Review For Buy ASUS F555LA-AH51 15.6-Inch Core i5 Laptop

Review For Buy ASUS F555LA-AH51 15.6-Inch Core i5 Laptop


The new ASUS F555LA-AH51 15.6-Inch Core i5 Laptop has the dual core ultra low voltage Haswell Intel i5-4210U processor at 1.7 GHz base speed that moves up to 2.7GHz with turbo boost when the tasks at hand require it, 8 GB DDR3 SDRAM at 1600MHz for very smooth and efficient multitasking so you can work on several apps, browsers and programs simultaneously without encountering hardly any lags or freezing, 1000 GB Serial ATA hard drive at 5400 rpm rotating speed to give you all the space you need to save all your files and the latest Windows 8.1 operating system and you won’t need to upgrade from Windows 8 and it comes with extra useful and familiar features for those that miss the older Windows 7.

Technical Details
Screen Size15.6 inches
Max Screen Resolution1366*768 pixels
Processor1.7 GHz Intel Core i5-4200U
RAM8 GB DDR3
Hard Drive1000 GB
Wireless Type802.11bgn
Number of USB 2.0 Ports1
Number of USB 3.0 Ports2
Brand NameAsus
SeriesF
Item model numberF555LA-AH51
Operating SystemWindows 8.1
Item Weight5.1 pounds
Item Dimensions L x W x H10.10 x 15 x 1 inches
Colorblack
Hard Drive Rotational Speed5400 RPM
Optical Drive TypeDL DVD±RW/CD-RW
Batteries:1 Lithium ion batteries required. (included)

ASUS F555LA-AH51 15.6-Inch Core i5 Laptop is able to handle very demanding tasks and works fast with the processor speed going up to 2.7GHz depending on whatever you’re doing- general multimedia and daily office tasks as well as more demanding stuff, but not really the latest 3D games due to lack of at least a mid-range discrete graphics card. Even when the machine has been on standby for a long time, it will wake up in only 2 seconds thanks to the ASUS Super Hybrid Engine II technology. When the battery level goes below 5%, your data is backed up automatically so you can have that peace of mind. Many people still don’t like the new Windows 8 but at least the Windows 8.1 has the familiar Start screen and Start button as well as some additional user-friendly features. The keyboard is not backlit, screen is not touchscreen and it would be nice to have a dedicated graphics card but none of these can be listed as cons at the price level this laptop is sold and everything else it seems to offer. Highly recommended!

See full review of  ASUS F555LA-AH51 15.6-Inch Core i5 Laptop Here

Windows Phone tweaks back Lumia 1020's 41MP camera

Microsoft had to change its Windows Phone 8 architecture to accommodate the Nokia Lumia 1020p's super high-res image capture and processing.



Nokia's new Lumia 1020 may be a Windows 8 phone, but Microsoft's OS division had to do some shuffling before the phone's enormous 41-megapixel camera could work.

First, Microsoft had to tweak Windows Phone 8 architecture to let the Lumia 1020's camera software processes two images, Windows Phone SVP Joe Belfiore said in an interview Microsoft posted online: one that captures a terrific amount of visual detail, and the condensed 5-megapixel version that's actually small enough to upload and e-mail.

In addition, Microsoft also had to code Windows Phone 8's photo viewer to improve its zoom capability in order to handle the far greater information stored within the larger resolution Lumia 1020 shots.

These changes also equipped Nokia's own camera apps, which include the controls to manually change exposure settings as well as extra features like HDR and panorama modes.

Now, did it really take a year and a half to change up the Windows Phone 8 architecture enough to get the 41-megapixel experience of Nokia's 808 PureView Symbian phone transferred over to a Lumia device.

On the Microsoft side, Windows Phone 7, the OS at the time Nokia became a mostly-Windows Phone shop, just didn't have the chops to handle image processing at high levels, and despite knowing about Nokia's 41-megapixel aspirations from the get go, it apparently took some work for Windows Phone 8 OS to gain that capability, too.

On Nokia's side, I suspect they had to tame that huge bulge created by the camera module in the original phone, which undoubtedly took engineering work to pull off, before they could get enough carrier interest to sign on for the device.

For even more details about the Lumia 1020's camera and build, catch CNET's Nokia Lumia 1020 hands-on impressions here.

Article updated at 11:41am PT.

