HP outs healthy slew of new Pavilion / Compaq Presario desktops

Seems that HP got all the laptop love out of its system yesterday, as today were having a foursome of new desktops shoved down our throats. First up is the Pavilion Slimline s5000, which gets going at $289 and includes an AMD LE1600 CPU, 2GB of DDR2 RAM, a 320GB hard drive, 6-in-1 media card reader and a case that should be small enough for most dorm room corners. Next, there’s the all-too-similar $269 Pavilion p6000, while the $599+ Pavilion Elite e9000 offers up a larger case along with an AMD Phenom II X2 545 CPU, 4GB of DDR3 memory, a 500GB HDD, 512MB NVIDIA GeForce G210 CPU and a 15-in-1 card reader. Finally, the $379 Compaq Presario CQ5000 ships with a 2.5GHz Athlon X2 7550 CPU, 3GB of DDR2 RAM, an NVIDIA GeForce 6150 SE GPU and a 320GB 7200RPM HDD. Tap the read link for all the nitty-gritty details, but only if you’re really, really prepared for what’s to come.

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HP outs healthy slew of new Pavilion / Compaq Presario desktops originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Jun 2009 11:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TechSaver: Apple iPod Touch, iTheater Eyewear, Garmin Nuvi GPS

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The same great technology deals you’ve come to expect, now with a bold and powerful new name.

1. Even I, the writer formerly known as Cheap Geek, can’t believe this deal on an iPod. Head over to eBay to get a 16GB second-generation iPod touch for $199.99 with free shipping. This isn’t a refurbished deal; it’s the real thing in the original box. This bargain comes through eBay retailer Datavis and supplies are limited, so buyers can only pick up two of them. If you’ve been thinking about trading in your small music player for one with a lot more power, now is the time to do it.

2. You can also get the movie-viewing experience with just a pair of glasses. Shop4Tech is selling iTheater wireless eyewear for game consoles, a pair of tech glasses that let you get a personal big-screen view of your PSP, Wii, XBox, DVD, and VCR content. A wireless receiver transmits the picture to you, so you can recline however you want while you play. Built-in speakers offer surround-sound audio. They’re priced at $109.95, but you can get them for $91.26 when you use the coupon code SS17. The store will also throw in free shipping and a free gift.

3. You’ll never ask for directions again once you grab this NewEgg.com deal. You can get a refurbished Garmin nuvi 660 for $139 with free shipping. This GPS has a 4.3-inch screen, speaks street names, and includes Bluetooth for hands-free calling.

Bonus Deal: Today is a Woot-Off!

Cheap Geek: Canon Video Camera, Samsung Monitor, DVD on the Xbox

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Yesterday I made a passing reference to Sarah Palin in this space and got eight responses, six of them bizarrely hostile. Thank you. You don’t know how much that meant to me. I didn’t think anyone read the introductions.

1. You’ll shoot some gorgeous high-definition video this summer if you pick up the Canon Vixia HG20. It records in 1920-by-1080 full HD resolution and offers a 12X optical zoom. You don’t even need to worry about storage cards, since it saves to a 60GB internal drive. Naturally, it includes image stabilization and a variety of shooting modes. J&R has it for $599 with free shipping.

2. With monitor prices this low, you might want to get an extra one so you can line them up and have a super-wide viewing experience at your desk. Buy.com is selling the Samsung 2033SW 20-inch widescreen LCD monitor for $153.99 (after $20 mail-in rebate) and that’s with free shipping. It has a piano black finish that should enhance any office.

3. Your Xbox gaming console becomes a DVD player in one step when you buy the Xbox DVD Playback kit from Buy.com. It’s going for $5.19, including shipping. The kit includes a remote and a sensor. Plug in the sensor and you’re ready to start watching.

Eizo 23-inch FlexScan EV2333W-H chooses DisplayPort, not HDMI

Nobody was happy to see digital video standards splinter along the lines of DisplayPort and HDMI back in 2007. Two years on and Dell and Apple seem to be the primary forces behind the standard as the rest of the consumer electronics industry opts for straight-up HDMI. Kind of makes you wonder if DisplayPort is the new Firewire particularly with HDMI 1.4 and minascule Type D HDMI plugs around the corner. At least Eizo’s tossing DisplayPort another bone today with the introduction of its 23-inch FlexScan EV2333W-H in Japan. The 1920×1080 pixel display with 3000:1 contrast, 300nits of brightness, and 7-ms response also packs a DVI-D jack to help ease the transition. It’ll cost ¥54,800 (about $560) when it lands in Japan mid-July. Not exactly a game-changer.

