Samsung ATIV Q release possibility, but not this year - Phones Review

Samsung ATIV Q release a possibility, but not in 2013


We have been seeing various manufactures trying to come up with mobile devices that offer something a little different from the competition. The Samsung ATIV Q is one such device although it seems to be having some issues while a release is still a possibility but not this year according to reports.


Samsung proudly unveiled the hybrid tablet PC the ATIV Q back in June which will run both the Windows and Android operating systems at the same time, but it seems according to reports that the company may have run into some patent issues that even led to talk of the device being scrapped.


Now a new report is stating that Samsung has not cancelled the device altogether but the ATIV Q won’t be released until sometime next year. It is not known if the Samsung ATIV Q will have been taken back to the drawing board to overcome any patent infringements.


This news if accurate could mean that the device will see a complete redesign before being released next year, or Samsung may be trying to come to sort of financial agreement with any companies that may be involved in a patent dispute before launching the product.


Either way it will lead to some disappointment among the many that liked the look of the device when it was launched running Windows 8 and Android 4.2.2 side by side.


Were you planning on getting the Samsung ATIV Q?


Source: AllAboutSamsung via Google Translate.





Samsung Galaxy S4 Spotted Running on Tizen 3.0 OS, Images Leaked Online - International Business Times AU


Samsung may still have plans of pushing through and further developing the Tizen software. Recently leaked images show the Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone running on the Tizen 3.0 mobile operating system.






Photo Credit: crave.cnet.co.uk


The leaked images show the handset's UI look comparable to that of Nokia's Windows Phone live tiles layout. Additionally, the general look with its colour variations and notifications offer a hint of the Android OS crossed with Apple's iOS 7 found on its iPhones and iPads.


The AndroidBeat report gave a brief description on how the Tizen software was developed. The report reads: "Nokia and Intel were both working on their own respective Linux based mobile operating systems. Nokia had Maemo, Intel had Moblin. The two decided to merge their efforts and give birth to a new OS called MeeGo. Nokia then got a new CEO, who pulled the plug on MeeGo, so Samsung took Nokia's place and decided to rename the OS Tizen."




According to the UnwiredView report, the plan is to run the Tizen software on all of the Samsung devices in the near future. It includes televisions and other devices like mobile phones and laptops so that they will have a seamless crossover now that the South Korean technology giant tries to work towards the dual-OS devices such as the ATIV Q.


For the time being, this appears to be a trial platform for the Samsung software engineers. Tizen 2.0 is currently the Samsung OS version and the Tizen 3.0 is reportedly due for launch in early 2014.


However, Samsung's first Tizen smartphone is not expected to be unveiled until 2014. Previous reports claimed that the Tizen phone to be unveiled will sport a 720p screen display and a Qualcomm Snapdragon processor.


Other reports suggest that the Tizen phone may not be given a big shove to be released soon since Samsung's Android devices are already doing well plus the new Galaxy Gear launches with the Android compatibility. Android has been helpful in making Samsung one of the biggest smartphone manufacturers with its wide range of Samsung Galaxy smartphones and tablets.


More Tech Articles to Read:


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HTC One Mini Heads to Australia with Release Date at Telstra on September 17 and Vodafone in Early October - [READ]


Nokia Lumia 1520: Upcoming Nokia Phablet 'Bandit' Image Leaked Online - [READ]


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Microsoft's Surface Problem Has Nothing to Do With Hardware - DailyFinance

Microsoft is planning to showcase its second-generation Surface tablets on September 23. Early reports indicate that the Windows-maker has not significantly altered the Surface, instead planning a modest improvement of the device's internals.


This might seem surprising -- the original Surface was a failure; in fact, Microsoft took a $900 million writedown on the tablet, as it had not sold as well as the company had expected.


Yet, the Surface's problems do not stem from its hardware -- rather, Windows continued lack of mobile apps puts it at a disadvantage to its tablet rivals.


The Surface's failure

To date, the Surface has unquestionably been a failure. From its launch last October through the end of June, Microsoft sold an estimated 1.7 million Surface tablets. Over that same period, Apple sold 57 million iPads.


Why such a discrepancy? Admittedly, that figure includes the iPad Mini, of which Microsoft has no direct competitor, but the full-size iPad is still many times more popular than the Surface, even though they were (until recently) priced roughly the same.


The Surface even includes features the iPad lacks, like a USB port, built-in kickstand, and specially designed keyboard cover. And don't forget Office, Microsoft's ubiquitous productivity software suite.


Windows 8 lacks mobile apps

Nevertheless, these features pale in comparison to the iPad's big advantage -- its app ecosystem. iOS remains the premiere mobile operating system among developers, and the iPad in particular has a bevy of apps made for it specifically.


