Veloci Laptops & Desktops Driver Download For Windows

The HP Elite Dragonfly is the rare laptop that comes along and sets a new standard for the entire category. This 2-in-1 laptop's design is one of the most stunning we've ever seen on a laptop. Below are some of the best laptops in our ratings in five screen-size categories, ranging from highly portable 10-to-11-inch models to hulking desktop replacements that are between 17 and 18 inches. The Helios 300 drops you right into the game with everything you need to obliterate the opposition on a blisteringly fast 144Hz 1 /3ms 2 display. Alienware's thin 17-inch laptop featuring options that include maximum performance NVIDIA ® GeForce RTX™ 30-series graphics. Show Features Hide Features Up to 10th Generation Intel ® Core™ i9-10980HK (8-core, up to 5.3GHz Max Turbo Frequency). While you can make some upgrades to your laptop to make it run faster, there are some improvements you can make that are more cost-effective and straightforward to do. These minor adjustments may not seem like they will speed up your computer performance, but combined they can make it possible to keep your PC functional for a number of.

This is a list of laptop brands and manufacturers.

Brands[edit]

Major brands[edit]

NameCountryBrands and product lines (A-Z)Market share (Q3 2020)[1]
LenovoChinaIdeaPad, Legion, ThinkPad, ThinkBook, Yoga23.7
HPUnited StatesElitebook, Envy, Omen, Pavilion, ZBook, Spectre, Probook23.6%
DellUnited StatesAlienware, G Series, Inspiron, Latitude, Precision, Vostro, XPS13.7%
AppleUnited StatesMacBook9.7%
AcerTaiwanAspire, Enduro, Extensa, Nitro, Predator, Swift, Spin, Switch, Travelmate7.9%

Other brands[edit]

BrandCountry
Asus - ZenBook, VivoBook, ROG, TUFTaiwan
Ordenadores Mountain - (YELLOMIX, S.L.)Spain
AXIOO InternationalIndonesia
ClevoTaiwan
Digital StormUnited States
Elitegroup Computer SystemsTaiwan
Eurocom CorporationCanada
EVGA CorporationUnited States
Falcon Northwest – DRX, TLXUnited States
Google - Chromebook PixelUnited States
FounderChina
FujitsuJapan
Gigabyte TechnologyTaiwan
GradienteBrazil
GrundigGermany
HaseeChina
Huawei – MateBookChina
HyundaiSouth Korea
iballIndia
IllegearMalaysia
Končar – Končar Elektronics and Informatics Inc.Croatia
Lanix – Lanix Portatiles, NeuronMexico
LavaIndia
LemoteChina
LG – GramSouth Korea
MaingearUnited States
Medion – AkoyaGermany
Meebox – Meebox, SlateMexico
Micro–Star International (MSi) – Megabook, WindTaiwan
Microsoft – Microsoft SurfaceUnited States
NEC – VERSA, LaVieJapan
Origin PCUnited States
Panasonic – Toughbook, Let's NoteJapan
Positivo Informática – Positivo, Platinum, Aureum, Unique, PremiumBrazil
Pravetz – 64MBulgaria
Purism – LibremUnited States
Razer – BladeUnited States
Samsung Electronics – Samsung Sens, Galaxy BookSouth Korea
Sharp – MebiusJapan
Siragon, C.A.Venezuela
StarmobilePhilippines
System76United States
Toshiba - Portege, Tecra, Satellite, QosmioJapan
TongfangChina
VAIOJapan
Velocity MicroUnited States
VestelTurkey
VIA – NanoBook, pc–1 InitiativeTaiwan
VizioUnited States
WaltonBangladesh
Wortmann – Terra MobileGermany
Xiaomi - Mi NoteBookChina

Defunct[edit]

