
Crave has travelled to the spiritual home of the iPhone -- California -- butwe're not chasing thisweek's phone superstar. This week is so last week, because we're at Qualcomm, which is taking us on amagic carpet ride into the future of the mobile world.
Here be dragons, thanks to Qualcomm's new Snapdragonprocessor, which powers the wafer-thin mega-touchscreen Toshiba TG01.Snapdragon has prompted Qualcomm to invent a new word, 'smartbook', to label itsdream of low-power, super-thin smart phones that are powerful enough to start nudgingthe netbooks. Snapdragon is a chip with 3G connectivity, so we're talking atablet that's always on and always connected to the Internet, without a Wi-Fisignal in sight.
We got our hands on the TG01 and its much bigger cousin, theWistron PBook -- that's 'P' for purse, ladies and manbag wielders. It may looklike an anorexic SonyP-series netbook, but there's no Intel inside, just the heart of asouped-up phone.
Snapdragon also uses much less power, and Qualcomm isbandying around battery life like 8-10 hours of use -- and multi-day standbytime between charges -- for a device such as the PBook. That means instead ofbusting out our power cord after two hours of typing, we can roam free of theplug and pop open the device, like a mobile, whenever we're in the mood for a spot of surfing or Facebooking.
But we're not talking about booting up Microsoft Word onthese little guys -- you can't load Windows. Instead, mobile operating systemssuch as Windows Mobile, Google Android and other versions of Linux are the flavourson offer.
The TG01 has already launched, there are now more than 40 Snapdragon-based devices in the works and Qualcomm says the UKis going to be the snappy reptile's prime stomping ground, so we're sure to seea herd of them on our shelves.
Click through to see what Snapdragon is promising, more fromthe PBook and a Dalek that will totally frickin' heal you.