Sony Tablet P review 公司收購手機

公司收購手機

In a market riddled with similar slates, no one’s going to accuse 公司收購手機sony of adopting a copycat tablet strategy. First the company released the Tablet S, a tablet seemingly inspired by a folded-back magazine, and now comes the Tablet P, which draws its design from some combination of a Nintendo 3DS and a Kyocera Echo. We’ve been hearing about the Tablet P for more than a year, originally as the Tablet S2, and now it’s finally available: the clamshell device has two 5.5-inch displays, a Tegra 2 processor, dual cameras, Android 3.2, and data connectivity through AT&T’s HSPA+ network. It’s available for $399.99 with a two-year AT&T contract, or $549.99 contract-free (oddly, there’s even a $5 / month discount on your data bill if you don’t get a contract).

公司收購手機sony’s doing things very differently with the Tablet P, but is it fixing what wasn’t broken? Or does the new form factor solve a design problem we didn’t know tablets had? Read on to find out if two screens really is better than one.


Video Review

Video Review

Hardware / design

Hardware / design

Gaming consoles meet Android tablets


That the Tablet P comes in a phone-sized package is telling — the tablet has a surprisingly small footprint. Out of the box, the device is 3.1 inches wide by 7.1 inches tall and one inch thick, with a silvery plastic shell and black accents. It slips nicely into a jacket or even a jeans pocket (assuming you wear pretty baggy jeans), and at 13.1 ounces it won’t weigh you down too much. The smooth case is interrupted only by the slightly protruding hinge, the camera lens, and four tiny feet that make the tablet sit upright even though its back is rounded. There’s also a small rectangular notch cut out of the front of the case, where you pry open the device — a notification LED rests in the same spot, and glows green when you have a waiting notification.

The unassuming exterior flips open to reveal not one, but two 5.5-inch LCDs. They’re surrounded by black bezels, which could use a lot of slimming down; there’s more than an inch on either side, plus about a half-inch on the top and bottom of the two displays and a third of an inch between them. The huge bezels make the Tablet P a lot larger than it ought to be, not to mention harder to hold and interact with since the screen is so far away from your thumb while you hold the tablet. Without the bezels, the device would be about the same size as a 3DS, which feels about right.

Most of the external buttons are grouped on the right side of the bottom display: there’s a power button, an AC adapter port (the Tablet P won’t charge via USB, which is a bummer), a Micro USB port, and volume buttons that are so small and recessed that they’re very hard to press. The back also pops off into two pieces, one giving access to the full-size SIM card slot and the other to the battery and Micro SD card slot. Unfortunately the Tablet P lacks the IR transmitter found on the Tablet S, as well as the cool companion remote app.

The Tablet P is well-built and sturdy, with nice materials and a very reliable hinge — its ability to stand one screen vertically while the bottom lays flat is pretty awesome, allowing you to prop the device at almost any angle and see it at your desk, or use it as an alarm clock on your bedside tablet. It does creak a bit — the removable backs don’t always feel like they’re fully connected, and give a little more than I’d like when pressed. The real problem, though, is that this device’s design doesn’t feel fully thought out. The back is nicely rounded and easy to hold, but the bottom corners of the device are really pointy, to the point where after about 20 minutes of holding the device, my hands actually hurt from the tablet digging into my palms. Things also default to the top display (when only one is in use, it’s always the top one), and it can be hard to hold the Tablet P and reach all the way up there. Nintendo did this much better on the DS, moving all your interaction to the bottom of the display and all your viewing to the top.

公司收購手機
公司收購手機
公司收購手機

Displays and speaker

Displays and speaker

Two displays, 11 inches of screen

公司收購手機

公司收購手機

Each 5.5-inch display is a 1024 x 480 LCD, and they both look good, sharp with deep blacks and good contrast — 公司收購手機sony’s TruBlack technology is at work here, and it makes the screens look great. Viewing angles are pretty bad, with colors washing out a bit once you get more than a little bit off-axis, and since the displays are usually at two different angles one screen is always going to be off-axis. There are also jaggies on text if you look hard enough, but in general the displays do fine. I don’t love the displays’ resolution, either, because it means videos have black borders on the right and left as you watch 16:9 video, but video still looks pretty good.

