Top new tech products: world’s cheapest tablet, the first social e-reader, revolutionary light field camera
Top new tech products: world’s cheapest tablet, the first social e-reader, revolutionary light field camera
World’s cheapest tablet
Canadian manufacturer DataWind has unveiled the world’s cheapest tablet in India -- a Rs. 2,999 ($60) Android device called the Ubislate7 (also known as the Aakash Tablet). The made-for-students tablet has a 7” display (800x480), runs Android 2.2 and enables users to browse the web, watch videos, view PDFs, write documents and play music. The Ubislate7 is expected on the market in early December.
http://www.aakashtablet.com/

Social e-reader that lets you browse the web
The Kobo Vox eReader is an e-reader cum Android media tablet. The device lets readers shop over 2.2 million digital books on a 7” multitouch color screen and also give them the ability to download apps and connect with friends on social networks. It features its own social reading platform “Reading Life,” runs on Android 2.3 and has a battery that lasts up to 7 hours. The Kobo Vox eReader will start shipping on October 28 for $199.99.
http://www.kobo.com/kobo-vox.html

Android tablet priced at under $200
Consumer electronics company ViewSonic is blazoning a sub-$200 Android tablet called the ViewPad 7e. The 7” Android 2.3 tablet has been designed for "economical consumers" who want the tablet experience without a $400-$1,000 price tag. Under the hood is a 1GHz processor that’s powerful enough to play flash video and surf the web, a 800x600 LED backlit touchscreen, dual cameras (3MP and VGA 0.3MP), 4GB of internal storage, a Micro SD card slot, 1080p video playback via the Micro HDMI connection, and WiFi and Bluetooth support. The ViewPad 7e will start shipping in North America at the end of October for $199.99. The tablet is expected to be available in Latin America in November.
http://www.viewsonic.com/products/v7e.htm

World’s first light field camera that lets you focus later

Lytro is a revolutionary new camera that lets users refocus images minutes, weeks or years after they have taken a photo. Lytro matches its future-thinking "living pictures" concept of photography with a radically different camera design. The pocketable camera (which measures 41 x 41 x 112 mm) boasts an 8x optical zoom lens with a constant f/2 aperture, a light field sensor that captures 11 million light rays of data, and a 1.46" multitouch LCD display. The Lytro will be available in early 2012 in two models; the 8GB Electric Blue or Graphite model which holds up to 350 photos for $399 and the 16GB Red Hot which holds up to 750 pictures for $499. Both models are available for pre-order from http://www.lytro.com now.

Push-to-talk Android smartphone with QWERTY keyboard and a tough exterior

The Motorola Admiral is a hardy Android 2.3 Gingerbread smartphone packed full with a 1.2GHz processor, push-to-talk connectivity, a 3.1” touchscreen, 5MP camera with 720p video capture, and 3G Mobile Hotspot capability for up to five devices. The smartphone also comes with military spec toughness, meaning that it will stand up against dust, shock, vibration and high and low temperatures. The Admiral is available now for $99.99 on a two-year contract after a $50 mail-in rebate.
http://www.motorola.com/Consumers/US-EN/Consumer-Product-and-Services/Mobile-Phones/MOTOROLA-ADMIRAL-US-EN

Thin and sleek 14-inch laptop with internal optical drive
Dell’s XPS 14z laptop is less than an inch thin (0.9”) but still manages to fit in an optical DVD drive, second generation Intel Core i5 or Core i7 dual core processors, NVIDIA graphics, a spill-resistant keyboard, and up to 750GB of storage. It runs Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium and has an edge