Monday, January 31, 2011

MAGIX Audio Cleaning Lab 17 Deluxe sounds sweet

By Mike Williams

MAGIX Audio Cleaning Lab 17 deluxe

Sound quality really matters. The tiniest of audio glitches can often be enough to ruin a home movie or audio file, yet most applications offer little to address this. Video editors may offer hundreds of ways to tweak your picture, for instance, but when it comes to audio processing, if you get as much as a wave editor and a "clean" button then you're generally doing very well.�If your software simply isn't delivering the audio quality you need, then, it may be time to get some help from a specialist tool -- and�MAGIX Audio Cleaning Lab 17 Deluxe has plenty to offer.

The program can import audio from audio files, videos, or even record it directly from any external audio source that you can plug in to your soundcard (microphone, record player, cassette player and so on), useful if you're looking to digitize your old vinyl record collection.�A stack of cleanup tools can then automatically remove clicks, crackles, humming, hiss and more.

Additionally, a suite of mastering options are able to improve your audio in many different ways, expanding its stereo effect, increasing volume, enhancing dynamics, even refreshing lost high frequency information in some recordings.�It seems like there's a solution here for just about every audio problem, then. But how would MAGIX Audio Cleaning Lab 17 Deluxe behave in practice? We decided to put it to the test.

Getting started

Launch MAGIX Audio Cleaning Lab 17 Deluxe and you're presented with a friendly-looking startup dialog, new to this version. Choose whatever it is you'd like to do ("restore vinyl sound," "clean tape sound," "optimize voice and audio book recordings," "edit digital file") and the program will set its audio presents accordingly, to deliver the best results.

The main work area then displays four buttons: "Import," "Cleaning," "Mastering" and "Export." Click one and you'll see further large icons or controls, and selecting any of these displays is a useful description of the feature.

There's more here than basic tooltips, too. If you're not an audio expert, for instance, then talk of altering audio "dynamics" or maximising the "compressor" won't necessarily mean very much. Fortunately every effect description here also includes two examples: clicking "Before" plays an audio file with the problem, clicking "After" plays a file showing how Audio Cleaning Lab 17 can fix it - very helpful.

It doesn't take long to figure out how to begin, then. Just choose the "Import" button and you're able to import audio files (MP3, WMA, OGG, FLAC, AIF), video soundtracks (though only AVI and MPG formats) or CDs.�Or a click on the "Record" button launches a tool that can record from whatever sound source that you can connect to your PC. Useful features here include the ability to separate records or CDs into individual tracks. And when it's done these may be saved as WAV, FLAC, MP3 or OGG files, ready for further processing.

Cleaning

While Audio Cleaning Lab 17 Deluxe contains many advanced features, you don't have to be an expert to take advantage of them.�Launch the extremely simple Audio Cleaning Assistant, for instance, and it will examine your audio, look for issues like crackles, clicks or noise, and apply the appropriate fixes entirely automatically. This didn't catch every problem in our tests, but it fixed a great deal and is genuinely useful.

The program also provides audio presets that may help in some situations. If you've recorded an old vinyl record with poor results, say, then you might try the "Restore vinyl record in very bad condition" preset, which automatically applies the DeCrackler and DeClicker filters at full strength.

You can also use a Step By Step wizard to take more control over the cleanup process. This can be complex, though, asking for example whether you should eliminate a "Stray pick-up 50Hz bright,"or "Stray pick-up 60Hz deep" (we're not sure, either).

Still, after choosing a cleanup option you can listen to the original audio, then the clean version, so you don't have to understand all the jargon: simply choose an option, preview the results and see if it's helped. Many of the cleanup tools offer further manual tweaks that allow you to customie how they work. If the DeClicker has left a few clicks behind, say, just dragging a slider to increase its strength and running it again could make all the difference.

Spectral Cleaner

Our favourite tool here is the Spectral Cleaner, which allows you to remove short but clear background noises, like a cough, without losing anything else.�To make this happen you must locate the noise on a spectrogram, and highlight it with the mouse. Audio Cleaning Lab 17 Deluxe then replaces that part of the frequency spectrum with information from either side of the noise. And as a result, the audio interruption entirely disappears, but there's also no drop-out, no change in volume: background sounds appear more or less as they always did.

MAGIX Audio Cleaning Lab 17 deluxe

This technology has its limits, of course. If a noise is lengthy, or occupies the same frequency as the signal you'd like to keep, then removing it seamlessly becomes very difficult.�When spectral cleaning works, though (which it normally does), it's like magic, stripping out that poorly timed sneeze so that you'd never know it was there. It's a very useful addition to anyone's cleanup toolkit.

Mastering

As well as the cleanup tools, MAGIX Audio Cleaning Lab 17 Deluxe also provides a host of more general audio processing options that will enhance your sound quality in a variety of ways.�In a click or two you can enhance the stereo effect on a track, for instance, or increase its actual or perceived volume (like the "Loudness" setting on a stereo).

The Brilliance Enhancer tries to restore high frequency sounds that are often lost in MP3 files or old vinyl recordings, by adding overtones based on the material that remains. Sometimes this works just great, sometimes the results are dreadful, but it's still worth having around.�The Sound Cloner uses a 1,204-band equalizer to change the characteristic of a track, so it sounds brighter, louder, like it was sung in a concert hall, or your bathroom.

All these options include multiple presets for easy use. So you don't just click "Loudness," say -- the same tool also offers settings like "Max Bass," "Emphasise Voice," "Emphasise Female Voice,""Boost Bass," 17 options in total, so you just click something that looks appealing and preview the results.�And if that's not enough, there's also support for adding VST and DirectX plug-ins, so you can extend the program with additional effects whenever you like.

Export

When you've finally finished working on your audio file, you'll want to save it, and MAGIX Audio Cleaning Lab 17 Deluxe has several options available.�You can of course export your project as an audio file (WAV, FLAC, OGG, AIF, MP3 or WMA).�The program can burn it directly to an audio CD or DVD (there's even a built-in designer to help you produce a cover).

If you've grabbed the soundtrack from a video, then you can replace this with the edited version in a click or two. As long as it's an AVI file, anyway -- there's no support for other formats.�MAGIX Audio Cleaning Lab 17 Deluxe has one or two restrictions, then, and the interface is overly complex in some places.

