All About the New Macbook Pros 2011 [Apple]

Today, on Steve Jobs’ birthday, Apple updated its MacBook Pro line with much faster models. But you probably already guessed that. Unsurprisingly, they’ve now got an Intel Light Peak port (renamed as Thunderbolt), which can transfer data at 10Gb/s. Plus, a new HD camera for FaceTime, which costs $1 from the Mac App Store. More »

Rumor: New MacBooks Come With Light Peak, Renamed ‘Thunderbolt’

Today’s big Apple rumor concerns Intel’s super-fast Light Peak connection, an optical (or copper) cable which can transmit just about anything along its skinny length. The rumor goes, quite convincingly, that the new range of MacBook Pros expected Thursday will incorporate Light Peak, and that Apple will rename it “Thunderbolt.” Then the rumors start to go awry.

The evidence consists of a supposedly leaked spec sheet for the new machine, along with a photograph of the actual Thunderbolt port and a screenshot of a promo page. Of these, the Thunderbolt logo looks pretty good, the port looks like it is a Mini DisplayPort with an icon Photoshoppped next to it, and the specs may or may not be legit.

Light Peak allows multiple protocols to travel along the same wire, where they are interpreted by a chip inside the computer. Thus you could plug displays, USB printers and even iPods into the same port. It is also faster than USB 3.0. It’s easy to see what the minimalist Apple likes about it.

The German language specs amy be real. In them, the Thunderbolt port is combined with the Mini DisplayPort connector, which fits with the photo of the port at least.

Possibly leaked specs of new 13 inch MacBook Pro from FSCKLOG

I’m skeptical of the photo, but the name and logo both have a ring of truth about them. Couple this with reports that Intel is launching Light Peak this Thursday and we have a pretty good pile of clues. And if Apple does launch Thunderbolt, how long will it be before it replaces the decrepit 30-pin dock connector?

The photo of the new port Thunderbolt! [Mac4Ever]

Photo: Specs of the new 13 “MBP with Core i5 and Thunderbolt port [FSCKlog]

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How Apple Is Winning the Post-PC War

A bit of semantic juggling makes Apple the biggest player in both the personal computer and mobile platform markets.

A research report published today by DisplaySearch found that sales of the iPad propelled Apple past HP for the No. 1 spot in the “mobile PC” market.

To make that work, you have to count the iPad as a PC. DisplaySearch combined sales of Mac notebooks with the iPad and found that Apple sold 10.2 million, or 17.2 percent, of mobile computers shipped during the fourth quarter of 2010. HP shipped 9.3 million.

But you could also count the iPad as a mobile device, as some have done. If you lump together the iPod Touch, iPhone and iPad, Apple’s iOS is the mobile operating system most often used to browse the web, according to NetMarketShare.

“While we anticipate increased competition in the tablet PC market later this year with the introduction of Android Honeycomb-based tablets, Apple’s iPad business is complementing a notebook line whose shipments widely exceed the industry average growth rate,” said Richard Shim, Senior Analyst at DisplaySearch. “Apple is currently benefiting from significant and comprehensive growth from both sectors of the mobile PC spectrum, notebooks and tablet PCs. Cannibalization seems limited at this point.”

The reports seem slanted in Apple’s favor: traditionally the iPad wouldn’t be considered a PC, and most research firms have concluded Android is beating the iPhone in the smartphone market, which doesn’t count the iPod Touch or iPad.

But it’s rational to count the iPad as a personal computer because, well, it’s a computer, even if it has more limited capabilities than a PC. And it seems fair to combine iPod Touch, iPad and iPhone sales when determining which mobile platform has the most dominance: They’re all running Apple’s iOS.

When you look at the big picture, the labels don’t matter to the manufacturers: They just want customers buying their products, and they don’t care if you call it a PC, smartphone or tablet.

The two reports also demonstrate that the lines between “PC” and “mobile” are blurring. Technically all these products — the iPhone, MacBook, iPad, iPod Touch, HP notebooks, Android smartphones and so on — are mobile computers.

So if you look at the iPad as a personal computer, and the iPod Touch, iPad and iPhone as one mobile platform (which it is), one thing is clear: Apple may have lost the PC war, but it’s winning in the post-PC era.