  • Acorn Computers (United Kingdom) – Deskbook, Desknote and Solonote
  • Averatec (South Korea)
  • Compaq (United States) (acquired by Hewlett–Packard) – Evo, Armada, LTE, Presario
  • Digital Equipment Corporation (United States) (acquired by Compaq) – HiNote
  • eMachines (United States) (acquired by Gateway Computers)
  • Everex (United States) – CloudBook, gBook
  • Fujitsu Siemens (Germany/Japan) (Fujitsu bought out Siemens' share of the company)
  • Gateway Computers (United States) (acquired by Acer)
  • Gericom (Austria) (acquired by Quanmax AG)
  • Itautec (Brazil) (acquired by Oki Electric Industry, PC/laptop division dissolved)[2]
  • Maxdata (Germany)
  • OQO (United States)
  • PC Club (United States) (Clevo brand)
  • Vigor Gaming (United States) – Atlantis, Augustus, Artorius, and Aegis
  • Voodoo PC (Canada) – Envy (acquired by Hewlett–Packard)

Defunct computer models[edit]

No longer manufacturing computers[edit]

  • BenQ (Taiwan)
  • Doel (Bangladesh)
  • Epson (Japan)
  • HCL (India)
  • HTC (Taiwan) – HTC Shift
  • IBM (United States) – sold its personal computer and Intel-based server businesses to Lenovo
  • Nokia (Finland) – Booklet 3G
  • Olivetti (Italy) – Olibook
  • Onkyo (Japan) – SOTEC
  • Philips (Netherlands) – X200
  • Sony (Japan) – VAIO – sold its PC business division to Japan Industrial Partners (JIP); owns 25% of VAIO Corporation
  • Wipro (India)

Original design manufacturers (ODMs)[edit]

The vast majority of laptops on the market (94% in 2011) are manufactured by a small handful of Taiwan-based original design manufacturers (ODM), although their production bases are located mostly in mainland China.[3]

Major relationships include:[4]

  • Quanta sells to (among others) HP, Lenovo, Apple, Acer, Dell, NEC, and Fujitsu
  • Compal sells to (among others) Acer, Dell, Lenovo and HP
  • Wistron (former manufacturing & design division of Acer) sells to Dell, Acer, Lenovo and HP
  • Inventec sells to HP, Dell and Lenovo;
  • Pegatron (in 2010, Asus spun off Pegatron) sells to Asus, Apple, Dell, Acer and Microsoft
  • Foxconn sells to Asus, Dell, HP and Apple
  • Flextronics (former Arima Computer Corporation notebook division) sells to HP

ODM laptop units sold and market shares[edit]

Year2018[5]20172016[6]2015[7]2014[8]2013[9]2012[10]2011[11]2010[4][12]2009[13][14]2006[14]
ODMUnits sold (millions)Units sold (millions)Units sold (millions)Units sold (millions)Units sold (millions)Units sold (millions)Units sold (millions)Units sold (millions)Units sold (millions)Units sold (millions)Proportion of marketUnits sold (millions)Proportion of market
Compal34.539.343.046.037.855.748.237.9,026%15,021%
Quanta37.640.631.648.543.153.854.052.135.9,025%24,033%
Wistron18.918.821.124.031.531.527.526.2[15]18%11,015%
Inventec9.98.518.620.916.817.016.221[16]15%7,010%
Pegatron,[17] until 2007 Asus[18]8.79.59.814.018.517.515.510.9,08%5,07%
Foxconn[17]2.74.218.410.07.2,05%
Flextronics5.04.37.2,05%
Elitegroup[17]3.6,02%
Others15.010.011,015%
Total163.7164.7?158141148194[19]214203[20]125[16]100%72.6100%

