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Jolla Tablet Reaches Crowdfunding Goal in Two Hours

The Finnish company is back with an iPad Mini 3 competitor that runs on open-source software and features an enhanced multi-tasking experience 

Jolla - the start-up company founded by ex-Nokia employees - has received more than double its intended crowdfunding goal of US$380,000 on Indiegogo for its new tablet.
The announcement of the aptly named Jolla Tablet comes just days after Nokia introduced its own first Android tablet, the N1, and those with a keen eye will spot that the Jolla device looks rather similar to its distant Finnish cousin.
The pair share a fair bit of internal DNA too: both have 7.9in screens with 2048 x 1536 resolution, quad-core Intel processors with 2GB of RAM and 32GB of onboard storage. Crucially though, Jolla has included a microSD memory card port.
The Jolla Tablet will run on the Sailfish OS, first seen on the Jolla Smartphone. It's an open-source OS and Jolla claims it won't sell or share your data with third parties. Sailfish can be controlled with a variety of hand gestures, meaning you don't have to get your sticky fingers all over the screen.
Multitasking will also feature prominently on the Tablet, with Jolla claiming it will have "the best multitasking on pretty much any device that's available in the world." Confident, then.
Loyal Android users will be pleased to know that Sailfish can run Android apps, as well as its own native ones.
The first batches of Jolla Tablets have sold out, but you can pre-order one on Indiegogo for US$210, with an estimated delivery date of May 2015.

Microsoft Surface Pro 3 Review

Has Microsoft cracked the hybrid nut at the third attempt? Why yes, yes it has

Microsoft’s new Surface Pro 3 alone may not wreck its maker if it fails. But if it succeeds, it could be a welcome turning point for a company that’s struggled for too long to out-innovate Apple and Google.
While on paper the Pro 3 is a humble range-filler (it takes the vacant slot at the super-size end of the Surface spectrum), it has enjoyed the kind of hype usually reserved for game-changing products.
This is perhaps because its various nips and tucks redefine the usability of the entire Surface concept.
For the Pro 3 to win, it must be usable everywhere, a brief that the Surface 2 and Surface Pro 2 fail to meet (stick a Surface 2 on your lap while sitting on a sofa with your legs crossed - silly, isn’t it?).
Next, the Surface Pro 3 must be a serious alternative to a Macbook Air or Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro. Again, the Surface Pro 2 fails on both fronts today, thanks to its compromised trackpad experience and less-than-ideal screen size and aspect ratio.
Lastly, the SP3 must be a good enough tablet to tempt away the masses heading for an iPad or Android 10-incher (ironically, this is the one area where the Surface 2 and Pro 2 have made some headway, thanks to the value they offer as powerful laptops).
No pressure here, then.
But despite the tough brief, the Pro 3 claims to meet each of those challenges in one, carefully refined package.
The Surface Pro 3 goes on sale in the UK on 28th August, and you can pre-order now at the Microsoft Store. We couldn't wait, so we picked one up in the US as soon as we could. Having now spent four weeks living with it we feel the time is right to answer the question that’s now on your lips: is it time to cancel that Macbook Air or iPad order?

READ MORE: Apple MacBook Air review

DESIGN: WHY DIDN'T THEY DO THIS IN THE FIRST PLACE?