Photo: Bryan Derballa/Wired.com


Every Trackpad Should Look as Good as HP’s Invisible Wonders [Computers]

HP’s new g6 budget notebook line is wholly unremarkable—almost. The econo-laptops have one thing going for them, but it’s pretty stellar—a completely seamless, invisible trackpad. Our only question is, why is this awesome feature stuck in cheap-o land? More »

Cut and Cover: Notebook Hides Pen Beneath its Skin

Teo Song Wei’s notebook is called simply “Notebook with Pen Holder”, and its beautifully minimal design matches its unadorned name. The silicone-bound book features a single slash in the front cover into which you press a pen, keeping it both handy and protected.

There is something a little creepy about it though, reminding me of subcutaneous, sci-fi implants, or even of Han pushing Luke into the still-warm carcass of his Taun Taun. However, I would buy it in an instant if I could, and surely spend far too much time picking at and fiddling with that lipless gash.

Hints to Wei if he ever gets a manufacturer for his book concept: One, never, ever make this in skin-pink and two, consider a Star Wars branded version with a grayish white furry cover and a light saber-shaped pen.

Pen in Crack [Yanko Design]

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Windows Ill-Suited to Touchscreens, New Tablets Show

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Most of the tablets released in 2011 will be Android-based, but a few stalwarts are sticking with Windows.

We recently got a closer look at two tablets shown off in Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer’s CES 2011 keynote: The Acer Iconia and the Asus Eee Slate EP121. Together, they show the potential — and the limitations — of a Windows-based tablet strategy.

It’s not that surprising to see Windows tablets, given that computer makers have been making them since 2001. In a sense, the Tablet PC never went away.

But in another respect, these tablets show just how wrong-headed Microsoft’s plan to use Windows for everything is. The company recently announced plans to create versions of Windows for ARM-based processors like the Qualcomm Snapdragon and Nvidia Tegra 2, which are found in a lot of upcoming tablets and high-end smartphones.

Microsoft division president Steven Sinofsky, speaking at CES last week, pointed to a convergence between the hardware requirements for Windows (the desktop OS) and most smartphones. Windows 7 requires no more resources than its predecessors, Windows Vista (in fact, slightly less) and he anticipates that its hardware requirements will remain level. Meanwhile, smartphones are gaining features previously found only in PCs: dual-core processors, gigabytes of RAM, heavy-duty graphics-processing capabilities.

“This convergence is pretty interesting to us as we think about the next generation of Windows,” Sinofsky said.

But the hardware convergence is only part of the story. The fact is, the Windows interface is not designed for touchscreens, a fact that was immediately obvious after spending a few minutes with the Asus and Acer tablets.

Above: The Acer Iconia is an unusual, dual-screen laptop. Its design echoes that of last year’s twin-screen Toshiba Libretto, except the Acer has two 14-inch displays, making it a full-size notebook.

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Photos: Jonathan Snyder / Wired.com


HP Pavilion dm1: Notebook with a Netbook Price

LAS VEGAS — The netbook is all but dead. Instead, we now have the ultraportable notebook. HP’s new Pavilion dm1 takes some cues from the latest MacBook Air, squeezing almost-notebook performance into an almost-netbook sized body.

CES 2011

The 3.2-pound dm1 has one of AMD’s brand new Fusion APUs (Accelerated Processing Units), a system-on-a-chip which combines multicore CPU, video-”card” and dedicated hardware hi-def video decoding into a single chip of silicon. This lets the 1.6GHz machine play movies without braking a sweat, something that most Intel Atom-powered netbooks have difficulty doing. But like the Atom, the Fusion processor consumes very little power. In fact, HP claims a battery life of 9.5 hours with a hard drive, and 10.75 hours with the optional solid-state hard drive.

The screen measures 11.6 inches and packs in 1366 x 768 pixels, and the body holds three USB ports, VGA, a card-reader, HDMI-out and Altec Lansing speakers with Dolby Advanced Audio. Finally, the dm1 has “CoolSense”, which is what HP calls its adaptive cooling tech. This detects when the notebook is mobile using accelerometers, and adjusts the interior air-flow to keep the base of the machine cool and lap-friendly.

The dm1 does inherit one thing from netbooks: looks. The chunky, plastic wedge shape is more MSI Wind than MacBook Air. When it goes on sale next week (January 9th), the dm1 will begin at $450.

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The 10 Most Significant Gadgets of 2010

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Steve Jobs and iPad


When this year began, we were feverishly speculating about an Apple tablet, looking forward to 3-D TV sets, and optimistically waiting for the end of the cable companies’ cruel grip on our wallets.