There is a discrepancy between the 2009 numbers due to the various sources cited; i.e. the units sold by all ODMs add up to 144.3 million laptops, which is much more than the given total of 125 million laptops. The market share percentages currently refer to those 144.3 million total. Sources may indicate hard drive deliveries to the ODM instead of actual laptop sales, though the two numbers may be closely correlated.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Download
  1. ^'Strategy Analytics: HP Narrowly Wins #1 Notebook Share Amid Strong Back-to-School Demand'. www.businesswire.com. 2020-08-17. Retrieved 2020-12-13.
  2. ^Ventura, Felipe (15 May 2013). 'Itautec desiste do mercado de PCs'. Gizmodo Brasil. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  3. ^'Global and China Laptop and Tablet PC Industry Report, 2011-2012'. Retrieved 2012-09-10.
  4. ^ ab'Global and China Notebook PC Industry Report, 2010 - ResearchInChina'. researchinchina.com. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  5. ^Quanta Computer Inc. Annual Report 2018(PDF). Quanta Computer Inc. 2019.
  6. ^Hsiao, Jim (2017-02-14). 'Taiwan notebooks – 4Q 2016'. DigiTimes. Retrieved 2019-04-02.
  7. ^'Taiwan notebooks – 1Q 2016'(PDF). DigiTimes. 31 May 2016.
  8. ^Wu, Thompson (19 January 2015). 'Asia Hardware Sector'. Credit Suisse.Missing or empty |url= (help)
  9. ^IPD Group. 'Notebook shipments of Taiwan players from 2006-2014 (Jun 15) - World News Report - EIN News'. einnews.com. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  10. ^https://cimbequityresearch.cimb.com/EFAOnTheWeb/EFAWebAPI/GetDocPDF.asp?DocGUID=2D5509A1-9E6C-4B30-8B0C-06CEEF480C45&A=CIMB
  11. ^estimate, according to Barclays Capital ResearchArchived 2013-01-17 at Archive.today: Asia ex-Japan IT Hardware Report
  12. ^Chuang, Steve (2011-01-14). 'Quanta Regains Lead in Global NB PC Shipment in 2010'. cens.com. Retrieved 2011-11-12.
  13. ^Culpan, Tim (2010-01-18). 'Quanta Seeks New Ventures, Devices After Record Profit in 2009'. Bloomberg Businessweek. Retrieved 2010-07-03.
  14. ^ abHachman, Mark (2007-05-09). 'The Top Laptop Makers Are Not HP, Dell, or Toshiba'. PC Magazine. Retrieved 2011-11-12.
  15. ^'Wistron Corporation 2009 Annual Report translation'(PDF). Wistron. 2010-04-30. p. 31. Retrieved 2010-07-03.
  16. ^ ab'Inventec's margin grew 4.5% driven by server sector'. www.computex.biz. 2010-04-30. Retrieved 2010-07-03.
  17. ^ abc'Global and China Notebook PC Industry Report, 2009 - ResearchInChina'. researchinchina.com. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  18. ^'ASUSTeK Computer Inc'. ASUS. 2008. Archived from the original on 2012-03-13. Retrieved 2010-07-21.
  19. ^'Acer loses world's No. 3 notebook-maker spot in Q4'. wantchinatimes.com. Archived from the original on 16 January 2013. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  20. ^'Growing Notebook & Netbook Market Will Boost Dell's PC Business'. NASDAQ.com. 12 February 2011. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_laptop_brands_and_manufacturers&oldid=1006545805'
Date: 14 June 2008Last modified 03-Dec-2011.

I have a new Asus M51SN laptop on order and I'm looking to upgrade from the standard 5400RPM drive to something a bit quicker. I was initially looking at the 200GB Seagate 2.5' 7200RPM drive (HD-ST9200420AS) [which Australian shoppers can order from Aus PC Market for $AU198 including delivery - click here to order one!], but then discovered that Western Digital are releasing their latest 10,000rpm Raptor drive in a 2.5' form factor.

I realise it's total overkill for a laptop, but I still want it!

So my question is, will the new Raptor even work in a laptop without shorting the power supply or melting its way through the casing like some out of control nuclear reactor?

Andrew

In brief: No, I'm afraid the new, and extremely fast, 300Gb Western Digital 'VelociRaptor' drive will not work in a laptop.

You might be able to use it in a tiny small-form-factor PC, though.

The VelociRaptor's been out for a little while now, so the early-adopter loonies should all have theirs by now and normal people will be able to find them in stock. Here in Australia, Aus PC Market will deliver a VelociRaptor anywhere in the country for $AU390.50 (Australian shoppers can click here to order one!). The usual non-delivered retail price in Australia is about $AU400 (the US ex-delivery street price is hovering around $US300), so that's a good deal.

