So buy the Krait version which is not last year's hardware.I honestly don't feel like you're going to get good consistent frame rates on a 1080p screen with what is essentially last year's hardware (Tegra 3 has been developed well over a year ago).
So buy the Krait version which is not last year's hardware.I honestly don't feel like you're going to get good consistent frame rates on a 1080p screen with what is essentially last year's hardware (Tegra 3 has been developed well over a year ago).
I honestly don't feel like you're going to get good consistent frame rates on a 1080p screen with what is essentially last year's hardware (Tegra 3 has been developed well over a year ago). The original Transformer Prime just manages to pump out smooth frame rates at 720p. Maybe I'm completely wrong and the extra 300mhz between all 4 cores is just enough to cover it. I'm saving up to purchase an Android tablet down the road but my gut feeling tells me to wait until the end of this year when the new iteration of Arm Quad core processors have reached mass market and internal ram is increased to at least 2gb.
So buy the Krait version which is not last year's hardware.
So buy the Krait version which is not last year's hardware.
It's usually not possible to get a trademark (Copyrights and Patents are completely different issues) on a common word describing the product. There's also different types of trademarks (unregistered, registered, etc.) that have different implications; for example, anyone can simply start using an unregistered trademark. There's also the funny case where a company can lose its trademark if the trademark becomes common usage. A few examples where this has occurred to some extent are Kleenex, Xerox, and Google, where people use the trademarks in place of the proper common word (i.e. tissue, copy, or search) that would normally be used.
Multiple companies are also capable of holding the same trademark if there's no likelihood of product confusion. For example, Hasbro uses the Transformer trademark to refer to its line of action figures, and ASUS uses it in the consumer electronics space. There's also another aspect to trademarks that makes lawsuits such as these common. If a company fails to protect its trademark, it can lose it. As the word 'transformer' is a common word, there's a lot of leeway into its use. However, adding 'prime' into the mix, another word that's heavily associated with Hasbro's product, starts causing a lot of overlap.
Not interested in the Ipad3?
No. The happiest day of my life was after I sold my iphone, then uninstalled itunes forever. I will never ever ever ever go back to that mess again.
Good hardware, terrible ecosystem
Let me correct that for you:
"Good hardware, great ecosystem, terrible lock-in"
The lock-in is inseparable from the ecosystem. For instance, achieving lock-in is the motivation behind iOS's lack of common filesystem, which prevents transparent 3rd party file sync (making the ecosystem poorer), which in turn forces a ton of app developers to incorporate 3rd party file sync support inside their own apps, which eats directly into the development of the app's core functionality (making the ecosystem yet poorer).Let me correct that for you:
"Good hardware, great ecosystem, terrible lock-in"
Still has a last year-ish GPU. That is what matters.
Wait, isn't the Infinity S4 going to be using the Adreno 320 GPU? Thats not a 'last year' GPU, thats Qualcomm's S4 Pro flagship.
Not interested in the Ipad3?
I think he's saying that the lock-in is what makes it a terrible ecosystem to him. And I agree (IMHO).
Would it bother you if I say that I don't want a blown up phone UI to be on a tablet, and I'm not necessarily a fan of Apple's heavy-handed, condescending style? I dig the eco-system, and believe me I wish I had it on my Android... but if push ever comes to shove and Google completely fails at marketing and getting support for Android tablet apps by the time Windows 8 becomes mass market... I'm going back to Windows.
