ARM is the dominant
architecture in the mobile landscape - if you have a smartphone, it’s
running on an ARM-based chip, but in the last couple of years chip giant
Intel has been trying desperately to enter the mobile market. And this
year, it’s finally done it. Intel has signed partnerships with various
companies for its upcoming phones running on its Medfield platform (the
Atom Z2460 chip), and has announced its roadmap for the future including
dual-core processors as well.
We got our hands on three of the first Intel Atom-powered devices at MWC 2012 and here are our initial impressions.
We saw the Lenovo K800 back at CES 2012 - it’s the first handset to arrive with Intel silicon. It’s at MWC as well.
The
handset is not the thinnest phone out there, but it’s not terribly
thick either. It’s got a huge 4.5-inch 720p display that does add a bit
to the feeling of bulkiness.
The K800 is said
to arrive with ICS at launch and it will be skinned with Lenovo’s own
UI-enhancing attempts. It packs the Intel Atom Z2460 processor clocked
at 1.6GHz, an 8-megapixel rear camera with dual-LED flash and HSPA+
supporting 21Mbps down speeds. It’s the only handset that differs
significantly from the rest as Lenovo has obviously put some effort in
designing it - it’s angular, weird and catches the eye which is a good
thing.
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The Lenovo K800.
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The Orange Santa Clara
on the other hand doesn’t differ much from Intel’s platform reference
design, but it’s a very important handset as it’s the first with Intel’s
Medfield chip to try and conquer the European market. It runs on
Gingerbread, has a 4-inch WVGA screen and an 8-megapixel camera. Now,
the biggest promise of the Santa Clara is better battery life -
something we are all eagerly awaiting. Not just because of the obvious
advantage, but mostly because we haven’t seen a real proof about it yet.
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The Orange Santa Clara.
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The Lava Xolo X900
targets the Indian market and it’s virtually identical to Intel’s
reference platform for the Medfield chip. You might have not heard about
Lava, and that’s because it’s a regional Indian phone maker. The
company hasn’t done much in order to differentiate designwise, and while
that won’t lure customers, what will is the stock software.
On
the Xolo X900 you have a 1.6GHz single-core processor running what
looks like almost stock Gingerbread on a 4-inch screen with a 600x1024
pixels. Now, we should note that the Intel chip manages to run Android
smoothly even at single-core which alone is a good achievement.
The
camera is another highlight of the Xolo X900 - there’s an 8-megapixel
single LED snapper on the back and it comes with some neat tweaks - you
can quickly shoot 10 times at 15fps. On the front, there’s a 3-megapixel
camera. You won't be able to get this one stateside though, it's
currently only planned to land in India in Q2 2012.
2 Comment:
good review
thanks
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