Acer Aspire 5551G, 5553G and 7551G keep the Phenom II X3 and X4 leaks flowing

Ah, now we get it. Clearly AMD has a few mobile chips in the backroom that it has yet to inform us about, and unfortunately for the fine folks in Sunnyvale, it seems as if their partner firms aren’t being quite so hush-hush. Just hours after discovering a quad-core Phenom II X4 within Dell’s new Inspiron M501R, along comes a spate of Acer Aspire machines with — you guessed it — Phenom II X4 and X3 chips within. The 15.6-inch 5551G / 5553G and 17.3-inch 7551G are all listed now at Amazon’s German portal, with the X3 N830 clocked at 2.1GHz and the X4 N930 chip humming along at an even 2GHz. The cheapest of the bunch is listed at right around €668 ($870), though you’ll have to dig into that source link for specifics. Fret not — we get the impression that each of these will be headed stateside just as soon as AMD sees fit to officially unveil its not-so-secret stash of new silicon.

[Thanks, TheLostSwede]

Acer Aspire 5551G, 5553G and 7551G keep the Phenom II X3 and X4 leaks flowing originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 May 2010 19:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSemiAccurate  | Email this | Comments

TomTom’s Vader voice: May the 4th be with you

The Dark Lord of the Sith is happy to guide you to your destination: The Dark Side.

Seagate’s New Drives Offer Mix-and-Match Connectors

SATA connector on Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex hard drive
Seagate’s making a big bet on SATA connectors, though the company wouldn’t describe it that way: Its new FreeAgent GoFlex line of hard drives and accessories makes use of the standard interface to offer a wide range of easy connectivity options.

Out of the box, the basic drive comes with a USB 2.0 connector. If your next notebook sports a USB 3.0 port, eSATA port, or a FireWire 800 connection, no problem: Just remove the Seagate drive’s back end and plug in the corresponding cable kit (sold separately by Seagate for $20 to $40). Your former USB 2.0 drive now has a new type of interface.

Inside the cable kit and the back end of the GoFlex drive are SATA connectors. That’s a standard interface used for the drives inside computers, but it’s somewhat unusual to see one outside the case of a PC. Fear not, though: You don’t need to know anything about ports because the cables just plug in and work automatically.

So far, this isn’t much that a standard multi-interface hard drive doesn’t accomplish, assuming all you wanted to do is plug into USB ports some days and FireWire ports other days. But it’s the extras that make the system really interesting.

Seagate says it can add features to the connectors, making it possible to bundle (for instance) automatic backup software with a cable adaptor, turning your vanilla portable hard drive into a one-step backup machine.

Bundled with the drives is software to enable Macs to read NTFS-formatted hard drives, making it easier for these drives to go from one platform to another with ease.

Seagate’s upcoming accessories add more use possibilities. The GoFlex Net is a compact dock that connects to your home network via Ethernet. It has two slots on the top for GoFlex drives to dock (via their internal SATA ports) and two additional USB 2.0 ports on the back for connecting any other storage devices. Once attached, the drives are accessible throughout your local network or over the web, using the dock’s Pogoplug-driven web interface.

GoFlex TV applies the same concept to your TV. It’s a simple media-playing device that connects via HDMI to your television. When you drop in a GoFlex drive, the contents of that drive — video, audio and photos — become playable via a straightforward interface, using the included remote. You can also play videos from YouTube, slideshows from Picasa, and movies from Netflix. And, of course, if you’ve got a GoFlex Net device on your network, the media player can play content from that, too.

The basic GoFlex drives, which have 5400RPM hard disks inside, are available now for prices ranging from $100 (320GB) to $200 (1TB) with an included USB 2.0 connection. A faster (7200RPM) GoFlex Pro kit costs $140 for 500GB to $190 for 750GB.

The GoFlex Net network adapter will be available at the end of this month for $100, while the GoFlex TV HD media player will cost $130.

Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex (product page)

Photo: Jonathan Snyder / Wired.com

See Also:

Gadget Lab to Go: Follow Dylan Tweney and Gadget Lab on Twitter for real-time tech updates.


Seagate GoFlex: Portable storage goes superflexible

Seagate unveils an entirely new line of external storage solutions called FreeAgent GoFlex that sport a very flexible adapter design.

Lexar ships thumb drives as backup solutions

Lexar announced two computer thumb drive that have built-in backup software for Netbook and notebook users.

Ellen pokes fun at Apple… and then apologizes

After watching this video, we’ve come to one conclusion: Apple needs to learn how to take a joke.

Continue reading Ellen pokes fun at Apple… and then apologizes

Ellen pokes fun at Apple… and then apologizes originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 May 2010 18:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Eric Lin (Twitter)  |  sourceEllen  | Email this | Comments

iPhone OS 4 beta 3 brings iPod widgets to the dock

Apple may have pulled iPhone OS 4 beta 3 soon after it went live, but we’re living recklessly — and hey, is that a set of iPod controls and a screen orientation lock hiding out in the app switcher? The control is accessed by swiping to the far left, and it all does pretty much what you’d expect. That’s good news, since we were missing the old pop-up iPod controls pretty badly. We’re hunting around for more new stuff, we’ll let you know if we find anything.

iPhone OS 4 beta 3 brings iPod widgets to the dock originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 May 2010 18:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Dell Inspiron M501R seen packing quad-core AMD Phenom II X4 CPU, ATI 550v GPU

Well, would you look at this? Dell‘s not-at-all-boisterous launch of numerous R-rated Inspirons left us with far more questions than answers (you know what we mean, J.J. Abrams?), but now things are starting to come together somewhat. We’re guessing some of the mystique surrounding the M501R has to do with the power plant within, because so far as we can tell, AMD has never shipped a Phenom II X4 within a laptop. Sure enough, this here machine can be ordered up with a quad-core X4, and while prices and the like aren’t yet available (the order process seems to be borked for now), we do know that this particular model will ship with a 720p 15.6-inch display, Windows 7, an optional 1GB ATI Mobility Radeon HD 550v (another new one to us), WiFi, up to 8GB of DDR3 RAM, four color options and a total weight of 5.83 pounds. C’mon Dell / AMD — why not just spill the beans already? Our trigger finger can only itch for so long.

Dell Inspiron M501R seen packing quad-core AMD Phenom II X4 CPU, ATI 550v GPU originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 May 2010 17:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDell  | Email this | Comments

Windows Phone 7 based on a hybrid Windows CE 6 / Compact 7 kernel?

Up until now, we’d heard and believed that Windows Phone 7 would be based on Microsoft’s time-tested Windows CE 6 kernel — aging, yes, but still considerably newer and more technically modern than the CE 5 upon which Windows Mobile 6.x operates. Thing is, Windows Embedded evangelist Olivier Bloch just dropped the knowledge this week that the company’s all-new phone platform will actually be “based on the Windows Embedded Compact 7 core,” which sounds a lot to us like Redmond skipped right over CE 6 and went straight for the latest and greatest (and still unavailable to the general public) stuff.

[Thanks, Jeff]

Continue reading Windows Phone 7 based on a hybrid Windows CE 6 / Compact 7 kernel?

Windows Phone 7 based on a hybrid Windows CE 6 / Compact 7 kernel? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 May 2010 17:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink MobileTechWorld, Softpedia  |  sourceOlivier’s WEBlog  | Email this | Comments

Made to travel: iHome rechargeable iHM79 speakers

While you can’t expect too much from these iHome iHM79 mini speakers, they do offer relatively decent sound for their small size and travel well.