Posts Tagged ‘samsung’

Samsung Chip NAND 20 nmSEOUL Samsung has been successfully completed grade NAND Flash memory chip 20nm. The company claims this card having a larger memory and faster than previous generations of similar cards.20nm MLC NAND card (multi-level cell) has a productivity level 50 percent higher than the 30nm-class, and its performance when the ‘write’ 30nm NAND also exceeded 30 percent.

In addition, according to Samsung, 20nm NAND NAND also have high reliability, equivalent to 30nm NAND. This card is believed to raise the standard of performance on smartphones and high-density IT applications.

“In just one year after the launch Samsung’s 30nm NAND production has been providing next generation 20nm NAND node, which exceeds the needs of customers the highest performance,” explained Mr-Soo Cho, president, Memory Division, Samsung Electronics, as quoted Softepedia, Monday ( 19/4/2010).”The new 20nm NAND is not only a significant step forward in the design process, but we have the advanced technology incorporated into it to activate a substantial innovation performance,” he added.Samsung will sell a card that has a storage capacity ranging between 4GB and 64GB, while the speed will be 10Mbps 20MBps when reading and when writing.

Kin phonesMicrosoft Corp launched a line of phones aimed at young people on Monday, marking a fresh assault on the low end of the growing smartphone market, where it has been losing out to BlackBerry maker Research in Motion, Apple Inc and Google Inc.

The software company’s first foray into designing its own phones comes six months before it rolls out its new Windows software for phones made by handset makers HTC, Samsung and others, which should be a more direct challenge to Apple’s iPhone and Google’s Android phones.

The new phones launched on Monday, called Kin One and Kin Two, are made by Japan’s Sharp Corp and will be sold by Verizon Wireless, a joint venture between Verizon Communications and Vodafone Group.(Reuters)

The LG Shine II

Posted: December 27, 2009 in mobile
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

LG Shine II

LG Shine II

The LG Shine II doesn’t mess with success. The first LG Shine was a best-seller on AT&T thanks to its high-end metallic body and solid call quality. Aside from a few minor improvements, the Shine II is virtually the same as the first model, with the same main benefit—it looks and feels good. It’s a good choice for AT&T subscribers looking for a basic, reliable, and classy voice phone.

Design and Call Quality
The Shine II measures 4.2 by 2.0 by 0.5 inches and weighs 4.4 ounces. The Shine’s brushed-aluminum housing makes it heavy but durable. Just like my old RAZR V3, I’d expect the Shine II to hold up nicely over time. It also looks great, and the cool blue backlighting enhanced the look further. The slider mechanism felt smooth and satisfying.

The 2.2-inch LCD has 240-by-320-pixel resolution. A new five-way control pad features a prominent, raised center button. The button, left, and right keys were fine, but the up and down keys were very small and stiff. Large-enough Send, End, and Back keys sit above an otherwise cramped, recessed keypad. Dialing numbers was tough with one hand.

As a quad-band EDGE (850/900/1800/1900 MHz) and dual-band HSDPA (850/1900 MHz) phone, the Shine II works on AT&T’s 3G network and on 2G EDGE networks overseas. Voice calls sounded loud, clear, and crisp, with a slightly trebly tone in the earpiece. Callers on the other end couldn’t distinguish between the Shine II and a BlackBerry Bold 9700 (also on AT&T); both sounded excellent. Calls sounded fine through a Plantronics Voyager Pro Bluetooth headset. The speakerphone went pretty loud, but sounded harsh and distorted at top volume. Battery life was on the short side, at 3 hours and 46 minutes of talk time.

User Interface, Apps, and Multimedia
The Shine II’s UI looks sharp and is well designed. The Shine II was very responsive to key presses. The stiff control pad wasn’t ideal for gaming, and the Shine II’s sluggish Java benchmark results mean you should stick to 2D titles. The Opera-powered Web browser was surprisingly good, offering mobile and landscape views. The browser delivers accurate renderings of desktop HTML pages, but the tiny screen is an impediment.