Nokia's Stephen Elop Battles Apple and Google With Megapixels

These are the days in Helsinki when the sun never seems to set. So maybe it's not so surprising that Stephen Elop, the CEO of the beleaguered Finnish phone giant Nokia, rejects the conventional wisdom that his company is as lifeless as the salted cod served in local restaurants. Instead, he sees a moment ripe with opportunity.


Apple's pioneering iPhone has not seen a major reset in many months. Samsung, the dominant player in the Android system, just released a flagship phone with a chaotic blur of features, none of them truly memorable.


So Nokia's unveiling today of the Lumia 1020 represents a chance - maybe the last, best one - to make its case to users, and to demonstrate that there's actually room for the 'third ecosystem' that Elop hopes Nokia will become. The case for the previous Lumias -- the well-received WinPhone operating system, a slick design, and some other nice features - has won a foothold but not much more. For Nokia to gain true momentum, it must provide something new and big. Something that people can not get elsewhere. Something technolust-worthy. Something actually useful. To engage in Elop-speak: a true differentiator.


'The tonality has changed a little bit in the industry. Look at the recent products launched. Their makers say: 'This is the next one.' But is it that innovative? Have they really differentiated this current generation from the previous generation product?'


'The basis we've chosen to compete on is innovation and differentiation,' he says. 'We have to set ourselves apart from the people who are leading the smartphone industry. The tonality has changed a little bit in the industry. Look at the recent products launched. Their makers say: 'This is the next one.' But is it that innovative? Have they really differentiated this current generation from the previous generation product?'


The Nokia 1020 - to be released on July 26 for $300 and a two-year AT&T contract - does have something genuinely unique. It boasts a suite of imaging features built around a technology called PureView, involving what Nokia describes as a '41-megapixel backside illuminated sensor.' Cut the jargon and what you get is a leap in camera tech. The sensor captures so much information that you can do a detailed zoom after you take the picture. It's like a real-time implementation of all the rigmarole that the photographer in the 1966 movie 'Blow Up' went through when he noticed a detail in his photo that proved evidence to a murder. Years after the fact, information stored in these 'superpixels' could unearth similarly amazing, if not incriminating, artifacts.


The Lumia 1020 is also augmented with a Xenon flash that grabs sharp pictures in low-light-images that the iPhone and the Samsung portray as blurs. Nokia has augmented its already excellent capabilities in image stabilization to allow users to capture steady high-def video, even in rocky conditions. And it will be a platform for an endless parade of nifty features. One example available on launch is the ability to use part of an image as an animated GIF while the rest of the image remains a static photo.


PureView really is a differentiator. When I got a demo of it early last year in Nokia's research lab, it was clear that this could make a difference to a lot of users. After all, taking photos is a core smart phone activity. But I was disappointed to learn that Nokia's first implementation of the technology would not be appear in the Lumia series of Windows phones that represented the company's future. Instead, Nokia chose to put its most amazing advances in the PureView 808 - a phone running the doomed Symbian operating system. It was like opening a new Danny Meyer restaurant in Chernobyl.


Elop defends the move now by saying that the 808 was successful on its own terms. 'It sold well,' he said, while not giving any numbers. (But I'll bet most of you have never seen one in the wild.) Its photography-crazy users loved it. But 808's real value was as a test bed for PureView. Nokia was able to gauge from real users how to improve the technology for the next iteration, the one now on the 1020.


Sure enough, this version of PureView seems ready for prime time. To accommodate the advanced camera, the 808 had a hideous unsightly bulge in its middle. It looked like it was momentarily about to give birth to an MP3 player. The 1020 has only a modest rise where around the lens - it reminds me of the stoic eye of HAL in Kubrick's '2001' - and is around the same thickness as the trim Lumia 920.


If this powerful imaging technology had been part of the last iPhone release, the internet would have exploded with Blogosphere hosannas and the lines outside Apple stores would have clogged entire metropolitan areas. But can innovation and differentiation really help Nokia make today's one-on-one smartphone battle into something more à trois? Skeptics - and plenty of people not normally inclined to skepticism - will probably stick to their view that at this point there is nothing Nokia can do to turn things around, and that the Finnish giant will wind up, with Blackberry, in high-tech's dustbin.