We had to settle for one out of three. While manufacturers did release a handful of 3-D TVs, there’s just not enough content (either on cable or Blu-ray) to justify purchasing one yet. The heavy, expensive glasses you need to buy don’t make the proposition any more attractive, either.

And as for getting all our video from the sweet, ever-flowing bounty of the internet? Sure, we still do that — when we’re at work. But at home, internet TV is still struggling to stand on its own. The gadget we’d pinned our hopes on, the Boxee Box, is unfinished and buggy. Google TV is hampered by the unwillingness of the TV networks to play ball. Apple TV remains locked into its own little iTunes-centric world.

So that leaves the Apple tablet. If you’d told us in December 2009 that we’d be using the word “iPad” every day without giggling, well, we would have giggled at you. But there it is: There’s no getting around the fact that the iPad, silly name and all, has completely and successfully redefined what a “tablet computer” could be.

But the iPad was far from being the only big gadget news of the year. E-readers, cameras, and even exoskeletons made huge strides in 2010. Here, then, are the 10 gadgets that were most significant in 2010.

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NVIDIA Admits to Faulty Notebook GPU’s & MCP’s

This article was written on July 03, 2008 by CyberNet.

nvidia broken-1.pngNVIDIA announced today that they will be taking a $150 million hit in order to repair faulty graphical processing units (GPU) and media communications processors (MCP). The problem is apparently only an issue in notebooks where the unusually large amounts of concentrated heat causes the chips to fail. Even though NVIDIA has come forward they have yet to say exactly what systems are affected by this issue. The only thing they said in their investor-focused announcement was that it’s their “previous generation” that has the abnormal failure rates:

NVIDIA plans to take a one-time charge from $150 million to $200 million against cost of revenue for the second quarter to cover anticipated warranty, repair, return, replacement and other costs and expenses, arising from a weak die/packaging material set in certain versions of its previous generation GPU and MCP products used in notebook systems. Certain notebook configurations with GPUs and MCPs manufactured with a certain die/packaging material set are failing in the field at higher than normal rates. To date, abnormal failure rates with systems other than certain notebook systems have not been seen.

A quick fix that they are apparently trying to employ on computers with the “defective” chips is to force the fans to turn on earlier by pushing out a driver update. Adrian Kingsley over at ZDNet has thrown out his guess that the Dell m1330′s and m1530′s are among those affected. They are powered by the GeForce 8400M GS, and some have had to get their motherboards replaced due to overheating issues. I actually know someone that purchased a Dell m1530 about two months ago, and after a week of owning the system they had to get their motherboard replaced because the laptop wouldn’t even turn on. Dell didn’t say what the issue was, but they were quick to replace the motherboard without running any diagnostics.

It would be nice if NVIDIA came forward with what chips are affected by the problem, but I don’t think they want to take any more of a loss than they already have. Their stock has already fallen 30% since this morning (now at $12.49), and so they are probably going to do anything they can to keep it from going any lower.

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First Look: Google’s Netbook Has Its Head in the Cloud

Google’s Cr-48 netbook is a promising but incomplete step toward a life lived fully on the internet.

It’s not a consumer laptop, it’s a test machine designed to showcase how Chrome OS netbooks will work. As a result, you can’t buy one, but you can sign up to get in line for Google’s pilot program.

Here are our first impressions after a few hours using the machine. A full review will follow.

The all-black Cr-48 looks like a stealth fighter. It has rubberized black surfaces, no logos anywhere and has minimal accoutrements: a built-in camera, one USB port, one video-out port, a headphone jack and a power supply. Dual-band Wi-Fi and a world-mode 3G radio are built in, as are a microphone and speakers. It has a 12.1-inch screen and a full-sized keyboard. At 3 pounds 10 ounces, it weighs more than I expected it to.

We’re still digging up specs about the guts, but some impressions: It’s pretty zippy, but not that zippy. We know there’s an Intel Pine Trail processor inside. It’s certainly as fast and responsive as you’d expect from a netbook, but it’s not nearly as fast as a MacBook Air or a reasonably equipped, sub-$1,000 laptop. While scrolling web pages, playing some web-based games and watching videos from YouTube and the Onion, I noticed some jerkiness and skipping.

