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The Most Anticipated Ultrabook of 2012

The Most Anticipated Ultrabook of 2012

CloudTags: CES 2012 , laptops , 2012 , ultrabook , battery life uk , Toshiba pa3536u-1brs , Hp pavilion dv4 batteries , compaq pavilion dv6 battery life

If you’ve watched our extensive laptop coverage from CES 2012, only to look down at your own busted-up old clunker of a machine, then 2012 might be the year you buy a new laptop.

And with so many high-end, high-design systems hitting store shelves this year, there are more worthy candidates than ever to choose from, and many of them fall into the still-new ultrabook category.

If you need a refresher on what “ultrabook” means, it’s an Intel marketing term (much like Centrino was), encompassing a growing category of Windows laptops that are thin and reasonably powerful (typically under 188 millimeters thick with the latest Core i-series processors), with good battery life and at least some solid-state-drive (SSD) storage.

With all the ultrabooks already confirmed for 2012, it’s a fairly safe bet that your next laptop will be a very thin one.

Running from just under $1,000 to $1,500 or more, the 2012 laptops that seem the most exciting aren’t exactly the least expensive we’ve ever seen, especially after several years of falling prices, but at least they all look good.

Our question for you is: based on design, price, components, and features, which of these highly anticipated 2012 laptops are you hoping to buy this year?

Below you’ll find a brief executive summary of each one, linked to more in-depth coverage, with our take on why it’s a lustworthy machine. Check out the contenders, then vote in our poll. Or, if you have a different choice, let us know in the comments section below.

HP Envy 14 Spectre 05 620x350 The Most Anticipated Ultrabook of 2012

HP Envy 14 Spectre
Estimated price: $1,499, Q1 2012

The winner of our Computers and Hardware Best of CES category, this glass-covered beast is certainly unique. We’re still not convinced a glass-lid laptop can survive in the wild, but the NFC support and great audio controls are big pluses. 

Dell XPS 13 Top The Most Anticipated Ultrabook of 2012

Dell XPS 13
Estimated price: $999, Q1 2012 

The look and feel remind us of Dell corporate Latitude line spliced with a MacBook Air, rather than previous XPS laptops, and inside it has edge-to-edge Gorilla Glass over the screen and a large clickpad. 

Acer Aspire S5 3 1 620x350 The Most Anticipated Ultrabook of 2012

Acer Aspire S5
Estimated price: $999, Q2/3 2012 

The S5 is 15mm thick–2mm thinner than last year’s Aspire S3–weighs less than 3 pounds, and has a sleek Onyx Black magnesium alloy chassis. More importantly, the ports–HDMI, USB 3.0, and Thunderbolt–are tucked away via a motorized rear port door.  

Samsung Series 9 2012 PID 07 620x350 The Most Anticipated Ultrabook of 2012

Samsung Series 9
Estimated price: $1,399, Q1 2012 

Last year’s big design winner was the ultraslim Samsung Series 9, which hit before anyone had ever heard of an ultrabook. This year’s version is even slicker, but still on the expensive side for what you get.  

yoga 06 interface 620x350 The Most Anticipated Ultrabook of 2012Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga 

Estimated price: $1,199, Q2/3 2012 

Another laptop we’ll have to wait for Windows 8 to get our hands on, the Yoga works perfectly fine as a standard clamshell laptop, but its lid flips all the way back to form a touch-screen tablet, providing extra flexibility (no pun intended) in how you use it. 

 

34850080 TP 620x350 The Most Anticipated Ultrabook of 2012

Not a 15-inch MacBook Air.

15-inch Apple MacBook Air
Estimated price: $1,699 or more, sometime in 2012 

A shot in the dark here, but there have been enough rumors and online chatter about a larger version of Apple’s MacBook Air that it must be on at least some people’s list of most-lusted-after laptops of 2012. If there is indeed a 15-inch Air, it could very well hit sometime around midyear, when the next generation of Intel CPUs is expected, and would most likely involve a decent premium over the existing 11- and 13-inch versions.

 

 

CES 2012: Acer Unveils World’s Thinnest Ultrabook Laptop, Aspire S5

CES 2012: Acer Unveils World’s Thinnest Ultrabook Laptop, Aspire S5

CloudTags: CES , 2012 , Acer , Thinnest , Ultrabook , Laptop , Aspire S5 , Acer Batteries , Acer as07b41

acer aspire s5 ultrabook laptop CES 2012: Acer Unveils Worlds Thinnest Ultrabook Laptop, Aspire S5

Acer has wasted no time kicking off CES 2012 with some laptop announcements, including a brand-new Ultrabook and an update Aspire Timeline series.The company calls the Aspire S5 (pictured) the world’s thinnest Ultrabook at just 15mm at its thickest point, and the 13.3-inch notebook weighs just under 3 pounds. It will come with an yet-unnamed Intel Core processor, solid state drive, and HDMI, USB 3.0, and Thunderbolt ports. To my knowledge, this is the first Ultrabook to include a Thunderbolt port, though by the end of the week, it probably won’t be the last.