The Shine hooks into AT&T Mobile e-mail for Yahoo, Windows Live, and AOL accounts, but not Gmail. A basic IM client offers AIM, Yahoo, and Windows Live support but not Google Talk. Either way, with only a numeric keypad, this isn’t a messaging phone. (If you want a keyboard, the excellent Pantech Impact beckons, and even costs $20 less.) It also works with AT&T Navigator (powered by TeleNav) for voice-enabled, turn-by-turn GPS directions.

The Shine II’s music player includes an adjustable EQ, ringtone creator, and music recognition software. There’s 102MB of free onboard storage. A microSD card slot sits underneath the battery cover, but not under the battery; my 16GB SanDisk card worked fine. The proprietary headphone jack is a disappointment, and there are no wired earbuds in the box. Thankfully, the Shine II now supports stereo Bluetooth. Music tracks sounded very bassy over Motorola S9-HDs, even with the Shine II’s custom EQ off; LG seems to have hardwired in a bass boost. Tiny album art thumbnails displayed when available. Standalone 3GP and MP4 videos played very smoothly in landscape mode, though the video player was sluggish and clumsy to operate. Streamed CNN videos played smoothly for about 10 seconds before freezing and timing out on several attempts.

Camera and Conclusions
The 2-megapixel camera includes an LED flash and auto-focus. A built-in image editor resizes, crops, and rotates photos, and features some basic effects. Test photos looked OK, with a little noise but decent resolution in shadowy areas, and a slightly soft, grayish focus outdoors. Shutter speeds were just under one second. Recorded 320-by-240 videos had good color balance, but were too jerky at 10 frames per second.

The LG Shine II is a good handset, but I’d like to see its price come down. Otherwise, it runs into headwinds on AT&T’s lineup as better phones get discounted. The $99 Sony Ericsson c905a is a vertical slider like the LG Shine II, but it has a vastly more powerful 8.1-megapixel camera with face detection. The $149 Samsung Mythic SGH-a897, our current Editors’ Choice for AT&T feature phones, offers mobile TV, a high-resolution touch screen, and plenty of music and video features.

Neither of those phones have the Shine II’s aluminum-chic design, though. For thousands of folks to date, that has been enough to seal the deal—and it likely will be enough once again with the Shine II.

Fujitsu P3010

Fujitsu P3010

As of this moment, I don’t have enough fingers to count the amount of oversized netbooks that are being sold in retail. Oversized netbooks typically have 11 to 12-inch widescreens and have parts with names like Nvidia’s ION, AMD’s Neo, VIA’s Nano, and the most popular of which, Intel’s Atom. Fairly late to the game is Fujitsu’s LifeBook P3010, an 11-inch, oversized netbook that runs on AMD parts, which have an edge in speed over the Intel Atom but trails it in battery life. Even if Fujitsu were to knock down the price from $549, it would still be just an okay netbook.Design  I’m usually a sucker for vibrant colors. The P3010’s shiny red plastics, though plain in design, still grabs a hold of your attention immediately and beats the drab, neutral hues found on the Lenovo IdeaPad S12, Samsung NC20 (21GBK), and MSI U210 (008US). Over on the corner of the lid is Fujitsu’s signature infinity logo, which is always a nice finishing touch. It’s a heavy netbook, though, as its 3.5-pound frame outweighs many of its netbook peers, including the Asus EeePC 1101HA (3 lbs), HP Mini 311 (3.3 lbs), and MSI U210 (3 lbs). Only the HP Pavilion dv2-1030us is heavier, tipping the scales at 3.8 pounds.

