Tablets, TVs and toys: it's an IFA gadget frenzy!

Tablets, tellies and toys at IFA
Philips announced a new range of Cinema 21:9 TVs at IFA 2011

IFA - Internationale Funkausstellung Berlin - is the world's largest consumer electronics show, and this year's gadget frenzy has been particularly interesting.

From tablets to TVs, really weird-looking smartphones to bizarre 3D headsets, if it beeps, lights up, connects to the net or fires laser beams from its eyes, it was unveiled at IFA 2011.

Sony at IFA

Away from TVs, Sony had a whole bunch of things to show us at IFA. There was the SMP-N200 Network Media Player, designed to turn any TV into a connected TV, and there was a faintly ridiculous-looking wearable 3D viewer that streams content from Blu-Ray players, PS3s and other 3D-capable kit directly into your eyes.

There was a new ereader and a new all-in-one Vaio PC, but what really got our attention was the long-awaited pair of Sony tablets.

There will be two Sony tablets, both Android powered. The Tablet S is a swoopy take on the traditional tablet form factor, while the Tablet P is a twin-screen clamshell affair.

Stars of the show

Toshiba showed off the AT200, which promises to be the thinnest, lightest ten-inch Android tablet around - it's just 7.7mm thick - but the star of the tablet show was Samsung.

There was the Galaxy Tab 7.7, a welcome update to the familiar seven-inch device, and the PC Series-7 tablet is a Windows 7, Core-powered tablet that easily docks to become a proper Windows laptop.

We're not sure about Windows 7 on tablets, but we'd love to see this model running Windows 8.

The most interesting Samsung tablet, though, wasn't really a tablet: it was the Samsung Galaxy Note.

Galaxy note

Although technically a smartphone, the Galaxy Note's 5.3-inch SuperAMOLED display is massive in mobile terms and well worth a look if you're considering a compact tablet. Just don't buy one if you're little: Samsung's CEO is, and when he held the Note to his head during Samsung's IFA presentation he looked like he'd borrowed the phone from Gulliver.

Carrie Marshall

Contributor

Writer, broadcaster, musician and kitchen gadget obsessive Carrie Marshall has been writing about tech since 1998, contributing sage advice and odd opinions to all kinds of magazines and websites as well as writing more than twenty books. Her latest, a love letter to music titled Small Town Joy, is on sale now. She is the singer in spectacularly obscure Glaswegian rock band Unquiet Mind.