Toshiba Unveils Laptop With Instant-On TV & DVR 189
Patik writes "Toshiba has unveiled a new laptop, Qosmio, that allows users to watch TV or a DVD without booting the OS. The laptop turns on instantly for these functions and has a 15" near-TV quality screen. To use DVR functions like time shifting and recording, the user must boot the Windows Media Center OS."
"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:2, Interesting)
Is this HDTV, or older PAL/SECAM or NTSC quality ?
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:2, Informative)
A 15" screen has, at least the ones I've seen, usually a resolution of 1024x768 pixels. As far as TV goes... well:
PAL: 625 scanlines, at 4:3 this will give 833 pixels in the horisontal plane
NTSC: 480 scanlines, and the same 4:3 ratio giving 640 pixels horisontaly
HDTV has different meanings depending on who makes them, but is often used for sets having a refreshrate twice the normal and a resolution of either 1920x1080 or 1280x720. mind you, the actuall signall recived over the antenna will be the same as i
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:2)
How is this marked "Informative"?
The 4:3 when the refer to TVs is not some magic scanline modifier.
IT'S THE FUCKING ASPECT RATIO!
Example:
A 15" monitor is approximately 12 inches wide, and 9 inches tall.
hence 12/9
NTSC Defines 480 scan lines. PERIOD*. It has 29.997 frames per second, each frame consisting of 2 fields (240 viewable alternating lines), which are interlaced images.
oh, and by the way.. it's Horizontal , not horisontal
*well, actually NTSC-
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:2)
Either the entire screen is not used, or some akward scaling will be going on to get the image to fill the entire screen, and this will make for a more blurry image.
TVs don't have a resolution in X (Score:2)
Re:TVs don't have a resolution in X (Score:2)
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:4, Informative)
hdtv is 1024x768
NTSC video bandwidth is 4.2 MHZ. 525 lines including retrace. How do you get 800 X 600 out of that?
Check the spec. Only the 3 X 4 aspect ratio matches. Everything else is stretched to fit. Lines that are not there are generated, not sent from the source.
A very brief spec for NTSC is found here;
http://www.datapro.net/techinfo/NTSC.html
a built in dongle's no hassle (Score:2)
Now is there any reason to think that th
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:2)
The real reason digital video is 480 lines and not 486 (the supposed full active area) is because most digital compression codecs are based on blocks that are 16x16. Many can only operate on video that has dimensions that are multiples of 16.
480/16=30. Good.
486/16=30.385. Bad.
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:2)
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:5, Informative)
regular tv is 800x600 hdtv is 1024x768
Wrong!
Regular TV is nX480, where n is determined by available analogue bandwidth, or by the defined digital value, whichever is less. If composite video is involved, n is less than 300, with colour resolution less than 150. If the narrowest analog link is S-Video, then image resolution may be as high as you can muster, but colour resolution is less constrained to about 400 pixels. Component can go as high as you want.
Digital modes include 352x240 (0.1 megapixels; VCD), 352x480 (0.2 megapixels; TiVo), 480x480 (0.2 megapixels; SVCD), 640x480 (0.3 megapixels; DTV/VGA), 704x480 (0.3 megapixels; DTV) and 720x480 (0.3 megapixels; DV/DVD). Note that in no case does X approach 800 nor Y approach 600. 800x600 would be 0.5 megapixels.
Now, if you've been paying attention, you've noticed that VCD is not nX480, byt nX240. To present this on an NTSC monitor, either each line is repeated, or the picture is scaled and smoothed, depending on your playback hardware.
HDTV, on the other hand, is firmly defined as 1280x720 (0.9 megapixels) or 1920x1080 (2.1 megapixels), both higher than 1024x768 (0.8 megapixels).
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:2)
Its usually 544x480.
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:2)
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:3, Informative)
TiVo is not 352x480, it supports three resolutions, and that happens to be the lowest one. If I recall correctly only if your Tivo is set to record over the air in basic quality does it use that low. Its usually 544x480.
Thank you for the correction.
NTSC transmission is 720x486 set your TV to overscan and you'll see all sorts of interesting things broadcasters use in those two 'hidden' 3-pix areas
I did not count that area because it is part of the oversacan, not part of the picture. If I were c
Re:"15" near-TV quality screen" (Score:3, Informative)
So, NTSC is really "n * 525", not "n * 480" and *certainly* not "n * 486"
I re-assert that it is 480, because only 480 lines appear on the screen, and, in the event of a fixed-pixel screen (LCD, plasma, DLT), 480 is the appropriate Y resolution.
Additionally, in digitizing NTSC, it is digitized to 480 (VCD exception noted), because to do so is entirely aprporiate.
