Sunday, August 23, 2009

Google Tasks Updates with Gmail Sharing Integration [To-do Lists]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/KJyfZGRh9Gs/google-tasks-updates-with-gmail-sharing-integration

Google Tasks graduated from Gmail Labs back in July, but it's still adding the occasional feature to tighten its integration with Gmail. Today, for example, Tasks added a small but useful feature allowing you to quickly and easily email a task list.

When you want to share any list, go to the Actions menu and click Email task list (simple enough). Gmail will compose a new email containing your list title and the items in your list, including crossed off items if they're there. It truly is a small feature, but if you sandbox all your todos inside Tasks and then need to send them off to someone for, you know, doing, it's a really nice option to have.

Email a task list [Official Gmail Blog]


Read More...

Photoshop.com Hosts Videos up to 2GB in Size [Video]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/Ru4kjYtV9pw/photoshopcom-hosts-videos-up-to-2gb-in-size

It's too late to make much of an impact on our call for the best video-sharing sites, but today online photo editor Photoshop.com announced that they're now allowing users to upload and share videos up to 2GB in size.

Unfortunately Adobe hasn't done much to make its video sharing tool stand out. For one, you can't currently edit videos at all, which seems to us like the only reason you might consider uploading your videos to Photoshop.com in the first place. You also can't embed videos, unless I'm missing something. The 2GB file size seems decent, but you're actually limited to 2GB of space on your entire Photoshop.com free account, so one big video upload and you're done. (Note: You can only upload videos up to 200MB in size via the web interface. For larger videos, you'll need to download their Adobe Air Uploader—which I couldn't even find, even after digging around the site and checking their support. Update: Here's the answer.)

In short, then: It's cool to see Photoshop join the video sharing world, and editing would be a great feature if it were there, but they're going to have to step it up if they want to attract anyone to use it. Feel differently? Tell us why in the comments.



Read More...

Set Up Space-Saving, Permanent Gmail and Reader Tabs in Firefox [Customization]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/DU8HrYk1otA/set-up-space+saving-permanent-gmail-and-reader-tabs-in-firefox

Ed. note: Reader Harsha Kotcherlakota wrote in to our tips box with a very detailed, very cool guide to how he uses a few Firefox extensions we've featured to create dedicated, always-available-yet-unobtrusive tabs for Gmail and Google Reader. Here's how.

So here's the deal. I like having my Gmail always open. (Who doesn't, right?) It's literally the first thing I go to in Firefox. But I don't want it to be my homepage, and frankly, I don't like the fact I have to always leave a full sized tab open just to keep an eye on my inbox. I am a fan of minimal, yet functional and attractive interfaces.

So I went searching for the perfect setup, and I'm happy to say, I found it! Using Gina Trapani's Better Gmail 2 add-on (specifically the Unread Count Favicon feature) and two other extensions, I found an extremely easy and attractive way to keep an eye on Gmail and have it open all the time without taking up a lot of space.

Here's what I did. (I'm doing all of this on the nightly build of Firefox 3.7 with Nightly Tester Tool installed, and it works just fine, so I'm positive this works for ALL versions of Firefox 3.0+.)

First, I downloaded and installed Better Gmail 2, and after enabling the Favicon option, ended up with this:

Looks fantastic, of course, but still, since I am currently using a netbook, I want to save as much space as possible. So I sea! rched an d searched until I found the FaviconizeTab extension, also previously mentioned on Lifehacker. Essentially, it adds an entry to the context menu when you right-click a tab that allows you to shrink it down to ONLY the Favicon. Here's how it works.

Right-click the desired tab and click FaviconizeTab:

Which gives you favicon-only tabs like you see in the screenshot. (I did this for both Gmail and Reader.)

