Dell Adamo falls to under $1,000 for the first time, tempts you mercilessly

You know what’s hard to resist? This. You know what else is difficult to turn a blind eye to? One of the sexiest machines Dell has ever made, at a price point that’s below the all-important four figure mark. Starting today, the Adamo Admire is sporting an altogether sultry base price of $999, which nets you a 1.4GHz Core 2 Duo processor, Windows 7 Home (64-bit), 2GB of DDR3 RAM and a 128GB solid state drive. If that’s a little weak for your tastes, the upmarket Adamo Desire has also undergone a price reduction, enabling you to get a 2.1GHz Core 2 Duo chip, 4GB of memory, integrated mobile broadband and a 256GB SSD for $1,799 — a full $500 less than it was in October. You’re blowing it off like you just don’t care, but you know you’ll be back to visit that Source link when no one’s looking. And the video after the jump, too.

[Thanks, Ben and Ryan]

Continue reading Dell Adamo falls to under $1,000 for the first time, tempts you mercilessly

Dell Adamo falls to under $1,000 for the first time, tempts you mercilessly originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jan 2010 15:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDell  | Email this | Comments

Will Nokia Respond To The iPad?

Nokia had a great quarter at the end of last year, exceeding analysts’ expectations as it blew out smart phones pretty much everywhere except the USA. But this week everyone’s minds are on tablets, and in an earnings call this morning transcribed by SeekingAlpha.com, Nokia CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo had a few things to say that may have been connected to the iPad.
His comments are a little opaque, so let me give you the full text and then I’ll try to parse it for you.
“When it comes to the tablets and products like that, we did explore and are exploring as we speak with the Nokia booklet has capped and tremendous response in the market place. Of course, it’s more like exploring as opposed to do a product that will become the market leader. But I think that experience that we have gotten there, the traction we are getting, the understanding that we can deliver in different type of home factors to make us really look at the overall tablet markets and different types of converged devices between the mobile phone and the PC as these two industries start to merge anyhow. So you will see more in this space going forward without making any product announcements here.” (Thanks to SeekingAlpha for the transcript.)
My translation: We’re interested in making things that fit between laptops and phones, like the iPad. We’re going to be doing more of them. The Nokia Booklet 3G was an experiment. We learned from that experience (and presumably also from the ongoing Nokia N900 experiment.) Watch this space, folks.

The Engadget Podcast, live at 4:15PM EST!

Hey, what do you think we’ll be talking about this week? We’ll be live at 4:15PM EST, get cozy in the chat below!

Update: It’s over! We’ll have the recording up in 20 minutes. Kidding. But soon, really soon.

The Engadget Podcast, live at 4:15PM EST! originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jan 2010 15:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Adobe on Flash and the iPad: ‘Apple is continuing to impose restrictions on their devices’

Adobe’s been trying to get Flash on the iPhone with zero success since Steve Jobs first held the thing in the air in 2007, and it looks like the tension is only going to grow as the iPhone OS moves onto the iPad. We noticed that the iPad doesn’t have Flash support almost immediately when Jobs was demoing the browser, and the Adobe Flash Platform blog picked right up on it, saying:

It looks like Apple is continuing to impose restrictions on their devices that limit both content publishers and consumers. Unlike many other ebook readers using the ePub file format, consumers will not be able to access ePub content with Apple’s DRM technology on devices made by other manufacturers. And without Flash support, iPad users will not be able to access the full range of web content, including over 70% of games and 75% of video on the web.

If I want to use the iPad to connect to Disney, Hulu, Miniclip, Farmville, ESPN, Kongregate, or JibJab — not to mention the millions of other sites on the web — I’ll be out of luck.