After just a week with the Surface Pro 3, the Type Cover 3 and flexible kickstand had left us furious with Microsoft. But only because the changes they bring from the first and second generation Surface are so obvious that you wonder why they didn’t happen earlier (don't worry if you own an earlier Surface - we're sure Microsoft has a letter of apology in the post...).
In place of the two-stage kickstand debuted by the Surface 2, the support now bends almost all the way back, using a brand new hinge design.
The Type Cover keyboard, meanwhile, can now be latched at its upper edge magnetically to the bottom of the SP3's screen, creating a rigid platform in place of the wobbly board that haunted previous Surfaces.
Those two changes transform the Surface into a good laptop that will work almost everywhere. With the kickstand bent back to 120-130 degrees and the keyboard attached, it works as well as any conventional laptop if you spend your life with your legs crossed on the sofa.
Tilt the kickstand back further to 140-150 degrees, and it's a perfectly-angled writing surface for use on a desk if you’re taking notes. In fact, we couldn't find a scenario where the Surface Pro 3 borked: it now works, really well.
The kickstand, in particular, is a minor engineering marvel. It retains the first two stages from the Surface 2; pull it away from the body, and there are two distinct locking points.
But push gently beyond the second lock point, and it will bend back to almost 150 degrees. We’re not irresponsible enough to give any view on the hinge’s long-term durability, but we will say that it feels beautifully made, and operates with the same well-damped smoothness after a hard month of use as it did on the day of opening the box.
The Type Cover 3, meanwhile, is a dramatic improvement over the Type Cover 2. The keyboard’s now spacious enough for big, clumsy fingers, and at last the trackpad is of a size and sensitivity that make it a pleasure to use. One thing, though: the keys clack if you’re typing in anger - but even then, the cheap-ish clack doesn’t infer shoddy build.
The kickstand and keyboard aren't the only changes for the better. Many (including us) found text too small on the 1920 x 1080 10in screen of the Surface 2 or Pro 2. So the switch to a 12in display at a rather unusual 2160 x 1440 resolution for the SP3 is welcome, as is the shift to a 3:2 aspect ratio. Somehow, the Pro 3 just looks and feels the right size (whatever that is), while its predecessors were too small to be taken that seriously.
The SP3's now natural to use in portrait mode (a claim you could never make for the Surface 2), making it a great (albeit large) ebook reader (which was one of Microsoft's stated intents with the 3: make it feel as much as possible like a good paper notebook).

PERFORMANCE: A GOOD LAPTOP, A BRILLIANT TABLET


Whatever combo you go for, you're buying a ridiculously powerful tablet, and a decently meaty mid-range laptop - and you can be confident that even the lowliest spec won’t be a slouch. Our Intel i5 / 4GB / 128GB model belted through just about every task we could hurl at it - Office, browsing, email, music and movies.
That said, let’s be clear on one thing - the SP3’s no gaming rig. It will happily chomp through the lighter games you'll find in the Windows Store. But with only an Intel 4400 HD graphics chip on hand to push the pixels, it'll stammer to a halt if you fire up Crysis at max settings (at which point, you’ll also discover how hot the top right hand edge of the unit can get).
Avoid giving it that kind of abuse, and the SP3 will run quiet and cool. We did find that the top right of the tablet (or top left, if you're holding it in portrait mode) is always slightly warm (we'll assume that's where the i5 is housed), but it’s barely enough to register in normal use.
So which spec should you go for? After a month with the 128GB i5, we wished we'd chosen 8GB of RAM and the 256GB SSD.
While 4GB of RAM will keep Windows 8.1 running happily enough, the OS is happier with 6-8GB under the hood (and since the memory is soldered to the SP3's motherboard, you can't upgrade at a later date).
As for wishing that we’d gone for the 256GB hard drive, the Pro 3 has convinced us that it’s more than a toy - it's easily flexible enough to be used day in, day out, with the result that we’ve half filled the 128GB with our usual digital detritus.
There’s a well-hidden microSD slot tucked into the back of the Surface’s casing, enabling you to add up to 128GB of extra storage.
That’s all very well, but as of now, you cannot install Windows Store games to an external drive - and with some of those games weighing in at over 1GB (Halo: Spartan Assault is 1.6GB, for example), we’d still spend the extra for the comfort of 256GB of onboard space.

Microsoft Surface Pro 3 Tech Specs






The Pro 3's screen is stunning. Although it has fewer pixels per inch than the iPad Air (216ppi vs 264ppi), you'd need comically good eyesight to find flaws with the 2160 x 1440 display. Everything's pin sharp.
The 12in screen is also commendably natural in the way it renders colours: its neither neutral to the point of being washed out, nor vivid in a way that'll give you a headache after an hour. It's just right.
And Microsoft has chosen a display that will go bright enough to ensure that your Surface will stay usable even in pretty bright daylight (just as well - the screen has a glossy coating that’s quite reflective).
Be aware that the driver for the Surface screen will only allow two resolutions - the native 2150 x1440, and a laughably old school 1024 x 768. Couple that with Windows 8.1’s, er, ‘interesting’ approach to DPI scaling, and be prepared to tweak before everything’s to your liking.
You should also know that quirks in that same DPI scaling can make life with an external monitor more arduous that it should be.
Our SP3 hooks up every day to the HDMI input of a 23in Philips 1080p desktop monitor, via the Pro 3’s mini display port. As regular as clockwork, we lose five minutes every morning to signing out and then in again once the Philips is connected, simply to re-scale the icons on the desktop. Annoying, and surely not that difficult for Microsoft to fix?

