Plextor launched what it claims as the world's smallest DVD writer, a slim external unit aimed at notebook users. It weighs 250g, 1.6cm high and barely bigger than a CD.
The PX-608CU supports all DVD recordable and rewriteable formats, including dual-layer media. Speeds range from 4x to 8x. It burns CD-R/RW discs at 24x and has 2MB of buffer memory on board.
It connects via USB 2.0, doesn't need a separate AC adaptor which is a boon for laptop users.
Plextor also launched an ATAPI-connected internal version of the drive named PX-608AL. It has a slot-load mechanism - the external drive pops open like an old-style portable CD player. Both drives come with a two-year collect and return warranty.
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World’s Smallest DVD Writer Launched
11:41 PM
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That's the world's largest capacity 1.8-inch hard disk drive right there. A claim met by a list of specs going a little something like this: 3.0Gbps SATA interface, 320GB capacity, 5,400 RPM, 16MB buffer, and 19dB of emitted noise during seeks -- a 4dB cut from Toshiba's previous generation of 5,400 RPM 1.8-inchers. Of course, these 1.8-inch mechanical HDDs are the form factor most commonly found in those netbook-shoving CULV thin-and-light ultraportables now coming onto the market. Look for it in December when the MK3233GSG hits mass production.
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The world’s thinnest 2.5-inch hard disk drive for the smallest laptops and netbooks.
The device can also be used in backup devices and consumer electronics gear. The drive is wafer-thin at 7 millimeters in height, about 25 percent smaller than the traditional 2.5-inch laptop hard drives that are 9.5 millimeters thick. Seagate says the small drive will enable a new breed of entry-level thin laptops.
About 90 percent of netbook computers — smaller than laptops and meant for cruising the web — currently use 9.5-mm 2.5-inch laptop drives. That’s because the smaller 1.8-inch hard drives and solid state flash memory drives are too expensive for the market. The Momentus Thin drive can rival other laptop drives in performance and power efficiency. It is available in 250 gigabyte and 160 gigabyte capacities. It includes an eight megabyte cache, a Serial ATA 3Gb/second interface and a 5400 RPM spin speed. It will ship to customers in January.
Soon after that, we’ll start to see even thinner and cheaper laptops and netbooks. The race toward thin computers is helping to drive mass adoption of laptops and netbooks all over the world.
About 90 percent of netbook computers — smaller than laptops and meant for cruising the web — currently use 9.5-mm 2.5-inch laptop drives. That’s because the smaller 1.8-inch hard drives and solid state flash memory drives are too expensive for the market. The Momentus Thin drive can rival other laptop drives in performance and power efficiency. It is available in 250 gigabyte and 160 gigabyte capacities. It includes an eight megabyte cache, a Serial ATA 3Gb/second interface and a 5400 RPM spin speed. It will ship to customers in January.
Soon after that, we’ll start to see even thinner and cheaper laptops and netbooks. The race toward thin computers is helping to drive mass adoption of laptops and netbooks all over the world.
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Google is a company that has built a single very large, custom computer. It's running their own cluster operating system. They make their big computer even bigger and faster each month, while lowering the cost of CPU cycles. It's looking more like a general purpose platform than a cluster optimized for a single application.
While competitors are targeting the individual applications Google has deployed, Google is building a massive, general purpose computing platform for web-scale programming.
This computer is running the world's top search engine, a social networking service, a shopping price comparison engine, a new email service, and a local search/yellow pages engine. What will they do next with the world's biggest computer and most advanced operating system?
I was thrilled reading this today because I had been thinking along the same lines as I wondered about Gmail (and the 1GB of storage in particular)...and that Skrenta had made the argument so well. This weekend, as I hacked through a bunch of XHTML and CSS for an upcoming site redesign, I jotted down a few notes for a follow-up on a post I made over a year ago called Google is not a search company. I was going to call it "GooOS, the Google Operating System".
My notes contained two of Skrenta's main points: the importance of the supercomputer and the scores of Ph.Ds being Google's main assets. A third key asset for Google is the data that they're storing on those 100,000 computers. As I said in that post:
Google's money won't be made with search...that's small peanuts compared to selling access to the world's biggest, best, and most cleverly-utilized map of the web.
So. They have this huge map of the Web and are aware of how people move around in the virtual space it represents. They have the perfect place to store this map (one of the world's largest computers that's all but incapable of crashing). And they are clever at reading this map. Google knows what people write about, what they search for, what they shop for, they know who wants to advertise and how effective those advertisements are, and they're about to know how we communicate with friends and loved ones. What can they do with all that? Just about anything that collection of Ph.Ds can dream up.
Tim O'Reilly has talked about various bits from the Web morphing into "the emergent Internet operating system"; the small pieces loosely joining, if you will. Google seems to be heading there already, all by themselves. By building and then joining a bunch of the small pieces by themselves, Google can take full advantage of the economies of scale and avoid the difficulties of interop.
Google isn't worried about Yahoo! or Microsoft's search efforts...although the media's focus on that is probably to their advantage. Their real target is Windows. Who needs Windows when anyone can have free unlimited access to the world's fastest computer running the smartest operating system? Mobile devices don't need big, bloated OSes...they'll be perfect platforms for accessing the GooOS. Using Gnome and Linux as a starting point, Google should design an OS for desktop computers that's modified to use the GooOS and sell it right alongside Windows ($200) at CompUSA for $10/apiece (available free online of course). Google Office (Goffice?) will be built in, with all your data stored locally, backed up remotely, and available to whomever it needs to be (SubEthaEdit-style collaboration on Word/Excel/PowerPoint-esque documents is only the beginning). Email, shopping, games, music, news, personal publishing, etc.; all the stuff that people use their computers for, it's all there.
Even though everyone's down on Google these days, they remain the most interesting company in the world and I'm optimistic about their potential and success (while also apprehensive about the prospect of using Google for absolutely everything someday...I'll be cursing the Google monopoly in 5 years time). If they stay on target with their plans to leverage their three core assets (which, if Gmail is any indication, they will), I predict Google will be the biggest and most important company in the world in 5-8 years.
While competitors are targeting the individual applications Google has deployed, Google is building a massive, general purpose computing platform for web-scale programming.
This computer is running the world's top search engine, a social networking service, a shopping price comparison engine, a new email service, and a local search/yellow pages engine. What will they do next with the world's biggest computer and most advanced operating system?
I was thrilled reading this today because I had been thinking along the same lines as I wondered about Gmail (and the 1GB of storage in particular)...and that Skrenta had made the argument so well. This weekend, as I hacked through a bunch of XHTML and CSS for an upcoming site redesign, I jotted down a few notes for a follow-up on a post I made over a year ago called Google is not a search company. I was going to call it "GooOS, the Google Operating System".
My notes contained two of Skrenta's main points: the importance of the supercomputer and the scores of Ph.Ds being Google's main assets. A third key asset for Google is the data that they're storing on those 100,000 computers. As I said in that post:
Google's money won't be made with search...that's small peanuts compared to selling access to the world's biggest, best, and most cleverly-utilized map of the web.
So. They have this huge map of the Web and are aware of how people move around in the virtual space it represents. They have the perfect place to store this map (one of the world's largest computers that's all but incapable of crashing). And they are clever at reading this map. Google knows what people write about, what they search for, what they shop for, they know who wants to advertise and how effective those advertisements are, and they're about to know how we communicate with friends and loved ones. What can they do with all that? Just about anything that collection of Ph.Ds can dream up.
Tim O'Reilly has talked about various bits from the Web morphing into "the emergent Internet operating system"; the small pieces loosely joining, if you will. Google seems to be heading there already, all by themselves. By building and then joining a bunch of the small pieces by themselves, Google can take full advantage of the economies of scale and avoid the difficulties of interop.
Google isn't worried about Yahoo! or Microsoft's search efforts...although the media's focus on that is probably to their advantage. Their real target is Windows. Who needs Windows when anyone can have free unlimited access to the world's fastest computer running the smartest operating system? Mobile devices don't need big, bloated OSes...they'll be perfect platforms for accessing the GooOS. Using Gnome and Linux as a starting point, Google should design an OS for desktop computers that's modified to use the GooOS and sell it right alongside Windows ($200) at CompUSA for $10/apiece (available free online of course). Google Office (Goffice?) will be built in, with all your data stored locally, backed up remotely, and available to whomever it needs to be (SubEthaEdit-style collaboration on Word/Excel/PowerPoint-esque documents is only the beginning). Email, shopping, games, music, news, personal publishing, etc.; all the stuff that people use their computers for, it's all there.
Even though everyone's down on Google these days, they remain the most interesting company in the world and I'm optimistic about their potential and success (while also apprehensive about the prospect of using Google for absolutely everything someday...I'll be cursing the Google monopoly in 5 years time). If they stay on target with their plans to leverage their three core assets (which, if Gmail is any indication, they will), I predict Google will be the biggest and most important company in the world in 5-8 years.
Google operating system
5:44 AM
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DataWind rolls out a new 7-inch netbook dubbed UbiSurfer for amazing Internet access along with Web browsing. This portable netbook comes with Wi-Fi, LAN and embedded wireless data modem and SIM for optimum consistent Internet connection.
It offers embedded SIM and GPRS modem through Vodafone network. This netbook flaunts a full QWERTY keyboard, 800 x 480 pixels resolution, three USB ports, integrated microphone and speakers. It also bundles up an ARM processor, SDHC memory card slot, Touchpad mouse pointer, 25GB of online storage, 1GB of internal flash memory and 128MB of RAM. Weighing 700g, UbiSurfer sports fingerprint and scratch resistant piano black or rubberized matt finish.
Suneet S. Tuli, CEO of Datawind commented, “Our main driver as a company is to offer free internet to everyone, everywhere. With the UbiSurfer we are offering 30 hours a month of free usage and we mean free, no hidden costs, no wires and no contract and it’s this that sets us apart from others in the market.”As for the UbiSurfer hardware itself, as well as the 800 x 480 screen there’s 1GB of storage, 128MB of RAM, three USB 2.0 ports, an SD card reader and built-in microphone and speakers. Software includes DataWind’s own browser, basic office apps, calendar and email, a basic graphics app and some games. It also comes with the DataWind software that includes basic office apps, DataWind’s own browser, calendar and email, a basic graphics app and some games.
With the DataWind web acceleration system, the UbiSurfer is said to take less time to load web pages. It opens a web page in about five to seven seconds. However, this system does not support video streaming.
It will provide free usage of 30 hours per month for the first year. Users may have to pay maximum £29.99 for the whole year at 30 hours per month. Heavy users may enjoy unlimited access for only £5.99 a month.
Users can choose from £5.99 per month or a one-off charge of £59.99 to upgrade their unlimited mobile access. Users may be charged $0.08 per minute roaming charges in US and Europe on the GPRS connection.
It offers embedded SIM and GPRS modem through Vodafone network. This netbook flaunts a full QWERTY keyboard, 800 x 480 pixels resolution, three USB ports, integrated microphone and speakers. It also bundles up an ARM processor, SDHC memory card slot, Touchpad mouse pointer, 25GB of online storage, 1GB of internal flash memory and 128MB of RAM. Weighing 700g, UbiSurfer sports fingerprint and scratch resistant piano black or rubberized matt finish.
Suneet S. Tuli, CEO of Datawind commented, “Our main driver as a company is to offer free internet to everyone, everywhere. With the UbiSurfer we are offering 30 hours a month of free usage and we mean free, no hidden costs, no wires and no contract and it’s this that sets us apart from others in the market.”As for the UbiSurfer hardware itself, as well as the 800 x 480 screen there’s 1GB of storage, 128MB of RAM, three USB 2.0 ports, an SD card reader and built-in microphone and speakers. Software includes DataWind’s own browser, basic office apps, calendar and email, a basic graphics app and some games. It also comes with the DataWind software that includes basic office apps, DataWind’s own browser, calendar and email, a basic graphics app and some games.
With the DataWind web acceleration system, the UbiSurfer is said to take less time to load web pages. It opens a web page in about five to seven seconds. However, this system does not support video streaming.
It will provide free usage of 30 hours per month for the first year. Users may have to pay maximum £29.99 for the whole year at 30 hours per month. Heavy users may enjoy unlimited access for only £5.99 a month.
Users can choose from £5.99 per month or a one-off charge of £59.99 to upgrade their unlimited mobile access. Users may be charged $0.08 per minute roaming charges in US and Europe on the GPRS connection.
