Fitbit Launching Force Wristband in Coming Weeks

Fitbit WristbandFitbit, makers of the fitness tracking Flex wristband, announced Thursday that it will be releasing the Fitbit Force this fall. The Force is an updated version of the Flex with some additional features, most notably an OLED display right on the device.

The added display is a big advancement in the device. Not only will this allow the user to see their distance progress and calories burned as you might expect, but it can also see the names of incoming callers. The Fitbit Force will pair with your iPhone via Bluetooth and is the first of the wrist-worn devices to take advantage of the new Apple iOS 7 notification center. This way users on a run can track the calls that come in without having to pull out their phone and gives Fitbit a jump on the competition from Nike’s Fuelband and Jawbone’s Up. There is no integration for this with Android yet, but touching the Force to an Android phone (NFC equipped) will automatically launch the Fitbit application.

The Fitbit Force will track steps taken, distance, calories and sleeping habits as its predecessor did. It will also track stairs climbed through a built-in altimeter and total active minutes throughout a week. The Bluetooth 4.0 also supports pairing with your computer to avoid the need for the USB connection to sync up your data.

Fitbit already offers an small array of fitness tracking products including the Zip, and One that attach to your clothing, the integrated Aria smart scale and the Flex wristband. Fitbit is offering the Force for $129.95.

Maingear launches liquid-cooled Epic series with 4th-gen Intel Core-i7 CPUs

Maingear launches liquidcooled Epic 4thgen Intel series for the performanceminded

Liquid-cooled rigs are de rigeur for serious PC gamers, but Maingear knows there are plenty who’d rather crowbar headcrabs than fiddle with plumbing. To that end, the company’s just buttressed its water-chilled desktop lineup with the Epic Series, consisting of the full-tower Force and mid-sized Rush models. Each pack a “BiTurbo” pump design that keeps things cool in the event of a single pump failure, along with the latest Intel 4th-generation Core i7 or AMD FX processors. As for graphics, you’ll get four-way SLI NVIDIA GeForce GTX Titan or Radeon HD 7970 GPUs if you opt for the Force model, while the Rush offers two-way GeForce GTX Titan SLI or dual Radeon HD 7990 graphics. There are also numerous memory, storage and static pressure fans using Corsair parts, and custom touches like lighting and Glasurit paint with an “automotive finish.” Prices start at $3,259 for the Force and $3,059 for the Rush and go way up from there — if that doesn’t phase you, check the source for more.

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Source: Maingear

Mobile Miscellany: week of February 25th, 2013

Mobile Miscellany week of February 25th, 2013

If you didn’t get enough mobile news during the week, not to worry, because we’ve opened the firehose for the truly hardcore. This week brought news of a new direction for Muve Music, the arrival of a budget smartphone at Sprint and a whole lotta LTE expansion. These stories and more await after the break. So buy the ticket and take the ride as we explore the “best of the rest” for this week of February 25th, 2013.

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Sprint Force LTE handset leaks, due March 1st from ZTE

Sprint Force LTE handset leaks, due March 1st from ZTE

Sometimes tips come out of the blue: while one of our editors was out and about earlier today, someone sent him the Sprint product page above. Turns out it’s for a 4-inch Sprint-branded Android phone, the Force, which looks like a version of ZTE’s rumored Force that will conveniently work with the carrier’s sparkling new LTE installations. Specs are middling, with Android 4.0, an unnamed 1.5GHz dual-core processor, 4-inch Gorilla Glass adorned display, 5-megapixel rear camera, 1-megapixel front camera, 1GB of RAM, 4GB of ROM and a 1,730mAh battery. Still, that’ll give you quick connection speeds for $50 when it launches March 1st — presumably on a 2-year contract — joining its more upmarket 4G ZTE stablemate, the 4.5-inch Flash, at Sprint.

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Corsair’s Force GS SSD series offer its best speeds in its biggest capacities

Corsair's Force GS SSD series offer its best speeds in its biggest capacitiesIf you liked the look of Corsair’s Force GT family of SSDs, but were after a little more space, the Force GS models might fit the bill — with some Sandforce-beating performance improvements along for the ride. The SSD sizes start from 180GB, reaching the capacious heights of 480GB, and each offers SATA 6 Gb/s connectivity. The SSDs tote a sequential read speed of up to 555 MB/s, while it tops out at 530 MB/s during writing. The 2.5-inch drives will all arrive with an adapter for 3.5-inch cubbies in tow, while you can expect to pay between $190 to $490 — depending on your storage needs.

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