Jan 12, 2013

Torres Del Paine National Park


A WOWZER Moment!
Our bus crests a hill revealing first view of Torres del Paine (Towers of the Blue Sky) National Park.


Seeing Torres Del Paine was a priority for me. It was grand and spectacular. We spent 3 days and two nights at Hotel Lago Grey which offered breathtaking views of the "Towers".


Dawn hunkering down behind a concrete block to video tape the mountains

It's true what they say about the winds of Patagonia. The day we arrived it was gale force winds and we could barely stand without getting blown over.


The back of the bus provided some wind protection


Trekkers in the Park. A popular 8 day trail circles the main set of Towers.


Crossing the fast-moving Rio Pingo

First day . . . taking a hike to a major viewpoint


Through a forest of Beech trees


The white thing is a iceberg, not a ship


Hiking across a very long sand-bar on Lago Grey


Whipping winds creating waves and white-caps

At the end of the sandbar is an island with a viewpoint of the Horns and Glacier


Gnarly tree shaped by constant gale winds


In front of the Towers and Horns


Boat-shaped iceberg on Lago Grey


Clouds parting to reveal more of the Horns of Paine


Towers to left (white spires) and Horns (dark peaks) of Paine around 8,500' - 9,500' tall


A grand view from Lago Grey (west view) from our hotel


A forest fire started in December 2011 denuded the low ridge below the Horns


Cerro Paine Grande - 10,332', tallest peak on Lago Grey


Early morning photos



The view from hotel deck


Another view of Horns from Lake Nordenskjold (southeast view)

On Lake Nordenskjold


The different colors of the Horns are result of tectonic and glacial forces that carved the massif. During the ice-age, the dark colored rock stuck above the ice. The granite which was not covered by glaciation retained the dark color. The light-colored parts are result of movement of glaciers and wind erosion.



If you look very close and use your imagination, you can see the silhouette of cowboy riding a horse on the rock-face on the right. Even a lasso above the head . . .


Hotel Lago Grey dining room with big windows


Bar room


Dining room with grand view


Chin-chin!! . . . pisco sour time


Dinner at Hotel Lago Grey


Julio, our Chilean guide in native dress, jumped out of the bushes and told us a story of native people's life on Lago Grey


It was a surprising performance . . . very nice Julio!

Via javageno

Koh Tao Travel Experince


I'm sitting on the porch of our little, old, wooden bungalow in Tanote Bay on Koh Tao's east coast. Music comes from a bar behind us, a local band plays reggae music, a bit out of tune but not too bad, just too loud for sleep and that's why I'm writing the blog. Now suddenly it's quiet! Black out, as so often during night times here. Yesterday I sat at the same place reading because of the bar on the other side of our bungalow where bumping electronic music kept me away from sleeping but tonight it's quiet and dark in Poseidon's bar. Now the electricity is back, sadly those black outs never last long enough.


After our friends, Riikka and Mikko started their journey back home from the Krabi airport, we changed over to Thailand's east coast and across the gulf, the ferry stopped at Koh Samui first, at Koh Pha Ngan later where we changed the boat on to Koh Tao. We called ahead to book a room as Christmas was only a week away and places started to fill up. We stayed in the JP Resort in Chalok Baan Kao bay, south of the famous Sairee beach because we wanted some quietness for reading, relaxing and snorkeling.



We then found out that a friend of Anni was on the same island, quite a coincidence because we met him in Ao Nang too. Together with him, his girlfriend, small son and family members, all Finnish of course, we booked a long-tail boat for a snorkeling trip around the island where we could decide where to go and where to stop. It was a brilliant day. The water around Koh Tao is incredibly clear and very rich in fish and corals where they haven't been destroyed yet, either by tourists or anchors of the numerous boats ashore. Highlight for everyone was probably Shark bay, not just a fancy name, we saw plenty of black tip reef sharks, some of them massive, I myself counted nine sharks in about 15 minutes.



Another day all of us went to Nang Yuan island, basically three islands connected by sand and crowded with tourists. They have a funny or annoying rule, depends how you look at it, no one's allowed to bring fins or plastic bottles onto the island. Doesn't count for the hundred or so divers around all the dive spots nearby or near the beach, learning skills on the bottom of the ocean, with fins. What hurts the corals more, a snorkeler with fins on the surface or a diver with fins on the bottom? I didn't get it, especially because the beaches are sandy without corals a long way out into the sea. We also snorkeled off Sairee beach where we found a beautiful reef parallel to the beach, we didn't expect that in front of the busy main beach. And the sunsets viewed from there are stunning!


