Toshiba Portege M780 marries Core i7 with tablet ergonomics, goes official

What would we ever do without our eagle-eyed readers? Bob has spotted the above M780 tablet PC from Toshiba (which we first heard of a couple of weeks ago) on the company’s official site, though its product page has yet to be linked to from any of the home pages. So it’s official, but sort of prematurely so. Browsing through the spec sheet, this update to the M750 seems to lack for nothing, as its maxed out variant (priced at $1,799) offers a 2.66GHz Core i7-620M, 4GB of DDR3 RAM and a 7200RPM 320GB hard drive. Okay, you could stand to upgrade those integrated graphics perhaps, but it’s a potent package nonetheless. It’s also interesting to see these 12-inch convertible tablets maturing to the point of offering viable workstation performance, as the M780 is joined by Lenovo’s ThinkPad X201T and Fujitsu’s upcoming tablet in offering Intel’s finest and fastest dual-core processor inside.

[Thanks, Bob]

Update: Toshiba has completed the ceremonies of officialdom now, with a full press release, which also notes the addition of a multitouch panel to the Satellite Pro U500.

Toshiba Portege M780 marries Core i7 with tablet ergonomics, goes official originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Feb 2010 06:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceToshiba  | Email this | Comments

Wi-Reach Turns 3G Dongles into Wi-Fi Hotspots

wireach_large_1

Don’t tell me. You wanted a Mi-Fi personal wireless hotspot, and all your boss bought you was that lousy 3G USB dongle. Well, quit fretting: with just one more ugly chunk of plastic in your stuffed and dorky nylon laptop bag, you can have what you want.

The Wi-Reach 3G Personal Hotspot doesn’t even require that you pull the SIM card from your existing USB modem. The plastic box, which resembles a battery charger, has a USB port inside into which you slot your stick. From there, it takes the EVDO or HSPA modem’s connection and turns it into an 802.11 b/g Wi-Fi hotspot, powered by a lithium-ion battery for up to five hours (or powered via its mini-USB port). It’ll even work with 4G dongles when they start to show up.

Its a neat solution, marred by one detail: at $100, it costs the same as a Mi-Fi, meaning you could clear some space in your ugly bag by sucking it up and buying one of those instead.

Wi-Reach 3G Personal Hotspot [Connect One]


PocketGear acquires Handango, becomes world’s largest cross-platform app store

Now this is intriguing. PocketGear has just acquired its former competitor Handango in the cross-platform app store space, and can now claim a library of software that places it right alongside Apple’s App Store in terms of the pure number of applications on offer. PocketGear has been busy providing the infrastructure for things like Samsung’s TouchWiz widget store and Palm’s Software Store for a while, whereas Handango used to be the largest independent app store out there, and their consolidated catalog will offer more than 140,000 applications on all the major non-Apple platforms: Android, BlackBerry, Palm, Symbian, and WinMo. The number of actually useful apps has not been disclosed, but we love the idea of an independent competitor nudging the proprietary stores along so let’s hope things go well for them. Full PR after the break.

Continue reading PocketGear acquires Handango, becomes world’s largest cross-platform app store

PocketGear acquires Handango, becomes world’s largest cross-platform app store originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Feb 2010 06:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Unibody Aluminum Toothbrush Case is Tough, Pointless

toothbrush-case

A “friend of mine” was once working as a cocktail bartender on a big yacht in the port of Monaco, during the formula one grand prix. The event? A party for the rich euro-trash (a prince turned up). The problem? The event organizer was a moron, and thought he was my friend’s boss. The solution was for “my friend” to sneak into this guy’s cabin, stick his toothbrush somewhere it shouldn’t go, and return it to the glass by the sink.

If that idiot had had the Dominic Wilcox Toothbrush Case, this would never have happened. The hefty, hinged case is hewn, unibody-style, from a single block of aluminum and snaps shut on brass hinges. It even has a carrying handle. A delightful piece of not-for-sale whimsy, the case would nonetheless not have saved the party-organizer from dysentery: it has no lock. It could have been purchased in time for that long-ago party, though. The Toothbrush Case was milled way back in 1999.