Yep, that sounds about right — and Adobe goes on to point out that the Open Screen Project is bringing Flash to all sorts of other devices. Considering the Nokia N900 runs Flash 9 extremely well on a 600MHz ARM Cortex A8-based TI OMAP 3 processor (and the Palm Pre, which uses the same chip, will be able to run Flash 10.1 when webOS 1.4 comes out) we don’t see any reason other than politics that the iPad can’t do it on that fancy new 1GHz dual-core Cortex A9-based A4 chip. Turns out people might think “the best way to experience the web” might involve a little Hulu, you know?

Adobe on Flash and the iPad: ‘Apple is continuing to impose restrictions on their devices’ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jan 2010 15:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Daring Fireball  |  sourceAdobe Flash Blog  | Email this | Comments

Samsung’s 3D Blu-ray player available for preorder on Amazon: $399 – Update: Not anymore

It feels like we just left our shutter glasses behind at CES, but already a few of Samsung’s new 2010 Blu-ray players (all featuring Internet@TV and Samsung Apps features) have popped up for preorders on Amazon, including the 3D playing BD-C6900. The company just announced 240HZ 3D LCDs have begun mass production and isn’t waiting for the competition before diving in, issuing the first price we’ve seen for one of the new players at a penny shy of $400. Moving down the line the super slim and woodgrain textured, but 2D only, BD-C7500 is also $399.99, while the speedy BD-C6500 and its promised 15 second bootup time is set for $299. The entry level and eco-focused BD-C5500 is still unpriced but instead of asking whether you can afford the price of a 3D Blu-ray player, ask yourself if you can afford not to own a Blu-ray player with a hole in the top. The answer should be obvious.

Update: Whoops, and now they’re gone, disappearing from Amazon as quickly as they came. Will that pricing information stick? We’ll wait for an official announcement, but they all seem probable from here.

Samsung’s 3D Blu-ray player available for preorder on Amazon: $399 – Update: Not anymore originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jan 2010 15:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink 3D-Display-Info  |  sourceAmazon  | Email this | Comments

Coming soon: EntroSys motorcycle air conditioner

It looks like an air-conditioning system for bikers is finally moving out of cold storage, with trials being conducted that should lead to a commercial rollout.

Liebermann Olympus 20″ Laptop Computer

This article was written on May 31, 2006 by CyberNet.

Liebermann Olympus 20
 

Is a 20″ laptop actually portable enough to be considered a laptop? Well, the 20.1″ Liebermann Olympus is pushing the limits with a specification list that is out of this world. This is a real gamers PC with dual 1GB graphics cards and both Blue-Ray and HD-DVD drives! Here is the list of specs:

  • 20.1″ widescreen – 1920×1200 resolution OLED
  • Single or Dual Core desktop processor up to 4.50GHz
  • PCI-Express architecture
  • 4GB DDR SDRAM
  • Built-in 3 megapixel camera
  • 1066 MHz BUS
  • Dual SLI Nvidia graphics (upgradable)
  • 7-1 card reader
  • Instant-On technology
  • PuRAM Solid State system drive
  • Dual internal SATA hard drives
  • Dual Blue-Ray and HD-DVD optical drives
  • 5 enhanced speakers plus subwoofer
  • PAL/NTSC HDTV internal tuner
  • Digital audio
  • Dual 64 bit PCI-Express CardBus
  • Firewire 800
  • USB2
  • Gigabit LAN
  • 108g turbo wireless
  • Bluetooth
  • High speed infrared
  • Quad DVI output
  • S-Video out

I bet it has great battery life, too :D .