Windows 8, on the other hand, continues to lack many major mobile apps, including Instagram, Pinterest, and HBO Go. Not to mention hit games like Candy Crush and Plants vs. Zombies -- an important category, given how much time tablet owners spend playing games.


As long as Windows lags in apps, hardware simply doesn't matter. Microsoft's recent decision to slash the Surface's price by $150 gives it an advantage over the iPad in terms of price, but the iPad still represents better value to most consumers.


Android tablets are starting to gain steam
But comparing the Surface to the iPad, as Microsoft has been eager to do, might be the wrong idea. Although Apple remains the single most dominant individual tablet maker, tablets powered by Google's Android are just starting to hit their stride.


Android-powered smartphones surpassed the iPhone in terms of marketshare back in 2011, but it wasn't until this year that Android-powered tablets began to overwhelm the iPad. There are now numerous capable Android tablets on the market, like Google's own Nexus 7, and Sony's waterproof Xperia Z, in addition to Amazon's bargain-priced Kindle Fires.


Samsung, long the premier Android handset maker, has begun to expand its dominance into the tablet market. In the first quarter, Samsung's share of the tablet market surged, jumping 282% on a year-over-year basis. Samsung makes a number of Galaxy tablets, with its Note 8.0 and 10.1 priced competitively with Apple's competing devices.


But Samsung's most interesting tablet is its ATIV Q. The device, which Samsung showed off in June, hasn't been released yet, but when it does go on sale, it will be interesting to see how the device sells -- and not just for Samsung's earnings.


The ATIV Q is unique in that it runs both Android and Windows 8 side-by-side. While it has the full functionality of Windows, it offers Android apps for those times when mobility is preferred.


In a way, the ATIV Q is emblematic of the Surface's larger problem: If Windows 8 had a robust mobile app ecosystem, Samsung would've never needed to create such a device.


What to watch for September 23
New hardware won't save the Surface. A faster processor and better battery might sound nice, but if Microsoft wants the Surface to sell, it needs to solve the app problem.


As long as Windows continues to lag iOS in apps, the Surface is going to continue to lag the iPad in sales. Moreover, the iPad might be the least of the Surface's problems -- rising competition from Android tablets, including Android/Windows hybrid tablets, could ultimately be much more consequential.


Come September 23, Microsoft announcing a program to accelerate mobile app development would be far more important than any adjustments to the Surface itself.



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The article Microsoft's Surface Problem Has Nothing to Do With Hardware originally appeared on Fool.com.


Sam Mattera has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Amazon.com, Apple, and Google. The Motley Fool owns shares of Amazon.com, Apple, Google, and Microsoft. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Samsung Ativ Q cancelled because of patent rights? - DecryptedTech








ativq

Samsung announced in June this year that they are working on a device that has the features of a laptop and tablet in a single device. It is the Ativ Q device, which was supposed to bring an unprecedented resolution when it comes to tablets, 3200x1800 pixels on a 13.3-inch screen.




The Ativ Q has a slide mechanism which allows him to easily convert from tablet to laptop and vice versa. Operating systems available for the device will be Windows 8 and Android 4.2.2.


However, sources familiar with the development of the device, would suggest that the device could be canceled, because the Samsung ran into paroblems around patents to run two operating systems simultaneously. For now, Samsung has not yet publicly announced the abandonment of the production unit, but according to the same sources, they canceled all preorders. Whether permanently or just temporarily we will see in the coming days.


Discuss...






Pc convertibile Android e Windows 8: Samsung ATIV Q - PMI.it


Samsung ATIV QIl computer convertibile Samsung Ativ Q è un prodotto innovativo che sorprende per contenuti tecnici: è il primo tablet convertibile Dual OS in grado di offrire diverse modalità d’uso e livelli di potenza, consentendo agli utenti di usare il sistema operativo Android Jelly Bean o Windows 8 a seconda delle proprie esigenze. Ativ Q unisce dunque in un unico prodotto le esigenze degli utenti Windows e di quelli Android, il tutto mixato in un hardware davvero stupefacente. Il fiore all’occhiello di questo tablet pc è lo schermo touch da 13.3 pollici con risoluzione 3200×1800 pixel con supporto al digitizer per interagire con uno speciale pennino offerto nella dotazione di serie. => Scopri tutte le novità da Samsung


