Translate to German Translate to Spanish Translate to French Translate to Italian Translate to Portuguese Translate to Japanese Translate to Korean Translate to Russian Translate to Chinese

Archive for August 22nd, 2008

Outlook Tasks synced to your iPhone with KeyTasks

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Third party software makers continue to fill the gaps left by Apple on the iPhone. Yesterday we heard about a framework called OpenClip, which will bring cut-and-paste to the iphone, and now Chapura has announced KeyTasks, which will bring your Outlook Tasks to your iPhone. KeyTasks is currently being offered on the App Store for $9.95 per year and includes a Task Manager for iPhone and ipod touch that syncs with your Outlook Tasks over-the-air.

The cool thing about this service is that it’s being offered by a company that definitely knows this space. I’ve been following Chapura since the days of the first Palm and back then they did Outlook syncing right, and continue to do the same today on all other platforms.

Out of all of the task oriented software being offered for the iPhone, I would place my bets on this one being the best implementation and I can’t wait to give it a go.

Read more about it at Chapura.com

Colombians Charged Up the Wazoo for iPhone 3G

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Apple would like to control its products in every way, including price, but it couldn’t prevent Colombian carriers from jacking up the iPhone 3G’s price to more than double its original cost.

Carriers Movistar and Comcel launched the iphone 3G on Friday in Colombia, and customers were likely disgruntled to learn they had to pay up to $605 for the 16GB iPhone 3G and up to $489 for the 8GB model. By way of comparison, the handset costs $299 for the 16GB model and $199 for the 8GB model in the United States.

How much you pay for an iPhone in Colombia depends on the monthly plan you choose: The more expensive the plan, the less the cost of the handset itself. Pretty messed up, isn’t it? It’s shocking to learn just how unlucky other countries are in terms of how much they have to pay to take advantage of the popular iPhone.

Colombian iPhone Launch = EPIC FAIL [Maxsez] (Thanks, Eric!)

(Photos courtesy of Maxsez)

Intel Stacks Up the Chips for Your Future PC

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

In the chip business, you can never be too cheap, too fast or — increasingly — too green. This week, chipmaking giant Intel trickled out a few more details about how it plans to give us all of that and more. The company will deliver a slew of new chips over the next two years for desktop PCs and for servers.

In true technology industry fashion, that means a jumble of codenames such as Nehalem, Lynnfield and Havendale. Here’s a rundown of the new chips’ details, how they fit into Intel’s roadmap and when users can get their hands on them.

Most of Intel’s big guns are directed at increasing performance for server chips. But for desktop processors, the company has a new line called Core i7, which should be in production in the fourth quarter of 2008.

Intel’s upcoming releases are expected to also help it catch up with rival AMD on the server side of the business, says Jim McGregor, research director and principal analyst for In-Stat. "AMD continues to beat Intel in the server market," he says. "Nehalem represents the first time the two will almost be on par."

Intel’s announcements can be broadly categorized across three sets: Penryn, Nehalem and Itanium.

At its developer forum, the company offered more details on a number of its upcoming processors, with focus on better performance and lower power consumption.

Here’s a guide to how Intel has stacked its chips:

Penryn:

Last year, Intel introduced the 45-nanometer next generation Core 2 processor family, code named Penryn. The Penryn microarachitecture delivered more performance at the same clock speed compared to Core 2 duo processors and offered up to 20% performance improvement on tested games compared to the fastest dual core processors then.

Now Intel is ready to release the final member of the Penryn family, a 6-core server chip code named Dunnington. Dunnington has been shipped to Intel’s customers since July and it will be available next month to users.

Nehalem:

The star of Intel’s portfolio now will be Nehalem.

Nehalem is not just one product but the code name for a family of chips that will appear in desktops, servers and notebooks.

Intel says it is the biggest change the company has made to its chip architecture in a decade and the result will be chips that combine extremely high performance with higher energy efficiency.

The first set of Nehalem-based products to hit the market will be for the workstation and "extreme edition" desktops, with server chips to be introduced later.

Nehalem will have the 45-nanometer manufacturing process and use "hyper threading" technology that will give the chips the ability to execute 8 threads simultaneously on 4 processing cores.

Nehalem differs from earlier Intel architecture in that it uses QuickPath, which integrates a memory controller into each microprocessor and connects processors and other components with a new high-speed interconnect. QuickPath will replace Front Side Bus used in Xeon and Itanium platforms.

"As we make processors faster with more cores and threads, computation stops being a bottleneck," Rajesh Kumar, Intel fellow digital enterprise group said during a session explaining Nehalem at the company’s developer forum. "Getting to and from the memory system fast enough is the problem and the integrated memory controller on chip improves performance."

Intel says the increase in memory bandwidth in the Nehalem microarchitecture makes the system almost four to six times faster than it current platform. It also allows for very short latency, almost 40% better than current versions. (Latency is the lag time before a CPU can begin executing a given instruction.)

Nehalem’s power management features are also a big step forward. Nehalem’s power gates cuts off switching power to cores that are not being used, rather than just reducing the switching current in earlier versions. Leakage power that was residual in earlier versions, will also be shut off. Nehalem has a new power control unit, which is an integrated micro-controller, and has more than a million transistors.

Glen Yeung, a research analyst at Citigroup, believes Intel could price Nehalem at a 6% price premium to the current Core quad-core chips.

Among the first products to be available will be the Intel Core i7 processor for the desktop, followed by a variant for performance servers codenamed ‘Nehalem-EP‘. A derivative for the expandable sever market will be called ‘Nehalem-EX‘.

The first set of Nehalem-based chips will be in production in the fourth quarter.

