삼성 Series 9 과 ASUS Zenbook 을 두고 고민아닌 고민을하다가 삼성을 주문했으니 ASUS 욕망은 Nexus 7 으로 채움. 



Lucky Number 7

The Nexus 7 delivers the finest experience we’ve seen yet from an Android tablet. Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

Note to all tablet makers not named Asus: This is how you make a 7-inch tablet.

The Nexus 7, the first tablet to wear Google’s Nexus brand, sets a new standard for smaller slates, proving that just because it isn’t as big as Apple’s iPad doesn’t mean it can’t be just as useful, as fast, or as fun. If you’ve been on the fence about Android, or tablets in general, this is the tablet you’ve been waiting for.

If you’ve been on the fence about Android, or tablets in general, this is the tablet you’ve been waiting for.

While the Nexus 7 isn’t a full-on iPad-killer, it far out-classes anything else offered in the 7-inch category, and most 10-inch tablets too. The Nexus 7 does this by offering smartly designed, powerful hardware and the best Android tablet experience to date. For those who only use their gadgets to surf the web, check e-mail, play games and update their social media feeds, the Nexus 7 might be an even better choice than an iPad, given how much easier it is to carry around.

But the feature that will probably be the most enticing to consumers is the price. The Nexus 7 sells for $200 with 8GB of storage. That’s the same price as the Amazon Kindle Fire and Barnes & Noble’s Nook Tablet at the same storage capacity. If you want a bit more room to download HD movies, music, games and apps, you can get the 16GB version for $250. At these prices, the Nexus 7 is frankly a steal when you compare it to what else is out there at the same cost.

The 1280×800 IPS touchscreen is beautiful. It’s the best display I’ve seen on a 7-inch tablet, and almost as good as the Asus Transformer Pad Infinity and the third-generation iPad. It’s not quite Retina display quality, but with a pixel density of 216ppi, it’s very close. Colors are balanced without being over-saturated, a common issue on many mobile devices nowadays, particularly those from Samsung.

Also absent are any software performance problems. Where the Fire and Nook suffer from unresponsiveness, slow animations and stuttering screens, the Nexus 7 screams. In fact, Google’s tablet responds as quickly and scrolls as smoothly as just about any tablet I’ve seen, no matter the size. It feels as fast as Asus’ larger Transformer tablets, and it performs as smoothly as the iPad, even when playing high definition games such as ShadowGun or playing back HD movies.

Basically, the Nexus 7 is a beast. Navigating around Android 4.1 Jelly Bean (yes, this is the first Jelly Bean tablet) is super clean. There’s no hesitation on the part of the Nexus 7 when loading magazines, books, apps, video, games, music or web pages.

This can be attributed to Nvidia’s 1.2GHz Tegra 3 quad-core processor — yep, this is the first quad-core 7-inch tablet, too. Alongside that is a 12-core Nvidia GPU and 1GB of RAM. The only noticeable delay comes when you first turn on the Nexus 7. There’s a lag of a few seconds while your content loads into the interactive home screen widgets pre-installed by Google.

The widgets show you what content — books, music, magazines, movies and TV shows — is available in the Google Play store for you to consume, via either streaming or downloading.

The various widgets give you a taste of what’s on offer from Google Play. Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

These widgets make extensive use of cover art, so they are colorful and attractive. They’re easy to use, expanding and contracting as you cycle through the various options. Most importantly, they reduce a lot of the friction around finding stuff in Google Play, both for content you’ve already purchased, as well as enticing new options. The widgets are very much “in your face,” and they clearly suggest that Google intends to be your go-to destination for buying, renting and streaming digital media.

The Fire and the Nook — the Nexus 7′s primary competitors, which also follow the “device as content portal” philosophy — also offer an array of entertainment options on their home screens, but Google’s arrangement is far prettier to look and less intrusive. Amazon Fire’s shows a cludgy carousel of content, and even that’s better than the random assortment of book covers found on the Nook’s home screen.