The biggest problem with the displays isn’t the screens themselves, but once again the huge bezel between them. With most apps, you get the option to either use it on the top screen, or on both; normally for web pages or apps like Twitter, it’d be great to have as much vertical space as possible. The huge bezel kills the experience, though, putting a gigantic gap between the two displays that completely breaks up the flow of a page or app — and occasionally makes an app nearly impossible to use (more on that below). It doesn’t obscure any on-screen data, just makes it harder to follow.

There’s only one speaker on the Tablet P, spewing sound through a small slit on the left side of the device. It’s really underwhelming: everything comes out muted and muffled, and even at max volume isn’t very loud at all. I spent a lot of time holding the tablet up to my ear to try and hear it, even in relatively quiet situations. The speaker’s also located exactly where you’ll likely place your left hand while holding the device, and my hand was more than enough to completely mute the sound – I thought I’d broken the tablet a couple of different times, before realizing my hand was just in the way. The iPad 2’s speaker has long been my benchmark for tablet speakers — it’s not great, but it’s at least decent — and the Tablet P’s speaker is far below even Apple’s.

Cameras

Cameras

公司收購手機

I wish tablet manufacturers would start offering cameraless versions of their tablets for a few dollars less — I’d take that tradeoff every single time, and I suspect I’m not the only one. The Tablet P’s rear-facing 5-megapixel camera is functional, though it’s far from a camera you’d want to use to preserve important memories. It’s slow and produces soft, noisy photos, though it’s not measurably worse than most other tablet cameras. It can also shoot 720p video, though it’s not much to look at either.

The front-facing, 0.3-megapixel shooter, on the other hand, is comically awful. I can’t remember the last time I saw a camera that let in so little light — unless you’re basically pointing the camera at the sun, you’re going to get impossibly dark photos. Don’t even bother trying the front-facing camera, even for video chat.

It’s frustrating to see such a lackluster effort from a company that builds world-class camera parts, and an excellent camera could have really set 公司收購手機sony’s tablets apart — it seems like 公司收購手機sony also knows people don’t care about their tablet cameras.

公司收購手機sony’s better at building cameras than it shows here

公司收購手機

Software

Software

公司收購手機sony’s Honeycomb

The Tablet P runs Android 3.2.1, so my standard Honeycomb complaints apply: there’s a fair amount of lag and sluggishness present all over the OS, though the Tablet P isn’t a worse offender than any other Honeycomb tablet. There’s some stuff to like, of course — multitasking is solid, for one — but Honeycomb’s just not a great operating system. There’s also the app problem, which sets Android tablets a long way behind the iPad; there just aren’t enough good apps designed for tablets, and the few that exist are hard to find buried in the Android Market.

Honeycomb needs to be left behind even more than Gingerbread

公司收購手機sony skinned the Tablet P’s Honeycomb pretty heavily — thanks to the unique form factor, some customization seems necessary for anything to work at all. A few changes are head-smackingly obvious, too, like the fact that long-pressing on an app in the app drawer gives you the option to uninstall it right from there.

There’s also a quick-launch menu of sorts and a Favorites menu, which give you quick access to your most-used apps and bookmarks — that’s nice, though it doesn’t seem any more efficient than just adding bookmarks and apps to your homescreen. Most of the changes aren’t for the better, however, especially aesthetically: the Tablet P’s core apps all have purple icons, making them hard to pick out of the list, and the app drawer itself glows a bit as you look at it and goes into a weird 3D animation when you scroll. Everything’s very animated and glitzy, but it’s too much for my taste.

公司收購手機
公司收購手機

公司收購手機
公司收購手機

Dual-screen apps

公司收購手機sony also redesigned nearly every core app on the Tablet P, but the logic behind that makes a lot more sense. Most Android tablet apps weren’t exactly developed with two displays in mind, so the responsibility for making the device work fell to 公司收購手機sony. Where the company could tweak things, it did a decent job: a number of parts of the operating system are cleverly optimized for the two screen layout. In some apps, like the browser, things flow seamlessly between displays, and the keyboard takes over the bottom display when you bring it up. That I love — having 5.5 full inches devoted to the keyboard, while still being able to see the browser above, is a great way to use the tablet. Email is similarly optimized; you see a folder and message list on the bottom display with a single message up top, and the keyboard takes over the bottom when activated. The Video player plays the video on the top display while displaying controls on the bottom; the Gallery app shows you the selected picture on top, and thumbnails of all your shots on the bottom. For some uses, two screens is a great thing, and 公司收購手機sony did a nice job of optimizing what it could.