We spent a great time with great people in truly magnificent nature but they left soon for a visa run and we were alone again. Then I got a cold and couldn't snorkel anymore. We also decided to move to another place because ours at JP's was a bit characterless and very hot as it was a concrete and brick room. Anni asked around and found a nice place called Taraporn on the far north side of the same bay. We moved into our bungalow and were happy as we got quite a bargain, 500 Baht is relatively cheap during christmas peak season. I was getting sicker from day to day and was looking forward to a good night's sleep, the ocean only meters away and with gentle waves that would follow me into sleep, I hoped.


Then, after dinner time, the music started. First from the main beach, carried across the bay and then from Taraporns bar. First at a modest volume but with the rising consume of alcohol also the volume of the music rose. Peak was at around midnight, quietness came at 03:30am. Every night. I didn't mind a christmas party or two but it was every night. And at the 27th it was someone's birthday party, louder than anything before and trust me, earplugs didn't help. So I spent lots of time outside, waiting for 03:30 to come. After the five nights we already paid, we left for Tanote bay. We found a bungalow for 400 Baht and this bay is famous for its good snorkelling and as it is far away from everything, only accessible over an awful concrete and dirt track, so we were sure to find peace. And quietness.



When we first saw our little hut we were delighted. An old, wooden bungalow only about 50 meters from the sea, a porch facing it, just perfect. And quiet! Just the sounds of waves, geckos and squirrels that jump from tree to tree above our porch. Then nighttime came and so did the music. First only little but it got louder and louder the later it got. We saw the restaurant next to our bungalow when we moved in but we thought hey, we're in a far away place, who wants to party here? The same as in the last place, not many.


First it was Sunshine divers, a big and busy dive company in Chalok Ban Kao and now it is Poseidon in Tanote bay. The Sunshine company had the AWARE sticker on their windows, an organization dedicated to saving sharks, I'm also a member. This is all very nice but during the hours I lie awake and listened to their bumping sounds I couldn't get this sticker out of my mind. Aware. Most dive companies on Koh Tao are very aware of their environment, organize clean-up days to collect rubbish from beaches or the sea bottom, they save or breed turtles and help sharks but one of these companies I got to now only through their so cool parties and music and around the others gather people already at lunchtime, holding their beers. Where's the "aware" here? Do they only care about the divers environments but not about their neighbors? How can they blast music all night long when the next bungalow is only steps away? Does everyone have to join them and party, if not you're a loser anyway?


We met more people here that seek quietness than people that are in need of more party. Two minutes before midnight at new years eve I went over to Poseidon to grab a drink and I found the place basically empty. Five people sat or lied around a table, music blasting but no sign of party, the drunk barkeeper gave me a beer out of a coolbox and went back to "business". If even at new years evening the bars stay empty, why the hell don't they turn off their music and power a fridge instead? So our search goes on, we'll go back to the west coast soon in the new year and look for a quiet spot but we gave half up already. Why not go to Sairee beach with cheap accommodation and music everywhere, at least it's cheap.

Korean Pop Music Out To Conquer The World

A host of young Korean stars are taking to the stage in London, New York and beyond in a bid to crack one of the final global frontiers for Asian culture -- pop music.


"K-pop", as Korean pop is called, has made major inroads into Japan, the world's second largest music market.

But breaking into key countries further afield like Britain, Germany, France and, most crucially, the United States, has so far eluded acts who may be household names at home but remain virtual unknowns outside Asia.

Korean bands are not the only ones trying to be the next Britney Spears, Lady Gaga or Justin Bieber.

Japanese artists, some of them "J-pop" superstars, have also looked overseas for new audiences, although the size of their own market, only just behind the United States in the world rankings, means they have less incentive.

"It is a pain for a lot of these Japanese bands to make the effort to try and penetrate overseas markets," said Steve McClure, executive editor of McClure's Asia Music News and an authority on the region's music scene.

"Time spent doing that is time not spent here and it's a really fast-paced market and you have to work at it," he told Reuters, speaking from Japan.