The tools are so powerful and effective, though, that even mastering just one or two of them, like the Spectral Cleaner, could be enough to justify the program's cost. So if you're tired of the feeble sound cleanup tools provided by most applications, then give�Audio Cleaning Lab 17 Deluxe a try -- you'll be surprised how much difference it can make.

Verdict: While it can be complicated, and takes some time to master, MAGIX Audio Cleaning Lab 17 Deluxe provides an excellent suite of cleanup tools that can greatly enhance most audio files.

We Like: Lots of cleanup and audio-enhancing tools, Spectral Cleaner seamlessly removes many audio glitches, some simple wizards, effects are generally very configurable, can import and replace soundtracks from AVI videos, VST and DirectX plug-in support.

We Don't Like: Overly complex interface, brief help file, limited video format support.

Manufacturer: MAGIX
MSRP: $49.99
Platforms: Windows XP SP3 (32/64-bit), Windows Vista SP2 (32/64-bit), Windows 7 (32/64-bit)
Requirements: 4GB free hard drive space for temporary work files

Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010

Add to Twitter Add to digg Add to Google Add to Slashdot Add to Facebook Add to Technorati Email this Article

Source: http://feeds.betanews.com/~r/bn/~3/nTvuT9WbqMQ/1296226291

SONUS NETWORKS SONIC AUTOMOTIVE SKYWORKS SOLUTIONS SILICON LABORATORIES SI INTERNATIONAL

How to Make a Bakugan Knight Pendant

As seen on the TV show Bakugan: Gundalian Invaders, the Castle Knights of Neathia wear a special necklace with a pendant that serves as an ID tag as well as a symbol of the bond between a Castle Knight and his or her partner Bakugan.
This guide will show you how to make a simple and stylish replica of this pendant, using shrinkable clear plastic, paint, and common jewelry materials.

Source: http://www.wikihow.com/Make-a-Bakugan-Knight-Pendant

IMATION IKON OFFICE SOLUTIONS IDT IBASIS

Microsoft Loses Another $543 Million Online

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/chart-of-the-day-microsoft-online-operating-income-2011-1

GOOGLE GOOGLE FORMFACTOR FISERV FIRST SOLAR

QNAP Turbo NAS TS-112, TS-212 and TS-412 home/SOHO servers outed

QNAP has outed its newest range of Turbo NAS servers, the TS-x12 line-up, consisting of 1-, 2- and 4-bay models for a total of up to 12TB storage. The QNAP Turbo NAS TS-112, TS-212 and TS-412 each use a Marvell 1.2GHz processor and 256MB of RAM, and offer local and remote file and media access with remote iPhone and Android streaming using the QMobile app.

The TS-112 is the baby of the range, a single-drive box which can be expanded via USB or eSATA, and works as a home file server, DLNA/UPnP streamer, USB printer sharer – for up to three printers – and SqueezeServer functionality. There’s also optional standalone wireless use, with a USB WiFi dongle, together with a gigabit ethernet port.

The TS-212 does much the same as the TS-112 but�accommodates�two drives with data protection. It has the same feature set as the one-drive version, including Full HD 1080p movie streaming. Finally, the TS-412 packs a full four drive bays and offers a choice of Single Disk, JBOD, RAID 0/ 1/ 5/ 6/ 5 + hot spare setups. No word on pricing at this stage, but all three will go on sale in February 2011.

Press Release:

QNAP Debuts New Affordable High Performance Turbo NAS Server Family for Emerging HOME, SOHO, and Prosumer Users

New TS-x12 Lineup Includes 1, 2, and 4-drive Models Featuring Embedded Marvell 1.2GHz CPU and 256MB of DDRII RAM, Delivering Great All-around Performance, Low Power Consumption, and a Wealth of Applications for Home Networks.

Taipei, Taiwan, January, 2011 – QNAP Systems, Inc., a leading manufacturer of world class NAS servers, NVR Video Surveillance Systems, and Network-based Media Players today announced the TS-x12 lineup of affordable high performance Turbo NAS servers intended for the fast-growing home and SOHO market segment. The new models utilize the latest Marvell 1.2GHz processor and include 256MB of DDRII memory and Gigabit LAN ports, offering up to 8TB of networked storage with a unique blend of solid performance, high reliability, and advanced features at very affordable price points. The TS-x12 series includes the 1-drive TS-112, 2-drive TS-212, and 4-drive TS-412.

NAS is becoming a popular addition to home networks as they solve the problem of how to centrally store and share digital content among computers in the home ? especially in mixed Windows/Mac networks. QNAP?s new TS-x12 models are easy to attach to existing networks and provides easy file sharing within the network, centralized backup of all networked computers, website hosting, printer sharing, even recording of surveillance video from IP cameras.

?The new TS-x12 series Turbo NAS servers offer affordable high performance coupled with ultra-low power consumption and virtually noise-free operation,? said Tony Lu, Product Manager from QNAP. ?Home users no longer need to sacrifice performance for lower cost NAS; and the new TS-x12 series offers advanced features like RAID and iSCSI support, making them an incredible value for the money.?

The new TS-x12 models also improve the multimedia experience and capabilities for home users. The built-in UPnP media server (TwonkyMedia) feature of the TS-x12 series supports numerous UPnP-compliant media players such as the Sony� PS3 and Microsoft� Xbox 360 gaming consoles. Users can even use their iPhone and Android phone to stream music and video or view digital photos stored on the NAS in real-time from anywhere they have a Wi-Fi or 3G connection.

Availability
The TS-x12 series will be available starting in February through popular commercial distributors, resellers, and retailers globally.


Relevant Entries on SlashGear



Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/plmOJf-h2K8/

ZORAN ZIONS BAN YAHOO YAHOO XILINX

Welcome to the New Team: Eberlein, Holmes, Spinney, and Sprung

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/JamesFallows/~3/aC_L4HIAonE/click.phdo

EASTMAN KODAK CO EARTHLINK DST SYSTEMS DISCOVER FINANCIAL SERVICES DIODES INORATED

Claim Chowder: Bloomberg on the Verizon iPhone

Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-06-29/verizon-wireless-said-to-start-offering-iphone-ending-at-t-s-exclusivity.html

TIBCO SOFTWARE TIBCO SOFTWARE THQ TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TERADATA

Can I ditch my computer and be green?

Computers may be a prime example of planned obsolescence, but you can decrease the damage along the way?

There is a disheartening moment when your computer makes weird noises and enforces Moore's law ? which decrees that the computing power bought for a certain amount of money doubles every 18 months ? by signalling its own obsolescence.

