Saturday, April 9, 2011

Specs Samsung Galaxy Neo with Android 2.2 Froyo

After US Cellular announces about Samsung GEM, today we get news that samsung officially announces about their new Samsung Galaxy Neo looks similiarly with Samsung Galaxy Ace but for the back panel, which is reminiscent of its larger Galaxy Tab sibling. Unfotunately, it looks like will be a Korea-only smartphone and we are not sure another country will get this new samsung smartphone.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Altec Langsing Octiv 650 iPhone/iPod Touch Speaker Dock

Altec Langsing released a new product called as Octiv 650 Speaker Dock that compatible with iPod Touch or iPhone, this as an answer if you are not satisfied with the tons of iOS docks at the first iPhone concept. To show a simple view, Altec Octiv 650 design with minimalist but has a broad spectrum of audio with support for full screen video from your iGadget to the television screen.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

The Top 10 Best Laptop

Shopping for a laptop these days is a pretty daunting task. The sheer number of laptops available online or in a store's electronics section is enough to make your mind spin. Most people have a general idea of what their laptop should look like and what they want in terms of features, but are often intimidated by the choices available. That's where we come in.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Dell achieves AMD Fusion, announces Inspiron M102z notebook

After so many ages of waiting the Fusion devices are upon us, and here's Dell's entry. It's the M102z, rocking an AMD E-350 processor at 1.6GHz and Radeon HD 6310 graphics, 4GB of RAM, and an 11.6-inch display managing 1366 x 768 -- not bad for a little guy priced at $699.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Sony CEO casually mentions he's supplying cameras to Apple

We were tempted to call it an April Fools' joke, but it seems the story's true: Sony CEO Sir Howard Stringer reportedly let slip that his company is producing cameras for the next batch of iPhones and iPads during a public interview with the Wall Street Journal.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Android's in-app billing makes a dent: Dungeon Defenders free on Android Market

Dungeon Defenders: First Wave cost $3 when it first came out. This week, the iOS version will cost you ninety-nine cents. But if you want to play the Unreal Engine-powered tower defense game today, you can have it for free -- developer Trendy Entertainment is now leaning on Android's new in-app billing system to pay for the whole thing.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Nike+ SportWatch GPS now on sale, $199 adds geek cred to your workout routine

Wrist-mounted iPod nano not quite the running companion of which you'd originally dreamed? This Nike+ SportsWatch GPS will be happy to take its place. We spotted the TomTom-branded fitness watch at CES this year, and now it's formally on sale -- though unfortunately for a price far steeper than those of its immediate ancestors.

Of course, the $199 band isn't just a replacement for the Nike+ iPod system, it also uses that onboard GPS to keep track of where you run, much like the Nike+ GPS app but without the necessity for an iPhone 4 bouncing around your person. Did we mention it's also a watch?

source: engadget

3DxWare 10 lets 3D mice work in 2D apps, leaves your standard mouse feeling a bit flat

Your standard mouse may do it on the table, but 3D mice do it with extra dimension -- some of the time, anyway. Quit 3ds Max and suddenly you have one axis too many on your hands. After all, the vast majority of applications are 2D to match mice that may exist in a 3D reality but are limited to a decidedly dual-dimensional existence.

No more. 3Dconnexion, makers of a couple different controllers with depth, has released 3DxWare, a Mac or Windows driver that enables exciting 3D mice to work with boring 2D apps. The first video after the break shows some one-handed zooming and browsing, while the second has you cutting and mixing in Final Cut Pro -- again with nary a keyboard or controller in sight.

SYNC's second version off to a buggy start, Ford fixes with Ctrl-Alt-Delete

With it being ordered in 80 percent of its 2011 models, SYNC's been a boon to Ford's bottom line, but it's not all peaches and cream for the Dearborn crew's connectivity platform. Our friends at Autoblog are reporting that the second generation of the infotainment software has a nasty little habit of restarting itself when something goes wrong with one of the applications.

Doesn't sound like such a big deal, except these automatic reboots take several minutes (an eternity if you're relying on the GPS to get you around), and the system tends to misplace your indexed music and linked phone info while fixing itself.