Monday, October 6, 2008

Coosh earphones Best Design

coosh-earphones
To make a long story short, the Coosh earphones are a worthy buy at $20.

For starters, our first impressions regarding the comfort-level lasted. Again, since there’s padding on the actual earphones themselves, covering the usually sharp seam between the metal grill and the earphone plastic, these earphones can spend the whole day in your ears.


On top of that, the soft plastic “arms” that wrap around your outer ears, so again the earphones can spend the whole day in your ears, because they’re securely fastened. Another feature we like was the bent earphone jack. Aside from being another opportunity for brand showcasing, this construction means you won’t have earphone jacks sticking out the side of your gadget.

The earphones are nowhere close to the audio quality of full-fledged headphones, especially in the bass department. But Coosh’s offering do a decent job. At the very least, you aren’t stuck with tin cans in your ears!

The only issue we have with the Coosh earphones is how those arms make you more visible than usual, especially in public. People will probably notice the white supports around your ears and do a double-take. This unfortunately may include thieves scoping out for a mark. Perhaps Coosh could make future versions have transparent arms?

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Razer Pro Type™ Keyboard

Razer ProType™ Keyboard
Razer Pro|Type™ Keyboard
The World’s First Keyboard With An Integrated iPod Dock


The Razer Pro|Type™ is the first professional keyboard to feature an integrated docking station for the popular iPod. It is also highly customizable and has quick access media keys for convenience. Developed by a specialized team of professionals, the Razer Pro|Type™ delivers a superb innovation in functionality and ergonomics to take your efficiency and productivity to greater heights.


iPod Dock:
Synchronize and charge your iPod easily

10 Customizable Profiles:
Configure keyboard profiles according to
your needs

10 Programmable Keys:
Switch Profiles and launch applications with a touch of a button

Ultra Touch-sensitive keys:
For enhanced and more precise key response

On-the-Fly Profile Switching:
Auto swap keyboard profiles upon program detection

Multimedia Hub:
Includes line-out and 2 USB ports for convenient connection to your peripherals

Media Hot Keys:
Provide one-touch access to media programs

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Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Asus Eee PC 701 Becomes Cheaper


Asus Eee PC 701 become cheaper. The netbook market is certainly one of the most dynamic segments of the IT industry. As a direct consequence of that, each day brings more details about freshly released netbooks and other netbook-related products. We, as regular consumers, can only attempt to stay up to date with the advances in the field by keeping an eye out for everything new that comes along.



Currently, netbook fans can choose from several such devices coming from a significant number of manufacturers. ASUS is probably one of the most successful vendors on the market, thanks to its vast Eee PC lineup, which currently counts no less than 12 models. Furthermore, users can get their Eee PC netbooks in various form factors, ranging from 7-inch to 10-inch. However, the 7-inch model can pride itself with being the very first of its kind, having been released back in the days when most users didn't even know of Intel's Atom.


Currently, the Eee PC 701 is the cheapest Eee PC you can find on the market. Although it doesn't come with the same technical specifications as its 9-inch and 10-inch counterparts, this ultra-portable computer system can certainly provide you with the basics in computing technology. For a price tag of approximately $280 (for the 4GB version running on Linux), you will be able to surf the Internet, listen to music, check your emails, and more. This offer is available over at Expansys so, if you are interested in it, you should turn to its website for shipping details, as well as to order it.


In other news, from now on, MSI's U100 Wind netbook will be available with a bigger hard drive, providing users with an impressive 120GB of storage space. Just as a reminder, the Wind U100 is the company's first netbook system, and it sports a 10-inch display. The U90 model will continue to ship with the 80GB hard drive.


However, if MSI's 10-inch Wind is not the thing for you, then maybe you’d be interested in Medion’s offer, which brings you the Akoya netbook, also sporting a 10-inch display. Good news is, it’s now shipping in the UK. Unlike the Wind netbook, the Akoya will only provide its users with a maximum 80GB of storage space. Aside from that, the netbook's tech specs are similar to the ones on the Wind netbook.

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Web Browser Google Chrome


Google has presented, during a media event lasting nearly an hour, its latest, highly acclaimed product. Probably anyone on the planet with an Internet connection is already familiar with Google Chrome, the first open source web browser.


During the conference, Google officials presented the capabilities of the product that has already generated a lot of stir, along with some behind-the-scenes development stories. The main “lecturer” was Sundar Pichai, Google product management vice president, who started by saying that the team working on Chrome tried to emulate the technologies and the user experience from behind Google's most successful product, the search engine used by nearly two thirds of the planet.


Pichai underscored that the main aspect that differentiated the browser from its competitors was that it didn’t stand out, and was as unobtrusive as possible. “The motto in the whole team was how do we minimize Chrome. We used to call it “content, not Chrome” [...]. Our view is that the browser is just an application, is just a tool for people to interact with the sites and applications they care about. So browsers should not be self important.”


“In Chrome, we do not interrupt users at all. There are no dialogs which pop-up in front of you and ask you to do something. So our goal is that the user should enjoy surfing the web and the browser should stay out of the way.” added the Google official.


The Google rep highlighted the three significant features that actually distinguished Chrome from anything else on the market – the rendering engine, the multiprocess technology and V8, a JavaScript engine that developers have built from scratch. Rendering is based on the same engine that powers Safari, which enables at least some of the web developers to easily adapt their webpages to fit the browser. Multiprocessing has the main function of increasing the speed of the browser, but also of avoiding the crashing of the entire browser when a tab malfunctions. The V8 JavaScript engine speeds up even more the reactions of Chrome, whenever users employ it to do something in particular.


While Sundar Pichai held a speech focused mostly on technical facts, Larry Page, one of Google's co-founders, joked about the fact that he usually ruled over his team with an iron fist, but that the people who worked on Chrome did a really good job. “I've been using Chrome for quite a while actually and I've really enjoyed using it. I used it on a slow, old computer on purpose to really force them to make it fast without a lot of memory and on slower computer.” said Page.

Meanwhile, Software Engineer at the company Amanda Walker announced that the Mac and Linux versions were under development, although no one could estimate the exact date of release. Pichai also tackled this topic for the journalists gathered at the official release event, saying that the internal need for the two versions of the browser (since many Googlers - the company staff - also use Linux and Mac OS X platforms) should make development pick up the pace.

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Google Browser Chrome


On September 2, 2008 Google released its own breed of open source browser, a marriage between Apple's Safari and Mozilla's Firefox, dubbed Google Chrome. Of course, Google Chrome is first and foremost a new competitor for Internet Explorer on the browser market. But in Google's own perspective, it is so much more than a potential IE killer. It is actually a Windows killer. Google has in fact not been shy about positioning Chrome against both Internet Explorer and Windows, as items of prey.


"What we really needed was not just a browser, but also a modern platform for web pages and applications, and that's what we set out to build," revealed Sundar Pichai, VP Product Management, and Linus Upson engineering director, on the occasion of the first official announcement of Google Chrome.


With the exception of the platform reference from Pichai and Upson, Google was careful to avoid the subject. Of course, not all of the Mountain View-based search giant representatives followed suit. Google co-founder Sergey Brin in fact indicated that Chrome was gunning down for Windows, not only Internet Explorer.


"I think operating systems are kind of an old way to think of the world," Brin stated according to Yahoo Finance. "They have become kind of bulky, they have to do lots and lots of different legacy things. Web users want a very lightweight, fast engine for running applications. The kind of things you want to have running standalone on a computer are shrinking."


Since Google's portfolio of services is situated completely into the cloud, the Mountain View-company needs only a browser to let end users access its products. In this context, the only actual piece of software anchored on the desktop that Google needs to control is the browser. The operating system in general, and Windows in particular, although it is currently one of the main intermediaries controlling access to Google along with IE, can be circumvented completely. In this context a future where the Google Chrome browser would boot straight on top of the hardware, perhaps with a minimalist hypervisor layer at the basis, but no Windows, or any operating system in sight, is a threat that Microsoft can not afford to ignore.


"We believe that open source works not only because it allows people to join us and improve our products, but also (and more importantly) because it means other projects are able to use the code we've developed. Where we've developed innovative new technology, we hope that other projects can use it to make their products better, just as we've been able to adopt code from other open source projects to make our product better," revealed Ben Goodger, Google software engineer.