Una risoluzione così elevata rende lo schermo brillante e definito. L’interfaccia Modern UI giova di quest’elevata risoluzione, anche se nella modalità Desktop icone e finestre risultano forse un po’ troppo piccole. Il Samsung Ativ Q offre un design accattivante con peso e dimensioni contenuti (un centimetro per 1,3 KG) nonostante sotto lo schermo si nasconda una tastiera hardware estraibile che permette di utilizzare il tablet pc come un vero notebook. Le specifiche tecniche: processore Intel Haswell Core i5 con 4 GB di RAM in grado di offrire potenza e consumi energetici ridotti. La batteria da 47Wh promette autonomia di ben 9 ore. Dal punto di vista software, la grande innovazione di questo prodotto è il Dual OS, cioè la possibilità di utilizzare sia Windows 8 che Android Jelly Bean. In realtà Android è emulato, ma questo permette di passare istantaneamente da Windows ad Android con un semplice click. Una soluzione davvero interessante e funzionale. Non ci sono ancora i dettagli sulla distribuzione del Samsung Ativ Q ma il prezzo dovrebbe attestarsi attorno ai 1600 euro. => Confronta con gli altri notebook per il business




Tags: android Samsung ATIV Q windows 8



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Samsung Ativ Q tidak akan meluncur tahun ini - merdeka.com

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Samsung ATIV Book 9 Lite - PCWorld.co.nz


This ultraportable – which could be classed an Ultrabook if not for its AMD processor – sits at the entry level of Samsung’s ATIV Book range of Windows 8 laptops.









  • Expert Rating




  • User Rating





Pros



  • Thin, lightweight

  • Excellent battery life

  • Attractive design




Cons



  • Disappointing performance

  • Low-quality screen




Bottom Line


Fantastic battery life and a lightweight, ultra-thin design are easy to recommend, but low performance and a low-quality screen make the ATIV Book 9 Lite a niche product for users seeking mobility above all else.




The ATIV Book 9 Lite is, visually at least, gorgeous piece of hardware for NZ$1,199. (NZ$1,399 for the touchscreen version.) Often laptops in the sub-$1,500 price bracket can be a little lacking in the style department, but the Lite takes its design cues from Samsung’s gorgeous top-end Series 9 Ultrabook.


The Lite is cased in plastic instead of metal, but keeps the same sleek lines, gently rounded edges, and airfoil-like profile of the Series 9. There’s a bit of give in the chassis, but not enough to be worrying. The Series 9, in fact, exhibited at least as much flexibility thanks to its ultra-thin alloy body.


The ATIV Book 9 Lite is, visually at least, gorgeous piece of hardware.The ATIV Book 9 Lite is, visually at least, gorgeous piece of hardware.


It’s super-lightweight, at 1.44kg, and slim at 17mm. Samsung say 16.9mm, but I’m not getting into tenths-of-a-millimetre when it comes down to how tightly you close the lid. Either way, it’s as thin as the MacBook Air, and not too much heavier, making the ATIV Book 9 Lite one of the most portable 13-inch laptops we’ve had the pleasure to test.


Samsung claim an 8-second boot time and 2-second wake from sleep, both of which we were able to verify.


The Lite easily manages an 8-hour workday or flight on a single charge.


Battery life in our power-hungry ‘productivity’ test was a very impressive 5hrs 23min. This is the best result of any laptop we’ve tested to date, exceeded only by a few Intel Atom-powered Windows 8 tablets. Under less strenuous use, the Lite easily manages an 8-hour workday or flight on a single charge.

Granting this long battery life is not one of Intel’s latest-generation ‘Haswell’ processors, but an unnamed AMD processor that is referred to in Samsung’s marketing, and within the laptop itself, as “Quad-core processor”.


It’s not widely publicised that this is an AMD chip: where you’d expect an AMD branding sticker (or where ‘Intel Inside’ would appear on an Intel-powered laptop), there’s simply an “x4 Quad-Core” sticker. The only processor spec we could get hold of, besides the quad-core nature of the CPU, was a clock speed of “up to 1.4GHz”. All very mysterious, and not something we’ve ever seen before on a laptop.


Besides the secretive processor, the Lite sports 4GB of relatively slow DDR3L-1066 memory. Graphics are handled by an embedded AMD Radeon HD 8250, and storage is a 128GB SSD.


We ran the ATIV Book 9 Lite through our standard benchmark suite, and found the results exceptionally low in laptop terms. The closest comparison point was Windows 8 tablets based on Intel’s Atom Z2760 dual-core/four-threaded CPU.


The Lite’s quad-core AMD processor delivered between 150%-200% the raw computing performance of the Atom Z2760, whilst still managing 75% of the battery life. In certain tests, it delivered up to 350% the performance. So, quite the step up from a little Atom-based tablet, which you’d expect from a 13-inch laptop. However, the Lite still only came in at about 50% the performance of similarly sized and priced Intel Core-based laptops.