As with any oversized netbook, the sweet spot is the extra screen real estate. The P3010 has an 11.6-inch widescreen, which not only gives you more to look at than the typical 10-inch ones, but the resolution is higher as well. Case in point: Ten-inch netbooks like the Toshiba mini NB205 and HP Mini 5101 default to 1,024-by-600 resolutions; the P3010, like all oversized netbooks, has a 1,366-by-768 one, or WXGA. Oversized netbooks like the Lenovo S12, Samsung NC20, and MSI U210 have bigger 12-inch widescreens, which you might consider if you want to push this boundary.
Features Another thing that the P3010 can afford to do with a bigger screen (hence, wider dimensions) is put in a full size keyboard. Its keyboard size is comparable to the ones found in the Lenovo S12, Samsung NC20, and MSI U210. In contrast, others in its size class, namely the HP Mini 311, ASUS 1101HA, and HP dv2, top out at 92% of full size. The touchpad seemed agonizingly small at first, but wrapping the chrome mouse buttons around the front bezel, thereby widening the pinch between the thumb and index fingers (used to navigate), made it tolerable. Nevertheless, Fujitsu needs to find a way to increase the size of the touchpad.

The P3010’s other features are average at best. Its most glaring omission is an HDMI port, given that the HP dv2 and MSI U210—netbooks that run on similar AMD parts—are including it. The three USB ports can be found in smaller 10-inch netbooks and 802.11g Wi-Fi seems average, too, when others are bundling 802.11n. Fujitsu is including a 320GB hard drive, though, which gives you more storage than MSI U210’s 250GB drive. Aside from that, it has Bluetooth, a 4-in-1 media card reader, Webcam, an Ethernet and a VGA port.

Performance
To date, I’ve looked at about four netbooks that run on the 1.6GHz AMD Athlon Neo MV-40—a single-core processor and one of AMD’s answers to the Intel Atom. A dual-core Neo is already shipping, but hasn’t shown up in many netbooks. The advantage of using an AMD Neo is that there isn’t a RAM restriction (Intel Atom-based netbooks can only ship with 1GB of RAM, but can be manually upgraded to two), so the P3010 ships with 2GB of DDR2 memory. In terms of raw speed, the Neo is a faster processor than the Atom; its score on our video encoding tests bears this out: The P3010’s 3-minute 56-second score convincingly beat out the Lenovo S12 (4:40), Samsung NC20 (5:30), and ASUS 1101HA (5:32). It has a minor graphics advantage, too, as the ATI Radeon 3200 chipset (with the Neo processor and 2GB of memory) handled high-definition clips (1080p and 720p) reasonably well; at least better than with Intel’s integrated graphics.

As a result of using AMD chips, the P3010 had to sacrifice battery life. As with the MSI U210 (4:13) and the HP dv2 (3:08), the P3010’s 3 hours 25 minutes score on MobileMark 2007 is sufficient enough for a half-day’s work, but falls well short of the 5- to 7-hour scores amassed by the Lenovo S12 (5:19), ASUS 1101HA (6:50), and HP Mini 311 (5:29). Against a smaller netbook like the Toshiba NB205 (8:27), the P3010 gets less than half its battery life.

It’s hard enough to compete as a latecomer, but when you’re priced more than similar netbooks (i.e, the MSI U210 runs for $430), it makes the Fujitsu LifeBook P3010 difficult to recommend. The P3010 does have very good qualities for a netbook, such as speed, ability to playback HD video, and a full size typing experience, but its battery score and price can’t compete with its peers. Consider the MSI U210 and the Lenovo IdeaPad S12 instead.

2Go Convertible

2Go Convertible

We should all pay homage to a little laptop known as the Intel Classmate PC. Without it, there wouldn’t be a category called netbooks, and ultraportables in the 2 to 4 pound range would still cost you an arm and a leg. While most netbooks have gone on and evolved into more complex designs, the Classmate has been and still is a netbook aimed at classrooms, particularly in developing nations. The 2Go Convertible Classmate PC ($499 street) by CTL Corp. has a rotating screen and touch capabilities this time around, complete with a carrying handle. Although the bundled education software and average netbook parts are classroom-worthy, parents and kids will find more appeal in the Disney Netpal by ASUS.

Design
Based on looks alone, the Classmate won’t likely won’t be a big seller. It’s bulky-looking, plain, and practical so that kids in a classroom won’t feel that any Classmate will look better than the other. It’s not meant to stop you at your tracks like the Disney Netpal or Dell Mini Nickelodeon Edition; the Classmate lacks any sort of zesty colors, animated themes, or glossy plastics. Like the teachers it likely appeals to, the Classmate’s primary goal is to get children interested in learning.