The S5 will be available sometime in the second quarter, though pricing was not revealed.Acer also announced 14-inch and 15-inch models of its Aspire Timeline Ultra notebooks with eight hours of battery life, dual core Intel processors, around 20mm thick, dedicated graphics for 3D gaming, and a slim DVD optical drive.

The new Aspire Timeline Ultra series are designed to provide more a traditional laptop experience in the Ultrabook form factor, complete with two-spindle design. As with previous Timelines, Acer promises 8 hours of battery life, and they will come with discrete graphics cards, DVD burners, and the “latest” Intel Core i series CPUs. Like the S5, they also include Acer Green Instant On technology that lets the computer wake up in 1.5 seconds from a battery-saving sleep mode.

We’re not provided with pricing for the new Timelines, either, but you may find out sooner than with the S5 since they are expected in Q1. And check back with us all week, as there will be plenty of more Ultrabook announcements still to come.

125149 acer inspire one CES 2012: Acer Unveils Worlds Thinnest Ultrabook Laptop, Aspire S5

The Acer S5 Ultrabook looks less like the MacBook Air than other Ultrabooks so far.

Acer media conference, held two days ahead of the official CES show, sets the scene for tough competition in 2012 between manufacturers readying to pump out Ultrabooks, which are small, thin yet powerful notebook computers with form factors similar to Apple’s MacBook Air.

Unlike regular notebooks, Ultrabooks have special Intel dual core processors coupled with inbuilt graphics, capable of performing many of the functions of high-end computers such as video editing and gaming.

It has a black magnesium-aluminum alloy cover and looks less like the MacBook Air than other Ultrabooks so far. The Aspire is due to ship in the second quarter.

Acer today did not reveal the price of its Ultrabook, however general pricing of less than $1000 will be crucial if the Ultrabook is to be successful, given that powerful notebooks weighing a little more that are not technically Ultrabooks can be bought for about $500.

Analyst Tim Bajarin of Creative Strategies told AFP the S5 was “quite significant”.

“It looks like the thinnest and lightest, and it sets the bar for the rest of the ultrabook vendors,” Mr Bajarin said.

Intel’s Ultrabook form factor also faces competition from high-end tablet computers and a new line of “Ultrathin” notebooks — rival AMD’s version of the Ultrabook that are due for release in Australia early this year.

Acer also will roll out a cloud service — AcerCloud, which will allow users to retrieve multimedia and data files on any Acer mobile device. Acer said it would include AcerCloud on all new Acer consumer PCs without additional cost.

 

2012: Year of the Ultrabook , Lenovo’s first Ultrabook IdeaPad U300s Review

2012: Year of the Ultrabook , Lenovo’s first Ultrabook IdeaPad U300s Review

CloudTag: Ultrabook , IdeaPad U300s , Lenovo laptop , Lenovo batteries , Lenovo thinkpad t61 batteries , inspiron 1525 batteries

The talk is usually all about tablets, but 2012 may be the year of the Ultrabook.

intel ultrabook 2012: Year of the Ultrabook , Lenovo’s first Ultrabook IdeaPad U300s Review

Apple inadvertently touched off a new PC category with its MacBook Air. While the MacBook Air was priced too rich for many in its initial generation, Apple was able to get the price down to a reasonable level with the current model. Starting at $999, the MacBook Air forced Intel and Windows laptop makers to scramble to come up with an answer to Apple. Thus the Ultrabook category was born.

What is an Ultrabook? According to Intel, who trademarked the term, the Ultrabook is a laptop that:

  • is less than 20mm (0.8 inches) thick
  • has no optical drive
  • uses a solid-state drive (SSD) for all storage
  • uses a Core i5, i7 processor
  • weighs less than 1.4 kg (3.1 lbs.)
  • yields 5 – 8+ hours of battery life
  • priced around $1,000

The first Ultrabooks have started to appear from top laptop makers, including Lenovo, Acer, ASUS, and HP. While these initial models have been able to meet the hardware criteria laid out by Intel, the “around $1,000″ has been a sticking point. To be fair, models of the MacBook Air with decent configurations sell at prices higher than the $999 entry-level configuration.

PC laptop makers realize they must do something to kickstart the Ultrabook category. It sounds like the Ultrabook will be the big thing at the CES in 2012, compared to netbooks and tablets in recent years.

