Thứ Hai, 3 tháng 10, 2016
Few would argue Android got off to a slow start. Back in 2008, it was the eagerly anticipated Google mobile platform that was supposed to take on the barely year-old Apple iPhone and venerable RIM (BlackBerry). The first Android phone, the HTC-built G1, was unusual and distinctive. It even had a dedicated, physical search button (so Google), but it didn’t inspire or sell very well. For a long time, Android appeared to have a failure-to-launch problem. Motorola arguably could be credited with rescuing Android from obscurity. Eventually, the Android mantle was passed from Motorola to Samsung and success built upon success until the platform owned a stunning majority of the global market. So, yes, Android is a global brand. But that initial announcement was not a shot heard around the world. It was a small seed that grew into the towering tree that is Google’s mobile platform. Google isn't planting a seed on Tuesday. Its fall hardware unveiling will be more, it hopes, like dropping a Star Trek II-style Genesis Effect bomb on a barren planet: terra-forming it instantly with millions of Google hardware converts. Am I exaggerating? A little. But check out this bold promise: We announced the 1st version of Android 8 years ago today. I have a feeling 8 years from now we'll be talking about Oct 4, 2016. — Hiroshi Lockheimer (@lockheimer) September 24, 2016 A memorable day means that Google has to do more than just officially launch all the hardware they introduced last summer. It has to do a hard reset, unveil mobile surprises and brand-new handsets that finally do what the G1 couldn’t do nearly a decade ago: position Google as a handset manufacturer equal to Apple. It's the right time for Google to do something bold and, maybe, a little crazy. The search giant has, after all, only partial control of the Android narrative. When most people think of a leading Android smartphone they think about Samsung and then LG and then maybe HTC. Motorola is still in there, too, though it doesn’t hold the same position it once did. Heck, now people can include BlackBerry and Android in the same thought. It's the right time for Google to do something bold and, maybe, a little crazy. None of these Android partners can be trusted to run 100% stock Android, though they’ve come much closer in recent years. Carrier partners are not much more helpful, stuffing handsets with their own custom software and still delivering Android updates on their own schedules, not Google’s. Google will, if the steady stream of leaks we’ve been fed for the last few weeks hold true, unveil at least two new smartphones on Tuesday. Which is exactly what Google did last year. It also introduced a new Pixel C tablet. “The last two were nice phones with solid features and with direct lines to upgraded latest software, but nowhere near an iPhone 6s Plus,” said Patrick Moorhead, president of Moor Insights & Strategy. The Nexus 6P and 5X were very good phones, but they quickly slipped from the public consciousness, almost as fast as we forgot the Pixel C. A quarter for anyone who can deliver of photo of one of those things in the wild. Google can’t expect to make waves when it's paddling with the same oars. Delivering yet another set of Nexus phones designed more to influence Android partners than to actually move the market won’t be enough. It feels like it's time for Google to have its Microsoft Surface moment: blow away (and maybe piss off) partners by designing, building and aggressively selling its own hardware. Some see this as a way forward for Google. The Google Pixel C sported a unique design where the tablet attaches to the detachable keyboard via strong magnets. Image: Jhila Farzaneh/Mashable “Making their own hardware is a way to help them gain back control of Android. Although it is a risky move, if they get strong carrier support and more importantly can guarantee that these products will always have the most current OS on them, then it could go a long way toward giving them a better position against Apple and other Android smartphone vendors,” said Tim Bajarin, President of Creative strategies. Bajarin thinks Google has a big opportunity here. They’re certainly going to have the attention to do something big. “It is a major hardware event where Google positions themselves as a major player like Microsoft has done with their Surface products,” said Bajarin. Google, obviously, does make and sell some of its own hardware. But they’ve been wildly inconsistent. For every Chromecast (a $35 success — relatively — from day one) there’s been a dumped-on-the-road Nexus Q. However, up until now, Google has never married hardware and software in a way that effectively illustrates the power of their search engine, vast data stores and growing expertise in Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning. Google Home, the smart speaker and digital assistant, could be that product. In fact, it could be the hardware game-changer Google desperately needs. Moorhead thinks Home represents a strong opportunity. Imagine “Google Home working spectacularly with their Pixel- or Nexus-brand phone — if they’ve optimized the microphones to work perfectly and it does things that Alexa and Siri can’t do and does it a lot better,” said Moorhead. However, that kind of integration is difficult to achieve. And Moorhead worries Google may not be able to deliver a flawless and consistent experience from the living room to the Nexus or Pixel Phone. With Cardboard, Chromecast and even Google-branded Wi-Fi, there could be more than half-a dozen hardware announcements on Tuesday. Some experts, though, still don’t believe hardware is the goal. “Google is not turning into a hardware business,” said Forrester Research VP and Principal Analyst Thomas Husson. He told me Google simply wants to showcase its information access across a wide variety of connected devices. “Search is increasingly taking place in many more places, via many more devices and through new interfaces — with a growing number of voice and visual requests. To stay relevant for marketers in the long run, the Google Assistant is likely to be the driving force behind Google’s hardware moves.” But why would Google introduce so many different pieces of hardware? Do its Android partners really need that much guidance? There are, I think, indications that Google has bigger plans for these