Toothbrush Case [Dominic Wilcox via Oh Gizmo!]

See Also:


United Nations identifies e-waste as an urgent and growing problem, wants change

E-waste might be one of the biggest misnomers in the history of nomery — the image it creates in the mind is of a bunch of email and document files clogging up your local internet pipes. The reality of it is that electronic waste is rapidly populating ever-growing landfill areas in so-called developing countries (they’re poor, just call a spade a spade) and the issue has now garnered the attention of the United Nations. The UN Environment Programme has issued a wideranging report warning that e-waste in China and South Africa could double or even quadruple within the next decade, whereas India could experience a five-fold rise. Major hazards exist in the unregulated and informal recycling of circuit boards and techno gadgets, as processes like backyard incineration for the retrieval of gold generate toxic gases while also being wildly inefficient. The whole point of the report is to encourage some global cooperation in setting up modern and safe recycling facilities in the affected countries to ameliorate the problem, though being generally more careful in our consumption and disposal of electronics wouldn’t do the environment’s chances any harm either.

United Nations identifies e-waste as an urgent and growing problem, wants change originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Feb 2010 05:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink PhysOrg  |  sourceUN News Centre  | Email this | Comments

Is Sandisk’s 64GB SD Card Too Big?

ultra_sdxc_writable_64gb_rgbIt may not hold 200 years’ worth of silicon-stuffed porn, but SanDisk’s new SDXC card has one big advantage over Dylan Tweney’s desert-island-fantasy 188 petabyte CF card: you can buy it. If you have $350 to spare.

The SDXC spec was announced a year ago, and has a theoretical 2 terabyte maximum capacity. But we wonder if anyone anyone will need them. The high-end cameras which need this kind of storage for their huge files all use Compact Flash cards, and anyone else runs into the eggs-in-basket problems of having all their images in one easy-to-lose place. Another problem: Where do you put these pictures? Filling up a 64GB card means that you’ll need to find somewhere to put all those pics, and your laptop’s hard drive will fill up pretty fast.

One more tip to all SD card manufacturers: Make these tiny slivers of plastic in brighter colors. Black may be more stylish, but it sure means I lose a lot of cards. I can’t find them in dark corners, and have to buy new ones. Or maybe that’s the point?

SanDisk Ultra SDXC Cards [SanDisk]

See Also:


Firefox 3 Beta 3 Coming with a Big New Feature

This article was written on January 30, 2008 by CyberNet.

Firefox 3 Windows Theme Mozilla just announced that they are planning on having the first Release Candidate build of Firefox 3 Beta 3 coming this Monday, and although no word on a release date was announced it can probably be expected about a week after that.

The new Beta will be the first release to start showing off the new Windows themes that they’ve been working on, but as it stands right now the Vista-specific theme is not available. Vista users will see the same theme as XP users, which I’ve captured in the screenshot above. I definitely don’t like how that theme looks on Vista, and I don’t think it would look all that much better on XP. As other people have iterated before the theme has a plastic-like look to it that makes it feel like a toy.

And no, the theme is not the “big new feature.” Just the other night Mozilla rolled out a new section to the Add-ons manager for finding extensions without ever going to the add-ons site:

Firefox 3 Add-ons Search

It only shows a handful of results, and then provides a link to the add-ons site to view the remaining extensions. I’m guessing that Mozilla is doing this in hopes of getting the add-ons to gain traction with new Firefox users.

That’s about all the new stuff that users will see in Firefox 3 Beta 3 since the last Beta was released, plus a bunch of bug fixes. After Beta 3 there will be another “quick” release of Beta 4, and then they will be moving on to the Release Candidate stage. You know what that means don’t you? Mozilla might be able to pull off a release in the first quarter of 2008 like they have been anticipating.

