Thursday, August 30, 2007

Microsoft: Vista SP1 beta in september, due in Q108


Looks like Microsoft is finally ready to tell people what the hell is going on with the first Vista service pack: chock full o' bug fixes, performance optimizations, and improved reliability, Microsoft is shooting the beta to between 10,000 - 15,000 people in September (which means it'll be about 10 minutes after release before you can get it on BitTorrent -- not that it isn't already) and is intending to launch it officially in Q1 of 2008. We're reserving judgment on just how badly it's needed or just how many people are itching for it, we just want the thing out, and ASAP.

Sony's Walkman A810 series now loose in the us


Hey, didn't we just see this little guy yesterday all blurry and
rumory like? Sure enough, the new Walkman A810 series was just
loosed in the US and doing pretty much everything the NW-A800
was doing for Europe and beyond. It's available in white, pink, or silver getups while maxing out storage with a black-only 8GB model (NWZ-A818BLK) just like we heard. 8GB will cost you a full $230 while the 2GB and 4GB models drop off to $140 and $180, respectively. That NWZ-S615F (with FM tuner) remains aloof but we're bound to hear something shortly.

Parrot announces DS3120 Bluetooth stero,Ds1120 Bluetooth speakers




  • Always one to cut cords at every corner, Parrot has taken advantage of IFA to unveil a range of new Bluetooth-equipped devices, including the stereo and speakers seen above. As you can no doubt surmise, the DS3120 Bluetooth stereo will pull tunes off your cellphone or other Bluetooth-equipped device and pump 'em through the unit's 20W speakers. Those looking to add a bit more ooomph to their phone calls can also use the stereo for some handsfree calling, with the integrated 1.8-inch LCD able to display phonebook information in addition to track and album details. On the non-Bluetooth front, the stereo packs a line-in port to accommodate other devices, along with an SD card slot and a built-in FM radio. If that's all a bit too much for you, you may want to consider Parrot's new DS1120 Bluetooth speakers, which ups the power output to a full 30W, with a Class-D digital amplifier in each speaker. Parrot's also thoughtfully bundled a Bluetooth USB dongle with the speakers, along with an RCA input to let you use 'em other devices. Look for both to be available this October, with the stereo running €169 ($230) and the speakers setting you back €199 ($270).

Talking CD case spruces up those mundane disc gifts


As if singing cards weren't zany enough, along comes a product that takes the idea one step further. Pre-vu's talking CD case enables customers to cram burnt home videos or any other optical disc into an enclosure that actually plays back up to sixty seconds of pre-recorded chatter. 'Course, this would probably be most effective when mailing out gifts to those you won't actually be meeting face-to-face, but for £2.50 ($5) apiece, it's not a half bad way to avoid writing out paragraphs of stereotypical well-wishes.

Emtec announces Movie Cube -R Multimedia hard drive



It looks like Emtec is continuing to branch out from its media-based roots, with the company now following up its recently-announced PMP with its new Movie Cube -R "multimedia hard drive." In addition to offering ample amounts of storage, this one boasts both video-in and video-out ports to hook it up to your TV, letting you record and view content without ever touching a PC (a remote control is included to help in that process). You can also, of course, hook the device up to your PC if you like, either by USB or Ethernet, with a memory card slot also provided to let you offload photos from your digital camera. As far as format support goes, you can look for all the usual suspects, including MP3, WMA, and OGG audio, along with MPEG-2, MPEG-4, DivX, and Xvid video. While the image above looks suspiciously polished, Emtec assures us that the real deal will be rolling out next month in capacities from 160GB to 500GB (or without a hard drive, if so choose), with prices starting at £150 (or about $300).

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Wrist Ringer - Fossil Mobilewear Abacus


This watch syncs with Symbian phones over Bluetooth. It vibrates when you get calls and shows callers’ names or numbers on its LCD screen.
Fossil Mobilewear Abacus $250

Skate Faster with Easton Synergy 1500C hockey skate


The 1.7-pound Easton Synergy 1500C hockey skate doesn’t sacrifice power to save weight.The fi rst-ever one-piece carbon-composite boot has no joints to rob it of rigidity, so itresponds quickly and evenly to movements from your foot.



