Tuesday, May 1, 2012

VIA spreading tablets to education market in India

VIA and Wishtell get a mention in an upbeat article about the proliferation of tablets in the education sector. The VIA based tablets were recently launched in India, catering to 23 different regional languages.

"Our tablets will enable students to access virtual labs for physics, chemistry and so on. A student can also subscribe to our special packages, such as astronomy content, which may not be available in the school curriculum," says Milind Shah, CEO of Wishtel India. - Source.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

VIA and Wishtel bring out new tablets in India

Two new Wishtel tablets, featuring VIA chips, are the first in the world to natively support Indian languages giving them an advantage for adoption into the education market in India.


“With the introduction of the IRA and IRA Thing, Wishtel is leading the way in driving tablet innovation in India,” commented Richard Brown, VP International Marketing, VIA Technologies, Inc. “The potential for these devices is breathtaking, particularly in areas such as education.”

Source.

Monday, October 10, 2011

How to turn a cheapie tablet into a cool device

The VIA WonderMedia WM8650 chip can be found in many 7 and 8 inch tablets that are manufactured in China and being sold for around the $100 mark. The specs are low, with an 800MHz processor, 256MB RAM and just 2GB internal storage. But for the price, the First Arkansas News has discovered that with a bit of tweaking, you can have yourself a fun mobile Internet device.

"Ah, but rooting the Cerebro is worth it. Prior to doing that, I had no Android Market, games were so slow they were unplayable and even the Amazon Kindle and Barnes & Noble Nook applications were painfully slow. All of those problems were fixed after I rooted the machine and that’s a good thing as I wanted the Kindle and Nook apps to work so I could turn this into a cheap ereader. The root kept me at Android 2.2 (Froyo) instead of moving to Android 3, but at least the thing behaves a lot better than it did."

The specific tablet in question is the Cerebro from Lightinthebox.com.

Friday, June 10, 2011

VIA Wondermedia "home" tablet


Engadget spotted something a little different in the tablet space on the VIA booth. There were half a dozen tablets all lined up in a row on the Wondermedia section of the VIA booth, and one of them featured an interface on top of Android 1.6 that gives it a "home" tablet sort of look, like something you might use on the kitchen bench to keep an eye on the time, weather, etc ... with quick links into the music and video folders as well. Quite a cool idea!

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Japanese site shows VIA QuadCore vs AMD E-350



As VR-Zone quite rightly reports, the benchmarks that Impress PC Watch have published are from a Powerpoint presentation put together by VIA, so they are of course going to be in VIA's favor. Never the less, some of them are rather impressive, although you do also have to remember that the VIA processor has an extra two cores over the AMD E-350.

"We wouldn't take any of this numbers as definite results, but they do at least show that VIA's new QuadCore has some potential."

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

"netbooks just got a boost of excitement" says HotHardware

HotHardware has joined the crowd of IT news sites who are writing up their opinions on VIA's new QuadCore processor which was announced last week. The 1.2GHz VIA QuadCore is 21% more energy efficient than any competing processor, and HotHardware's Ray Willington is quick to realize the potential boon this could be for netbooks.

"It's hitting the market this month, feature a highly optimized, energy-efficient multi-core architecture that's said to provide multi-threaded performance across the board for multi-tasking, multimedia playback, productivity and internet browsing in a low power envelope. With a TDP (Thermal Design Power) of only 27.5 watts, the 1.2+ GHz VIA QuadCore processor is 21% more energy efficient than the nearest competitor and ideal for a wide range of desktop PC, notebook, small form factor PC, all-in-one PC, and mini-server system design applications."

Monday, May 16, 2011

Nano gets bigger says Anandtech

One of the biggest tech sites out there has reviewed the new VIA Nano Quad Core processor. The story in the write-up, by non other than Anand himself, is that VIA's creed that power consumption really matters is already accepted by consumers when it comes to smartphones, tablets and other mobile devices. He is optimistic that VIA's processors have what it takes, but less certain about whether VIA can make the right business connections to get into the game on a mass scale. The article goes over the highlights of the new processors and then takes a tour of Centaur's facilities, where VIA processors are designed, including two videos.