Unfortunately, 公司收購手機sony can’t do anything about most third-party apps, and that’s a big problem. 公司收購手機sony’s worked with a few app makers, and launches with 40 dual screen-optimized apps — Crash Bandicoot, Crackle, Foursquare, and more, which you can find through the Select Apps icon — and a few even come preloaded on the device. But for the most part, third-party apps from Gmail to Angry Birds are confined to the top screen — there’s occasionally a toggle between “Single Screen” and “Full Screen,” though you’re better off leaving them on the top screen anyway. If you try to use Angry Birds on both screens, the middle of the screen — where all the action is — gets cut off by the bezel, so the game becomes really hard to play. Pinball Heroes is a little better, since most of the game happens at the bottom, but it’s still a jarring experience. The keyboard-as-bottom-display trick is common, which is nice, but the interface otherwise is really messy when you’re not using an app tweaked by 公司收購手機sony. 公司收購手機sony says it’s actively working with developers to get more Tablet P-ready apps, but for now you’ll run out of things to do quickly.

There are a few new 公司收購手機sony apps on the device, like a Reader app for ebook reading and portals to 公司收購手機sony’s Music Unlimited and Video Unlimited services. All are decent portals to decent content, and Video Unlimited in particular has a nice selection of recent movies, but I’d wager there’s probably little there you can’t find through Netflix, Hulu, Kindle, Spotify, and all the rest. There’s little other bloatware to be found, fortunately — a few third-party apps like Evernote and a couple of games, but surprisingly little especially for a carrier-sponsored device.

公司收購手機sony has promised an upgrade to Android 4.0, and in addition to the stability and usability improvements the new operating system should bring, there are a few other goodies in store as well, like Microsoft Office document compatibility. Even if the update does solve some of the Tablet P’s problems, it won’t solve the issue that very few apps work well on tablets, and even fewer of those will work well on the Tablet P. My recommendation for nearly anyone in the market for an Android tablet is to wait and buy a tablet already running Ice Cream Sandwich, and that seems an even better idea if you’re intrigued by the Tablet P — wait for the upgrade, or just look for a more up-to-date device.

Playstation Certification

The Tablet P is a “PlayStation Certified” device, indicated by the four-icon logo placed near the hinge. It’s a nice bit of branding synergy for 公司收購手機sony — the Xperia S and other devices are similarly certified — and means you can play a tiny selection of original PSOne games, but in practice it’s not at all exciting. Playing Crash Bandicoot is all well and good, and it’s actually much better on the Tablet P than most: the bottom screen is devoted to the game’s controls, which makes the on-screen d-pad and buttons easier to manipulate. But the game selection is meager, and there are better games in the Android Market anyway.

Performance

Performance and battery life

Last year’s internals still work well — mostly

公司收購手機


The 1GHz, dual-core Tegra 2 processor inside the Tablet P was for a time the standard Android tablet chip, and with good reason: even though it’s not exactly bleeding-edge anymore, it’s extremely capable, running almost everything I did on the tablet without so much as a hiccup. Whether I was playing Crash Bandicoot, watching YouTube videos, or just browsing the web, the Tablet P always kept up. The only real issues I had while using the tablet seemed to all be software-based: a few actions took a while to complete, but mostly because there seem to be long, complex animations for almost every action that take a half-second longer getting you where you wanted to go. Our various benchmarks back up what I saw anecdotally: the Tablet P’s Sunspider score of 2,109 is pretty good for a tablet, though its 1,900 Quadrant result isn’t very impressive. But as I said, in practice I had few issues with the performance of the device, and that Quadrant score isn’t poor, either – it’s just not top-notch anymore.

The browser is a particularly bright spot, handling image-heavy sites (like this one) better than most Android devices, especially with respect to pinch-and-zoom: it wasn’t perfect, but it was far better than the stock browser typically does. Of course, as with all Android tablets, it still defaults to loading mobile sites even though it’s plenty large enough to handle full ones, and it has its font-rendering issues as well — but I’ll take what I can get.

