Microsoft says Windows 7 battery ‘issue’ isn’t one
Laptop addicts among us, listen to this - Microsoft says Windows 7 battery ‘issue’ isn’t one originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Feb 2010 17:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink
After Microsoft stated a week ago that it would look into reports of Windows 7 causing premature battery degradation, we’ve been staying up late at night with our frazzled lithium ion cells, reading them stories about Battery Heaven and generally trying to keep an upbeat tone around the Engadget HQ. Well, it turns out not everything is rosy in batteryville, but Microsoft says Windows 7 isn’t the one to blame. According to the company’s testing, the new tool, which reports when a battery is down to 40% of its designed capacity and suggests replacement, hasn’t reported a single false positive. Additionally, the tool uses read-only data from the battery, and is in fact incapable of tweaking the battery’s life span or internal data — it merely reports the data it receives, and stacks the theoretical design capacity up against the current full charge capacity. Microsoft attributes the reports of the tool dooming batteries to an early grave to the mere fact that many people might not have noticed the degradation already taking place in their batteries — most batteries start to degrade noticeably within a year. Of course, not everybody’s going to just take Microsoft’s word for it, and Microsoft itself will continue to look into the issue, but for now this sounds like a bit of a non-issue. The part about Windows 7 being less conservative with power use is a whole ‘nother issue, of course.
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Engineering Windows 7 | Email this | Comments.
For those of you who want more info, look at this: Here
It’s cool how quickly notebooks have taken over the computer marketplace.
TomTom Ease arrives in limited edition red for Valentine’s Day
From the article:
Funny that this special red edition of the TomTom Ease is actually beating the regular version to market, but hey, it’s Valentine’s Day. Nothing new here apart from the case color — you’re still looking at a 3.5-inch QVGA display, 2GB of internal memory preloaded with Tele-Atlas maps, Map Share / IQ Routes, an integrated battery, and a built-in Fold & Go mount. Amazon has the limited-edition red exclusively for $119 now, if you’re ready to commit — or you can wait and just be friends with the boring gray model, which should be out any day now.
TomTom Ease arrives in limited edition red for Valentine’s Day originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Feb 2010 12:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Amazon, BusinessWire | Email this | Comments.
For the full post check out here: Full Article
I can’t wait to get my hands on the next model that comes out.
Inbrics’ Android-based M1 slated to ship this year
This is neat:
We already caught a fair amount of play time with Inbrics’ Android-based M1 at CES, but it looks as if the company is fixing to “officially” reveal it next week at Mobile World Congress. We’re still debating whether or not this thing is a bona fide smartphone or yet another MID that’ll have a tough time gaining acceptance in this cruel, cruel world, but either way, it’s apparently on track for release later this year. According to details scooped up by Pocket-lint, the company is hoping that the M1 will double as a media controller for AV junkies, and if all goes well, Europeans could get their hands on it “in 2010 or early 2011.” Just as long as it’s prior to 2012, we’re cool.
Inbrics’ Android-based M1 slated to ship this year originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Feb 2010 10:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink |
Pocket-lint | Email this | Comments.
Source: Inbrics’ Android-based M1 slated to ship this year
Is it just me, or are laptops more reliable than desktops.
Inbrics’ Android-based M1 slated to ship this year
This is neat:
We already caught a fair amount of play time with Inbrics’ Android-based M1 at CES, but it looks as if the company is fixing to “officially” reveal it next week at Mobile World Congress. We’re still debating whether or not this thing is a bona fide smartphone or yet another MID that’ll have a tough time gaining acceptance in this cruel, cruel world, but either way, it’s apparently on track for release later this year. According to details scooped up by Pocket-lint, the company is hoping that the M1 will double as a media controller for AV junkies, and if all goes well, Europeans could get their hands on it “in 2010 or early 2011.” Just as long as it’s prior to 2012, we’re cool.
Inbrics’ Android-based M1 slated to ship this year originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Feb 2010 10:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink |
Pocket-lint | Email this | Comments.
Source: Inbrics’ Android-based M1 slated to ship this year
Is it just me, or are laptops more reliable than desktops.
Sharp and Samsung settle LCD patent cases, end legal dispute
With notebooks spreading like a plague (of goodness), I think this news will catch peoples attention:
After three years of spent treasure, Sharp and Samsung have finally settled their LCD patent fight. Although the terms of the agreement won’t be made public, a Sharp spokesman was caught boasting about conditions that “will be in favor of Sharp” — the company that kicked off the battle back in 2007. As a recap, the disputed patents covered LCD TVs, monitors, and mobile phones in lawsuits filed in the US, Europe, Japan, and South Korea. After a string of defeats in the US and Europe resulted in an import ban on its panels, Samsung, it seems, was left with little choice but to settle on Sharp’s terms.
Sharp and Samsung settle LCD patent cases, end legal dispute originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Feb 2010 06:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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PC World | Email this | Comments.