Looks awesome, right? Well, I thought so too! Until I closed Firefox, and when I opened it again, I realized my faviconized Gmail tab did not stay faviconized. I also wanted a solution in which Gmail and Google Reader always appear when I opened Firefox. I knew how to set up multiple homepages in Firefox, but it's not quite right for what I want. For one, if i do that, every time I press the "Home" button, all those sites load up at once in multiple tabs.

So I went off hunting again for a permanent tab solution. But wait! Lifehacker, many moons ago, highlighted an extension called PermaTabs, an extension that preserves selected tabs through sessions and prevents accidental closing.

Sadly, the developer of that extension has long since forgotten it. I was annoyed, but after a bit more searching, I found another extension called PermaTabs Mod. It's the same as the original extension, however it's updat! ed and m odified to work with Firefox 3.5. Essentially, this add-on allows you to make a tab permanent—that is to say, it cannot be closed by accident, actions such as "Close other tabs" in the Tab context menu do no affect it, and better yet, the tabs stay where they are in the order they are even if you close/shutdown Firefox! Here's how it works:

We right-click the tab we want to make permanent, then select PermaTabs -> Permanent Tab:

Now, you'll notice that the tab we just PermaTabbed is now a slightly different shade, and when you try to right click, you'll notice the option to close it is now grayed out!

So here I am, jumping with joy, excited to see if my experiment will work. And lo and behold! It does! When I open up Firefox, here's what I see!

As you can see, this also works with Gina Trapani's Better GReader and its Favicon Unread Count feature, and is equally useful.

Here's the skinny on what's absolutely awesome about this setup:

  • Permatabs are not affected by closing Firefox, cannot be closed automatically, and can be "un-permafied" at any time when you want to get rid of them.
  • When you first start up Firefox, the Permatabs DO NOT AUTOMATICALLY LOAD THEIR PAGE. They only load them when you click on them, which is insanely handy for me for when I'm on a terrible connection and I don't want all my Permatabs to load up instantly when I start up Firefox. (This is why I do not like having multiple homepages—I cannot control when they load.)
  • With this setup, you don'! t have t o make Gmail or GReader your home page. Your home page is separate; in my above example, I have about:blank set as my homepage, but this won't affect your setup at all.
  • Permatabs are not set in stone as far as location goes. You can reorder Permatabs by dragging them around. (Be warned, you can also pop-out Permatabs, but once you do, you must pop them back in or add them again manually.)
  • Using this setup, I don't need to use toaster popups from extensions like Gmail Notifier or any third party app. All I have to do is glance to the top right to see if there's any new messages.

Quick Note: If you use any sort of script/extension that forces Firefox to show the Close button on all tabs all the time, this setup WILL visually break that feature. Try it to see what it looks like, if you're unsure.

So, now a bit of eye-candy. Since the above screenshots are shown with little to no visual customizations at all, here's a look at what my current setup looks like, optimized for my netbook:


(Click the image above for a closer look.)

A few notes about my my web setup:

  • I'm using a 1024x600 resolution(Asus Eee PC), so minimal interface design is key for me.
  • By default, I hide my Menu Bar and my Status bar. My Menu Bar is easily brought up by pressing Alt, and I use Fission (original post) to display both on-hover links and progress bars in my address bar. It works very well and adds a nice Safari-like touch as well as save space
  • My theme is Heaven.Cube with small icons.
  • I'm using Stylish for the custom about:blank page and the removal of the Go button and the Search button in the main toolbar.

Nice work, Harsha, and thanks for the guide!



Read More...

Get Healthier with a (Surprisingly Tasty) Squash Pasta Substitute [Food Hacks]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/hq6qA4jHusU/get-healthier-with-a-surprisingly-tasty-squash-pasta-substitute

Vegans, low-carbers, gluten-free dieters, and nearly all individuals trying to shed a few pounds face the tough task of cutting pasta out of their diets. Turns out you can use squash as a delicious pasta substitute.