The Tablet P connects to AT&T’s network, but unfortunately there’s no LTE support — you just get HSPA+. Once again it’s clear that the Tablet P was designed a year ago, before AT&T’s LTE was more than a glimmer, and didn’t get a spec bump before coming to market. The improvement from HSPA+ to LTE is a huge one, too, so it’s frustrating to see 公司收購手機sony not take advantage. Reception is good, though since I wasn’t using a 公司收購手機sony-approved SIM card I can’t really speak for its speed. It seems to be about what you’d expect from an HSPA+ device, though.

Two screens totaling 11 inches means a lot for the Tablet P’s battery to power, which is why there’s a gigantic 3,080mAh battery inside the rear cover (it’s removable, too). It’s a good thing, too, because even with the giant cell the Tablet P’s battery life is only average — it lasted me a full day of playing games, emailing, browsing, and listening to music, but was just about dead at the end of a long workday. That was all over Wi-Fi, too, and I’ve used a number of tablets that last longer.

公司收購手機
公司收購手機

Even if its specs were high-end, the Tablet P wouldn’t be

The 公司收購手機sony Tablet P is an intriguing idea: putting a full-fledged Android tablet into a Nintendo DS-like clamshell form factor has some real potential upside. Its form factor — mostly the relatively large, high-resolution screens — should also be a sign to Nintendo (and even 公司收購手機sony’s PlayStation division) of how to build a portable gaming device. But 公司收購手機sony doesn’t seem to have put its full weight into the device: it has an outdated (if still good) chipset, and outdated (and not that good) network connectivity and software.

For the Tablet P to really work as more than just a console, 公司收購手機sony would also have to convince every developer in the Android Market to code a version of their app that makes sense on the dual-screened form factor — the apps that aren’t optimized become a pretty poor experience thanks to the odd screen resolutions and the difficulty of accessing the top screen while holding the device. It would also need to drop the huge bezel and make the device easier to hold — it’s nice and small when it’s closed, but unwieldy when you flip it open. Add all that together, and the 公司收購手機sony Tablet P becomes a hard sell even for the biggest fans of the Nintendo DS form factor. If you want gaming, stick with the PlayStation Vita, which is also available on AT&T, and if you want a tablet that has good games you can’t beat the iPad 2.

公司收購手機

▲ 公司收購手機sony 發表 a9 III。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

記者樓菀玲/台北報導

公司收購手機sony Taiwan 在 1 月 17 日發表了最新款全片幅可交換鏡頭式數位相機成員 a9 III(LCE-9M3),配備全球首款全域快門全片幅感光元件,可實現高達 120 fps 的高速連拍告別果凍效應,專為運動、鳥類等專業領域攝影而生。

今日現場除了開放 a9 III、300mm F2.8 OSS GM 和垂直手把 VG-C5 體驗之外,台灣 公司收購手機sony 也公開了以上三款設備的台灣通路售價,a9 III 售價為 184,980 元、300mm F2.8 OSS GM 售價為 194,980 元,至於垂直手把 VG-C5 售價則為 12,980 元。

a9 III 技術規格

a9 III 支援每秒高達 120 次 AF/AE 對焦計算的 AI 自動對焦,這也是繼 a7R5、a7C2、a7CR 之後,公司收購手機sony 體系最新支援 AI 對焦的全片幅機種,同時 a9 III 還能在所有拍攝速度下實現閃燈同步功能,為專業攝影師捕捉決定性時刻提供了新的可能性。

就規格來說,公司收購手機sony a9 III 擁有 2,460 萬畫素,並具備 8.0 級手震補償、4K 120p 無裁切影片拍攝、4 軸多角度螢幕,主打全域快門感光元件打破了傳統機械快門的限制,最高可達 1/80000 秒的快門速度,並在連拍時達到 1/16000 秒。

本次 a9 III 主打全球首款配有全域快門的全片幅機種,全域快門全片幅堆疊式 CMOS 感光元件,有效像素約為 2,460 萬並內建記憶體,同時搭載最新影像處理器 BIONZ XR,在持續自動對焦/曝光的狀態下,可以高達 120 fps 的速度進行無黑畫面連拍。