THE PEN AND ONENOTE: THE PARTNERSHIP THAT MAKES THE PRODUCT?




Prod the pen's purple top button once, and your Pro 3 will launch a full-screen note, regardless of whether the machine's asleep or awake. It's intended to allow you to get sudden ideas down quickly, and that's precisely what it does. Double-tap the same purple button, and it will give you the option to lasso a section of the screen for storing away into OneNote. Smart, and genuinely useful.
Live with the SP3 for a bit, and the combination of the pen and OneNote feel as much a part of the everyday experience as the keyboard and kickstand. And you begin to appreciate that OneNote 2013 isn't that shoddy an application. It's great for taking and organising just about anything you throw at it, and the keyword search works a treat.
OneNote's only hitch, in our humble opinion, is its tight integration with Outlook 2013 for task management. If Microsoft really wants to own the productivity game (and it does), it needs a task manager that can sync to the cloud and every other mobile platform.
If you're still a desktop Outlook addict (there are some still out there… right?), you'll adore OneNote. But if you spend your days in one of the thousands of Android or iOS task managers, you'll find OneNote a bind. There are Microsoft-made OneNote apps for Android and iOS, sure, but they're no match for their Evernote equivalents.
Out of the box, your Surface Pro 3 will come with a small pen holder that's meant to attach to the Type Cover. Bluntly, it doesn't work.
After three or four days, we almost lost the pen after the tab holder detached itself without our noticing; the sticky part just isn't sticky enough to stay attached to the Type Cover, and a normal knock will send it flying.
We've taken to carrying the Surface pen around in a laptop case or shirt pocket. That guarantees that it will eventually go missing. Given how important the pen is to life with an SP3, Microsoft needs to come up with a more permanent, attractive solution - and fast
We’d also advise that you find a reliable local stockist of AAAA batteries before you invest in an SP3; the Surface pen is powered by a single AAAA, and we chewed through the power of the battery that came in the box in about four weeks (so let’s make that 12 batteries a year).

BATTERY LIFE: GREAT - AS LONG AS YOU’RE US…

Budget laptops are forgiven if they suffer from poor battery life. You know that you’re compromising by spending the bare minimum, and most cheap 15in lappies aren’t really built for an entire day away from a charging point.
The Surface Pro 3 has no such excuses. Its entire appeal rests on its flexibility - one minute hammering through a PhotoShop file at your desk, the next reading a Nook book on the morning commute. For the whole concept to stack up, you mustn’t feel nervous when taking it out for a day on the road.
Microsoft claims up to nine hours from the Pro 3’s lithium-ion battery ‘while browsing the web’, with careful warnings that your mileage may vary depending on your habits (and it's fair for Microsoft to hedge its bets here: a device as powerful as the Surface can indulge in some heavyweight, juice-sapping work).
Our i5, 128GB model is good for a working day, although we confess that we’ve yet to deliberately run it to red line.
In one day last week, it was unplugged from charge at 7am, then pounded at a conference from 9.30am to 4pm, before taking care of email and transcription duties on the 30-minute train ride home. By the time we re-attached it to a charger at 5.30pm, it was showing 30%. We’d call that good, by any standards.
But then, we’ve read enough forum posts from users suffering from disappointing SP3 battery life to feel blessed. What a forum post can’t tell you, of course, is what use the poster is putting the Surface to. What we can say is that heavy use - particularly video streaming - has a very visible effect on the SP3’s battery drain.
By the way, brownie points go to Microsoft for the design of the power supply. Too many 11-13in laptops come with leads and blocks that weigh more than the thing they power - the Pro 3’s is compact and light, and even includes a USB charging port in the power block.

