Samsung Launches 3200x1800 Pixel ATIV Book 9 Plus Laptop
sfcrazy writes "As expected Samsung has updated its Ultrabook family giving direct competition to Apple's MacBook Pro and MacBook Air. When Apple launched its MacBook Air with 12 hours of battery life every one was looking at only one company to outdo Apple and that company was Samsung and the leading Android maker did not disappoint. With the launch of ATIV Book 9 Plus featuring:
* 256GB SSD (seems 128GB would be the base model)
* 3200x1800 resolution
* Touch Screen
* Haswell Processor
* 12 Hours battery life
* More 'standard' ports as compared to Apple's proprietary ports."
* 256GB SSD (seems 128GB would be the base model)
* 3200x1800 resolution
* Touch Screen
* Haswell Processor
* 12 Hours battery life
* More 'standard' ports as compared to Apple's proprietary ports."
The high resolution is a major win over the Macbook Air. Typing this on a MBA and the one thing I wish it had was higher screen resolution.
very nice, how much?
FTFA:
weighs only 1.39 grams
Care to name them?
SJWs are the new boogeyman. -Me
Which port is that exactly? The USB, the HDMI, the SD slot, or the Thunderbolt ports. All of which are standards.
...and weighs only 1.39 grams
Wow! It must be constructed from helium infused aero gels and space age nano-materials. Almost makes the horrible OS worth enduring. Almost.
If you build it, nerds will come. Soylentnews.org
The only proprietary one I see is magsafe for the power...
At least link to an article with more than 300 words. Review at CNET.
I've NEVER gotten the battery life i was sold out of any portable device.
Ever.
And laptops? Not even close... be lucky if i got %50 at best.
And that's not even doing much. just browsing.
TFA is hideous. Poorly written and says nothing really factual except that Samsung has a sexy new laptop out.
The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
I'm just guessing here, but given the history of litigation with Apple, if I were Samsung, my thinking would be something like this:
Dunno if that's their real strategy, but there is no doubt that the vast majority of leading edge manufacturing is done under contract in the far east. And the world's leading SoCs are definitely not made in USA or Europe.
I suspect that Samsung was a sleeping giant, and that Apple's clueless lawyers have awakened it.
I wish Samsung created its own Linux based operating system
Why on earth would you want to use a Samsung Linux distro?
It's not like there are heaps of great, easy to use distros out there already...
Will the price become obstacle for this one?
Very nice. However, they did comment on how it lacks in software (Win8 and not so good touchpad).
-AC now burry me.
Does it runs Linux? Does gets bricked if try something different from Windows 8, or even windows 8 itself? With that resolution and battery life even Linus could love it... if can run his own system on it, of course.
Not interested. It still has win 8 in it.
Yawn. Troll harder next.
...does it run IRIX???
OSX needs more hardware choice and new mac pro just seems to make the mini to pro gap even bigger.
Where is the mini plus with a desktop cpu, and at least mid range video? Don't want AIO's.
You're kidding, right? Other than Facebook or playing FreeCell, what is it good for?
"The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
The problem is that Apple is now a couple of years behind Android and needs come up with something really outstandingly *new* to get the free advertising they've received in the past. I don't really think it's gong to happen. They'll come up with a refreshed OS, maybe their own 'magical' proprietary NFC or something, or perhaps s new service, but the odds are slim of anything beyond that.
When they announce a price of $1299, we can start comparing this to the Macbook Air, okay?
"The only normal people are the ones you don't know very well."
Pull the string and read another story full of flannel and hype as Samdung tries to play catch up.
It looks nearly identical to the original MacBook.
Or even Win7?
Does it have the stupid-ass "Secure Boot"? Does it need to be disabled?
DETAILS!!! Even the CNet article linked in the comments doesn't cover this.
General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
I bought a Samsung Chronos Notebook a year ago, and it was a horrible experience.
The touchpad broke twice.
The headphone socket produced a buzz every time the laptop was plugged into the mains.
The WiFi kept disconnecting
Out of date drivers that have never been updated.
No support for Windows 8.
Terrible support staff who were either incompetent, lazy, or bored.
Badly written system software: it takes a full 20 seconds to enable/disable the WiFi, no support for non-administrators, it's intrusive and yet it's also required for full system functionality.
Even if all the hardware on this new model is up to scratch, nothing else has changed, and this deal will leave you sour. Basically, don't expect any real after-sales support in the way you probably expect it from most other laptop manufacturers. If you think of it as an appliance (like a TV) and never upgrade it, you *may* be fine.