These Google Play widgets come installed by default on every Nexus 7, but you can easily remove them and use a fully customized Android home screen of your own design. If you’re not into buying content from Google, you can download Amazon’s apps and get your stuff there. You can still get Netflix, or Hulu for video. Rdio, Mog, Spotify, Pandora and other music streaming services are there, too. This isn’t a user experience that forces you to buy all your content from one storefront.

It’s the perfect size for reading books, websites, magazines and news feeds. Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

The Nexus 7 is a device tailored to consuming digital entertainment. The operating system is confined to a portrait landscape, and there’s an app tray persistent across the bottom of the homescreen. The only time the Nexus 7 shifts into landscape mode is when the content you’re consuming calls for it, such as watching a movie or playing a widescreen game.

The smaller form factor makes the Nexus 7 ideal for reading books.

The smaller form factor makes the Nexus 7 ideal for reading books, and magazines are a joy to read here as well, thanks in part to a “text view” mode that pulls the text from an article out of its magazine layout and into a more easily consumable e-book-style view.

As good as it is for running apps, the Nexus 7 did leave me with one complaint that persists across all Android tablets — there still aren’t as many tablet-optimized apps for Android as there are for the iPad. A 7-inch screen makes this deficiency much less of a problem than it is on 10-inch tablets. But for key apps like Twitter, Facebook, Vimeo, Fandango and Foursquare (just to name a few), you’re stuck using a stretched phone app. The experience isn’t horrible, but when compared to what’s available on the iPad, it’s obvious things could be better. It’s a shame too, because when it comes to entertainment, you can use the Nexus 7 to do nearly everything you can do on an iPad, but the smaller number of tablet-specific apps leaves the device feeling less capable.

I would also like the Nexus 7 to have included a rear camera, but there is a front-facing 1.2-megapixel camera that’s good for video chat and passable for photos. Bluetooth and NFC (two features common in phones but not lower-priced tablets) are included here, as well as a gyroscope and accelerometer.

The build quality on the Nexus 7 is excellent. The display looks fantastic, and the rest of the device is best-in-class. It’s thin (0.41-inches) and lightweight (about 12 ounces). At 4.7 inches wide and 7.81 inches tall, it’s small enough to fit in the back pocket of a pair of jeans. The back is covered in a black rubberized plastic that’s dimpled — it feels sort of like a pair of leather driving gloves. The design really works. The Nexus 7 looks classy, and it’s comfortable to hold with one hand or two. Throwing it into a purse, messenger bag, backpack or coat pocket is no problem at all.

Since it’s a smaller tablet, battery life is about the same as a large smartphone: 7 or 8 hours under normal use. Watching HD movies or playing games non-stop will blow through that in half the time or less. But overall, battery life is about what one would expect.

Google Now is one of the new features in the tablet’s native Android Jelly Bean operating system. Photo by Ariel Zambelich/Wired

Being a Nexus device, the Nexus 7 runs an unaltered version of Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. To put it plainly, Jelly Bean is the best version of Android Google has ever released, and on the Nexus 7, the OS feels tailored for this device.

Two major new Jelly Bean features, the Google Now info cards and a voice-activated search system, work expertly on the Nexus 7. Google Now presents the pieces of information you frequently search for in a series of “cards.” You can access these cards at any time by swiping upwards from the bottom of the screen, even while running different apps. For me, Google Now guessed I wanted to see local weather and directions from home to work (or from work to home, depending on the time of day). These two cards show up in Google Now automatically. It’s helpful, and it gives me what I’m looking for before I even request it, which is the point of Google Now. Eventually, the system will learn my frequent searches, and those cards will show up, too. You can delete cards you don’t want to see, or prioritize the most important ones.

The Nexus 7 delivers the best Android tablet experience we’ve seen so far.

Voice Search allows you to run basic web queries by asking a question rather than typing one in. It’s an extension of what’s already offered in Google’s mobile search apps, but it’s been refined for Jelly Bean. Answers come quickly — whether in the form of links, Google Now cards or a sweetly spoken response — but Google still doesn’t understand a lot of natural language or slang. You have to be pretty obvious in your requests. “Best wine shop nearby,” works better than, “Where can I get the best bottle of wine around here?”

