Slashdot Mirror


HP (Re-)Announces a 14" Android Laptop

PC Mag reports that an upcoming laptop from HP (one that was prematurely announced in April, and now official) has decent-to-good specs — under 4 pounds, battery life more than 8 hours, Tegra processor, and a 1928x1080 touch screen — but an unusual operating system, at least for a laptop. The SlateBook 14 will run Android, rather than Windows (or ChromeOS, for that matter), which helps keep it relatively cheap, at $400. According to the article, Android is "a lot cheaper for HP to implement in a laptop; ChromeOS, in contrast, comes with more stringent system requirements that would cost HP a bit more." Ars Technica's mention in April includes a screenshot taken from a video (note: video itself appears to be disabled) which shows the keyboard layout and which reveals some Android-specific changes. Update: 06/01 19:23 GMT by T : Here's an alternative link to the promotional video.

2 of 121 comments (clear)

  1. HP Is Being Cheap by EmperorArthur · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ChromeOS, in contrast, comes with more stringent system requirements that would cost HP a bit more.

    In other words, this thing is going to be really slow if you try to use it for serious work. Why? Because HP is cheap and doesn't want to shell out for decent components. That and/or they like their locked down bootloader.

    --
    So lets pretend that we've just completed writing this code, as opposed to having just completed sabotaging it -Altera
  2. All maximized all the time by tepples · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My beef with trying to use Android on a desktop or laptop form factor device is this requirement in the Android Compatibility Definition Document: "Devices MUST NOT change their reported screen size at any time." This rules out use of any nontrivial window manager, despite that the screen of a laptop or tablet is big enough for 2 to 4 phone apps at once.