The Medion ultra mobile PC could have DOUBLE the battery life of 2006 UMPCs…
But first, the images. These come from the OEM’s website.
That’s a good looking docking station. If the Medion ultra mobile PC is shipped with it, it will enable grab-and-go home PC use.
In my quality mock-up (!) I proved that thumbing could be possible.
Note the touchpad on the bottom right of the frame. This is an update to the design. There was a mouse button before.
The specifications have been updated. They now reflect the fact that we’ve seen it promoted as a Windows Vista machine. Note too that it has the LED backlit screen and they quote a battery life of 4-5 hours. That’s believable due to the fact the h/w spec is similar to the Samsung Q1B which has been proven to reach 4 hours battery life. I like the idea of a touch pad rather than a mouse pointer too. This opens up the possibility of little thumb gestures. It might be too small though. We’ll have to see.
A word about the processor. Its the VIA C7-M. I know this doesn’t support Direct-X 9 in hardware so there will be limitations. Gaming will be a problem. I’ve also seen problems in Vista’s media center but this could be due to beta s/w and drivers. On the positive side, the quality of screen-scaling, TV out, audio (I hope there’s a digital audio output on the dock) and, if supported in the drivers, MPEG-2, MPEG-4 and WMV9 hardware acceleration will be very good. My guess is that the hardware video acceleration IS supported. Why? Well to support DVB-T MPEG-2 rates on the C7, you need to be doing something in hardware. Having tested it myself, DVB-T on the VIA C7-M based Paceblade Easybook P7 without hardware acceleration support is a jittery experience.
These are OEM specs and could change slightly for the Medion version of this device.
- OS: Microsoft Windows Vista
- CPU: VIA C7-M 770 (5.0W 1.0GHz ULV @400MHz FSB)
- Chipset & GPU: VX700 (UniChrome GPU)
- Memory: 512MB/768MB DDR2
- Storage: 30GB or above PATA 4200rpm
- LCD:6.5″ WVGA (800 X 480 LED B/L)
- Web Cam: 300K for VOIP
- Input Device
Touch Screen
Stylus
Touch Pad
Keyboard
4-way buttons
Enter button
Mouse select buttons - Connectivity:
802.11b/g
Bluetooth® V2.0 - I/O Port
VGA out x 1
USB 2.0 x 2
Media slot (SD/SD-IO/MMC) x 1
Headphone jack x 1
Microphone jack x 1
DC-In x 1
Hot Key Buttons
WiFi on/off
Bluetooth on/off
Web Cam on/off
TV/GPS on/off
Show or hide windows Mobility Center
Display enlarge - Dimension (w/Battery Pack)
190 x 120.8 x 28.3 mm - Weight (w/Battery Pack): 720g
- Battery Life: 4 ~ 5 hrs
I liked this device when I first saw it back in Nov and I like it even more now. Engadget dismissed it as a non-starter then (guys, you have to trust my tips!) but I’d like to see what they say now. Personally, I find it much more exciting than the iPhone and want one NOW!
I’ll update the Carrypad datasheet for this later today.
Steve / Chippy
aww man i want this so bad!!!! and i hear its not gonna be available in u.s.?? if it it i am definitely buying over the new over-priced oqo 02