Foreign music accounts for around a quarter of Japanese record sales, and the top 10 albums on record are all by local artists. Hikaru Utada holds the record with "First Love" from 1999, while Mariah Carey is the biggest international artist.

K-POP VS. J-POP

McClure, like many others, believes that K-pop stands a better chance at success globally than J-pop, although even that is far from certain.

The structure of Korea's relatively small music market is such that telecom companies control a large proportion of revenues, he said, meaning bands have an economic incentive to look abroad.

And K-pop acts, often created and nurtured by savvy record companies like S.M. Entertainment, are being groomed for specific markets -- learning Japanese, for example, and fitting in with Japan's musical mores.

One recent success story has been the nine-member South Korean girl band Girls' Generation, whose first full-length Japanese album sold over 500,000 copies in Japan.

McClure also argued that Korean pop acts, though often manufactured, were generally more professional than their Japanese rivals and produced a better sound.

The most obvious, and biggest barrier to Asian acts breaking regions like Europe and North America is language.

Since music is about communicating ideas and feelings, common language helps. And the prevalence of English makes it easier for a singer from Toronto, for example, than one from Tokyo.

"The language barrier is probably the biggest thing that sets us apart from the global (arena)," said G.NA, a 24-year-old Canadian-Korean singer whose first language is English but who has found success in Korea.

She, along with two other K-pop acts, will be appearing at London's 02 Academy Brixton on December 5 as part of what the PR company handling the gig called "The Invasion of K-Pop".

It follows a K-pop concert at New York's Madison Square Garden in October. Those and other similar gigs outside Asia underline the ambition of K-pop acts and management companies to conquer the West and beyond.

It may be less invasion and more a small-scale foray, but promoters say there are encouraging signs for K-pop.

"We can't spend too much money if there is no market for us," said Ronnie Yang, head of CABA Entertainment who is organising the London gig featuring artists from Cube Entertainment.

"But we feel this is the right stage for developing a new market -- there is demand and it is higher than before."

G.NA, for one, is not getting lost in the hype. Chance, she says, is as important as anything else.

"This industry is kind of like gambling," she told Reuters by telephone from Seoul. "You lose something, and you may lose everything. You may win and win more than expected. I think there's a lot of luck.

"It does depend on how much we try, but no matter how hard we try, if the circumstances don't work out, then things may not work out the way we planned. This concert is huge -- if people don't like it that could be the end of that."

"GENRE-SPECIFIC"

The wide pop genre may be the hardest market to crack abroad, but there has been success in the United States and elsewhere within narrower categories of music like classical, dance, rock and heavy metal.

Japanese heavy metal band X Japan staged a North American tour in 2010 catching the attention of major news outlets, and have visited Europe, Latin America and Asia this year.

L'Arc-en-Ciel, a Japanese rock group, has flirted with the United States and Europe, and plans a 2012 world tour.

The event is limited in scale so far, however, with seven dates showing on the website including indigO2 in London with a capacity of around 2,500.

The band's guitarist Ken alluded to a cultural barrier which has proven tough to break down.

"In Japan I am always listening to music from the U.S. and the UK," he told Reuters by telephone, speaking through a translator.

"But I never really got the impression people in the UK were listening to music from other parts of the world. So I'm really looking forward to getting a sense of how those people in Britain will perceive our music."

McClure added: "Music is meant to be the universal language...well, yes and no.

"There does seem to be this inability to accept an Asian face in the world pop music market place. I don't know why that is, as there are Asians who have done well in other spheres."

Lockitron: The Smart Door Lock for Smartphone


Lockitron has just outed a new cellphone-controlled keyless entry system, sporting a raft of new bells and wireless whistles. The WiFi-connected product mounts over your existing deadbolt "in seconds," according to the company, and lets you or those you trust control your lock from anywhere in the world by SMS or the internet.


You can also unlock your door in person without lifting a finger if you have an iPhone 4S or 5, as the Lockitron will sense your approach using Bluetooth 4.0 -- a feature that may extend to NFC and Android devices in the future, too. To top it off, the system can notify you when a friend or relative returns home, and it has a knock sensor to let you know if someone's come by to visit. Lockitron exceeded its self-imposed minimum order limit by 250 percent in less than a day, so if you'd like to pre-order one at the current $149 price and get it for March 2013, hit the source.