Flash Player is pre-installed (and presumably sandboxed) but watching Flash videos is a bit of a sucky experience, especially in full-screen mode. But everything at least works as advertised, and it’s still totally usable.

The keyboard is full-sized, but it has some quirks. Much has been made of the Cr-48’s lack of a Caps Lock key, but it’s totally fine by us since the caps lock key is now a Search key. Press it and a new browser tab opens with the cursor in the URL/search bar, or the “omnibox” as Chrome terms it. Just start typing and you get instant search results from Google (the default engine, though Yahoo and Bing are also options).

If you miss the Caps Lock key, it can be remapped by clicking on the wrench icon in the top right. That’s where all the system settings live. You can also re-map the Alt and Ctrl keys (helpful if you’re a Mactard like me) and you can set the keyboard to swap between Dvorak and normal-person mode.

Also gone are the function keys. They’ve been replaced by browser controls (including a dedicated “refresh” button that will doubtless get a lot of use) and your standard brightness and volume controls. The trackpad is a little bigger than a credit card, and it’s the tap-to-click variety without a button. You use two fingers to right-click. Finally — and I’ve never seen this before — the letter keys are all lowercase.

It’s important to note that almost nothing is stored on this laptop. Chrome OS is just a very thin system OS with Chrome browser running on top. The desktop is gone, all you see is the browser. You log in with your Google account when you first turn it on, and it syncs up all of your settings, bookmarks and personal data through the cloud.

When I first started it up, it had a few problems connecting to the “Get Started” pages on Google’s servers. Also, we tried to connect to the Chrome Web Store and got a security alert for a certificate violation. Oops. But after logging out and logging back in as a different user, everything went smoothly.

It’s remarkably easy to log in and get started. You feed it your Google credentials and within seconds, you’re looking at a Chrome browser window. You’ve been here a million times before, and you know exactly what to do. Most of the familiar browser keyboard shortcuts are there. Ctrl-T and Ctrl-W open and close tabs. Ctrl-N launches a new workspace, and you can swap between work spaces using the key formerly known as F5.

From the time you press the Power button, it takes about 15 seconds to get to the “desktop.” All your Chrome bookmarks appear at the top of the screen, and you can start searching and browsing right away. Some biggies — Gmail, Google Talk, Google Maps, YouTube — come pre-installed. There are also two pre-installed games, Poppit and Entanglement. When I say “installed,” I basically mean there are shortcuts displayed in a grid on the default Chrome New Tab screen. Click on a candy-flavored icon and a web page launches in that tab.

As a cloud-dependent netbook, the Cr-48 does not fare so well without a net connection. I disconnected from the office Wi-Fi and, after about a 30-second pause, I was able to keep using some apps in offline mode.

However, Google Docs doesn’t have offline mode, so you can’t edit documents without a connection. (Google Docs’ offline mode is being reworked and will be back in early 2011, says Google, and presumably this won’t be an issue by the time Chrome OS laptops are generally available.) When I switched tabs to write a few e-mails, I found that Gmail was unresponsive, too. Instead, I played a few games of Entanglement and read a news story I had previously loaded. When I reconnected, everything turned back on in a few seconds and my Gmail inbox refreshed.

I also kicked on the 3G radio. One click connects you to Verizon’s network and brings you to a screen where you can easily configure your machine. Every Chrome OS laptop will come with free Verizon data service providing 100 MB of data per month for two years.

Back on Wi-Fi, I visited the store and installed some Chrome apps, including The New York Times, The Onion, and Tweetdeck. All of these are basically just web pages, but they’re specially tailored for Chrome users. For example, when you browse the NYT app, you don’t see the Times website. You get a customized layout that looks and feels more like an iPad app than a traditional website. It doesn’t have iPad-like smoothness, but it is tablet-esque in design.

When using apps, there are some cases when the machine definitely feels underpowered. Most websites and things like Gmail and Google Docs work with no problems and very little latency. But the Times app isn’t so smooth. The Onion’s app, which puts a big video player front and center, lags. Tweetdeck, which is a mix of Flash and HTML5, is clunky.

But this is, after all, a test machine. The Atom processor inside will probably need a boost before Chrome OS hardware hits the shelves. Otherwise, people who would be excited about a fast, web-connected portable powerhouse will be dismayed by the relative lack of muscle.

However, anyone who needs something stable, simple and fully synced that’s instantly familiar out of the box will be delighted.

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Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com