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Sunday, August 24, 2008

Aspire 5920G-832G32Mn


The T5750 Core Due Processor gives blistering performance, especially for this price range. 4GB of DDR2 RAM and an impressive 250GB hard drive will help ensure that the included Windows Vista Home Premium will offer users the ultimate experience.

On a laptop, monitor performance is a huge deal. If you’re not happy with the display you receive then there’s very ltitle you can do about it but fortunately the 15.4” widescreen monitor utilises Acer’s CrystalBrite technology to give clear and accurate display images.


Acer Aspire 5920g - New Design For The Aspire SeriesThe Blu-Ray combo drive is a superb addition enabling owners to watch the latest high definition movies. The Acer Aspire 5920g also includes an ATi Mobility Radeon HD3470 graphics card with 256MB of dedicated RAM so whether you want to use your laptop for multimedia or for some fairly serious PC gaming, it has the capability.

Multimedia keys can be found at the sides of the keyboard, enabling you one touch access to the Internet, your email, and the built in media player. 4 USB and 1 Firewire connections provide a good degree of connectivity for any user.

Laptop computers are the ideal machine for multi-purpose use. The convenience of the Acer Aspire 5920g ensures that users can sit down to watch high quality, High Definition Blu Ray movies, create their own multimedia, surf the web, and (if absolutely necessary) do a little work as well. For the mid price budget range, the BMW styled design and rich features make the Acer Aspire 5920 a desirable product indeed.

Platform Notebook PC with Intel Centrino Duo Technology
Processor Type Intel Core 2 Duo Processor
Processor Onboard Intel® Core™ 2 Duo Processor T8300 (2.4 GHz, FSB 800, Cache 3 MB)
Chipset Intel 965PM
Standard Memory 2 GB (2x 1 GB) DDR2 SDRAM PC-5300
Max. Memory 4 GB (2 DIMMs)
Video Type NVIDIA GeForce 8600M GT 256 MB
Display Size 15.4" WXGA TFT
Display Max. Resolution 1280 x 800
Display Technology CrystalBrite TFT
Audio Type Integrated
Speakers Type Integrated
Floppy Drive Optional
Hard Drive Type 320 GB Serial ATA 5400 RPM
Optical Drive Type DVD±RW
Modem Optional
Networking Optional
Network Speed Optional
Wireless Network Type Intel PRO/Wireless 4965AGN
Wireless Network Protocol IEEE 802.11a, IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g
Wireless Bluetooth Integrated
Keyboard Type Ergonomics 88 keys
Input Device Type Touch Pad
Slot Provided ExpressCard/ 54
Card Reader Provided SD, MMC, Memory Stick / Stick PRO, xD-Picture Card
Interface Provided 4x USB 2.0, Firewire, VGA, LAN, Audio
O/S Provided Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium
Battery Type Rechargeable Lithium-ion Battery
Power Supply External AC Adapter
Dimension (WHD) 364 x 43 x 270 mm
Weight 3 kg
Standard Warranty 1-year Limited Warranty by Authorized Distributor
Bundled Peripherals Carrying Case
Others Integrated Acer Crystal Eye webcam supporting Acer PrimaLite™ technology

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Samsung LE32A556P 32″ HD Review


The 32” HD Ready Samsung LE32A556P may not have the snappiest of names, but it does provide an extremely rich colour, dark blacks, and superb features as well as offering full HD ready capability with 1080p resolution. Because sound is as important to the viewing experience as picture quality is, the Samsung LE32 uses SRS Trusurround to provide equally excellent sound quality.


High definition television quality is usually marked by the richness of blacks as well as the crispness of colours. The Samsung delivers true deep blacks as well as crisp colours with a 15000 contrast so that pictures look and feel more realistic. It even includes Wide Colour Enhancer2 technology to provide richer colours and a better viewing experience.

Samsung LE32A556P 32Three HDMI sockets, 2 SCART, and 1 Component Cable input socket provide owners with a more than adequate range of inputs. What’s more, the Samsung LE32A556P 32” HD Ready 1080p Digital LCD TV also has a built in digital TV receiver saving you the socket that you would normally use for your freeview box.

The Samsung LE32A556P 32” HD digital TV is ideal for watching High Definition television channels, viewing Blu-Ray movies, or playing high definition next generation games.

Full Specifications:

* Picture Enhancement - DNIe Plus
* Contrast - 15000 : 1
* Sound type - SRS Trusurround
* Inputs - 3xHDMI, 2xSCART, 1x Component
* Visible Screen Size - 31.5″
* Digital TV receiver - For extra channels
* Wide Colour enhance 2 - Truer colours
* Also available in - 37,40,46,52 screen size

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Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Free Microsoft Prototype Prioritizes Emails

Microsoft
A new Microsoft prototype offered as a free download is designed to assess incoming emails and prioritize them according to their importance. The tool is a Microsoft Office Labs project set up to integrate exclusively with Office Outlook 2007. Email Prioritizer runs on Exchange Server and represents a taste of an email overload management utility. But just a taste since
it is nothing more than a prototype, not even in Beta stage.


"We understand that email overload is a challenge: today, many people get too much email and have a hard time keeping up with it. Not only do people receive a high volume of mail, the mail may arrive at inconvenient times. There are a lot of good ideas about how to help people with email overload and we’re testing a few of those ideas in Office Labs," revealed a member of Office Labs.

Email Prioritizer does bring interesting functionality to the table, enabling end users to essentially filter the most important pieces of email out of all the mundane items that end up in their box. The tool enables users to pause all incoming emails for a period of time anywhere from 10 minutes to 4 hours. At the same time, Microsoft has integrated a set of criteria into Email Prioritizer based on which the add-in is able to rate email. The company informed that the collection of priorities can be controlled and adjusted by the users.

Email Prioritizer features "a "Do Not Disturb" button that stops incoming mail delivery so you can work without interruptions. Email priorities are assigned to incoming mail so you can focus on the most important mail first. With a "0-3 stars" ranking system, you can focus on email messages that are most important to you. These priorities are based on algorithms from Microsoft Research," the Office Labs representative added.

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Internet TV Intel Joins Forces with Yahoo!

Internet-TVInternet TV represents, without a doubt, the future of television as we know it, since the WWW is turning in the world's greatest content delivery solution. However, in order to be able to enjoy the various types of content that can be delivered via the Internet, users require dedicated, specialized machines, and this is where giant chip manufacturer Intel comes into play.


Thus, at the Intel Developer Forum, the company has just announced the Intel Media Processor CE 3100, which is the first in a new family of purpose-built System on Chips (SoCs) for consumer electronics devices based on the company’s Intel Architecture (IA) blueprint. The processing unit is targeting a wide variety of products typically encountered in people's home entertainment centers, such as optical media players, connected CE devices, advanced cable set top boxes and digital TVs

Previously known by the codename "Canmore", the Intel Media Processor CE 3100 is a highly integrated solution that combines an IA processor core with multi-stream video decoding and processing hardware, while also adding a 3-channel 800 MHz DDR2 memory controller, dedicated multi-channel dual audio DSPs, a 3-D graphics engine enabling advanced UIs and EPGs, and support for multiple peripherals, including USB 2.0 and PCI Express.

Moreover, the Intel Media Processor CE 3100 also features Intel Media Play Technology, which combines hardware-based decoding for broadcast TV and optical media playback with software-based decode for Internet content. When a consumer watches broadcast TV or content on optical media players, Intel's Media Play Technology software routes the video to the on-chip hardware decoders, but when viewing Internet content, the software automatically routes the video, and audio as applicable, to a software codec running on the IA processor core.

And what's the connection with Yahoo!, you might ask? Well, it's actually quite simple. Beside announcing the CE3100 media processor, the two companies have also used this opportunity for previewing an applications framework for televisions (TV) and related CE devices that use the Intel Architecture. This framework, dubbed the Widget Channel is, as the name says it, powered by Yahoo!'s own Widget Engine (optimized to work with the CE 3100) and allows users to watch TV programs and, in the same time, view web content.

The Intel Media Processor CE 3100 is scheduled to arrive at various CE manufacturers, such as Samsung Electronics and Toshiba, at some point next month, which means that we might actually see it in action before the year's end.

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Monday, August 18, 2008

Cell-phone TV Is Great


This is one of the reasons the United States is behind several other countries when it comes to making television an attractive option for cell phones. Carrier business models are partly at fault, but choices about TV technology made long ago are largely to blame.

