July 04, 2016
The report provides key statistics on the market status of the Laptop Battery manufacturers and is a valuable source of guidance and direction for companies and individuals interested in the industry.DeepReseachReports.com provides an overview of the research on Global Laptop Battery Industry 2016 Market Research Report published through its high quality database.The Global Laptop Battery Industry provides a basic overview of the industry including definitions, classifications, applications and industry chain structure. The Laptop Battery market analysis is provided for the international markets including development trends, competitive landscape analysis, and key regions development status.
Development policies and plans are discussed as well as manufacturing processes and cost structures are also analyzed. This report also states import/export consumption, supply and demand Figures, cost, price, revenue and gross margins.Key Companies Analysis: - HP, LG Chem, Samsung SDI, Sony, Amperex Technology, Amstron, BTI, Fujitsu, Likk Power, Panasonic, Toshiba, Anker, Fengshou Technology (Hongkong) Co., Limited profiles overview.The Global Laptop Battery Industry focuses on global major leading industry players providing information such as company profiles, product picture and specification, capacity, production, price, cost, revenue and contact information.
Upstream raw materials and equipment and downstream demand analysis is also carried out.
The Laptop Battery industry development trends and marketing channels are analyzed. Finally the feasibility of new investment projects are assessed and overall research conclusions offered.With the tables and figures the report provides key statistics on the state of the industry and is a valuable source of guidance and direction for companies and individuals interested in the market.
HP executives have focused their efforts on out-innovating the premium laptop maker. Yes, the MacBook is 0.1 inch fatter than the Windows 10-powered Spectre. To the naked eye, that means nothing. Even with a 5X magnifying glass and tape measure, I could barely spot the difference.DETAILS: Four-inch air angle grinders with model number 20687. The model number is printed on the packaging. The grinders have a blue handle and some models have the ASC logo on the top. They were sold at Agri Supply stores in Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia and online at www.agrisupply.com from January 2015 to April 2016.
WHY: The spring-loaded safety switch can fail and allow the grinder to turn on even with the safety switch locked in place, posing a finger, hand or other laceration risk.
INCIDENTS: One report of the safety spring failing, resulting in a finger laceration.
HOW MANY: About 200.
FOR MORE: Call Direct Distributors at 877-564-8669 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET Monday through Friday, send email to recall@ncddi.com, or visit www.agrisupply.com and click on "Recall Notice" at the bottom of the page for more information.DETAILS: STIHL model HSA 65 battery-powered hedge trimmers. "STIHL" and "HSA 65" are printed on the side of the battery compartment between the trigger and the loop handle. The hedge trimmer is gray and orange, with a loop handle, removable battery and a 20-inch hedge trimming blade. They were sold at authorized STIHL dealers nationwide from June 2010 through April 2016.
WHY: The hedge trimmer can operate faster than expected, continue running after the trigger is released or operate by depressing either the trigger or the front handle switch individually, posing a laceration hazard.
Sony Corp. is recalling about 1,700 Panasonic Corp. lithium-ion battery packs installed in Vaio laptops, due to overheating that may pose a fire hazard.
According to a notice from the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, no related incidents or injuries have been reported.In early 2014, Sony said it would discontinue the sale of PC products, and the company sold its Vaio business to private-equity firm Japan Industrial Partners Inc. At the time, Sony said it would continue providing customer service for existing Vaio customers.The battery packs subject to the recall have model number VGP-BPS26 and part numbers 1-853-237-11 and 1-853-237-21, and were included in computers sold in 2013.In March, Toshiba Corp. recalled about 91,000 Panasonic laptop battery packs in the U.S. due to fire risk. At the time, Toshiba said it had received four reports of overheating and melting, with no reports of injuries.
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Vaio suffered years of losses before the 2014 sale. Earlier this month, Vaio Corp. Chief Executive Yoshimi Ota said the company expects to report its first operating profit in years for the period ended May 31.HP has announced a worldwide voluntary safety recall for certain notebook batteries designed for use with several different lines of hardware. The recall affects batteries that were sold with systems between March 2013 and August 2015, and those sold separately or supplied as replacements by the company in that timeframe. Affected batteries run the risk of overheating, which could cause injury to the user or even a fire in extreme cases. Given the potential danger that these defective components can bring about, owners of HP notebooks are being advised to check whether their battery is part of the recall as soon as possible.
Certain models of HP, Compaq, HP ProBook, HP Envy, Compaq Presario, and HP Pavilion notebooks are thought to be affected by the issue. Not all of these systems were shipped with the defective batteries, but they are compatible with them, so owners are being encouraged to check in case the stock battery was replaced at any point.
The company is offering a utility to help check whether or not your battery is at risk — but there are also instructions for a manual check available via HP’s statement announcing the recall.
HP is no stranger to this kind of scenario. Back in 2014, the company was forced to recall 6 million notebook charging cables because of a fire and burn hazard linked to overheating.
Users who find that their notebook is among those affected can still use their system, so long as the battery is removed. Running the laptop while it’s connect to external power doesn’t present a fire hazard — unless of course your charging cable slipped through the cracks during the aforementioned 2014 recall.What's more, the Laptop Battery industry development trends and marketing channels are analyzed.Finally, the feasibility of new investment projects is assessed, and overall research conclusions are offered.In a word, the report provides major statistics on the state of the industry and is a valuable source of guidance and direction for companies and individuals interested in the market.
