







In the wake of Maingear’s eX-L gaming laptop getting revamped with new Intel Core processors and the latest ATI Mobility Radeon HD 5870 graphics, MSI announces an even cheaper gaming notebook that is also equipped with some new hardware.
Unlike the Maingear, the MSI GX640 comes in a single configuration, but it’s not a bad one for the $1,099 price tag. You get a Core i5-430M processor, 4GB of DDR3 RAM, 500GB hard drive, DVD burner, and a 1,680×1,050 15.4-inch display. Most importantly, however, is that it includes the new ATI Mobility Radeon HD 5850 graphics, which won’t be as fast as its more powerful 5870 sibling, but still supports DirectX 11 and comes with 1GB of GDDR5 RAM.
You can grab the GX640 already at Amazon.com, and MSI says the budget gamer will becoming to Newegg later this month (which means in the next few days).
Apparently, this new Intel Design Center is the first facility in Israel to be blessed with a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification. This is Intel’s first high-level LEED blessing. One of its facilities in Kulim, Malaysia, received a more basic LEED nod for a retrofit. The company also has a Gold certification pending for its Octollio campus in Chandler, Ariz.
You would need 326 TiVo Premiere boxes to match what the Snapstream DVR can do with just one coax plug.This Snapstream DVR is basically just a tech demo—but it's one hell of a tech demo. Loaded with 50 analog tuners, it can pull and record 50 channels, simultaneously, from your cable feed onto 136TB of storage—which is capable of saving 115,200 hours of recorded TV (or 13 years worth of content to watch). Put differently, you could record 50 channels in your cable package for 96 days straight. The system is driven by a 1U dual-processor quad-core Nehalem Xeon server with "a ton of RAM." So what would this beast cost were Snapstream to actually sell it? Well a 4 to 10 tuner system with 3-15TB of storage goes for $12,000. I'm guessing you can scale that cost appropriately, then add plenty of ??? to the price since it'd be a custom job.
Computer skins are nothing new, but there's something different about these offerings from Karvt—namely, they're made of real wood. Bamboo, cherry, maple, pine and walnut—available stained or unstained—pick whichever you'd like. They're all backed with 3M adhesive for easy stick-on; they all sell for $35 a pop (which really isn't bad if you've seen what some companies will charge for plastic.) If you're so inclined, Karvt also offers an "Artists Series" that uses laser etching to add a layer of design to the wood for $50. All models are on pre-order now to ship May 1st. I'm interested to see how pretty, thick and durable these real wood skins prove to be in real life, but for now, I definitely understand the appeal.
I don't know exactly what people are buying novelty spy cameras for these days, but I guess babysitter surveillance is as timeless a concern as any. Brando's newest motion-activated spy gizmo takes the shape of a small luxury automobile.The rechargeable car shoots 29FPS color video at 1280x960 resolution and snaps still shots as well, storing them in the trunk on an SDHC card. You can set it to start recording when triggered by sound or motion. The package comes with a charging kit and a Gorilla Pod-esque suction cup monopod. Don't worry, no one one will wonder why you have a MatchBox car on the end of a monopod. The toy car spy cam is $60, and it might be the only chance you ever have to afford a Beemer.
Who cares if you've never even heard of the ability to run alternative operating systems on your PS3—you could potentially be in for a small windfall under consumer protection laws. As the story goes, Iapetus at the NeoGAF forums took the issue up with Amazon (who sold him the PS3), quoting a European consumer protection law that states all products bought must be "fit for the purpose which the consumer requires them and which was made known to the seller at the time of purchase," netting him £84 ($130) in the process. He didn't have to return his PS3, nor be within warranty—certainly worth taking up with your retailer, if you've still got the receipt. Though this particular law will only apply to you if you live in Europe—any idea on similar laws in the US, folks? Firmware update 3.21 could prove to be a very costly affair for Sony and retailers.
Back in 2005, a film version of Halo was first penned by Alex Garland, writer of The Beach novel and 28 Days Later screenplay, and it was slated to be released by 20th Century Fox. Acting as producer Peter Jackson and his WETA studio began making props for the Halo film. And filmmaker Neill Blomkamp began making Halo short films for Microsoft.
To my knowledge the only fullHD webcams available are external ones—so Samsung's CMOS sensors could prove a hit for people not wanting to fork out extra for a webcam. True, you'd have to buy a Samsung laptop though...