Most phones sold in Japan can tune in to free TV broadcasts, and there are tens of millions of viewers. Cell phones that can tune in to free broadcasts are also available in South Korea, Germany and China.


But only 3 percent of Americans regularly watched video on their cell phones late last year, according to a survey by the Pew Internet & American Life Project. That figure includes people who watched short, downloaded clips rather than broadcast TV.

For starters, you can blame the impending shutdown of all full-power analog TV broadcasts on Feb. 17, a deadline set by the government. That Chinese handset, made by ZTE Corp., can only tune in to analog transmissions. Because most of them are going away, there's no real point in selling phones like that in the United States.

China is keeping its analog broadcasts until 2015, six years longer than the U.S., so the phones are viable there. Ironically, the TV reception chip inside comes from a U.S. company, Telegent Systems Inc., based in Sunnyvale, Calif.

The analog U.S. broadcasts are being replaced by digital broadcasts, but there are no phones anywhere that can tune in to those.

When the U.S. digital TV standard was laid down in the early '90s by the Advanced Television Systems Committee, it was optimized for high-definition signals to stationary antennas, according to Mark Richter, president of the industry group.

At the time, cell phones had screens that could display eight digits and nothing else, so little thought was given making the broadcasts work with mobile gadgets.

The Europeans created their digital television standard later and made it a bit more amenable to mobile reception, Richter said. Thus, there are now phones sold in Germany that can receive local digital broadcasts intended for stationary TVs.

Weijie Yun, Telegent's chief executive, said it's theoretically possible to receive U.S. digital terrestrial broadcasts on a phone, but engineers have yet to overcome key technical challenges. For now, Telegent's chips can receive analog broadcasts in most countries of the world, and digital broadcasts in Europe and a few countries outside it.

Because U.S. phones can't receive regular broadcast TV, carriers have had to look to other solutions. Cell-phone technology company Qualcomm Inc. has created a network that broadcasts signals designed for cell phones. AT&T Inc. and Verizon Wireless sell some handsets that can tune in to these broadcasts.

Sprint Nextel Corp. has contracted with another company, MobiTV Inc., which streams lo-fi streaming video over the phones' broadband connections. The fourth national carrier, T-Mobile USA, doesn't have a TV service.

The common denominator for the existing services is that they cost money, limiting their adoption. AT&T and Verizon Wireless charge $15 per month for 10 channels. Sprint bundles MobiTV with some high-end plans and charges $9.99 per month as standalone service.

In-Stat analyst Michelle Abraham estimates that Qualcomm's MediaFLO has 100,000 subscribers. MobiTV has done better, with about 4 million subscribers.

Research director John Barrett at analysis firm Parks Associates points to the fees as a problem, and recommends that operators provide free content.

"A free taste would go a long way in making the consumer case for mobile TV," he wrote in a recent report. "Mobile TV services have taken off in Japan and South Korea, where service is offered free of charge. In Italy, where additional fees have been the norm, usage has been limited."

This month, Toshiba Corp. announced it would end a pay-TV system for handsets because of the popularity of free TV broadcasts.

"That's one of the key barriers," Telegent's Yun said. "Once you start charging consumers, they start getting turned off."

U.S. TV broadcasters are quite eager to provide free broadcasts to cell phones, just as they do to TVs with "rabbit-ear" antennas. They've formed the Open Mobile Video Coalition, which estimates that advertising-financed TV for cell phones could be a $2 billion market.

They want to reach cell phones through another wireless standard the ATSC is creating. It will use regular TV frequencies to reach mobile gadgets, meaning TV stations will be able to broadcast from existing towers.

The goal is to complete the new standard, called ATSC-M/H, by the first quarter of next year, Richter said. That could mean broadcasts will be operational before the end of next year.

It's not completely clear that the technology would be used for free TV — the possibility to charge viewers monthly fees will be built in — but it would be natural for broadcasters to simulcast their regular advertising-financed programming on the mobile channel.

The big question then, Abraham said, is whether broadcasters will be able to persuade carriers to sell TV-capable phones.

AT&T spokesman Michael Coe said it was too early speculate.

"If the answer ends up being 'yes,'" Abraham said, "then that opens up a very large market."

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Apple iPhone


The iPhone has proven quite popular in Japan, despite the fact that many phones in the Japanese market have most of the common features that the iPhone lacks. Because of this, a former NTT DoCoMo executive blames the industry for being too insular, designing phones only to carrier specifications.

Japan, which has long had 3G networks (still in relative infancy here in the US), has been in many ways years ahead in innovations compared to other markets. Most phones can scan QR barcodes, pay for items at vending machines, and use a complex system of "emoji" for messaging, all features that the iPhone currently lacks. But data access is built around the i-mode system, developed by NTT DoCoMo in 1999 as sort of an Internet "lite" that is speedy and easily transmitted over cell networks, and Japanese handsets are built to work with the i-mode network.


The iPhone, on the other hand, was built to access the "real Internet," using standard protocols and data formats. And since it wasn't limited to any carriers' specifications, Apple was free to design a device with an innovative interface and relatively open features. "I believe the iPhone is closer to the mobile phone of the future, compared with the latest Japanese mobile phones," Tsuyoshi Natsuno—former head of the i-mode division at DoCoMo—told Nikkei's TechOn. He compared Steve Jobs' vision in developing the iPhone to that of Sony's Ken Kutaragi, responsible for the Playstation and Playstation 2, and Nintendo's Satoshi Iwata, the man behind the Gameboy DS and the Wii.

The iPhone could really shake up the handset designs in Japan. At the same time, the iPhone's popularity there could result in requests for some of the features that are missing, which could lead to the features spreading to other parts of the world. iPhone OS 2.0 already includes an innovative character input method for Chinese and Japanese originally developed in Asia, so there's hope that new developments won't just work in one direction. I'm already having dreams of swiping my iPhone to hop on the CTA or pay my bar tab.

General 2G Network GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
Announced 2007, January
Status Available. Released 2007, June
Size Dimensions 115 x 61 x 11.6 mm
Weight 135 g
Display Type Touchscreen, 16M colors
Size 320 x 480 pixels, 3.5 inches
- Multi-touch input method
- Accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate
- Proximity sensor for auto turn-off
Ringtones Type Polyphonic, MP3
Customization Download
Vibration Yes
- 3.5 mm headset jack
Memory Phonebook Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall
Call records 100 received, dialed and missed calls
Card slot No
- 4/8/16 GB shared memory
Data GPRS Yes
HSCSD No
EDGE Yes
3G No
WLAN Wi-Fi 802.11b/g
Bluetooth Yes, v2.0, headset support only
Infrared port No
USB Yes, v2.0
Features OS Mac OS X v10.4.8
Messaging SMS, Email
Browser HTML (Safari)
Games Downloadable (firmware 2.0)
Colors Black
Camera 2 MP, 1600x1200 pixels
- Google Maps
- iPod audio/video player
- PIM including calendar, to-do list
- TV output (firmware 1.1.1)
- Photo browser/editor
- Voice memo
- Integrated handsfree
Battery Standard battery, Li-Ion
Stand-by Up to 250 h
Talk time Up to 8 h

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Friday, August 1, 2008

Apple to Seed OS X 10.5.5


Sources are reporting that Apple is close to issuing the first pre-release build of the next maintenance update to Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard). Mac OS X 10.5.5 is said to include support for new Mac notebooks due out later this year (autumn).


"People familiar with the matter say Apple Developer Connection members and other high-profile software makers could receive the first test builds of the software prior to the start of the weekend," AppleInsider reveals. "The first seedings will almost certainly arrive by the middle of next week," the site notes, citing the same sources.

Apple's latest maintenance update for Leopard, Mac OS X 10.5.4 was released on June 30, just a month after the first beta build had been seeded to the Apple developer community. The update included a major patch that fixed some issues with Adobe's Creative Suite 3.0, but also contained references to the MobileMe service replacing .Mac. The MobileMe requirements list revealed that users would need to run Mac OS X 10.5.4 with iTunes 7.7 in order to benefit from the new features. The same requirements list also noted that 10.4.11 users would be able to use the service too, but not to the extent of Leopard users.

Recent rumors about an upcoming, touch-based Apple portable have given rise to speculation on the MacBook-hardware-upgrade front. Apple's plans for an overhaul are said to include Intel Centrino 2 chips, 16:9 screens, which come in slightly bigger sizes: 14 inch and 15. 6 inch with different resolutions, and a 45nm processor to extend battery life. However, this is the first time that speculation surfaces on OS updates occurring in parallel with hardware upgrades.