For the full story check out here: Sharp and Samsung settle LCD patent cases, end legal dispute
I wish I got on to the laptop train earlier
PwnageTool for iPhone OS 3.1.3 released for the version obsessed
Notebook addicts of the world, listen to this:
While the list of tweaks is absurdly small in the latest iPhone OS update, we know that some of you simply have to run the latest and greatest OS at all times regardless of risk. Fortunately for you, the Dev-Team has stepped to with a new version of PwnageTool (v3.1.5 for Mac OS X) that handles the update to iPhone OS 3.1.3 with aplomb while preserving your device’s ultrasn0w unlock and jailbroken state. As usual, there’s a litany of precautions depending upon the device you own so hit the source link and read the dev-team’s words carefully before proceeding. With a little luck, patience, and undue stress, improved accuracy of your device’s reported battery level can be yours — Huzzah?
PwnageTool for iPhone OS 3.1.3 released for the version obsessed originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Feb 2010 06:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Dev-Team Blog | Email this | Comments.
The rest of the article can be found here: Source
Is it just me, or are laptops more reliable than desktops.
Social Today Feels Like Search A Decade Ago: Lots Of Noise And Lots Of Spam
From the story:
A decade ago most of us were using AltaVista or something similar for search. No one was really complaining very much about the huge amount of spam and other noise that cluttered the results because we didn’t know there was a better way. Then Google came along with Page Rank, and had a profound effect on the quality of Internet search. Suddenly (and it really was that sudden), we couldn’t imagine going back to AltaVista and searching pages of results for the thing that Google gave us immediately. For a good history of search, get John Battelle’s book The Search: How Google and Its Rivals Rewrote the Rules of Business and Transformed Our Culture. The online social landscape today sort of feels to me like search did in 1999. It’s a mess, but we don’t complain much about it because we don’t know there’s a better way. Everything is decentralized, and no one is working to centralize stuff. I’ve got photos on Flickr, Posterous and Facebook (and even a few on MySpace), reviews on Yelp (but movie reviews on Flixster), location on Foursquare, Loopt and Gowalla, status updates on Facebook and Twitter, and videos on YouTube. Etc. I’ve got dozens of social graphs on dozens of sites, and trying to remember which friends puts his or her pictures on which site is a huge challenge.
You can view the rest of the article here: –>HERE<--
Major manufacturer stocks are a good bet after hearing that.
Gigabyte M1405 spied hauling around its external GPU
Here’s your daily supply of laptop battery News news:
Happened upon the Taipei Game Show? No? Us neither, but Nicholas Khoo of 9eekonomics was, and we’re glad he made it. Spotted at the event was Gigabyte’s latest docking laptop, the M1405. On the go, there’s a 14-inch, 1366 x 768 resolution TFT LED, Intel Core 2 Duo SU7300, up to 4GB memory and 500GB storage, DVD, Windows 7, and graphics provided by an Intel GMA 4500MHD — attach that external GPU and you’ve got extra ports and GeForce GT220 with 1GB discrete memory. It’s got a 6-cell battery, but you can add an addition 3-cell if you don’t mind ditching the disc drive. No prices or release date, but expect an even grander unveil next month at CeBIT. More pictures via the source link, video after the break.
Continue reading Gigabyte M1405 spied hauling around its external GPU
Gigabyte M1405 spied hauling around its external GPU originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Feb 2010 03:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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9eekonomics |
Picasa, YouTube | Email this | Comments.
We got this story here - Here
Any comments?
Hell Freezes Over As Google Runs Its First Super Bowl Ad
Perk up notebook addicts, this one’s for you guys - Hell Freezes Over As Google Runs Its First Super Bowl Ad
For the energetically disabled out there -
As predicted, Hell has indeed frozen over. Yesterday, Google CEO Eric Schmidt sent a tweet hinting at something most people probably never expected to see: a Google Super Bowl ad. But the contents of the ad, and even the product it would be promoting, remained a mystery. Moments ago some 90 million Americans watched as Google showed off the search functionality that it’s famous for, in an ad called Parisian Love. We’ve embedded the ad below. Yesterday, John Battelle correctly predicted that the ad would be running during the Super Bowl.
Post your responses below.
Report: Large Hadron Collider producing tons of awesome collisions
Attention notebook addicts, this one’s for you guys - –>HERE<--
For those that don’t want to leave this page -
Hey, now, this is some great news, right? The trouble-plagued Large Hadron Collider looks to be doing a bang up job in some of its primary tasks. After breaking the energy record previously held by the Tevatron particle accelerator back at the end of November, 2009, reports are now coming in that the LHC is, in fact, producing some extremely high energy collisions. A research team led by MIT, CERN and the KFKI Research Institute for Particle and Nuclear Physics in Budapest, Hungary have released a report detailing findings that the collisions are producing an “unexpectedly” high number of particles called mesons, subatomic particles composed of one quark and one antiquark. The research is considered one of the first steps in the search for rarer particles, and the elusive, theoretical Higgs Boson. The paper, published in the Journal of High Energy Physics has led scientists to fine-tuning their predictive models for how many mesons will be found in even higher energy collisions. Hit the read link for the full, high energy news.
Report: Large Hadron Collider producing tons of awesome collisions originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 07 Feb 2010 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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MIT | Email this | Comments.
Major manufacturer stocks are a safe bet after reading that.