Darya from foodie blog Summer Tomato shows us some dos (rotate the squash while peeling) and some don'ts (don't peel the squash directly over the bowl or overcook the noodles) when it comes to making squash noodles:

There's a recipe for "Summer Squash Pasta & Simple Tomato Sauce" at Summer Tomato, along with more detailed instructions, but before you run off to the kitchen: tell us about your favorite diet-friendly food substitutes (and about just how tasty they are or aren't).



Read More...

KissTunes Turns Your Keyboard into a (Musical) Keyboard [Fun]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/cOBXTV6klMw/kisstunes-turns-your-keyboard-into-a-musical-keyboard

You're probably not going to crank out any concert-worthy concertos using KissTunes, but you can have a bit of fun with the simple computer-as-musical-keyboard model it uses to generate user-created songs.

KissTunes turns the home row and a few secondary keys above the home row, into a keyboard-like tool for composing simple tunes. You can edit your work, share it, and even back up the tunes you create to your computer. Check out the video below, which covers just about everything you can do with KissTunes:



Craving a more advanced virtual-jam session? Check out previously reviewed JamStudio for a multi-instrument virtual music maker.



Read More...

Five Best Video-Sharing Sites [Hive Five]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/k1xSB1Q1b6E/five-best-video+sharing-sites

With everything from our cellphones to laptops to keychain trinkets coming sporting video cameras these days, more and more people are capturing and sharing digital video. The following video sites make sharing your video missives easy.

Photo by Jakob Montrasio.

Earlier this week we asked you to share your favorite video sharing web site and tell us what made it your favorite. We've read over your comments, tallied the votes, and now we're back to share the most popular video sharing sites.

blip.tv (Basic: Free, Pro: $96/year)

Blip.tv is a video-sharing service aimed at people producing web shows. The site isn't designed for or marketed to people uploading single videos or viral-video content. The site is strongly oriented towards users producing continuous videos and includes revenue sharing to help independent producers make money—50% of the ad revenue from your content is shared with you. Both the basic and the professional account are limited to file sizes of 1GB, but one of the benefits of the professional account is that you get priority conversion and additional conversion time per episode, which allows you to use higher quality video. The professional service is really only necessary if you're consistently uploading large amounts of long videos and want priority conversion, so the free service should cover the needs of nearly everyone besi! des peop le producing full out web-based television series.

YouTube (Free)


YouTube has reached a level of ubiquity in the video-sharing market that for millions of internet users, YouTube is not only how they were introduced to video sharing—it's also the only video sharing site they're even aware of. Videos uploaded to YouTube have to be smaller than 2GB, and they must be 10 minutes or shorter in length if you're using a basic account. YouTube places no restriction on the number of videos you can upload as long as they follow the 2GB/10min rule. You can't edit your videos once you've uploaded them to YouTube, but you can annotate them with additional information and links. YouTube lets you embed and customize the player, again, for free.

Vimeo (Basic: Free, Plus:$60/year)


Vimeo is a video sharing service with a heavy emphasis on community and creativity. You can't host commercial content on Vimeo; instead, all uploaded content must be original and non-commercial. Vimeo accounts come in two flavors. The basic account is free and includes 500MB per week of uploaded video, including one HD video per week. You get three albums, one group, and one channel with basic accounts. Basic accounts also let you embed and share your work as well as set basic privacy restrictions. Upgrading to the Plus account kicks your upload cap to 5GB, removes the restriction on HD movies, lets you embed HD movies, and gives yo! u unlimi ted album, group, and channel creation. A Plus account also expands your privacy control and allows you to customize the embedded player.

Viddler (Free)

If you're put off by the length restrictions of some video-sharing sites, Viddler has no limit on length. As long as your file is 500MB or less in size, you can make it as long as you like. (500MB holds a lot of web-cam quality video.) In addition to the 500MB limit, you're restricted to 2GB of storage and bandwidth per month. If you sign up for a partnership account, instead of a personal account, your videos are overlaid with advertisements but the storage and bandwidth restrictions are removed. Both the personal and the partnership accounts are free.