While Apple is almost certainly revamping its MacBook line, a new Leopard update is most likely in order as well. As soon as the first seed notes for Mac OS X 10.5.5 emerge, clues to a possible release date are likely to be spotted as well. Just as the AppleInsider post reveals, next week would be a good time to keep an eye out for said documentation.

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Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Windows Codename Mojave


Microsoft has thrown the old Windows Vista in the same arena of public perception as a "new Windows operating system codenamed Mojave." And surprisingly, Windows Vista won. Well, the new Windows Vista at least, now complete with Service Pack 1, not the RTM version that hit the shelves on January 30, 2008. Microsoft's latest Windows operating system is finally getting a much needed breath of fresh air, with the Redmond company focusing to generate positive publicity around the platform, in a move that is long overdue.


"94% of respondents rated Mojave higher than they initially rated Windows Vista before the demo. 0% of respondents rated Mojave lower than they initially rated Windows Vista before the demo," Microsoft revealed. In fact, that Mojave experiment was nothing more than masquerading Windows Vista as the next version of the Windows operating system.

But what the Mojave Experiment really shows is Microsoft's failure to build a brand out of Vista. At this point in time, the characteristics that have become inherently associated with the Vista brand are too well rooted into public perception to be dislodged by any marketing campaign. Microsoft is at a juncture where it might as well throw buckets of money at marketing campaigns and run experiments labeled after all the deserts in the world, Vista will remain Vista.

The Mojave experiment is about 140 people. But not counting the 180 million users that have already made the jump to Windows Vista, the largest past of the 1 billion Windows users will not be that easy to convince, or reach for that matter.

"Of the 140 respondents polled the average pre-demo Vista score was 4.4. The average post-demo Mojave score was 8.5. Many said that they would have rated it higher, but wanted more time to play with it themselves," Microsoft added.

But the Redmond company is right to assume that public perception has impacted and hurt Windows Vista like nothing else. But at the same time, it might just be too late for Vista. But not for Windows 7, the real next version of the Windows client. Experiments like Windows Mojave could at least give Windows 7 a clean slate, because, having Windows Vista at its basis, the next Windows platform is bound to inherit its sins.

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Steve Wozniak on Humans and Machines


Steve Wozniak will be one of the speakers at the next Intel Developer Forum (IDF) held August 19-21 at the Moscone Center West in San Francisco, according to MacsimumNews. The subject of debate will be "Crossing the chasm between humans and machines". Schedule and other sessions are disclosed below.


More than 180 leading companies will feature hands-on demonstrations of their newest innovations and future technologies at the IDF Technology Showcase, spanning sessions like "Inspiring innovation," "Where will 'on-the-go' go?", "MIDs: platform for innovation," "I love TV," and "Developing for the future of computing".


Enlarge picture"Intel Developer Forum (IDF) is where Intel and the ecosystem come together to share their latest innovations and vision for the future of technology," says Intel. "Come hear industry news, learn about trends, and discover opportunities to integrate what is discussed into your projects."

Some of the reasons one could be interested to attend the IDF include the chance to hear breaking news from senior Intel leaders in the seven Forum Keynotes, accessing more than 170 hours of invaluable expert training on the latest processor technologies, digital enterprise, ultra mobility, software etc., and discussing technology with the companies present at the Technology Showcase. "If you are ready to develop the next innovative product, to maximize the capabilities of your current projects, to invent the new reality, your next action is clear: register for IDF today," Intel advises.

Steve Wozniak, aka "Woz," will speak on Day 3 of the IDF alongside Justin Rattner, Intel chief technology officer, about "Crossing the Chasm between Humans and Machines". On the same day, Dr. Moira Gunn of NPR's "Tech Nation" and "BioTech Nation" will have "a candid conversation with one of the most influential pioneers of the technology industry," according to CDRinfo.

Steve Wozniak is an American computer engineer and the co-founder of Apple Computer, now known as Apple Inc. He has contributed greatly to the personal computer revolution of the 1970s, creating the Apple I and Apple II computers in the mid-1970s, with the latter gaining a good dose of popularity, eventually becoming one of the best selling personal computers of its time.

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Microsoft Applauds Victory Over Linux


Once the traditional anti-open source poster child, Microsoft is slowly seeing this aura eroding replaced as a direct consequence of the rise of new, more pressing, rivals such as Google and Apple. Furthermore, the Redmond company, once the epitome of the proprietary software business model, while still retaining its overall strategy, is more and more embracing open source with its own solutions mainly through its new found commitment to interoperability. Microsoft's relaxed approach to what used to be regarded as a fierce potential competitor was on display at the company's Financial Analyst Meeting 2008 the past week. The Redmond giant stopped nothing short of declaring an all out victory over Linux and open source.



"In the industry-standard computing space, a number of years ago we faced the challenge of what was going to happen with Linux and the growth of open source. And fundamentally we made a decision that business customers make rational business decisions, and the reason they choose an open source product is because they can solve the problem better than they can with a Windows-based product. So when you put it in those sorts of terms, the way we compete against Linux is very simple: we build a better product and we have a great value proposition. Today our customers know Linux isn't free and the overall cost of the solution is in fact in most cases quite a bit higher than a Windows-based solution. And if we can offer a better solution at a great price, then customers choose Windows -- and they are. So we are growing strongly," stated Bob Muglia, Senior Vice President, Server and Tools Business.

But Muglia wasn't the only Microsoft top executive to indicate that Windows and the Redmond company's products now have the upper-hand compared to Linux and open source. A similar perspective was offered by Kevin Turner, Microsoft Chief Operating Officer. Turner revealed that Microsoft considers the face-off with open source over the last couple of years nothing short of a success. The statement was based on the fact that the software giant managed to grow its shipments at a rate three times faster compared to Linux and open source.

Turner also added that Microsoft is by no means declaring peace. "And we're really getting the message out about the fraudulent perception of free in the marketplace as it relates to open source. IT pros and decision-makers are starting to get it, that it's not free, that there's a lot of TCO that goes along with that, and there's also substantial security risks that go along with it. And so we're really making some traction in this area, and we're going to continue to hit the gas and go more and more aggressive as it relates to winning share," he stated.

Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Ballmer tackled the same issue during his presentation. The company's CEO talked about the threat of open source technology and business model in the past tense. Ballmer pointed to five years back to open source as a potential threat. Additionally, the Microsoft CEO pointed out that Microsoft's focus is shifting away from keeping open source down and toward Software + Services and the online search and advertising markets.

"Today we live in a world where I think people worry about the risks in software plus services, and advertising. And what do I tell our people, the only way to really win this game is to go out there and do it every day. Nobody talks as much today about the risks in our business that come from Linux and open source. They're still there, they're going to be there every day, and yet we've done a very, very good job, I think, in the marketplace versus those risks," Ballmer stated.

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Internet Explorer 8 Reliability


"For Internet Explorer, reliability means that the browser should always start quickly, perform well, connect to the Internet, and show Web sites without crashing or hanging. Most users want their browser to work, recover smoothly after a crash, and display the Web correctly. Users are not as concerned with what causes the problem, whether that be a poorly functioning add-on or poorly performing website. As part of our ongoing commitment to improve reliability, we have done a great deal of work in IE8 to make the browser more robust in all of these areas: performance, recovery and display," stated Andy Zeigler, Program Manager Reliability and Privacy.


Internet Explorer 8 will deliver, starting with the second Beta build, planned for August 2008, two critical features when it comes down to ensuring reliability: Loosely-Coupled IE and Automatic Crash Recovery. Both could have made the life of IE7 users much easier, but Microsoft is betting on "better late than never" with the introduction of the two items into IE8. However, the availability of the two features only in IE8 will continue to preserve and perpetuate the perception that Microsoft is still playing catch-up to rival products, especially the open source Firefox browser from Mozilla.

Loosely-Coupled IE is the foundation for IE8 Automatic Crash Recovery, and a feature which ensures that the browser is handled as a sum of its active components, with the tabs virtually isolated from the frames. Thanks to this architectural attribute, a crash caused by a website opened in a tab will not kill the entire browser process, but only that specific problem-area. IE8 Beta 2 will deliver Frame Process Merging, additional tab processes and virtual tabs.