Booth Babes CES 2013


'Booth babes' have been one of the more unfortunate features of tech trade shows for years. Women (we've never seen any male booth babes) chosen for their looks are paid to hang around a company's booth and attract attendees.

We've seen some fairly egregious examples over the years, but none more so than this one at #CES 2013: Four women dressed in body paint and little else were displayed at a company's booth, like sculptures. The women looked straight ahead with bored expressions, and were not allowed to interact with attendees. The company's own Instagram feed described them as "fembots."

It was not immediately clear how this display was supposed to relate to the product in question, a hard drive.

Via mashable

Transparent AMOLED Display


The OLED display technology is came with a super concept laptop that feature a see-through AMOLED display.The display has a resolution of 960x540. The transparency(optics) of the screen is about 40% but color are very decent and vibrant.


Spider Computer


Its three legs can easily be folded out, allowing it to be placed on a flat surface. The mirror head opens, and the projection is directed towards the table surface or a wall. Digital correction compensates for angular differences in projection versus surface. When legs are folded into the body, it becomes a mobile device, used as a phone, for messages etc. Circular LCD display with graphic interface.

Designer: Nikolaus Frank.


The Spark mission is to promote better living through better design. The Spark founders believe Design is an important, relevant tool to help build a better world. We feel that Design and designers act as catalysts, addressing problems and improving our lives and our Earth. Designers may be from anywhere, of any age, of any education. But they design!


Via yankodesign

Google+ Feature

Its 2013 Want to Make the BEST OF Being Connected? Then Best Learn About This Little Known Google+ Feature!:


Your friends WANT to get in touch with you easily...SOMETIMES they are ON your page...wall...stream...whatever we are calling it these days. And they think.. WOW I should say hi! But they don't!!!!

Why?

Because they have to leave your page and go back to THEIR page...to leave YOU a message! Its not really logical... but its not really your fault.. its one of Google Plus' least known about or understood features!!!

Watch the video and find out!

Korea Wave Hits Middle East

Requests for Bae Yong-joon’s telephone number or e-mail address and for Yoon Doh-hyun’s hit song “I Think I Love You” are common among some 1,000 e-mails and letters Bae Jung-ok, a producer of the Arabic-language production team of KBS’ Radio Korea International (RKI), receives every month from listeners in Arab nations. Yet three or four years ago, a mere 20 to 30 arrived, swelling to about 100 last year. “Though it is still in an initial stage, you could say that the Korean Wave has reached the Middle East.”

Students majoring in Korean at Ain Shams University in Cairo, Egypt hold pictures of Bae Yong-joon and Choi Ji-woo, the two leads of “Winter Sonata,” on Friday. A male student in the bottom of the picture wears clothes based on the costumes worn by Bae in the soap.
Egypt was unclaimed ground until late last year, when the KBS hit soap “Winter Sonata” was aired there. The response was explosive. More than 300 Egyptians launched a fan club and opened a “Winter Sonata” website, and a growing number of people are requesting a rerun. “Unfortunately, there has been no follow-up Korean drama since ‘Winter Sonata’ was aired. I’m dying to watch another Korean drama,” one says.

Members of the “Winter Sonata” fan club exchange original soundtrack CDs online. At the request of Egyptian viewers, KBS has opened an Arabic version of the drama’s website. On it, one Egyptian wrote “I’ve become a fan of Korea, the country of ‘Winter Sonata.’” Kim Shin-il, a producer of KBS, says it’s evidence that Korean drama is understood in the Arabic cultural sphere.

It’s not just Egypt. Since Oct. 9, the KBS soap “Emperor of the Sea” has been broadcast by Turkish Radio and Television (TRT) for an hour every Sunday night, and has enjoyed respectable ratings. “Emperor” ranks 32th out of 1,000 shows currently on air. Among the well educated and in higher socioeconomic brackets, the show ranks 10th. KBS agreed with Jordan to air the show in the country and could take “Winter Sonata” to Tunisia and Iraq.

The MBC historical soap “Daejanggum (Jewel in the Palace)” is scheduled to hit the airwaves in Iran at the beginning of next year. MBC is also looking into a plan to distribute the drama for free in other Middle Eastern countries. “There is good chance the Korean Wave will spread rapidly through the Middle East because the region has a strong homogeneity in language and culture,” an MBC insider says.

