top of page
搜尋

HP HSTNN-XB3C Battery

  • fasophiafrance
  • 2016年7月25日
  • 讀畢需時 7 分鐘

The LED backlight has three settings (off, low, and bright) and the keys are easy to see in a dark environment. That said, the white text is hard to spot on the champagne-colored keys when you’re indoors under bright lights or outdoors under direct sunlight.The touchpad on the Yoga 900S is notably smaller than the touchpads you’ll find on most 13-inch notebooks, but the matte glass surface is smooth and delivers a good experience with accurate cursor movement and precise gesture detection.

Our only issue with the control interface here is that a 12-inch hybrid device just begs for a digital pen to be included. When the Yoga 900S is in tablet mode it feels almost like a legal notepad in your hand … so it’s only natural to want to write on the screen with a pen. The Yoga 900S might look better than the Apple MacBook, it might even offer more ports and a convertible touchscreen design, but at the end of the day it suffers from many of the same weak performance issues thanks to the use of Intel’s Core m5 processor. The Core m5 is a SoC or “system on a chip” that combines a dual-core processor and integrated graphics on a single die. The big advantage of a SoC is low power consumption and a smaller footprint that fits inside increasingly smaller and thinner devices.Sure, you can play Minecraft or Hearthstone while streaming YouTube videos with minimal problems, but that is about the most “intense” computing activity you can expect here.

The Yoga 900S has a starting price of $1,099 for the base configuration with a Core m5 processor, 128GB SSD, 4GB of RAM and a 1080p screen. This isn’t bad compared to the Apple MacBook, but you can spend less money and get a significantly better 13-inch notebook like the HP Spectre x360, the Dell XPS 13, or even the Acer Aspire S 13 … you just have to be able to live with a larger screen.

Most premium 13-inch notebooks and 2-in-1s claim they offer “all-day battery life” but the real world battery life is generally somewhere between 5 and 8 hours depending on your usage. In addition to our casual use battery life tests we also use Futuremark’s Powermark synthetic benchmark test to drain the battery in a fraction of that time. We found that the Lenovo Yoga 900S ran for 4 hours and 41 minutes during the Powermark benchmark that simulates intense usage. Our casual battery drain tests showed that the battery inside the Yoga 900S typically lasted for between 7 and 8 hours of casual use.

The battery life of the Yoga 900S is all the more impressive when you consider the high-voltage USB power adapter that is included will charge a completely empty battery to full charge in less than 3 hours.Are browser benchmarks still valuable? Yes, but only to the extent that you understand the scenario being tested. For example, after doing my tests, I'm pretty confident telling you that if you're just doing very light web browsing with the screen brightness at a medium-to-dim 150 nits, Edge is the most power-efficient choice, but the other’s ain’t so bad either.

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-B0Y84EA.html HP B0Y84EA Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-B6M23EA.html HP B6M23EA Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-B6M92EA.html HP B6M92EA Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-B6N04EA.html HP B6N04EA Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-LJ487UT.html HP LJ487UT Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-LJ487UT-ABA.html HP LJ487UT-ABA Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-LJ488UT-ABA.html HP LJ488UT-ABA Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-LJ502UT-ABA.html HP LJ502UT-ABA Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-633733-151.html HP 633733-151 Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-HSTNN-XB3C.html HP HSTNN-XB3C Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-HSTNN-XB2F.html HP HSTNN-XB2F Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-HSTNN-Q89C.html HP HSTNN-Q89C Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/HP-QK646U.html HP QK646U Battery

For more than a decade every PC manufacturer in the world has attempted to create its own version of Apple’s most popular MacBooks. While the current 12-inch MacBook is one of the thinnest and lightest laptops on the market, Lenovo’s new Yoga 900S might just give potential Apple customers a better Windows 10 alternative.The Yoga 900S is a 12.5-inch 2-in-1 laptop that’s even thinner than the MacBook and still somehow manages to include two full-sized USB 3.0 ports. Unfortunately, the starting price of $1,099 means that Lenovo surrenders one additional advantage to Apple … making a laptop that’s better than a MacBook look a little worse when it comes to price. Let’s take a closer look to see if the Yoga 900S is a better purchase than a MacBook.

At first glance the 12.5-inch Yoga 900S looks like a thinner, lighter version of the 13.3-inch Lenovo Yoga 900 right down to the iconic watchband-style 360-degree display hinge. Lenovo doesn’t earn any points for originality here, but recycling the same design isn’t a bad thing when you consider that the Yoga 900 and earlier Yoga 3 Pro are among the best looking 2-in-1 laptops.

That previously mentioned watchband hinge is one of the few design elements you’ll find on premium thin-and-light notebooks that doesn’t look like a tacky attempt to convince wealthy customers to buy an overpriced laptop. You won’t find 24-carat gold plating or Swarovski crystals here. This is the third Lenovo notebook we’ve seen that features the watchband hinge design but it remains nonetheless impressive considering this is one of the thinnest screen hinges on any notebook yet it holds the screen firmly in place through the full 360 degrees of rotation.The Lenovo Yoga 900S is a beautiful 2-in-1 lightweight PC with plenty of battery life and enough performance for general web browsing and casual video streaming. Unfortunately, this notebook lacks enough muscle to handle just about anything else.

