ASUS debuts 18.4-inch W90 gaming laptop at CES 2009

Got an itch for a gaming laptop that’s big enough to span the laps of both you and your lover? ASUS has you covered. Here in the desert, the outfit has introduced a potent 18.4-inch gaming rig with a 1080p panel, twin ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4870 X2 GPUs, three RAM slots (a world’s first, mind you) stuffed with 6GB of DDR2 memory, a Core 2 Duo processor, a half dozen (seriously) Altec Lansing speakers and a Turbo Gear function that will enable users to overclock the system and boost performance by as much as 25%. A few more configurations are available, including one with a 17-inch panel, an NVIDIA graphics option, dual HDDs, an optional Blu-ray drive and enough ports to put your average desktop to shame.

Filed under:

ASUS debuts 18.4-inch W90 gaming laptop at CES 2009 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Jan 2009 17:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Palm Pre Full Video Tours

Here’s a complete video tour of the new Palm Pre showing how it was made, finger navigation, menus, web browser, media player and more. Check back frequently as we upload videos.

Web browser walkthrough showing navigation, cards (Palm’s term for tabs), and the sad proof of no flash.

Palm Pre official video tour

Here’s the Pre’s music player and Amazon music store.

Here’s a quick look into the Pre’s photo viewer, camera, texting, and video player.

CES 2009: Palm Pre to Support App Store, WebKit, Possibly Flash

pre-lounge.jpg
I’m here at the Palm Pre VIP lounge at the 2009 CES, where they’re serving up delicious coffee drinks and doing demos for developers. I got to ask a bunch of questions that Palm CEO Ed Colligan didn’t answer during his Pre press conference, and wanted to pass along the answers.


The Pre will have an app store, Palm reps confirmed. They’re not saying anything about the revenue share, but you’ll buy apps through an on-device app store.


Colligan said that apps for Pre were written in Javascript, HTML and CSS, which I found suspicious. Folks here at the lounge confirmed that there will be a software developers’ kit to let developers access core Pre features, and that it will be called “Mojo.” Just not yet. I did, though, talk to one of their early third-party developers, who said that everything he did before in Visual Studio he could do in Javascript on the Pre.


Going into a little more detail on Mojo, Palm folks said they’ll have a set of APIs to let Javascript programmers hit hardware features that aren’t commonly touched in Javascript apps. Will you be able to do everything – such as write to the frame buffer? No, but you’ll get access to all of the phone’s databases, unlike on the iPhone. So if you wanted to, say, write a way to integrate MySpace into the contact book, that would be possible.


Palm even said that a third party could write a Palm OS emulator for webOS, which tells me they must have some funky Javascript APIs indeed.


The WebKit-based Web browser supports streaming video in RTSP, H. 263 and H.264 formats, but doesn’t support Flash … yet. But I spoke to two Palm employees both of whom smirked when I mentioned Flash, which made me think they’re talking to Adobe right now. The browser also doesn’t have a name, though Palm will release specs soon for developers who want to make sure their sites work on the browser.


How do you sync it with Outlook without an Exchange server? They’re not saying, but it looks like it will be possible.


How about music and video? You can drag and drop it over from your PC using USB Mass Storage, or buy songs on the device using a built in Amazon MP3 Store client.


Read more about the Pre in my full story on PCMag.com.

Palm Unveils Its Long-Awaited Smartphone, the Pre

7g7i9228

LAS VEGAS — Struggling smartphone pioneer Palm announced a new phone, dubbed the "Pre," along with a new operating system that could give the company a fighting chance against its more powerful rivals.

The new Palm Pre, announced today at the Consumer Electronics Show, is a sleek black device that evokes the iPhone touchscreen and form factor. But it is no ordinary iPhone clone. It offers a clean interface, a combination of touchscreen and keyboard inputs, and a curvy black exterior.

"This brings Palm back into the game," said Tim Bajarin, industry analyst and consultant with the firm Creative Strategies. "It’s a very slick and solid device. Having both the touch screen and drop down keyboard is exceptional."

Palm made history with its early handheld device, the Palm Pilot, which was the first personal digital assistant to achieve widespread success. The company later broke new ground with its Treo line of smartphones, which combined PDA and cellphone features. But in recent years the company has fallen on harder times, losing market share to rivals such as Apple, Motorola and Nokia. Many industry watchers regard Palm’s widely-anticipated phone as the company’s last best shot at survival.

The 3.1-inch touchscreen Palm Pre weighs 4.8 ounces also comes with a QWERTY slide-out keyboard. The phone supports Wi-Fi and EVDO and has 8GB storage.

"The Palm Pre is the phone that thinks ahead," said Ed Colligan, CEO
of Palm, at the CES 2009 at one of the most anticipated events of the
year." The phone is beautiful inside and out from a design perspective
and it is one device that will help you navigate through your lives
seamlessly."

"Mobile is in our DNA," said Colligan.

The phone will be available on the Sprint network "as soon as
possible", said Palm. The company still needs to get FCC certification
to launch the product. Palm did not disclose pricing for the device.

The new user interface and design should help Palm silence its critics who have assailed the company’s recent Treo phones as being
too bulky and out of touch with what consumers really want.

With the touchscreen Pre phone, Palm has hopped on to the trend set by Apple’s iPhone and improved on it.

Palm Pre has a touchscreen not just on the main display area
but also extends to the center button at the bottom of the phone to an
area called the gesture zone. The Pre also comes with a removable
battery.