"Automatic Crash Recovery: in the event of a crash, Automatic Crash Recovery is designed to get you back to browsing as quickly as possible. It uses LCIE’s tab isolation to help localize the failure to your tab," Zeigler added. "When you crash, we tear down the old tab process, create a new tab process and recover the stored data back into the tab. For many website this works well; however, there are other websites, such as sites with web forms, or sites that you need to login to, that we didn’t recover successfully," he continued revealing that with Beta 2 IE8 would be capable of recovering login information via session cookies and form data.

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New Apple iPhone

Shoppers lined up outside stores around the country this weekend to get their hands on the new Apple iPhone, and Vicksburg was no different. But, for many, they showed up too late.

"Hopefully next week," is all Cedrick Hubbard, 39, had to say Saturday morning as he walked out of the local AT&T store on Pemberton Square Boulevard. AT&T is the exclusive carrier for the new iPhone 3G, which went on sale in 21 countries Friday.


Hubbard, a Vicksburg resident, said he had gone to the store Saturday after a failed attempt at getting the new iPhone the day before.


Shoppers lined up outside stores around the country this weekend to get their hands on the new Apple iPhone, and Vicksburg was no different. But, for many, they showed up too late.

"Hopefully next week," is all Cedrick Hubbard, 39, had to say Saturday morning as he walked out of the local AT&T store on Pemberton Square Boulevard. AT&T is the exclusive carrier for the new iPhone 3G, which went on sale in 21 countries Friday.


Hubbard, a Vicksburg resident, said he had gone to the store Saturday after a failed attempt at getting the new iPhone the day before.

He went to the store at 7 a.m. Friday, about an hour before the it opened. Hubbard said he was wrong in thinking he'd gotten to the store early enough to get the new phone before he had to head to his daughter's soccer camp.

"There were already a lot of people in line, and eventually I had to leave," he said.

Hubbard said he later learned that the local store had sold all of its 40 iPhones that morning, and he was told to come back the next day when the store would have a new shipment.

But Hubbard was told Saturday at the store that the shipment didn't come in and he would have to wait seven to 10 days.

"I should have stayed in line Friday morning, I guess," he said, laughing.

While managers at the Vicksburg AT&T store would not comment on the iPhone shortage, Sue Berry, a spokesman for AT&T in Mississippi, said she didn't think it was as much due to a limited number of phones as it was an unprecedented number of customers.

"Vicksburg doesn't have a very big store," she said. "Apple sends us the shipment that we get. We did not expect in some of our smaller markets people lining up in the wee hours of the morning."

Meanwhile, as the iPhone flew off store shelves Friday it also hit a glitch. Customers across the nation were unable to get their phones working due to a global problem with Apple's iTunes servers that was preventing the phones from being fully activated in-store. Buyers were told to perform the last step at home by connecting their phones to their own computers.

However, iTunes servers were equally hard to reach from home, leaving phones unusable except for emergency calls.

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Sunday, July 13, 2008

Premium drum set for Rock Band


We're still enjoying Guitar Hero at my office but I would be willing to move the Wii to a more spacious location in order to accomodate this awesome new Ion Audio drumset for Rock Band.
Contrary to popular belief, San Francisco is not a great music town, at least not if you are a drummer and want to practice in your house. Unlike the east coast (and presumably elsewhere) where basements are plentiful, the bay area is lacking in-home practice areas.


We're still enjoying Guitar Hero at my office but I would be willing to move the Wii to a more spacious location in order to accomodate this awesome new Ion Audio drumset for Rock Band.
Contrary to popular belief, San Francisco is not a great music town, at least not if you are a drummer and want to practice in your house. Unlike the east coast (and presumably elsewhere) where basements are plentiful, the bay area is lacking in-home practice areas.

Generally speaking electronic drums are not that satisfying, but bring some video games into the mix and I'm on board. During a trip to Japan I sat down at the full-size drum machine game and played along to Crazy Train. All the kids thought I ruled until I told them I actually knew how to play.

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Friday, July 11, 2008

BIC Phone Is No Throw-Away Gadget


Bic is an awesome gadget company. I’ve been using their quality ball-point pens and even a disposable razor or two for years. I’m not quite sure if I can trust them yet when it comes to anything too technological. I mean, they don’t really have a reputation as a tech company. But luckily, with this dip in the mobile market pie, Bic has a little help from their friends.

Bic has teamed up with Orange France to release the first ever Bic Phone, a cell which is sold with a pre-charged battery and made to be thrown away after a chunk of usage. The Bic Phone comes with a SIM card already set-up and roaring to go, with activation being the only needed step. Each Bic Phone will also offer 60 minutes of free talk time. But you can always add more minutes if you’re so inclined.


Bic is an awesome gadget company. I’ve been using their quality ball-point pens and even a disposable razor or two for years. I’m not quite sure if I can trust them yet when it comes to anything too technological. I mean, they don’t really have a reputation as a tech company. But luckily, with this dip in the mobile market pie, Bic has a little help from their friends.

Bic has teamed up with Orange France to release the first ever Bic Phone, a cell which is sold with a pre-charged battery and made to be thrown away after a chunk of usage. The Bic Phone comes with a SIM card already set-up and roaring to go, with activation being the only needed step. Each Bic Phone will also offer 60 minutes of free talk time. But you can always add more minutes if you’re so inclined.


Don’t be turned away so easy. We don’t want you to worry that Bic hasn’t had any help along the way with hardware. As it turns out, Alcatel manufacturers the phones themselves, with the telephone number included in the packaging. So while it might be an extremely low-end phone (it’s made for strictly calls and texting only), at least Bic has a known hardware co-dependent backing them up.

The Bic Phone will be available in France starting August 7. There will be two color choices: Citrus Orange and Lime Green. The phone itself will cost €49 (£39/$80). It’ll be interesting to see how the disposable phone idea works, especially from a name not associated with the mobile industry at all up until now.

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Camera Phone


Alcatel has introduced a budget price camera phone for anyone who just wants an uncomplicated phone to stay in touch with family and friends.

Priced at just £14.99, the OT-S520 is a candybar phone offering a VGA camera that can be used as a webcam, and a 1.8-inch colour screen.


Alcatel has introduced a budget price camera phone for anyone who just wants an uncomplicated phone to stay in touch with family and friends.

Priced at just £14.99, the OT-S520 is a candybar phone offering a VGA camera that can be used as a webcam, and a 1.8-inch colour screen.

It measures just 11mm thick and provides up to 10 hours of talk time, 400 hours of standby, MP3 ringtones, 2MB memory, 800 phone number entries and conference calling.

The OT-S520 is available exclusively from Woolworths on the Virgin network.

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iPhone killer-app is letting users choose software


SAN FRANCISCO - The first iPhones won praise for their sleek design and elegant touchscreen, but Apple's new computer phones, arriving this week, will use the power of software to make the device like no phone ever seen.

Whether it's faster Web speeds, security for business users or using the phone's direction-finding capability to let it act as a game controller or location-aware device, it's software, not hardware, that should define the iPhone from here out.

"The emphasis on software shifts the debate from how cool a device it is to what it can do for you," says Tim Bajarin, an analyst with industry research firm Creative Strategies of San Jose, California, and a veteran Apple-watcher.

"It's basically redefining what a phone is," said Raven Zachary, open source software analyst for industry research firm The 451 Group and founder of iPhone Dev Camp, a conference for independent developers of software for iPhones.

Get over how it looks. It's the power of the computer inside, combined with supporting technologies that let it perform many powerful tasks no phone has managed before.


SAN FRANCISCO - The first iPhones won praise for their sleek design and elegant touchscreen, but Apple's new computer phones, arriving this week, will use the power of software to make the device like no phone ever seen.

Whether it's faster Web speeds, security for business users or using the phone's direction-finding capability to let it act as a game controller or location-aware device, it's software, not hardware, that should define the iPhone from here out.

"The emphasis on software shifts the debate from how cool a device it is to what it can do for you," says Tim Bajarin, an analyst with industry research firm Creative Strategies of San Jose, California, and a veteran Apple-watcher.

"It's basically redefining what a phone is," said Raven Zachary, open source software analyst for industry research firm The 451 Group and founder of iPhone Dev Camp, a conference for independent developers of software for iPhones.

Get over how it looks. It's the power of the computer inside, combined with supporting technologies that let it perform many powerful tasks no phone has managed before.

