Intel shocks everyone, including itself, with record Q1 earnings

IntelThis is starting to get a bit repetitive, but we’re sure Intel will never tire of hearing it: the chip maker just had its best quarter ever. The company expected to pull in roughly $11.6 billion, topping last quarter (and its previous record) by $500 million. Looks like the company was being conservative enough to make Pat Robertson blush — it raked in a grand total of $12.8 billion in Q1 of 2011. About $500 million of that discrepancy can be explained by the acquisition of McAfee and Infineon, the rest is thanks to huge increases in sales across all market segments. Now go ahead, Intel, you just pretend to be surprised like last quarter.

Intel shocks everyone, including itself, with record Q1 earnings originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Apr 2011 20:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Philips GoGear Connect gets Gingerbread and some new threads, we go hands-on

It’s been a while since we last saw Philip’s GoGear Connect PMP, and in the meantime it’s acquired a new look and a new flavor of Android. The new GoGear has gone from white to black, lost its trackball in favor of a capacitive touchscreen display, and exchanged the lowly Android 2.1 for Gingerbread. Like its competition from Samsung, the device also has access to the Android Market and all those apps that lesser PMPs lack. After getting some quality time with a prototype of the new device, we found the copper-colored buttons and speaker grill running along its right side to form an intriguing design, but the overall fit and finish — not to mention the lack of a backlight for the screen — demonstrated that it wasn’t quite ready for primetime. Luckily, there’s plenty of time to work out the kinks, as Philips has pegged a September debut for the 8GB and 16GB versions (at $179 and to-be-determined price points, respectively), and promised a 32GB iteration will come later. PR after the break.

Continue reading Philips GoGear Connect gets Gingerbread and some new threads, we go hands-on

Philips GoGear Connect gets Gingerbread and some new threads, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Apr 2011 19:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Download OpenOffice.org 2.0.4 And Information About Future Releases

This article was written on October 10, 2006 by CyberNet.

OpenOffice.org OpenOffice.org 2.0.4 was just put on the FTP server and can now be downloaded. They have not updated the download page to reflect the new version so the release notes are currently not available. Here is a list of what was expected to be done for this release

  • LaTeX export
  • Enhanced support for OpenOffice.org Extensions
    • extended Dialog Editor to support binding of UNO Objects
    • Library export in Basic IDE
    • Dependencies for extensions
  • Netbeans Integration enhancements
  • System Integration
    • Slackware
    • Use MacOSX installer for X11 builds
  • Automated Update Notification
  • Support of new locales
    • Fijian (fj_FJ)
    • Tigrigana (ti_ER)
    • Namibian (af_NA, en_NA)
    • Amharic Ethiopia (am_ET)
  • Database Enhancements
    • Reports from a native query

One person in the OpenOffice.org forums commented saying that the performance of 2.0.4 was better than 2.0.3 so it is probably worth doing the 90MB+ download.

This release comes a little over 3-months after version 2.03 was released. The typical schedule for new releases of OpenOffice.org is actually 3-months so this one is right on target. Of course they probably won’t officially announce this release until the end of the week since it will be the 6-year anniversary of the OpenOffice.org website going live (yes, it lands on Friday the 13th). That is when they opened themselves up to the world to enjoy a free Office productivity suite.

Here are the download links for the new OpenOffice.org 2.0.4:

Download OpenOffice.org 2.0.4 for Windows
Download OpenOffice.or 2.0.4 for Linux

The thought of OpenOffice.org 3.0 still floats around in my mind and surfaces every now and again for air. I am just curious what they will be doing to make it an even better productivity suite. Will they still stick with the toolbars or will they switch up the design a little to give it a fresh new look. I have read in a few different places that a tabbed interface is in the works and should get released before OpenOffice.org 3.0! It is still a little disappointing that version 3 will not be released for quite awhile (probably at least a year). Here is a list of the known release dates and what features the future versions should have:

OpenOffice.org 2.1 (December 2006)

  • SoC: SQLite driver
  • Extension Manager
    • Versioning of Extensions

OpenOffice.org 2.2 (March 2007)

  • Unknown

OpenOffice.org 2.3 (June 2007)

  • Chart2

OpenOffice.org 2.x/3.0 (Unknown)

  • Basic API & UNO support for bibliographic enhancements
  • Bibliographic enhancements Stage 2
  • New Chart Module
  • XForms Enhancements
  • Performance Improvements
    • Threading Framework
    • Drawing Engine
  • Table support in Impress
  • Extensions:
    • API enhancements
    • GUI enhancements

    Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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    Google Invests $100 Million in a Wind Farm

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    Google has serious power needs, and the company is looking to make sure its operations are as environmentally friendly as possible. The company has invested in solar power plants and green datacenters in the past, and even has massive arrays of solar panels on the buildings at its Mountain View, California headquarters. Now the company is investing over $100 million into what will be the world’s largest wind farm.
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    What Google plans to do with all of this investment in the energy sector is anyone’s guess, but if their public statements are any indication, they just want to be good corporate citizens. It’s also likely they’re looking to make sure they invest enough in renewable energy to offset their future plans for growth and energy demand. 

    ThinkGeek Now Accepting Pre-Orders for the iCade iPad Cabinet

    ThinkGeek iCade

    The iCade, originally an April Fool’s joke by ThinkGeek, is finally here – almost. The iPad arcade cabinet finally has a release date: May 11th. The device will start shipping on May 10th, and if you have to be first in line or get one shipped to your home on release day, you can pre-order it now for $99.99 retail price.  The iCade uses Bluetooth to connect to the iPad, and supports both the original iPad and the iPad 2.
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    GSM-flavored Xoom passes FCC muster, bound for AT&T?

    It appears Motorola is taking a page from the Samsung playbook and making the Xoom carrier-agnostic. Verizon and Sprint are already marching along and, according Wireless Goodness, an AT&T version is about to join the parade. The FCC approved a “hand held device” from Motorola that packs an HSDPA-capable radio on the 850MHz and 1900MHz bands, which just so happen to be the very same frequencies used by AT&T. A screen shot snapped by Wireless Goodness refers to the product as a “wireless tablet with embedded WLAN,” though that description is conspicuously absent from the documents now. The filing also makes mention of MOTOTalk, two-way radio functionality, a feature missing from other Xoom versions that seems like a perfect fit for the rumored rugged tablet the company is working on. Looks like that little bundle of “4G” tablet joy teased during CES is finally on its way.

    GSM-flavored Xoom passes FCC muster, bound for AT&T? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Apr 2011 18:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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    PlayBook Tablet Has a Spotty Day One in San Francisco

    The 7-inch PlayBook is Research In Motion's entry into the tablet market. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

    Research In Motion’s BlackBerry PlayBook tablet launched Tuesday, and the tablet turned in some limp results in the wired city of San Francisco.

    Wired.com contacted every San Francisco store that agreed to carry the PlayBook, including Best Buy, Office Depot and Radio Shack, to get an idea of how well the tablet was selling. The results were a mixed bag, but for the most part, underwhelming.

    Technology observers typically view a product launch as a strong indicator of how well they’ll perform over their shelf life, because Day One tends to generate the highest number of sales from enthusiastic early adopters.

    One Office Depot completely sold out of the PlayBook by 2 p.m. PST, one Best Buy location “sold a lot,” according to a sales rep, and only had the 16-GB model left, and none of the 16 Radio Shack locations in the city have even received PlayBooks yet. The other Office Depots had plenty left in stock.

    None of the stores reported having long lines as a result of the PlayBook, like you would typically see at an Apple store whenever a new iPhone or iPad gets released. (Although, to be fair, long lines would be difficult to generate when the PlayBook is available at so many stores, as opposed to an iPad available at a small number of Apple stores.)

    Nonetheless, the fact there are so many PlayBooks around here offers a glimpse into how well the tablet is selling on launch day, considering that San Francisco is home to many tech-savvy consumers who are quick to grab the latest shiny gadget.

    Elsewhere around the world, the PlayBook’s launch doesn’t look promising — not surprising for a product that many technology critics have dubbed incomplete and “half-baked.”

    Over in New York, Barron’s called the PlayBook release a “stealth” launch because of poor visibility of the tablet in stores — one had to ask an employee just to see a PlayBook at a Best Buy, because the product had no prominent placement. In one store, the PlayBook was in the middle of downloading a software update, so no one was trying it, Barron’s wrote.

    Similar to Wired.com’s digging, Barron’s found that only one store was sold out, and when asked how many sold, the clerk said, “We had a lot of them.”

    Meanwhile, in Canada, Loop Insight’s Jim Dalrymple scoped out major retail store Future Shop, which had PlayBooks as well. Similarly, there was no line of customers aching to get their hands on a PlayBook, and store employees told Dalrymple that zero people had pre-ordered the tablet.

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