The CMOS sensors, by the name of S5K6A1 and S5K5B3, can both record 1080p video at 30fps, with the first model shooting on a 1.3MP sensor and the latter model a 2.1MP sensor. The ability to decrease resolution is included, for moments when your internet speed isn't up to par, and the 2.1MP sensor also has an EDoF, or enhanced depth of field function, for recording business cards so it can be translated into text.
You won't see them in laptops until later this year, however—but if Samsung laptops float your boat, it may be worth jotting those sensor names down and asking when it's time to upgrade if the new shiny model has one of the upgraded webcams in it.
Mozilla now estimates that its Firefox web browser is now responsible for some 30% of all web browsing.
Yesterday Mozilla released its first quarterly analyst report (PDF), a document which bought together a whole raft of metrics related to the browser.
By number-crunching data from four metrics providers that Mozilla called “reliable sources” - StatCounter, Quantcast, Net Applications, and Gemius - to pull together a worldwide usage figure of 30% for the plucky browser.
On a more granular level, the company also pulled apart the stats on a continental level: Strongest adoption is in Europe, with usage up at 39.2%. The browser usage for north America stands at 26%.
Before delving into the particulars, it’s important to understand the distinctions between the two primary SKUs of BPOS. (There’s a third,recently introduced Federal BPOS SKU, but that’s not part of this discussion.) THe “Standard” BPOS offering is a multi-tenant (multiple customers sharing the same hardware platform). The “Dedicated” BPOS offering, targeted at larger customers — typically those with more than 20,000 seats — is built on a set of hardware dedicated for a single customer. Standard BPOS is updated with new features every six to eight weeks. Dedicated BPOS is updated every six to eight months.
The biggest change coming for both Standard and Dedicated BPOS customers is a refresh of services that are part of the “Wave 14″ release of products. In other words, Microsoft will be making available to BPOS cloud customers a number of the features that it is rolling out first in its on-premises products, like Exchange Server 2010 (which released to manufacturing at the end of last year), SharePoint Server 2010 (which is due to RTM in April); and Office Communications Server 2007 R2 (which RTM’d late last year) and Office Communications Server 2010, which is expected to RTM at the end of calendar 2010.
The Microsoft-hosted Exchange and SharePoint services will be updated first — in beta form in the next month or so for BPOS Standard users, and then in final form in the second half of this year. Communications Online users will get only the OC Voice technology from the on-premises OCS 2010 product in this calendar year. The rest of the OCS 2010 features will find their way into the cloud-hosted version of Communications Server in the first half of 2011, according to my source.
What else is coming for Microsoft’s growing cadre of cloud customers in calendar 2010? There’s a “Lite” version of BPOS coming, that will be targeted at SMB customers with 25 seats or less, as I’ve reported previously. (I am hearing BPOS Lite is a second half 2010 deliverable.) My source says there’s another new SKU, known as BPOS E (Enterprise) coming, as well, that will include Enterprise Client Access License (CAL) features. I don’t know any feature specifics about either of these products.
Additionally, Microsoft is telling customers and partners that it is trying to establish a new platform that its BPOS services will run on. I don’t think they’re talking about the rehosting of BPOS on Windows Azure here, which company officials have said is a long-term goal for Microsoft’s Online/managed services unit. Instead, this is more of a developer platform: Something that will provide developers and customers with a more programmable layer, allowing them to interact directly with Microsoft’s hosted services via a set of application programming interfaces that bypass the BPOS user interface.
I’ve heard Microsoft will likely highlight at its Office 2010 launch in New York on May 12 some of the enterprise “three screens and a cloud” scenario that BPOS and the individual, Microsoft-hosted services that comprise that product, will enable. I’ve also heard that Microsoft is pitching BPOS hard to its customers and its partners in its current and next fiscal years.
Anyone out there gotten the BPOS pitch? What do you think Microsoft is doing right and wrong with BPOS, vis-a-vis its business productivity competitors like Google with Google Apps?
EBay’s PayPal said it will double the number of employees in Asia Pacific to 2,000 by the end of the year as it chases more growth in the region.
PayPal said it would ad jobsin Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan. PayPal’s international headquarters will be in Suntec City, Singapore and focus on technology, product development, infrastructure, risk and engineering.
In 2009, PayPal processed $6 billion in total payment volume in Asia Pacific, up 38 percent from a year ago. PayPal will also launch its mobile payment software development kit (SDK) for Asia Pacific developers.
PayPal, the growth engine of eBay, also forged partnerships with China UnionPay and DBS Bank.
EBay CEO John Donahoe is betting that PayPal can grow on a global scale. Among the key slides from Donahoe’s February presentation in the UK: