latest tech

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

The New Fujitsu Stylistic Q550

Fujitsu will launch their new Stylistic Q550 at Germany’s CeBIT show this year, running the first week of March. This should be a welcomed return for many long-time Tablet PC fans who lamented the gradual decline of this line of slates. And for those who don’t know their long history with tablets, Fujitsu has put together a show for you.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Archos Arnova 7ob : Color e-Book for Those Who Like Official Names

CeBIT 2011 will be this year the ”Heart of the digital world” and it will house the biggest IT names which will launch new products and projects. French supplier of electronic devices, Archos has chosen an exhibition CeBIT for the release of e-books with seven-inch color touch screen. The Archos Arnove 7ob will retail in Europe for €129 or about US$179 including VAT. The Archos Arnova will runs Android 2.1 Eclair.

Thin and Light Laptop with Superior Performance from Apple MacBook Air 11-inch

Apple makes the MacBook Air both smaller and less expensive, creating an excellent ultraportable, but leaving out a few features along the way. The new 11.6-inch version of the MacBook Air kills both birds with one stone, as the smallest current Apple laptop (there were 12-inch PowerBook models as recently as five years ago), and also lowering the entry price to $999, coincidentally, the same as the white basic 13-inch MacBook.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

A Well Balanced Business Netbook from Lenovo ThinkPad X120e

Stick one into a ThinkPad design, and you have the ThinkPad X120e, an update to last year's ThinkPad X100e (which had AMD's Neo processor). The ThinkPad X120e is the latest "netbook alternative" for business from the team at Lenovo. Lenovo has done a magnificent job giving the keyboard a full-size feel, but the 1366 by 768, 11.6-inch display suffers in comparison to the 12- and 13-inch displays of other ultraportable laptops. Given the choice between characterizing the X120e as an underpowered ultraportable or as a wonderful netbook.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Charges Your iPhone with Electric Bike (Gas 2.0)

Its new bicycle features wireless braking, wireless throttle and wireless pedal-assist function, which all communicate using 2.5-gigahertz frequency-hopping "spread-spectrum" technology. That means there are no wires or delicate electrical components to short-circuit. This $2000 bike would be pretty  tempting for thieves. Still the idea of being able to charge your bike and iPhone and the fact that this probably lasts longer than other bikes might make it worthwhile.

Elegant and Affordable Supergadget from Apple iPad

The Apple iPad is an unprecedented device. Announced on January 27th to a middling response, Apple has been readying itself for what could be the most significant product launch in its history; the making (or breaking) of an entirely new class of computer for the company. The iPad is something in between its monumental iPhone and wildly successful MacBook line a usurper to the netbook throne, and possibly a sign of things to come for the entire personal computer market if Apple delivers on its promises. And those are some big promises; the company has been tossing around words like "magical" and "revolutionary" to describe what many have dismissed as nothing more than a larger version of its iPod touch.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Extremely LOW PRICE with Extreme Portability and Battery Life from HP Mini 1103

HP's Netbooks have traditionally come in two versions: consumer 10-inch models such as the Mini 210, and pro-level Netbooks such as the Mini 5103. The $299 Mini 1103 is both and neither. An affordable business/education-targeted Netbook, it has a bare-bones design while offering better bells and whistles under the hood than similarly priced competitors: Bluetooth, a 7,200rpm hard drive, and mobile broadband antennas all come standard. An excellent battery life only adds to its appeal. In the end, the Mini 1103 is still a 10-inch single-core Atom Netbook, but it's one of the better budget Netbooks you can buy.