Monday, December 17, 2007
Everex's Nanobook becomes the Cloudbook, gets gOS
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Augustine
at
10:42 AM
Hands-on with BetaBlue, JetBlue's WiFi-equipped Airbus
Continue reading Hands-on with BetaBlue, JetBlue's WiFi-equipped Airbus
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Augustine
at
10:42 AM
NVIDIA reveals GeForce 8800 GTS 512MB
[Via HotHardware]
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Augustine
at
10:41 AM
DisplayLink, Alereon intro wireless USB video card reference design
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Augustine
at
10:39 AM
Toshiba's 15-nm process hints at 100Gbit NAND chips: 6x current densities
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Augustine
at
10:32 AM
7-year old Gordy Moore travels through time, invents Penryn
Posted Dec 13th 2007 7:19AM by Thomas Ricker
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Augustine
at
10:30 AM
Pentagon prepping non-lethal "light and sound" weapon
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Augustine
at
10:25 AM
Battleship Mtron: the absurdly fast SSD RAID array
[Thanks, David]
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Augustine
at
10:23 AM
Intel develops integrated WiFi / WiMAX / DVB-H chip
[Via Slashdot]
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Augustine
at
10:22 AM
Motorola's A1600 MING 2 surfaces
from Engadget by Darren Murph
What's that, you say? Reportedly, that picture you see above is the Motorola A1600, which could be the long-awaited successor to the A1200 MING. Granted, we've no proof to go along with it, but the design sure fits the mold. According to Chinese-based eNet, this bugger will sport quad-band GSM connectivity, a 3.2-megapixel camera (with autofocus), WiFi, assisted-GPS, a couple of built-in games, a "talking dictionary" and a Linux-based OS. Interestingly enough, that last tidbit certainly conflicts with other reports we've heard, but we suppose time will tell (look for a February launch) what system really ends up running the MING 2 show. [Via UnwiredView]
Posted by
Augustine
at
10:20 AM
iPhone gets video recording capabilities
Continue reading iPhone gets video recording capabilities
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Augustine
at
10:17 AM
ATI demonstrates hybrid-chip CrossFire graphics tech
from Engadget by Nilay Patel We've already seen laptops like Sony's Vaio SZ include integrated graphics alongside much more powerful (and power-hungry) dedicated chips, but AMD's looking to make such setups all the more commonplace with new chips capable of hybrid CrossFire. AMD recently demoed the tech to PC Perspective, showing off a 2.2GHz Phenom machine with both unreleased RS780 integrated graphics and a RV620-based card labeled HD Radeon 3450. Running games like Call of Duty 4 and Unreal Tournament 3, frame rates jumped from 30-35fps to around 55fps when hybrid mode was enabled. That's pretty respectable, although the system is limited to speedups of the slowest chip times two, so bigger gains are probably not in the offing. However, there can still be benefits to using chips of drastically different horsepower: the integrated chips can power down the heavy hitter to save power when not needed, and totally switch over when required. That's a pretty solid compromise, we think -- and with AMD aiming for the initial batch of hybrid CrossFire-capable cards to be priced around $50, it looks like we'll be seeing these setups a lot when AMD starts shipping these early next year.
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Augustine
at
10:15 AM
Homer's iViewer: the wireless TV transmitter
[Via ChipChick]
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Augustine
at
10:12 AM
ITRI showcases a 10.4-inch flexible color LCD
[Via TG Daily]
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Augustine
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10:09 AM