Dailymotion (Free)

Dailymotion offers two different accounts for content sharers. The basic account allows you to upload videos up to 1GB in size. If you're sharing original content, you can sign up for a Motionmaker account. Motionmaker accounts are intended for the distribution of Creative Commons videos and allow you to upload HD content. Original content by Motionmakers is more aggressively promoted on the front page and through search results.


The technical information on the various video-sharing sites is usually buried in help files and not particularly clear in most instances. If you're basing your selection on a very specific aspect of the service like whether or no! t you ca n upload .mov files without converting them or whether or not the site supports 256kb audio, we'd highly recommend checking out this extensive set of charts on Wikipedia to see if the site meets your needs.


Now that you've had a chance to look over the top five contenders for the crown of Best Video-Sharing Site, it's time to cast your vote in the poll below:


Which Video-Sharing Service is Best?(polls)

Can't believe your favorite site didn't make the top five—or maybe we missed mentioning the feature you like best? Sound off in the comments with your video-sharing tips and tricks.



Read More...

HousingMaps Scours Craiglist For Home and Apartment Deals [Housing]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/6bYuGjYo9rg/housingmaps-scours-craiglist-for-home-and-apartment-deals

Craigslist has tons of listings for apartments, houses, and rooms but it's not particular convenient to click each listing and then cross-reference it to a map. HousingMaps combines Craiglist listings with Google Maps to make it easy to pinpoint locations.

HousingMaps searches apartments, condos, houses, and rooms for rent, as well as homes and condos for sale and subletting offers. You can narrow your search to most of the markets served by Craiglist and by price range. Additional filters allow you to search by keyword, number of rooms, pet policy, and whether or not the listing has pictures.

Search results are displayed on a map of the city and listed to the right of the map. The columns in the listing chart can be ordered ascending or descending by the various categories like price, number of rooms, and so on. It's a pretty great service when it works, and was mentioned in passing in our roundup of the top 10 real estate search tools. In passing because, like anything hooked into Craigslist's data, occasional push-back from the classifieds site can leave sites like HousingMaps high and dry, at least for a time.

HousingMaps is a free service and requires no signup.



Read More...

Intel Buys RapidMind, a Company That Makes Multicore Parallel Programming Easier [Intel]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/FqmWUbSgap0/intel-buys-rapidmind-a-company-that-makes-multicore-parallel-programming-easier

Intel just picked up RapidMind, a company that specializes in making it easy for developers to optimize and program their applications for multicore processors. Their technology sounds a little bit like Apple's GrandCentral technology built into Snow Leopard, actually. It's an interesting move, since Intel already hires more software engineers than hardware dudes because of the difficulty of parallelism. [PC World]




Read More...

Northern Michigan University teams with Motorola for campus-wide WiMAX

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/08/22/northern-michigan-university-teams-with-motorola-for-campus-wide/

Northern Michigan University was fairly early to the game in offering laptops and campus-wide WiFi to its students, and it looks like it's now stepping things up even further with a little help from Motorola, which is providing the backend for NMU's new campus-wide WiMAX network (a first in the US). Better still, the university is also providing some brand new WiMAX-equipped ThinkPads to nearly 3,000 of the school's more than 9,000 students, and it's also making a range of laptop and desktop WiMAX adapters available to students with non WiMAX-enabled computers. With a radius of some 30 miles, the network will also encompass a number of off-campus sites, and be made available to local schools and municipal offices though a licensing arrangement.

[Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons]

Filed under:

Northern Michigan University teams with Motorola for campus-wide WiMAX originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 22 Aug 2009 09:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Enhanced Gmail Plug-in for BlackBerrys arrives, but only syncs one way

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/08/22/enhanced-gmail-plug-in-for-blackberrys-arrives-but-only-syncs-o/

Lackluster Gmail support has been a real pain point for BlackBerry users, and we've really been hoping that this new "Enhanced Gmail Plug-in" would solve all that. It's out as of today, and we've certainly gotten some improvements, like support for archiving messages, marking spam and managing labels / stars. Unfortunately, these new management features are only live synced one way, from the phone to the Gmail server, so many of the actions that take place desktop side won't be reflected on the phone once that particular message has been picked up by the BlackBerry Internet Service. There's also the small problem of installing the thing: we haven't been successful so far on two different BlackBerries, and you have to make sure to uninstall the existing Gmail Plug-in. Meanwhile, in BlackBerry Enterprise Server land, the Google Apps Connector has now gone live, which means Google Apps users get push Gmail and what seems to be much tighter Exchange-style syncing. Let us know if you get either of these things working with your particular setup.

[Via Boy Genius Report]

Read - Enhanced Gmail Plug-in now available
Read - Google Apps Connector for BES now available

Filed under:

Enhanced Gmail Plug-in for BlackBerrys arrives, but only syncs one way originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 22 Aug 2009 15:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

PCI Express 3.0 specification formally delayed, products pushed to 2011

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/08/23/pci-express-3-0-specifications-formally-delayed-products-pushed/


We've been enjoying (or just dealing with, depending on perspective) PCI Express 2.0 since early 2007, and it now looks as if we may still be utilizing said protocol come early 2011. Way back in June of '08, we began to hear whispers that the next iteration of the technology would be finalized by the end of this year, but now the PCI SIG has formally delayed the release of the specification until the second quarter of 2010. What does that mean for the consumer? Try coping with the fact that you won't see a PCIe 3.0 product until 2011. As the story goes, the delay was needed in order to "maintain backward compatibility with current PCI Express standards," and while the technical details of all that may interest some, it's the awfully unfortunate setback that's most notable here. But hey, at least all those PCIe 1.0 cards that are still totally relevant will work with your next (next-next?) PC!

[Via Reg Hardware]

Filed under:

PCI Express 3.0 specification formally delayed, products pushed to 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 23 Aug 2009 04:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

AOC's 2436Vw does 24-inches of power sipping LCD on the cheap

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/08/23/aocs-2436vw-does-24-inches-of-power-sipping-lcd-on-the-cheap/

It's nothing too astonishing in the specs department (300 nits, 60,000:1 contrast, 5ms response time), and the DVI and VGA plugs are rather lonesome without an HDMI or DisplayPort plug to tag along, but we can't fault AOC for the 2436Vw's $220 pricetag. The 49W of power draw in a 24-inch 1080p display doesn't hurt either, and we're sort of digging the clean design. The 2436Vw is out now.

[Via Electronista]

Filed under:

AOC's 2436Vw does 24-inches of power sipping LCD on the cheap originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 23 Aug 2009 07:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Pharma Giants Shift Tactics in Wake of FDA Crackdown on Search - http://bit.ly/12Polo

Read More...

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Contextual Bubble Help

Contextual bubble help for webpages/blogs: dictionary, thesaurus, wikipedia, amazon, and clip2send (1-line install) - http://bit.ly/34Tca0

Read More...

HDMI 1.4 Rocks for Six Reasons, Sucks for Four More [Hdmi]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/X_UkQnD1c-w/hdmi-14-rocks-for-six-reasons-sucks-for-four-more

The new HDMI standard—1.4 to be precise—is pretty excellent, since it has an integrated Ethernet channel, 1080p 3D support and oh yeah, delicious 4K resolution images. But, like we said before, you need all-new everything for it.

TechRadar breaks down everything you need to know about HDMI 1.4 into an easy-to-digest 10-thing listicle. Personally, I'm most excited about the new Micro Connector, since I just love new kinds of cables, though sad I'll have to wait a whole year to buy it. [TechRadar, Image via Sam Catchsides/Flickr]




Read More...