IS THAT A COMPUTER IN YOUR POCKET?

IPhone gaming features are a good example. A built-in accelerometer lets the device know when it's being tilted or swung, allowing it to act like a Nintendo Wii game controller, not just an input device where the user punches buttons in four directions to control game movements.

Similarly, the iPhone's Global Positioning System (GPS) chip allows software to go far beyond obvious functions like maps. Web search or photo-sharing sites can now assume a user's location and adjust what they see to their local surroundings.

San Francisco start-up Stitcher (http://stitcher.com/) introduced software in February that detects what streaming audio news iPhone users like and lets them "stitch" audio programs into personalized radio stations.

With GPS, Stitcher can deliver local news, weather or sports, co-founder Mike Ghaffary said, calling it "YouTube for audio" -- for when users are driving or unable to watch video.

The iPhone 3G also works on faster networks, so software runs twice as fast as the first-round devices. This makes it more effective at running complex software with functions that trip up phones on slower networks, forcing users to hop on standard computers to get any real work done beyond replying to e-mail or quickly scanning the most vital work documents.

ONE-BUTTON SOFTWARE STORE

Furthermore, Apple is eliminating the complexity for users to install and run software on phones.

The new AppStore, offering one-button access to buy and install programs on iPhones, is expected to transform what is expected from software on phones. Unlike PCs, phones tend to offer little or no choice of what programs run on them.

Apple's iPod followed a similar trajectory. When introduced in 2001, the device that would redefine how music is sold was derided as just another digital music player -- and an expensive one at that, albeit slicker-looking and lighter in weight, recalls Gartner Inc industry analyst Mike McGuire.

But it was not until 2003, when iTunes began offering a seamless way to shop for, install and play music, eliminating many technical hurdles, that the impulse era of digital song buying began and iPod sales soared. The AppStore promises to bring that same spontaneity to software use, analysts say.

"It was the first inkling that the iPod wasn't just a music player. It became a gateway that opened up to a larger set of services," said Web consultant Peter Merholz of the photos and movies and other features that followed.

Merholz is co-author of a book called "Subject to Change" arguing how iPhones are an example of how companies should stop thinking about products as products and instead see them as ways to connect customers to useful services. He is president of Web design firm Adaptive Path and perhaps best known for coining the term "blog" in 1999.

Apple resisted opening up the iPhone to software developers at first, meaning that only Web-based software could run on it. But a change of heart by Apple since October has brought software developers flooding in to take advantage of new powers to run programs on the phone rather than, slowly, via the Web.

The changes mean software can store data on the iPhone. It means passwords and "virtual private networks" -- secure pipelines over the Internet into office networks that companies require to gain access to sensitive business data -- now work.

"From the Palm days up to now, the smartphone market has suffered because the average consumer does not understand how to load software on a phone," said Paul Moreton, vice president of product management for Quickoffice, the most widely distributed productivity software for use on smartphones.

Quickoffice is a package of word processing, spreadsheet and presentation software that comes pre-installed on 60 million Symbian software-based phones from handset makers including Nokia, Samsung and Sony Ericsson.

Taking advantage of the high-resolution iPhone screen, Quickoffice has created a version of its software that lets iPhone users view full-screen PowerPoint presentations or zoom in to read or edit individual characters in the document.

(Additional reporting by Sinead Carew in New York and Duncan Martell in San Francisco; Editing by Braden Reddall)

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New Smart Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi/400D


The Canon Digital Rebel XTi/400D is an ideal camera for first-time digital SLR users. Unfortunately if you don't know photography lingo you might find yourself never veering from your camera's default settings and into all the cool features that help you take outstanding photos. This book takes care of that problem. Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi/400D For Dummies comes to the aid of new and inexperienced XTi/400D users by walking them through all the features of their camera. The book not only explains that camera's controls, but also demonstrates how each feature contributes to creating great photos. Illustrated with hundreds of full-color photos, this guide helps you get up-to-speed on the XTi/400D and in control of this popular camera.


The Canon Digital Rebel XTi/400D is an ideal camera for first-time digital SLR users. Unfortunately if you don't know photography lingo you might find yourself never veering from your camera's default settings and into all the cool features that help you take outstanding photos. This book takes care of that problem. Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi/400D For Dummies comes to the aid of new and inexperienced XTi/400D users by walking them through all the features of their camera. The book not only explains that camera's controls, but also demonstrates how each feature contributes to creating great photos. Illustrated with hundreds of full-color photos, this guide helps you get up-to-speed on the XTi/400D and in control of this popular camera.
Key Topics Covered:
- Getting the Lay of the Land.
- Taking Great Pictures, Automatically.
- Controlling Picture Quality.
- Reviewing Your Photos.
- Taking Creative Control.
- Getting Creative with Exposure and Lighting.
- Manipulating Focus and Color.
- Putting It All Together.
- Downloading, Organizing, and Archiving Your Photos.
- Printing and Sharing Your Photos.
- Ten Fast Photo-Editing Tricks.
- Ten Special-Purpose Features to Explore on a Rainy Day.
SOURCE: Research and Markets Ltd.

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New Smart Kodak camera


We have got used to many features from digital cameras – that they know to focus in on faces, they know to keep still when the photographer’s hand is a bit shaky, that they know how to make the best of bad lighting conditions etc. If you believe what Kodak claim, everything should be even easier with their new EasyShare M1093 IS. This SmartCapture feature should be able to work out the theme of the photo and adjust the setting accordingly. Aside from all of this though, this is still a pleasing little camera.

This new compact camera has a 10 megapixel resolution, a 3x optical zoom and a 3inch display. It goes without saying that it also includes standard features such as image stabilising and face recognition.


We have got used to many features from digital cameras – that they know to focus in on faces, they know to keep still when the photographer’s hand is a bit shaky, that they know how to make the best of bad lighting conditions etc. If you believe what Kodak claim, everything should be even easier with their new EasyShare M1093 IS. This SmartCapture feature should be able to work out the theme of the photo and adjust the setting accordingly. Aside from all of this though, this is still a pleasing little camera.

This new compact camera has a 10 megapixel resolution, a 3x optical zoom and a 3inch display. It goes without saying that it also includes standard features such as image stabilising and face recognition. It has a maximum ISO of 3200, and the digicam can record videos, even in HD resolution in 16:9 format (1280 x 720). Those who also buy the dock to go with the camera can watch videos directly on the TV.

The internal memory, which is only 32MD, can easily be increased using SD or SDHC memory cards. It should be available from September in red, silver and black - Kodak’s RRP is around £160.

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New 3G Apple iPhone


GADGET fans queued from the early hours in the city centre this morning to be sure of getting their hands on the new 3G Apple iPhone.

Rumours of limited supplies meant dozens were happy to wait in the rain outside O2 and Carphone Warehouse stores for the chance of being one of the first with the new technology.

The new version of the iPhone has faster download speeds for surfing websites, as well as more memory and extra applications like GPS.

And the proud owner of the first iPhone in Manchester was 34-year-old IT manager Darren Sellers, who waited outside the Market Street O2 store from 4.45am.

He said: “We have all been talking about it at work. Lots of people have been waiting for the 3G version.

“I am out here queuing because I tried to pre order one online but I wasn’t quick enough.

“I will use it for email and surfing the web.

“It can also tell me instantly if any systems go down at work.”

Also in the queue was 36 year old holiday company director John Pollard, from Prestwich.


GADGET fans queued from the early hours in the city centre this morning to be sure of getting their hands on the new 3G Apple iPhone.

Rumours of limited supplies meant dozens were happy to wait in the rain outside O2 and Carphone Warehouse stores for the chance of being one of the first with the new technology.

The new version of the iPhone has faster download speeds for surfing websites, as well as more memory and extra applications like GPS.

And the proud owner of the first iPhone in Manchester was 34-year-old IT manager Darren Sellers, who waited outside the Market Street O2 store from 4.45am.

He said: “We have all been talking about it at work. Lots of people have been waiting for the 3G version.

“I am out here queuing because I tried to pre order one online but I wasn’t quick enough.

“I will use it for email and surfing the web.

“It can also tell me instantly if any systems go down at work.”

Also in the queue was 36 year old holiday company director John Pollard, from Prestwich.

He said: “I go all over the world with my job and I need access to the internet and email.