Why? Perhaps it is partly because strong anti-American sentiment in the region means American popular culture seems tainted. “In the Middle East, there is a widespread anti-America and anti-Hollywood sentiment,” says KBS producer Kim Shin-il. “Also, Korean dramas, which have hardly any sex and violence and focus on family values, seem to fit with the conservative values of the region.”

Source: Digital Chosunilbo 11 Dec 2005 Via daejanggeum

Jan 11, 2013

Top 10 Content Slider Plugins

No web design trend has become as wide-spread and as popular recently as the content slider, they are everywhere! And rightly so, not only do they offer a marvelous method for displaying a lot of content in such a minimal space, they are also a great way to highlight your best and most popular articles and content.

And on top off all that, with the correct image selection and well chosen content they look great as well.

When you take the most popular current web trend (the sliders) and mix it with the most popular CMS (WordPress), you just know there is going to be a bunch of free plugins you could easily use. And that is what we focus on in this post, 10 of the best free Content Slider WordPress Plugins. And on top off all that, with the correct image selection and well chosen content they look great as well.

Front Slider WordPress Plugin


Front Slider, with its smooth sliding effect, will allow you to display an unlimited number of posts including images and thumbnails. You can set the speed, duration and whether or not to allow it to auto-rotate. Overall its very easy to customise and can be integrated into most WP themes with ease.

Front Slider WordPress Plugin » View the Demo »

vSlider – WordPress Image Slider Plugin


vSlider is a jQuery based image slide show script that can display specific images on your WordPress based website with fading or sliding transitions. It makes use of the core WordPress jQuery library, making it very tiny, about 20 kb, and you don’t have to have any knowledge of coding for using it!

It can use images from your posts using custom fields or scanning for images in the post to feature your latest posts from a specific category (for example a featured category), this way with every new post the slider will automatically update it self.

vSlider – WordPress Image Slider Plugin » View the Demo »

SlideDeck WordPress Slideshow Plugin WP


SlideDeck is a new way to display rich content on websites and blogs. It delivers a better user experience by removing the information overload and providing a fun, quick and beautiful slider for users to interact with your blog posts and other content.

The SlideDeck WordPress plugin allows you to easily create a content slider widget or slideshow on your WordPress blog without having to write any code. Just create a new slider with the SlideDeck control panel tool and insert the widget into your post via the WYSIWYG editor with the TinyMCE plugin SlideDeck picker.

You can also create a dynamic slider by using the Smart Slider function. Just choose your blog post criteria (recent, popular, featured), select a theme, set your options and viola, you have a dynamically updated slider in seconds! Users can now visually experience your blog posts.

SlideDeck WordPress Slideshow Plugin WP » View the Demo »

EasyRotator for WordPress


EasyRotator for WordPress is a free plugin that allows you to easily create sliders in a visual editor. Sliders can display static photos, text and links, or dynamically display recent posts or posts from a certain category or tag. The plugin comes with many attractive, customizable templates. Sliders can be inserted in posts and pages or used as widgets. The editor is simple enough that clients can easily make updates.

EasyRotator for WordPress » View the Demo Video »

WP Slideshow Gallery


WP Slideshow Gallery is a flexible and easy to configure JavaScript powered slideshow gallery showcase for WordPress.

WP Slideshow Gallery » View the Demo »

Featured Content Gallery Plugin


Completely customizable, the Featured Content Gallery is very easy to integrate. Choose to automate the plugin and simply add a custom field to each post or page you want to display and the gallery will show the image, an auto-generated thumbnail in the upper carousel, and the title and first few lines of page/post text. Advanced options allow inclusion of custom thumbnail images, text, gallery styles and transitions.

Featured Content Gallery Plugin » View the Demo »

Frontpage-Slideshow for WordPress


There are no limits to how many slides Frontpage-Slideshow will allow, it will automatically start when images are preloaded and will retrieve automaticaly all information to show depending on global parameters. All aspects can be easily customized: sizes, colors, background-images, transitions, durations, parts to show and preload animations.

Frontpage-Slideshow for WordPress » View the Demo »

Featurific, The Terrific Featured Item Slideshow!



Smooth Slider – Slideshow Of Featured Posts


Smooth Slider is a free, feature rich and easy to customise and style WordPress Plugin that assigns a post as featured posts on a blog and then create a slideshow with them to show at any location on a blog.