Cost - $450

Saturday, August 11, 2007

HP Pavilion dv2000

And yet another new and sleekly designed eye catching laptop from HP dv2000. It is a pretty light weighed and yet very high performance machine. With the luxurious snake skin out look it looks very damn amazing too!



Specifications:


The laptop comes with variable options for all its parts as always, which you can chose to suit your style and pocket. I came accros a very nice and high performance item. It had a very significant 2gb ram, 2 Ghz core 2 dual proccessor, 160 gb hard drive, over 256 mb of visual graphic card and 1.3 megapixel internal web cam. The lappy has a 14.1" wide screen smaller then is trendy so to increase the mobility and decrease the weight




Samsung's Q1 Ultra











Samsung has now come up with a new idea of sleek mobilty in style with this new ultra mobile pc. They say that this gadget comes with enough power to compare with any other laptop and has more power and functionality than any other pda. They say that its a laptop that doesnt go in your lap it fits in your palm. Samsung recommend Windows Vista Home Premium for this device so you can very well imagine what this small machine is capable of.








Mobile:The device comes with complete mobile phone capabilities so you can stay in touch on the go and get work done when you're at it. The device has more capabilties than any other mobile phone. It comes with wireless lan and bluetooth to give you complete accesibility wherever and whenever you need it. You can surf the internet like on a laptop or a personal computer. Q1 Ultra even lets you video conference with your colleagues or friends. And with the split keyboard you can type emails or instant messages faster than on a mobile phone.






Personal Computer:
With this device in your hands you can enjoy full PC performance and functionality whenever or wherever. Any software that is compatible with Vista and Xp, this device has been configured to run them! The computer is powered by Intel's latest Ultra mobile technology processor, which enables the gadget to perform like a computer and use the least battery. With the 7" back lit LCD's touch screen you can do whatever you like, and it displays 1024x600 resolution. You can transfer all your data from a PC into this machine with its full PC connectivity usb link


Intel Core 2 Extreme QX6850 Quad-Core

The quad-core Core 2 Extreme QX6850 keeps the desktop CPU performance belt tied firmly around Intel's waist at a price that helps offset the lack of sizable performance gains. New products at the end of the year may outclass this new chip when they arrive, but for now, the QX6850 reigns supreme.

This new chip offers slightly faster performance for significantly less money than Intel's previous quad-core CPU. Forth coming chips from AMD and intel itself might render this chip less lime light and this might give an expensive effect. These new chips will come in 6 months period or so but untill then this is the best it gets :)

Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTX

This new card from Nvidia outruns all its competitors in performance, with 768 MB of memory and 575 Mhz core clock speed this is as good as it gets. This card dominates all other rivals as ATI, it matches the image quality of the ATI. This is also the first car that comes with DirectX 10 support. This card also gets a 9 out of 10 rating from CNET.

Nvidia's GeForce 8800 GTX not only beats ATI to market with its next-gen 3D graphics hardware, it also eliminates ATI's image-quality advantage in current-generation titles. Throw in its sheer horsepower, and Nvidia gives the high-end enthusiast every reason to make this purchase. This card costs around $600

Toshiba Portege R500-S5002

Perhaps the laptop we've been most looking forward to checking out this year, Toshiba's Portege R500 is very close to the final word in ultraportable systems. Incredibly thin and light, it manages to squeeze a 12-inch display into a package even lighter than Sony's 11-inch VAIO TZ150.This laptop costs around $2000 for the base model and $2150 for the upgraded version.Toshiba's much-anticipated Portege R500 may be the best ultraportable laptop available right now. This is an extremely thin and light has excellent battery life and even includes optical drive. This machine has a weight badge of 2.4 pounds! Which is much greater than extraordinary. The laptop also has a 120 GB hard drive, a 1.2 GHz Intel core 2 duo processor and Mobile Intel Express 950GM video card.The only thing this laptop lacks is no mobile broadband and that very limited configuration options.

