| It was last year that Intel chose Computex, a computer tradeshow in
 Taiwan, to introduce its Ultrabook concept to the world. Twelve months 
later, 110-plus models are in the pipeline, which meant the Taipei 
Convention Center was overrun by skinny, lightweight laptops. Make that 
skinny, touch-enabled laptops. Between those new Ivy Bridge chips and 
Microsoft putting the finishing touches on Windows 8, this week's show 
was nothing if not a five-day-long wedding between two tech giants: 
almost every device on display here was a vehicle for showing off 
Microsoft's glossy new OS. At every turn, a celebration of touchscreen 
notebooks. With more than 30 hands-on posts this week, we can see where 
one Core i5 laptop might look like the next, or how you might have 
failed to keep up with Jonney Shih's rapid-fire product announcements. 
Now that we're wrapping up here in Taiwan, though, we're ready to take a
 step back and think about what it is we just saw. Whether you felt 
overwhelmed by our wall-to-wall coverage or just need to catch up, we 
suggest you meet us past the break for a quick recap of all the new 
Ultrabooks. Oh, and if you're in the market for a new laptop, you can 
check your trigger-happy finger at the door. With few exceptions, we're 
not expecting these to go on sale until the fall, when Windows 8 is 
expected to start shipping. 
 Acer Aspire S7 Acer was the first 
company to ship an Ultrabook, which means it's now showing off its third
 generation at a time when other companies are just getting around to 
announcing their first. Still, the Aspire S7 series marks a departure 
for Acer: these are the outfit's first touchscreen Ultrabooks, for one, 
and they also happen to be the company's sexiest. Plastic? Try unibody 
metal. A 1366 x 768 screen? How about a 1080p display that folds back 
180 degrees? And while you won't find this on the 11-inch model, the 
13-inch version has a slick glass lid, similar to the HP Envy 14 
Spectre. For now, Acer isn't ready to reveal pricing or even specs like 
processors and storage options. In the meantime, we'll say we were 
impressed with those high-res touchscreens, though we wish Acer 
reconsidered its shallow keyboard design. Acer Aspire Timeline Ultra M5 
Need a little less touch and a little more graphics oomph? Acer's got 
you covered there, too. The M5 series joins the similar M3 Ultrabook we 
reviewed earlier this year, and features the same Kepler-based NVIDIA 
GeForce GT640M graphics. The difference? The M5s (there are two of them)
 have a polished, brushed-metal design, along with narrower bezels. 
Otherwise, the specs are near-identical to what you'll get in the M3, 
which is to say they offer 1366 x 768 screens, Core i5 / i7 processors 
and a mix of HDD and solid-state storage options. Interestingly, 
although the 14- and 15-inch M5 differ in weight, both measure about 
20mm (0.8 inches) thick. If you're in the UK you can buy one this month,
 but our US readers will have to wait a little longer for pricing and 
availability details. ASUS TAICHI Easily the most inventive design we 
saw this week, the TAICHI convertible laptop has dual screens: one 
facing the keyboard, just like on a normal notebook, and one on the lid.
 In laptop mode, you can view the 11- or 13-inch screen while using a 
backlit keyboard. Shut the lid, though, and you've got yourself a 
big-screen tablet, complete with pen support. Whichever way you use it, 
ASUS went decidedly all-out on the specs: the TAICHI makes use of a Core
 i7 processor, solid-state storage and a Super IPS+ display with an 
optional 1080p resolution. The best part, potentially: ASUS says the 
final version will be about as thin as the rest of its Ultrabooks, 
despite the fact that these have twice the screens built in. ASUS 
Transformer Books Think of it as the love child between an ASUS 
Transformer tablet and a Zenbook Ultrabook. At first glance, ASUS' 
Transformer Books are merely a group of 11-, 13- and 14-inch laptops 
with touchscreens. In fact, though, the displays can be lifted away from
 their keyboards, leaving you with an oversized slate. What's especially
 neat about this concept is that even after you detach the screen you've
 got a full-blown x86-based tablet, not some lower-powered ARM device. 
At the same time, the display has some of the amenities you'd expect in a
 regular Transformer  -  namely, front- and rear-facing cameras. 