Based on the Nehalem microarchitecture, Intel will also have the following products:

Havendale and Auburndale: processors with integrated graphics, for desktops and notebooks respectively.

Lynnfield and Clarksfield: processors that require discrete graphics (separate graphics cards), for desktop and notebook systems, respectively.

The four listed above are expected to be in production in the second half of 2009.

Intel also plans to have Westmere, a 32-nanometer version of Nehalem. Westmere will debut in 2010, Intel CEO Paul Otellini said earlier this year.

In terms of microarchitecture, Nehalem’s successor will be the 32-nanometer microarchitecture process called Sandy Bridge.

Itanium:

The latest chip in Intel’s Itanium family for server and high-performance computing systems, Tukwila, is expected to be delivered late this year to server makers. Systems using the chip will ship in late 2009.

Tukwila is a 65-nanometer chip and the first quad-core member of the Itanium product family. The processor has more than 2 billion transistors on it.

Tukwila will be followed by Poulson and Kittson.

Poulson will use a 32 nm process and is expected to feature either four or eight cores, better multithreading and is expected to ship in two years.

Intel has yet to reveal details about Kittson.

USB Fan Hub

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

If you want a USB desk fan and also a USB hub at the same time, this USB fan hub might just be of interest to you. While combining a USB hub and a USB-powered fan might not have any added benefit, aside from the convenience of having 2 devices in one, it does save a little space on your desk. $14.99 for a little more space on your desk, that doesn’t sound too expensive, does it?

Apple’s Big Plans: 40 Million More iPhones in the Next Year

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Apple had a stronger-than-expected start with the iPhone 3G, and the company plans to keep upping the ante by producing at least 40 million more iPhones in the next year, Business Week reports.

An Apple insider told Business Week that Apple plans to produce between 40 million to 45 million more iPhone 3Gs by August 2009. Albeit astronomical, this number falls short of Gene Munster’s optimistic projection that Apple will 13 million more iPhones in 2008 and 45 million in 2009.

There’s no doubt that the handset is immensely popular among consumers: In just three days after its launch, Apple sold one million iPhone 3Gs. However, it is questionable whether Apple’s sales will be as successful in the coming year, in light of the "defective iPhone 3G" lawsuit it faces, among widespread complaints over the handset’s spotty performance on the 3G network.

Apple’s Ambitious iphone 3G Plans [BusinessWeek]

(Photo credit: Florent Brunel/Flickr )

Star Mouse Tries To Shine

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Innovation is a beautiful thing, and it has gifted us with many lovely devices over the years. This time though, it looks like somebody misunderstood what innovation meant. This weird looking mouse is called the Computer-Mouse Star, and with its star shaped design, it sure isn’t going to win any ergonomics competition. If you’re really into stars, then this would probably pique your interest, if not, it’s highly doubtful that most people would buy this, especially since it’s going for about $44.

Microsoft once again offering Office Ultimate 2007 for just $59.95

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Microsoft has once again brought back their “Ultimate Steal” deal for Office Ultimate 2007, which allows students to purchase the full retail version for just $59.95. Keep in mind this is the regular version and not the normal student edition, this version includes Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, Access, Accounting Express, Groove, InfoPath, OneNote and Publisher.

In order to qualify students must use an email address ending in .edu when placing their order, be actively enrolled in at least 0.5 course credit and provide proof of enrollment should Microsoft decide to follow up.

While I could not find an exact ending date, according to the press release the Ultimate Steal is running “throughout the academic school year,” so it seems you have some time to decide if you want to part with your 60 bucks.

Of course keep in mind that if you are not a student and decide to try and fool the system and fail, you will be held accountable for the full retail price, and considering this is an Office product its safe to say that will be expensive.

Product [The Ultimate Steal] Read [Microsoft]

Keep up with the latest gadget goodness! - Subscribe to our feed →

LG Prada II Is Coming?

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Another gadget might get an upgrade or another iteration (hehehe, what a geeky term!)

There are rumors of the LG Prada coming out with an LG Prada II, and it has a side-sliding QWERTY keyboard. Other rumors include a 2 megapixel camera, 3G capabilities and higher memory storage.

I personally think that the LG Prada phone is one of those overly over-priced gadgets, but if they’re going to beef up the features a bit, it maybe be worth my money.

[ via Newlaunches ]

Tags: LG Prada II

Photographs of Dissected Household Items

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

What goes on inside a waffle-iron, a dust-buster or an electric knife? Flickr user brittnybadger’s curiosity got the better of her, and she decided to find out.

The resulting photoset is fascinating for anyone who likes to take things apart to see how they work. The choice of cooking and cleaning appliances was inspired: both of these still need to move physical things around, be it dirt or dollops of dough, so the interior components are a lot more interesting than the circuit board inside a router, for instance.

We particularly like the clinical way the parts are laid out, as if on a mortuary slab. Brittnybadger herself likens the resulting dissections to “brains”. We won’t disagree.

Disassembled household appliances [Flickr via Kottke]

Fusion CA-IP500 Head Unit

Friday, August 22nd, 2008


Fusion will be rolling out its CA-IP500 head unit that boasts an internal iPod docking station, making it one of the first of its kind in the world. The head unit’s faceplate is tilted open, revealing an empty space which will hold the iPod touch snugly. In addition, it is also compatible with both iPod 5G and the iPod classic, along with iPod nano (second and third generations). Controlling your iPod is pretty easy - you can do it from the head unit’s controls while viewing the current playing track along with all the other information thanks to the OLED display. The CA-IP500 also doubles up as an ipod charger each time you dock your device inside. No word on a North American release, but you can get yours in Australia or the UK in September for approximately $280 after conversion.