The Weekly Roundup for 05.13.2013

The Weekly Roundup for 12032012

You might say the week is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workweek, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Weekly Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past seven days — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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The Weekly Roundup for 05.13.2013

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Iconia W3 tablet live on Acer’s Finnish website, confirms 8.1 inches of Windows 8 Pro

Info about the Iconia W3 Windows 8 tablet has already slipped out a few times, and now this 8.1-incher is live on Acer’s Finnish website. While there’s no mention of price or availability, the specifications list matches what’s already been leaked. You’re looking at Windows 8 Pro running atop an Intel Atom Z2760 CPU, aided by 2GB of RAM. Other features include a 1,280 x 768 touchscreen, an eight-hour battery, up to 64GB of storage, 802.11 b/g/n WiFi and Bluetooth 4.0. Port lovers will be pleased to find micro-HDMI and micro-USB hookups onboard, as well as a microSD slot. Microsoft Word comes pre-installed, but there’s no concrete info about the optional full-size keyboard dock — other than that it exists, anyway. It’ll likely be closer to June when we’ll be staring at it in the flesh, so you’ll have to settle for the info at the source link for now.

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Via: Phone Arena, SlashGear

Source: Acer

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Iconia W3 tablet live on Acer’s Finnish website, confirms 8.1 inches of Windows 8 Pro

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Python S3 is a new tablet that can’t decide: boots Ubuntu, Android and Windows 8

Python S3 is a new tablet that can't decide boots Ubuntu, Android and Windows 8

Ubuntu tablets may not be particularly new, but thanks to its liberal build, things can get a bit more interesting when another OS is added to the mix. Ekoore’s Python S3 tablet goes a little further, nestling Ubuntu, Android and Windows 8 behind its 11.6-inch screen. Specifications can be customized on the order page, but there’s an Intel Celeron processor, 8GB of RAM and a 128GB SSD for storage, while the 1,366 x 768 resolution was chosen to suit all three operating systems: Windows 8, Android 4.2 and Ubuntu 13.04. There’s connectivity through both WiFi and an optional 3G module — the Win 8 license itself is also a purchasable extra. The device is priced at $770 for the US, while you’ll be able to pick up a dockable keyboard add-on (with built-in battery) for around $179. For those of you who still can’t decide your favorite tablet OS, you can hedge your bets and place an order at the source.

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Via: PC World

Source: Ekoore (Italian)

Python S3 is a new tablet that can’t decide: boots Ubuntu, Android and Windows 8

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Photoshop Express brings its quick photo fixes to Windows 8 and RT

Adobe’s Photoshop Express has been taking care of our botched photos on Android and iOS for quite some time, but it hasn’t had its turn on a desktop-class platform. That changes with today’s launch of a version for Windows 8 and RT. Like their mobile counterparts, Windows users can now make basic edits, apply filters and sync photos to Revel in a touch-friendly interface; the chief difference is the landscape-oriented Windows Store look. If you’ve wanted to use your Surface as a mobile photo workshop without paying for apps, you can grab Express for free at the source link.

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Source: Windows Store

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Photoshop Express brings its quick photo fixes to Windows 8 and RT

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Toshiba Kirabook review: Toshiba tries to reinvent itself with a flagship Ultrabook

Toshiba Kirabook review Toshiba tries to reinvent itself with a flagship Ultrabook

It’s not like Toshiba is new to laptops — it’s been making them for decades — but for whatever reason, US consumers don’t seem to trust the company with top-shelf products. Four-hundred-dollar machines, maybe, but a designer laptop? An Ultrabook, no less? Toshiba has an image problem, to be sure, and the executives in Tokyo know it. The answer, they hope, is to start fresh with a clean slate. The company recently announced a new family of premium devices, called Kira, with the 13-inch Kirabook being the inaugural product.

At first blush, it has all the trappings of a flagship machine, with an all-metal chassis, backlit keyboard, 8GB of RAM, a two-year warranty and a 2,560 x 1,440 display, one sharp enough to rival the Chromebook Pixel and Retina display MacBook Pro. In fact, this is the first Windows laptop to offer such a high-resolution panel, which gives Toshiba a big opportunity indeed: to lure people who still haven’t found their perfect Ultrabook. The problem with “perfect,” of course, is that it comes at a price: $1,600 and up, in this case, and the touchscreen isn’t even standard. That leaves just one question, then: is it worth it?

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Toshiba Kirabook review: Toshiba tries to reinvent itself with a flagship Ultrabook

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