In a similar vein, I assert that PAL/SECAM is 576 (288 for VCD), despite that there are 625 scan lines. The lines beyond 576 are not shown,
Wow! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Wow! (Score:5, Insightful)
This "Not-An-OS" hack/trick of Toshiba is a way to get away Windows' (The OS) horrific boot-loading/suspend/power-management stability issue.
In OSX, no such problem exists: the system is stable, and manages its power in such a way that it need not interfere with instant-on operation.
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
In OSX, no such problem exists: the system is stable, and manages its power in such a way that it need not interfere with instant-on operation."
Really? I have both Windows XP and OS X laptops and they boot from power-save near identically. In fact, the OS X one is a little trickier, in that there's some kind of a timeout value (I don't know where to set it) that controls how long the password screen stays up. Often I'll s
Re:Wow! (Score:5, Informative)
I think this would rock, as it's rather a waste to have those nice wide LCD screens off at any time (that and the fact that my apartment is of the aforementioned shoebox type).
Re:Wow! (Score:3, Insightful)
What do you guys think of the new imac also being a tv?? I mean think of that awsome 20in screen you could have a computer and tv all in one. For those small rooms or even say dorms. You could also hook your console and vcr up to it. I do not have any true info about this it just came out of my head.
Speculation or shooting the breeze?
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
Well, in theory, with a STB with D-sub or DVI-D output you should be able to do this with any monitor - no need for a PC at all.
It's actually something I've been thinking of myself - LCD monitors are much cheaper than LCD TVs (at least they are here in Australia) and Avermedia makes a cheap SDTV STB with D-sub out. Whether this works well in practise, though, is something I'm wondering about - I'd love to hear from anyon
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
Eh. I've found there's something about watching TV and movies on a computer that just doesn't "feel right". I recently purchased a 20" LCD for the box I built, and it pales in comparison to my 40" HDTV.
On the other hand, movies on a laptop rock. I love taking my iBook to bed and watch episodes of MST3K. In that instance, I think it's better than a bedroom TV.
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
sony model extant (Score:2)
it does however use sony's odd thumb out tech known as gigapocket, which severly limits the options for third party tv software.
15" near-TV quality screen (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:15" near-TV quality screen (Score:4, Informative)
Re:15" near-TV quality screen (Score:2)
Re:15" near-TV quality screen (Score:3, Informative)
Re:15" near-TV quality screen (Score:2)
Re:15" near-TV quality screen (Score:2)
Re:15" near-TV quality screen (Score:3, Interesting)
As a side note, this is just the next logical step. My older Toshiba already plays audio CDs at the flip of a switch without being booted up as a computer.
uh oh. (Score:5, Insightful)
This is an interesting dis-info exercise. People think "OS = Microsoft".
It is "not booting -the- OS", no. Its not booting "Windows OS".
There -is- an OS being loaded, just that its only going to support Toshiba's Apps... and nobody elses.
Re:uh oh. (Score:2)
Well I for one welcome our TV/Laptop bundling overlords.
Re:uh oh. (Score:2, Insightful)
ob linux comment (Score:3, Interesting)
It's possible this is just some firmware on a chip that displays tv signals.. but say it is an OS, it leads to the question
Re:ob linux comment (Score:2)
Re:ob linux comment (Score:2)
Maybe this is a good application for underclocking [silentpcreview.com]?
Not quite so nice (Score:5, Insightful)
Consider yourself turning this thing on and watching, you get carried away and want to record something.
You have to reboot, LOAD WINDOWS, start the tv thingy and get recording.
from the article:
If users want to pause live TV or record TV shows onto the 80-gigabyte hard disk, however, they'll need to do so with the Windows software.
Re:Not quite so nice (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not quite so nice (Score:2)
without booting the OS (Score:4, Insightful)
So its a laptop built into a TV then, not the other way around, eh?
Re:without booting the OS (Score:2)
I believe manufacturers have found out that everage users don't like to use computers. Why? Because they are crap. "They", most generally means Windows, which is so unfriendly to use that most people avoid it if they can.
Re:without booting the OS (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:without booting the OS (Score:2)
I've always wondered why in such embedded/utility systems we have a formal "booting up". I've always felt that the default OS should start up without any fuss and trademark logos or such on power-up, giving a no-fuss start, with a manual button/key/option to over-ride and do something else
So, even if its not always-running or always-on, its on when you need it...
Improvement on the 2 in 1 problem (Score:4, Interesting)
This is a great step in improving the tv on computer experience.
That being said, I don't understand why they say "near tv quality" when the laptop screen is so much better than a normal TV. Does it have to do with the scaling?