gadgets. A look at the massive Google Pixel phone leak from Monday morning offers an interesting glimpse of how Google may want us all to think about their handsets (and hardware, in general) in the future. The image says “Introducing Pixel, Phone by Google.” "Introducing Pixel" is relatively small and “Phone by Google” is larger and more prominent. Does Google want us to start saying something like “I love my Google Phone?” There would be few branding moves bigger than introducing “The Google Phone,” though, some are not convinced. Pixel likely to be the standard bearer for “Google Phones” going forward. “I don’t know if they want to copy Apple and put their whole company name on it,” said brand expert, CEO and Founder of The Branding Clinic Kathleen Carroll, adding, “Companies use other names to protect themselves in case it doesn’t go well [and] to keep parent’s brand equity very strong.” Which means Pixel is still the more likely standard bearer for “Google Phones” going forward. Google first used “Pixel” in 2013 when the company unveiled the Chromebook Pixel. Pixel was then less a brand name than an indication of the laptop’s rather remarkable screen resolution for the time (239 pixels per inch). If Pixel does become the go-forward brand for its new line of flagship Android phones, the switch makes sense, said Carroll, especially if Google is bringing “revolutionary change.” In fact, keeping the Nexus brand for technology that leapfrogs the competition would be, Carroll noted, a mistake. “Nexus has been out long enough and enough people are uninterested or are rejectors that [Google does] need a new name to get excitement and interest in category,” she told me. Google hasn’t built up a lot of faith in its brand-management expertise. With the exception of Android, they still tend to introduce brands and then drop or ignore them. “Look at the Nexus brand,” said Patrick Moorhead. “It started with a certain promise and changed. Not disciplined brand management.” When I asked Moorhead, Carroll and others about the possibilities of Google taking firmer control of “Android” as a brand name for their handsets, most thought that would be a mistake. Calling the new phones Google Pixel, though, won’t necessarily solve all of Google’s device branding problems, but it could bring it into line with Google Home, Google Chromecast and Google Pixel C. So let’s imagine that Google’s Pixel phones manage to raise the bar on photography, battery life, screen resolution and even affordability. They demonstrate a Google ecosystem of mobile and home devices that use the smartly rebranded Google Assistant as connective tissue, which follows you from the office, to the road to the home and back out again. It’s finally Google’s moment to prove that, as Bajarin put it to me, its hardware business “is not a hobby.” In 90 intense and thrilling minutes, Google will finally deliver a unified vision for its software and hardware. It will feel, essentially, like an Apple event. And more importantly, the excitement of the event will, finally, be matched by some follow-through. This could happen. On the other hand, Google’s event track record is terrible. In the last five years, there’s be exactly one break-out moment: When Google co-founder Sergey Brin (an arguably more dynamic figure than the brilliant but dull Google CEO Sundar Picahi) stunned a Google I/O audience by using parachute jumpers to introduced Google Glass (they actually wore the headsets while jumping out of an airplane). Ultimately, this perfectly illustrated everything that’s wrong with Google’s hardware approach. They were building cool gadgets for nerds, instead of useful, beautiful consumer electronics for everyday people. That moment probably worked because we were truly surprised. There were no expectations (except for the sky-high ones that existed right after the Google Glass reveal). By contrast, less than 24 hours from what could be Google’s most important unveiling in eight years, expectations are high and rising. “[They] set the expectations that they’re going to swing everyone around the room,” said Moorhead. “I feel like Google is setting themselves up for either a colossal failure or disappointment.”
Thinking different
Who are you?
What’s in a name
Google is Google
iPad sales aren't what they used to be. With the release of the 12.9-inch iPad Pro and the 9.7-inch iPad Pro, it's clear the iPad's future is for professionals. Apple is rumored to be considering an "iPad mini Pro" with a 7.9-inch screen and the 9.7-inch iPad Pro could be replaced with a slightly larger 10.1-inch model, according to the often-reliable Japanese Apple blog Macotara. An iPad mini Pro would have all the features that would make it a "pro" tablet, including the True Tone display introduced on the 9.7-inch iPad Pro, a Smart Connector on the side for magnetically connecting to accessories like a keyboard, quad stereo speakers, an improved 12-megapixel camera with True Tone flash and a new four-array microphone setup. The iPad mini was last updated in 2015 with the iPad mini 4. As I wrote in my review, it's basically an iPad Air 2 with a smaller screen. An iPad mini Pro would have all the features that would make it a "pro" tablet. A larger 10.1-inch iPad Pro would break with the 9.7-inch display that has been the standard size for the iPad since it launched in 2010. It could get the same microphone upgrade the iPad mini Pro is rumored to have. Moving to a larger screen could also give Apple the screen estate it needs to potentially increase the resolution. Not to mention a larger screen would give people more space to work on and create things. It's unclear if Apple might ditch the 4:3 aspect ratio if the larger iPad Pro turns up. The rumor corroborates a previous report from KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo that claimed Apple would introduce a larger iPad Pro; his report, however, claimed the tablet might have a 10.5-inch screen. The 12.9-inch iPad Pro will also reportedly get upgraded with all of the iPad mini Pro's improvements. Most notable of all is the new iPad Pros will reportedly keep their 3.5mm headphone jacks. Apple removed the jacks on the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus to make room for a larger battery, larger Taptic Engine and seal them for water-resistance. Macotara believes the new iPad Pros will ship in 2017.