It is good that so many companies are looking to produce Ultrabooks, as that will drive prices down. While Ultrabook makers may have a hard time competing with Apple currently, if prices drop enough next year that will surely change. Intel is predicting 40 percent of all laptops sold will be Ultrabooks by the end of 2012.

While netbooks were essentially a flash in the pan, quickly getting big sales numbers and fading just as fast, Ultrabooks are here to stay. Netbooks went the underpowered route to acheive cost effectiveness, and many owners quickly tired of the corner-cutting. Ultrabooks are full laptops, with good performance packed in a highly portable form. In spite of the fancy new marketing term, they are the natural evolution of the bigger laptops, and they’ll be around for a good while, post-PC era or not.

Lenovo U300S2 web 540x385 2012: Year of the Ultrabook , Lenovo’s first Ultrabook IdeaPad U300s Review

If next year I can get an Ultrabook like the Lenovo U300s I recently reviewed for less than $1,000, I can see myself buying one. I likely wouldn’t be the only one, as many need a Windows laptop, or have a bias against Apple. Next year may very well be the year of the Ultrabook.

Lenovo IdeaPad U300s Review

Ultrabook is a product category invented by Intel to cook up excitement for the laptop segment. It is essentially a thin and light notebook computer that is reasonably priced. The first Ultrabook for ThinkPad maker Lenovo is the IdeaPad U300s, and it validates the new product name as it is the thinnest and lightest Windows laptop I have ever used. It is also the best Windows notebook to cross my desk, and that covers a lot of them.

The Ultrabook design gives the U300s its form, a light (<3 lbs.) aluminum case that is half an inch thick. The unibody design is deceptively sturdy, and is easy to carry and use. The 13-inch display is bright and vivid, and the chiclet keys a typist’s dream with one exception detailed below. Performance is top-notch with the Intel Core i7 processor as configured, and battery life can last all day. I’m not convinced we need the special Ultrabook marketing term, but the IdeaPad U300s fits the ultra branding in every way. 

Hardware specs as reviewed

  • CPU: Intel Core i7, 1.8 GHz
  • Memory: 4GB
  • Storage: 256GB SSD with RapidDrive technology (verified cold boot in 10 seconds)
  • Display: 13.3 inches; 1366 x 768;
  • Ports: 1-USB 2.0; 1-USB 3.0, audio, HDMI
  • Dimensions: 324 x 216 x 14.9 mm; 12.75 x 8.5 x 0.58 inches
  • Battery life: 8 hours real world; Rapid charge to 50% in 30 minutes
  • Weight: 1.32 kg; 2.9 lbs.
  • OS: Windows 7 Ultimate
lenovo ideapad u400 2012: Year of the Ultrabook , Lenovo’s first Ultrabook IdeaPad U300s Review

Using the Ultrabook

Carrying the U300s in one hand couldn’t be easier, with the thin laptop fitting comfortably in the hand. The notebook feels like it could stand up to the daily rigors of a road warrior, while remaining easy to throw in the bag and go. The system is optimized to make the laptop quick to start, easy to put to sleep, and fast to charge when the battery level drops down. Even the power brick is well designed, being almost as thin as the laptop itself and easy to fit in a small pocket of any gear bag.

Lenovo has designed the U300s with a solid bottom cover to the notebook, with nary a vent. This keeps the laptop cool when using propped up on the lap, due to air circulating through the keyboard and out the two side vents. The Ultrabook exhibits little warming during use as found in many laptops. It is well designed for long-term usage with good thermal engineering.

Ultra-performance

The Intel Core i7 processor (1.8 GHz) coupled with the 256 GB solid-state disk (SSD) make this laptop fly. It is the fastest thin laptop I have ever used, and has handled everything I throw at it with ease. The Windows Experience Index (WEI) of 4.4 shows how it stacks up, with the highest rating given to the SSD of 7.1.

This performance would mean little if the battery installed wasn’t able to keep it going for very long. Lenovo rates the fixed battery at 8 hours, and my real-world usage backs that up. I have routinely gotten over seven hours with the Balanced power setting, and could see getting even longer with aggressive power management.

The rapid charging technology in the U300s adds even more value to the long battery life. Using the tiny power brick, it is possible to make a 50 percent charge to a dead battery in just 30 minutes. This is a huge advantage for the frequent traveler, as just a half hour access to a power outlet can get you an extra 4+ hours of usage at the end of a long day.

Lenovo claims the battery has a 30-day standby time, which I have not verified. I can’t let the U300s sit idle for days as it calls me to use it frequently. I have verified the 10.5 second cold boot time, made possible by Lenovo’s optimization with the RapidDrive SSD.

Conclusion

Lenovo has produced an outstanding laptop for its first Ultrabook, and it meets the ultra definition in every way. There is even anti-theft protection on the U300s to help locate a stolen laptop for hopefully recovering it intact should that tragedy strike.