Saturday, 30 November 2024

 

Laptops , Tablets and Smartphones , I believe , could merge.  I guess this is where " the idea "  of  a Laptop/Tablet/Smartphone(ALL-in-ONE) machine with built-in DVD-RW Player ] came from.

Friday, 29 November 2024

PPPPPPPP

 


A    FoldingSmartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet      machine , if manufactured , and if released to the market , it does not mean that this machine has to be the most expensive machine out there , so much so that , many people might not be able to afford it .  I guess , it is the duty of the   hardware/software   manufacturer to ensure that  when   

A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet      when it goes  into production and release to the market ,  it should be made affordable to the masses .           

A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet     machine does not have to be designed/made  to be a very high-end machine , it does not have to be made with with  cutting edge   specifications .

A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet     machine , if designed or manufactured ,  it does not have to be made with many CPU cores until the machine hits a high-end desktop performance level .

A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet     machine , if designed or manufactured , it  does not have to be made to be a very high-end device ,  to be a premium machine to cater only for corporate/business   users , to cater only for enterprise users , to cater only for desktop/mobile gaming users.

A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet     machine , if designed or manufactured , it  should be made with decent computing performance to cater also for ordinary users who love only one machine which they can use as a Laptop , which they can use as a Tablet and also as a Smartphone .

The idea of a [ Laptop/Tablet/Smartphone(ALL-in-ONE) ]  machine , like for example , the  A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet ,  which can serve as a  Laptop , which can serve as  a  Tablet , which can serve as a  Smartphone , could change the way we use our  Laptop , our Tablet and our  Smartphone ,  for study , work and play and entertainment.


Currently , as of today August 2023 , there is no Folding Smartphone that can unfold into a                                        15.6 inches Tablet . This and this and this and this  and this  and this  and this  and this  and this are a few examples of   folding smartphones that cannot unfold into a   15.6 inches Tablet. Hopefully , in the not too distant future , folding smartphones like  this or this or this or this  or  this  or  this  or  this or  this or this ,  can unfold into a  15.6 inches  Tablet .

As of today , October 2022 , the   A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet     is one computing device that has yet to be invented . 

NNNNNN

 


Smartphones and Tablets and Laptops , I believe , could merge.  I guess this is where " the idea " of a [ Laptop/Tablet/Smartphone(ALL-in-ONE) machine with built-in DVD-RW Player ] came from.    


A few examples  of devices that , I believe ,  could be a   Laptop/Tablet/Smartone(ALL-in-ONE)  machine  are :


1.   a   15.6 inches  5G  smartphone


2.   a   15.6 inches  5G  Folding-Smartphone-that-can-unfold-into-a-15.6 inches

      Tablet  [ 1 ]


3.   a    15.6 inches   "Touchscreen"    "Auto-rotate"   "360 degrees foldable"   5G

      Cellular Laptop (regardless of the Operating System being used ,  regardless

      INTEL-based or ARM-based)    that can make telephone calls to any  landline

      telephone/number   and  reply telephone calls  from any  landline

      telephone/number    and make telephone calls to any 5G smartphone and reply

      telephone calls from any 5G smartphone .


4.   a    15.6 inches   "Touchscreen"    "Auto-rotate"   "360 degrees foldable"   5G

      Cellular Tablet (regardless of the Operating System being used ,  regardless

      INTEL-based or ARM-based)    that can make telephone calls to any  landline

      telephone/number   and  reply telephone calls  from any  landline

      telephone/number    and make telephone calls to any 5G smartphone and reply

      telephone calls from any 5G smartphone .