Thứ Ba, 6 tháng 9, 2016
Google is thought to be working on a 7-inch tablet, slated for a late 2016 release. Few details about the device have emerged except for the name of its manufacturer, Huawei, and the amount of RAM memory it would have: 4GB. The rumor comes courtesy of one reliable leaker of all things mobile, Evan Blass aka @evleaks. Google's Huawei-built 7-inch tablet, with 4GB RAM, on track for release before the end of the year. — Evan Blass (@evleaks) September 5, 2016 Google's current phablet in the Nexus lineup, the Nexus 6P, is built by Huawei, so the idea of the Chinese smartphone maker building a tablet for Google isn't far fetched. Furthermore, it's been a long, long time since Google launched a Nexus tablet — the Nexus 9 came out in 2014 — and even longer since the company released a 7-inch tablet, the now-discontinued Nexus 7, which came out in 2013. In Sept. 2015, Google did launch its 10-inch Pixel C tablet, which is much more of a productivity device and a Surface/iPad Pro competitor than your average Android tablet. Note that Blass does not call this device a "Nexus". A report in June claimed Google planned to release a phone from scratch, under its own brand, but CEO Sundar Pichai also said the company planned to invest "a lot more effort" into Nexus and would continue to work with hardware partners. It's worth pointing out that just days ago, at the IFA electronics trade show in Berlin, Huawei launched an 8.4-inch Android tablet called the MediaPad M3 with a 2K-resolution screen, 4GB of RAM, a fingerprint sensor and dual 8-megapixel cameras (one on the front, one on the back). The company put a lot of emphasis on the audio quality of device's Harman Kardon-branded 1W stereo speakers. We wouldn't mind seeing any of that (or all of it) in a Google-branded tablet, but when it comes to its own devices, Google likely calls (nearly) all the shots.
Chủ Nhật, 3 tháng 7, 2016
Huawei's MateBook will draw the inevitable copycat comments from fans of both the Microsoft Surface Pro and the iPad Pro. But really, who copied who? Everyone copied Microsoft. The original Surface, as big a flop as it was, had the new portable-PC concept right from the start. The idea then and today remains the same: a tablet that transforms into a laptop with a detachable keyboard. Tablets — iPads in particular — are great for many people, but when it comes to getting "real" work done, a device with a proper keyboard (and for some, a stylus) is a must. Apple caved to this vision and released the iPad Pro, complete with Smart Keyboard and Apple Pencil, in late 2015. While it may validate Microsoft's mobile tablet-PC vision, it's nowhere near as versatile as a Surface Pro 4 since it runs iOS and not OS X (soon to be called macOS). Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook has more in common with the Surface Pro 4 than an iPad Pro. It runs Windows 10, and its entry-level specs are the same as Microsoft's tablet. Starting at $700, it's $200 less than what the Surface Pro 4 starts at, too. On the baseline, you get a dual-core Intel Core m3 processor, 4GB of RAM and 128GB of internal SSD storage. I tested the more powerful $850 MateBook with an Intel Core m5 processor, 4GB of RAM and 128GB of SSD and based on how it performed, I don't think anyone should buy the Core m3 model. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE At first glance, the large 12-inch screen looks sharp and capable. Its 2,160 x 1,440 resolution may not be as high-res as the iPad Pro's 2,732 x 2,048 display or the Surface Pro 4's 2,736 x 1,824, but it's at least on par with Samsung's TabPro S's screen. Huawei kept the bezels around the display nice and slim. Photos and videos look great at first glance, and the screen looks perfectly fine in well-lit situations like the office. But I found its brightness insufficient and the viewing angles too weak when I used it at home in my dimly lit bedroom. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE With Windows 10, the Huawei MateBook is immediately a more useful computer for me than the iPad Pro. For work, I need full-featured Chrome, with extensions, to get anything done. That's impossible with an iPad Pro. The Core m5 processor provides good-enough performance for the usual web browsing, video and music streaming, and document editing. But if you're looking for a mobile video editing or gaming machine, you should look elsewhere. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Windows 10 has really grown on me over the last six months and while I could juggle a dozen open Chrome tabs fine, the 4GB of RAM quickly bottlenecks when you do more resource-intensive things like streaming video while multiple apps and tabs are open. One night, the MateBook struggled to stream a 480p video clip on YouTube without dropping frames. Fingerprint sensor works with Windows Hello. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook even supports login with Windows Hello via its fingerprint sensor between the volume buttons (which are too flat in my opinion). Once configured, unlocking the MateBook is as easy as touching the sensor with a registered fingerprint. The best part is there's no silly swiping required. It works just like the sensors on many flagship smartphones and is a much better login alternative to typing in a password. Unfortunately, the 5-megapixel camera on the front doesn't support Windows Hello's facial recognition. The MateBook supports fingerprint login with Windows Hello via its fingerprint sensor. The MateBook, like virtually all tablet hybrids, doesn't actually come with its accompanying keyboard in the box — you have to buy it separately. Samsung seems to be the only company with the sense to bundle the keyboard in with its TabPro S. Huawei sells a "Portfolio Keyboard" for $130. It attaches securely to the MateBook via a seven-pin port using magnets. The back of the keyboard, which is also a protective folio-style case, can be positioned at two angles via magnets in the back. It's OK, but not nearly as versatile as the Surface Pro 4's hinge when it comes to "lapability." Still better than the iPad Pro, though. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The keyboard itself is... not the best. The keys are large, but they're too close to each other, which made it really easy to hit the wrong keys during a rapid-fire typing session. The trackpad works, but out of the box there's a slight lag to the pointer. But again, at least it has a trackpad unlike the iPad Pro. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook's screen supports multi-touch with up to 10 fingers and the responsiveness is spot-on. Huawei also sells a stylus for $60. I'm not a fan of styli because they're easy to lose and there's usually no way to keep them attached to the tablet. In comparison, the Surface Pro 4's stylus attaches magnetically to the side of the tablet. It's a good stylus that's responsive and I like the two buttons (one for ink and one for an eraser) and how the other end is a laser pointer. It's also pressure-sensitive, which means the harder you press, the thicker the digital ink will be. Additionally, you can buy a $90 dock which includes two USB 3.0 ports, a USB-C port, HDMI and VGA ports, and an Ethernet port and plugs into the MateBook's single USB-C port. Yet another added cost to get more out of the MateBook. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Battery life is the MateBook's weakness. Huawei advertises battery life as up to 9 hours, but I didn't get anywhere close to that. I got around 3 to 4 hours using it as my work machine at work, at home and even during my commute. You will see longer battery life if you turn all the usual settings down or off (i.e. Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, brightness, audio, etc.), but that's not how most people are going to use the MateBook. If you're considering the MateBook, you're looking at it as a laptop replacement, not just a tablet alternative. Battery life needs to be a lot longer. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE I can, without hesitation, tell you the MateBook is a beautiful tablet. The aluminum build quality is top-notch, it's super thin, and the specs sound solid on paper. It's even $200 cheaper than the entry-level Surface Pro 4. But Huawei dropped the ball on bringing the hardware and software together. The MateBook has weak battery life and stutters when you throw a handful of apps at it. Not to mention the entire device gets hot even you're not doing anything intensive (like typing this in a Chrome tab). The MateBook is a good first try, but I'll wait for the next-gen model. Like so many rising Chinese tech companies, Huawei's goal is to topple the existing top tech players. The company's made tremendous strides in the last few years to establish itself as a quality hardware maker (i.e: Nexus 6P and P9 and P9 Plus smartphones), but that's not enough. As the smartphone scene has taught us, any company, big or small, can build premium devices with the latest processors and storage. But few can optimize software to work seamlessly and powerfully while maintaining solid battery life. The Surface Pro 4 is still the gold standard when it comes to 2-in-1 devices. The iPad Pro is a good alternative if Windows 10 isn't your thing, but you won't get the same kind of productivity from iOS the way you would with OS X (soon to be called macOS) on a MacBook. Huawei's here for the long haul. The MateBook is a good first try, but I'd recommend waiting for the next-gen model, which will hopefully deliver more juice. Ultra-thin metal design • Runs Windows 10 • Good-enough performance • Sharp, high-res screen • Fingerprint sensor security Models with 4GB of RAM insufficient • Keyboard keys are too big and mushy • Weak battery life • Volume buttons too flat Huawei's MateBook would have been a decent entry-level Surface Pro 4 rival if not for middling performance and weak battery life. Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.Cheaper than Surface Pro 4
A 'real' computer for work
Magnetic connector
1 USB-C port
Keyboard
Trackpad
$60 stylus
$90 USB-C dock
Boo for battery life
Room for improvement next time
Huawei MateBook
The Good
The Bad
The Bottom Line
Huawei's MateBook will draw the inevitable copycat comments from fans of both the Microsoft Surface Pro and the iPad Pro. But really, who copied who? Everyone copied Microsoft. The original Surface, as big a flop as it was, had the new portable-PC concept right from the start. The idea then and today remains the same: a tablet that transforms into a laptop with a detachable keyboard. Tablets — iPads in particular — are great for many people, but when it comes to getting "real" work done, a device with a proper keyboard (and for some, a stylus) is a must. Apple caved to this vision and released the iPad Pro, complete with Smart Keyboard and Apple Pencil, in late 2015. While it may validate Microsoft's mobile tablet-PC vision, it's nowhere near as versatile as a Surface Pro 4 since it runs iOS and not OS X (soon to be called macOS). Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook has more in common with the Surface Pro 4 than an iPad Pro. It runs Windows 10, and its entry-level specs are the same as Microsoft's tablet. Starting at $700, it's $200 less than what the Surface Pro 4 starts at, too. On the baseline, you get a dual-core Intel Core m3 processor, 4GB of RAM and 128GB of internal SSD storage. I tested the more powerful $850 MateBook with an Intel Core m5 processor, 4GB of RAM and 128GB of SSD and based on how it performed, I don't think anyone should buy the Core m3 model. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE At first glance, the large 12-inch screen looks sharp and capable. Its 2,160 x 1,440 resolution may not be as high-res as the iPad Pro's 2,732 x 2,048 display or the Surface Pro 4's 2,736 x 1,824, but it's at least on par with Samsung's TabPro S's screen. Huawei kept the bezels around the display nice and slim. Photos and videos look great at first glance, and the screen looks perfectly fine in well-lit situations like the office. But I found its brightness insufficient and the viewing angles too weak when I used it at home in my dimly lit bedroom. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE With Windows 10, the Huawei MateBook is immediately a more useful computer for me than the iPad Pro. For work, I need full-featured Chrome, with extensions, to get anything done. That's impossible with an iPad Pro. The Core m5 processor provides good-enough performance for the usual web browsing, video and music streaming, and document editing. But if you're looking for a mobile video editing or gaming machine, you should look elsewhere. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Windows 10 has really grown on me over the last six months and while I could juggle a dozen open Chrome tabs fine, the 4GB of RAM quickly bottlenecks when you do more resource-intensive things like streaming video while multiple apps and tabs are open. One night, the MateBook struggled to stream a 480p video clip on YouTube without dropping frames. Fingerprint sensor works with Windows Hello. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook even supports login with Windows Hello via its fingerprint sensor between the volume buttons (which are too flat in my opinion). Once configured, unlocking the MateBook is as easy as touching the sensor with a registered fingerprint. The best part is there's no silly swiping required. It works just like the sensors on many flagship smartphones and is a much better login alternative to typing in a password. Unfortunately, the 5-megapixel camera on the front doesn't support Windows Hello's facial recognition. The MateBook supports fingerprint login with Windows Hello via its fingerprint sensor. The MateBook, like virtually all tablet hybrids, doesn't actually come with its accompanying keyboard in the box — you have to buy it separately. Samsung seems to be the only company with the sense to bundle the keyboard in with its TabPro S. Huawei sells a "Portfolio Keyboard" for $130. It attaches securely to the MateBook via a seven-pin port using magnets. The back of the keyboard, which is also a protective folio-style case, can be positioned at two angles via magnets in the back. It's OK, but not nearly as versatile as the Surface Pro 4's hinge when it comes to "lapability." Still better than the iPad Pro, though. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The keyboard itself is... not the best. The keys are large, but they're too close to each other, which made it really easy to hit the wrong keys during a rapid-fire typing session. The trackpad works, but out of the box there's a slight lag to the pointer. But again, at least it has a trackpad unlike the iPad Pro. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook's screen supports multi-touch with up to 10 fingers and the responsiveness is spot-on. Huawei also sells a stylus for $60. I'm not a fan of styli because they're easy to lose and there's usually no way to keep them attached to the tablet. In comparison, the Surface Pro 4's stylus attaches magnetically to the side of the tablet. It's a good stylus that's responsive and I like the two buttons (one for ink and one for an eraser) and how the other end is a laser pointer. It's also pressure-sensitive, which means the harder you press, the thicker the digital ink will be. Additionally, you can buy a $90 dock which includes two USB 3.0 ports, a USB-C port, HDMI and VGA ports, and an Ethernet port and plugs into the MateBook's single USB-C port. Yet another added cost to get more out of the MateBook. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Battery life is the MateBook's weakness. Huawei advertises battery life as up to 9 hours, but I didn't get anywhere close to that. I got around 3 to 4 hours using it as my work machine at work, at home and even during my commute. You will see longer battery life if you turn all the usual settings down or off (i.e. Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, brightness, audio, etc.), but that's not how most people are going to use the MateBook. If you're considering the MateBook, you're looking at it as a laptop replacement, not just a tablet alternative. Battery life needs to be a lot longer. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE I can, without hesitation, tell you the MateBook is a beautiful tablet. The aluminum build quality is top-notch, it's super thin, and the specs sound solid on paper. It's even $200 cheaper than the entry-level Surface Pro 4. But Huawei dropped the ball on bringing the hardware and software together. The MateBook has weak battery life and stutters when you throw a handful of apps at it. Not to mention the entire device gets hot even you're not doing anything intensive (like typing this in a Chrome tab). The MateBook is a good first try, but I'll wait for the next-gen model. Like so many rising Chinese tech companies, Huawei's goal is to topple the existing top tech players. The company's made tremendous strides in the last few years to establish itself as a quality hardware maker (i.e: Nexus 6P and P9 and P9 Plus smartphones), but that's not enough. As the smartphone scene has taught us, any company, big or small, can build premium devices with the latest processors and storage. But few can optimize software to work seamlessly and powerfully while maintaining solid battery life. The Surface Pro 4 is still the gold standard when it comes to 2-in-1 devices. The iPad Pro is a good alternative if Windows 10 isn't your thing, but you won't get the same kind of productivity from iOS the way you would with OS X (soon to be called macOS) on a MacBook. Huawei's here for the long haul. The MateBook is a good first try, but I'd recommend waiting for the next-gen model, which will hopefully deliver more juice. Ultra-thin metal design • Runs Windows 10 • Good-enough performance • Sharp, high-res screen • Fingerprint sensor security Models with 4GB of RAM insufficient • Keyboard keys are too big and mushy • Weak battery life • Volume buttons too flat Huawei's MateBook would have been a decent entry-level Surface Pro 4 rival if not for middling performance and weak battery life. Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.Cheaper than Surface Pro 4