News Source: Notebook Review

Copyright © 2010 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

Related Posts:


Apple and Fujitsu inevitably caught up in iPad trademark dispute

Well, here we go again. Apple might have stolen all the headlines yesterday with the iPad, but as we’ve already noted, that name has been in dispute since September — and it doesn’t look like Fujitsu, which has been selling its own iPad since 2002, is going to back down. “It’s our understanding that the name is ours,” Fujitsu PR director Masahiro Yamane told the New York Times. Maybe, but it’s not quite that simple. Here’s the deal: Fujitsu applied for the “iPad” mark in 2003, specifically covering handheld devices used in retail. (The Fujitsu iPad is a $2,000 Windows CE point-of-sale device.) Along the way, the application got bogged down because a company called Mag-Tek had already registered IPAD for its line of PIN-entry keypads, and Fujitsu’s application was listed as “abandoned” in April of 2009. The notice of abandonment apparently woke someone at Fujitsu up, because the company then asked the Trademark Office to re-open the application, arguing that Mag-Tek’s IPAD had nothing to do with the Fujitsu iPad. The USPTO agreed, re-opened the application, and the process continued until September, when the iPad application was published so other trademark holders could oppose registration. That’s when Apple signaled that it wasn’t so happy about things — and filed its own “iPad” trademark application using a shell company called “IP Application Development.”

Phew — still with us? That leaves us at now, with Mag-Tek selling the IPAD under a valid, registered trademark, Fujitsu selling an iPad with a pending trademark application, and Apple sucking all the air out of the room with the launch of the iPad and no US trademark at all. We’ll be honest: we’d always simply discounted rumors Apple would call it the iPad, because this is kind of a mess. Apple can’t just take “iPad” from Fujitsu because it really wants the name — it’s likely going to have to argue that “iPad” is confusingly similar to “iPod,” while still trying to register “iPad” on its own and telling the Trademark Office that it won’t be confusing to people looking for the Mag-Tek device, or the Siemens “iPad” motor trademark, or potentially even Coconut Grove’s trademarked iPad bras. Of course, all these problems can be solved with the direct application of cash and some nice ambient media attention, so it’s likely we’ll see some friendly joint PR from Apple and Fujitsu along with an agreement to share the name sometime before Apple’s formal opposition is due on February 28. That’s pretty much what happened when Apple bit the “iPhone” name from Cisco, anyway. But still — why can’t Apple ever learn to have these conversations ahead of time?

Apple and Fujitsu inevitably caught up in iPad trademark dispute originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jan 2010 14:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceNew York Times  | Email this | Comments

Clear WiMAX USB modem impressions

Clearwire (along with Sprint and Comcast, just to name a couple) has been fiercely expanding its WiMAX network across America for months on end now, and while select citizens in select cities have had access to the 4G superhighway for just over a year, we haven’t actually had the opportunity to find ourselves in one of those locations for any amount of time. Until recently, that is. The Clear 4G service was lit up in Las Vegas late last year, which gave the Engadget squad just enough time to scrounge up a gaggle of Motorola 4G USB sticks and really test out the network while at CES. Meanwhile, the North Carolinians among us were also able to test the boundaries of the 4G patches that have been setup here, and we’re finally ready to dish out a few opinions on the fourth generation of cellular data. Eager to know if it’s the best thing since sliced bread the invention of the MP3? Read on to find out.

Continue reading Clear WiMAX USB modem impressions

Clear WiMAX USB modem impressions originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jan 2010 14:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

iPad Accessories, Part 2: Griffin Protectors

GriffinElanPassportiPad.jpg

The beginning of the iPad accessory avalanche continues with Griffin’s line of protectors. The Elan Passport (shown) is a one-piece folio that opens like a book to show your iPad. The inner cover includes business card-sized pockets. It lists for $49.99.

The Elan Sleeve ($49.99) is a slim pocket with a tab closure. Pull the tab to slide your iPad out quickly. It’s made of a stain-resistant synthetic fabric with a smooth micro-suede interior. The FlexGrip ($29.99) is a simple case that wraps around the side and back of your iPad, leaving the screen exposed. It comes in four colors. Finally, the Jumper ($29.99) is a sleek black neoprene sleeve with a pull tab closure.

If you’re not looking for a case, but want to protect your iPad’s large screen, consider the Griffin Screen Care Kit for iPad ($24.99), which includes a static peel screen protector and a cleaning cloth.