SanDisk Sansa Connect


The Sansa Connect is a nicely designed player with desirable features and advanced wireless technology, making it a great choice for early adopters and Yahoo Music Unlimited subscribers. With a bit of tweaking to the integrated Wi-Fi, this device could become a "must-have" music player for users who want fresh content all the time.The SanDisk Sansa Connect has a high-quality design, a lovely, user-friendly interface, and good audio quality; it offers desirable features such as a MicroSD card expansion slot and a built-in external speaker for sharing tunes. The Connect is also Wi-Fi-capable, letting you access Internet radio for free and the entire Yahoo Music catalog with a subscription.

The Cheapest Laptop in the World


The Medison Celebrity laptop. It's a $150 laptop from Swedish company Medison that's available through the Columbus, Ohio-based online reseller 2Checkout.com. This laptop costs and amazing $150 !This laptop features a large, wide-screen 14-inch WXGA display and weighs a reasonable 4.8 pounds. Powering the Medison Celebrity is a 1.5GHz Intel Celeron M 370 processor and 256MB of RAM. It uses Fedora Linux, which requires less muscle to run than a Windows OS and no Microsoft licensing fee. Rounding out the specs are a 40GB hard drive, an integrated Via PN800 graphics chip, and 802.11g Wi-Fi. You also get stereo speakers, three USB 2.0 ports, and a PC Card slot. Medison backs the laptop with a one-year warranty but offers little detail about the terms.And guess what, $150 is all you have to pay, the shipping is also free and there are no extra charges whatsoever!

SIT BACK, RELAX - Self Adjusting Chair


The chair of the future will form-fit your back, adjust itself, and possibly disappear altogetherSitting up straight is bad for you. Scottish radiologists confirmed in a study last year that a 130-degree angle of recline between torso and thighs reduces pressure on the discs in the lower back. This (and its sleek design) is why the ubiquitous Aeron chair was so ahead of its time in 1994. It deeply reclined by pivoting at the hips.But designers find that the features of chairs like the Aeron are lost on most sitters. The array of levers and knobs—recline tension, lumbar support, seat-pan depth, forward tilt—are commonly ignored by users, who only think to change the chair’s height.This neglect has manufacturers such as Herman Miller and umanscale looking toward the next frontier: a self-adjusting chair. “We’re working on a chair that will listen to who’s sitting on it and adjust itself to their weight,” says Bill Dowell, director of research at Herman Miller, which makes the Aeron. Humanscale’s Freedom chair includes a counterbalance system that adjusts itself like scales to the sitter’s weight as he or she reclines, eliminating the need for recline controls.Or perhaps the chair of the future isn’t one at all. Chairs contribute in part to the high rate of back pain, which, according to the National Institutes of Health, affects eight out of 10 Americans. “Our notion of a machine for sitting may not make sense in a globalized world,” says Herman Miller designer Cameron Campbell. Galen Cranz of the University of California at Berkeley points out in her book The Chair that the Indian practice of squatting and the Muslim practice of stretching five times a day to pray have great ergonomic benefits. Ten years from now, one worker may settle into a low recliner, another will kneel on a soft carpet, and they’ll talk across a pile of office cushions.

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

ONE PEN FOR EVERYTHING


German pen company Staedtler created the first pen to write on almost anything. Next: ink that chemically adapts to that surface. Staedtler is closely watching academic research into smart inks, which change to optimize molecular bonds with a surface. Paper could triggernon-bleeding ink; whiteboards might produce a dry-wipeable substance.

SUPER HELPFUL PHONE


In a project at the Palo Alto Research Center in California, phones use nearby office cameras to detect when you’re in a face-to-face or cellphone conversation. Natural language software then picks out words like “meeting” and automatically fills in your calendar.