      

   a Tablet and a Smartphone when combine into one device , when combine into one machine , like for example ,  A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet      machine , it does not mean that this machine has to be the most expensive machine out there , so much so that , many people might not be able to afford it .  I guess , it is the duty of the   hardware/software   manufacturer to ensure that  when   A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet      machine  goes into production and release to the market , it should be made affordable to the masses .           A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet     machine does not have to be designed/made  to be a very high-end machine , it does not have to be made with with  cutting edge   specifications ,  it does not have to be made with many CPU cores until the machine hits a high-end desktop performance level , it does not have to be made to be a very high-end device ,  to be a premium machine to cater only for corporate/business   users , to cater only for enterprise users , to cater only for desktop/mobile gaming users , but it should be made with decent computing performance to cater also for ordinary users who love only one machine which they can use as a Laptop and also as a Tablet and also as a Smartphone . This idea of a [ Laptop/Tablet/Smartphone(ALL-in-ONE) ]  machine , like for example , the  A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet ,  which can serve as a  Laptop , which can serve as  a  Tablet , which can serve as a  Smartphone , could change the way we use our  Laptop , our Tablet and our  Smartphone ,  for study , work and play and entertainment.


Currently , as of today August 2023 , there is no Folding Smartphone that can unfold into a                                        15.6 inches Tablet . This and this and this and this  and this  and this  and this  and this  and this are a few examples of   folding smartphones that cannot unfold into a   15.6 inches Tablet. Hopefully , in the not too distant future , folding smartphones like  this or this or this or this  or  this  or  this  or  this or  this or this ,  can unfold into a  15.6 inches  Tablet .

As of today , October 2022 , the   A-Folding Smartphone-That-Can-Unfold-Into-a-15.6 inches-Tablet     is one computing device that has yet to be invented . 

Thursday, 28 November 2024

ERROR

 

Will people someday use only a  5G Folding Smartphone but not a  5G Laptop , but not a  5G Tablet? 


In my opinion , with a machine like the  15.6 inches 5G smartphone (a 5G smartphone which have a diagonal screen size of 15.6 inches which is comparable to the screen size of a  15.6 inches Laptop and comparable to the screen size of a  15.6 inches  Tablet) or  a  5G  Folding Smartphone  that can unfold into a  15.6 inches Tablet   that look something like  this or this ,  which can serve as a Laptop , which can serve as a  Tablet,  and can serve as a  Smartphone , if God willing,  YES .

Source :  Internet 


Yes, an Intel-based processor in a 5G cellular laptop can be better than an ARM-based processor for a number of reasons, including:
  • Performance: Intel processors can handle more sophisticated tasks per instruction than ARM processors. For example, software written for x86 can run on Arm chips, but it's much slower than native Arm code. 
  • Drivers: Drivers are often an issue with Arm-based Windows. For example, some network drivers don't work on Arm-based devices. 
  • Ecosystem: The Arm ecosystem for CPUs is less developed than Intel's.   [ 1 2 3 4 5 ]


Furthermore , with the introduction of the INTEL EVO   processor/SoC  [ 1 ] inside a 5G Laptop , I believe , an  INTEL EVO 5G Laptop can power up like 
a  phone , like a  5G smartphone , meaning , an INTEL EVO5G Laptop is switched on very quickly . Having said that , an   INTEL EVO 5G Laptop should be on par with an  ARM-based  5G Laptop when the
power is switched on .  
 

Some people say , " Connected PC sales have been a disappointment "   as a 
result of thatINTEL had stepped back from making 5G Laptops .  My simple 
answer to that is , 
firstly ,
INTEL should continue making 5G Laptops or  INTEL EVO 5G Laptops but INTEL must add this 
wonderful smartphone hardware feature in all   INTEL EVO 5G Laptops , that is ,  
all INTEL EVO 5G Laptops  not only can connect to a 5G   
network/base station/tower   but also can make telephone  telephone calls to any  landline   telephone/number [ 1 ] and reply telephone calls from any   landline   telephone/number [ 1 ]  and make phone calls to any 5G smartphone and reply phone calls from any 5G smartphone.