-Pete
Near-TV quality means... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Near-TV quality means... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Near-TV quality means... (Score:2)
Re:Near-TV quality means... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Improvement on the 2 in 1 problem (Score:2)
"instant on" for the tv, like a normal tv. n/m (Score:2)
Windows Media Center Edition? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Windows Media Center Edition? (Score:2)
It's the frills in Microsoft's products I'm of a mind to get rid of, youngster, not Toshiba's.
Re:Windows Media Center Edition? (Score:2)
Oh, and some stuff to make it boot faster by increasing the base memory usage, to encourage me to buy a new computer 'cos my laptop's already maxed out.
Re:Windows Media Center Edition? (Score:2)
It ships with Windows Media Center Edition.
Therefore the question arises, does the firmware DVD functionality depend in any way on the OS (probably not, but I've seen weirder dependencies than that), and is the hardware otherwise generic enough to allow a standard software load (I've run into laptops where the only way to get the right drivers is through their own restore disk)...
hmm (Score:2)
However, with these new devices being built into laptops, wouldnt they be slightly more heavier?
Though I suppose a lotta people wouldnt mind carrying the laptop around and watching whatever available channels in the air, wherever they are in the world. Airports won't be so dreary anymore then, eh?
Re:hmm (Score:2, Insightful)
Not very likely. If there is any addtional weight it would be insignificant to notice the difference from a similar model without the feature. Nothing that will break the camels back.
Why widescreen laptops? (Score:5, Interesting)
Lets take an example of some poor sod using MSOffice
They have the task bar down the bottom.
They may have a scrolling news bar across the top.
The will have menu bars at the top of word.
All sorts of tool bars docked with the menu.
What way up to we normally edit a page? Portrait, not landscape.
I saw a secerterys PC once that had so many extra toolbars, that using Word was like working through a letterbox.
Re:Why widescreen laptops? (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course it's also an awesome way to read and post to
Re:Why widescreen laptops? (Score:3, Informative)
Laptops aren't used only as text editors anymore. Gaming and multimedia takes advantage of widescreen. Sooner or later all DVD/TV broadcasts will be 16:9. Natural image, unlike text, is better to be bigger in horizontal direction than vertical direction. This is simply because our eyes are located next to each other sideways
Re:Why widescreen laptops? (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, consider the UI I usually interact with:
OS X dock on the right hand side of the screen.
Menu bar at the top (no clutter by having visible menu bars for inactive windows. Easier target to hit according to Fitt's law.)
Document window the height of the screen.
Tool pallets floating around it.
Preview window floating next to it.
When using something like LaTeX (or even editing HTML) widescreen is very useful, since you can have a preview window and an editing window on screen next to each other at the same time. The same is true of writing code, since it is possible to put a code window and a document window on screen next to each other easily.
Re:Why widescreen laptops? (Score:2)
Yes, but if you lay out text so that it spans your entire field of vision, your eyes will tire quickly from scanning back and forth. It's not a coincidence that the vast majority of printed material from the past several thousand years is presented in "portrait mode", usually in columns with a width of roughly three to ten inches.
This doesn't preclude the usefuln
Re:Why widescreen laptops? (Score:2, Interesting)
I bought a widescreen Wintel laptop last year for one reason only: coding
In coding, I want as much horizontal room as possible. Vertical, I don't care as much about.
Depending on your IDE and / or options, you usually have atleast 1 pane (left of right) with an explorer / visualizer / etc. Some even have left AND right.
Don't get me wrong, when I code, I try not to go too far to the side. But every little bit helps.
Th
Re:Why widescreen laptops? (Score:2)
[...]
What way up to we normally edit a page? Portrait, not landscape.
How about you display two pages at once? It often makes more sense to be able to see odd and even pages together.
Btw this is exactly how Apple markets its widescreen displays.
Biggest gripe? Widescreen laptops not standard... (Score:2)
TV / laptop combinations (Score:5, Insightful)
Dell Japan offers TV tuners for their desktops only in Japan. All the Japanese manufacturers (Fujitsu, Toshiba, NEC, Hitachi, Sony, et al) pack TV tuners in their machines as defaults. Toshiba has made the jump by avoiding the 20-seconds of boot-up time when someone just wants to watch the latest episode of Gundam reruns...
While we're on the subject of japanese notebooks, the US notebooks suck in terms of case design and overall size/weight.
Re:TV / laptop combinations (Score:2)
Well, I wouldn't expect Dell Japan to sell TV tuners in the United States.
Dell USA does, though -- they have a line of Windows Media Center PCs.
While we're on the subject of japanese notebooks, the US notebooks suck in terms of case design and overall size/weight.
