Da Gadgetz

All about the latest technological gadgets


Barely more than 24 hours after the Nokia stunner of the century -- the company's announcement of the Booklet 3G "mini laptop" -- we're starting to get some more details about the 10.1-incher. Netbook News is reporting an unnamed source that claims the netbook will run $799 -- certainly not a netbook price. The Booklet will boast a 1.6GHz Intel Atom Z530, and will reportedly boast a 120GB HDD, plus integrated 3G, a swappable SIM card, A-GPS, Bluetooth and WiFi. There is no official word on pricing or release date, but we're expecting to hear tell of all that at Nokia World (which is on September 2nd).

Specifications (base version)

Manufacturer Nokia
Model name Booklet 3G
CPU type Intel Atom Z530
CPU speed 1600 Mhz
OS Windows 7
Display Size 10"
Hard Disk 120 GB
Keyboard YES
Mouse Pointer YES
Weight 1250g
Size(w/h/d mm) 265/185/20 mm

Physical Interfaces
HDMI
SD card slot
USB2.0 (x3)
Line-out / Headphone (3.5mm)

Wireless Interfaces
802.11b/g
802.11n
BT (type unknown)
HSPA (7.2/2.0Mbps)

Additional Specs and Accessories (can vary)
WebCam

Optional Specs and Accessories (can vary)
Stereo speakers

Stylish alluminium casing, high battery life claim of 12hours, integration with OVI and OVI Maps.




It's not much, in fact, these screenshots are incredibly easy to fake. Still, a hastily constructed WordPress blog has been setup to host what are claimed to be the world's first screenshots of Google's new Chrome OS -- hailed as both a Microsoft Windows and Apple OS X killer or a Google FUD generator depending upon who you're listening to. As the story is told, a Google representative demonstrated a private beta build of the OS to an anonymous Acer parts supplier yesterday, presumably somewhere in Taiwan. The picture above was grabbed breathlessly while the Google rep was distracted. Highlights of the demonstration break down as follows:

  • The "elegant" install on the Acer Extensa 4620Z laptop took about 10 minutes and 1 restart
  • Reboots desktop-to-desktop in about 25 seconds
  • It was "amazingly fast" in its stripped-down beta form
  • The blue orb on the auto-hiding "Chrome Bar" along the bottom of the UI is essentially the start menu
  • Navigating the file system can be done in "exploration" (like Windows explorer) or "browser" (search based) modes
  • The Chrome Bar can also host a search bar if configured
  • Future Chrome OS net books will feature an iconified Chrome key on the keyboard similar to the Windows flag key
Of course, it's a long, long time before this OS appears on next generation ARM and x86 smartnetbooks -- second half of 2010 according to the Google -- so who knows what the interface will look like by then. One more image after the break.