“I already have an iPhone, but with 3G version the internet will run three or four times faster so I won’t need to travel with my lap top.”

But with queues of up to 50 people at each store, and rumours that there might not be enough iPhones to go around, it looked likely that some would be leaving disappointed.

An O2 spokesman said: “We havn’t got specific numbers for each store, but on average each one is getting a few dozen.

“There will be numerous restocks in the coming weeks.”

Sarah Henderson, a 44-year-old company director from Rochdale, said: “I wasn’t going to queue but I heard that they only had 30 in the shop.

“I have been here since 7am.”

It costs anywhere from £159 with a £30 a month contract for 18 months, to free if you sign up for a £75 monthly fee.


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Thursday, July 10, 2008

Nnew Apple iPhone In Hongkong


HONG KONG (AFP) — Apple fans across Asia queued for hours to get their hands on the new iPhone Friday, looking to be the first to own a gadget the company hopes will be as big a worldwide smash as the iPod.

More than 1,000 people, many waiting through the night, besieged a store in downtown Tokyo as the iPhone went on sale for the first time in Japan, where having the latest gizmo is almost a national obsession.

Some Japanese began camping out days before the launch for the thrill of being the first to buy the new smartphone -- described as twice as fast and half as expensive as the original iPhone, which was never sold in Japan.

Apple is rolling out the much hyped iPhone 3G in cities around the world on Friday, but New Zealanders got the first chance to buy it when stores opened just after midnight.

Shoppers braved the cold winter weather to queue in the main cities of Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch, waiting for three stores to open especially for the occasion.


HONG KONG (AFP) — Apple fans across Asia queued for hours to get their hands on the new iPhone Friday, looking to be the first to own a gadget the company hopes will be as big a worldwide smash as the iPod.

More than 1,000 people, many waiting through the night, besieged a store in downtown Tokyo as the iPhone went on sale for the first time in Japan, where having the latest gizmo is almost a national obsession.

Some Japanese began camping out days before the launch for the thrill of being the first to buy the new smartphone -- described as twice as fast and half as expensive as the original iPhone, which was never sold in Japan.

Apple is rolling out the much hyped iPhone 3G in cities around the world on Friday, but New Zealanders got the first chance to buy it when stores opened just after midnight.

Shoppers braved the cold winter weather to queue in the main cities of Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch, waiting for three stores to open especially for the occasion.

Auckland student Jonny Gladwell, 22, was first in line outside his local store, having queued since Tuesday after friends promised to pay for his phone if he lasted the distance.

"I'm going to go home, put this on charge, have a play with it and have a nice big sleep," a weary Gladwell told Television New Zealand after securing one of the first iPhones sold in the world.

But many potential customers expressed outrage over the cost, with the cheapest price, 199 New Zealand dollars (150 US), tied to a two-year calling contract costing 250 dollars a month.

Pricing is expected to be key to the success of the iPhone 3G, which boasts faster Internet access and file transfer than the first version and also has a built-in iPod.

In Australia, a few hundred people spent a chilly evening outside a Sydney store which got a jump on its competitors by opening at midnight.

First through the doors was business analyst Brett Howell, who said he had been surprised to find himself at the head of the queue when he turned up about 11 hours earlier.

"I was shocked that no one had lined up," he told reporters. "I'm not a super geek, but apparently I am. I'm Australia's super geek."

Enthusiasm ran higher in Japan, where white smoke shot up in front of the flagship store of Softbank Mobile in Tokyo, with curtains pulled back to reveal huge iPhone 3G images as the countdown to the launch ended.

"This is great, there is nothing more to say, this is great. I have made a call to my girlfriend," said the person who got the first iPhone, priced at 23,040 yen (215 dollars).

"Finally, finally. At last!" yelled English teacher and gadget freak Charles Browne from his camping chair minutes before the launch. He already owns seven Apple Macintoshes and five iPods.

Experts have said the iPhone could face an uphill battle in Japan, where handsets allow users to watch television and pay for goods like they do with a credit card -- neither of which the Apple phone can do.

Nonetheless, IT worker Yuki Kuroda spent a night outside the store to be one of the first Japanese to own an iPhone -- despite saying he was "not an enthusiastic Apple fan."

"But you should get this kind of gadget on the debut day. It loses value day by day," Kuroda said.

In Hong Kong, more than 60,000 people have already ordered the iPhone 3G, but only around 1,500 pre-chosen customers were able to pick up their handsets on Friday.

One of the lucky 1,500 told a local TV station he had thought about selling the gadget, but "nobody is interested in buying."

Black market debut-version iPhones are already widely available in Asia, serviced by countless shops that "unlock" their software to allow them to operate.

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New GPS gadget for digital SLR cameras


Amateur Photographer: A Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) receiver designed to attach to the hotshoe of digital SLRs is predicted to help trigger a ‘geotagging’ revolution.

Geotagging allows photographers to automatically assign GPS data to their pictures. Its protagonists expect such technology to win mass market appeal – making life easier for photographers by helping them manage their collection and quickly search their image database, based on the location data embedded in the image file.

Geotate’s €100 device, called Kato, uses its own built-in memory (to store GPS data) and a rechargeable battery.

Geotate hopes that such ‘instant GPS camera technology’ will trigger an explosion in location tagging of images.


Amateur Photographer: A Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) receiver designed to attach to the hotshoe of digital SLRs is predicted to help trigger a ‘geotagging’ revolution.

Geotagging allows photographers to automatically assign GPS data to their pictures. Its protagonists expect such technology to win mass market appeal – making life easier for photographers by helping them manage their collection and quickly search their image database, based on the location data embedded in the image file.

Geotate’s €100 device, called Kato, uses its own built-in memory (to store GPS data) and a rechargeable battery.

Geotate hopes that such ‘instant GPS camera technology’ will trigger an explosion in location tagging of images.

‘We think [automatic geotagging] will become a standard feature on cameras,’ said Paul Gough, Geotate’s senior director for product development.

Geotate draws on research predicting that the GPS camera sector will increase five-fold by 2011.

Though GPS accessory units for cameras are nothing new, Geotate claims its ‘USB GPS logger capture device’ offers key advantages over other GPS units in that it frees up picture taking and uses less power.

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LG KS360


LG has added to its collection of slider phones, but there's a twist – the LG KS360 packs a side-loading full QWERTY keyboard.

It's aimed at the serial communicators out there who can't let a minute go by without updating their facebook status, twittering or texting.

For a slider it's not too flabby either, clocking 16.8mm on the chub-o-meter.

There's a 2MP camera on board so you can attach jaunty snaps to your mobile missives. It comes with 15MB internal storage and will take up to a 4GB MicroSD card.

Internet duties are taken care of by a GPRS/EDGE connection. For everyday dialling, digits can be plugged in on the touchscreen, without having to haul out the full keyboard every time.


LG has added to its collection of slider phones, but there's a twist – the LG KS360 packs a side-loading full QWERTY keyboard.

It's aimed at the serial communicators out there who can't let a minute go by without updating their facebook status, twittering or texting.

For a slider it's not too flabby either, clocking 16.8mm on the chub-o-meter.

There's a 2MP camera on board so you can attach jaunty snaps to your mobile missives. It comes with 15MB internal storage and will take up to a 4GB MicroSD card.

Internet duties are taken care of by a GPRS/EDGE connection. For everyday dialling, digits can be plugged in on the touchscreen, without having to haul out the full keyboard every time.

Essentials
LG KS360
Price: £TBA
On sale: August
Contact: LG

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Gadget-hungry UK consumers

Gadget-hungry UK consumers are storing an average of £600 worth of photos, films, music and games, new research estimates.

The YouGov survey of more than 2,000 adults found that the average tally of digital content per head on audio players, PCs and cameraphones includes 502 songs, 466 photos, 14 films and eight games.

The survey suggests that users of digital devices place a high monetary value on digital storage.

But over two fifths have more of an emotional connection, saying that their collections are 'valuable' or even 'priceless'.

This is not surprising, according to the report, when almost one in 10 have over 2,000 photos and more than one in 10 have over 2,000 songs.

The poll found that one in five consumers are 'high capacity' users requiring more than 200GB of storage.


Gadget-hungry UK consumers are storing an average of £600 worth of photos, films, music and games, new research estimates.

The YouGov survey of more than 2,000 adults found that the average tally of digital content per head on audio players, PCs and cameraphones includes 502 songs, 466 photos, 14 films and eight games.

