admin on February 7th, 2010

alienware-m11xAlienware claims the M11x can go for up to 8.5 hours unplugged. The M11x is available now starting at $799 and has estimated ship dates of early March. lienware announced its M11x 11-inch gaming notebook at CES this year - we covered the launch. The notebook is now avaiable for purchase starting at $799. Read the rest of this entry »

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admin on February 6th, 2010

lenovo-thinkpad-t410Lenovo ThinkPad T410 is the latest revision of the popular T-series ThinkPad from Lenovo. This model brings a new line of dedicated and integrated graphics cards, the Intel Core-series processor line, and a completely redesigned chassis. We took an in-depth look at the highly anticipated T410 to see how well it stacks up against all the prior T-series ThinkPads. Does it live up to our expectations? Read on to find out. Read the rest of this entry »

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admin on December 27th, 2009

The MSI U135 is the latest Pineview netbook featuring Intel’s just announced Pinetrail platform. It was announced a few days ago, and now Netbooked confirmed that the product page of this new system is up on the Global official site of MSI.

The U135 is essentially the same machine as the U130. Both contain a 1.66GHz Intel Atom N450 processor and Intel’s NM10 chipset, which features Intel’s GMA 3150 GPU.

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Search made for Acer Aspire 1420P has revealed that it is available in the European online stores. As Microsoft showed them off last month there is no more news about the model. But the Model is expected to show up in US first. The other model of Acer i.e. Acer Aspire Timeline 1820PTZ is already making a good market in Singapore and will be sold elsewhere as soon as 2010 starts.

Acer Aspire 1420P is powered by:
CPU:
Intel Celeron SU2300 (1.2GHz, dual-core)
Display: 11.6” 1366 x 768 multi-touch
Graphics: GMA 4500MHD
Hard Drive: 250GB HDD
RAM: 2GB

It has Gigabit LAN and 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi. It comes with a 6-cell battery for good back up, Bluetooth and will ship with Windows 7 Home premium 64-bit. The release date for the model has not yet finalized.

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Yukyung has just announced that it will demonstrate two new products, the viliv N5 MID and viliv S10 Blade netbook, at the CES 2010 in Las Vegas next month. It is holding the demonstration at Booth 30349 of the South Hall 3 Upper Level, and the company is currently scheduling one-on-one meetings to discuss its latest gadgets.

There is little information about the products, but previous viliv computers have often been Intel-based, but there is no word yet whether the new machines will make use of Intel’s Pineview platform. The viliv N5 MID has a 4.8” WSVGA (1024 x 600) LCD display, a clamshell design, QWERTY keyboard, 3G, Wi-Fi and GPS.

The viliv S10 Blade is described as a MID, but with a 10” WXVGA (1366 x 768) HD LCD display, it’s definitely the right size for a netbook. It has a multi-touch swivel display, which implies it could be a tablet PC like the viliv S7; it also features 3G and Wi-Fi.

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There is a rumor that Apple is releasing a new tablet PC early next year. Macrumors.com has recently written about Apple Inc’s purchase of the domain name ‘islate.com‘. This has caused many to speculate that Apple’s new tablet PC will be called ‘iSlate‘. Whilst this is just speculation, The Washington Post has expanded on this story, and highlighted the fact that several ‘islate’ domains have been registered by ‘Mark Monitor’, someone who apparently works with Apple in securing domain registrations (such as islate.jp and islate.fr).

Macrumors.com has demonstrated that islate.com is registered by Mark Monitor, but registration details were altered temporarily in 2007 to reflect Apple Inc as the owner, thereby confirming Apple’s involvement with islate domain registrations. The Washington Post has also discovered that a company called Slate Computing has filed for the trademark ‘iSlate’, in the US and Europe. The newspaper suggests that this is a company set up purely for this purpose, with the aim of keeping Apple’s involvement with the name ‘iSlate’ secret.

The consensus is that Apple’s involvement with the domain registrations and possible involvement with Slate Computing, is evidence that it wishes to protect the name iSlate because it intends to use the name for its rumored tablet PC. A company such as Apple would probably behave this way, although its attempts at secrecy have clearly failed. However Apple has a motive for protecting certain names that have the prefix ‘i’: this nomenclature is synonymous with its products.

 

Whether or not the tablet PC will materialise next year is another matter, but the cost of securing a few domain names and a trademark costs relatively little to a successful company such as Apple. Therefore, this news is no real indication of Apple’s imminent plans, and it may have secured other domain names with the prefix ‘i’ in the past, without any concrete plans to release products under such names.

 

 

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admin on December 27th, 2009

We have seen a couple of operating systems based on Linux in the past couple of months be it Moblin, Ubuntu, Puppy Linux, etc. the list is unending. Well, it makes a lot of sense if one goes in for these operating systems to power their netbooks because these operating systems consume far less resources than the traditional Windows. As we all know that netbooks are stripped down versions of notebooks. Most of the netbooks are powered by a less powerful Intel Atom N270 processor with 1GB of RAM and a 160GB hard disk drive. Keeping this configuration in mind, I think that it makes more sense to install an operating system which takes up less disk space and which is light on the system i.e. it consumes lesser system resources. 

Well, Browser Linux, the newest operating system in the netbook market is just the sort of OS which consumes less disk space as it comes in as a 78MB download file. Moreover, this OS is quite light on system resources as it fulfills just a few basic functions. This loss of functionality might trouble a few but, for netbook users who have quite specific needs like browsing the internet this OS will definitely make sense. Browser Linux is a stripped down version of Puppy Linux. It has been built specifically for people who want to use their netbooks to browse the internet. What users will get is Firefox 3.5.5, a file manager, PDF reader, Flash 10, and an audio player (alsaplayer).

The best part about this operating system is that you can easily install it on a USB flash drive using Unetbootin. If you are wondering what that is, UNetbootin allows you to create bootable Live USB drives for a variety of Linux distributions from Windows or Linux, without requiring you to burn a CD. This way a user can run the OS from the flash drive without installing it on the system. A word of caution though, while running the OS from the USB flash drive a user might experience slower boot times and response times. I suggest that in order to truly appreciate this OS install it on your hard drive first. 

The advantages of Browser Linux are as follows:

  • Very small size (78MB download file)
  • Can be run via a USB flash drive
  • Consumes very little system resources (good for under-powered netbooks)
  • Easy to use 
  • Faster boot up times
  • Carry anywhere (portability)

The main disadvantage is the loss of functionality but, as I said before this OS is only for users who have specific needs like browsing the internet.

 

 

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