Smooth Slider – Slideshow Of Featured Posts » View the Demo »

WordPress Content Slide Plugin


Content Slide a WP plugin to create fully customizable jQuery fading image slideshows/sliders anywhere within your WordPress site. Custom options include slideshow size, color, style and more, much more.

WordPress Content Slide Plugin » View the Demo »

Coin Slider 4 WordPress


Coin Slider 4 WP will show your featured posts as an image slider and rotate them using unique effects provided by jQuery’s Coin Slider. Implementation is very easy, after you download and activate this plugin, just paste one line of code in your template and Coin Slider 4 WP is ready to use.

Coin Slider 4 WordPress » View the Demo »

Featured Posts Slideshow WordPress Plugin


This basic, yet smooth, slider plugin can be easily incorporate into your WP theme. In the admin overview you can set the category, the number of posts, and easily customise it. To view the images in the slideshow, you must create a custom field with the key "thumbnail" and with the direct link to the picture as value.

Featured Posts Slideshow WordPress Plugin » View the Demo »

Via speckyboy

Jan 10, 2013

Samsung Series 5 Ultrabook


Samsung is taking the wraps off its 13-inch Series 5 Ultra Touch Windows 8 ultrabook today, and at a starting price of $809.99 for the Core i3 version, it’s one of the more reasonably-priced machines we’ve seen so far. An extra $50 will buy you a Core i5 processor upgrade, but otherwise, both models will have the same 1366x768 10-point touch display, 4GB of RAM, and 500GB hard drive with 24GB of ExpressCache — Samsung’s term for high-speed solid state storage directly on the logic board. The Series 5 Ultra Touch isn’t breaking any records with its 3.83-pound weight, but it’s not bad for a machine with a spinning hard drive.

The company also took a minute to touch on its renamed Ativ Smart PC 500T and 700T Windows 8 tablets, which will be selling for $749.99 and $1,199.99, respectively. While both will be running Windows 8 and not the more limited Windows RT, that extra $450 will buy you an Intel Core i5 processor (the 500T comes with an Atom Z2760), a bump from 2GB to 4GB of RAM, and a doubling of storage, from 64GB to 128GB.

ASUS Zenbook Prime UX31A

The new ASUS Zenbook Prime UX31A might look exactly like the old Zenbook UX31E, but remember it is what is on the inside that really counts! ASUS appears to be all about consistency these days and have kept the sleek aluminum chassis the same on this razor thin Intel Ultrabook .


The weight of this thin Ultrabook also remains the same, at 1.3 kg or about three pounds. It is only when you open the Zenbook Prime UX31A that you'll start to see the improvements over the last model. For example you have an illuminated keyboard with a gorgeous 1080p IPS (in-plane switching) display for you to look at when you use it and on the inside you have a 3rd Generation Intel Core i5 or i7 'Ivy Bridge' processor along with the new Intel HM76 Express chipset.

The new processor is faster and also includes improved graphics thanks to the inclusion Intel HD Graphics 4000 technology. The new Intel HM76 Express Chipset brings native support for a pair of USB 3.0 ports, so both USB ports on the Zenbook Prime are SuperSpeed USB 3.0 enabled. ASUS didn't stop there though and fixed a number of smaller issues that end users griped about on the original Zenbook. For example the power connector easily came out on the Zenbook, so it was changed to a different type that 'clicks' in and stays in place on the Zenbook Prime. Basically, ASUS fixed what needed to be fixed and left what was working alone! This is great news for consumers as you get a refined product that has been tried and tested by millions of people.

Before we dive into the Ultrabook that we will be reviewing we need to cover what an Ultrabook is. For starters, Intel has trademarked the Ultrabook name, so only certain laptops that meet the Ultrabook criteria can be called that. According to Intel, a laptop has to meet or exceed these five characteristics to be an Ultrabook.
  • Quick Startup - Going from hibernate to keyboard interaction in 7 seconds or less. Resume from sleep should be even faster than that.
  • Long Battery Life - The minimum for a single charge of the battery must be at least 5 hours.
  • Thinness - Ultrabooks need to be less than 21mm (0.82-inch) thick.
  • Enhanced Security - The laptop firmware must support Intel's Anti-Theft and Identity Protection technology.
  • Performance - Must be powered by Intel processors.
Basically, The Intel Ultrabooks are Windows powered alternatives to the hot selling Apple MacBook Air! They are thinner, lighter and often faster than ultraportables that many have used in recent years. The thinner designs on Ultrabooks don't look half bad either thanks to use of lightweight materials like aluminum and magnesium alloy for the housing. Inside you'll find powerful 2nd or 3rd generation Intel Core processors and a solid-state drive to give you a laptop that is snappy and responsive.

