The same processor that runs the N4, which has a 1280x768 resolution is going to run a 1920x1080 screen that must also contend with Sense ?
The same processor that runs the N4, which has a 1280x768 resolution is going to run a 1920x1080 screen that must also contend with Sense ?
You are on a mission.
Do think Surface RT has made a compelling argument to be in the same price range as an iPad with a better display, ecosystem (which will even include an official version of Office next year), and at least equal build quality? The $100 cheaper Nexus 10 makes a much better case in my opinion.
Next time an iDevice launches, watch when most every other major tech blog posts their review versus Gizmodo. I think most of them get the review units early.
Quick question: Aren't the scaling limitations of iOS going to make increasing the resolution for this difficult? It seems like they have to mostly make changes as a multiple of the original resolution (iPhone 4 was 4x the original iPhone resolution as was iPad 3 4x iPad 2's) with the exception of iPhone 5, were they…
26k-28k years.
IPS or not, curved display monitors actually sound really cool.
iOS and all of Apple's ecosystem start to look really good when you're regularly buying and selling your equipment because of the resale value. I'm hoping that the Nexus line starts holding its value well, but there are few product lines in laptops that even compete with macbook resale.
Am I the only one seeing this comment section non-Kinja on desktop? I don't have Kotaku-fix on...
Google, hurry up and smoosh your Quickoffice and Google Docs together. Mobile spreadsheets in Drive suuuucks and I'm wanting to move over to Drive from Dropbox.
http://isnatesilverawitch.com/ got a pretty hilarious update today.
Good job, Gizmodo.
It's been interesting to track http://www.intrade.com/v4/misc/scoreboard/ this go around. Unlike what you here on the news, most prediction markets and statistical models (like http://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com/) haven't really had this one close.
Cool, glad to hear it.
How have you liked Birmingham, if you don't mind me asking? I'm from Alabama and always like to hear other peoples views on it when given the chance.
How much information it can display is based on resolution, not physical screen size and the N7 has more pixels in both directions. But it's only a slight increase in horizontal lines (from portait view) so it's not a big deal there. The mini's advantage with web pages come from physically larger text from both the…
Well, this is just Displaymate evaluating the mini's display relative to its competition and they bring up some interesting points. I'd advise you watch a video on one before buying it. If it's good enough for you, have fun. I can't imagine getting one though with the $500 iPad 4th gen not far away in price.
"On the iPad mini, 16:9 content is viewed letterboxed with only 1024x576 resolution, which is getting pretty close to standard definition video rather than true high definition 1280x720 video on most other mini tablets like the Amazon Kindle Fire HD and Google Nexus 7."
I can't imagine why anyone would want the GNex now. Now that the professional images have come out, it actually looks better than a GNex to me (http://www.theverge.com/2012/10/29/3569540/google-nexus-4-preview-price-release-date)
There seems to be an annoyingly small amount of pictures for all this new stuff.