TRANSPARENT MONITORS


Go ahead, stare out the window—it’s also your monitor. Displays can already be 75 percent transparent when turned off, thanks to thin electroluminescent fi lms called organic light-emitting diodes, or OLEDs.
Universal Display Corporation in New Jersey and others are developing seethrough conductive materials to replace the last visible part: the grid of circuits that delivers power to pixels.

TRANSPARENT MONITORS

Go ahead, stare out the window—it’s also your monitor. Displays can already be 75 percent transparent when turned off, thanks to thin electroluminescent fi lms called organic light-emitting diodes, or OLEDs.
Universal Display Corporation in New Jersey and others are developing seethrough conductive materials to replace the last visible part: the grid of circuits that delivers power to pixels.

Surf Warmer


If you prefer your winter rides in liquid form, keep your lips from turning blue with the Rip Curl H-Bomb heated wet suit. Two lithium-polymer batteries power waterproof, fiber-basedheating elements along your back to keep your core warm.
Cost -- Around $700

Saturday, August 4, 2007

BenQ E1000 10 mega pixels Digital Camera



The BenQ E1000 features a bright 3-inch LTPS LCD display, a 10 mega pixels image sensor, 3X optical zoom in both static and moving recording mode, automatic face-tracking function and a high ISO of up to 1600.

The E1000 supports ISO of up to 1600 to facilitate shooting and ensures clear photos in darkly-lit environments if the use of flash is not desirable. The Shake-Free hotkey located right next to the shutter button allows instant access to activate the Shake-Free function anytime. Capturing moving objects in a darkly-lit environment can now be achieved easily with BenQ's enhanced image stabilizer – the Super Shake Free function, which adjusts ISO and shutter speed according to the environment where the image is taken. The BenQ E1000 offers amateurs and professionals an easy way to adjust aperture and shutting according their liking by incorporating the P/Av/Tv/M mode.

Control your iPod with your watch



Fumbling around with your iPod while it is in your pocket or engaging with it full-force may be getting old, especially when you're in the middle of a triathlon. Timex aims to fix that by putting basic iPod controls on its new iControl Ironman watch.

The new watch includes a dongle that attaches to the iPod or iPhone connector, allowing users to play, pause, navigate forward and backward, and turn up the volume remotely from their wrists.
Both Engadget and Gizmodo already have some hands-on experience with the watch, which lists for $125.
Although buying info for the watch is nowhere to be found on Timex.com or Apple.com, the Timex site says that the watch will be available later next week.

Tough Laptops - Getac Military Laptop



Getac V100 Military Grade laptop has been designed to meet the high rugged standards of the military, government, utility, public safety, field service, manufacturing and health care industries.

The V100 features a rotatable, polarised touchscreen 10.4-inch WXGA TFT LCD display (including a 1.3MP waterproof camera) that can be customised to include sunlight readable technology and it boasts specialist rugged features to ensure it can withstand some of the most extreme conditions in almost any environment but remains ultra-light at 2.2kg.
It is capable of withstanding heavy rain and is immune to damage from dust and debris. The removable hard drive, is shielded with anti-vibration rubber and anti-shock housing.
The HDD can have an optional HDD heater which combined with low temperature battery means the V100 will continue to work in temperatures down to -20C and it is encased in magnesium alloy.
No pricing or availability details are available, and it is not expected to be released for sale to the general public.

Transcend JetFlash V35 and 220 USB drives



Transcend has updated their JetFlash pen drive series with two new usb drives -- the V35 and the 220.

The latter one boosts fingerprint recognition sensor strip and AES 256-bit encryption technology to protect you data. The security feature and 8GB capacity (about $150) sounds good for a business users. The tiny multicolored V35 (max 8GB at $140) comes in compact size and weights only 8g.

Creative Zen V Plus Now 16GB

An interesting development has just occurred in this line of Creative PMP products with the addition of a 16GB version. That’s twice the amount of movies and musi. Zen will probably be in the history books for the most part through their user interface that uses an hierarchal system to navigate content (Apple paid $100 million for this technology).