PROBLEMS: YEP, THERE ARE SOME

Since its launch in the US in late June, users began reporting problems with their Pro 3s waking from sleep, staying awake and suddenly freezing. There have been several firmware releases aimed at squishing the bugs (one of which takes a nail-gnawing 15-20 minutes to install).
But we’ve experienced none of the sleep or wake issues (bar one freeze that forced a hard shutdown - an update shortly after appears to have fixed it).
However, we did fall foul of one of the other commonly reported issues: flaky wireless. The latest update (July 16) claims to have sorted it for good. That claim looks to be accurate: our SP3 will now happily tether to our HTC One M8 (impossible before the update), and connect to the 2.4GHz wireless in Stuff Towers without constantly dropping.
There’s one other SP3 problem that Microsoft cannot fix alone (although with Windows 8.1 Update 2 coming down the tracks, they could sure as hell help).
The high dpi screen demands that developers update their software so that it renders correctly - and as it stands today, some significant developers have yet to catch up.
Until very recently, even Google Chrome looked awful at hi-dpi (the latest Chrome beta solves most of the issues). Dashlane, a popular password manager, displays as a boil-washed version of itself. Evernote desktop is usable, but ruined by miniature icons and smaller-than-needs-be text.
Developers are getting there, but we understand the Catch 22 from their point of view - it takes time and effort to make the software work well with high dpi displays, but the market for high-end PCs with displays that go beyond Full HD is hardly thriving.

Microsoft Surface Pro 3 Verdic


The Surface Pro 3 is excellent.
There, we said it. And with a straight face.
At last, Microsoft has delivered on the promise of the tablet-cum-laptop hybrid. It proves Microsoft's argument that there's space in the world for a design that's more productive than an iPad or Galaxy Note, but easier to hump around than a traditional laptop.
Would we buy one? Yes. We’d avoid the 64GB and 512GB models (you’ll either have no space left in a week, or regret paying the high price after a month). But put a 128GB or 256GB on the counter, and we'd tap in a PIN code without a moment's hesitation.
It would be daft not to point to the fact that the Windows Store still hasn’t reached the heights of the Play Store or iTunes, but that's an issue that's at least somewhat mitigated by the fast that Pro lets you install practically any piece of PC software on the desktop side of the two-faced OS.
Price still has to come into it. The i5 / 128GB SP3 £1000 asking price (with the Type Cover included) would buy an awful lot of Windows laptop, or a similarly-specced 13in Macbook Air with £100 change to spare.
But the Pro 3’s different enough to undermine absolutist comparisons: a chunk of that £1000 is going on ‘unusual’, and we think that for many it will justify itself on that basis. And if you insist on like-for-likes, the fact is that the Pro 3 is as quick and capable as either a Lenovo Yoga Pro 2 or a Macbook Air.
At last, there’s a Surface that’s right.

Google Nexus 9 Review

We get our first lick of the Lollipop with the Nexus tablet



If there’s an Android contender to rival an iPad Air 2, this is it. The Nexus 9 has the same screen shape, the same resolution and – like the Apple tablet – launches with the very best its platform has to offer.
You get the brand new Android 5.0 Lollipop software, bags of power and a super-sharp display: all for £80 less than an iPad Air 2. It’s sure to lure thousands away from the Apple Store.
Just as important, though, is what the Nexus 9 does for Android. It sets the bar for future Android tablets, and sees Google finally embrace non-widescreen tablets. It’s been a long time coming.

The Tupperware of Tablets



There’s plenty of praise to come for the Nexus 9, but it’s not a tablet that sets out to wow you with its hardware design. Like the good old Nexus 7, it’s more practical than luxurious.The back is plastic, and has the sort of minimalist design a swedish furniture maker might come up with. Good-looking? Sure, but it doesn’t give the hard, expensive impression of the iPad Air 2, or offer the jaw-dropping thin-n-lightness of the Samsung Galaxy Tab S 8.4.You get the feeling Google cares a little more about what happens when you switch the screen on than what it feels like.That we can be so blasé about a tablet this thin and light tells you about how far we've come, though. The Nexus 9 is 7.9mm thick and weighs just 425g in its Wi-Fi only incarnation. It is thin and it is light, it just doesn’t showcase it in the same way the 6.1mm-thick iPad Air 2 does.That slight lack of initial impact is quickly forgotten when you start using the Nexus 9, though. The 4:3 aspect is so much better suited to an 8in-plus tablet than the widescreen styles that used to be the Android norm.Switch between this and the Nexus 10 and the older tablet just seems a bit, well, silly. It’s not just about the looks either, but how its weighting sits in your mitt. The Nexus 9 feels right, and is just about light enough to use one-handed while reading an article on the train on the way to work.In short, the Nexus 9 makes it pretty obvious why 10in widescreen tablets were never all that popular.