When it gives up the ghost, don't let it become another piece of unloved e-waste. The UK is responsible for 15% of Europe's total. Around 900 containers of e-waste from Western Europe lands in Asia and Africa each week. Some 80% is dumped, often burned in pits, releasing pollutants ranging from mercury in flatscreens to toxic heavy metals in a PC's central processing unit or barium in the plastic casings.

Also think of the squandered energy and resources used in making it. As Julie Hill reminds us in The Secret Life of Stuff, computing is one of the top water-using industries. Turning the 3G off on your iPhone reduces its energy consumption by 43-60%. You can buy greener, too ? epeat.net rates electronics. The latest Greenpeace report shows electronics companies making progress on phasing out toxic materials but not on increasing longevity. Hardly suprising given their mission is to sell more. But this should be our focus. While the advice used to be to buy a sleek laptop (less power hungry), now it's to invest in a modular PC built with replaceable, repairable components and a capacity to upgrade. Eco beauty isn't all about being sleek and wafer thin.


Email Lucy at lucy.siegle@observer.co.uk or visit guardian.co.uk/profile/lucysiegle for all her articles in one place


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/jan/30/waste-computing

SYMANTEC SYKES ENTERPRISES INORATED SYBASE SUN MICROSYSTEMS STANDARD MICROSYSTEMS

Android In-App Payments Coming Soon

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/01/25/android-in-app-payments/

QUALCOMM QUANTA COMPUTER RESEARCH IN MOTION ROGERS COMMUNICATIONS SAIC

Apple too closed and Steve Jobs ego-led rants Netgear CEO

Netgear‘s CEO and global chairman has heavily criticized Apple for its closed ecosystem, blaming Steve Jobs’ ego for certain aspects of company strategy, and suggesting that once the iconic CEO steps down permanently Apple will struggle against Android becoming the de facto standard in consumer electronics. Speaking to the Sydney Morning Herald, CEO Patrick Lo claimed that Steve Jobs’ departure is “probably not far away” and that Apple’s closed system is leaving content partners “wary” of the company’s control.

“Once Steve Jobs goes away, which is probably not far away, then Apple will have to make a strategic decision on whether to open up the platform. Ultimately a closed system just can’t go that far … If they continue to close it and let Android continue to creep up then it’s pretty difficult as I see it.” Patrick Lo, CEO, Netgear

As for Jobs’ ego, Lo criticized the Apple exec for what he believes to be a personally-motivated attack on Adobe’s Flash technology. “What’s the reason for him to trash Flash?” Lo questions, referring to Jobs’ well-publicized open letter to Adobe.�”There’s no reason other than ego.”

While Lo’s comments are extreme, it doesn’t look like they’ll have much impact on Apple’s attitude towards Netgear; according to the exec himself, “Steve Jobs doesn’t give me a minute!” Still, Cupertino can take some enjoyment from the fact that Lo is similarly dismissive about Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 platform, suggesting that “Microsoft is over – game over – from my point of view.”

[Image via Venturebeat]


Relevant Entries on SlashGear



Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/Dg90NCcuzMI/

MOBILE TELESYSTEMS NANYA TECHNOLOGY NII HOLDINGS NIKON NINTENDO

CES 2011: Tablet strategies and MIAs

Looking back on the week in Las Vegas's giant show points to some serious struggles ahead in a number of sectors

The stands have been broken down, the sun has set in Las Vegas, and the Consumer Electronics show is over - having attracted around 140,000 visitors, up around 40% on last year. It really is big: split among three halls, and spilling over into multiple hotels, with 1.5m square feet of exhibits, 2,500 exhibitors (of whom 1,200 came from outside the US), with 20,000 products launched.

So here's the wrap-up. What are the topics? They fall pretty neatly into a few categories.

Tablets

What a lot of tablets. Around 80 were launched, almost all of them running Android. Motorola wowed the show by announcing its 10-inch (1280x800) Xoom, which will run Android 3.0 (aka "Honeycomb"). You couldn't actually see it running Honeycomb, though; all the stand had was a sort of video demonstration running on the device. Battery life? Price? Ship date? "Competitive", "competitive" and "aiming for Q1".

Presumably it can't determine the battery life or shipping date because that depends on Google getting the software ready, and to announce the price would offer a hostage to fortune at the hands of all the rivals. The Xoom does look very nice, though, and Honeycomb looks like an OS that has tablets in mind; it's not just a blown-up phone interface. I was less convinced by RIM's PlayBook: I simply couldn't see what it would do especially for a business that couldn't be done cheaper and leveraging the Android developer community on Android. That's going to be a tough sell for RIM, I think. HP's forthcoming tablet, meanwhile, is a completely unknown quantity, but the challenge will be the same: getting the developers on board.

Asus also said it would ship a Honeycomb tablet, but didn't even waggle that under our noses; I'd suspect that Motorola is slightly better favoured by Google on this.

The absence: tablets running Windows 7. I did find one (the iTablet from AHX Global, which is a British company) which said that Windows 7 interest was actually greater than for its Android tablet. Then again, the 80-1 interest might indicate that there were other Android tablets; with so many, you'd be hard-pressed to pick one over the others without a detailed review.

And Steve Ballmer did not do the much-expected relaunch of Windows 7 for tablets. The announcement that the next version of Windows (dubbed Windows 8 by the press and analysts, though Microsoft treated the idea of naming it at all as toxic) would run on both Intel's x86 and ARM's RISC architecture. That's a huge move, but it also means that with at least 18 months before you see WindowsNext, other tablet companies will have a chance to go after that market and possible saturate it.

What's not entirely clear, even yet, is what Microsoft is aiming at. To unify the codebase? Possibly, suggested Ron Burk, former editor of Windows Developer's Journal: it might not be such a split for the Windows/Intel monopoly as people have been making out. His suggestion: it's a play for the embedded market, offering developers who have written for the desktop the chance to access that space without having to go through too much pain. Except, as he pointed out to me in an email, "there's no great value to be had from trying to claim you can take applications designed for 1600x1200 screens, keyboards, and mice, and run their binaries unchanged on a cellphone. You have to redesign your UI (at a minimum) for the mobile device anyway, so the fact that you have to set the compiler flag for "ARM" is the least of your worries. If you want the flood of apps to Windows phones that the iPhone has seen, you really want tap the large number of Windows desktop developers that have never written a Windows CE program in their lives."

