Sunday, December 9, 2012

Bridge laptop for $449

Bridge laptop for $449

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inShare.The ultrabook phenomenon of 2012 has brought us a plethora of ultra-thin, ultra-light, speedy, and battery-friendly PCs. The downside is that becoming ultra-thin and ultra-light, while maintaining good performance and long battery life, just flat out costs more.

The mSATA SSD cache or full-fledged SSD costs more than a traditional spinning HDD. Low-voltage CPUs to reduce heat dissipation and power consumption cost more. Developing the thin chassis, usually with a healthy dose of aluminum, costs more.

As such, we typically see ultrabooks with battery like Sony ACC25 Ac Adapter, Sony VGN-FZ Ac Adapter, Sony PCG-FR Ac Adapter, Sony VGN-CR Ac Adapter, Sony PCGA-AC51 Ac Adapter, Sony PCG-V505 Ac Adapter, Sony VGN-B1VP Ac Adapter, Sony PCG-Z1RA Ac Adapter, Sony VGN-TX Ac Adapter, Sony VGN-U8 Ac Adapter, Sony VGN-X505 Ac Adapter, Sony VGN-TX690 Ac Adapter priced in the upper end of the $500-1000 price range. However, one can find quite a bargain in a PC that is stripped of its official, Intel-imbued ultrabook status but retains the chassis, look, and feel.

Dell's Inspiron 13z is one of these little gems, measuring just 0.82-inches thin and 3.81lbs on the scale with its 13.3-inch HD (1366×768) screen. It lacks the standard SSD cache we find on ultrabooks, relying instead on a 500GB 5400 RPM hard drive. A low-voltage CPU is kept on-board to play nicely with the tiny chassis, but again to keep costs low Dell went with a Core i3, rather than i5 or i7.

An extra bonus not previously available on 13z models is the fact that the Core i3 CPU is now an updated Ivy Bridge version, using the latest microarchitecture and clocking in at 1.8GHz. All of this is partnered with 6GB of RAM, 802.11n WiFi, USB 3.0, HDMI output, a media card reader, and a bevy of other features.

We especially like that even on such a low-price model, Dell includes one year of in-home warranty service and 90 days of premium phone support, all at no extra cost.

Click here to start at Dell.com. Total $150 instant savings applied automatically. This deal expires December 10 or sooner.

MANILA, Philippines -- Despite the sharp fall of PC sales in the third quarter this year, computer hardware companies Dell and Lenovo expressed confidence that the personal computer industry will stay amid the rapid growth of the touch computer.

Local executives here of both companies said people who are in "real kind of work" will still prefer the PC.

According to Vicky Agorilla, country manager of Lenovo Philippines, the PC is actually evolving and not dying as some people say, since the latest line of PC products are now designed for work and play.

She said PC sales will remain significant with the continuing rise of consumerism and mobile lifestyle.

"With the launch of Windows 8 and Intel's Ultrabook technology, now is the right time for the convertible form factor to take off," Agorilla said.

Lenovo recently announced two touch-optimized Ultrabook devices designed for both consumers and business professionals -- the IdeaPad Yoga 13 and Lenovo ThinkPad Twist.
Business ( Article MRec )

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