The only performance advantage that the Intel Core m5 brings to the table is exceptional battery life. If you don’t care about how fast a processor is or how quickly it allows you to render freshly edited videos then the Core m5 might not be a problem. If you plan to do anything other than browse websites at a coffee shop, type up a Word document, or stream Netflix then this 2-in-1 isn’t going to give you what you need.

That said, the Yoga 900S offers marginally better real-world battery life than the Apple MacBook and the Lenovo is more portable, has more ports, and features a 2-in-1 design. People who buy MacBooks usually aren’t looking for good performance, so if you just want a thin-and-light laptop with good looks and great battery life then the Lenovo Yoga 900S might be exactly what you want.There’s a real laptop that you can order right now for just $69. Yes, the whole laptop. Not just a replacement battery or a charging brick for it.

Let’s clarify right off the bat: the $69 price tag is for the first 200 units that will be shipped to Azpen Innovations’ Kickstarter backers. But those supporters really will get an actual laptop — with a screen, keyboard, touchpad — the whole works. Azpen is crowdfunding development of the Hybrx, an 11.6-inch laptop that runs Remix OS. For the unfamiliar, Remix is an aptly named popular Android remix that’s been tweaked to be a bit friendlier to use on desktops and laptops.

How on Earth did they manage to build a laptop that they can sell — even as a pledge perk — at $69? It all starts with the CPU. The Hybrx isn’t running an Intel or AMD processor. It’s not even using an Exynos or Snapdragon. It’s powered by a quad-core AllWinner A64. It’s not going to blow you away with its performance, but it’s plenty capable for basic computing tasks like browsing, casual gaming, and streaming video or music.

The base Hybrx config will come with 1GB of RAM and 16GB of internal storage. They’re also offering a model with 2GB RAM and 32GB of storage, and it’s only an extra $20 to double up. Sure, these are crowdfunding prices, but if Azpen can afford to let several hundred go at these prices it won’t be long before other manufacturers start pumping out similar configs at the same price points.Oh and don’t worry if the lower tiers are all gone before you get a chance to pledge for a Hybrx of your own. Just opt for the $275 tier instead and yourself a new primary laptop and two spares — because why the heck not at that price?

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/fujitsu-lifebook-nh532.html Battery for Fujitsu Lifebook NH532

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-inspiron-1545.html Dell Inspiron 1545 Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-xps-l501x.html DELL XPS L501x Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-xps-l701x.html DELL XPS L701x Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-vostro-v13.html DELL Vostro V13 Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-vostro-v130.html DELL Vostro V130 Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-vostro-3700.html DELL Vostro 3700 Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-vostro-3500.html DELL Vostro 3500 Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-vostro-1520.html Dell vostro 1520 Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-alienware-m11x.html Dell alienware m11x Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-alienware-m11x-r3.html Dell alienware m11x r3 Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-alienware-m14x.html Dell alienware m14x Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-alienware-m17x.html Dell alienware m17x Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-alienware-m17x-r3.html Dell alienware m17x r3 Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-inspiron-1520.html Dell inspiron 1520 Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-inspiron-1521.html Dell inspiron 1521 Notebook Battery

http://www.new-laptopbatteries.com/dell-inspiron-1720.html Dell inspiron 1720 Notebook Battery

A reader who wants to remain anonymous doesn't want to type in his Windows password more than once or twice a day. By default, Windows requires you to prove that you're you every time you boot or just wake the computer out of sleep mode. There are good reasons for that. You don't want someone else reading your email or shopping with your Amazon account.

But all that typing can get annoying, and if you only use your PC in a secure place, it may not be necessary. Here are three ways to avoid this repetitive typing.If your computer is always on, you never have to enter a password. But there are some real disadvantages. It wastes electricity, runs down your laptop battery, and increases your energy bill. And the computer is completely unprotected—anyone who can get into the room can use it.Of course, a compromise would be to turn it off when you're done for the day, and boot it up again every morningTo make sure the PC stays awake on its own, you'll need to make adjustments in Control Panel's Power Options tool. Search for power options and select Power Options in the Control Panel section. (Windows 10 users have another option: right-click the Start button and select Power Options.)You can tell Windows to not ask for authentication when it wakes. This takes care of the wasted electricity issue, but still leaves your PC vulnerable--unless you shut it down completely.


 
 
 

最新文章

查看全部
Lenovo 3000 V100 Battery

Opera's developer channel version is available for laptops running OS X, Windows and Linux.That is, does Opera and its Power Saver...

 
 
 
Lenovo ThinkPad T420 Battery

Would you rather have a thicker tablet, or a thinner, cheaper tablet that couldn't run all your apps? That was the choice in 2012, but...

 
 
 
Featured Posts
請稍後再來
文章發佈後將於此處顯示。
Recent Posts
Archive
Search By Tags
Follow Us
  • Facebook Basic Square
  • Twitter Basic Square
  • Google+ Basic Square

© 2023 by Anton's Animal Kingdom. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page