Yes, if you want a thin and light convertible 2 - in - 1 that can play some lightweight games and speed up
video encoding while on the road.
Not exact matches
The integrated Mali - 400 GPU is believed to be able to
encode and decode Full HD 1080p
video with an HDMI 1.3 a output that can be run concurrently
while the Cortex A9 chip simultaneously drives two displays onboard.
There's also 1080p HD
video encoding and playback support, thanks to a 400 MHz GPU,
while battery life is tipped at up to 5 hrs of 3G browsing, up to 45 hrs of audio, or up to 8 hrs of talktime.
It is able before to play 720p h264
encoded videos using about 40 % from the CPU
while using the GPU acceleration.
About that - the 8 MP rear facing camera can shoot full HD, 1080p
video,
while clips in the same
encoding can run smoothly on the 1280 x 800 screen.
The Steam Link wasn't at fault, but this does show that you'll need a decent rig to handle running games at 1080p 60
while also
encoding video.
Unfortunately,
while the area itself is spectacular, the Japanese arm of Capcom doesn't seem to have mastered the art of
video encoding for YouTube yet, so the picture quality is really quite bad, but it is how it is.
While a well -
encoded 720p
video will look very good on the ZenPad, the step down to the low - definition stream with Netflix is very obvious.
It completed our Handbrake
video -
encoding test in 1 minute 58 seconds, landing a mere second behind the Acer V5 - 571P - 6627 (1:57)
while breezily outpacing the HP G6 - 2368CA (3:08) by a wide margin.