Yukyung Viliv S7 – a latest gadget is brimming with the functionalities like, the speed of Atom Z520 1.33GHz, memory capacity of 1GB, storage capacity of 32GB SSD, XP Home, and 3G either. Such a finer gizmo is produced by whom – this feat has fared by Yukyung Technologies.
This latest model tablet hybrid is attaching along a touchscreen plus full keyboard and an excellent battery life. What hitches this gizmo have; run-of-the-mill CPU working, costly price comparatively to its Atom-powered devices.
But frankly speaking, this latest series – Viliv S7's small size and netbook-tablet hybrid design is appealing, but its high price is unjustified in a world of affordable recourses.
It is a well known veracity that, this is the epoch of technological advancements, and at such time sooner or later we'll be moving beyond these netbooks – into something more evolutionary. More portable and flexible devices will push the boundaries of what we consider to be possible in computing.
Whilst UMPCs and swivel-screen tablet devices have existed for years, newer iterations such as the Asus T91 and the Yukung Viliv S7 have begun to merge them with the popular Atom-powered Netbook.
Interestingly it is offering an easy usability and a short styled gizmo, there's a lot to like about the Viliv S7--except for its price. Priced from USD 699, to our review unit at USD 799, you'll be paying a significant premium for the sub-Netbook specs under the S7's hood, especially when many Netbooks are available for as low as USD 299.
In case, you are interested like a 7in netbook that can effortlessly convert into a tablet and provide decent battery life, the Viliv S7 might be a finer choice of you. We reviewed the Viliv S5 and X70EX UMPC-form devices, which both have energy-saving but lower-performing Z-series Atom processors and combine Windows XP with a custom user interface called The Cube.
This tablet-style format, while portable, simply couldn't provide serious users with the same sort of useful interface that a keyboard could provide--and Windows XP plus a resistive touch screen don't exactly make for effortless touch control.
This string has a compact but fully featured keyboard and a swivel-hinged screen that can transform the device from a clamshell Netbook into a tablet, giving the S7, in some senses, the best of both worlds.