News
Lenovo Tab P12 Pro headlines new P-Series tablets
With 5G and next-gen add-ons
Tablets continue to persist and Lenovo is keen on making ones that handle both work and leisure. Headlining their new tablets is the Lenovo Tab P12 Pro.
Lenovo Tab P12 Pro
Lenovo packed the Tab P12 Pro with everything you could possibly want and need from a tablet. It has a 12.6-inch AMOLED display with a 16:10 aspect ratio. That’s more akin to recent laptops than the usual 16:9 tablets.
More on the display, it supports Dolby Vision and HDR10+ to deliver vivid and stunning visuals. It supports both 60Hz and 120Hz refresh rates which you can toggle manually or set to adaptive to let the tablet make the decision for you.
To complement the treat it gives to your eyes, the Tab P12 Pro is equipped with JBL speakers that support Dolby Atmos.
It’s powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 870 chip with up to 8GB of RAM and 256GB of internal storage. For connectivity there’s WiFi 6 or you can opt to get the 5G model for a more truly mobile experience.
It packs a 10,200mAh battery with support for 45W wired quick charging. Lenovo is promising up to 17 hours of battery life.
Taking the productivity further, it comes with a full-sized snap-on keyboard with large built-in trackpad in the box. If you want to kick it up a notch higher, you can purchase the compatible Lenovo Precision Pen 3.
Lenovo Tab P11 5G
As the name suggests, the tablet supports 5G. It’s designed to be ultra-portable whether that’s for schools, offices, or travel assuming things open up soon in your area.
The Tab P11 5G has an 11-inch IPS 2K-resolution display and supports the optional keyboard pack and Lenovo Precision Pen 2 for light productivity.
It’s powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 750G 5G with 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage. Battery capacity is 7,700mAh with support for 20W quick charge.
Pricing and availability
The Lenovo Tab P12 Pro Wi-Fi only model will retail for US$ 609.99 and will be available on Lenovo.com come October 2021. The 5G model will be available in Europe on October 2021 and will start at EUR 899. It won’t be available in North America at this time.
The Lenovo Tab P11 5G will be offered in Europe come October 2021 and will start at EUR 499.
Enterprise
Google ordered to pay EUR 4.1 billion in fines
The EU alleges that Google uses its apps to establish an unfair dominance.
European fines have unintentionally become a normal part of doing business in the American technology space. For too long have American companies paid paltry fines to prevent harsher regulation in the European Union. Now, for the first time, Google is about to pay a record-breaking fine that goes beyond “paltry.”
Today, via CNBC, Google has been ordered to pay an astonishing EUR 4.1 billion (or approximately US$ 4.67 billion) in fines. The fine is in response to an anti-competition case.
This has been a long time coming for Google. The original case started in 2018. At the time, the European Union accused the brand of using anti-competitive practices to ensure its dominance in the smartphone market. According to the courts, the company’s bundling of first-party apps for every Android smartphone gives them an unfair advantage in the market and lessens the user’s choice in selecting apps.
For years, Google has fought the fine to seemingly no avail. Now, the company has lost its final attempt, which means that the fine still stands. On the bright side, they did get it reduced from the original EUR 4.34 billion fine.
The European Union is the scourge of every American tech company (and a godsend to consumers). Most notably, the continent’s government forced Apple to adopt USB-C, leading to a more universal experience across brands.
Google’s hefty fine aims to do the same. And it is quite hefty. Whereas previous fines were in the millions (and hence, negligible for most companies), a fine in the billions is more tangible.
Gaming
Xbox might get rid of physical discs too
The experimental disc-to-digital feature will digitize your physical library.
Sony and Microsoft are seemingly locked in a farcical battle to sink their own ship first. Just today, the PlayStation fired its most damaging salvo yet by cancelling physical games starting 2028. Not to be outdone, the Xbox is going pound-for-pound through an experimental disc-to-digital feature to digitize physical games.
According to The Verge, Microsoft is currently testing a feature which will allow users to completely digitize their collection of physical games on the Xbox One and the Series X. Upon inserting the disc, the Xbox will create a digital copy attached to the physical disc.
Being attached to the disc means that the digital copy can move from console to console. Once the disc is inserted to another console, the digital copy transfers with it.
The feature will prevent more than a single person from using the disc at the same time. It sounds similar to Nintendo’s Virtual Game Card but without the ability to lend games out to friends and family.
It’s still an experimental feature, so there’s no schedule for a global rollout yet. Still, the disc-to-digital feature sounds like an eerie prelude to Microsoft similarly eliminating physical discs for the future. If it’s any consolation (but it’s probably not), Nintendo already got the ball rolling by introducing the Virtual Game Card feature, but the Switch 2 mercifully hasn’t removed physical cartridges.
SEE ALSO: Xbox CEO admits Game Pass is too expensive right now
The ASUS ExpertBook Ultra is now available in the Philippines. It is ASUS’ latest AI-powered business laptop for professionals who want a lightweight machine without sacrificing performance.
Positioned as the flagship of the ASUS ExpertBook lineup, it combines a sub-1kg chassis with Intel Core Ultra processors, enterprise-grade security, and AI features. ASUS is targeting executives, business users, and creators with the new laptop.
Built for portability and performance
The ASUS ExpertBook Ultra weighs as little as 0.99kg. It measures just 10.9mm thick. The laptop uses an aerospace-grade magnesium-aluminum chassis with ASUS Nano Ceramic Technology. ASUS says the finish delivers five times greater scratch resistance than the industry standard.
Despite its slim profile, the laptop packs a 70Wh battery. ASUS rates it for up to 26 hours of battery life.
Power comes from Intel Core Ultra Series 3 processors. The lineup is topped by the Intel Core Ultra X9-388H. Buyers can configure the laptop with up to 64GB of LPDDR5X memory running at 9600 MT/s and up to a 2TB PCIe Gen 5 SSD.
ASUS also highlights its ExpertCool Pro thermal system. It allows the processor to sustain up to 50W of CPU performance while keeping fan noise low.
Tandem OLED display and premium hardware
The ExpertBook Ultra features a 14-inch 3K Tandem OLED touchscreen. It offers a 120Hz refresh rate and up to 1,400 nits of HDR brightness. Corning Gorilla Glass Matte helps reduce reflections while preserving image quality.
Other hardware highlights include:
- 1.5mm travel spill-resistant keyboard
- Edge-to-edge haptic touchpad
- Six-speaker Dolby Atmos audio system
- Dual Thunderbolt 4 ports
- Two USB-A ports
- HDMI 2.1
- 3.5mm audio jack
AI and enterprise security
As a Copilot+ PC, the ASUS ExpertBook Ultra includes AI-powered tools through the MyExpert suite. These include AI ExpertMeet and a local Knowledge Hub.
The laptop also focuses on enterprise security. Features include dual biometric authentication, a physical webcam shutter, self-healing BIOS, TPM 2.0, Microsoft Pluton, and compliance with the NIST SP 800-193 firmware security standard.
Price and availability
The ASUS ExpertBook Ultra is now available through ASUS authorized stores and select retailers nationwide.
Pricing starts at PhP 129,995. Higher-end configurations go up to PhP 215,995.
ASUS is also offering an Early Bird Bundle until July 31, 2026. Eligible purchases include an ASUS 100W GaN charger and PhP 10,000 worth of SSI gift vouchers.
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