World's Biggest Water Pump Under Construction In New Orleans, Would've Been Cooler Four Years Ago [Engineering]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/PpgeALwb4uM/worlds-biggest-water-pump-under-construction-in-new-orleans-wouldve-been-cooler-four-years-ago

The Army Corps of Engineers has broken ground on a serious construction project: a 150,000-gallon-per-second, $500m pumping station charged with keeping the city of New Orleans a little, uh, dryer than it has been in the last few years.

The pump is just a small part of a larger $14bn plan to seal up New Orleans' levees and bolster the city's disaster preparedness, but it's without a doubt the most visually impressive. PopSci's thrown together a couple of diagrams to give us a sense of scale, and trust me, they're necessary—see that little white thing next to the diesel engine? That's a full-sized human being. There aren't a whole lot of companies that make combustion engines that cartoonishly huge, so my money's on something from a company like Wartsila-Sulzer, which makes engines like this to spin the props on ultramassive cargo ships, and conceivably, pumps:

At any rate, the pump is expected to be operational—and NOLA slightly safer—by 2011. More at [PopSci]




Read More...

Plasma HDTV Sales Soar, LCD Sales Steady, Sony Loses Ever More Market Share [HDTVs]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/49gdSHBRMxI/plasma-hdtv-sales-soar-lcd-sales-steady-sony-loses-ever-more-market-share

HDGuru has some notes from the now-concluded second quarter HDTV sales, and they show some interesting movement: With dirt-cheap prices, high end plasmas (42"-50") surged almost 40%, though LCD sales merely held steady. The big loser? Sony.

Total plasma sales went up 31% compared to the first quarter, mostly due to the high value attached to them in this economic downturn. In terms of LCDs, Vizio continues its hold as the number 1 maker, and in fact grew their market share, as did Samsung, Toshiba and Panasonic. Sony, unfortunately, lost more than 3% of the market—a huge piece of its share—though the Japanese giant did retain its third place position. Check out HDGuru for more info and analysis of the numbers. [HDGuru]




Read More...

Lenovo's Sleek IdeaCentre Q110 Nettop Has Nvidia Ion Graphics [Lenovo]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Sxz0-aCeJkM/lenovos-sleek-ideacentre-q110-nettop-has-nvidia-ion-graphics

After teasing us over Twitter yesterday, Lenovo has now outlined full specs and pricing for its new Q100/Q110 nettops, and D400 Home Server. Both nettops are 0.7-inches thin, and the Q110 has Nvidia Ion graphics with 1080p HDMI output.

The $349 IdeaCentre Q110 has 2GB of memory and a 250GB hard disk, versus the $249 Q100's 1GB RAM and 160GB hard drive. Both use a lowly single-core Atom 230 processor, but I guess they are tiny systems, and Atom is a requirement for Ion.

Each also has Gigabit Ethernet, an 802.11b/g Wi-Fi dongle, and run either XP Home or Vista Premium. No keyboard or mouse is included.

Meanwhile, the IdeaCentre D400 will start at about $499, and support up to 8TB of storage over four hard drives. Specs include an Atom 230 single-core CPU, 1GB memory, Gigabit Ethernet, plus 1eSATA and 5 USB ports.

The company has had a bunch of new gear of late, including the IdeaCentre C100 All-in-One and IdeaCentre Q700 HTPC.




Read More...

Asus Tops Apple Again in Reliability Rankings [Reliability]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Vkc_XaA28t4/asus-tops-apple-again-in-reliability-rankings

Asus has held onto its lead over Apple in the second quarter RESCUECOM Consumer Reliability Report, scoring 416 to Apple's result of 394. IBM/Lenovo and Toshiba came in third and fourth, with scores of 394 and 314, respectively.

The report aims to provide unbiased data on big name computers by taking into account both market share and the amount of repair and service calls RESCUECOM had to handle.

"Because ASUS just introduced the newest version of the EEE laptop last fall, the original predicted computer reliability of this laptop has been somewhat up in the air," says David A. Milman, RESCUECOM's founder and CEO.