But Elop has a point to make about tables turning. 'If you had asked anyone in the smartphone world on January 1, 2007, they would have said Nokia was incomparable,' he says. 'It had such a strong share, so much lock-in, so much brand awareness that no one could challenge it. And yet innovation, disorientation, disruption changed that. It set Nokia on an entirely different trajectory.'


That trajectory turned downward so precipitously that Nokia's very survival is at stake. But Elop believes that PureView - along with future differentiators he says are in the works - will help him paint a very different picture. With 41 million megapixels.


Nokia's newest Windows Phone: Will the best camera win?

Summary: Nokia has launched its latest smartphone, the Lumia 1020, with souped-up, top-of-the-line camera technologies. Is that enticement enough to push Windows Phone share beyond three percent?


I don't take a lot of pictures on my Windows Phone -- other than lots of pictures of my craft beer pints (for my Untappd.com app). I don't take a lot of pictures with a regular point-and-shoot camera, either.



So when I got to see Nokia's newest Windows Phone, the Lumia 1020, during its unveiling in New York City today, I was interested but still not sure if it's for me.


The good news, on first 'hold' (we didn't get loaner units to try out at the launch), is the 1020 is much nicer 'in the hand' than the heavier/bulkier Lumias like the 920. Yes, I know some folks don't find the weight/size of the Lumias problematic, and some even prefer the heavier form factors. I am not in that group. The new camera doesn't protrude much, either, in spite of all the technology it packs inside.


Nokia is providing a new app on these phones that will help non-pro photographers like me figure out how to use all the new bells and whistles. And there will be a number of new third-party apps that are built using the Lumia 1020 software-development kit to take advantage of all the new optics and audio capabilities in the phone.


Nokia wisely didn't run through a bunch of speeds and feeds during today's unveiling, and instead focused on showing off all the new things the new PureView camera can do. For the full list of specs on the device, check out Nokia's official spec sheet. The short version: The 4.5-inch AMOLED device has a 41-megapixel camera, 7712 X5360 resolution, 2 GB of RAM; 32 GB of internal memory and 7 GB of free SkyDrive cloud storage.


Under the hood, the 1020 runs Microsoft's GDR2 update to Windows Phone 8, plus the 'Amber' layer of customized Nokia firmware and fixes; plus additional camera-specific software.


As someone who cares less about snapping pics than I do about browsing the Web and checking email on my phone, would I pay $299.99 with a two year contract on AT&T for this device? Or $659.99 off contract?


(Unsurprisingly, given Nokia's relationship with AT&T, this phone -- which goes on sale on July 26 -- is an AT&T exclusive in the U.S. Microsoft is promising that the 1020 will be available later this quarter in China, select European countries and various other countries around the world.) I am a Verizon customer, which means if anything comparable to the Lumia 1020 comes to Verizon, it won't likely happen for months.


I'm skeptical the new camera will win me over. But I'm reserving final judgment until I get a loaner device so I can try it out myself. What about you, photography-fanatics and not?


Lenovo grabs top PC vendor crown from HP


Global PC shipments reached 75.6 million units.


Global PC shipments of Lenovo reached 12.61 million units during the second quarter of 2013, reporting a 1.4% drop, while has surpassed HP that shipped 12,378 million units, according to a new report from IDC.


IDC's latest Worldwide Quarterly PC Tracker report revealed that Lenovo's market share remained 16.7%, while HP captured 16.4% of the global PC market share during the quarter.


In the quarter, Lenovo's sales increased outside of APeJ, while its sales in China were also affected due to short-term economic and inventory hurdles affecting shipments.


HP reported growth over the last quarter due to a strong boost from shipments to India, while faced drop in shipments in EMEA region, with a stabilised business in the US.


Other firms that followed in the list of top vendors include Dell, Acer and ASUS.


During the quarter, global PC shipments reached 75.6 million units, an 11.4% drop, but was slightly better than anticipated results for the period.


IDC Worldwide PC Tracker senior analyst, Jay Chou, said that with second quarter growth so close to forecast, some improvement in growth is anticipated during the second half of the year.


'Slower growth in Europe and China reflect the risks, while the improved U.S. outlook reflects potential improvement,' Chou said. 'Still, the weakness in emerging markets is a threat to a core long-term growth area.


'In addition, while efforts by the PC ecosystem to bring down price points and embrace touch computing should make PCs more attractive, a lot still needs to be done in launching attractive products and addressing competition from devices like tablets.'