A 'real' computer for work
Magnetic connector
1 USB-C port
Keyboard
Trackpad
$60 stylus
$90 USB-C dock
Boo for battery life
Room for improvement next time
Huawei MateBook
The Good
The Bad
The Bottom Line
Huawei's MateBook will draw the inevitable copycat comments from fans of both the Microsoft Surface Pro and the iPad Pro. But really, who copied who? Everyone copied Microsoft. The original Surface, as big a flop as it was, had the new portable-PC concept right from the start. The idea then and today remains the same: a tablet that transforms into a laptop with a detachable keyboard. Tablets — iPads in particular — are great for many people, but when it comes to getting "real" work done, a device with a proper keyboard (and for some, a stylus) is a must. Apple caved to this vision and released the iPad Pro, complete with Smart Keyboard and Apple Pencil, in late 2015. While it may validate Microsoft's mobile tablet-PC vision, it's nowhere near as versatile as a Surface Pro 4 since it runs iOS and not OS X (soon to be called macOS). Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook has more in common with the Surface Pro 4 than an iPad Pro. It runs Windows 10, and its entry-level specs are the same as Microsoft's tablet. Starting at $700, it's $200 less than what the Surface Pro 4 starts at, too. On the baseline, you get a dual-core Intel Core m3 processor, 4GB of RAM and 128GB of internal SSD storage. I tested the more powerful $850 MateBook with an Intel Core m5 processor, 4GB of RAM and 128GB of SSD and based on how it performed, I don't think anyone should buy the Core m3 model. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE At first glance, the large 12-inch screen looks sharp and capable. Its 2,160 x 1,440 resolution may not be as high-res as the iPad Pro's 2,732 x 2,048 display or the Surface Pro 4's 2,736 x 1,824, but it's at least on par with Samsung's TabPro S's screen. Huawei kept the bezels around the display nice and slim. Photos and videos look great at first glance, and the screen looks perfectly fine in well-lit situations like the office. But I found its brightness insufficient and the viewing angles too weak when I used it at home in my dimly lit bedroom. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE With Windows 10, the Huawei MateBook is immediately a more useful computer for me than the iPad Pro. For work, I need full-featured Chrome, with extensions, to get anything done. That's impossible with an iPad Pro. The Core m5 processor provides good-enough performance for the usual web browsing, video and music streaming, and document editing. But if you're looking for a mobile video editing or gaming machine, you should look elsewhere. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Windows 10 has really grown on me over the last six months and while I could juggle a dozen open Chrome tabs fine, the 4GB of RAM quickly bottlenecks when you do more resource-intensive things like streaming video while multiple apps and tabs are open. One night, the MateBook struggled to stream a 480p video clip on YouTube without dropping frames. Fingerprint sensor works with Windows Hello. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook even supports login with Windows Hello via its fingerprint sensor between the volume buttons (which are too flat in my opinion). Once configured, unlocking the MateBook is as easy as touching the sensor with a registered fingerprint. The best part is there's no silly swiping required. It works just like the sensors on many flagship smartphones and is a much better login alternative to typing in a password. Unfortunately, the 5-megapixel camera on the front doesn't support Windows Hello's facial recognition. The MateBook supports fingerprint login with Windows Hello via its fingerprint sensor. The MateBook, like virtually all tablet hybrids, doesn't actually come with its accompanying keyboard in the box — you have to buy it separately. Samsung seems to be the only company with the sense to bundle the keyboard in with its TabPro S. Huawei sells a "Portfolio Keyboard" for $130. It attaches securely to the MateBook via a seven-pin port using magnets. The back of the keyboard, which is also a protective folio-style case, can be positioned at two angles via magnets in the back. It's OK, but not nearly as versatile as the Surface Pro 4's hinge when it comes to "lapability." Still better than the iPad Pro, though. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The keyboard itself is... not the best. The keys are large, but they're too close to each other, which made it really easy to hit the wrong keys during a rapid-fire typing session. The trackpad works, but out of the box there's a slight lag to the pointer. But again, at least it has a trackpad unlike the iPad Pro. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook's screen supports multi-touch with up to 10 fingers and the responsiveness is spot-on. Huawei also sells a stylus for $60. I'm not a fan of styli because they're easy to lose and there's usually no way to keep them attached to the tablet. In comparison, the Surface Pro 4's stylus attaches magnetically to the side of the tablet. It's a good stylus that's responsive and I like the two buttons (one for ink and one for an eraser) and how the other end is a laser pointer. It's also pressure-sensitive, which means the harder you press, the thicker the digital ink will be. Additionally, you can buy a $90 dock which includes two USB 3.0 ports, a USB-C port, HDMI and VGA ports, and an Ethernet port and plugs into the MateBook's single USB-C port. Yet another added cost to get more out of the MateBook. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Battery life is the MateBook's weakness. Huawei advertises battery life as up to 9 hours, but I didn't get anywhere close to that. I got around 3 to 4 hours using it as my work machine at work, at home and even during my commute. You will see longer battery life if you turn all the usual settings down or off (i.e. Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, brightness, audio, etc.), but that's not how most people are going to use the MateBook. If you're considering the MateBook, you're looking at it as a laptop replacement, not just a tablet alternative. Battery life needs to be a lot longer. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE I can, without hesitation, tell you the MateBook is a beautiful tablet. The aluminum build quality is top-notch, it's super thin, and the specs sound solid on paper. It's even $200 cheaper than the entry-level Surface Pro 4. But Huawei dropped the ball on bringing the hardware and software together. The MateBook has weak battery life and stutters when you throw a handful of apps at it. Not to mention the entire device gets hot even you're not doing anything intensive (like typing this in a Chrome tab). The MateBook is a good first try, but I'll wait for the next-gen model. Like so many rising Chinese tech companies, Huawei's goal is to topple the existing top tech players. The company's made tremendous strides in the last few years to establish itself as a quality hardware maker (i.e: Nexus 6P and P9 and P9 Plus smartphones), but that's not enough. As the smartphone scene has taught us, any company, big or small, can build premium devices with the latest processors and storage. But few can optimize software to work seamlessly and powerfully while maintaining solid battery life. The Surface Pro 4 is still the gold standard when it comes to 2-in-1 devices. The iPad Pro is a good alternative if Windows 10 isn't your thing, but you won't get the same kind of productivity from iOS the way you would with OS X (soon to be called macOS) on a MacBook. Huawei's here for the long haul. The MateBook is a good first try, but I'd recommend waiting for the next-gen model, which will hopefully deliver more juice. Ultra-thin metal design • Runs Windows 10 • Good-enough performance • Sharp, high-res screen • Fingerprint sensor security Models with 4GB of RAM insufficient • Keyboard keys are too big and mushy • Weak battery life • Volume buttons too flat Huawei's MateBook would have been a decent entry-level Surface Pro 4 rival if not for middling performance and weak battery life. Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.Cheaper than Surface Pro 4
A 'real' computer for work
Magnetic connector
1 USB-C port
Keyboard
Trackpad
$60 stylus
$90 USB-C dock
Boo for battery life
Room for improvement next time
Huawei MateBook
The Good
The Bad
The Bottom Line
Huawei's MateBook will draw the inevitable copycat comments from fans of both the Microsoft Surface Pro and the iPad Pro. But really, who copied who? Everyone copied Microsoft. The original Surface, as big a flop as it was, had the new portable-PC concept right from the start. The idea then and today remains the same: a tablet that transforms into a laptop with a detachable keyboard. Tablets — iPads in particular — are great for many people, but when it comes to getting "real" work done, a device with a proper keyboard (and for some, a stylus) is a must. Apple caved to this vision and released the iPad Pro, complete with Smart Keyboard and Apple Pencil, in late 2015. While it may validate Microsoft's mobile tablet-PC vision, it's nowhere near as versatile as a Surface Pro 4 since it runs iOS and not OS X (soon to be called macOS). Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook has more in common with the Surface Pro 4 than an iPad Pro. It runs Windows 10, and its entry-level specs are the same as Microsoft's tablet. Starting at $700, it's $200 less than what the Surface Pro 4 starts at, too. On the baseline, you get a dual-core Intel Core m3 processor, 4GB of RAM and 128GB of internal SSD storage. I tested the more powerful $850 MateBook with an Intel Core m5 processor, 4GB of RAM and 128GB of SSD and based on how it performed, I don't think anyone should buy the Core m3 model. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE At first glance, the large 12-inch screen looks sharp and capable. Its 2,160 x 1,440 resolution may not be as high-res as the iPad Pro's 2,732 x 2,048 display or the Surface Pro 4's 2,736 x 1,824, but it's at least on par with Samsung's TabPro S's screen. Huawei kept the bezels around the display nice and slim. Photos and videos look great at first glance, and the screen looks perfectly fine in well-lit situations like the office. But I found its brightness insufficient and the viewing angles too weak when I used it at home in my dimly lit bedroom. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE With Windows 10, the Huawei MateBook is immediately a more useful computer for me than the iPad Pro. For work, I need full-featured Chrome, with extensions, to get anything done. That's impossible with an iPad Pro. The Core m5 processor provides good-enough performance for the usual web browsing, video and music streaming, and document editing. But if you're looking for a mobile video editing or gaming machine, you should look elsewhere. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Windows 10 has really grown on me over the last six months and while I could juggle a dozen open Chrome tabs fine, the 4GB of RAM quickly bottlenecks when you do more resource-intensive things like streaming video while multiple apps and tabs are open. One night, the MateBook struggled to stream a 480p video clip on YouTube without dropping frames. Fingerprint sensor works with Windows Hello. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook even supports login with Windows Hello via its fingerprint sensor between the volume buttons (which are too flat in my opinion). Once configured, unlocking the MateBook is as easy as touching the sensor with a registered fingerprint. The best part is there's no silly swiping required. It works just like the sensors on many flagship smartphones and is a much better login alternative to typing in a password. Unfortunately, the 5-megapixel camera on the front doesn't support Windows Hello's facial recognition. The MateBook supports fingerprint login with Windows Hello via its fingerprint sensor. The MateBook, like virtually all tablet hybrids, doesn't actually come with its accompanying keyboard in the box — you have to buy it separately. Samsung seems to be the only company with the sense to bundle the keyboard in with its TabPro S. Huawei sells a "Portfolio Keyboard" for $130. It attaches securely to the MateBook via a seven-pin port using magnets. The back of the keyboard, which is also a protective folio-style case, can be positioned at two angles via magnets in the back. It's OK, but not nearly as versatile as the Surface Pro 4's hinge when it comes to "lapability." Still better than the iPad Pro, though. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The keyboard itself is... not the best. The keys are large, but they're too close to each other, which made it really easy to hit the wrong keys during a rapid-fire typing session. The trackpad works, but out of the box there's a slight lag to the pointer. But again, at least it has a trackpad unlike the iPad Pro. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE The MateBook's screen supports multi-touch with up to 10 fingers and the responsiveness is spot-on. Huawei also sells a stylus for $60. I'm not a fan of styli because they're easy to lose and there's usually no way to keep them attached to the tablet. In comparison, the Surface Pro 4's stylus attaches magnetically to the side of the tablet. It's a good stylus that's responsive and I like the two buttons (one for ink and one for an eraser) and how the other end is a laser pointer. It's also pressure-sensitive, which means the harder you press, the thicker the digital ink will be. Additionally, you can buy a $90 dock which includes two USB 3.0 ports, a USB-C port, HDMI and VGA ports, and an Ethernet port and plugs into the MateBook's single USB-C port. Yet another added cost to get more out of the MateBook. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE Battery life is the MateBook's weakness. Huawei advertises battery life as up to 9 hours, but I didn't get anywhere close to that. I got around 3 to 4 hours using it as my work machine at work, at home and even during my commute. You will see longer battery life if you turn all the usual settings down or off (i.e. Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, brightness, audio, etc.), but that's not how most people are going to use the MateBook. If you're considering the MateBook, you're looking at it as a laptop replacement, not just a tablet alternative. Battery life needs to be a lot longer. Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE I can, without hesitation, tell you the MateBook is a beautiful tablet. The aluminum build quality is top-notch, it's super thin, and the specs sound solid on paper. It's even $200 cheaper than the entry-level Surface Pro 4. But Huawei dropped the ball on bringing the hardware and software together. The MateBook has weak battery life and stutters when you throw a handful of apps at it. Not to mention the entire device gets hot even you're not doing anything intensive (like typing this in a Chrome tab). The MateBook is a good first try, but I'll wait for the next-gen model. Like so many rising Chinese tech companies, Huawei's goal is to topple the existing top tech players. The company's made tremendous strides in the last few years to establish itself as a quality hardware maker (i.e: Nexus 6P and P9 and P9 Plus smartphones), but that's not enough. As the smartphone scene has taught us, any company, big or small, can build premium devices with the latest processors and storage. But few can optimize software to work seamlessly and powerfully while maintaining solid battery life. The Surface Pro 4 is still the gold standard when it comes to 2-in-1 devices. The iPad Pro is a good alternative if Windows 10 isn't your thing, but you won't get the same kind of productivity from iOS the way you would with OS X (soon to be called macOS) on a MacBook. Huawei's here for the long haul. The MateBook is a good first try, but I'd recommend waiting for the next-gen model, which will hopefully deliver more juice. Ultra-thin metal design • Runs Windows 10 • Good-enough performance • Sharp, high-res screen • Fingerprint sensor security Models with 4GB of RAM insufficient • Keyboard keys are too big and mushy • Weak battery life • Volume buttons too flat Huawei's MateBook would have been a decent entry-level Surface Pro 4 rival if not for middling performance and weak battery life. Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.Cheaper than Surface Pro 4
A 'real' computer for work
Magnetic connector
1 USB-C port
Keyboard
Trackpad
$60 stylus
$90 USB-C dock
Boo for battery life
Room for improvement next time
Huawei MateBook
The Good
The Bad
The Bottom Line