The survey suggests that users of digital devices place a high monetary value on digital storage.

But over two fifths have more of an emotional connection, saying that their collections are 'valuable' or even 'priceless'.

This is not surprising, according to the report, when almost one in 10 have over 2,000 photos and more than one in 10 have over 2,000 songs.

The poll found that one in five consumers are 'high capacity' users requiring more than 200GB of storage.

A third of the respondents feel that they need devices with storage capacities that provide at least twice as much space to keep everything that they would like, while one in five reckon they need an 'infinite' amount.

Brits aged 18-34 with an electronic device are not dissimilar to their American and Asian contemporaries when it comes to possessing a voracious appetite for digital media, particularly music.

UK adults in this age group store 1,056 songs, or about three times more than the average UK consumer, but are outpaced by their peers in America who store 2,065 songs.

But those young Americans are in turn eclipsed by young Asians who keep a whopping 3,195 songs.

"Storage needs keep going up and up," said Nick Kyriacou, director for EMEA at Hitachi GST, which commissioned the research.

"Just over 20 years ago people thought that five megabytes was more than enough, but that is enough space for only one or two songs today."

As consumers have demanded more, the technology has enabled terabyte hard drives that allow consumers to store and carry large amounts of data, including high-definition video.

"There is an insatiable appetite for storage capacity and we would estimate that the average value of stored content has gone up almost 50 per cent over the past three years and is continually increasing," added Kyriacou.

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gadget sales soar saving money

NEW YORK — With fuel prices soaring, sales of products designed to boost gas mileage are also rising — even though the government says they're not worth the money.

The products range from devices that fit inside an engine's air intake valve to fuel additives. Their makers claim they boost mileage by helping gasoline burn more efficiently.

"The EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) has tested hundreds of these products," said Laura DeMartino, a Federal Trade Commission attorney. "Even for the few that worked, the gas savings was so small it didn't justify the price."

But that's not discouraging people from searching for ways to eke extra mileage out of their vehicles when gas prices are hovering above $4 a gallon nationally.

"Our sales have probably close to doubled," over the past year, said Dan Baxley, founding partner of Automotive Research Laboratory LLC, which makes the Vortec Cyclone, a device designed to boost gas mileage by improving an engine's air flow.


NEW YORK — With fuel prices soaring, sales of products designed to boost gas mileage are also rising — even though the government says they're not worth the money.

The products range from devices that fit inside an engine's air intake valve to fuel additives. Their makers claim they boost mileage by helping gasoline burn more efficiently.

"The EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) has tested hundreds of these products," said Laura DeMartino, a Federal Trade Commission attorney. "Even for the few that worked, the gas savings was so small it didn't justify the price."

But that's not discouraging people from searching for ways to eke extra mileage out of their vehicles when gas prices are hovering above $4 a gallon nationally.

"Our sales have probably close to doubled," over the past year, said Dan Baxley, founding partner of Automotive Research Laboratory LLC, which makes the Vortec Cyclone, a device designed to boost gas mileage by improving an engine's air flow.

The $40 device fits inside a car's air intake hose, where it, "creates a swirling mass like a tornado," Baxley said. That creates a finer gas-air mix than normal, which burns more efficiently. Some Vortec Cyclone users have claimed a benefit of as much as 6 miles per gallon, though most see an improvement of 1 to 2 mpg, Baxley said.

Kevin Shaw, vice president of development at The Coffee Beanery, has tested it on four of his company's vehicles.

The coffee chain found that it improved the performance of two of his service vans by 2 miles per gallon, while one passenger car's fuel efficiency rose by 1 mile per gallon. The fourth car saw no improvement, but Shaw said three out of four is enough to convince him that the device is well worth the money.

"I have nine on order right now," said Shaw, who believes the devices will save his company at least $1,400 a year per vehicle in fuel expenses.

Like other companies that sell gas-mileage-improvement products, Baxley is used to skepticism.

He says his company's tests prove that the Vortec Cyclone improves gas mileage, and Automotive Research Laboratory backs its product up with a money-back guarantee. Returns run only around 5 percent of sales, he said.

Automotive Research Laboratory has never received a complaint from the FTC, which declined to comment on specific products.

National Fuelsaver Corp., which makes Platinum Gas Saver, can improve fuel mileage by 22 percent, said company owner and technical director Joel Robinson. The product, which the company started selling nearly 30 years ago, injects a small amount of platinum into a vehicle's air intake system. The platinum molecules boost the amount of fuel burned by the engine, company press materials say. The remainder is expelled as vapor and burned off by the catalytic converter.

Robinson said he has been contacted by the FTC and some state attorneys general. But he's been able to defend his product thanks to his victory in an early 1980s lawsuit brought by the U.S. Post Office, which said he was trying to obtain money through the mail by making false claims.

"They all thought we were frauds until I sent them the judge's decision," Robinson said.

Robinson produced data that, he says, show Platinum Gas Saver works. But he also notes that — aside from his product — there is merit to the FTC's warnings.

"Except for ours, I think there's a lot of truth to it," Robinson said. "The problem in selling this product is that in the last 10 years there have been 10,000 phony fuel savers."

Platinum Gas Saver costs $150 for a 30,000 mile supply. Robinson declined to disclose annual sales.

Another company, Magnetizer Industrial Technologies Inc., has stopped selling a $150 gas-savings device to the general public, citing high costs to fulfill individual orders and the general skepticism that surrounds any kind of magnetic gas savings device.

"There is a technology here that can benefit," said Ron Kita, director of research, but "there has been a lot of negative press."

Magnetizer's magnets work by changing naturally formed chemical associations, "into a single, potentiated molecular state," which burns more efficiently, the company's Web site explains. The company still sells the system to fleet operators as an emissions reduction device.

The government's advice to people looking to save on gas: Drive the speed limit, use cruise control, combine errands and remove excess weight from the trunk.

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O2 launch of Apple iPhone set


Tomorrow's UK launch of the new iPhone is threatening to descend into chaos, with limited supply of the gadget set to leave hundreds of thousands disappointed.

According to the website of O2, Apple's network partner for the much-anticipated handset, sales of iPhone 3G will be limited to one per customer and two for business customers.

"We are experiencing unprecedented demand for the device and whilst we are confident that all customers who want iPhone 3G will get one by the end of this summer, initial supply is limited and will be for some weeks," says a website update about the combined music player, web browser and mobile.

O2 and Carphone Warehouse stores will have limited numbers of iPhone 3G this Friday, July 11. On average, O2 will only have "a few dozen" iPhone 3Gs per store. Some O2 stores will open at 8.02am tomorrow, others "a bit later".


Tomorrow's UK launch of the new iPhone is threatening to descend into chaos, with limited supply of the gadget set to leave hundreds of thousands disappointed.

According to the website of O2, Apple's network partner for the much-anticipated handset, sales of iPhone 3G will be limited to one per customer and two for business customers.

"We are experiencing unprecedented demand for the device and whilst we are confident that all customers who want iPhone 3G will get one by the end of this summer, initial supply is limited and will be for some weeks," says a website update about the combined music player, web browser and mobile.

O2 and Carphone Warehouse stores will have limited numbers of iPhone 3G this Friday, July 11. On average, O2 will only have "a few dozen" iPhone 3Gs per store. Some O2 stores will open at 8.02am tomorrow, others "a bit later".

O2 is also out of stock of iPhone 3Gs via its on-line store, and has issued a grovelling apology to customer that experienced problems with its online store on Monday as a result of unprecedented demand for the gadget.

Cheryl Black, customer service director for O2 writes on the site that "an amazing 200,000 people registered" their interest in the new phone, the price of which has tumbled in an attempt to take it to the mass market. That figure includes many people who wish to upgrade their existing iPhone.

She adds: "Apple can only supply us with a small proportion of that number to start with, but with weekly deliveries, we're confident that everyone who wants an iPhone will be able to get one by the end of the summer. Until then, we realise that some people will be disappointed...

"Because we were so open about where and when you could pre-order your iPhone, the online shop was always going to be busy. We tried to prepare for this by increasing the online shop's capacity to 250 times its normal rate and testing it over and over again before the launch.

"It wasn't enough. I'm really sorry if you couldn't get your order in. We weren't prepared for the speed and volume of people. I'm not sure any website could have been."

O2 said it was working closely with Apple to get more of the gadgets, which have received rave reviews.

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