Secondly , a SIM Card from a 5G smartphone is interchangeable with a 5G Laptop , meaning 5G SIM Card can be swapped back and forth between a 5G
smartphone and a 5G Laptop . It is just like swapping back and forth a 5G SIM Card from one 5G smartphone to another 5G smartphone to make phone calls
and connecting to a 5G network for high-speed Internet access .

Thirdly , INTEL must bring down the price of all INTEL EVO 5G Cellular Laptops  so that it can be be available to all the masses, and ordinary consumers and not only restricted to 
business/corporate/enterprise   users only . 

Lastly , as of today November 2024 , INTEL processors are not used in mobile
or mobile device , like for example ,
smartphones or 5G smartphones.  So , with the advent of   INTEL EVO   processor/SoC   in a 5G Cellular Laptop and 
implementing phone functionality inside the  INTEL EVO 5G Cellular Laptops  ,  INTEL should utilize the full potential of the  INTEL EVO   processor/SoC  and used it in a mobile device like the
INTEL EVO 5G Cellular Laptops  as much as possible . 



Wednesday, 27 November 2024

 







Source :  Internet




Lenovo Flex 5G review: Stunning battery life ruined by Windows on ARM

App compatibility still sucks.

Lenovo Flex 5G review: 5G in a laptop, if you can find a signal
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In 2019, Lenovo announced it would be the first to make a 5G laptop with Qualcomm’s Windows on Snapdragon platform. A whole year later, the company finally started selling the Flex 5G, which is available via Verizon for a whopping $1,400. That’s more than the base model of machines like the Dell XPS 13 or MacBook Air. Why is it so expensive -- does it have superpowers? Well, if you consider very long battery life and 5G support superpowers, then the Flex 5G has them. It uses the Snapdragon 8cx chipset that’s similar to the one in the Surface Pro X and the Galaxy Book S. But like every Snapdragon PC out there, this laptop suffers from app compatibility problems and buggy performance.

Design

I’ve been spoiled by the super thin and light notebooks I’ve been testing lately, like the Samsung Galaxy Book Flex and HP’s Elite Dragonfly. In comparison, the Lenovo Flex 5G feels quite chunky. If the HP laptop is a graceful dragonfly and the Galaxy Book Flex an elegant butterfly, the Flex 5G is a dull, unremarkable moth. It’s bigger and heftier, and nowhere near as pretty. Its dark grey-silver color looks dated, while the 0.58-inch profile and 2.97-pound footprint really weigh it down.

Part of the reason the Flex 5G is heavier is simply because it is a larger laptop than the competition. As one of the first laptops supporting mmWave 5G, the Flex has limited competition. Add its Snapdragon 8cx chipset and there’s basically no other computer to compare with. The most obvious rivals are the Surface Pro X, which uses a similar CPU and offers LTE instead of 5G, and the Galaxy Book S. We’ve yet to review the latter, though. HP also sells a version of its Elite Dragonfly ultraportable with 5G, but it uses Intel processors.

The Flex has a 14-inch screen, compared to the 13-inch panels on the Surface Pro X and the Galaxy Book S and the HP Elite Dragonfly. That bigger size should mean it has more room for ports, but you’ll only find a pair of USB-C sockets on the left, as well as a power button and headphone jack on the right. Even the much sleeker Galaxy Book Flex offers three USB-C ports and an onboard S Pen. I guess the Flex’s 5G antenna takes up a lot of space.

I do appreciate that Lenovo included a physical switch on the right edge to quickly turn on airplane mode, though. I’m also glad that the bezels surrounding the display are fairly slim, so at least that part feels like a machine made for 2020 rather than 2018 (unlike the Snapdragon 835-powered ASUS NovaGo).

Display and audio

The Flex 5G’s 14-inch full HD display is decent. It won’t knock your socks off, but it is crisp enough that I could make out individual strands of fur on a sloth in a wildlife video. The Surface Pro X has a sharper resolution, but I haven’t really noticed a significant difference. When I watched a trailer for Wonder Woman on the Flex 5G, Diana’s golden lasso and Chris Pine’s shockingly blue eyes also popped. The 400-nit screen was adequate indoors but was hard to read under direct sunlight when I took it out hunting for 5G, though.