US notebooks are designed to meet a different set of requirements than those sold in Japan. For instance, more of us in America have our own cars -- traveling with a big heavy lap
PC monitors should have tuners built in (Score:2)
Atari on the road! (Score:2, Funny)
How small is Windows Media Center? (Score:3)
buttons on the side (Score:3, Interesting)
I can only assume Qosmio will be nice as well, however I really dislike the trend of putting buttons all over the front and sides of the laptop. About twice a month my Toshiba 5202-S703 gets turned on accidentally because I hit one of the DVD buttons on the front, or a button gets pressed due to the shifting inside my carrying case.
It's really pleasant to take it out of the case when I have work to do and find it hot as hell with half the battery drained...
Re:buttons on the side (Score:2)
Solution: (follow at own risk!)
- take out harddrive from case (to prevent vibration/shock)
- Unlatch keyboard from bay. Disconnect keyboard ribbon cable and LCD cable from motherboard.
- If you have a miniPCI slot, open it up and untap
uh oh (Score:2)
Re:uh oh (Score:2)
article title (Score:4, Informative)
The DVR isn't instant on, only the TV is. I suppose if you took the "&" symbol to mean a pause, like a comma, they would be separate and only the TV would be instant on. But to me, "&" means "and" and "inclusive" and this article title implies that the DVR is also instant on.
But when will we get VGA-in? (Score:2)
Re:But when will we get VGA-in? (Score:2)
Re:But when will we get VGA-in? (Score:2)
He's probably talking about what I've been wanting too....the ability to use a laptop as an LCD monitor. As in....server in a rack, no KVM available....plug the video keyboard and mouse into the laptop with extension cables, and use the laptop as your IO device.
It would rock, but I'm sure its such a niche market it would never happen in a useful (read: a laptop that isn't complete crap) manner.
Re:But when will we get VGA-in? (Score:2)
Mmmmm...even better idea.
Wow. I'm a geek for even caring that much. But damn, that would be nice.
Re:But when will we get VGA-in? (Score:2)
As the other poster points out, I want a laptop that I can take to any standard x86 PC, run a couple of wires from the laptop to the desktop, and have the display for the x86 PC appear on the laptop's LCD. Basically
huh??? (Score:2, Informative)
last time I checked my 5 year old laptop has a BETTER THAN-TV quality screen.
come on 1024X768 versus the NTSC 720X485 resolution mans the PC has higher resolution and is capable of displaying many HD modes.
If this laptop doesnt have a better picture than a regular TV then something is very wrong.
Re:huh??? (Score:2, Interesting)
Instant-on isn't anything new (Score:5, Informative)
Granted, this article is about a laptop with instant-on capabilities, which is of course cooler and more expensive.
Toshiba PR release? (Score:2, Insightful)
If you're going to watch a DVD movie, does it really matter that you have to start the OS?
I mean, you're sitting down ready to spend two hours or whatever watching your film, does it really matter that you have to wait 30 seconds for the OS to boot?
Just go to the kitchen and get a bag of popcorn or something.
Two words: region-free? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Two words: region-free? (Score:2)
Somebody's gotta hack this! (Score:2, Interesting)
Near TV Quality? (Score:2)
Golly! (Score:3, Insightful)
Wow!
I'm totally underwhelmed at the advancement in technology.
Re:Golly! (Score:2)
It sucks, 'cause Enderle says it doesn't... (Score:2)
This thing has GOT to suck now, if Enderle likes it! Some Enderle-isms:
"I have a hard time seeing the Linux Zealots as any different from terrorists" [technewsworld.com]
"The biggest myths about Microsoft are that its desktop products are overpriced, it doesn't respect its customers, and reliability and security are poor" [internetweek.com]
"So I called SCO and personally found that they did have evide [enderlegroup.com]
VIA's MBios (Score:2)
At the time I was working with VIA and had the opportunity to talk to one of the techs about it. I remember him saying that it was actually fairly simple to only activate the pieces of the motherboard that were required for playback.
It still
Re:quality reviews by quality reviewers (Score:2)
Re:quality reviews by quality reviewers (Score:2)
Re:quality reviews by quality reviewers (Score:2)
Re:quality reviews by quality reviewers (Score:2)
This is a pretty open and shut case. Since success in business is measured by profitability, Gates and his company have very few competitors for the title. Now if you want to argue whether he's the most philanthropic, etc, then you might be able to argue both ways.
Re:gimmick (Score:2)
Re:gimmick (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't think the issue is the boot time. For a laptop, the issue may be battery life. If you can run a 15 watt display and tuner and leave the 60 watt CPU, HD, Memory, and interfaces un-powered, it may greatly extend the battery life. Too bad the extra time gets eaten by long adverts on over the air TV.
On second thought, this may have trouble selling. NTSC is scheduled to go away. There is very little worth watching on over the air TV. Why bo