But not if you want to put it in a laptop.

The most obvious reason for this is that the VelociRaptor drive module, while it is indeed a 2.5-inch device bolted into a 3.5-inch-drive-sized holder, is considerably thicker than the standard laptop drive form factor, which is only 9.5mm tall. The VelociRaptor drive module is about 12mm in thickness, so it won't physically fit in pretty much any laptop.

If your laptop happens to have a tall enough SATA hard drive bay, the VelociRaptor drive module might actually plug straight in; its SATA connectors just can't be in the standard locations for a 3.5-inch drive, since they all have to be on the back of the small central drive module, but they do appear to be in the standard locations for a 2.5-inch drive. So the VelociRaptor won't plug into most, if not all, 3.5-inch SATA drive caddies or trays, but it might actually connect to a laptop OK.

Unfortunately, though, the VelociRaptor needs twelve-volt power instead of the five volts that runs normal laptop drives. I don't know how many laptops actually bother to run a 12V rail to a SATA hard disk power connector.

Heat is not actually likely to be a problem, though, even though the VelociRaptor's does indeed have that big intimidating heat-sink size-adapter doodad (and the warranty is void if you remove it). The faster a drive's spindle turns, the more friction there is between the platters and the air inside the drive; a normal 'fast' laptop drive these days turns at 7200RPM and has a single platter inside it, so a 10,000RPM, two-platter drive like the VelociRaptor can be expected to make proportionally more heat.

But the VelociRaptor only, according to its spec sheet (PDF), draws a maximum of about six watts, or about 4.5 watts when idle but still spinning.

Six watts of electricity in means six watts of heat out (in one place or another), but I'm sure many laptops can handle a drive that hot. The peak power consumption for the 7200RPM Seagate drive you were previously considering is only 2.3 watts, or 1.9 watts when idle but spinning; another four watts probably wouldn't be a serious problem, unless the drive bay was unusually badly cooled, and/or you were using the laptop in a particularly hot place.

(Note that the little cooling vents in many laptops also clog up, over time, with dust and hair, making the cooling system work less and less well over time. If your 18-month-old laptop now always seems to be running its fans at full speed, you're probably going to have to take it apart to clean the vents.)

For comparison, a typical high-capacity 3.5-inch 7200RPM desktop hard drive these days is likely to have a peak power draw of nine to 12 watts, and idle-but-spinning power of something like five to eight watts.

The relatively low power draw, and thus heat output, of the VelociRaptor means that although it's a non-starter for laptops, you actually probably could use it quite successfully without its heat-sink/adapter module, in a small-form-factor PC or something. Removing the adapter will still void the warranty, and you shouldn't expect the VelociRaptor to be as resistant to vibration or shock as a proper laptop drive, but apart from that it ought to work fine in a small PC with a reasonable amount of cooling air flow.

Veloci Laptops & Desktops Driver Download For Windows 7

Incidentally, the VelociRaptor is not all that amazing a technological development. It's worth owning, for much the same reasons that the previous Raptor drives were, but it's not actually all that different from them. Other very fast drives - mainly server hardware - have had platters not much bigger than those of a laptop drive for some time, now. The drive makers decided to do it that way mainly because it takes less time for the read/write heads to traverse a small platter. The price they pay is low capacity; the largest Raptor-series drive before the VelociRaptor only holds 160Gb, and the VelociRaptor's 300Gb isn't very impressive these days either.

The solution to this problem, of course, is to boot your computer from a WhateverRaptor, and have a large 3.5-inch 7200RPM drive as well for all of the bulk data that doesn't really need seven-millisecond seek speeds. The sustained transfer rate of high-capacity 7200RPM drives is actually very respectable, because their super-high data density means an awful lot of data passes under the heads per rotation.

Veloci Laptops & Desktops Driver Download For Windows 10

Australian shoppers can buy the 300Gb SATA VelociRaptor drive from Aus PC Market.
Click here to order one!