Which still leaves Microsoft outside the tablet market looking in - and Intel too, because it's got nothing to offer to the tablet market as it is now shaping up. Windows tablets will barely grow in absolute numbers for 2010 (from the 1m-odd they sold to niches in 2009), even as the sector has exploded.

Intel: unhappy. Netbooks: unhappier

And Intel was offended by Microsoft's non-move at tablets: CNet reported an Intel executive saying "Hey, we tried to get [Microsoft] to do a tablet OS (operating system) for a long time. Us, and others like Dell." That from Tom Kilroy, senior vice president and general manager of Intel's Sales and Marketing Group. And I've heard the same from a separate, unconnected source: there is real irritation within Intel, and within Dell, at the fact that Microsoft seems to have promised to go big on tablets, but then done nothing that would push them along to the wider market. That has hurt the hardware partners - and those are expensive mistakes on both sides.

For instance, there were plenty of netbooks on show at CES - but it's hard not to feel that the steam has gone out of that market. Quite aside from Apple's iPad (which will have had a Christmas boost from all the phone operators suddenly offering it with 3G plans - funny, that), Samsung is reporting that it has sold 1.5m of its Galaxy Tab tablets, which I find remarkable given that its performance (especially on Flash) really isn't that good; there are better and cheaper options out there if you want a 7-inch Android 2.x tablet, such as the Viewsonic: see my review comparing them.

So what will tablets do to the netbook market? Is every tablet sold going to be sold along with a new netbook? Will people who presently don't have a netbook wait and buy one of those first, and then get a tablet later? I suspect not - I think tablets and netbooks are in a zero-sum game, given their very similar pricing. Given the choice, you'll buy one or the other. They're additive to your desktop or laptop - but they're mutually exclusive.

(Please don't protest that you can't see the point of a tablet. Nobody is forcing you to buy one. But clearly people are doing so.)

However, for Microsoft, it's not a zero-sum game. Every Android tablet or iPad sold represents lost revenue, whether through a Windows licence on a netbook, or an Office licence, or simply the chance for people writing Windows software to benefit. Microsoft offers no software for the iPad, and nothing for Android tablets. For Windows developers, and also for Windows Phone developers, that's lost money. Why would you spend time developing for Windows Phone (which runs on ARM, so could run on an ARM-based tablet) when you could develop for Android first, and make some cash there?

Windows Phone 7: the problem's in the name

Gordon Kelly, a British freelance journalist, pointed out to me the problem with Windows Phone 7: the name. If Android were called "Google Phone OS", you'd feel a bit odd about having it on a tablet; for the marketing team, it confuses the message. "Android" doesn't say anything about the device. (Apple of course barely acknowledges that its devices have an OS.)

However, the branding problem is acute with trying to run Windows Phone 7 on a tablet - even if the Windows division were to allow it, which it seems not to want to do. The logic behind the latter thing is that a Windows licence generates about $40, while a Windows Phone licence generates about $5. Sensible then not to license WP7 on tablets? Except if you don't sell any of them, your revenue is $40 x 0. Compare that to the revenues from tablets: imagine if those 1.5m Galaxy Tabs were running WP7. It's better than the nothing Microsoft gets now.

But the branding problem is a hassle too: if it were called something portmanteau like "Windows Portable" (because Windows Mobile is tainted), that would make it usable on a tablet without giving the marketing people migraines.

There doesn't seem to be a simple solution for Microsoft. In the meantime, even if tablets kill off netbooks and then die themselves in a year or two, and a different form factor takes over, it will still have been a victory for Apple and Android, and a rout for Microsoft. We'll watch and compare PC sales this year with the forecasts made last year with a lot of interest.

3D! It's 3D!

Yes, 3D TV is still happening. Sony, Samsung, LG and others are pretty sure they can persuade us to dump our HD sets and buy a new one requiring strange heavy glasses (or possibly not - Sony has a 3D TV that doesn't need glasses waiting in the wings) some time in the next five years. And if you thought your front room was dominated by your TV now, here's the next bit: 3D TVs are only available in 40-inch sizes and up. Aesthetically, you've got to have a really big room or the thing's in your lap.

Two questions arise: can a 3D TV work as a 2D set? (Yes.) Is this something that consumers are banging on the manufacturers' doors and demanding? (No.) Then again, people don't know what they want until you offer it, as HDTV showed - though many people still aren't getting the benefit of that.

Sony is betting big on this - 3D camcorders and cameras, and 3D computers, quite beside the TVs. The problem is that 3D TV still just feels like multiple flat planes sliding around in front of you.

If we accept that 3D will become popular then it won't take long to become a commodity, meaning Sony's investment will be hard to recoup. For Howard Stringer, Sony's chief executive, 3D might be what makes or breaks him: there have been mumblings about whether other parts of the executivocracy in Sony want him out. So if you want him to stay, buy a 3D TV.

Smart TV (aka Google's revenge)

Rumours that Google TV would be absent from CES turned out to be wrong: instead it's undergone something of a rebranding as "smart TV", which gets away from the G-word, and focusses on the internet element. Certainly it has potential, being app-based (Android and Linux again: a missed revenue opportunity for Microsoft, again); what will be key will be how much access content owners such as TV stations and film streaming companies such as Netflix allow, or (in the latter case) are allowed to allow. One of the companies showing off products was Logitech; I'm bringing back one of its Revue boxes (for smart TV) so we'll put it through its paces and see how it goes.

Apple: missing, but present

Apple is, in case you hadn't noticed, a consumer electronics company. However, it wasn't at this, the biggest consumer electronics show in the world - possibly the universe. Las Vegas is too loud, and anyway it wouldn't have anything to show. Yet it's fascinating to note that everywhere you turned, there were accessories for iPhone and iPads; there were so many exhibitors trying to show off iPad-related stuff (such as cases and screen covers; not what you'd call essential by any stretch of the imagination) that some company has got a nice job making iPad shells - just the metal back cover and a cardboard block with a picture of the home screen in the front. In fact sometimes it felt like 19,000 of the new products being launched were add-ons for iPa/o/phone/d/s. Actually, not so much iPods: those are now reckoned to be a dead market.

The size of that hardware ecosystem should be making Microsoft pause a bit. It's interesting too (as Griffin Technology, one of the longest-running accessory companies told us) that the best-selling Android tablet accessories are for the Samsung Galaxy Tab: proof that it's not necessarily the best that emerges from such races.