It’s the truth: Compared with the new wave of insanely thin laptops, even your once-svelte MacBook Air or Dell XPS 13 looks like Garfield after a lasagna lunch. Apologies if this causes them any self-esteem issues.
Earlier this month, HP began selling the Spectre, "the world’s thinnest laptop,†according to the company. At 0.41 inch thin, it’s as flat as a single breakfast pancake—bananas not included. More impressive, it doesn’t skimp on processing power, like Apple’s new MacBook does.
HP executives have focused their efforts on out-innovating the premium laptop maker. Yes, the MacBook is 0.1 inch fatter than the Windows 10-powered Spectre. To the naked eye, that means nothing. Even with a 5X magnifying glass and tape measure, I could barely spot the difference.
It’s why I’ve long felt technology’s thinolympics has been a waste of time. "Our new product is so much thinner than the competition that you can fit one more sheet of paper into your messenger bag! You’ll need to make room for the charger, though, since we cut out some battery. Sorry!â€
First, since the port is uncommon, you can’t do things you take for granted, like plugging an iPhone into your computer with the regular USB cable. Second, one port just wasn’t enough for me. The best solution? Purchase a hub with full-size USB ports and an SD card slot, like the $50 Hyperdrive USB Type-C 5-in-1 Hub.Apple should take a page from HP’s port playbook: The Spectre has three USB Type-C ports along its back, two of which are capable of handling more power than the MacBook’s. And if you buy the Spectre from Best Buy, a USB-Type-C-to-regular-USB adapter is included in the box.
The Key(s) to Comfort
The MacBook and the Spectre represent the laptop stripped to its barest parts: screen and keyboard. Yet they’re not like the tablet-keyboard combos, which fail at the whole sitting-on-your-lap thing. The traditional clamshell design makes these a pleasure to use—if you can get used to a few ergonomic shortcomings of their own.
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The MacBook’s sturdier, more attractive build is tarnished by a keyboard that looks like it’s been flattened by a dough roller. To make the underside razor-thin, the keys were chopped off and redesigned with a mechanism that aims to recreate the feedback and bounce of real keys. It took some getting used to, but three months in, my hands were so comfortable, it felt a little weird going back to the MacBook Air.
From the start, I loved the MacBook’s large trackpad. Though it’s just a flat, fixed piece of glass, small vibrations and a clicking sound fool you into thinking you’re physically pressing down. It messes with your mind—in a good way.With the Spectre I felt at home on the keyboard in an instant. The keys are a normal height, with more surface area thanks to a 13.3-inch screen (versus the MacBook’s 12-inch display). HP’s trackpad, on the other hand, feels claustrophobic. I also repeatedly encountered issues with it, including jumping cursors and unregistered clicks. HP says it is working on a software update to fix the problems.
The unfixable issue with the Spectre? The fact that it looks like it was designed by Kanye West. The only color option includes a gaudy gold logo and hinge that instantly attract fingerprints. On the other hand, I am entranced by HP’s trippy new logo. It’s like a Magic Eye optical illusion. Does it say HP? Lip? Fiji?Since thinner laptops have less room for battery, they tend to have less powerful chips. Yet the newest chips found in the MacBook and Spectre amp up the processing while remaining relatively efficient.
Apple recently updated the MacBook with the new Intel Core M processor, which is 20% faster than last year’s chip. I noticed it. The previous model took too long to open apps and multitask. The new one’s snappier at my usual routine of juggling multiple browser tabs and apps like Spotify, Microsoft Word and Slack. Slowdowns only start occurring when I throw more graphics-intensive jobs at it in Photoshop. (I’ve changed my mind. It could now potentially replace my three-year-old MacBook Air, though I’d like to see what’s next for the MacBook Pro before deciding.)The Spectre is available with Intel’s big-boy Core i5 and i7 processors. These can provide up to 25% more power than the Core M processors. In my tests, the Spectre was just as snappy as the MacBook at surfing the web and launching apps, but when it came to editing multiple, large images in Photoshop, the HP was far more cooperative.
That speed has some downsides. The Spectre’s fan periodically sounded like it was preparing to cool down an office building. A software fix quieted it down a bit, though it still acts up at times. (The MacBook doesn’t have a fan, and suggests closing programs when it gets warm.)The Spectre also trails behind the MacBook on battery. In my test, which loops a series of websites with brightness set at around 80%, the Spectre ran for 6.5 hours. The MacBook lasted for 8.5 hours, an hour beyond last year’s model. And it pulls that off while driving over a million more display pixels than the HP. In daily use, I found the MacBook still outlasted the Spectre, though both fell short of the 11-hour endurance of the larger MacBook Air and Dell XPS 13. (If battery life concerns you, try using native browsers—Edge on Windows, Safari on Mac.)
HP's Spectre laptop is thin enough to slice cheese. Don’t do this at home. ENLARGE
HP's Spectre laptop is thin enough to slice cheese. Don’t do this at home. PHOTO: MATT MCDONALD / THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
The Spectre and the MacBook are symbols of computing progress, and good news for people shopping for Windows or Mac hardware. Just look how much the MacBook’s performance and battery life improved in one year.
Still, before you are seduced by thinness, ask yourself how much you value portability over ports, performance and battery life—and how much you’d pay for the compromise. The Spectre starts at $1,170 and the MacBook at $1,300. Meanwhile, for under $1,000, you can buy one of their, uh, huskier counterparts.
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