People seem to be fairly impress by it having a 12 hour battery life and calling the best laptop... While my laptop weighs probably double that, it is well worth it seeing as it specs blow this thing out of the water (except for the pixel density). I can play things like BF3 and WoW on my comp just fine and while using it for school or lighter usage where they benchmark battery life, I was able to get 15 hours of use on mine...
Clearly this laptops sparks some attention because Apple Fanboys are trolling here as well as in both articles mentioned.
But what I see is that now I have decided which will be my next laptop. Retina Schmetina. I like to tinker. Apple is for non-tinkerers. The hi-res screen is drool-worth as I am really sick of 1366x768 displays that are the bread oand butter of the non-mac laptop world.
Nice to see Samsung beating everybody to that party.
Will it run Windows 7? The hardware looks brilliant and the screen looks incredible. Samsung has ratcheted their game up considerably over the last several years. Unfortunately Microsoft has ratcheted theirs down just as far. The computer comes with Windows 8 and that is a deal breaker if it can't be replace with Windows 7.
However, selling a laptop by claiming TBolt is proprietary and not standardized is asinine. Leave it to Samsung to think an Intel published standard and licensing like USB makes it proprietary.
12 months ago "Oh retina is pointless, you don't need it".
I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
To conform to the UEFI spec there must be a way to disable secureboot. Its really not a big deal. Yes your beloved AMD is just one of the other members of the UEFI group. Secureboot does as much as the TPM module that Slashdot claimed would kill Linux.
Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
When they allow you to choose which CPU and GPU you want, which can either be installed by them or by you, as well as and distro, or OS I may buy one.
Buying a laptop is something I have been thinking about, but until they can handle the type of workloads desktops can there is really no point in buying one. Gaming would would be an example. And I am not talking about 8 bits games for the late 80's early 90's or the remakes of such games, I am talking about today's cpu/gpu hogs.
... another way of saying shiny screen.
No thanks.
EMail: 0110001101100010010000000110001101110010 0110000101111010011011100110000101110010 0010111001100011011011110110
Old School.
-- Cisk for the Cisk God
Other than OS X, what other OSes support high DPI displays that work well?
Windows is relatively horrible - set it to 150% and yeah, it's usable, but it seems most apps don't properly handle it so you have text exceeding their bounding boxes constantly. Set it to 100% and it's squint central.
Linux is no better - it just assumes a standard DPI display, and X is just.. horrible to deal with. Yeah, I can have a huge terminal window, but that's relatively useless to me because I want nice crisp text.
Hell, Google spent a lot of time with ChromeOS, it does look great on high DPI mode on the Chromebook Pixel. Alas, regular Linux beside it? Awful.
So, OS X and ChromeOS. Though I like the OS X implementation - because when I run the display in "most text" mode (virtual 1920x1200) it looks damn nice, and looks native still (the scaling is 150% to native panel pixels). Obviously Apple worked hard getting it to that point, better than Windows any day (no text exceeding their bounding boxes! UI widgets scaled up!)
I bought a Sony Vaio Z about 3 years ago and, since the line has been discontinued, I have felt there really wasn't an equivalent laptop on the market. Before I would be tempted by this new laptop, it would have to best the specs of my 3 year old laptop:
1920x1080 IPS screen
excellent backlit keyboard
excellent trackpad
exchangeable battery
2.53 GHz Core I5 processor (boost 3.06 GHz)
3.07 lbs or less (the mentioned laptop appears to be exactly this weight)
My current laptop also has a DVD drive, which pretty much makes it irreplaceable (and at the time, it could have been purchased with a blu-ray burner for $500 more without really impacting the weight. Core i7 versions were also available).
My laptop also has discreet graphics and 4 SSDs set up in Raid 0. However, I suspect that integrated graphics and more modern SSD's may mean that the performance on this new laptop from Samsung may equal or exceed that of my current laptop.
It's a pity that Sony discontinued the Vaio Z line of laptops, as, even 3 years later, they appear to have no peer.
Disclaimer: this laptop cost $2400 in 2010 and, fully loaded, the cost could have gone over $4000.
Disclaimer 2: Yes, I can live without a DVD drive, but, all things being equal, I prefer to have one built-in.
Can I buy the display only?
