Bangladesh has unveiled a domestically made laptop which officials claim is one of the cheapest in the world.
Bangladesha Bangla laptop tk. 12000tk-17000tk
Bangladesh has unveiled a domestically made laptop which officials claim is one of the cheapest in the world.
Bangladesha Bangla laptop tk. 12000tk-17000tk

The Dell Latitude E6420 is a business-rugged laptop with a 14-inch display and tons of options. It features a Tri-Metal design, backlit spill-resistant keyboard, and up to a quad-core processor. It can also be customized with a 900p HD+ display. Solid state drive options and up to 8GB, DDR3 memory at 1333MHz are available (2 DIMMS).
Quick Specs
Latitude E6420 ATG Laptop Computer- Intel Core i5-2520M (2.50GHz, 3M cache) with Turbo BoostTechnology 2.0
This 15-inch desktop replacement packs a quad-core processor, Bang & Olufsen speakers, and a two-year warranty for under a grand. Find out why it doesn’t make the cut in our review.
Build and Design
The N53SM is billed as a premium multimedia notebook and has the design to compliment the claim. I like the brushed aluminum lid and palm rest; the silver metal speaker cover is also a nice touch. The glossy screen bezel and touchpad buttons are unfortunately glossy and become an eyesore with fingerprints and dust; I sincerely wish notebook designers would abandon using glossy materials.
Build quality is superb; the chassis is stiff as a board and there’s no flex when pushing down on the palm rest. The plastic used is a step up in quality from what we’re used to seeing on budget notebooks. The lid is also strong and no ripples appear on the screen when twisting it. These are impressive attributes for a consumer notebook. At 6 pounds and 1-1.5 inches thick the N53SM is average for a 15.6″ notebook.
A large access panel on the bottom of the chassis allows access to the two memory (RAM) slots and the 2.5″ storage drive bay. The battery is removable. No surprises here, which is a good thing if you care about upgrading your laptop at some point in the future.
Ports and Features
The ASUS N53SM has an average number of ports for a consumer notebook; it has two USB 3.0 ports and HDMI but not eSATA, DisplayPort, or an ExpressCard slot. On the plus side, you do get an optical drive for watching DVDs or burning files to discs.
Screen and Speakers
The N53SM is available with one screen, a 15.6″ panel with a glossy surface and 720p (1366×768) resolution. It’s the kind of panel expected on a ~$500 machine but not one double that. The screen has a cold/bluish hue and poor color reproduction – colors appear washed out. The glossy surface helps contrast but isn’t enough to make up for the panel’s quality; black levels are more gray rather than true black. The primary issue with the display though is the resolution; 720p simply doesn’t provide enough “room” to work with. Significantly more scrolling is required in web pages and Word documents compared to a 720p display; such a low resolution prevents using two windows side by side as well, so productivity suffers. There’s no good that can come out of such a low resolution – normally I’d say it keeps the price down, but that reasoning doesn’t work on a notebook this expensive.
The speakers on the other hand are audibly superior to “typical” notebook speakers. ASUS worked with Bang & Olufsen to create this system and it’s well done. The speakers aren’t particularly loud but have sufficient volume to entertain a few people watching a DVD. Unlike stereotypical notebook speakers with flat sound, these have depth and a touch of bass. The placement of the speakers under the display is also ideal as they face the user; too often notebooks come with speakers hidden under the palm rest which results in muffled sound.
Keyboard and Touchpad
The N53SM has a full-size keyboard with separate numeric keypad. It’s a traditionally styled keyboard, not a “Chiclet” version like on Apple MacBooks. While it lacks backlighting it provides a pleasant typing experience. There’s sufficient key travel for good tactile feedback and no noticeable keyboard flex. The layout is as expected with no keys in unusual positions. The keys in the numeric keypad are smaller than those on the main keyboard.
The touchpad is regular sized for a 15.6″ notebook and has an excellent matte surface. The two buttons are louder than I prefer but have good feedback.
source: www.notebookreview.com
Tech World is going on. fast and fast, new inventions, competing others. Every second product is trying to defeat their rivals by introducing their new gadgets or products to attract customers. Here we presents multiple products of different manufacturers that will compete in future, a new world of 2012 year technology.
source :http://sawallpapers.blogspot.com
Like me, you may have decided that 2012 is the year to get yourself a new laptop! So obviously you want to know which are the Best Laptops 2012 don’t you!
Every day it seems that there are more versatile and powerful laptops becoming available at more affordable prices. There is also now a whole range of netbooks and tablet pcs that you might also want to consider as you look for the Best Laptops 2012.
If you are looking for a new laptop then there is an amazing selection of the Best Laptops 2012 available for you to choose from!
None of the laptops provided in Article 5 of the most expensive laptop , not even close to worth with the title of most expensive laptop in the world…
Continue Reading…
All the excitement these days may be centered around supersmall laptops, from ultraportable to ultrathin to ultrabook, but there’s still a place for PCs on the opposite end of the spectrum. There are few things more fun for a laptop reviewer than unpacking and setting up a massive 17- or 18-inch desktop replacement laptop. To be fair, many of these systems hardly qualify to be called laptops at all; some are so massive, and have such poor battery life, that you’ll essentially set them up once and never move them again.
Alienware M18x
Intel Core i7 2920XM, Nvidia GeForce GTX 580M (x2, SLI), $5,071
The new Alienware M18x is built around a stunning 18-inch display, with copious configuration options for killer performance, including overclocked CPUs and dual video cards. The huge screen makes a surprising difference over slightly smaller 17-inch ones, and if you’re eschewing a flat-screen TV in a den, dorm room, or vacation home, the M18x can be an all-in-oneentertainment center, especially as it has a separate HDMI-in port for your game console, cable box, or other device.
Origin EON17-S
Intel Extreme Edition Core i7-2920XM (overclocked), Nvidia GeForce GTX 580M (overclocked), $3,599
The real advantage Origin brings is its capability to offer not only overclocked CPUs, but also overclocked GPUs. Considering that the overclocked parts in our review unit were already top-of-the-line–an Intel Extreme Edition Core i7-2920XM and an Nvidia GeForce GTX 580M–it’s not too surprising that this config costs a whopping $3,599. What you end up with is a powerful system, hand-assembled and tested, but without the inventive proprietary industrial designs that companies such as Hewlett-Packard and Dell can bring to their own gaming systems.
Intel Core i7-2630QM, Nvidia GeForce GTX 560M, $1,899
This particular Qosmio comes packaged with Nvidia 3D Vision technology (the most common way for laptops to display stereoscopic 3D) and a pair of Nvidia 3D active-shutter glasses, meaning it can play 3D PC games and 3D Blu-ray movies. Both look good on the large 17.3-inch 1,920×1,080-pixel display, or either can be output to a 3D-compatible HDTV with Nvidia 3DTV Play software. Still, the value of 3D entertainment is up for debate; honestly, even in the years since 3D laptops were introduced, it’s never been more than a high-end novelty.
Acer Aspire Ethos AS8951G
Intel Core i7-2630QM, Nvidia GeForce GT555, $1,599
The 18-inch Acer Aspire Ethos AS8951G is a huge multimedia powerhouse laptop with a unique removable touch-pad remote control. It’s a clever idea, but one that might be ahead of its time. Beyond that, the laptop’s actual hardware is mostly top-notch. Acer and sister-brand Gateway have always made excellent large 17-inch-and-bigger multimedia and gaming laptops. This one has a full HD 1,920×1,080-pixel-resolution screen, Blu-ray, a fast Intel Core i7-2630QM CPU, and a decent Nvidia GeForce GT555 graphics card.