Touchscreen ASUS Zenbook Prime It was only two weeks ago that ASUS 
announced a completely refreshed line of Ultrabooks, and yet they 
already seem outdated. Here at Computex, the company showed off the 
11-inch UX21A with a touchscreen, making it easier to interact with 
Windows 8. (We'll let you decide if that's worth getting fingerprints 
all over that gorgeous 1080p, IPS display.) With the exception of the 
screen, the design and internal specs haven't changed, though an ASUS 
rep confirmed that the touch models will naturally cost more. No word on
 pricing just yet, but we're told this will eventually go on sale in the
 US, and it will be available in a 13-inch version too. Dell Inspiron 
14z and 13z With a starting weight of 4.1 pounds and a fairly plain 
interior, the 14z was hardly the sleekest laptop on Intel's Ultrabook 
Wall of Fame. Still, a starting price of $700 makes it easily one of the
 most affordable. For now, the base model comes with a Sandy Bridge Core
 i3 CPU, unfortunately, but pay a little more and you'll get 
third-generation Core i5 and i7 processors, as you'd expect on any other
 Ultrabook. Really, the biggest tradeoff is likely to be storage: the 
14z starts with a 320GB hard drive, and tops out with a 500GB HDD, 
meaning you'll have to step up to the XPS 13 if you want a solid-state 
drive. The good news: folks who need an Ultrabook before October can 
scoop one up June 19th. If the 14z's relative heft turns you off, 
there's also a 13-inch model, which weighs 3.8 pounds. Gigabyte X11 A 
hint to all the marketing types reading this: tech writers are suckers 
for superlatives. That explains our fascination with the X11, whose 
carbon fiber build makes this the "world's lightest" Ultrabook, at 2.15 
pounds  -  or so says Gigabyte, anyway. After seeing it in person at the
 show, we can say this 11-inch ultraportable does indeed feel light in 
hand, though that carbon fiber weave isn't immune to greasy fingerprint 
smudges. What's more, we found the keyboard cramped, especially compared
 to the more spacious one on the 11-inch ASUS Zenbook Prime UX21A. We'll
 reserve judgment until we can test its performance and five-hour 
battery, but for now it's safe to say the X11 faces some formidable 
competition from similarly priced 11-inch Ultrabooks. LG X Note Z350 
Need proof that Ultrabooks are the new netbooks? Just watch as every 
company on the face of the planet trots out a super-slim ultraportable 
with Ivy Bridge inside. LG, not especially well-known for its PCs, 
announced two X Note Ultrabooks, and we happened to catch the 13-inch 
Z350 hanging around Intel's booth at CES. Though its internals are 
fairly standard (Core i7, Wireless Display and an SSD), the port 
selection is pretty robust for an Ultrabook: not one, not two, but three
 USB 3.0 sockets. It's just too bad about the design: thanks to that 
faux-brushed-metal chassis, it doesn't look quite as nice up close as it
 does in photos. MSI Slider S20 Rewind a few years to the netbook era 
and MSI was a huge mover-and-shaker at Computex, with lots of pint-size 
laptops to choose from. Since then, the company has been largely dormant
 as far as mobile products are concerned, focusing more on nine-pound 
gaming rigs. That doesn't mean MSI is willing to sit out the Ultrabook 
fad, though: the company took the opportunity to show off the Slider 
S20, an 11-inch ultraportable with a touchscreen that slides back and up
  -  yes, exactly like that Slider. In our brief hands-on, the 
sliding mechanism felt smooth, but the cramped, malleable keyboard 
brought us back to the netbook era, and not in a good way. Samsung 
Series 5 Ultra Touch and Convertible What do you do if you're Samsung 
and you've just refreshed your current Ultrabooks with Ivy Bridge? You 
trot out brand new models with touchscreens, naturally. Not one to miss 
out on a trend, the Korean electronics giant spent the week showing off 
not one, but two touch-enabled versions of its Series 5 Ultrabooks. This
 included a traditional clamshell laptop, as well as a convertible model
 whose screen folds all the way back, kind of like the Lenovo IdeaPad 
Yoga. After a brief hands-on, we came away skeptical about the 
convertible, since using it in tablet mode means resting your fingers 
against an exposed keyboard on the backside. We'd also love to see Sammy
 improve the screen quality: as is, these panels are supremely 
reflective. Sony VAIO T13 Better late than never, right? After teasing 
its first Ultrabook at CES and then announcing it for the European 
market, Sony said it's bringing the VAIO T series to the US as well. And
 here's a surprise: if you privately thought Sony has been resting too 
much on its brand cache, the T13 starts at $800  -  about as low as 
Ultrabook prices get. For the money, the base specs are pretty typical: a
 Core i5 processor, 4GB of RAM and a 500GB hard drive, paired with a 
32GB SSD for faster boot-ups. As with other budget Ultrabooks, though, 
you'll find yourself making a compromise between weight and convenience.
 On the one hand, it weighs 3.5 pounds, which is on the heavy side for a
 13-inch Ultrabook. On the other, that 0.7-inch-thick chassis makes room
 for some valuable ports, including USB 3.0 and 2.0, HDMI, Ethernet, an 
SD slot and even a VGA socket. For students on the hunt for a new 
laptop, this is worth considering. Toshiba Satellite U845W Despite the 
fact that there are just so many gosh-darn Ultrabooks hitting the 
market, you shouldn't have a problem remembering the U845W. Its display 
measures an unusual 14.4 inches (with 1792 x 768 resolution), making it 
the world's first laptop with a 21:9 screen. Toshiba claims that extra 
real estate is ideal for multitasking and watching movies, and is even 
including some software that helps you divide the screen into zones 
(kind of like Snap in Win7, but with more windows). All told, the Harman
 Kardon speakers, aluminum chassis, soft-touch accents and backlit 
keyboard make it feel more premium than the Satellite U845, the other
 Ultrabook Toshiba announced this week. We're told it will go on sale in
 the US sometime in the next few months, starting at $999. Hopefully 
before then we can take a closer look, and weigh in on whether those 
viewing angles are any good. Toshiba concept devices running Windows 8 
Okay, so these weren't on display at Computex, but we'll throw them in 
the ring anyway, since Toshiba chose this particular week to announce 
them. The company recently let us get hands-on with a trio of mock-up 
concept devices built with Windows 8 in mind: a touchscreen laptop, a 
Transformer-style tablet and a notebook with a sliding touchscreen. Had 
these been shown at Computex, they would have been in good company: we 
saw variations on each of these form factors throughout the week. Still,
 we can't help but be intrigued, especially since Toshiba hasn't said a 
word about specs and hasn't even shown these devices powered on. Maybe 
this just means we have something to look forward to at our next big 
tradeshow, IFA in August.
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