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3/12/2016 - Asus K53E-SX104V Battery

Next, you’ll need a plan that supports UHD – namely the ‘premium’ tier that costs £8.99 per month. Perhaps most importantly, Netflix recommend that you’ll need an internet connection of at least 25 Mbps.If you're used to Full HD, then Netflix's 4K content will be a big improvement. If your broadband connection isn't up to it, however, it may prove a frustrating experience: if your ISP isn't up to scratch, the compression artefacts, dropouts and buffering will quickly make you wish you were watching a proper 4K Bluray disc instead. The final moan? It doesn’t help that Netflix pads out its 4K library with upscaled nature documentaries. Actual 4K content is still fairly few and far between.The good news is that headline shows on Netflix such as House of Cards and Marco Polo really do look spectacular in UHD. Okay, it’s not the same leap in quality we saw from SD to Full HD, but on a big 2160p TV, or a projector, you’ll appreciate the extra pixels. (Note: 4K-skeptics may insist that they can’t see the difference – in truth, unless your screen is big enough and/or your eyesight keen enough, then you might not get the full benefit.)

Netflix is stepping up its 4K offering in the face of competition from Amazon Instant Video, a tempting alternative for those who don’t mind signing up to Amazon’s Prime delivery service.Amazon has recently given the Fire TV a boost with 4K support thanks to High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC). As the name suggests, HEVC is a highly efficient way of compressing and storing video. It’s so efficient, in fact, that it halves the amount of storage required compared with H.264, which is the current standard for HD video compression.Audio buffs should take note, however, that both the Netflix and Amazon 4K streams are so data hungry that there’s no room for a high-res DTS Master Audio soundtrack to go with your UHD video. Dolby Digital 5.1 is the best you can hope for with the current streaming 4K formats.You might have already seen the somewhat confusing “Mastered in 4K” Blu-ray releases floating around. They’re not native 4K films, but regular 1080p Blu-rays with one crucial difference: the film was shot on 4K cameras and then mastered, compressed and transferred onto disc in such a way that it (allegedly) upscales again more readily onto a 4K panel.

So it seems that if you want 4K now, you’re best bet is to do it yourself. Capturing 3,840 x 2,160-resolution images turns out to be quite easy, with plenty of camcorders, still cameras and even smartphones recording in 4K.It’s the action-cam market that’s really running with this one, though. Or should that be skateboarding, skydiving and free running? Just look at all the 4K footage appearing on YouTube and GoPro’s own channel. So my answer is to go out there and make your own 4K films until Hollywood and the hardware manufacturers are ready to release UHD Blu-ray.12.9 inches?! Yes, the iPad Pro is one big tablet. A gargantuan tablet. In fact, it's about as big as a tablet can feasibly get. If it's too big for you, but you like the idea of an iPad with a proper keyboard, desktop-class performance and multitasking, it might be worth considering its smaller sibling, the new Apple iPad Pro 9.7-inch. This loses a little RAM, but is otherwise a perfectly formed iPad Pro that's been hit by a top-secret Apple shrinking-ray.

In fact, the little iPad Pro is such a sizable step forward that we've given it a recommended award. Click here for the full Apple iPad Pro 9.7 review. Otherwise, continue reading for our original 12.9in iPad Pro review. Bigger is better, right?The year 2015 was an odd one for Apple's tablet business. In the face of falling sales of its previously evergreen 9.7in iPad Air, it decided against an incremental update, opting for a major shake-up instead. The result was the 12.9in iPad Pro, a tablet, it seems, designed specifically to target Microsoft Surface Pro 4, and prevent it having the whole of the hybrid market all to itself.So far, the tactic is working. In February 2016, analysts at IDC reported iPad Pro sales in the fourth quarter of 2015 had exceeded the entire Microsoft Surface product line, by 2million to 1.6million total sales. It's a stunning victory for Apple over Microsoft, and a real vote of confidence in the iPad Pro by consumers.

The success of the iPad Pro, even so early in its lifespan, is surprising considering how dramatically different it is to previous iPads, but it helps that there are plenty of elements of familiarity here. One glance tells you this is still very much an Apple iPad, thanks to its glass front and aluminium rear, chamfered-edge front and all-over immaculate build quality.It has an identical design to the iPad Air 2 and iPad mini 4. The front is all display, surrounded by narrow bezels on the longer sides and wider ones at top and bottom. A camera lens peeps out from the centre at the top and the home button with Touch ID capabilities nestles at the bottom. Every other detail, almost, is the same as on the smaller-screened Apple tablets. Power button on the top edge: check. Volume up and down buttons on the right edge: check. Whacking great Apple logo on the middle of the back: check. On the Wi-Fi and cellular model – plastic stripe on the back and SIM card slot on the right edge: check and check. Single loudspeaker on bottom edge: oh, hold on.

The iPad Pro, uniquely in Apple’s iPad range, has four speakers, two on the top and two on the bottom edge. As you’d imagine, this design change seriously upgrades the tablet’s audio capabilities.There’s one other difference: on the left edge, three small circles sit innocuously in the middle. These form the Smart Connector, which attaches Apple’s Smart Keyboard or third-party accessories such as the Logitech Create keyboard case.For all the similarities to previous iPads, the Pro has one major difference: its size. The 12.9in display may not sound much bigger than the previous iPad’s 9.7in screen, but it looks huge in comparison.It’s much heavier than the iPad Air 2, but still lighter than the first iPad, weighing 713g for the Wi-Fi-only edition, and 723g for the Wi-Fi and 4G model. That’s heavier than many rival tablets, but it still feels light relative to its size.

Dell has hit a rich seam of form in recent months. Now, it’s taken the elegant carbon-fibre and metal design of the XPS 13 and scaled it up to create the company’s most stylish 15in laptop yet, the Dell XPS 15. Throw in the latest quad-core Skylake processors, Nvidia’s gaming-class graphics and the option of some blazingly quick NVMe SSDs, and the Dell XPS 15 is ready and raring to do serious damage to credit cards across the globe.If you’ve seen the XPS 13, then you know exactly what to expect here. Over the years, Dell has worked hard behind the scenes to refine the design of its XPS models, and the result is some of the finest Windows devices the world has ever seen. Squared-off slabs of cool-to-the-touch metal sandwich a thin wedge of carbon fibre; long rubber feet poke through the underside; and the clean, crisp design is all straight-line geometry and subtle curves. Suffice to say, the XPS 15 is a handsome devil – I’d be tempted to say even more so than Apple’s current 15in MacBook Pro with Retina display. There’s something about the visible weave of the carbon fibre and the fine sheen of the metal that make for a high-end yet understated appearance.


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