The downside of Ultrabooks being so thin is that you have to give up a few features that most don't need in 2012 and beyond. For starters the optical drive has been kicked to the curb, so if you want to run a CD, DVD or Blu-Ray you'll need to invest in an external USB drive. Other features missing from most Ultrabooks are the ethernet port and DVI video outputs due to how large those connectors are and a removable battery. Most people are running just Wi-Fi now days, but we still run across a hotel or two that don't have Wi-Fi and that wouldn't be a good thing with an Ultrabook. You can always get adapter cables, but who wants to carry that around as that defeats the purpose of having something so light and portable.

Now that you have know what an Intel Ultrabook is all about, we can get back to the Ultrabook that we will be reviewing here today.

The ASUS Zenbook Prime is available in two sizes, the ASUS UX21A (11.6" display) and the ASUS UX31A (13.3" display). Both sizes come standard with a 16:9 HD display that runs at a screen resolution of 1600x900. If you are buying an Ultrabook we highly suggest spending a little extra and getting the by IPS FHD 1920x1080 pixel display. The 1080p display also includes an antiglare technology that looks much better than a high-gloss display. Once you figure out what size Zenbook Prime that you want and what display you want, you then get to pick the processor and how much storage capacity you want! You have your choice of 128GB or 256GB of SSD drives and either an Intel Core i5-3317U or Intel Core i7-3517UM processors.

The model that we are going to be reviewing today is the ASUS Zenbook Prime UX31A-DB51. This model is the 13.3-inch model with the 1080p IPS display, 1.7GHz Intel Core i5-3317U processor, 4GB of DDR3 1600 MHz memory (RAM), and a 128GB solid-state drive.

ASUS Zenbook Prime UX31A-DB51 Specifications:
  • 1.7GHz Intel Core i5-3317U Dual-Core Ivy Bridge CPU
  • 4GB of DDR3 RAM
  • 128GB SATA III 6Gbps Solid State Drive
  • Integrated Intel HD 4000 Graphics
  • 13.3" Widescreen IPS Antiglare Display
  • 1920 x 1080 Native Resolution
  • 802.11a/b/g/n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0
  • Bang and Olufsen ICEpower Speakers
  • Integrated Webcam and Microphone
  • Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit)
The ASUS Zenbook Prime UX31A-DB51 runs $1049.95 shipped, which is price competitive with other brands with similar specifications.

Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga Review

Lenovo’s IdeaPad Yoga 13, which starts at $1,000, is just one attempt to take advantage of Microsoft’s dual-sided operating system. Out of the box, it looks like a traditional notebook, but keep tilting the 13-inch touchscreen back along its hinge, and it folds all the way around until the clamshell is closed again. Only now, the screen is face-up, and the keyboard hangs from the underbelly. You can also open the Yoga partway, keys down, so the screen is facing outward, or stand the device on both of its edges in a tent-like configuration.

Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga

This approach is simple and logical enough, but after spending a week with a Lenovo Yoga review unit, I think it’s a better laptop than it is a tablet.

The Yoga is clad in plastic, but it’s a soft-touch material that doesn’t feel like the cheap shells of budget laptops, and the area where you rest your palms almost has a leathery feel. Among Windows laptops, it’s the rare high-end design that doesn’t feel ripped off from Apple‘s MacBooks, yet its keyboard and trackpad are just as good

The trackpad is generously sized and covered in glass, so your fingers glide over it smoothly, and the entire surface clicks with ease. It also supports multi-touch gestures, such as two-finger scrolling, pinch-to-zoom and the ability to simulate right-clicks by depressing the pane with both fingers. The Yoga’s keyboard is also a pleasure to type on, with island-style keys that let out a satisfying clack. One particularly nice touch is the rounded edge on the bottom of each key, which seems to leave just a bit more room for your fingers to land.

