Computex: Windows-Android hybrids and phablets launch
Asus's chairman showed off its dual-booting Transformer Book Trio
A
laptop running both Windows 8 and Android; a 6in (15.2cm) smartphone;
and a hybrid mouse-touchpad are some of the devices to have been
unveiled ahead of the start of Computex.
The tech show in Taipei, Taiwan runs from Tuesday to Saturday.Other launches included the first PCs to feature Intel's new processor, codenamed Haswell.
The event comes a week after researchers suggested PC sales were declining faster than had been thought.
IDC predicted that shipments of personal computers - including both desktops and laptops - would fall by 7.8% over the course of 2013. The firm had previously forecast a 1.3% decline.
It added that it believed tablet shipments would grow by 58.7% over the same period, putting them on course to overtake PCs by 2015.
Foxconn and Firefox
Taiwanese firm Hon Hai revealed it is to develop five devices powered by Mozilla's new Firefox mobile operating system.Hon Hai is perhaps best know for making Apple devices at its Foxconn factories in China. However, analysts have suggested the firm could be responsible for assembling as much as 40% of the world's consumer electronics.
Hon Hai said its Firefox line-up would include smartphones and televisions. It added that they would be released under others' brands, rather than its own.
The news offers a boost to Mozilla's HTML5-based OS which it is pitching as an "open alternative" to Android for low-end handsets.
The move also allows Hon Hai to diversify its operations. That may reassure investors following a Wall Street Journal report last week which said Apple was increasingly sending orders to another Taiwanese firm, Pegatron.
That trend poses a potential
problem for manufacturers since margins on tablets are often thinner
than they have been accustomed to with PCs.
Hybrid devices
Acer kicked off the announcements with news of an 8.1in tablet capable of running the full Windows 8 operating system. The firm described the Iconia W3 as being the first device that lets Microsoft's desktop OS be used comfortably with "a single hand".
The Taiwanese company also announced a 5.7in Android handset which it called its "first phablet" - signifying a cross between a phone and a tablet.
The Liquid S1 offers slots for two Sim cards - allowing consumers to use it with both their business and personal accounts. However, its 720p resolution screen and a lack of 4G support may limit its appeal to buyers wanting a high-end device.
Asus - which is also based in Taipei - announced the Transformer Book Trio as the centrepiece of its news conference.
The device is marketed as a three-in-one device which can be used as a desktop, laptop or 11.6in tablet. Its key feature is that it can run both the Jelly Bean version of Google's Android OS and Windows 8.
The firm said users would be able to synchronise data between the platforms in order to enjoy a "smooth transition" between each mode.
Acer's new line-up included what the firm said was the industry's first 8.1in Windows 8 tablet.
Perhaps more unusual was the company's VivoMouse. The wireless device combines a circular touchpad and mouse into a single device which can be dragged across a surface or operated while being held in the air.
Asus said the controller was particularly suited for Windows 8 users whose PCs lacked touchscreen displays.
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