Google Now and the speech-enabled search features are only found in Jelly Bean, and the Nexus 7 is the only way to get it for now, though it’s weeks away from arriving on Galaxy Nexus phones.

The the Nexus 7 boasts some other firsts. It’s the first production tablet built on Nvidia’s Kai program, which essentially lays out a recipe for building a quad-core tablet at a $200 price point. Before the end of the year, we’ll likely see similarly performing slates from other Android hardware partners. Undoubtedly, Amazon and Barnes & Noble will participate, though likely while running Android version who-knows-what forked into something unrecognizable and free of Google’s influence.

But make no mistake. The Nexus 7 delivers the best Android tablet experience we’ve seen so far. There simply hasn’t been a Google-powered device this compelling ever before. With a mix of top-notch hardware, a convenient and portable size, and easy access to entertainment from Google or anybody else outside of Apple and Microsoft, there isn’t much more you could want from a tablet, other than more tablet-tailored apps.

Overall, the Nexus 7 provides the best tablet experience outside of Apple’s iPad, though the Nexus 7 is far easier to carry around. This is the first Android tablet I’d go so far as to say I love using.

WIRED This is the Android tablet you’ve been waiting for. Beautiful, detailed display. Handsome design and fantastic build quality. Jelly Bean feels like it was built for the Nexus 7. The first 7-inch quad core tablet, it has Porsche-like speed and agility.

TIRED Android still doesn’t have enough tablet-optimized apps. No rear camera.

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대학교 입학과 함께 구입한 Dell XPS M1330 이 시름시름하다. 마더보드와 선풍기도 갈았지만 근래 미디어카드 문제인지 음영상 재생이 버겁버겁이다. 청소도 자주하지만 전만큼의 속도가 아니다. 건전지, 내장카메라, d 드라이브가 죽었다. 구입 후 한 달즈음 되어 콩크리트에 떨어트려 외부커버가 찌그러지기도 햇는데 아프지도 않았다. 여기저기 외상이 많다. 용량은 Terra 외장을 사용하기에 넉넉하다. 

IT 전공하던 친구는 나에게 할아버지를 사용하고있다고 했다, 하하. 나의 할아버지 노트북, 색상은 핑크이시다. 나는 핑크색을 좋아하지 않는다. 이 나이 아니면 언제 분홍 컴퓨터를 사용할까, 라는 생각에 녀석을 택했다. 한국에서 녀석을 주문했지만 나의 미국 입국날짜보다 늦게 도착하였다. 그리하여 늦게 들어오는 친구가 녀석을 나에게 배달해주었다. 미국에서의 첫 해에 오지에서 길을 잃었었다. 스마트폰이 없던 시절, 녀석을 길가에서 꺼내들어 왠 호텔을 무선인터넷으로 집으로 가는 버스노선을 검색하여 집을 찾았다. 버스에서 펼쳐서 나 버스 탔다고 무언의 동영상도 촬영했다. 외로운 밤들에 녀석으로 영상통화도 상당히 많이했다. 슬프다는 행복하다는 글도 상당히 상당히 많이 수만장을 썼다. 몸과 마음이 아파 일주일 이주일 내내 녀석과 영화만 보기도했다. 녀석을 통해 태지의 음악과 영상을 잔뜩 보고 눈물도 잔뜩 흘렸다. 녀석으로 논문도 쓰고 자료도 찾고 블로그도 쓰고 트위터도 쓰고 이메일도 수천 수만통을 작성하였다.비행기표도 예매하고 여행지도 정리하고, 친구들과 사진과 연락도 공유했다. 녀석으로 요리도배우고 이사 할 집도 찾고 원서도 작성하고 그림도 그렸다. 추억이 담겨있다. 아팠던 동안 함께 해 준 것이 가장 기억에 남는다, 많이 아팠으니까. 조금은 괜하지만 의미부여가 된다 하하. 오래 버티어 준 녀석의 생명력이 고맙다. 



상당히 알뜰하게 사용했다, 뿌듯하다. 사실상 큰 문제는 아직이다. 