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Eizo 23-inch FlexScan EV2333W-H chooses DisplayPort, not HDMI originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Jun 2009 05:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple patent filing shows off activity monitor for skiers, bikers

Fans of more extreme sports will probably be stoked to hear that Apple just might be developing a device with them in mind. Apple Insider’s discovered a recent patent filing that could possibly signal the development of a monitoring device (much like Nike+) which can detect, track, and display a visual and quantitative measure, for instance, of a skier’s speed and air time. The device looks like it would contain one or more loft sensors (in one photo it is shown installed in a snowboard) and a microprocessor subsystem to determine loft time. There are of course, no guarantees that a product like this will ever see the light of day, but we sure hope so: runner favoritism must end. One more page of the filing after the break.

Continue reading Apple patent filing shows off activity monitor for skiers, bikers

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Apple patent filing shows off activity monitor for skiers, bikers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Jun 2009 14:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cheap Geek: Samsung Monitor, Sansa MP3 Player, Brother Label Printer

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I’d like to thank everyone for this Webby award for Best Technology Deals Column Aimed at Frugal Geeks. It was an awesome night. Great partying with you, Trent.

1. Giant flat screens aren’t just for the TV room. You’ll find you’re more productive when you’ve got this Samsung 2243SWX 21.5-inch screen on your desktop. It delivers a 1920x1080pixel resolution, a 15,000:1 dynamic contrast ratio, and a 5ms response time. It even has a handsome design, with a piano black bezel and a soft, rounded design. Buy.com will deliver it to you for $169.99, with free shipping. Now that’s a big screen bargain.

2. There are huge deals to be found on music players that don’t have the word “iPod” on the box. For example, Amazon is selling the SanDisk Sansa m250 for $32.95. It’s an attractively compact 2GB player for people who prefer something on the smaller side.

3. Label your world with the Brother PT-9500PC. It connects to your Windows or Macintosh computer so that you can print labels right from your screen. OnSale.com has it for $186.99, which includes a $50 instant rebate.

NEC introduces tree-hugging MultiSync E222W LCD monitor

How do you make an otherwise plain, unassuming monitor one that’s worth paying attention to? You make it run off of sheer joy, that’s what. Sadly, we’ve yet to see an LCD that gets all the juice it needs from the smiles on our faces, but NEC‘s 22-inch MultiSync E222W is unquestionably a step in the right direction. Said panel is said to utilize 50 percent less power and contain half the amount of mercury compared to traditional LCD monitors, and as for specs, you’ll find a 1,680 x 1,050 resolution, 250 nits of brightness, 1,000:1 contrast ratio, a five millisecond response time, DVI / VGA sockets and a 4-way adjustable stand. Check it this July for $269.

[Via iTech News]

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NEC introduces tree-hugging MultiSync E222W LCD monitor originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 18:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ViewSonic intros new 20-, 22- and 24-inch VG27 LCD monitors

Don’t get all worked up here, you won’t find anything too far out of the ordinary. That said, there’s nothing at all wrong with new LCD options in the 20-, 22- and 24-inch segments, and that’s exactly what ViewSonic‘s delivering. The VG2027wm, VG2227wm and VG2427wm are all equipped with 1,920 x 1,080 Full HD panels, a 20,000:1 contrast ratio, 300 nits of brightness, an integrated two-port USB 2.0 hub, DVI / VGA ports and built-in stereo speakers. The new trio can be had right now for $319, $399 and $499 from smallest to largest. Sexy side shot is after the break.

Continue reading ViewSonic intros new 20-, 22- and 24-inch VG27 LCD monitors

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ViewSonic intros new 20-, 22- and 24-inch VG27 LCD monitors originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 03:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Giz Explains: What’s So Great About LED-Backlit LCDs

LED-backlit LCDs are where TV’s future and present meet—they’re the best LCDs you’ve ever seen, but they’re not as stunning as OLED displays, which will one day dominate all. They’re not cheap, but they’re not ludicrous either. Most importantly, they’re actually here.