Lenovo Flex 5G review
Cherlynn Low / Engadget

The speakers flanking the keyboard could also be better. I barely heard any bass in The Weeknd’s Blinding Lights or Lizzo’s Truth Hurts, and generally songs sounded tinny. To be fair, the Surface Pro X also suffers from thin sounding audio, as do some XPS machines. This is a fairly common problem with laptops, unfortunately.

Keyboard and trackpad

As with most Lenovo notebooks, the Flex 5G has a very good keyboard, though it’s not as deep or cushy as those on the company’s ThinkPads. Every key is generously sized and the layout is evenly spaced. I’ve spent most of my quarantine on a smaller, 13-inch laptop, so it took my fingers a while to adjust to this wider layout, but everything I needed was within reach.

The Flex 5G’s trackpad is similarly roomy, though sometimes it feels a little sluggish. The cursor movement isn’t as smooth or snappy as on the Galaxy Book Flex, but I had no issues with multi-finger gestures like pinch-to-zoom or switching apps.

To the far right of the trackpad is the laptop’s fingerprint sensor. It works as expected, and offers an alternative to the IR camera above the display for Windows Hello logins. Both biometric login options are fast, so you can choose whichever you prefer.

Lenovo Flex 5G review

In use and app compatibility

The most fascinating feature of the Flex 5G is the Snapdragon 8cx CPU that keeps it running. It’s similar to the Qualcomm-Microsoft SQ1 chipset that powers the Surface Pro X, and the technical differences aren’t very clear. The 8cx is supposed to provide “extreme” performance for Qualcomm’s Windows on ARM computers, and is meant to compete against Intel’s Y-series chips for thin-and-light notebooks. In addition to the Snapdragon processor, the Flex 5G also comes with the same 8GB of RAM the Surface Pro X offers, though Lenovo provides a 256GB SSD while Microsoft’s only has 128GB at the base level.

The Flex 5G was mostly capable of managing my usual workload… Until it wasn’t. After I drained the battery with our video rundown test and restarted the laptop, getting all my Chrome tabs reloaded and apps running took an excruciating 10 minutes. I just wanted to get back into my Google Doc and address some edits or open Gmail to clear out my inbox, but each tab took minutes -- plural --to load. Even apps that weren’t reliant on an internet connection, like Events viewer or File Explorer, took forever to start. This was not the Always On experience that Qualcomm and Microsoft promised, and it was noticeably slower than other Snapdragon laptops I’ve tested.

I also ran into odd little delays here and there, like an occasional two or three-second stall when I was Alt-Tabbing to other windows or images not loading when I opened them from File Explorer, for example. But these little hiccups aren’t as frustrating as my biggest problem with Windows on ARM: confusing and incomplete app compatibility. I’ve complained about this ever since I reviewed the first Snapdragon PC. Microsoft and Qualcomm have done a lot to make Windows on ARM run better, like improving Chrome performance and adding 64-bit support. I basically live in Chrome, and the browser did feel more stable overall, and battery life seems better than before.

Geekbench 5 CPU

3DMark (Sky Diver)

ATTO (top reads/writes)

Lenovo Flex 5G (Snapdragon 8cx)

719 / 2,880

5,597

1.64GB/s / 401.11MB/s

Microsoft Surface Pro X

Not tested (was not compatible)

NA

1.85GB/s / 775.76MB/s

Samsung Galaxy Book Flex (2020, Core i7-1065G7, Iris Plus)

1,231/4,329

6,815

2.98GB/s / 2.77GB/s

Dell XPS 13 (2020, Core i7-1065G7, Iris Plus)

982/4,659

9,502

2.7GB/s / 1GB/s

But the problem, as always, comes when you need to install less popular apps. When setting up the Flex 5G, I ran into a snag almost immediately. Handbrake, one of the apps we use to benchmark performance, wouldn’t install, saying it required a 64-bit system and that my PC was only 32-bit. I also tried installing the 64-bit version of Slack and couldn’t, though the 32-bit option worked. It’s infuriating, because according to the system’s “About your PC” page, the Flex 5G runs a “64-bit operating system on an ARM-based processor.” Most of our usual Windows benchmarks also aren’t compatible.