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Features
5.25 Inch Bays: 3 External bays
3.5 Inch Bays: 1 External bay, 5 Internal bays
Motherboard Form Factors: Standard ATX & Micro-ATX motherboards
Front USB Ports: 2 Front USB Ports
Front Audio Ports: 1 Audio-out Jack + 1 Mic-in jack
Cooling Fans: Bundled with 1 x 9cm and 1 x 8cm cooling fans
Heat Vent: Heat-vent chimney technology for better air flow
Power Supply: iBall LPE223-400 (250 W) power supply
Available Colours: Red & Black
Dimensions: 16.1 x 7.0 x 17.5 inches (H x W x L)
Features
5.25 Inch Bays: 3 External bays
3.5 Inch Bays: 1 External bay, 5 Internal bays
Motherboard Form Factors: Standard ATX & Micro-ATX motherboards
Front USB Ports: 2 Front USB Ports
Front Audio Ports: 1 Audio-out Jack + 1 Mic-in jack
Cooling Fans: Bundled with 1 x 9cm and 1 x 8cm cooling fans
Heat Vent: Heat-vent chimney technology for better air flow
Power Supply: iBall LPE223-400 (250 W) power supply
Available Colours: Red & Black
Dimensions: 16.1 x 7.0 x 17.5 inches (H x W x L)
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Features:
2.4 inch (6.1 cms) super TFT 26K colours screen.
MP5 Player with AVI, ASF, MP4, 3GP, FLV, DAT, MPG and many other Video files playback support
MP3, WMA, WAV, AAC & AMR Audio playback support
JPG, BMP, GIF and PNG Photo viewer with different angle photo browsing option
Voice recording
FM radio tuner with recording
Mini SD card slot for memory expansion
Dual earphone output. Connect 2 earphones simultaneously
Built-in powerful speaker
Built-in games
Text file browsing with auto read option
MP3 Playback: MP3, WMA, WAV, AAC & AMR Audio playback
Video Playback: AVI, ASF, MP4, 3GP, FLV, DAT, MPG and many other Video files playback
Photo Playback: JPEG, BMP, GIF and PNG photo viewer with option of photo browsing in different angles
FM Radio: Built-in FM Radio tuner with 20 presets
FM Recording: You can record directly from your FM station to the player memory
Voice Recording: Normal and high quality voice recording
USB Flash Drive: Use as USB mass storage drive
Repeat Function: Repeat A-B function can be a powerful tool for learning languages
ID3 Tags: Supports ID3 tags & lyrics display
Multi-Language Menu: Choose from 20 different language options
LCD Screen: Big 2.4 inch (6.1 cms) super TFT 26K colours screen
Equalizer: 12 Mode Equalizer
E-Book Function: Text files browsing with auto read option Expandable Memory
Mini SD card slot for expanding memory upto 2GB
Games: Built-in game
Interface: USB 2.0 high-speed transmission makes it easy and speedy to exchange files with
Video Playback: AVI, ASF, MP4, 3GP, FLV, DAT, MPG and many other Video files playback
Photo Playback: JPEG, BMP, GIF and PNG photo viewer with option of photo browsing in different angles
FM Radio: Built-in FM Radio tuner with 20 presets
FM Recording: You can record directly from your FM station to the player memory
Voice Recording: Normal and high quality voice recording
USB Flash Drive: Use as USB mass storage drive
Repeat Function: Repeat A-B function can be a powerful tool for learning languages
ID3 Tags: Supports ID3 tags & lyrics display
Multi-Language Menu: Choose from 20 different language options
LCD Screen: Big 2.4 inch (6.1 cms) super TFT 26K colours screen
Equalizer: 12 Mode Equalizer
E-Book Function: Text files browsing with auto read option Expandable Memory
Mini SD card slot for expanding memory upto 2GB
Games: Built-in game
Interface: USB 2.0 high-speed transmission makes it easy and speedy to exchange files with
your PC
Charging Option: USB Port & Direct Power
Firmware Upgradeable: Yes
Battery: Built-in rechargeable Li-polymer battery. High capacity 850mAh battery for longer play time.
Battery Life: Video Playback - Max. 6 hours, MP3 Playback - Max. 9 hours
Available Capacities: 2 GB
Available Colours: Metallic Red
Dimensions: 47 x 82 x12 mm ( H x W x D )
Weight: 65 gms
Bundled Softwares: Driver for Win98SE, AVI Video Convertor
Bundled Accessories: High quality earphone, USB Cable, Power Adaptor, Utility CD, Neck Strap, User Manual
Warranty: 1 Year
Charging Option: USB Port & Direct Power
Firmware Upgradeable: Yes
Battery: Built-in rechargeable Li-polymer battery. High capacity 850mAh battery for longer play time.