Copyright © 2010 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

Related Posts:


Gartner: Apple, Android, and RIM winners in 2009 smartphone growth, Nokia and Symbian still dominate

Gartner just released its annual numbers for worldwide mobile phone sales to end users in the year known as two thousand nine. Looking at smartphone OS market share alone, Gartner shows the iPhone OS, Android, and RIM making the biggest gains (up 6.2, 3.4, and 3.3 percentage points from 2008, respectively) at the expense of Windows Mobile (off 3.1 percentage points) and Symbian (off 5.5 points). Although Gartner says that Symbian “has become uncompetitive in recent years,” (ouch) it concedes that market share is still strong especially for Nokia; something backed up by Nokia’s Q4 financials and reported quarterly smartphone growth by 5 percentage points. Regarding total handsets of all classifications sold, Nokia continues to dominate with 36.4% of all sales to end users (down from 38.6% in 2008) while Samsung and LG continue to climb at the expense of Motorola (dropping from 7.6% to 4.5% of worldwide sales in 2009) and Sony Ericsson. See that table after the break or hit up the source for the full report.

Continue reading Gartner: Apple, Android, and RIM winners in 2009 smartphone growth, Nokia and Symbian still dominate

Gartner: Apple, Android, and RIM winners in 2009 smartphone growth, Nokia and Symbian still dominate originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Feb 2010 05:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink @ruskin147  |  sourceGartner  | Email this | Comments

ViewSonic’s new VNB131 ViewBook Pro puts an attractive spin on the 13.3-inch ULV laptop

Viewsonic isn’t quite our go-to for excellent PC design just yet, but its new VNB131 ViewBook Pro is a surprisingly decently attractive alternative to the usual ULV fare from the likes of Acer and ASUS. Maybe it’s just that touch of “1999” in the aluminum curves and accents that we’re finding ourselves suddenly drawn to. Outside of the looks, the VNB131 is mostly pretty stock ULV: there’s an Intel ULV SU7300 Core 2 Duo processor, 320GB HDD, 2GB of RAM, a DVD burner, HDMI, VGA, 802.11n and a 7-in-1 card reader. Interestingly, however, you can swap out the DVD drive for an extra 3 cell battery, which in conjunction with the stock 6 cell should offer up to 12 hours of battery life. We’re sure you sacrifice a bit on weight and thickness for that luxury, and the price isn’t best-in-class either at $949. Still, it’s not bad for a company that’s still thinks it’s pulling one over on people by trying to rip the “MacBook Pro” below-screen lettering. It’s available now, wherever ViewBooks are sold. Check out another shot of the laptop after the break, along with some fancy PR.

Update: Electric Pig got some hands-on time with it.

Continue reading ViewSonic’s new VNB131 ViewBook Pro puts an attractive spin on the 13.3-inch ULV laptop

ViewSonic’s new VNB131 ViewBook Pro puts an attractive spin on the 13.3-inch ULV laptop originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Feb 2010 04:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

LG’s in-cell multitouch laptop displays get unveiled, certified with Windows 7 Touch Logo (video)

Want evidence for the old saying that there’s always something next to wait around for with technology? We’ve only just reviewed the most bodacious X200 Tablet from Lenovo, yet already there’s a capacitive multitouch display that promises to be that little bit better. LG’s in-cell multitouch technology places the touchy-feely parts inside — rather than as a film on top of — the LCD panel, which we’re told eliminates the loss of picture quality and brightness that regular multitouch results in. It only works with two fingers so far, but LG is still pretty pleased with itself for being the first to gain the Windows 7 Touch Logo sticker with this technology, which was previously limited to cellphone-sized displays. Mass production is set for the second half of this year, and we’ll go ahead and assume that local nemesis Samsung will be using every moment until then to offer its own competing models. Bring on the marginally better touchscreens! We’ve now got a video for you as well, you know where to find it.

Continue reading LG’s in-cell multitouch laptop displays get unveiled, certified with Windows 7 Touch Logo (video)

LG’s in-cell multitouch laptop displays get unveiled, certified with Windows 7 Touch Logo (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Feb 2010 03:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink MobileTechReview  |  sourceLG Display  | Email this | Comments