Posted on 02/26/2010 9:26:57 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
From a company called Notion Ink, it's called the Adam. Compared to an iPad it has a bigger screen, twice the battery life, all sorts of needed connectors including an HDMI connection, camera, multi-tasking and more.
And it is supposed to come out at $350.
What's interesting about this machine is the fact that it will be the first great test of the newest Nvidia Tegra cpu/gpu chip which technically should be an ideal chip for this sort of machine.
(Excerpt) Read more at marketwatch.com ...
As a Mac aficionado since 1985, I’d buy an Adam before an iPad.
No mention of the storage...guess they will just stick something inside and have various size options....
And the Android as the OS is a Huge plus.
Notion Ink Adam hands-on & digital magazine demo
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While we were with NVIDIA today, we ran into one of the guys from tablet start-up Notion Ink. Weve covered their Adam tablet several times here at SlashGear, and so jumped at the chance for a hands-on with their latest prototype unit. The company have confirmed that there will be two models on offer when the Adam hits the market in Q3 2010, one with the innovative Pixel Qi display (at 12.9mm thick) and another (11.6mm thick) regular
I thought I saw somewhere that it will take SD cards.
BUMP!
Pixel Qi developing new panel sizes; several new customers onboard
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Friday, Feb 26th 2010
t was shortly after Pixel Qi chief Mary Lou Jepsen tipped specialized tablets with multitouch back in December 2009 that we got our first glimpse of the Notion Ink Adam, and so forgive us for getting excited when the CEO confirms several more panel customers and different display sizes in the pipeline. Speaking to E-Ink-Info, Jepsen wouldnt confirm which new companies had signed up to use the hybrid display but did say that theyre going into a variety of new product categories.
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Monday, Dec 7th 2009
Pixel Qi have announced that their first batch of production displays will be ready shortly, and confirmed that the first recipients for the panels will be specialized tablet devices with multi-touch. Project lead Mary Lou Jepsen does not reveal the identity of the manufacturer using the Pixel Qi screens which work as color LCDs in regular lighting, but can be read as easily as e-ink panels in direct sunlight but did say that the companys customers will be at
She also says that increasingly these screens will be super-slim, but some customers prefer the standard thickness. It seems likely that one or more or Pixel Qis initial customers would use the displays for ebook readers, since the technology would both support video and low-power text display.
Notion Ink Tegra Android smartpad uses Pixel Qi display
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Friday, Dec 18th 2009
The Notion Ink smartpad measures 6.3 x 9.8 x 0.6 inches and weighs 1.7lbs; as well as the triband (850/1900/2100) UMTS/HSDPA, WiFi b/g and Bluetooth 2.1+EDR it also squeezes in A-GPS, a digital compass, accelerometer and proximity, ambient light and water sensors. Connectivity includes USB, HDMI, a 3.5mm headphone jack and a microphone input, and theres also a 3-megapixel autofocus camera with video recording support. Onboard storage is either 16GB or 32GB of SSD, and theres an SD slot for augmenting that.
Initially at least as its to be shown at CES the smartpad will use the regular Android UI, with full gesture support. Navigation is either via the touchscreen or a trackpad, and Notion Ink have added a matte-finish anti-glare, oleophobic and scratch-resistant coating to the Pixel Qi display. Of course, the panel itself can be viewed indoors as a regular LCD, or outdoors in either transflective mode with reduced color vibrancy or fully reflective 64-level grayscale mode. Notion Ink say theyve been developing a number of applications that should be added sometime after CES, including Office-style software, Flash-based titles and some graphics apps that include physics-based functionality. Ebook reading is also another possibility, and the company are in talks with several (unnamed) content providers.
Perhaps most importantly for a web-browsing tablet, battery life estimates are impressive.
Whats Happening at Pixel Qi Mary Lou Jepsens Blog
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August 26, 2009 at 9:43 am ·
Above is a comparison between the new Pixel Qi screen and other screens available enjoy! Mary Lou
Dedicated eReaders, multiple mode Screens, multiple purpose Devices
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December 19, 2009
Notion Inks new smartpad, which is powered by PixelQi multi-mode screens, is hard to categorize i.e.
Its neither a dedicated eReader like the Kindle, nor is it a LCD screen multi-purpose device.
It changes the game totally.
So far weve had to choose between -
Its been a clear demarcation. Now, with Pixel Qi screens we suddenly have a whole new category.
Lets consider the impact.
Screen suited for reading books
Consider the Pixel Qi screen in eReader mode -
Reflective Black and white (64 shades of grayscale).
The screen has a lot of pluses -
Take a look at this video which shows both the black and white mode and the screen in sunlight
Adam, the ipad killer made in India
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Posted 16 February 2010 - 11:06 AM
Gotta see this...
Thanks for all the info.
One simple question, with the camera built in, if you buy two, will one be able to converse in real time video with someone located in the CONUS? Seems like you should be able to!
See updates.
Particulary the video available at link on post #30.
The biggest problem I see is it has no option for pen-input.
Typing on a touchscreen is not why I would buy a tablet computer. I want to be able to quickly sketch out diagrams with my ideas at meetings and such, and the pogostick “stylus” is not a good substitute.
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Hyderabad has developed into a major hub for the Information technology industry in India. It is the Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical Capital of the Country.
map at the link.
That is likely a software question...an android question...I don’t know.
Impressive. I must add, for those here who give a damn, that I’ve spent years in the high performance computing (HPC) field. Supercomputing, in other words; primarily Linux clusters. If you look at the Top 500 list, published twice a year, of the most powerful systems on the planet....you’ll see many of the systems I used to “own” for Big Blue (in a worldwide marketing sense).
In that field, nVidia’s GPU technology is a serious game changer. In HPC, clusters are used for serious modeling/simulation, and that means serious number crunching. GPU’s are perfect for this. Think of them as math co-processors on steroids.
Traditionally, we all used generic Intel or AMD CPU’s (almost always dual proc) “pizza box” servers lashed together for clusters. Blades came later, but the idea was still the same: lots and lots of “cheap” servers running off-the-shelf CPU’s lashed together to run massive problems.
The core issue there (no pun intended) is that CPU’s do certain things very well; they aren’t dedicated math co-processors. What nVidia and their brilliant Tesla architecture brought to the table is highly significant.
Now....and I’m pulling these numbers out of my, um, ear......rather than 20 racks of Intel or AMD CPU-based servers in a cluster, you may have five racks: 2 with CPU-based servers (or maybe 3), 3 racks of GPU’s (Tesla’s...maybe 2 racks). You get the idea. FAR smaller node count, and offloading the serious number crunching (utilizing CUDA) to the GPU’s vs. more generic CPU’s.
Huge cost savings, huge power savings, huge cooling savings, far more efficiency.
That, folks, in a nutshell, is the future (frankly, the real present) in supercomputing.....and nVidia deserves one hell of a lot of credit for it.
Looks like it could be a big winner compared to it’s competition.
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