The next game-changer in tablets could come from Samsung, not Apple, as a perfect storm of processor, screen and platform coalesces to make the Korean firm an innovator not a copycat. Samsung has already demonstrated its abilities in processors â even Apple would have to agree with that, having co-developed the A4 chipset powering the original iPad with its Korean rival â but the new Exynos 5 Dual raises the bar significantly; according to the rumors, meanwhile, that will find its way into the Samsung âP10?, a new uber-tablet packing a display that squarely challenges Appleâs Retina tech. The P10, itâs believed, will arrive sometime in 2012, with an 11.8-inch WQXGA screen. If youâve not been keeping up to speed with your acronyms, that means 2560 x 1600 resolution for a pixel density of 256ppi; in contrast, Appleâs new iPad has a 9.7-inch screen with a 264ppi pixel density. At those sort of levels, a handful of pixels either way probably isnât going to swing it, meaning both tablets will likely be as easy on the eye when it comes to graphics. The 2560 x 1600 number is interesting, because itâs the figure Samsung has been shouting about with relation to the Exynos 5 Dual, the latest SoC (system-on-chip) off the Korean firmâs semiconductor lines. Although only a dualcore, rather than the quadcores weâve seen from NVIDIA and others, Samsung steps up to an altogether more advanced type of processor, the Cortex-A15, which means that â on paper at least â the Exynos 5 Dual will be more potent than any of the chipsets currently on the market. In fact, Samsung says one A15 core is between 1.5x and 2x faster than the A9 NVIDIA is currently using. So, Samsung has a pixel-dense display â one we have high hopes for, too, given the companyâs track record in panel technology â and the processor to drive it, but thatâs not the extent of the new Exynosâ abilities. In fact, running such a screen is really just the baseline. The Exynos 5 Dual is able to overlay a live UI onto a 1080p HD video, while simultaneously processing a live camera preview feed, encoding video in the background, and driving a separate display via HDMI output. Most users will never require that exact mixture of tasks, but it does suggest that the new Exynos will be smooth as melted butter in everyday use. Samsung has been taking a pasting in the courtrooms of late, Apple turning the companyâs own design research against it as it sets up a case of design theft. Performance in the marketplace is also questionable, with Samsungâs healthy shipment figures potentially masking altogether more pedestrian sales of devices like its Galaxy tablets. New Galaxy Note 10.1 Yet itâs not all bad news: the new Galaxy Note 10.1 looks set to build on the perhaps surprising degree of interest around the original Galaxy Note, and Samsungâs promotional campaign for the pen-enabled tablet suggests that the company might finally have got the message that functionality in context is just as important, if not more so, than how well-packed your spec-sheet is. Samsungâs big challenge, then, is not to get sidetracked by the pure specifications of its new slate behemoth. The company needs to tell us why we need tech that previously it might simply have hoped to hypnotize us with. Much of that will depend on the platform the tablet runs. So far, the rumors havenât pinned down OS, though there are two key possibilities: Windows 8 (or, more accurately, the ARM-specific breed, Windows RT) or Android. With Jelly Bean, building on the solid groundwork of Ice Cream Sandwich, Googleâs platform is finally feeling up to speed for tablets; our experience with the Nexus 7, which runs Android 4.1, suggests that Android has â after the abortive mess of Honeycomb â eventually come of age on larger displays. Samsung has woken up to context. It is either realizing or being forced to comprehend that delivering products that look like theyâve been borrowed from Appleâs alternate-ideas pile isnât good for business: customers donât want copycats, and if they want something that looks like an iPad (either in hardware or software, or both) then theyâll probably just buy an iPad. Yet the tablet market is still relatively immature and, like Microsoftâs emphasis on content creation with Surface, thereâs more than one way to skin the proverbial cat. With Jelly Bean, Android finally feels as smooth in operation as it needs to be. With the Exynos 5 Dual, Samsung has a chipset that can translate that smoothness to a tablet. With a 2560 x 1600 display, it can compete on shelf-appeal, rather than being the pixelated also-ran behind the new iPad. As long as it tells us why we really need it, Samsung could have the next big tablet hit on its hands. (Source: Slash Gear)
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The next game-changer in tablets could come from Samsung, not Apple
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