Lenovo Yoga Book ausprobiert: Wer braucht schon eine richtige Tastatur?

Eines der ungewöhnlichsten Convertibles der Ifa kommt von Lenovo: Statt einer Tastatur hat das neue Yoga Book eine große berührungssensitive Oberfläche, die als Tastatur oder digitaler Block genutzt wird. Wir konnten schon auf dem Gerät tippen und kritzeln – und sind skeptisch. (Ifa 2016, IFA2007)

Eines der ungewöhnlichsten Convertibles der Ifa kommt von Lenovo: Statt einer Tastatur hat das neue Yoga Book eine große berührungssensitive Oberfläche, die als Tastatur oder digitaler Block genutzt wird. Wir konnten schon auf dem Gerät tippen und kritzeln - und sind skeptisch. (Ifa 2016, IFA2007)

Zu früh gefreut?: Was die EU-Leitlinien für das offene Netz bedeuten

Der jahrelange Streit um die Netzneutralität in der EU ist beendet. Ist der Jubel der Internetaktivisten über die neuen Leitlinien berechtigt? Schon gibt es erste fragwürdige Zero-Rating-Angebote von Verlagen. (Netzneutralität, VoIP)

Der jahrelange Streit um die Netzneutralität in der EU ist beendet. Ist der Jubel der Internetaktivisten über die neuen Leitlinien berechtigt? Schon gibt es erste fragwürdige Zero-Rating-Angebote von Verlagen. (Netzneutralität, VoIP)

Smartphonesteuerung: Archos stellt Quadrocopter für 100 Euro vor

Archos hat seinen ersten Quadcopter vorgestellt. Der kleine Flieger kann sich mit knapp 30 km/h fortbewegen, wird über ein Smartphone gesteuert, filmt in HD und ist vergleichsweise günstig. (Drohne, Technologie)

Archos hat seinen ersten Quadcopter vorgestellt. Der kleine Flieger kann sich mit knapp 30 km/h fortbewegen, wird über ein Smartphone gesteuert, filmt in HD und ist vergleichsweise günstig. (Drohne, Technologie)

HP unveils Elite Slice modular mini desktop

HP unveils Elite Slice modular mini desktop

HP is going modular with its latest business-class mini-desktop computer. The new HP Elite Slice is a tiny desktop that measures about 1.5 inches thick and 6 inches across.

The computer itself houses everything you need for a basic PC experience. But you can also expand its functionality by stacking a series of modules to add hardware such as an optical disk drive or audio module with a speaker and microphones.

HP has also developed a series of custom plates for the top of the HP Elite Slice, including one that allows you to wireless charge a smartphone and another with touch-sensitive functions for use when you’re making conference calls.

Continue reading HP unveils Elite Slice modular mini desktop at Liliputing.

HP unveils Elite Slice modular mini desktop

HP is going modular with its latest business-class mini-desktop computer. The new HP Elite Slice is a tiny desktop that measures about 1.5 inches thick and 6 inches across.

The computer itself houses everything you need for a basic PC experience. But you can also expand its functionality by stacking a series of modules to add hardware such as an optical disk drive or audio module with a speaker and microphones.

HP has also developed a series of custom plates for the top of the HP Elite Slice, including one that allows you to wireless charge a smartphone and another with touch-sensitive functions for use when you’re making conference calls.

Continue reading HP unveils Elite Slice modular mini desktop at Liliputing.

HP Pavilion Wave is a compact desktop for the office or living room

HP Pavilion Wave is a compact desktop for the office or living room

HP is rethinking the concept of a desktop tower PC. The company’s new Pavilion Wave isn’t just smaller than a typical tower, it’s also shaped differently, covered in different materials, and designed to be useful in the home office or in the living room.

The HP Pavilion Wave will be available September 16th for about $530 and up.

The Pavilion Wave is a triangle-shaped tower PC built around a speaker.

Continue reading HP Pavilion Wave is a compact desktop for the office or living room at Liliputing.

HP Pavilion Wave is a compact desktop for the office or living room

HP is rethinking the concept of a desktop tower PC. The company’s new Pavilion Wave isn’t just smaller than a typical tower, it’s also shaped differently, covered in different materials, and designed to be useful in the home office or in the living room.

The HP Pavilion Wave will be available September 16th for about $530 and up.

The Pavilion Wave is a triangle-shaped tower PC built around a speaker.

Continue reading HP Pavilion Wave is a compact desktop for the office or living room at Liliputing.

HP builds one desktop PC around a speaker, another in slices

HP is trying to make desktop computers as exciting as laptops and all-in-ones.