Another little piece of anecdotal evidence came from walking around the show: a surprisingly large number of people (and this is a trade show, so these are buyers for retailers and/or distributors) were sporting iPads or Apple computers. Again, the sort of thing Microsoft might feel a bit itchy about.

Overall? The scene is set for a fascinating battle this year between Android Honeycomb-based tablets and the iPad 2 (which we can reasonably expect will offer front and rear cameras); and to find out whether smart internet-connected TVs are going to enhance our lives, or whether we'll be fighting for the remote as one person tries to tweet and the other tries to change the channel. And 3D TV? Until they can ensure they'll work in screens of 32 inches or less, it's going to remain a niche.

Also MIA

Oh, and one last thing: at your request, I headed over to the Nokia stand to find out about MeeGo devices, and I tried to find Notion Ink to ask about the Adam e-reader. Struck out on both: Nokia was only talking about its Qt software, and Notion Ink wasn't distributing; it seems to be saving money on a stand by demonstrating it only to a selected few. We weren't among them. If they're in money-saving mode, that might not be the greatest news. Perhaps we'll know for sure in a year.

And for now - CES is officially closed. Thanks for all the comments and reading.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/blog/2011/jan/10/ces-2011-roundup-android-3d-smarttv

IOMEGA INTUIT INTERSECTIONS INTERNATIONAL RECTIFIER INTERNATIONAL GAME TECHNOLOGY

Report: Republicans Won Social Media Battle During Midterm Elections

Republicans November's midterm elections saw the Republican party reassert its power in Washington, thanks to landslide victories at voting booths throughout the country. And, according to a new study from the Pew Research Center, the GOP did pretty well on Facebook, too.

In the months leading up to the November elections, 22-percent of all online adults used social media to follow a particular campaign or the election itself, including two-percent who used Twitter to keep up with the latest news. According to Pew's report, 11-percent of Internet-using adults used social networking sites to find out who their friends were voting for, while seven-percent either 'friended' a political candidate on Facebook or followed one on Twitter.

Continue reading Report: Republicans Won Social Media Battle During Midterm Elections

Report: Republicans Won Social Media Battle During Midterm Elections originally appeared on Switched on Fri, 28 Jan 2011 14:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.switched.com/2011/01/28/report-republicans-won-social-media-battle-during-midterm-elect/

JDS UNIPHASE JDA SOFTWARE GROUP JACK HENRY and ASSOCIATES IXYS ITRON

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Cathode

Source: http://www.secretgeometry.com/apps/cathode/

CDW CHINA MOBILE CISCO SYSTEMS COGNIZANT TECH SOLUTIONS COMCAST

T-Pain Tattoos a Facebook 'Like' Button on His Arm

T-Pain's Facebook Tatoo
T-Pain has added a Facebook homage to his tattoo collection. The star got the phrase "you don't have to like me," tattooed on his bicep, with the "like" in the form of the iconic Facebook button, inspiring me to get my own social networking tattoo. A Twitter one seems perfect... just as soon as I figure out how to visualize self-importance and white noise.

T-Pain Tattoos a Facebook 'Like' Button on His Arm originally appeared on Switched on Fri, 28 Jan 2011 17:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.switched.com/2011/01/28/t-pain-tattoo-facebook-like-button/

UNITED ONLINE UNISYS TRIQUINT SEMICONDUCTOR TRIMBLE NAVIGATION LIMITED TRIDENT MICROSYSTEMS

Anonymous and Tunisia: A New Cyber Warfare?

anonymousTunisia's 'Jasmine Revolution' ignited on December 17th, when a street vendor named Mohamed Bouazizi set himself on fire in front of a local police station. The demonstration struck a chord within millions of Tunisians -- many of whom, like Bouazizi, had fallen on hard times, due to the country's stagnant labor market, skyrocketing food prices and high-level political corruption. Within days, protesters had flooded the streets of Sidi Bouzid, an economically downtrodden region of the country. Within weeks, they had forced President Zine Al Abidine Ben Ali to flee the country, after 23 years of autocratic rule.

As the upheaval unfolded, it soon became clear that the Jasmine Revolution was not a typical uprising. Tunisians spread their revolutionary fervor to the digital sphere, where Ben Ali's regime had previously enjoyed unchallenged sovereignty. As scores of protesters clashed with police and demanded economic and social reform, an equally impassioned, if comparatively less tangible war was being waged online -- one involving not tear gas and demonstrators, but malware and rogue hackers.

Continue reading Anonymous and Tunisia: A New Cyber Warfare?

Anonymous and Tunisia: A New Cyber Warfare? originally appeared on Switched on Sat, 29 Jan 2011 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.switched.com/2011/01/29/anonymous-and-tunisia-a-new-cyber-warfare/

IMS HEALTH IMATION IKON OFFICE SOLUTIONS IDT IBASIS

Facebook Beefs Up Site Security, At Long Last

Facebook will start allowing users to do all their social networking via HTTPS connections?also known as SSL encryption, the most widely used form of security on the web. Until now Facebook has only used HTTPS on its login page, where users type in their passwords. The change comes almost a year after the Federal Trade Commission called on Facebook and other internet companies to start using HTTPS encryption by default, a suggestion that was widely echoed by privacy advocates. Facebook has been under close scrutiny when it comes to privacy issues, and with three major browser companies having recently proposed improvements to protect user privacy, the company surely understands that it can’t be seen to be a laggard while the online privacy movement gathers steam.

Source: http://feeds.paidcontent.org/~r/pcorg/~3/Jcq10BwMbtY/

INSIGHT ENTERPRISES INGRAM MICRO INFORMATICA INFOCUS ZORAN

Tim O?Reilly on Mobile Phones as Payment Devices

Source: http://www.google.com/buzz/timoreilly/AWGXFisUmF1/In-response-to-a-discussion-on-an-internal-OReilly

MICROS SYSTEMS MICRON TECHNOLOGY MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY METHODE ELECTRONICS MENTOR GRAPHICS

On the Term ?HTML5?