SNS 에 노트북 추천을 문의하니 맥 Mac 추천이 압도적이다. 애플 Apple 은 i pod 몇 개. Mac 은 사용해 본 적이 없다. 근래 잡스 전기를 읽는 터라 애플에 호감이 높은 편이다. 추천은 Mac Book Pro 와 Mac Air 로 나뉘더라. 비주류를 좋아하는 나로써는 일단 고민. 


Lenovo 와 IBM 도 관심이 간다, 아는 것도 없으면서 괜히 하하. Dell 도 상당히 만족스럽게 사용했기에 염두에 둔다. Seattle 살아서 그런가, 이 녀석이랑 정이 들어 그러한가보다. 



와중 Wired 는 리뷰를 잘 쓴다, 유용하고 재미지다. 댓글 많고 유용하고 웃기다 푸핳핳. 

http://www.wired.com/reviews/2012/06/samsung-series-9-2012/


결국 나는 다시 PC 를 구입. 마이크로소프트 스토어 Microsoft store 에서 $699 이상 값의 PC 를 구입하는 학생에게 X Box 4 GB 을 주더라 야호. Samsung Series 9 2012 15" 주문 완료.



  • Samsung Series 9 NP900X4C-A01US (2012) 
  • Notebooks
  •  
  • · $1,400 as tested 
  • · Samsung

The 2012 edition of Samsung’s well-regarded Series 9 laptop invites you to play a game of numbers. Here are the relevant digits: 15-inch screen. 15 millimeters thick. 3.7 pounds.

The last figure is the showstopper. This isn’t just the lightest laptop in its size class, it’s lighter than every 14-inch laptop I’ve reviewed and even lighter than some 13.3-inch laptops I’ve seen, too. If ultrabooks had a 15-inch category, the Series 9 would be the leader of the pack.

For users who desire broader screen real estate and a more spacious typing experience — yet aren’t willing to sacrifice portability — the 2012 Series 9 is a near-perfect pick.

But for now they don’t, and that puts the Series 9 in an interesting and unique market position. For users who desire broader screen real estate and a more spacious typing experience — yet aren’t willing to sacrifice portability — the 2012 Series 9 is a near-perfect pick.

What’s under the hood? A 1.7GHz 3rd generation Core i5, 128GB SSD, 8GB of RAM, and integrated graphics. The screen — an odd 15.0 inches — packs in 1600×900 pixels and is extremely bright. Altogether, it’s one of the most dazzling displays I’ve come across.

The Series 9 is also an impressive performer, turning in the best general application benchmark scores I’ve seen on an Ivy Bridge system to date while still pulling out 4.5 hours of battery life on a full-screen video loop at maximum brightness. Of course, it’s a no-show on graphics tests, a necessary sacrifice for a machine of this size and weight.

The design is strikingly thin, yet there's still a fine selection of ports. Photo by Peter McCollough/Wired

The Series 9 even goes above and beyond with its port selection considering its tiny size: two USB 3.0 ports, one USB 2.0, and an SD card reader, plus micro connectors for HDMI, VGA, and wired Ethernet (dongle included). Even the power brick is small enough to add only a minimal additional burden to your travel bag.

Samsung has been dinged in the past for having wonky clickpads on its laptops, and the kinks finally seem to have been ironed out here. I had no trouble with tracking and taps being registered, and the depress-to-click action works well.

If I have only one complaint (and I do) about the Series 9, it’s the keyboard. 15mm doesn’t give you much depth to work with, and the shallow travel on these keys makes touch typing difficult. At $1,400, the price may be an additional concern for some buyers, but I’d happily argue that the design and power of this good-looking laptop merit the extra outlay.

WIRED Amazingly portable and powerful, with a screen to die for. Surprisingly sturdy, tough design. “Silent mode” kills fans.

TIRED Keyboard backlighting too dim to be useful, even at highest brightness setting. Thin profile means very shallow key travel.

The keyboard suffers a bit from the thinness of the computer's case. Photo by Peter McCollough/Wired







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