Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Canon Cross Media Station pulls your pics and charges your cameras, wirelessly (video)

Canon Cross Media Station pulls your pics and charges your cameras, wirelessly (video)

Canon Cross Media Station pulls your pics and charges your cameras, wirelessly (video)
Pulling memory cards and downloading pictures? A pain. Keeping track of a drawer full of different-sized battery packs for your travel, studio, and video cameras? A headache. If that's you, Canon's Cross Media Station could be a big hit of aspirin. Finally shown to the world after being teased at the Canon Expo last month, the prototype device looks something like a chubby scanner from a dark future. However, the top is actually an inductive charging pad. Set your camera up there (up to three at once) and a blue light will pop on to indicate flowing electricity. While the power heads one direction the data goes whizzing by in the other, pictures pulled and categorized on the device based on time, place, and recognized faces. As you can see in the video after the break, photos can be displayed over HDMI onto your HDTV. We're guessing the wireless data spec is TransferJet, as Canon is a member of that consortium, but when it comes to the wireless charging we're somewhat in the dark. It looks like the models in the video are using adapters to enable this functionality, but surely this will be integrated eventually. You know, in the future, when all the best stuff happens.

Continue reading Canon Cross Media Station pulls your pics and charges your cameras, wirelessly (video)

Canon Cross Media Station pulls your pics and charges your cameras, wirelessly (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Oct 2010 08:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceTrustedReviews  | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Mushkin gets cozy with SandForce again, launches 6Gb/s EP Series SSDs for Enterprises

Mushkin gets cozy with SandForce again, launches 6Gb/s EP Series SSDs for Enterprises

Mushkin gets cozy with SandForce again, launches 6Gb/s EP Series SSDs for Enterprises and exceedingly well-heeled gamers285MB/s read speeds from the Callisto series? Phsaw. We need at least twice that to get us out of bed in the morning, and Mushkin has our wake up call. Its announcing the EP Series of SSD drives, based on SandForce SF-2000-series processors, pledging 6Gb/s burst speeds. That sounds mighty impressive, but if you capitalize that B it turns into a somewhat less stunning figure of 768MB/s. Sequential read and write speeds are 500MB/s, while each can sustain a rate of 60,000 operations per second. That's a lot of I/O, and it's coming to gilded racks sometime in the first quarter of 2011.

Continue reading Mushkin gets cozy with SandForce again, launches 6Gb/s EP Series SSDs for Enterprises

Mushkin gets cozy with SandForce again, launches 6Gb/s EP Series SSDs for Enterprises originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Oct 2010 13:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

< h6>Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Mushkin gets cozy with SandForce again, launches 6Gb/s EP Series SSDs for Enterprises

Mushkin gets cozy with SandForce again, launches 6Gb/s EP Series SSDs for Enterprises

Mushkin gets cozy with SandForce again, launches 6Gb/s EP Series SSDs for Enterprises and exceedingly well-heeled gamers285MB/s read speeds from the Callisto series? Phsaw. We need at least twice that to get us out of bed in the morning, and Mushkin has our wake up call. Its announcing the EP Series of SSD drives, based on SandForce SF-2000-series processors, pledging 6Gb/s burst speeds. That sounds mighty impressive, but if you capitalize that B it turns into a somewhat less stunning figure of 768MB/s. Sequential read and write speeds are 500MB/s, while each can sustain a rate of 60,000 operations per second. That's a lot of I/O, and it's coming to gilded racks sometime in the first quarter of 2011.

Continue reading Mushkin gets cozy with SandForce again, launches 6Gb/s EP Series SSDs for Enterprises

Mushkin gets cozy with SandForce again, launches 6Gb/s EP Series SSDs for Enterprises originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Oct 2010 13:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

< h6>Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Read More...

IDC: Apple's now third largest PC vendor in US with 10.6 percent market share

IDC: Apple's now third largest PC vendor in US with 10.6 percent market share

Apple might be billing its next big event as "Back to the Mac," but don't let that fool you into thinking its computer platform has been waning. Quite to the contrary, according to IDC, which reports the Cupertino team has grabbed third spot in the US PC sales charts with a 10.6 percent market share, bumping the incumbent Acer into fourth. Two million Mac shipments during the period represented an increase of 24.1 percent relative to last year, while the overall PC market turned in a somewhat morose 3.8 percent growth. Gartner's also unleashed its numbers unto the world today, giving Acer the lead for third by the slimmest of margins, but both stat teams agree that the Taiwanese vendor has suffered a bad year along with Dell, which has also experienced some shrinkage. Toshiba's the only major Windows machine seller to see its fortunes improve with double-digit growth, while HP seems to be hanging on to the top spot nice and steadily. Hit the source links for worldwide numbers.

IDC: Apple's now third largest PC vendor in US with 10.6 percent market share originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Oct 2010 18:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink CNET &nbs p;|  sourceBusinesswire, MarketWatch  | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Netgear Roku XD Player gets official, coming to big box retail everywhere

Netgear Roku XD Player gets official, coming to big box retail everywhere

We knew something was up when we saw a Netgear-branded Roku XD hit the FCC and subsequently turn up at Fry's, and now it's official: Netgear will be selling the Roku XD as the -- wait for it -- Netgear Roku XD Player. Hardware and functionality-wise, it's the exact same Roku XD you've come to know and love -- 720p Netflix and Amazon streaming with support for 1080p on certain channels -- but Netgear's vast distribution network means that it'll be sold in Best Buy, Radio Shack, Fry's and anywhere else Netgear products routinely show up. It's a pretty aggressive move for Roku, which was previously online-only -- the company has been saying its goal is to put a box by every TV in your house, and the XD is certainly cheap and flexible enough to tempt quite a few big-box shoppers. Of course, you're be paying a little extra for that extra silkscreen and distro love: Netgear's MSRP is $89.99, $10 more than the straight Roku. (Fry's selling it for $79.99 after "instant savings," though.) That's not exactly impulse-buy pricing, but it's still $10 cheaper than the Apple TV, so it looks like the heat is on -- check out our Roku XDS review and just ignore the part about USB playback to get a feel for the XD.

Netgear Roku XD Player gets official, coming to big box retail everywhere originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Oct 2010 21:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceNetgear  | Email this | Comments

Read More...