 By prasad, on  June 29th, 2010
The Innoversal lattice tablet should come with a 1.66 GHz Intel Atom N450 processor. The rest of the specs should include a 6 cell 58Whr 5300mAH battery, SSD upto 64GB, wifi b/g/n, bluetooth 2.0, and 3G modem, and it should be able to run a variety of OS including Android, Ubuntu linux, and Google Chrome.

However, its claim to fame, will be the 10.1″ 1024 x 600 capacitive panel Pixel Qi display, that can toggle between a full color LCD screen, and shut off the backlight to an e-ink display, readable under sunlight. With rumored delays hitting the Notion Ink Adam, could this be the first pixel Qi device to ship.
It should be available for sale around September for around $550.
Video of the Lattice in action after the break. The touchscreen seems to reflect a lot of glare though. Continue reading Innoversal Lattice tablet with pixel Qi display
 By prasad, on  June 29th, 2010
DigiLife is an optical camcorder manufacturer, and the DigiLife iOne is an Android tablet with a difference. It has a built in pico projector. The iOne is still just a mock-up and non-functional prototype. They expect to have working prototype in another month. If and when it does, it will run on a Samsung Cortex A8 processor and have a 10.1″ capacitive touchscreen, USB ports and dual microSD slots.

They still haven’t decided what kind of a pico projector they want to build into the tablet. They claim to have been approached by various firms each pushing their technologies.
Nothing about how much it weighs, but the best bit of news is could end up costing under $200 without the pico projector, and under $300 for the model with the pico projector.
A Video after the break. Continue reading DigiLife iOne Android tablet with a Pico projector
 By prasad, on  June 29th, 2010
Aigo, that claims to the No. 1 chinese consumer electronic brand, announced the N700 Android 2.1 tablet. It is a 7″ 800 x 480 multitouch display that runs on 1 GHz dual core ARM Cortex A9 processor, and will feature Nvidia’s Tegra 2 graphics chipset, 512 MB DDR2 RAM, Wifi, HDMI output, 1.3 MP front facing camera and optional 3G.
It should come in different versions with 4 GB, 16GB, and 32 GB. The price is unknown, but it seems to be a rebadged version of the Compal NAZ10 that was announced for less than $300. This, for a change, is a really good looking tablet with equally good specs.
Aigo also announced the 7007 which should run on a 600 MHz ARM9 Rockchip RK2808. This one too seems to a rebranded tablet with looks and specs, both not so impressive.
Continue reading Aigo N700 and 7007 android tablets
 By prasad, on  June 29th, 2010
The chinese company, Mesada, well known for their GPS navigation devices, have now announced a new tablet called the Mesada Internet tablet. It packs a 5″ resistive touchscreen with a resolution of 800 x 480 and runs on a 833 MHz ARM Cortex A8 based Samsung S5PC100 processor, and 512 MB RAM.
Windows CE 6.0 is the OS choice and a 32 . . . → Continue reading 5″ touchscreen tablet from Mesada
 By prasad, on  June 29th, 2010
Pioneer Copmputers, from Australia, have announced the DreamBook ePad A10, a windows 7 tablet. It features a 10.1″ LED multi touch WSVGA display with a resolution of 1024 x 600. An Intel Atom N 455 or 475 provides the processing power. It also comes with a 2GB DDR3 RAM, and a choice of SSDs ranging from 8 GB . . . → Continue reading DreamBook ePad A10 windows 7 tablet from Pioneer
 By prasad, on  June 29th, 2010
Surface Ink is presenting a 12″ 1280 x 1024 tablet with a capacitive touch screen powered by the standard distribution Ubuntu OS. It was pretty slim with a well built sturdy frame, but the prototype wasn’t a working model.
It is powered by Freescales’s i.MX51 800 MHz ARM Cortex A8 and comes with Wifi b/g, HDMI, bluetooth 2.1, and USB 2.0. Surprisingly, . . . → Continue reading Surface Ink 12″ capacitive tablet running Ubuntu
 By prasad, on  June 29th, 2010
We have seen a lot of android tablet announcements, several of them competing only on price, in the race to be the cheapest tablet yet. AllGo could probably win that race. They have presented what could be the lowest cost ARM9 based Android device solution for tablets, PMPs, etc.,
AllGo provides android software integration on the Freescale platform for just $15. A complete tablet with a 7″ WVGA touchscreen and a battery could have a BoM cost of just $35.
The chipset would be Freescale i.MX223, an ARM9 SoC which isn’t exactly cutting edge technology, but should be enough to keep the AllGo’s custome android build running. It also plays YouTube videos and is able to stream audio over Wifi. A Video after the break. Continue reading AllGo, cheapest Android tablet yet
 By prasad, on  June 29th, 2010
Intel is expected to ship a fully native x86 version of Android 2.2 to developers in the next couple of months to spur growth of Atom powered Android netbooks and slate tablets.
Android was originally written for ARM processors which power most smartphones, and the new class of smartbooks, and tablets. However, the highly anticipated FroYo release should mark another stage in . . . → Continue reading Intel working on native x86 version of Android 2.2 FroYo
|
|