Source: http://jeffcroft.com/blog/2010/aug/02/term-html5/

VERIFONE HOLDINGS VEECO INSTRUMENTS VARIAN SEMICONDUCTOR EQUIPMENT ASSOCIATES UNITED ONLINE UNISYS

Macworld Live

Source: http://www.macworld.com/

COSMOTE MOBILE TELECOM DLINK DIGITAL CHINA HOLDINGS DIRECTV GROUP ELPIDA MEMORY

Paul Clarke: how I would fix data.gov.uk

Open data expert Paul Clarke explains how he would change the government's open data project

A year, almost to the day, from the launch of data.gov.uk it seems clearer that it was really trying to fire at three targets simultaneously: transparency, usefulness and good old commercial value. Three targets that have some overlap, but also some inherent tensions. How well has it done?

On transparency, we heard much along the lines of "sunlight being the best disinfectant" and that the very act of openly publishing information, particularly on accounting and spending, would do much to reduce wrong-doing and rebuild trust. It might not matter so much if the information wasn't actually read that regularly or in detail; what mattered most was that it was published. We were told that tools would emerge to make general understanding easier, that amateur auditors would audit from their armchairs and indeed there has been some progress in this area. But there hasn't been a dramatic unveiling of hitherto concealed horrors, just some visualisations and a tendency to focus on quirky details that make interesting stories - with no substantive follow-up.

On the subject of usefulness, things have gone less well. We haven't seen much in the way of new apps and services driven by data.gov.uk data which actually deliver value to people in their day-to-day lives. Political pressure has been focused on driving out more of the spending data, perhaps at the expense of data that may be practically useful. We can speculate about the political factors at work here: gleeful exposure of the excesses of the last government and the current tensions between central and local government on spending priorities both spring to mind.

But it does mean that the genuinely "useful" - the data that describes things in real people's lives: maps, postcodes, contact information, opening hours, forthcoming events - and the real-time stuff, such as live running transport information, are falling behind. And that's where the really useful apps and services are going to come from. Certainly, recent moves such as the release of Ordnance Survey maps under reusable licence are steps in the right direction, but much more political will is needed here to level things up.

And on the last target - the billions of commercial value that were touted as being locked up in government data - things don't seem to be going too well at all. Some of this value was no doubt to be derived from the opening up of key enabling datasets - such as maps and postcodes - allowing new business opportunities to really take off. But some of it would have to come from inherent value in the data itself, or released from the combining of datasets to produce new products: taking data and finding new markets for it. Quite where this is currently headed remains shrouded in vagueness, but a new Public Data Corporation is now proposed, which lists among its objectives the management of the conflict between revenues from the sale of data and the benefits of making it freely available. This doesn't actually seem that unreasonable. If one considers data as a national asset, why would it not be sensible to secure appropriate commercial value from it as with any other asset? But the proposal has triggered questions and some criticism from open data campaigners that this wasn't how it was supposed to be. The extent to which commitments to release data free of charge were actually made or implied is now coming under scrutiny.

So where do we go from here? In the light of what we've learned over the last year, I'd prescribe the following: a rebalancing of the data held within data.gov.uk in favour of the genuinely useful; swift clarification of what is to be made available free of charge and what is not; a more mature approach to engaging developers and entrepreneurs if we're really to see apps and services flourish (it's going to take more than just a few "hack days"); and some exploration of how to demonstrate the value returned from what government spends. This last point should be of concern: at the launch last November of central government spending data, I reminded Francis Maude and the Transparency Board of Wilde's description of those who knew the price of everything and the value of nothing?

Paul Clarke has worked on digital strategy for Directgov, the London Datastore and the Department of Health

More data

Data journalism and data visualisations from the Guardian

World government data

? Search the world's government data with our gateway

Development and aid data

? Search the world's global development data with our gateway

Can you do something with this data?

? Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group
? Contact us at data@guardian.co.uk

? Get the A-Z of data
? More at the Datastore directory

? Follow us on Twitter


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/2011/jan/22/government-data-uk-clarke

OSI SYSTEMS ORACLE OPENWAVE SYSTEMS ON SEMICONDUCTOR NVIDIA

Cook : Apple :: Ballmer : Microsoft ?

Source: http://www.winsupersite.com/blogs/tabid/3256/entryid/76084/Daily-Update-Site-Update-Windows-Phone-Stuff-Much-More.aspx

VIEWSONIC VERISIGN VERIFONE HOLDINGS VEECO INSTRUMENTS VARIAN SEMICONDUCTOR EQUIPMENT ASSOCIATES

Olbermann Leaves ?Countdown? on MSNBC

Source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/01/21/olbermann-hosts-last-countdown-on-msnbc/

ASUSTEK COMPUTER ATandT AUTODESK AUTOMATIC DATA PROCESSING AVNET

? Simple Questions for Google Regarding Chrome?s Dropping of H.264

Source: http://daringfireball.net/2011/01/simple_questions

ECLIPSYS EASTMAN KODAK CO EARTHLINK DST SYSTEMS DISCOVER FINANCIAL SERVICES

Facebook Friends Help Dublin Man Find His Stolen Audi A4

Man recovers stolen car with help from Facebook friends.
A Dublin, Ireland man has recovered his stolen car with help from his Facebook friends. According to The Daily Edge, Warren Coakley posted a status update asking his friends to watch for a silver 2005 Audi A4, which was stolen as he loaded his car to take his kids to school last week. Prior to his Facebook plea, Coakley posted pictures of the car and his contact information on several message boards. Coakley also wrote a letter to Motorcheck.ie, which was published on their blog, that described his shock at walking out his front door with his two sons and seeing a stranger peel out of the driveway in his car. But when all had failed, it was an unidentified friend-of-a-Facebook-friend who read Coakley's status, and remembered seeing a similar car parked in the woods not far from Coakley's house. Coakley eventually talked with the stranger on the phone and notified the police, who recovered the car.

Of course, Coakley is still in the hole for the money it cost to replace the keys and change the locks on his cars and home. But maybe now, if nothing else, he'll be smart enough to realize that it just isn't smart to leave a car unattended with the keys in the ignition, which we'd think would be something a 34-year-old man would already know.

Facebook Friends Help Dublin Man Find His Stolen Audi A4 originally appeared on Switched on Sat, 29 Jan 2011 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.switched.com/2011/01/29/facebook-friends-help-warren-coakley-find-stolen-car/

QUEST SOFTWARE QUANTUM QLOGIC PROGRESS SOFTWARE PLANAR SYSTEMS

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Government's data portal 'doomed'

Critics claim enthusiasm for transparency project, set up to create a new right to data, has worn off

One year after the Labour government launched the data.gov.uk portal, intended to provide a front door to a library of government data, there is disquiet that the initial enthusiasm has worn off and that civil servants are quietly blocking widespread release of useful information.

