Apple’s watch will run iOS and arrive later this year, say sources
Jony Ive wants a spot on your wrist
The Web of Consumerism & Gadget Envy
Apple’s watch will run iOS and arrive later this year, say sources
Jony Ive wants a spot on your wrist
LaCie and Philippe Starck create $299 ‘Blade Runner’ limited-edition hard drive
LaCie has teamed up with French designer Philippe Starck to create a limited-edition Blade Runner external hard drive. The Blade Runner is a 4TB hard drive that connects via USB 3.0.
Lenovo ThinkPad Helix tablet / laptop hybrid gets a power-up when it docks
Did you think you’d seen every possible way a laptop and tablet could merge? Lenovo’s ThinkPad Helix is here to show you otherwise. Rather than simply flipping head over heels, twisting in place, or detaching from a battery-laden slate of keys, the ThinkPad Helix is a powerful tablet that actually gets more powerful when you combine it with its keyboard docking station — think Mighty Morphin Power Rangers but with Lenovo’s trademark rack of keys rather than giant robotic animals.
Russian YotaPhone aims to reinvent the smartphone with secondary Kindle-like display
But will a late 2013 launch kill its chances?
Acer Aspire S7 and Dell XPS 12 review: battle of the transforming 1080p touchscreen ultrabooks
Two Windows 8 laptops with 1080p screens, premium builds, and very different gimmicks
“The first Nintendo console to join the HD era, the Wii U’s main selling point is something different — the GamePad, a merging of a tablet interface with a traditional controller. Where the Wii was designed around simplicity and accessibility, the Wii U is a much more complicated proposition. In the Japanese giant’s new attempt to retake the living rooms of the core gaming audience and the massive mainstream foothold it found with the Wii, the biggest problem is how to explain just what the Wii U is, and what it’s trying to do.”
Read our full Wii U review, only on Polygon.
(Source: parislemon)