 
 READ MORE: Samsung Galaxy NotePRO 12.2 vs Apple iPad Air

Google Nexus 9 Tech Specs






The Nexus might lack some of the gloss of an iPad Air 2 but build quality is more than reasonable. The plastic (in black, white or sandy beige) flexes a little in parts, and the volume controls feel a bit, well, naff. But the front is Gorilla Glass 3 and the band of metal around the sides gives you some confidence that HTC – this tablet’s maker – hasn’t scrimped entirely on the essentials.
The size, the shape, the handling: we have no serious complaints. However, Google has deliberately limited you in one quite annoying way. There’s no memory card slot.
Of course, iPads have never had memory card slots, either - but the iPad Air 2 is available in 64GB and 128GB versions if you're the type that values on-board storage. The Nexus 9, on the other hand, maxes out at 32GB.
Casual users may well get by with the standard 16GB, but with only 10GB of it actually available to use once you factor in the OS, it’s soon gone if you load up a few games and movies. You can obviously bolster this with cloud storage from Google Drive or Dropbox, but it's not really the same thing. Don’t say we didn’t warn you.

LCD starlet

Get your eyeball up to the display and you can see a teeny bit of fizziness, but we’re calling it: this resolution is enough.
Just like the Nexus 7 before it, the Nexus 9 uses an IPS LCD screen, the same tech found in the iPad Air 2. The strong colour reproduction melded with the high resolution, bright backlight and very immediate image give the display plenty of pop.
However, purists will notice a few little issues. First, this is an LCD and its black levels aren’t close to what you get from an OLED tablet such as the Samsung Galaxy Tab S 8.4.
There’s also some pretty clear leakage from the backlight, particularly clear at the top of the Nexus 9. It exhibits as a tiny strip of brightness at the top of the screen. You should get used to it, but those with display OCD may find it distracting. It is fairly minor, but is another little negative to jot down if you’re after the ultimate Android tablet.

READ MORE: Lenovo Yoga Tablet 10 HD+ Review

What flavour is that Lollipop?  


So far, so ordinary: we’ve seen better screen performance from both the iPad Air 2 and the Samsung Galaxy Tab S tablets. It’s the software the Nexus 9 is really here to show off.
This is the first tablet to run Android 5.0 Lollipop, the version the rest of the Android-using world is going to be clamouring after for weeks or, more likely, months. So what’s it all about?
Android 5.0 Lollipop has a new look. It appears and feels familiar, but everything has been given a subtle facelift. The soft keys are new. The apps menu now looks like a series of white pages and you double-swipe down from the top of the screen to access quick settings toggles and screen brightness.
The lock screen is new, too, giving you notifications without having to take the tablet out of sleep mode. Very handy and about time. These are all things that we’ve seen before in other custom interfaces. It’s mostly just a neat, simple, quite cute UI – not a revolution.
Google has also reworked a bunch of the standard Android apps in the Nexus 9’s Android 5.0. Gmail, the Contacts book, Calendar and even the Play Store have all been given a spring clean.
But speaking of apps, it's also worth noting that many still aren't optimised for larger Android screens. Developers seem happy to produce different versions of their apps for iPhone and iPad, but many seem content to release just one for Android, which is then simply blown-up to fit tablet screens. That can have some ugly results.
But Lollipop is pretty elsewhere, with a colour palette that now has that extra hint of pastel to it. And everything moves with that extra bit of pep. Google seems to want the Nexus 9 to be something that would slide gracefully into an IKEA show home in its software as well as its hardware design.
Is it flat-out better than what you get with the Google Now interface available for just about any Android device these days? Maybe, but not by a huge margin.
What really matters is the stuff in the background – those turning cogs you can’t see on the surface. Android 5.0 now supports 64-bit processors and is better primed for connections to other devices than ever before. Our guess is that this means deeper integration with Android Wear watches, co-operation that we don’t even know about yet. For now, it means you can take up where you left off with media and apps in Lollipop goodies.
A lot of that promise is about the future, not right now. For example, while the Tegra K1 CPU used in the Nexus 9 is 64-bit, there’s nothing that specifically makes use of that more advanced architecture at present.
It’s not noticeably faster than previous top Android tablets, either. There’s the odd hint of lag here and there, undoubtedly because Android 5.0 Lollipop is a baby chick still brushing off those remaining bits of eggshell.
We imagine it’ll soon be improved in an update before too long, and it’s hardly bad at present anyway. Just the occasional stutter, and some apps not loading as fast as we’d like, especially given Android 5.0 uses a special ART runtime that’s meant to speed this whole process up. We’ll have a full review of Android 5.0 Lollipop up on wapwing.blogspot.com very soon.