The Palm Pre is built off a new platform called Palm Web OS that the
company says it created from the ground up. "It is going to redefine the
center of your access point to the Internet," said Colligan. "It is
built on industry standard web tools and if you know HTML, CSS and
Javscript you can develop for this platform."

That should help Palm attract mobile developers who have to choose among different platforms including the iPhone, Google Android, BlackBerry and Windows Mobile.

Img_1715
Palm also launched a wireless charging accessory called Touchstone,
a smooth pebble-like gadget that allows users to drop their Palm Pre
phone on it and allow for it to be charged wirelessly.

Palm Pre’s user interface
evokes the Apple’s design ethos—a move that might not be entirely accidental.
After all Palm executive Chairman Jon Rubenstein who introduced the Pre
has been instrumental in the launch of the iPod and the creation of the
iMac line at Apple. Rubenstein moved to Palm in 2007.

The launch of the Pre has also been interesting in that there were
almost no leaked information about the phone available prior to its launch — a
culture of secrecy that Apple is better known for.

"There’s no question Palm is following in Apple’s footsteps," says
Jack Gold who runs the industry consulting firm J.Gold Associates.
"Apple is really the benchmark for everyone in the industry and Palm is
trying to beat that standard."

With Pre Palm has taken the first steps towards making a comeback. But the company still needs to work out details including pricing, which will be a critical factor for consumers makign their purchases this year.

The phone’s
launch on the Sprint network could limit the device’s popularity among
users. "Sprint is a question mark in terms of carrier choice," says
Bajarin. "It has had some ups and downs. A bigger carrier could have
given greater reach for the phone."

Also see:
Palm’s New OS, Phone Likely At CES

Photo: Jon Snyder





Add to Reddit
Add to Facebook
Add to digg



CES 2009: The USB Negative Ion Generate Make Your Computer Smell Less

usbnegativeion.jpg

Working up a sweat from those late night World of Warcraft sessions? Yens Electric’s USB Negative Ion Generator can’t help your social life, but it might be able to do something about the smell.

This USB-powered device can neutralize smells. It also helps remove dust and dirt from the air, and, according to the company, “neutraliz[es] positive ions, defer[ring] human fatigue.

The little box outputs more than two million ions per cubed centimeter.

CES: SPTs Water Bottle-powered Personal Humidifier

personalhumidifier.gif

CES isn’t exactly know for its humidifier selection–one company called SPT was showcasing a fairly wide selection of the things on the showroom floor today, however. This little pink one caught my eye–maybe it was the water bottle jutting out of it, or perhaps it was the deluge of steam pouring forth.

Either way, the Personal Ultrasonic Humidifier is a cool little device. It weights about 1.4 pounds and can output about 120cc of humidity per hour. The mist flow is also adjustable. The coolest part, of course, is the fact that it takes water bottles instead of a standard water tank, making this an ideal humidifier for taking on the road.

The Personal Ultrasonic Humidifier is available now for around $50.

CES 2009: Altona Makes your PC HDMI-ready

altonahdmi.gif

Want high-def video output from your PC but don’t have a built-in HDMI out? No problem. Altona’s new AT-HDPIX can turn your computer’s USB into an HDMI port.

The little box is Mac and Windows compatible, outputting video at a maximum of 1600 x 1200 or 720p. It devotes the entire bandwidth of the USB port for video, pulling audio from your 3.5mm stereo jack. Audio is embedded with video and then both are transferred to your HTV over an HDMI cable.

The box is available now for $179.

CES 2009: Cobras Cheap Flip Killer

cobradvc950.jpg

Another trend at this year’s CES? YouTube camcorders, of course. Illinois-based Cobra Digital has come out with their own entry into the field. The DVC950 looks a lot like a slimmer version of the original Flip, but manages to pack in a lot of features that that camera was missing–for a much lower price point.

Like the Flip, the DVC950 has a retractable USB arm, making for easy uploads to site like YouTube. The camera also has an SD card slot, and a swiveling 1.5-inch screen for those among us (read: teenagers) who like to shoot videos of themselves. The camera doesn’t have a built-in battery, however, and requires two AA batteries.

The camera ships with software, a USB cable, and a 256MB SD card. The DVC950 carries an MSRP of around $60.

CES 2009: iGen Intros Worlds First Night Vision Device With Image Capture

igen.gif

Honestly, who couldn’t use a little bit of night vision? iGen makes a slew of night vision devices, aimed largely at hunters. The iGen NV 20/20 is the company’s first night vision device (and, according to them, the world’s only) that also takes still images.

The iGen NV 20/20 has adjustable light amplification up to 10,000x and a frame rate that varies from 2 to 30 frames per second. The display has variable brightness and offers color output option. The camera also features composite video out.

Most interest here, of course, is the image capture. The NV 20/20 has a built-in SD card slot and can take black and white photos in the JPEG or TIFF

CES 2009: The DTV Storm Brings Mobile TV to your PC

dtvstorm.gif

DTV Interactive’s Storm is a TV tuner that’s roughly the size of a standard USB Flash drive. The device, which weighs 25 grams, brings mobile TV to your PC, anywhere in the U.S.

The mobile TV receiver is compliant with the ATSC-M/H standard and decodes video at 24KHz, with a frame size of 320 by 240. The dongle also has a large antennae that extends from its back for improved signal reception.

The Storm has a USB 2.0 interface and is compatible with Windows XP.

For PCMag’s full CES coverage, go to http://www.pcmag.com/category2/0,2806,2235882,00.asp.