"However, a good eight months later, we're still receiving the fewest calls for computer repair and support with ASUS, while their market share is increasing, adding the EEE desktop to their line as well, indicating that this PC is continuing to prove itself in terms of computer reliability."

[RESCUECOM Report via PR Newswire]




Read More...

ASUS' Ion-based Eee Top ET2002T makes itself known in France

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/08/18/asus-ion-based-eee-top-et2002t-makes-itself-known-in-france/


ASUS sort of got official with its Eee Top ET2002T back at Computex in June, but it's looks like things are now a whole lot more real in France, where Blogee.net has gotten the pics and the complete specs of the all-in-one desktop. In addition to that all-important (and already known) Ion chipset, this one comes packing a 20-inch 1,600 x 900 display, an Atom 330 processor, 2GB of RAM, a 250GB hard drive, a DVD burner, and even an HDMI input in case you want to simply use it as a display, among some other fairly standard specs (detailed at the link below). Still no word on an official price or release over here, unfortunately, but it'll apparently be available in Europe in "several weeks" and run a not so low €598, or about $845.

Filed under:

ASUS' Ion-based Eee Top ET2002T makes itself known in France originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Aug 2009 18:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Acer reportedly set to launch three touch-enabled, Windows 7-based devices

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/08/18/acer-reportedly-set-to-launch-three-touch-enabled-windows-7-bas/


Another company producing yet more products that take advantage of Windows 7's much-vaunted touch capabilities? Amazing but true, at least according to DigiTimes, which is reporting that Acer is set to launch no less than three "touch-enabled products" loaded with Windows 7. That word apparently comes straight from a product manager in the company's mobile computer department, who also went on to say that touch-enabled netbooks might see "good market acceptance" if they're marketed as cheaper alternatives to tablet PCs, although it's not clear if the products in question are actually touch-enabled netbooks. In other touch-related news, Acer is also reportedly looking at using in-cell touch panel technology when it becomes widely available, which should be cheaper to produce than conventional touch panels that don't have all the necessary touch components built right in at the LCD panel level.

Filed under: , ,

Acer reportedly set to launch three touch-enabled, Windows 7-based devices originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Aug 2009 19:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Acer Veriton N260G nettop arrives, does not blow minds

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/08/18/acer-veriton-n260g-nettop-arrives-does-not-blow-minds/


Alright, we understand that Acer's new Veriton N260G Atom nettop is primarily aimed at businesses and comes with novel features like "OneButton Recovery" system restore and "eLock Management" for data security, but the pricing seems way out of line to us: the NVIDIA Ion-powered AspireRevo starts at $299, while the Veriton uses the far less powerful Intel GMA 4500MHD chip and costs $399. That's pretty much all we need to know, but if you're still interested there's more info at the read link.

Filed under:

Acer Veriton N260G nettop arrives, does not blow minds originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Aug 2009 23:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Windows Mobile 6.5 'touch interface' update in February to coexist with WinMo 7?

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/08/19/windows-mobile-6-5-touch-interface-update-in-february-to-coexi/

The evidence that Windows Mobile 6.5 could soon be moving beyond the stylus to gather finger-friendly, multi-touch, capacitive screens into its long, loving arms has been mounting with the leak of the HTC Leo ROM and TouchFlo 3D 2.6. Such a move would quickly put Microsoft back on track to compete with the iPhone and Android devices like the HTC Hero. Now DigiTimes, based on sourced information from Taiwanese handset makers, is reporting a "touch interface" version of Windows Mobile 6.5 set for release in February 2010 -- an upgrade to the initial Windows Mobile 6.5 launch expected on October 1st. However, instead of phasing out Windows Mobile 6.5 with the Q4 2010 launch of Windows Mobile 7, DigiTimes asserts that Microsoft will lower the price of WinMo 6.5 to compete against open-source Android devices while positioning WinMo 7 to go head-to-head with the iPhone. In other words, Microsoft appears to be adopting a dual-platform mobile strategy like we've heard before, regardless of Steve Ballmer's recent grandstanding against Google's dual-platform approach.