Samsung announced a laptop last year with a >1080p screen (to lazy to google it). For about 6-8 months I regularly went to their site and searched google/ebay for one.
Nada. It was just a paper release. Now this, maybe they will release it, but until I can click buy and have it shipped to my door in a couple days its just BS.
Frankly, I can't really believe that the only manufacture making a laptop with a screen >150PPI is Apple. Every single PC manufacture thinks it ok to put a garbage screen on their crapbooks, and maybe grace the really high end ones with full 1080p, like its some kind of magic resolution. No wonder dell/HP are screwed, 3/4's of the tablets I look at have better resolutions than nearly every laptop sold at retail outside of an apple store.
I'm not buying a single samsung product ever again....
Our household has 4 Samsung devices currently, and EVERY single one of them has needed repairing in first months of their lives.......
Their products are just SHIT quality!
Try using a version of Windows that isn't 15 years old. 640x480 isn't even a supported resolution
640x480 is still supported but it is hidden in the UI when larger modes are available.
Why, oh why, can't somebody other than Apple make a 16:10 laptop?
PlusFive Slashdot reader for Android. Can post comments.
I don't want an ultra book, I want something full size I can code on :(
and it seems currently my options are either Apple or settle for FHD.
kps is a front end for ps that allows you to do what Task Manager does.
You can do so much more but you won't look because you're looking not for how to do stuff, but how stuff can be "not Microsoft".
And talking to someone whose only goal is to not like Linux to tell them what Linux can do is a waste of time and effort.
Don't use it. Who cares? It isn't that what you want isn't available, it's that you don't want to use it.
So in which departments does ATIV Book 9 Plus beat the MacBook AIR?
* Great design
What the hell does this even mean? The MacBook Air defined the "Ultrabook" form factor, which this is following onto. Oh, but somehow Apple is behind when this is the exact same form factor, with a bit of side moulding?
* 256GB SSD (seems 128GB would be the base model)
Exactly the same as MacBook Air, except the MacBook Air has faster storage, because it's PCI-E based instead of SATA.
* 3200x1800 resolution
Yes, that's more pixels then MacBook Air. However, there is no OS you can run on this thing that properly deals with Hi-DPI displays.
* Touch Screen
Do not want.
* Haswell Processor
Same as MacBook Air.
* 12 Hours battery life
Claimed 12 hour battery life. Is this a real "I can use it for 12 hours on wireless, with the backlight on, doing real work" or "It can idle with the backlight and all radios off, and every power management setting at maximum, and it will barely squeak out 12 hours" ? MacBook Air's 11 hour battery life is real world proven by reviewers.
* More 'standard' ports as compared to Apple's proprietary ports.
What the hell does this mean? Mini-VGA is not any standard you'll find on anything. What on the MacBook Air is "proprietary" to Apple, other than the MagSafe power? DisplayPort is a VESA standard. Thunderbolt is a licensable tech from Intel.
This article is astroturf garbage.
Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
A Beowulf cluster of these!
Running a raytrace of Natille Portman, Naked and Petrified!
Oooh it's enough to put hot grits down your pants (pants are optional, but recommended for you)
So I've found a so called "tech"-website which is worse than everything before... This site looks just like it's produced by some 14-something apple-fanboy, who is strangely fond of linux but seems an utter idiot calling for a "specially tailored" Samsung-Distro. If he'd ever used desktop-linux he might know why he can not evangelize everyone for the sake of it's advantages (there might be sooome drivers, somethings for colour-calibration and even some apps, which might help using this nice display and the great battery, although a good lot might be windows-only; it won't help either if they were blobs for Samsung-Linux) – but since he might have been content with his IPad i don't think this attitude a great wonder.
So says a proud debian-user who neither thinks, that window$ is from micro$oft, macs are crap, because there are no games, or that bash is UI-heaven (some commenters seem to be of that opinion for sure on this/that site...)
Well, if there's no reply, simply send one of those to me and I'll be happy to boot and report... C;-)
Non-Linux Penguins ?
This thread is pants.
Shit article, written by an idiot.
This.
Optical drive.
Real ethernet port.
And a trackpoint.
Hey Lenovo, go break into Samsungs house and steal their screens and put them into a nice Thinkpad for me, eh?
You're stuck with Windows 8.
Samsung do not provide an install DVD. You cannot obtain the license key, as it's built into the BIOS. You cannot downgrade to Windows 7; you will have to BUY a new Windows 7 license.
If you install Windows 7, you invalidate your warranty (!!!)
