Jun 27

iRiver, known for its portable multimedia players and e-book readers, has been rumored to be working on a tablet, which may now be confirmed with recent sightings of a physical device. Netbooknews reports that the company’s MX100 tablet was seen at an iRiver event in China last week. The device appears to have a seven inch display form factor.

Netbooknews also noticed that the MX100 showed up towards the end of a recent LG U+ YouTube video pitch.

Some specs of the tablet have leaked out. It runs a 1GHz Samsung Hummingbird processor and Android 2.2.

Read more…

Tags: Tablet, Tablet Possibly

Jun 27

” The Nexus S 4G is a Google phone through and through. Following Google’s first hardware venture into the handset market, the Nexus One, this phone is how Google envisions the Gingerbread (Android 2.3) platform. Manufactured by Samsung, the Nexus S originally debuted as a GSM unlocked phone and on T-Mobile in the US earlier this year. Now, for the debut on CDMA networks, Samsung and Sprint have teamed together to add a 4G, WiMAX modem. ”

PC Perspective

Tags: Google, Nexus S, Nexus S 4g, S 4g

Jun 26

The biggest hurdle is finding which stocks trading below $5 represent the best long-term investment. Stocks trading under $5 typically have no analysts’ coverage — never mind a “buy” rating — leaving investors to do the homework for themselves. However, a select few boast of favorable coverage from analysts, which can direct share-price movements.

Many high-volume stocks under $5 have proven to be huge winners, including Evergreen Energy(EEE) and Majesco Entertainment(COOL), which have more than doubled this year. Read more…

Tags: Buy, Buy Ratings

Jun 26

When the Internet first appeared people saw it as an open communication network as well as a place to learn and share. But with its continuing success and growth the regulation and control of information on the web has increased. ISPs now monitor what subscribers download (and upload) in certain countries, anonymous accounts can have their owner uncovered with a court order, and some governments have the ability to turn off the Internet as and when they see fit. Theres also the growing question of net neutrality and how far governments are willing to go to protect it.

All of the above goes against the freedoms the Internet offers, and you might be surprised to hear that one of the first countries pushing hard against it is Afghanistan. Although that push comes out of necessity rather than choice.

Look at any country that is facing unrest and you see a government trying to control the flow of information both outside of their country and within it among protestors and troublemakers. With most connections to the Internet controlled by a few corporate entities, this is an easy thing for a government to do. The way around this is to bypass such companies completely and setup an alternative Internet.

In Afghanistan a select few people are creating such a network and have called it FabFi. Funded through a grant offered by the National Science Foundation, as well as the savings of those indviduals involved in setting it up, FabFi at the moment is a small-scale wireless Internet located in the eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad. A similar network is also appearing in Kenya.

FabFi consists of a number of nodes transmitting a wireless signal a few miles. Each node is currently transmitting as far as 3.7 miles with connection speeds as fast as 11.5Mbps. While the distance and speed may seem limited, the thing that makes FabFi worthwhile is its cost and openness. Each node on the FabFi network is , made from building materials that are commonly available in the region, and cost a mere $60 to setup.

That low cost and open nature mean anyone can create a node suggesting FabFi could soon criss-cross the country creating Internet access completely free of government control. If a node is taken offline, another can be built easily to replace it. If enough nodes are built, then the removal of one may not even affect access.

As well as offering an open Internet link, FabFi is leading to work for those who know how to create and install a node and then maintain it. The project is also continually developing so as to support more users, embrace meshing technology, and reduce costs even further.

Tags: Network, Network 60

Jun 25

Both AirPlay and Thunderbolt may be prohibitively expensive for a large number of device makers for either to become mainstream in the near future, sources rumored Friday. AirPlay wireless audio streaming allegedly adds as much as $100 to the price of an audio system since it involves more than just introducing Wi-Fi. Costs were getting lower, iLounge heard, but even Philips’ Fidelio system costs $230.

Thunderbolt was already known to be expensive and is currently limited to very fast external storage. The price of the necessary hardware for a port is now said to be as much as a low-end hard drive and doesn’t make sense for low-capacity storage.

Read more…

Tags: Rumored, Thunderbolt Rumored

Page 15 of 17« First...10...1314151617