While most netbooks offer 10-inch widescreens (and some are even pushing it beyond that), the Classmate’s 8.9-inch one seems as antiquated as the one on the Disney Netpal. As most parents would say, a big screen is better for the eyes. The keyboard looks miniature compared with the full size ones found on the Toshiba mini NB205, Samsung N120 (12GBK), and HP Mini 5101. At 84%, it’s even smaller than the 89% keyboard found in the Disney Netpal. Although you can argue that a child’s hands are small enough to handle it, the Netpal’s keyboard is where I draw the line. The Classmate’s mouse buttons and touchpad, on other hand, are some of the best I’ve used. They’re comparable to the NB205’s navigating experience, which is terrific for kids and adults alike.

Features
The Convertible portion of this model refers to the rotating screen that covers up the keyboard and supports touch gestures. It lacks Wacom support (which requires a digitized pen) and Windows XP’s Tablet Edition (this review unit comes with Windows XP Home Edition), so there isn’t a built-in handwriting recognition engine (it does include Vision Pen Objects—a third-party tool that does an average job turning handwriting into editable text and includes a virtual keyboard). In addition, a stylus is included for tapping and doodling. The touch gestures work well if you use your fingertips. Otherwise, you would have to forcefully press on the screen in order to get a response.

In addition to Vision Pen Objects, the Classmate, as usual, comes with a bevy of software, which includes Evernote’s note taker, a basic eReader, and a drawing and doodling program called ArtRage—good learning tools but nothing a child or a parent would consider must-haves. The Netpal, on the other hand, built an entire environment around Disney’s classic and current themes. It comes with productivity and learning tools, games, and more importantly, effective parental controls that keep your child away from online dangers. The Classmate lacks these parental controls since the primary target is a school environment, which is more than likely to administer its own security software. If you’re buying this for a home, you can opt to do what the Dell Nickelodeon did—install a subscription-based security suite like McAfee’s Family Security Center, which will have the parental controls you need.

Features are as plain as any other inexpensive netbook. The two USB ports aren’t impressive when the Netpal and the Mini Nickelodeon have three. It has an SD card reader, VGA-Out, Ethernet, and built-in 802.11n WiFi. The Webcam, which sits above the screen, rotates 180 degrees and has a light that tells you when the camera is on. The most disappointing feature is the 60GB hard drive, which pales in comparison to the Netpal’s and Mini’s 160GB ones. Worst of all, it spins at an atrocious 4200rpms, which impacts performance.

The Classmate has caught up with current processing technologies, considering the first one started with an Intel Celeron M processor. Like the Netpal and Nickelodeon, the Classmate uses an Intel Atom N270 (1.6GHz) processor and 1GB of DDR2 memory. Upgrading the memory yourself, however, isn’t as easy as removing a screw or two (it’s easier to perform a memory upgrade on the Netpal and the Mini).

Performance
Performance would have been in line with other netbooks had the Classmate used a faster spinning hard drive. Its SYSMark 2007 score finished 3 points below those of the Disney Netpal and Dell Nickelodeon. Since video encoding is a processor-intensive test and the Classmate uses the same processor as its peers, its 4 minute 43 second score was par for the course with the rest. It includes a 53Wh (6-cell battery), which drained in about 5 hours, according to MobileMark 2007 scores. The Netpal, however, beat the Classmate by another half an hour (5:30). Mainstream netbooks like the Toshiba NB205 and HP 5101 delivered 7-8 hour battery scores with similar batteries.

The 2Go Convertible Classmate PC’s price seems high for an average netbook with touch functions. When purchased in bulk, say, for a school, however, prices do come down drastically. CTL Corp. is selling this netbook as a standalone system, and by itself, it’s overpriced compared with mainstream netbook models like the Toshiba mini NB205 and HP mini 5101. Furthermore, parents and kids will prefer all the neat and useful software that comes with the Disney Netpal by ASUS.