Battery Life: Video Playback - Max. 6 hours, MP3 Playback - Max. 9 hours
Available Capacities: 2 GB
Available Colours: Metallic Red
Dimensions: 47 x 82 x12 mm ( H x W x D )
Weight: 65 gms
Bundled Softwares: Driver for Win98SE, AVI Video Convertor
Bundled Accessories: High quality earphone, USB Cable, Power Adaptor, Utility CD, Neck Strap, User Manual
Warranty: 1 Year
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MEDIA PLAYERS
IVO-515i
Features :
In-built Memory : 2GB & 4GB
Comes in 02 colours – White & Black
PC Free Operation
2.4” High brightness TFT Screen
Real Time Clock Display
Play Music/FM While Browsing Picture and Game
User Specific Equalizer setting with SRS WOW/WOW HD
Mini SD Card- Expandable Memory
Hi-Fi Earphone
Built-in Speaker
Fm RADIO With Recording function
Voice recording
Transfer Content from PC/SD Card
Multiple Charging : USB/ADAPTER
Supporting Format Of:WMV / AVI / JPEG / GIF / MPEG4 / MP3 / WMA / WAV / APE / BMP / XVID / MPEG / OGG
IVO-515i
Features :
In-built Memory : 2GB & 4GB
Comes in 02 colours – White & Black
PC Free Operation
2.4” High brightness TFT Screen
Real Time Clock Display
Play Music/FM While Browsing Picture and Game
User Specific Equalizer setting with SRS WOW/WOW HD
Mini SD Card- Expandable Memory
Hi-Fi Earphone
Built-in Speaker
Fm RADIO With Recording function
Voice recording
Transfer Content from PC/SD Card
Multiple Charging : USB/ADAPTER
Supporting Format Of:WMV / AVI / JPEG / GIF / MPEG4 / MP3 / WMA / WAV / APE / BMP / XVID / MPEG / OGG
Moserbaer IVO-515i media player
1:23 AM
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Intel has put its Larrabee graphics processor plans on hold indefinitely. The project produced impressive results at a supercomputing contest earlier this year, but it's also been plagued by a series of delays. For now, Intel will instead use the technology as a software development platform for internal and external use.
Intel Puts Larrabee Chip on Ice
6:08 AM
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Some trends that have gained a strong foothold will persist in 2010. For example, continued growth in the sheer quantity of digital information will continue to propel data deduplication and SSDs. The green IT movement will push cloud servics, and the customer will rule. Some new trends will also emerge: Spending will shift to pre-integrated systems, and new hybrid computing platforms will emerge.
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iPad Features :
1/2" thin and only 1 1/2 lbs
9.7" IPS display with multi-touch sensors
1GHz Apple A4 chip.
Wi-Fi 802.11n, Bluetooth 2.1 EDR
Supports 16 to 64 GB Flash Storage
Accelerometer
Compass
Speaker
Microphone
30-pin connector
10 hours of battery life, 1 month standby
Environmentally friendly being Arsenic-free, BRF-free, Mercury-free, PVC-free and is highly recyclable.
Runs all iPhone apps, and can run them full screen by doubling the pixels.
9.7" IPS display with multi-touch sensors
1GHz Apple A4 chip.
Wi-Fi 802.11n, Bluetooth 2.1 EDR
Supports 16 to 64 GB Flash Storage
Accelerometer
Compass
Speaker
Microphone
30-pin connector
10 hours of battery life, 1 month standby
Environmentally friendly being Arsenic-free, BRF-free, Mercury-free, PVC-free and is highly recyclable.
Runs all iPhone apps, and can run them full screen by doubling the pixels.
New technology in Apple I-pad
11:52 PM
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Specifications :
2.4inch TFT LCD colorful screen (16 million colors)
Supported video formats: - MP4 / 3GP / AVI / divX / ASF and dat files with real-time play effect
Supported audio formats: - MP3 / WAV formats
Supported image formats: - JPG / GIF / BMP
Built-in microphone recording
Electronic book, calendar and time display
Multi languages menu
7 preset equalizers
MicroSD card to extend space
Lithium battery
Loud speaker
Soft buttons and easy menu navigation
Enhanced battery life
2.4inch TFT LCD colorful screen (16 million colors)
Supported video formats: - MP4 / 3GP / AVI / divX / ASF and dat files with real-time play effect
Supported audio formats: - MP3 / WAV formats
Supported image formats: - JPG / GIF / BMP
Built-in microphone recording
Electronic book, calendar and time display
Multi languages menu
7 preset equalizers
MicroSD card to extend space
Lithium battery
Loud speaker
Soft buttons and easy menu navigation
Enhanced battery life