The display isn’t too chintzy, either, though it does beg for the occasional swipe of a cloth as fingerprints build up. Although some users may pine for a higher resolution than 1600-by-900, this pixel density strikes a happy compromise, where text is fairly crisp but the desktop elements remain large enough to tap on, should the modern interface of Windows 8 fail to suit your needs.

As for performance, the Yoga’s Intel Core i5 processor provides more than enough power for ordinary tasks such as word processing, web browsing and streaming video. It can even handle some newer PC games; I loaded Guild Wars 2 on it, and had no trouble adventuring through its massive world.

The Yoga does falter slightly on battery life, which in my experience floated in the five- to six-hour range. That’s not terrible for a laptop, but it’s far below average for a tablet. Unfortunately, any tablet based on Intel’s Core processors will have this problem, and the only alternative is to sacrifice processing power.

The bigger issue with the Yoga is its storage situation, as pointed out by the Wall Street Journal‘s Walt Mossberg and ZDNet’s Ed Bott. The Yoga uses solid state storage instead of a hard disc drive, so instead of having lots of space, you get much zippier performance. That’s a fine tradeoff in the age of cloud storage and cheap external hard drives, but the problem is that despite an advertised 128 GB of storage, only about half of it is available to users, and it’s divided across two partitions. The rest is gobbled up by recovery services, built-in software, the operating system itself and other mysterious partitions whose purpose is unknown. Users can reclaim some of this storage through an elaborate workaround, but that only underscores how bad the situation is out of the box.

Those gripes aside, Lenovo’s Yoga is still an excellent high-end Windows laptop. But its laptopness (for lack of a better term) is exactly what prevents it from being an excellent tablet.
My feeling is that if PC makers are going to put touchscreens on their laptops, they ought to at least provide some way for the keyboard and trackpad to get out of the way. The Yoga accomplishes this goal, but crudely. Hold it in your hands as a tablet, and you’ll feel the keys under your fingers.

In practice, this isn’t as bad as it sounds; the keys are disabled in tablet mode, and they’re barely noticeable when the device is resting on your lap. Still, the combination of awkward key placement, a weight of 3.3 pounds, a thickness of 0.7 inches and the jumbo 13-inch display can all feel like too much, especially if you’re playing a touchscreen game or propping the tablet on your chest for bedtime reading. You’ll hear the whir of the system’s fan the whole time as well.

I must admit that on a few occasions, the Yoga achieved hybrid greatness. The hinged design is so easy to flip around that I’ve gotten into the habit of switching to tablet mode just to read a long article — usually in portrait mode, like some futuristic broadsheet newspaper — or to scroll through Twitter. If I had this device for longer, I could imagine using its outward-facing screen to check recipes while cooking, or to play games while reclined with a controller in-hand. There’s something to this design, despite its flaws. Even so, the lack of Windows 8 apps so far holds the Yoga back from what it could become.

The question, then, is whether Lenovo’s IdeaPad Yoga is worth the price premium over other high-end Ultrabook laptops. The answer is only “yes” if you need to buy a laptop now, if your basic tablet needs are already covered by another device — say, the iPad or a smaller tablet like the Nexus 7 — and if you’re willing to gamble on Windows 8′s app situation getting better. Worst-case scenario, you’ll still end up with a great laptop.

But as someone who’s personally in the market for a new laptop, I’m planning to see what comes in the next few months, including Microsoft‘s Surface with Windows 8 Pro and other announced but unreleased hybrids. I’ve enjoyed using Lenovo’s Yoga, but this being a time of experimentation and all, I’m also anxious to see more results.

Acer Aspire S5 world’s thinnest Ultrabook


The Acer Aspire S5 “world’s thinnest” Ultrabook measures just 15mm in depth at its thickest point. That’s 0.59 inches in old money. In comparison the MacBook Air is 0.68 inches and the Samsung Series 9 2nd Generation Ultrabook is 0.58 inches thick. Well, it seems like there’s more than one “world’s thinnest” Ultrabook around…


Acer managed to keep the thickness of the laptop down partly due to how the ports on the S5 are accessed. On the bottom of the laptop a panel hinges down to form a wedge(when a button is pressed), at the thickest point, towards the screen hinge, the ports are revealed and are accessible. Acer call this “MagicFlip I/O”. The action of this hinge will also tilt the keyboard of the laptop on your desk for a better typing angle, so it has a secondary ergonomic function.