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Ultrabooks need more to compete against tablets

05 Sep 2011

Last week at the IFA show in Berlin, the world got a look at several of the first Ultrabook systems based on Intel's concept for a new ultra-light category to rival tablets for portability and instant-on capability.

The results are somewhat underwhelming, and add fuel to the sceptics' view that Ultrabook is simply a new name for a thin-and-light laptop. If Intel wants Ultrabook to draw consumers away from tablets like Apple's iPad, the company is going to have to convince the vendors to do better than this.

To be fair, there is nothing at all wrong with the models shown at IFA, which sport super-thin designs. Acer's Aspire S3 is claimed to be just 13mm at its thinnest point, while Lenovo's IdeaPad U300s is not much thicker.

Nevertheless, the systems are based on the same second-generation Intel Core processors as many other laptops launched this year, and the remainder of the specifications seem to be fairly standard as well. Lenovo's model includes 4GB memory and a 256GB SSD, for example.

The models announced so far are also light, in the 1.2kg to 1.4kg range, but again this is nothing unusual for a thin-and-light laptop. In fact, most of the Ultrabooks shown so far are simply laptops with few design features to make them stand out from the crowd.

Pricing could ultimately determine whether Ultrabook is going to be a success or a failure as a category, and Intel has previously signalled that it wants these models to be more affordable than ultra-thin or ultra-light systems have traditionally been.

With the IdeaPad and the Aspire expected to start at about £700, these are effectively hitting the mainstream price bracket, but both are above Intel's target price of $1,000 (about £620) for Ultrabooks, and much more costly than most tablets.

Will buyers be swayed by the Ultrabook? Consumers wanting a convenient device for web access and digital media will probably prefer a tablet, while those needing a keyboard for word processing are still more likely to opt for a netbook or entry-level laptop at around the £300 mark.

If anyone is going to buy an Ultrabook, our guess is that it is most likely to be a business customer. However, this is just the first generation of Ultrabook, and Intel is reported to be planning a second wave based on the upcoming Ivy Bridge processor platform.

Even so, it looks like vendors will need to get their prices down further, or come up with something more imaginative than a slim but otherwise conventional laptop design, to draw consumers away from tablets.

In pictures: past, present and future collide at the Gadget Show

13 Apr 2011

V3.co.uk spent a busy morning at the Gadget Show in Birmingham's delightful NEC Arena this week to take a glimpse at some of the innovations on display at the annual event.

Among a slew of tablets and laptops for consumers and businesses, including several from Lenovo, there were one or two interesting and noteworthy products on display.

Below: Lenovo's IdeaPad S1 tablet will give users the ability to use a digitiser pen to take more efficient notes than hammering on a touch-screen keyboard, and will be out in the next month or so in the UK.

Lenovo's Sl IdeaPad tablet should be out in April or May

Below: Underlining the desire for tablets of any kind in the consumer space, Elonex had a range of cheap 'media tablets' on display. The 5in version costs just £59 and it wouldn't be surprising to see them in an Argos catalogue at Christmas.

The five inch tablet from Elonex underlines the growing desire for these devices in all formats

Below: Slightly more high tech was Warwick University, which was showing off its 3D scanning and printing technology. This accurately captures the dimensions and contours of an object, such as a human hand, before using the measurements to produce an exact 3D representation of that shape which can be used to fashion corresponding physical items.

A representative on the stand explained that the system had recently produced a pair of gloves for a surgeon that fitted his hand exactly, for example.

3D laser scanning in action by the University of Warwick

Below: While tablets and touch screens dominated, the Centre for Computing History was keen to make sure everyone remembered where they came from, with a selection of ancient devices (in computing terms) on display including a Commodore 64 and an old Apple Mac.

A long way from the iMac and iPad

 

The Commadore 64 one of the original computers


Below: Even R2-D2 was in town to catch the eye of those walking past electronics
retailer PC World.

R2D2 stopped by the Gadget Show

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