1. LG 55-INCH OLED TV [Due: October]
At just
4mm thin, this television almost disappears from side-on. The first
55-inch organic light-emitting diode television revealed at CES offers
more than just a skinny form, however, with benefits including brighter
colours, better contrast and more energy efficiency. It also has a tiny
bezel around the screen and weighs just 7.5kg, making it much easier to
mount on a wall. Early customers will have to pay more for this OLED
screen than an LCD model, though it will cost less than $10,000 when it
launches in Australia late this year.
2. FUJIfILM X-PRO1 [Due: February]
Fujifilm's
upcoming professional class camera looks retro but packs in
cutting-edge technology. Its built-in optical viewfinder is actually a
hybrid electronic model that can display settings over the scene in
front of you and automatically adjusts the magnification to suit
whichever of the three fixed X-mount lenses are attached: 18mm, 35mm or
60mm. The 16-megapixel camera features a surplus of dials and buttons
for quick setting changes, although it doesn't focus as fast as
competing compact system cameras.
3. NOKIA LUMIA 900 [Due: 2012]
Nokia's new
flagship Windows smartphone offers an expansive screen and speedy 4G
mobile downloads. The Lumia 900, celebrated by Microsoft in the
company's final CES keynote, looks similar to other recent Nokia
releases, except for a 4.3-inch AMOLED screen. It also packs in an
8-megapixel camera, a 1.4GHz processor and 16GB of storage.
4. LENOVO IDEAPAD YOGA 13 [Due: Second half of 2012]
Named
Yoga for its ability to flip its screen over, this computer is a
laptop-tablet hybrid. It features a dual hinge that lets users fold the
screen over entirely or just enough to prop it up on a desk, and a
13.3-inch touch-sensitive screen. The new IdeaPad model will be one of a
handful of tablets using Windows 8 when it is released and will do so
using a chip as powerful as the Intel Core i7, while storing up to
256GB. The Yoga 13 will be just 1.69cm thick and weigh 1.47kg.
5. SONY TABLET P [Due: This year]
Revealed
with Sony's first tablet, this dual-screen tablet folds over into a much
smaller device that can be carried inside a jacket pocket (like Sony
president Sir Howard Stringer carries it). Working models at CES showed
Google Android apps that could be used over both of the tablets 5.5-inch
touchscreens or, in the case of games and others, in split-screen
format. The tablet weighs less than 400g, runs a 1GHz dual-core
processor and is due out sometime this year.
0 comments
Post a Comment