(This info from Samsung sales phone line).
Did anybody remember to bring the greased Yoda dolls?
Trolling is a art,
For "kids" I probably could have substituted "students", especially high school students, because that's when they really should be exposed to computers as a wide field (as used to be done) instead of just typing stuff in MS Word. I didn't expect you to be so thin skinned as to take offence and assume that I'm calling you a child. I expected you to take it at face value and notice the regret that your generation was presented with a monoculture, and the belief that the next should not be given such a narrow view.
I also think there are good things about MS Windows (it's finally getting some stuff running on 64 bit) but I've seen it grow so slowly and have so many backward steps that I am no fanboy.
To start with there is no registry to add confusion and you've already answered your own question about finding what files a process has open by mentioning "lsof".
No, Lightpeak is Intel, Thunderbolt is Apple
Light Peak was the code name for Thunderbolt which was developed by Intel and Intel owns the full rights to the trademark. It uses an Apple developed connector and Apple was the first ones to put Thunderbolt on their machines but it is unambiguously an Intel owned technology.
Intel developed Lightpeak, Apple simply purchased the technology and named it Thunderbolt, hence Apple owns the trademark on that one.
Apple transferred the Thunderbolt trademark to Intel about two years ago.
If you want to use IEEE1394, you need to pay... Apple.
As well as 9 other corporations that hold essential patent rights to the technology in IEEE1394.
Waiting for the inevitable mod-down by Apple fanboys who dont like the truth.
Since virtually all your facts are wrong you might consider taking a less adversarial tone.
Ha! Just what people using relatively small (i.e. non-desktops) screens and battery power need: more pixels!
Not.
This reeks of Samsung trying to suck as much as Apple, trying to "compete" based on having high numbers and bullet points, rather than actually having good products. Hey Samsung: the reason you've become as big as you are and have started eating Apple's lunch, is that you were making good products instead of Apple-like products. Don't throw it away now, in your moment of triumph.
Take this laptop and cut the pixels to quarter of that, and you know what you'll get? Something that is faster, lasts longer on a charge, and looks the same to anyone who isn't inspecting the screen with a magnifying glass.
It's so sad that we're finally getting CPUs as awesome as Haswell, and then throwing away the gains by increasing power consumption and bandwidth usage, in other components. Net gain: nothin'. I wanted a net gain.
Thunderbolt is Apple proprietary. The Intel version which is freely licensable is called Lightpeak.
Your facts are wrong. Intel developed this technology and the code name for it was Light Peak. Apple registered the trademark for Thunderbolt but transferred the rights to that trademark to Intel two years ago. Thunderbolt is not proprietary to Apple in any meaningful way.
Hardly anything supports it.
Thunderbolt is just PCI Express and Displayport with DC power baked in. Both PCIe and DP are well supported and widespread. A Thunderbolt port can be used for PCIe or Displayport devices. It's accurate however that Thunderbolt is not widely used outside of Apple products at this time.
Why do these new laptops top out at only 8GB of RAM? My 5 year old desktop has 8GB and I make good use of the RAM and sometimes find myself wanting more. Anyone that does java development or graphics/video editing can easily run into memory constraints with only 8GB.
Slap Windows 8.1 on there and you've got a customer.
Price? TBD. To me until I have that this thing is meaningless. Also, it's meant to compete with the MBP, not the MBA. Unless it's going to be the same price. From what I see so far, all things considered (not forgetting the build quality of Apple could possibly be matched, at best)- the MBA would still be my choice.
http://www.accountkiller.com/en/delete-slashdot-account Stop visiting Slashdot.
"Ativ Book 9 Plus" Keep trying to figure out product naming Sammy!
Who says Apple needs free advertising?
It is all down hill from here which creates a wall of cognitive dissonance at Apple resulting in their ultimate waning. The innovation died, or rather had a limited lifetime. Apple will wane for the same reason it was successful. The wonderful market action we so dearly love--the ability to copy successful products, services, and ideas.
I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
It was a serious comment. The troll detectors are set to 11 here.
I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
I'm writing this on my MacBook Pro Retina. I love the screen, for the most part, but there are a few issues. For one thing, it down-resolves by default, so you don't get all the extra screen real estate you might want. Second, sometimes that down-resolving looks really shitty. The Office suite, for example, is vomitously gross to look at. Otherwise, yay. There are some other issues too, but it is really the best computer I've ever owned.