The Numbers of The Beast

Hardware-wise, the Nexus 9 is one of the most powerful Android devices ever made.Its Tegra K1 CPU is a dual-core 2.5GHz chipset – it may have just two cores, but they don’t half pack a punch. In the Geekbench 3 benchmark, it scores roughly the same points per core as you get out of all of the Nexus 7’s four cores. For the spec-heads out there, it scores 1970 points per core, 3332 total in Geekbench 3.However, the real meat of the K1 processor is in the graphics side. It uses a Kepler DX1, which has 192 cores – sounds ridiculous and it sorta is.We thought all this power might end up being squirted into oblivion, but there are already some games that make terrific use of it. For example, Dead Trigger 2 offers a special graphics mode not available on other devices that adds gorgeous water effects, the kind you’d only normally see in console or PC games. Yes, that does mean the game is now jammed full of puddles, but they aren’t half pretty.These optimisations are already in place because this isn’t the first time a Tegra K1 has been jammed into an Android device: the Nvidia Shield Tablet has one, too (a slightly different version). Nvidia went as far as to bring over classics such as Portal and Half-life 2 to the Shield Tablet, but they don’t seem to be available for the Nexus 9 yet.Fingers crossed they will be at some point, though. If only for show-off points.
 
 Front-loaded Bieber blasters




Battery life is pretty good. Off a full charge we got just under 12 hours of video playback from the Nexus 9, with the screen set to middling brightness – which is actually probably a bit brighter than you’d use indoors. In normal everyday use it'll last a few days.
If you're a real power user you might be disappointed to find that hot-swapping is off the table. In fact, swapping of any kind seems unlikely - battery isn't just non-removable, it's glued in place behind a back cover you can’t rip off.

Papp-a-razzie

The cameras are a slight weak point. On the back of the Nexus 9 sits an 8MP camera while the front uses a rather unusual 1.6MP sensor.
Walk around a major city and you’re sure to see loads of tourists taking loads of pictures with their tablet – probably iPads. But HTC and Google still seem to be working under the assumption tablet cameras aren’t too important.
We'd wouldn't necesarily argue with that, but if you are a tablet snapper you'll likely find that your greatest annoyance isn’t image quality but autofocus speed. It feels sluggish, not the sort of camera to whip out to capture your dog as it bounds across a park, flinging 360 degree drool. You’d probably end up with a photo of some grass. Maybe a tree if you’re lucky. The Nexus 9 is also prone to overexposing just about every cloud in the sky, too.
Approach the camera with patience and you can get some reasonable results with pretty decent colour saturation, but we'd recommend sticking to your phone camera unless you simply must let absolutely everyone see that you’re rocking the new Nexus.

Google Nexus 9 Verdict
The Nexus 9 shows where Android tablets of the future should be headed — a little less geek locked in their bedroom, a bit more ‘ordinary person’ relaxing in the lounge. However, it also has the raw power underneath to satisfy enthusiasts so it’ll come up with the hardcore goods once more devs gets their heads around its 64-bit Kepler engine.
But there are still some niggling flaws - the build isn’t up there with the likes of the iPad Air 2, storage is limited and at this early stage Lollipop is just a little stuttery.
Our other lingering regret is that the Nexus 9 and Nexus 6 show that the Google Nexus line isn’t the bargain-hunter’s paradise it used to be. Good value overall? Sure, but perhaps the real bargain right now is the £240 iPad Mini 2. Now there's a turn up for the books.

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