Enlarge / From top to bottom, the Elite Slice main unit, the optical drive, audio module, and VESA mounting plate. (credit: HP)

HP has announced today two new desktop PCs both with some unusual form factors in what it calls the "desktop reinvention." While laptops and all-in-ones have a long history of novel designs and advanced engineering, the traditional desktop has tended to be a rather less exciting category. Some systems have shrunk, to take advantage of the increasing integration and decreasing power requirements that modern processors boast, but the plain old mini-tower PC, still a corporate staple, has had little thought or attention given to its design over the years.

The HP Elite Slice is a corporate oriented machine designed to be modular, taking advantage of USB Type-C for power and I/O. The base unit houses the actual PC in a unit measuring 6.5 inches square, and 1.4 inches tall. This houses all the major PC components—processor up to a 35W Core i7-6700T, RAM up to 32GB, storage up to 512GB NVMe, gigabit Ethernet, 802.11ac Wi-Fi—and a handful of ports. There's a USB Type-C for power, a second USB Type-C that also supports DisplayPort alternate modes, two USB Type-A, one DisplayPort, and one HDMI. Optionally, the side of the unit can sport a fingerprint reader.

The top cover of the main unit is modular, though not end-user changeable. As well as a plain cover, the main unit can have a wireless charging cover, so you can recharge your phone just by setting it on top of your PC, or what HP calls the "collaboration cover," which contains a set of buttons (start/end call, volume up/down, and so on) for controlling a software phone such as Skype for Business.

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Superbook laptop dock for Android phones pre-orders open for $109 (post-Kickstarter)

Superbook laptop dock for Android phones pre-orders open for $109 (post-Kickstarter)

After raising close to $3 million dollars through Kickstarter, the folks behind the Superbook laptop dock for Android phones are offering folks who didn’t get in on the campaign a chance to pre-order.

The Superbook is now available for purchase through Backerkit.

What is a Superbook? It’s basically an inexpensive device that looks like a laptop, but which doesn’t have its own processor, memory, storage, or operating system.

Continue reading Superbook laptop dock for Android phones pre-orders open for $109 (post-Kickstarter) at Liliputing.

Superbook laptop dock for Android phones pre-orders open for $109 (post-Kickstarter)

After raising close to $3 million dollars through Kickstarter, the folks behind the Superbook laptop dock for Android phones are offering folks who didn’t get in on the campaign a chance to pre-order.

The Superbook is now available for purchase through Backerkit.

What is a Superbook? It’s basically an inexpensive device that looks like a laptop, but which doesn’t have its own processor, memory, storage, or operating system.

Continue reading Superbook laptop dock for Android phones pre-orders open for $109 (post-Kickstarter) at Liliputing.

Lenovo’s new Yoga Book is a 360 degree laptop without the keyboard

Clamshell system drops the keyboard in favor of the touch-sensitive “Create Pad.”

Enlarge

Microsoft's Courier was supposed to be an electronic journal or diary, a piece of hardware purpose-built for applications like OneNote. Two screens with a hinge between them, it opened and closed like a book, supporting both touch and stylus input on both its screens. Lenovo's new Yoga Book looks like a riff on the Courier combined with the company's successful range of 360 degree hinge Yoga-branded laptops.

Like a Yoga machine, it's a more or less clamshell form factor that can be opened right up to turn it into a tablet of sorts. Like Courier, it's got book-like styling with both halves approximately the same size for a symmetrical look. And like the Courier, it's designed for mixed touch and pen input. But it has a twist. A normal laptop has a screen and a keyboard. Courier has a screen and another screen. The Yoga Book does neither of these things; it has a conventional touch screen paired with a special touch input surface designed for a stylus, dubbed the Create Pad.

Using the Real Pen to paint.

Using the Real Pen to paint. (credit: Lenovo)

Press a button and the Create Pad turns into a backlit keyboard using haptic feedback to simulate the feedback you'd get from a regular keyboard. In this mode, it has shades of Microsoft's Touch Covers, but the Yoga Book's concept is more versatile—the touch surface isn't just a keyboard—and probably more comfortable, thanks to that feedback. The removal of the physical keys makes this half of the Yoga Book thinner; it also makes it into a drawing surface. Hide the virtual keys and it becomes a stylus workspace for the Yoga Book's battery-free Real Pen, with 2,048 pressure levels and angle detection. Clip a piece of paper to the Create Pad and put some ink into the Real Pen and you can draw with, well, a real pen and real ink, while everything you do gets immediately digitized by the device.

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