A solid-state version of the Samsung Q1 ultra-mobile PC is to go on sale in
the UK late this month – though it will be only available online.
It replaces the usual hard-disk with 32GB of flash memory and is the first
mobile PC with no moving parts ever to be available in the mainstream market.
This makes it a double first for the Q1, which was also the first
ultra-mobile built to Microsoft's Origami spec to be generally available. The
model is being sold exclusively by
Expansys.
The solid-state version will cost £1,399 - £600 more than the entry-level Q1.
This is not expensive by the standards of ruggedised computers.
Samsung is also bringing out a Q1b model in October which uses Via's C7-M
processor, and slightly improved disk space and Ram: 60-byte hard disk and 1GB
of Ram. It will cost £899.
Dinesh Chand, product manager of Samsung's mobile computing division, said
there are no immediate plans to bring out a more powerful models using the
latest dual-core processors.
Samsung is also fitting
HSDPA wireless broadband
modules to its latest mobiles, capable of connecting at up to 1.8Mbits/sec.
T-Mobile already offers HSDPA with its 3G services, and operator 3 is about to
roll out similar services.
Among models using it is the new Q40, a slimline conventional notebook. It
has a Sim card slot on the base.
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