"Forgive me but I think this project is doomed", says one contributor to the site's debate forum, which was highlighted today on the front page of the website, which was launched to huge fanfare a year ago tomorrow by Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the British inventor of the world wide web.

The poster, Peter Austin, a web developer, said: "I became a member of this community nearly a year ago. I wanted to use my programming skills for the public good ?[but] I can only describe it as Yes Minister data. Harmless. Unlikely to generate controversy."

Launched by Gordon Brown, the transparency project has become a big part of the coalition government's plans: the Big Society declaration included a key line that "we will create a new 'right to data'". Downing Street pledged to "unleash a tsunami of data" on the world, which would hold the government to account - and kick-start a �6bn industry.

Since then it has published substantial datasets including all government spending over �25,000 and civil servant salaries. In June it released the Treasury's secret COINs spending database.

A Downing street source said: "In terms of the political will to make it happen we're full steam ahead. In the next two months yet more will be released on crime and government contracts.

This month every council in England has to publish spending data over �500. So far, only 200 out of about 360 councils have done so. "We might have to get the big stick out on this one," said one Downing Street source.

Professor Nigel Shadbolt, who with Berners-Lee was instrumental in getting the data.gov.uk portal set up, said: "There is a huge amount still to do. We have to change the behaviour of public servants and ministers so that they make data available without being asked."

Concerns have also been raised about the role and aims of the Public Data Corporation (PDC), a government-owned entity that will distribute data - perhaps for profit. "It just sounds Orwellian," said one involved in the open data movement, who asked not to be named.

Jonathan Raper, the chief executive of Placr, which has built a number of applications using transport data, notably from the London Datastore, warned ministers at a recent public meeting that charging for data through the PDC would be "regressive".

The Cabinet Office said: "One of our aims is to make more data free at the point of use, where this is appropriate and represents good value for taxpayers' money; and where data is charged for, we would aim to do so on a consistent basis"

Perhaps the biggest impact may be a complete rebuild of data.gov.uk, according to the Downing Street source. "It's just not as good as it should be."


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2011/jan/21/government-online-data-portal

L1 IDENTITY SOLUTIONS KINGSTON TECHNOLOGY COMPANY KEY JDS UNIPHASE JDA SOFTWARE GROUP

Stacking hands-on preview

Tim Schafer has created a deft masterpiece in which an evil baron can be defeated by one force: stacking dolls

If adoration guaranteed success, Tim Schafer would doubtless be a multi-millionaire by now. Gamers who loved the Monkey Island adventures, Grim Fandango and Psychonauts have practically deified him. In person, he is self-effacing, smart and funny. He loves games, he believes in them. He called Bobby Kotick a prick.

He also has ideas such as this: in the midst of development hell on Brutal Legend, and inspired by the improvisational movie-making tactics of Chinese director, Wong Kar-wai, Schafer split his workforce at Double Fine into small groups and got them all to prototype small-scale games.

It was meant as a team-building exercise, but when Brutal Legend 2 fell through, he returned to the interesting ideas his staff came up with and spied a new production model: contained, digitally distributed titles, which could be pitched as cheaper, more risky prospects to the right publishers. So they pitched four of them and sold them all. The first out was Costume Quest, designed by ex-Pixar animator Tasha Harris, the next will be Stacking, an adventure puzzler like no other.

The setup is typically Schaferian. Charlie Blackmore is a teeny Russian doll whose family has been kidnapped by an evil industrialist who has put them to despicable work around his empire. But little Charlie isn't helpless, he has the ability to pop himself into progressively larger Russian dolls, taking on the abilities of each host. Cut adrift in a world that partly resembles a Victorian theatre and partly the set of a silent movie, he must use this gift to track down his siblings.

But although this sounds like typical Schafer, the concept came from Lee Petty, the art lead on Brutal Legend. "I was really interested in doing something in the adventure game genre, but I didn't want it to be a retro throwback," he says. "The things I focused on were story, ideas, being able to play the game at your own pace, logic puzzles. But I also wanted it to be more immediate, I wanted there to be a momentum to the gameplay. I saw my daughter playing with a stack of Russian dolls, and I thought, wow, that could really work, because rather than having an inventory of objects, each of the dolls could BE the objects. And stacking the dolls is fun in itself."

But it couldn't have been an easy sell, surely? During the Amnesia Fortnight process, how did he inspire other members of Double Fine to join his group? "At the end of my presentation, I had this list of reasons to join the Stacking team," he explains. "The top one was alcohol at every meeting. And there were no other reasons, I ran out of ideas.

"And it was a lie," adds Schafer.

Stacking begins in a cavernous railway station, where a noisy strike is in full swing. Charlie must coax four members of the mighty train guild out of their gentlemen's club to meet with the picketers and get the trains running again. But how will a lowly urchin do that? Subterfuge. With the setup established, you can freely wander the beautifully ornate station, "talking" to other dolls (which will usually elicit a daft speech bubble, or a useful clue) or stacking inside them. Once in he can access the unique special ability of the utmost doll ? one plays the violin, one can burp, one farts, and one slaps passers-by with a white-gloved hand. It doesn't sound useful, but remember, this is a Double Fine game.

Indeed, these abilities are needed to complete the challenge areas, where Charlie is given a significant puzzle to solve. To access the gentlemen's club he needs to distract the doorman, but does he do it by inhabiting a doll whose scream demands the help and attention of all gentlemen? Or perhaps by popping in an attractive blonde whose skill is simply named, 'seduce'. In fact, he could do either ? in Stacking, every puzzle has multiple solutions, and if you like, you can try to find them all. A handy guide in the pause menu shows how many are available for each challenge.

What immediately captures your attention, though, is the beautiful set design. From cardboard cut-out animals, to steam ship decks made out of lollipop sticks, the effect is part proscenium arch theatre, part model village. At the beginning of every challenge, there's a flickering silent film cut-scene, filled with visual gags that trade off the burly, pompous looks of the doll characters. It's so watchable and delightful.

Later, when the strike is broken, the trains become available, and each one leads to another area of the industrialist's empire and another family member to rescue. In our demo, we head to a steamship, where Charlie's sister is being employed to clean out the vast steam funnels with a toothbrush. There's a lovely puzzle in which the player needs to cause chaos at an onboard safari exhibition. One method is to break into the big game hunter's cabin, stack into his stuffed bear and run out to alarm the passengers ? who leave piles of sawdust in their terrified wake.