I’ll CC You in the FL
With LCDs, it’s all about the backlighting. This defines contrast, brightness and other performance metrics. When you watch plasma TVs, OLED TVs or even old tube TVs, there’s light emanating from each pixel like it was a teeny tiny bulb. Not so with LCD—when you watch traditional LCD TV, you’re basically staring at one big lightbulb with a gel screen in front of it.

The typical old-school LCD backlighting tech is CCFL—a cold cathode fluorescent lamp—which is an array of the same kind of lights that make people’s lives miserable in offices around the world. The reason they aren’t the greatest as backlights for TV watching is that they light up the whole damn display. Because LCD is just a massive screen of tiny doors that open and close, light inevitably leaks through the closed doors, when they’re trying to show black, resulting in more of a glowy charcoal. Check out this shot from Home Theater mag to see what I mean:

LEDs (light emitting diodes) are different from say, an old school incandescent bulb, which heats up a filament to generate light, in that they’re electroluminescent—electricity passes through a semiconductor and the movement of the electrons just lights it up. Instead of having one lightbulb in the bottom of the screen, shining up through all of the LCD pixels, you can have arrays of LEDs that shine through smaller portions of the LCD screen, leaving other portions in the dark, so to speak.

OLED—”organic light emitting diode”—is slightly different. Since the electroluminescent component is organic and not a chip, each point of light can be much tinier. That’s why an LED TV still needs the LCD screen in front: there’s no way to have a single LED per pixel unless the screen is huge, and mounted to the side of a building in Times Square. OLEDs don’t: HD OLED displays are made up of red, green and blue dots, no LCD panel required.

LED Is As LED Does
So, Samsung’s term “LED TV” is more accurately—and more commonly—described as an LED-backlit LCD. But not all LED displays are created equal.

There are two major kinds of LED backlighting: Edge-lit and local dimming. Edge-lit displays are what they sound like—the LEDs are arranged in strips running along all four edges of the TV, like you can see in this gut shot from Cnet. A light guide directs the glowyness toward the center of the screen. The advantage of edge-lit displays is that they can get incredibly thin, are 40 percent more power-efficient than regular LCDs and are a bit cheaper than local-dimming TVs. But because they’re still shooting light indiscriminately across the LCD panel, they can’t pull off the black levels that a local dimming backlight setup can.

LED backlighting of the local dimming variety is how you build the best LCD TV in the world. It’s called local dimming, as you probably guessed, because there are a bunch of LED bulbs—hundreds in the Sony XBR8—arranged in a grid behind the screen. They can all be dark or brightly lit, or they can turn off individually or in clusters, making for the actual Dark Knight, rather than the Grayish Knight you’d see on many cheaper CCFL LCDs. Sets with local dimming are pricier than edge-lit—the Samsung’s local-dimming 46-incher started at $3,500, versus $2800 for one of their edge-lit models. They are thicker too.

What Color Is Your LED?
The color of the LEDs matters too, separating the best LED-backlit LCDs from the the merely great. Most LED sets just use white bulbs. The reason Sony’s XBR8 started out at $5,000—as much as Pioneer’s king-of-TVs Kuro—is because it uses tri-color LEDs in an RGB array. In each cluster, there are two green bulbs next to one red and one blue (greens aren’t as bright). The result is high contrast plus super clean, incredibly accurate color.

LED displays are getting cheaper, more quickly than originally expected, so we could see them go mainstream sooner. You already see the lower-end edge-lit LED tech used in mainstream stuff—MacBook Pro and Dell’s Mini 9 to name a couple. Which is a good thing, since the prophesied ascendancy of OLED in 2009 completely failed to happen. So we’ll have to make do with LED in the meantime. Just be sure to find out what kind when you’re buying.

Samsung ships $129 SPF-87H 8-inch digiframe / secondary monitor

Samsung’s been dousing just about anything it can get its paws on with that ‘Touch of Color‘ design scheme, and even the outfit’s latest digiframe wasn’t able to dodge the madness. The 8-inch SPF-87H, which was originally introduced to the world back in April, is now shipping to those scouting a multifaceted digital photo frame. Unlike traditional alternatives, this 0.91-inch thick frame can double as a secondary display (via USB), and the respectable 800 x 480 resolution panel ensures that you can fit more than just a weather widget on there. Other specs include 1GB of built-in storage, an SD expansion slot, 500:1 contrast ratio and a $129 price tag.

[Via HotHardware]

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Samsung ships $129 SPF-87H 8-inch digiframe / secondary monitor originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 May 2009 07:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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