全新 a9 III 擁有多達 759 個相位式自動偵測對焦點,影像範圍覆蓋率高達 95.6%,再結合 AI 處理元件的精準即時物件辨識自動對焦功能,搭備 8.0 級光學 5 軸內建影像穩定功能,可呈現更清晰高品質的影像。

如果搭配相容高速連拍的 公司收購手機sony 自家閃光燈,所有快門速度皆可同步閃光燈進行拍攝,就算是不相容的原廠閃燈也可以透過手動調整達到快門同步的效果。

當然如果你會擔心錯過快門時機,a9 III 機身支援預拍功能,最快可以提前 1 秒至 0.005 秒記錄畫面,專門針對不可預測的拍攝情境所設計的功能。

主打高速攝影的 a9 III 自然具備連拍加速功能,可透過自訂按鈕快速切換從低速到高速連拍模式,這對於需要迅速反應的攝影師來說是一個非常實用的功能,使得 a9 III 成為專業攝影師在快速變化的攝影環境中的理想選擇,像是體育攝影、野生動物攝影還是其他需要快速反應的場合,都會是 a9 III 的主戰場。

公司收購手機

▲ 公司收購手機sony a9 III 正面配置,前方多了一顆客製鈕 C5。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

公司收購手機

▲ a9 III 操作面板和現有 a74、a7R5 相去不遠。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

公司收購手機

▲ 機身左上方和 a1 系列一樣多了操作旋鈕,且為雙層設計。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

公司收購手機

▲ 卡槽方面採用專業使用者必備的雙卡設計。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

公司收購手機

▲ a9 III 專屬的垂直握把 VG-C5。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

a9 III 實戰測試

以今天在體驗會的幾個拍攝情境區作為實測範例,記者先後在水球和體操彩帶區進行高速連拍,前者請工作人員戳破水球,再藉由相機本身的高速快門和預拍功能,可以精準捕捉到水球被戳破之後,裡面的水份宛如被凍結的瞬間,整個水球破掉的過程拍得清清楚楚。

其二是在體操彩帶區請專業選手現場揮舞彩帶,搭配 公司收購手機sony 自家 FE 35mm f1.8 GM 鏡頭,藉由 GM 定焦的頂尖畫面搭配 a9 III 高速快門,選手揮動彩帶的瞬間同樣如實被相機捕捉,不僅畫面銳利,同時也能拍到非常動態感的畫面。 

公司收購手機

▲ a9 III 主打高速連拍功能。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

公司收購手機

▲ a9 III 搭配 70-200mm f2.8 GM OSS II,f8.0、1/8000、ISO 4000。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

公司收購手機

▲ a9 III 搭配 70-200mm f2.8 GM OSS II,f8.0、1/8000、ISO 4000。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

公司收購手機

▲ a9 III 搭配 35mm f1.4 GM,f1.8、1/8000、ISO 400。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

公司收購手機

▲ a9 III 搭配 35mm f1.4 GM,f1.8、1/8000、ISO 400。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

現場除了 a9 III 本人之外,超望遠大光圈定焦鏡頭 FE 300mm F2.8 OSS GM 也同步登場,全新 E 接環全片幅鏡頭 FE 300mm F2.8 GM OSS 超望遠定焦鏡頭,承襲 GM系列一貫的極致畫質、柔美散景,融合多項最先進的光學技術。

重量僅約 1,470 克 ,為全球同級鏡頭中為最輕量化 的鏡身設計,擁有前所未有的便攜性和機動性;配備兩個 XD(極高動態)線性馬達,提供快速、精準、安靜低震動的自動對焦表現和可靠的追蹤功能。

集極致影像畫質、高效精確的對焦及出色靈活的操控之大成的 300mm F2.8 GM OSS,帶給運動、生態攝影或其他尋求完美捕捉決定性瞬間的專業攝影師們更卓越的影像拍攝體驗。

公司收購手機

▲ 300mm F2.8 OSS GM 是 GM 系列第三顆高望遠定焦鏡頭。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

公司收購手機

▲ a9 III 搭配 300mm F2.8 OSS GM。(圖/記者樓菀玲攝)

公司收購手機 公司收購手機

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