While you're not solving the key challenges, there are other activities. Players can earn bonuses for stacking into matching sets of dolls. There's an illusionist family, whose smallest member is a dog doll ? stack into him and you can do tricks like dragging your bottom half across the floor. (The team has teased an amazing amount of animative depth from a bunch of limbless dolls in two bulbous halves.)

You're also able to engage in hijinks, a range of daft mini-challenges which employ the special abilities of selected dolls. When Schafer demos the game to us, he shows off a task in which the white-gloved doll has to slap 10 other characters ? their affronted yelps and screams make it all the more enjoyable.

For Schafer the appeal of the game is obvious. "I started out working on adventure games with characters, stories and puzzles, games that moved at a certain pace and that I could play with my family. This isn't a throwback, but it has the fun part of those games, placed into a completely new mechanic."

Meanwhile, he's also overseeing the other two titles from that fortnight of experimentation, and then there's a burgeoning collaboration with an old LucasArts colleague. "Ron Gilbert and I are meeting regularly in our office to discuss a top secret project he has," teases Schafer. "It's something very new ... and very cool."

? Stacking will be released on Xbox Live Arcade and PlayStation Network on 31 March


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/gamesblog/2011/jan/20/stacking-tim-schafer

EARTHLINK DST SYSTEMS DISCOVER FINANCIAL SERVICES DIODES INORATED DIEBOLD

? Simple Questions for Google Regarding Chrome?s Dropping of H.264

Source: http://daringfireball.net/2011/01/simple_questions

UNISYS TRIQUINT SEMICONDUCTOR TRIMBLE NAVIGATION LIMITED TRIDENT MICROSYSTEMS TRANSACTION SYSTEMS ARCHITECTS

I Can't Not Mention This ('Lang Lang as Warmonger' B.S. Dept)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/JamesFallows/~3/2Oqj92W9zVU/click.phdo

JDS UNIPHASE JDA SOFTWARE GROUP JACK HENRY and ASSOCIATES IXYS ITRON

The Technology Newsbucket: LinkedIn announces IPO, while Demand Media's own IPO soars

Plus back to the future for Nokia's new chief, and Microsoft sues a former head of business development

A quick burst of 6 links for you to chew over, as picked by the Technology team

LinkedIn files registration statement for Initial Public Offering >> The LinkedIn Blog

"LinkedIn Corporation announced today that it has filed a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed initial public offering of its Class A common stock. The number of shares to be offered and the price range for the offering have not yet been determined. A portion of the shares will be issued and sold by LinkedIn, and a portion will be sold by certain stockholders of LinkedIn."

Netflix Grades Broadband Internet Providers >> AllThingsD

"We do know, because Netflix already told us, that Charter gets the best marks. And it appears that Clearwire, the wireless service co-owned by Sprint and some of the big cable companies, ranks dead last. The news that most of you care about: Time Warner Cable and Comcast, the nation�??s two biggest cable companies, appear to be in the top part of Netflix�?? rankings"

Google Engages in Subtle Form of Censorship >> Mashable

Removing links to some filesharing portals, such as BitTorrent, in Auto Suggest feature. View in juxtoposition to the company's Spanish court battle

No Profits, No Problem: Demand Media IPO Soars 33% On First Day >> Wired.com

"Although the company's revenue has grown substantially, it has never turned a profit in its four-year history, a fact the company also warned investors about in its prospectus. "We have had a net loss in every year since inception," the company said. "As of September 30, 2010, we had an accumulated deficit of approximately $53 million and we may incur net operating losses in the future." "Demand is heavily reliant on web search giant Google to drive its revenue. In the first three quarters of 2010, Demand's advertising agreements with Google accounted for nearly one-third of its total revenue, according to the company. The firm also faces competition from other web publishers, including AOL and Yahoo." Wonder how many articles it has for "How do you identify an internet stock bubble?"

Microsoft claims employee stole $460,000 from the company >> Computerworld

"Microsoft has sued a former director of business development in state court, accusing him of stealing nearly $460,000 from the company and trying to make off with another $1.5 million before his scheme was uncovered. "In a complaint filed with a Washington State Superior Court, Microsoft alleged that Robert D. Curry created a fake company, Blu Games, then submitted bogus invoices for non-existent services."

Welcome Stephen Elop to Best Job in High Tech: New CEO for Nokia >> Communities Dominate Brands

Former Nokia exec Tomi Ahonen in September 2010: "Except that the job at Nokia in 2010 is actually far better, and far more than those three giants even, two decades ago! What is best, is that the strategy and business basics at Nokia are supremely sound. The new CEO inherits a powerhouse mobile phone maker giant, which is on solid foundations, well positioned to reap benefits of the economic upturn, and well poised to capture a disproportionately large share of almost any conceivable mobile phone industry opportunities that can currently be seen on the horizon, including all flavors of smartphone opportunities from superphones to app stores." Stephen Elop, January 2011: "Nokia faces some significant challenges in our competitiveness and our execution. In short, the industry changed, and now it's time for Nokia to change faster".

You can follow Guardian Technology's linkbucket on delicious


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/blog/2011/jan/28/technology-links-newsbucket

NOVELLUS SYSTEMS NOVELL NETWORK APPLIANCE NETGEAR NCR

Toshiba?s new 1.8 inch hard drives may mean new improved iPod classic

Apple?s iPod classic could jump from the 60GB capacity to 220GB with the introduction of Toshiba?s new 1.8-inch hard drives. The new MKxx39GSL series of hard drives will be available in 160GB, 200GB, and 220GB capacities. This development may mean not only increased capacity but also improved battery life.

The new drives are single platter and it allows them to fit into the iPod form factor, where older dual disk drives with higher capacities were not used because of their larger size. The MKxx39SGL series will use less power so you could expect the future iPod classic to last longer than the current version?s 36-hours.

The higher capacity would give you enough memory for 55,000 songs, 275 hours of video, or over 34,000 photos. Hardcore music fans or those that are particular about music quality and prefer lossless formats and enormous music libraries will probably celebrate the most should Apple implement this in their next rendition of the iPod classic.

[Via 9 to 5 Mac]


Relevant Entries on SlashGear



Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/PzCxdqtX2HY/

LSI LINEAR TECHNOLOGY LEXMARK INTERNATIONAL LEVEL 3 COMMUNICATIONS LAWSON SOFTWARE