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Archive
Archive for January, 2011

Thought Honeycomb was just for tablets? Well, it’s not! According to Engadget that is. They’ve dig the preview SDK’s emulator of Honeycomb to have found some evidence of the Honeycomb smartphone crime scene. Just by simply changing the screen resolution of the emulator from WXGA to WVGA, a very familiar scene surfaces.
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The Motorola Atrix 4G, the dual-core phone that was previewed at CES 2011, finally got its first promo video, highlighting its laptop and HD multimedia docks (giving us a decent peek at the docked UI for both), dual-core processor and related gaming credentials, and, of course, that gorgeous qHD screen resolution on the handset itself. Motorola also claimed boldly the Atrix 4G to be the first dual-core phone. Will LG whip out a counter assault soon? We’ll just prepare some popcorn.
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When it comes to accessories for your Mac, they must not run short of aesthetically beautiful brushed aluminium products to compliment your very beautiful MacBook. Great example to have is this BookArc for Air from Twelve South, who’s made name on the Apple community for products that are crafted so magically for Apple, it makes you wonder if Steve Jobs’s is part of the owner of the company.
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This leak is thus far the CDMA side of the story, but it’s quite an interesting leak nonetheless. Going chronologically, first up will be a CDMA PlayBook in the second quarter of the year; so far, Sprint’s WiMAX version (sans CDMA support) is the only carrier-partnered version of the tablet announced. Next comes Montana — a CDMA version of the Dakota — which may come to market as the Bold Touch; as the name implies, you can expect the classic portrait QWERTY Bold form factor with the addition of a touchscreen.
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We’ve heard that HTC is eager to throw in a tablet to the table, but now the wind is getting stronger. A leaked picture has surfaced on the net claiming to be the upcoming Android tablet from HTC. Flyer, the device is powered by Google’s Android 2.3 aka Gingerbread, which seemed odd. However, the source has claimed that HTC will eventually offer Honeycomb in the near future, or possibly the end product will ship with Honeycomb. Obviously this is a leak so anything can happen to the final.
As a competitor to the Samsung Galaxy Tab, the Flyer features a 7-inch (1024 x 600) touchscreen, a 1GHz Qualcomm MSM8255 single-core chipset, a front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera, a rear-facing 5MP camera with LED flash, HSPA (allowing for up to 14.4Mbps via the cellular network pending on your carrier), a HDMI output and DLNA support for easy data streaming to various consumer electronics. The HTC Flyer is expected to launch in March 2011 and it’s mentioned that a 10-inch LTE model may come along after that, presumably to have a catfight with Moto Xoom.
SOURCE via Tc Magazine

Everyone knows that RIM is losing badly in the smartphone market with Android and iPhone going for an all-out war, and having Windows Phone 7 at the side gaining some momentum into the battlefield. Therefore they needed a new white knight to guide the company back to the battlefield, but we never expected something like this. RIM has surrendered and has whipped out a BlackBerry Curve Touch codenamed “Malibu”, and it’s all touchscreen. There’s no QWERTY keyboard, not even a slide out one. Thus far, it’s said to be CDMA, and is a midrange touchscreen BlackBerry smartphone.
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Time flies, and all of a sudden the gaming gear for enthusiast Razer DeathAdder is already 5 years old. I still remember Razer coming out of nowhere when Fnatic was stomping the front to victory streaks with Razer gears back then when f0rest~w0w~ is just a noob. To celebrate from being a baby to a toddler and ready for kinder garden, Razer has released the DeathAdder Black Edition to celebrate the 5th anniversary of the DeathAdder high-performance gaming mouse. The DeathAdder Black Edition comes with the same 5 Hyperesponse buttons, on-the-fly sensitivity adjustment, 3500dpi 3.5G infrared sensor and a 1ms response time. The DeathAdder Black Edition is now available for $59.99 each. Nothing much, just being black, since there’s already a white. Now you can’t call Razer a racist. Still, the DeathAdder is the best mouse I’ve used.
SOURCE via Razer

When Sony announced the NGP earlier yesterday, they picture it as a portable PS3. However, that phrase has frightened many innocent kids, even making some babies cried, nearly flooding the Yellow River again. However, Eurogamer and Game Informer have good news for all you cry babies.
They’ve interviewed Sony’s Andrew House and Shuhei Yoshida, and in the interview they mentioned that the quad-core handheld nuclear reactor will be ‘affordable’. Nobody knows how they defined ‘affordable’, but they has given a good picture for your imagine, and that is a price somewhere northward of the Nintendo 3DS’s $250, Yoshida was quoted as saying “It’s not going to be $599,” laughing off the idea that the system would cost as much as the PlayStation 3′s infamous appraisal at launch, and House said that Sony “will shoot for an affordable price that’s appropriate for the handheld gaming space.” Yes, now you can sleep sound tonight. Read the rest of the interview in the source below.
SOURCE via Eurogamer

Intel will soon be launching a new X-25 lineup SSD known as the 510 Series, and they’ll be based on the very fast SATA 6Gbps interface. This will be good news for speed enthusiast, as SSD speed cope with 6Gbps interface will be very neck-breaking. The upcoming drive comes in a 2.5-inch form factor and uses a 34nm MLC NAND flash. The storage device provides read and write speeds of up to 450MB/s and 300MB/s, respectively. What’s more, the Intel 510 Series SSD is also capable of 20,000 IOPS for 4KB reads and 4,000 IOPS for 4KB writes. Available in 120GB and 250GB of storage capacities, the Intel 510 Series SSD will retail for $279 and $579, respectively.
SOURCE via PC Launches
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