This is a serious problem that Microsoft needs to work on because it’s crippling the entire platform, including the Surface Pro X. I understand that getting widespread app compatibility is hard, but the messaging needs to be clearer. And, more importantly, don’t lie to the user -- if 64-bit apps won’t work, don’t call this a 64-bit operating system.

Lenovo Flex 5G review
Cherlynn Low / Engadget

5G and LTE

So, app compatibility sucks, but the Flex 5G does have its merits. One of the highlights is right there in its name: 5G connectivity. Lenovo announced it was making a 5G laptop with Qualcomm back in June 2019, but took a year to actually launch the thing. The company probably needed the extra time to figure out how to get its 5G antennas in the system. The Flex 5G works with both mmWave and sub-6 Ghz technologies for up to 2 Gbps downloads over 5G. And while 5G coverage is still pretty sparse, you’ll get plenty speedy service over gigabit LTE the rest of the time.

Our review unit came with Verizon service and I was able to rely on LTE for all my work. (Note: Verizon is our parent company, but has no control over our editorial content.) I downloaded benchmarks, program installers and even had a four-way video conference with no speed or image quality issues.

The problem with Verizon’s ultra wideband 5G network is that coverage is still pretty sparse. According to the carrier’s maps, I’d have to cross the street or walk down the block for 5G, but even when I went out hunting for a signal, I never found one. It’s nice that Lenovo was able to build support for the super fast mmWave technology that Verizon’s network relies on, but I’m not sure the tradeoff in size and weight are worth it.

Battery life

At least the company didn’t compromise on battery life for 5G, though. My gosh the battery life on this thing. The multi-day runtime claims here are true. I could generally use the Flex 5G for a whole workday and part of another on a single charge. Since I haven’t been working outside much, I haven’t connected the Flex to 5G, but it’s fair to expect that would ding the battery life a bit.

Battery life

Lenovo Flex 5G

16:47

Microsoft Surface Pro X

11:45

Dell XPS 13 (2020)

15:55

Samsung Galaxy Book Flex

13:33

On our battery test, the Flex 5G’s hit an impressive 16 hour and 47 minutes, beating every other laptop we’ve tested this year by a pretty significant margin. In second place is the Dell XPS 13 with a 15:55 runtime. And that’s despite the fact that the Flex 5G only has a slightly more generous 60 Whr battery compared to Dell’s 56 Whr cell.

Lenovo Flex 5G review
Cherlynn Low / Engadget

Wrap up

The Flex 5G delivers on its two biggest draws: fast cellular speeds and long battery life. But these days, few people are traveling and the need for a long-lasting machine that will stay online when on the go is minimal. Plus, Windows on ARM still needs a lot of work.

The much prettier Surface Pro X starts at $999, and even after adding the keyboard its total of $1,200 is still cheaper than the Flex. The Galaxy Book Flex starts at $1,300, but it uses a more-powerful Intel Core i7 chipset, comes with an S Pen and has a gorgeous QLED screen.

Sure, neither of these machines support 5G (or even LTE in the Samsung laptop’s case). But $1,400 is a lot to pay for a laptop that might not run every app you need. And that’s not counting the extra $15 to $30 a month you’ll have to fork over for a data plan. If you wait till next year to buy a 5G laptop, not only will there be better coverage, but the device will likely be thinner and lighter, too. The Flex 5G is an adequate machine, but it’s not worth buying during a global pandemic and recession.

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