Filed under:

Windows Mobile 6.5 'touch interface' update in February to coexist with WinMo 7? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Aug 2009 02:06:00 E! ST. Ple ase see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Nine HDTVs form 3D visualization rig, but only in the name of science

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/08/19/nine-hdtvs-form-3d-visualization-rig-but-only-in-the-name-of-sc/

If you're the kind of person who happens to have a number of LCD HDTV's lying around, we suggest you give University of California, San Diego's Calit2 Visualization Team a ring. Researchers from the group have constructed a three-column, nine-panel 3D display using flat screens from JVC, stereoscopic glasses, and "game PCs with high end NVIDIA game engines." Dubbed NexCAVE, it's a much more inexpensive version of the its projector-powered StarCAVE used for data analysis, although its range is more limited -- on the plus side, however, since this is LCD, it can be used in bright rooms. At 6,000 x 1,500 pixel, the resolution isn't as mind-blowing as we'd hope, but the team is currently building a version for Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah University for Science and Technology (KAUST) that's 7 columns (totaling 21 panels) and 15,000 x 1,500 resolution. If nothing else, any chance we can play Mirror's Edge on this? Video demonstration of the nine-panel rig after the break.

[Via PhysOrg]

Continue reading Nine HDTVs form 3D visualization rig, but only in the name of science

Filed under:

Nine HDTVs form 3D visualization rig, but only in the name of science originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Aug 2009 04:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Garmin-Asus nuvifone M20 launches in Taiwan, Windows Mobile and all

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/08/19/garmin-asus-nuvifone-m20-launches-in-taiwan-windows-mobile-and/

Following last month's launch of the proprietary OS'd G60, Taiwan's now playing host to the Windows Mobile-based M20 from Garmin-Asus, the joint venture's second model. Local carrier Chunghwa will be carrying the phone, which features HSDPA, a VGA display, 3 megapixel cam, and comprehensive navigation capabilities that earn it the Garmin name -- but it turns out they'll also be launching the iPhone 3GS and Hero in the next few days, a situation that effectively defines the phrase "hostile competitive landscape." Best of luck, Garmin-Asus -- given the Duke Nukem-esque delays you've encountered in your bumpy road to retail, you need all the luck you can get if you want to turn a profit any time soon.

Filed under: , ,

Garmin-Asus nuvifone M20 launches in Taiwan, Windows Mobile and all originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Aug 2009 05:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Fujitsu unleashes CELSIUS ULTRA specs, offers test drives at gamescom

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/08/19/fujitsu-unleashes-celsius-ultra-specs-offers-test-drives-at-gam/

And now we know what the "world's fastest" air-cooled gaming rig is made of -- a 3.33GHz Intel Core i7-975 and a pair of souped-up GeForce GTX 295s running in SLI. They're backed up by 12GB of DDR3 memory, a 150GB WD Raptor as an OS drive and two 1TB storage hangars, but you must be wondering where all that German ultra clocking is. Well, the motherboard is of Fujitsu's own making and a custom tweaker-ready BIOS is promised, but the truth is we really can't see anything overclocked especially for this rig. Which is not to say it won't be the most powerful pixel pusher in the world (this week), with hardware like that we're sure you'll be able to run Vista Business without a hitch... oh yea, that's the listed OS, and since we're spilling bad news, recommended price tag is €4,000. If you're anywhere near Cologne this week, head on down to gamescom, and if you ask really nicely, the Fujitsu people might even let you play on this fiery beast of a machine. See it undressed after the break.

[Via Netzwelt]

Continue reading Fujitsu unleashes CELSIUS ULTRA specs, offers test drives at gamescom

Filed under: ,

Fujitsu unleashes CELSIUS ULTRA specs, offers test drives at gamescom originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Aug 2009 05:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...