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Asus n75 Battery; Asus n75 Battery
Topic Started: Feb 27 2017, 11:39 AM (2 Views)
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The company suggested customers, to go through the validation process and check manually to find if the battery is faulty. Though the company has already mentioned some computer models, all are not affected.

The process for companies or individuals with more than 10 affected batteries will be slightly different, Slash Gear pointed out. This process is applicable for individuals as well as the companies. In that case, email addresses are provided to contact for bulk checking and replacement. The addresses can be found in the FAQ section of the company.

The company says it is doing its best to replace the batteries at the earliest. The customers can check the shipment status once they send the faulty battery back. For those who have not faced any issue with the battery till now, fault checking is strongly encouraged by the HP battery recall team.
One huge disadvantage of Nintendo's own console is that it is not as powerful as the Xbox One S. It does have the advantage of mobility but players would not be able to seek all of the games available in the other platforms because of its inferior hardware.

Console modder Ben Heck was able to make an Xbox One S laptop that needs a CNC machine and a 3D printer for the additional parts, Digital Trends has learned. Thanks to the smaller form factor of Microsoft's new and upgraded console, it is able to fit in a modded laptop.

The Xbox One S laptop still needs to be plugged in for power. It has its own 1080p Full HD screen which means players do not need an external monitor.
The Xbox One S laptop is not able to play videos or video games in 4K because of the screen's 1080p limit, Game Rant reported. However, the small screen means that there is a high pixel density which translates to a clearer and crisper image.
Heck's process is meticulous and interested users need to know some technical jargon to attempt the Xbox One S laptop mode. Opening the insides of the console will also void the warranty which means that users need to know the risks before doing the mod.

Rumors have been rife about the release of the MacBook Pro 2016, and the latest information suggests that the new laptop will launch on Oct. 26. It is also speculated that the Cupertino-based tech giant will turn to AMD's A10 Fusion chipset as opposed to Intel's Kaby Lake processor.

The alleged release date is just a month away, and therefore, fans are clamoring for every bit of information about the features incorporated in the upcoming device. Previous rumors indicated that the MacBook Pro 2016 would release with Intel's seventh-generation Kaby Lake chipset, which could be the cause of the delay. However, new reports have emerged indicating that the laptop may release with AMD's new 64-bit A10 Fusion SoC, according to The Verge.

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While AMD's processing chip is used in smartphones such as the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, it is believed that the A10 Fusion SoC is powerful enough to handle workloads on the MacBook Pro. The current MacBook Pro devices run on Intel Core i5s and i7s for their processors.

According to the publication, AMD is not Intel's closest opponent, not even close enough since AMD's thunderbird vs. Intel's Pentium, although the hardware masters Apple. This is evident with the current performance of Apple's A series smartphone processors as the leading in the market compared to Intel's x86 chipsets.

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It is further rumored that the new MacBook Pro 2016 will come with an organic light-emitting diode (OLED) display touch bar located above the keyboard, according to Mac Rumors. The laptop will reportedly sport a USB Type-C port and a Thunderbolt 3 port besides the biometric Touch ID functionality. Furthermore, the upcoming laptop may support 5K displays clocked at a screen resolution of 5120 by 2880 pixels.
Fans will have to choose between the 8GB of RAM model and the 16GB of RAM one. The laptop will allegedly ship with a solid-state drive (SSD) that can be expanded up to 1TB.