A whole lot of benchmarks aren’t worth anything in isolation: maybe 50% the performance is more than good enough, I thought, in exchange for that great portability and battery life. Yeah, no. Unfortunately, the ATIV Book 9 Lite struggled with everyday tasks such as multi-tabbed web browsing (to be fair, we’re talking 10+ tabs in Mozilla Firefox), working with heavyweight web apps such as Google Docs, or playing back HD video from YouTube.


While simple document-editing in Google Docs worked alright, though we did occasionally experience a bit of lag that wasn’t present on other PCs connected to the same network. Large, complicated spreadsheets proved a real hassle to update, thanks to slow performance on the client-side (again, the same activity on a different PC, over the same internet connection, posed no trouble at all).


Standard-definition and 720p YouTube clips played smoothly, but fullscreen 1080p clips displayed some lag during playback, even when fully buffered (i.e. the internet connection had no impact on playback). Playing two video clips at once resulted in both being unwatchably laggy. Sure, this isn’t something you’d be likely to try on purpose, but you’ll sure notice it when some website is silently auto-playing a promotional video in the background whilst you’re trying to watch YouTube.


Connectivity is, like the Series 9 laptop the Lite is modelled after, limited.Connectivity is, like the Series 9 laptop the Lite is modelled after, limited.


Common applications such as Photoshop Elements were usable, but slower than we’re used to. We had no trouble retouching a single high-res image, but batch processing or just working on several images simultaneously brought things down to a crawl.


With performance like this, the ATIV Book 9 Lite is really only useful for the most basic web browsing and productivity work – typing and throwing emails around, perhaps working on some of those ultrabasic spreadsheets that might as well be a single-column list. Yes, it’s significantly more powerful than the cheap Windows 8 tablets on the market, but it still falls well short of what we’d expect from a laptop.


Also questionable is the Lite’s 13.3-inch screen. The 1366 x 768-pixel display is lower than we like to see, but I’ll let it pass on a 13.3-inch laptop. Though you can see individual pixels if you bend too close over the screen like you’re deliberately trying to do your back in, it’s not as outrageously blocky as that same resolution stretched into a 15-inch laptop. It’s also matte, which should be a huge point in its favour: glossy screens may look better in nice dim conditions, but prove a nightmare under strong lighting or the naked sun.


It’s not all sunshine and pixels, though. Colours look washed out, particularly at lower brightness levels, and the maximum brightness struggles to compete with the sun even given the matte finish. There was clear vertical banding visible, too, which we haven’t seen since the early days of passive-matrix LCD screens. If you love vibrant, Apple-style screens with a glossy finish and photorealistic colours, this is not the laptop for you.


There's no onboard Ethernet, but you do get an adapter in the box.There's no onboard Ethernet, but you do get an adapter in the box.


Connectivity is, like the Series 9 laptop the Lite is modelled after, limited. There’s a single USB 3.0 port, one USB 2.0 port, and a headphone socket. An SD card reader is tucked away on the left-hand edge, helpfully protected by a spring-loaded cover. A micro-HDMI port and a proprietary port for the included Ethernet dongle sit on the same side. So, no onboard Ethernet, but you do get an adapter in the box.


You’re not so lucky for video output: there’s no cable included for micro-HDMI to regular-sized, nor does Samsung include the necessary adapter to use the mini VGA port on the right-hand side.


Wirelessly it’s the usual deal: 802.11b/g/n, and Bluetooth 4.0. Given the super-portable angle it would’ve been nice to see 3G/4G mobile internet support, but we’d hardly expect that given the price range and it’s entry-level positioning.


We’d really like to recommend Samsung’s ATIV Book 9 Lite. It does ‘mobility’ well, the battery life is just peachy, and it looks beautiful despite its plastic construction. However, it failed at the most important thing: being a useful computer. When even basic tasks proved frustrating thanks to the limits of its gutless, nameless little ‘quad-core processor’, it left us having to curb our enthusiasm and temper that recommendation.


There’s still a niche for the Lite. If you need an ultra-lightweight, long-running PC with a full-sized keyboard to take notes on during lectures, meetings or interviews, it works well. However, it’s not going to serve as a primary PC for most users: it’s the kind of laptop that you buy, if you can afford to, to use alongside a desktop or gruntier laptop.


The ATIV Book 9 Lite is an accessory for people that need almost tablet-like portability but require the screen size and keyboard of a laptop. It fills that niche reasonably, but don’t buy this one if you’re after something to provide traditional 'laptop' performance.


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