Welcome to a laptop battery specialist of the Hp Ac Adapter
The Motorola Droid RAZR MAXX HD (known internationally without the Droid brand name) is, for most consumers, the undisputed leader in battery life. With a 3,300 mAh battery, it is possible to use the Droid RAZR MAXX HD intensively for more than a day without having to worry about finding a charger when you need one the most. This is something that isn't lost on Motorola; the company took potshots recently at Apple's iPhone in a recent print advertisement.
However, the Droid RAZR MAXX HD's distinction of being the handset with the longest-lasting battery may be passed on to another device, that is, if only more people in the Western world were aware of it. That is, if the newly-launched Lenovo P770 would ever be launched someday outside of China.
It has a 3,500 mAh battery such as HP Pavilion dv1500 Ac Adapter, HP Pavilion dv1400 Ac Adapter, HP Pavilion dv1200 Ac Adapter, HP Pavilion dv1600 Ac Adapter, HP Pavilion DV1700 Ac Adapter, HP Pavilion dv4000 Ac Adapter, HP Pavilion dv4100 Ac Adapter, HP Pavilion dv4300 Ac Adapter, HP Pavilion dv5000 Ac Adapter, HP Pavilion dv5100 Ac Adapter, HP Pavilion dv5200 Ac Adapter, HP Pavilion N3000 Ac Adapter, or 200 mAh more than the Droid RAZR MAXX HD; in other words, it could last a few hours longer than the Droid RAZR MAXX HD while doing pretty much the same kind of tasks.
Then again, it could last more than a few hours longer. The P770's other specs lean towards midrange territory; it comes with a 4.5-inch screen with 960 x 540 resolution, a dual-core Mediatek processor, 1 GB RAM and Android 4.1 Jelly Bean.
The phone will also cost only 1699 Yuan, or $272 in US currency. Take note of this unlocked price point, because it looks like Lenovo will once again stick to the Chinese market alone with this new release.
An analysis of how Microsoft has priced its Surface tablet shows that the Redmond giant is more than willing to make the shift to the post-PC era -- as long as it can continue to pull in PC-level license fees.
This is the assessment of Asymco founder and analyst Horace Dediu, who claims that the software profit margins that Microsoft pulled in from selling PCs is now "captured in hardware," and that this in turn explains why the Surface tablet comes with a $499 price tag.
Dediu claims that Windows revenues for PC have held steady for the last three years, at around $52, while Office have increased slightly to $67.
"The problem for Microsoft," writes Deidu, "is that pricing systems software at $50 and a suite of apps at $67 for a tablet that costs $200 to the end-user is prohibitive."
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