Apple is yet to give any official details on the next laptop, and therefore, these rumors should be taken with a grain of salt. Here is a sneak peek for further information on the MacBook Pro 2016:Southwest Airlines may want to get in touch with Samsung for its next "Want to get away?" commercial. As if the company needed more bad PR over its battery situation, the company's affiliate battery plant in China caught on fire earlier today.
Reuters describes it as a "minor fire" at the Samsung SDI Co Ltd factory, one that was caused by waste products containing faulty batteries. The fire has since been extinguished and there were no injuries reported, but this is the last thing Samsung needed to happen. It also reflects poorly on lithium-ion battery technology.Starting with Samsung, the company's trying to move on from a global recall of Galaxy Note 7 handsets that were prone to overheating and exploding. There were multiple reports of personal injuries and property damage resulting from defective Galaxy Note 7 devices. Samsung thought it had a handle on the situation when it swapped out the battery and began replacing defective models, but it wasn't long before there were reports of replacement devices overheating and catching fire as well.
Following the recall, Samsung investigated the matter and determined that faulty batteries were to blame in both cases, even though the batteries came from two different manufacturers. As a result, Samsung decided not to launch its upcoming Galaxy S8 flagship at Mobile World Congress this month as planned so that it could put the new phone's batteries through a more rigorous qualification process. Now this.The good news for Samsung is that the fire wasn't caused by new batteries, nor did it break out on the production line. It originated (and was seemingly contained to) a part of the factory that is used for waste.While this is obviously another black eye for Samsung (to some extent, anyway), it's yet another incident that casts lithium-ion batteries in a negative light. In semi-related news, video has surfaced of a Dell laptop catching fire four times while charging.Devon Johnson, an 18-year-old from Thousand Oaks, California, was eating pizza and playing video games with a friend when the incident occurred. The laptop was just a few feet away when it burst into flames, NBC4 Los Angeles reports.
Devon had plugged the laptop in to charge. A few hours later smoke started coming out the side right before it was engulfed by a fireball. The laptop is toast and there is some damage to the nearby sofa, but luckily for the Johnson family Devon and his friend were around to put out the fire and unplug the notebook.After unplugging it, the two teens took the laptop outside where it again caught on fire. They blew the flames out but it burst into flames a few minutes later for a third time while still unplugged. That time they used a fire extinguisher to put it out, seemingly for good, except that it caught fire a fourth time."We are coordinating with Mr. Johnson to retrieve the product and will conduct a complete investigation to validate its origin and understand its full history. There is a wide spectrum of potential reasons for what's seen in the video," Dell said in a statement.There are some things you can do to mitigate the risk of something like this happening, or from turning into an even worse situation. Not leaving your laptop or other lithium-ion powered device plugged in and charging overnight or while you're away at work is one of them.
What's really needed, however, is a battery technology that is less prone to overheating and catching fire.Update: Dell provided us with a statement regarding the exploding laptop. As it turns out, the battery was a third-party solution and not one that Dell manufactured or provided."We have concluded our full investigation. The battery involved was not manufactured by Dell and was not an authentic Dell battery. Dell batteries contain Dell intellectual property that helps ensure safety. Remember, it is important to follow the manufacturer’s safety instructions for all electronic devices. Incompatible, counterfeit or third-party batteries may increase the risk of a safety related incident," Dell said.
I log in to the onboard Wi-Fi and so begin my real problems. The connection isn't so bad considering the train is rattling down the line at 130mph but, as expected, it has been hijacked by a madman in the train company's IT department who wields his IP blocker like he was slicing three peppercorns with a machete.This hamstrung Wi-Fi provision allows me to check emails and browse the web a bit. I can even try to entertain myself by depleting my smartphone with ten types of barf streamed from an onboard server via an award-winning app that eats up half your journey just trying to be downloaded in the first place... before you realise the Google Play Store has been blocked.

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More importantly, Dropbox access is blocked. Given the vast size of my box (ahem), I don't mirror the entire content to my measly laptop otherwise I'd have no space for anything else such as, oh I dunno, application programs or an operating system. And it's a good job I have those installed on the hard drive rather than running in the cloud otherwise those would probably get IP-blocked too.My home NAS, which I suppose takes a known route, is blocked. Client company VPNs are blocked. Evernote is blocked. YouTube is blocked. Google services other than web search are blocked. Not even Google Mail seems to work.This leaves me just one night to get the latest versions of everything I might need downloaded to various USB sticks and SD cards that I have lying about. Besides, who knows, maybe the net access at my destination will be just as bad, or even absent altogether. Just because I've been called in to give a consultation about digital media doesn't mean the client is prepared to help me get online.Big corporates and small businesses are wonderful to deal with in this respect, mind: it's the mid-size companies that seem to have a problem sharing a Wi-Fi password with visitors, and they positively freak out if I produce an Ethernet cable. This leaves me running everything through 4G, which works fine until the moment I'm expected to browse through 100GB of uncut video files in the cloud, each labelled helpfully with filenames such as VID2846759.
"We put everything in your Dropbox last night," they tell me, underlining the fact that my inability to access any of it while on the train or in their office is evidently my problem.So that's what I was doing all last night: downloading folder after folder. Hammer and tongs. Action and drama.But hey, I don't mind doing that for large media files. What bugs me is being denied access to a 24kb Word doc while en route to my client meeting because the file just happens to be hosted on Dropbox servers. Often all I need is to be able to see a file list, not necessarily download the files themselves.And while I remain shut out of my own data, I grumble to myself on the journey home, the incessantly sniffing nob-end sitting across the train carriage aisle is streaming billions of bits to the YouTube app on his smartphone.After a little investigation, it looks as if there are gaps in Virgin's blacklist. Forget using a web browser on my laptop, let's try some smartphone apps... Yup, if I steer clear of the obvious routes, I find I can get into places that IT's Mr Machete doesn't want me to access using his precious onboard Wi-Fi routers.In fact, it turns out that one of the services he forgot to block was Google Drive. That's quite an omission and useful to know – I might actually start using it. I make a mental note to attack Google Drive in a big way when I get home, hammer and tongs, action and drama. Just don't tell anyone, right?
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