Monday, December 12th 2011
Samsung Introduces the Series 5 Ultrabook
Today Samsung Electronics unveiled the Series 5 Ultra, a 'high-performance' ultrabook which will debut in South Korea at the end of this month and will probably (hopefully) reach other markets in early 2012.
This new mobile solution makes use of an aluminum chassis, comes in 13.3-inch and 14-inch versions (the 13-inch model is 14.9 mm thick, the 14-inch is 20.9 mm), and features a yet unnamed Intel processor, up to 8GB of RAM, a 500GB/1TB hard drive or a 128GB solid state drive, and 8GB of ExpressCache memory which ensures lower boot and access times (Samsung claims that its machine can come out of sleep mode in under 2 seconds). The 14-inch unit boasts a Radeon HD 7550M discrete graphics card and an optical drive while the 13.3-inch model has to settle for an integrated Intel GPU and no ODD.
The Series 5 Ultra also has WiFi, a webcam, two USB 3.0 ports, and both D-Sub and HDMI outputs. Pricing in Korea is said to range from about US $1,121 to US $1,339.
This new mobile solution makes use of an aluminum chassis, comes in 13.3-inch and 14-inch versions (the 13-inch model is 14.9 mm thick, the 14-inch is 20.9 mm), and features a yet unnamed Intel processor, up to 8GB of RAM, a 500GB/1TB hard drive or a 128GB solid state drive, and 8GB of ExpressCache memory which ensures lower boot and access times (Samsung claims that its machine can come out of sleep mode in under 2 seconds). The 14-inch unit boasts a Radeon HD 7550M discrete graphics card and an optical drive while the 13.3-inch model has to settle for an integrated Intel GPU and no ODD.
The Series 5 Ultra also has WiFi, a webcam, two USB 3.0 ports, and both D-Sub and HDMI outputs. Pricing in Korea is said to range from about US $1,121 to US $1,339.
11 Comments on Samsung Introduces the Series 5 Ultrabook
1./ We are returning back to the superior Matte Screen on laptops/netbooks
2./ That Samsung are using great looking models in their PR, unlike some of the scary girls we have seen over the last couple of weeks from other Asian manufacturers!
Just comparing an old XPS M1730... damn 4 years old tech... it shipped with an bleeding edge IPS panel (3 types). There are many examples like that...
What are these? Again photozhoped(some will understand) TN LCD screen on slide shows, design wise mimicking some sort maker with an bitten fruit on its logo. I can not complain about the babe though, not bad at all :D.
I don't care about the specs, it is a laptop, I do not need to run cysis on it... This machine is quite dis balanced productivity wise...13.3-inch and 14-inch with 8GB ram LoL...
Go!
Of course it's still a TN and it's still shit compared to an IPS screen :cool:
And I was repair technician for old CRT TVs. Many brands ranging from Nokia to Sony and even soviet made ones etc... There for I have polished my critical eye view to normal color space and gamut and of course viewing angles... then the LCD age came in, I could not stand the fake image for long (just as fake boobs? :D).
And it still pisses me off... The current LCD manufactures are robbing us, they could've make better eIPS/VA/IPS screens for laptops, as it's very crucial for them to be independent of viewing angles. It is called poor competition... :confused:
Yeah, you're right. There few in the market still and TN tech has progressed, they cannot be compared to old ones for sure, but the main flaws have remained. At least we have still hope till the quadHD invasion comes in at last.
But again, if I am looking upon this product, for that price and features, I've would've preferred a perfect screen that costs just 20-50$ more in the real life, than this one...
Nah... I'll skip that... that old XPS that is 5 years old does the same(shame eh?). If we want battery life (Who does gaming on batteries? :wtf:), I chose ARM solution. Ipad 2 or Asus Transformer likes with keyboard is more suited for surfing and writing simple stuff for hours over the social web.
This product is sort of semi gaming MMORPG machine that has disguised it self as innocent Ultrabook (sounds gay to me), I am hiding my true nature - lol. I cannot justify the existence of this product nor as gamer, nor as a engineer, nor as mere consumer. I am not objective, I know that but I hope you understand my point of view also. It just a mere fragile toy, not a machine.
Manufacturers should really start putting at least e-IPS if they really don't want to use the more expensive (and better) S-IPS.
At the beginning the panels would be expensive yes, but after you ramp up production prices would fall and we would all have a much better display for a similar price.
They even ditched the 16:10 ratio on laptops which is a real shame.
I like having my web browser, office, my most used apps etc to a RAM drive for instant use
Beautiful...
But, why buy a laptop that is going to have its chipset and CPU outdated in a few months?
Specially since the incoming Ivy Bridge CPU is going to work much cooler and with a significant augment of battery autonomy.
Apparently all Ultrabooks and notebooks released before May 2012 won't be allowed to ever upgrade to Ivy Bridge. Intel has not comfirmed otherwise.
www.cpu-world.com/news_2011/2011121301_Details_of_embedded_and_OEM_mobile_Ivy_Bridge_CPUs.html