by Jay Garrett on February 4, 2010
Remember that see-through lap top that was spotted at CES at the start of this year?
Well, it seems that those hi-tech sci-fi films and scenes in the likes of CSI, could well be coming to a laptop near you!
Of course, the Samsung transparent screen concept is incredibly cool but honestly; when tapping away at your puter do you ever long to stare at the wall or at the cat that’s sleeping behind your screen?
The concept would be great for head-up displays (HUD’s) in cars or motorcycle helmet visors but on a regular puter?
I guess if they can make huuuuuuuuuge screens that can form a part of meeting rooms, etc then that would also be very cool!
Still, saying that, I hope Sammy goes ahead with building some and lets me have a go and perhaps try and convince me of the merits
by Jay Garrett on December 16, 2009
You know how it is.
We were happy with 3G when it came out but that was like ages ago!
We need 4G now!
You may have heard that those lucky TeliaSonera customers over in Sweden and Norway have got access to the speedy service and, as not to be left out, so has Slough!
Where the 4G is ticking over (Stockholm and Oslo) the users will require special Samsung modems – well, there aren’t any 4G phones yet.
TeliaSonera wants to bring the 4G lovin to 25 Swedish cities and three Norwegian cities by this time next year as well as having a licence to roll it out to Finland.
So, Slough.
The O2 HQ happens to be based in Slough and this is where the UK 4G is being tested and they seem quite happy with it and it may even cover that patchy 3G coverage of theirs
But don’t go slinging the 3G dongles in the trash just yet as 4G modems aren’t backwards-compatible to 3G at the mo. Take a leaf out of the Scandinavian’s books and keep hold until at least the second half of next year.
OK then – what is this 4G and why is it so special?
4G refers to Long Term Evolution, a tweaked version of High-Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA), which makes your 3G phones and dongles work.
To be considered 4G the connection must have a downlink rate of at least 100Mbps and an uplink rate of at least 50Mbps – or up to 10 times faster than the 7.5Mbps of current HSDPA. Nice
In the tropics of Slough, O2 reckons it’s hit 150Mbps so with data rates like that, high-quality video, music and games could be streamed to your phone effortlessly and, more importantly, quickly!
No real sign of when we can expect 4G in Blighty but at least it looks like O2 is having a play with it.