Creative Zen V plus has a 1.5-inch 128 x 128-pixel OLED display and supports MP3, WMA, IMA ADPCM, WMA DRM, JPEG and AVI natively with more video formats supported through software conversion. It also features PlayForSure support, an FM tuner and lin-in. It measures 43.5 x 67.5 x 15.9mm and weighs 43.5g. It’s priced at $399.00.

Talking Baby


You’ll be astonished to see the talking internet telephone with foxy fur and blue complexion, this baby is always dressed for any occasion. Just plug Baby into the USB port. Now whenever your friends are appearing or calling this baby will flash his horns, shake its hands and make lots of noise..

An Enticing Glow


The Saitek Eclipse II is a nice and solid springy 104 key keyboard with a twist. That is a knob on the right that fires up the illumination. Laser etched keys glow from within in electric blue, demon red, or wizard purple. The glow emanates from the side, giving this unique keyboard the illusion that it’s hovering scant inches from your desktop. The keyboard is a perfect blend of style and function, beauty and brains..

Laugh Heartily


Made from vinyl, these Laughing Bags are hilarious! All you have to do is give them a squeeze and they start to snigger, laugh and giggle, giving the impression of being overdosed by laughing gas. .

How to Catch a Hacker

I just wrote this guide to give you some tips of which you may not have heard yet. Hopefully, it won't come to a hacker getting in, but if it does...

Tip 1: Hackers cover their tracks. Experienced hackers cover them more thorougly, but amateur hackers sometimes leave things behind. Don't expect them to leave any really big evidence behind; expect more of little things here and there you might find surprising. For example, if you're writing a term paper and a black hat hacker accidently saved it when he took a paragraph out- that's suspicious. Where did that paragraph go? Well, for one thing, now you know he was in that area. Check the folders surrounding the file- you might find something.

Tip 2: Decipher between the type of hackers that are attacking you. Experienced hackers will have a more in depth look around when they penetrate your system. They won't touch much because they know that that won't add too much to their knowledge. But if you know a hacker's been in, and some files are messed with, and you have a log of someone guessing passwords to a file or something of that sort, its probably some newbie who's just starting out. These are the easiest hackers to catch. They usually get so caught up in thoughts like "I'm in!" that they forget the basics, such as work behind a proxy. My friend was setting up a webserver once. His first time too, and he wasn't to anxious to set up some good software to protect against hackers and viruses. He didn't put up one IDS, and before you know it, the obvious happened. But this time, a newbie had struck. The nice log files showed, bluntly across the screen, multiple instances of a foreign IP address that stood out. Some stupid newbie had tried to login as "uucp" on my friend's XP computer, with a password of "uucp." Well, that's great, but he also had tried the same user/pass combination three times, enough to get himself logged nicely. Even a semi-brainless user with some form of neurological system knows that uucp isn't a default XP account. Again, excitement toiled this hacker's brain, and maybe if he hadn't done that, along with a few other stupid things, he wouldn't have gotten caught. What other things did he do? Well, lets see. He openned 35 instances of MS-DOS. He tried to clean the printer's heads, and he edited a .gif in notepad. Then he uninstalled a few programs and installed some html editor, and replaced four files with the words "14P." He might as well have posted his phone number. In a few days, we had tracked him down to a suburban town in Ohio. We let him go, not pressing any charges, because he had done nothing really damaging and had provided me with an example of a moron for this guide.

Tip 3: Don't go crazy if you lose data. Chances are, if it was that important, you would have backed it up anyway. Most hackers nowadays wish they were back in 1989 when they could use a Black Box and having a Rainbow Book actually meant something. Most hackers aren't blackhat, they are whitehat, and some even greyhat. But in the end, most hackers that are in systems aren't satisfied by looking around. From past experiences, I have concluded that many hackers like to remember where've they been. So, what do they do? They either press delete here and there, or copy some files onto their systems. Stupid hackers (yes, there are plenty of stupid hackers) send files to e-mail addresses. Some free email companies will give you the IP of a certain e-mail address's user if you can prove that user has been notoriously hacking you. But most of the time, by the time you get the e-mail addy it's been unused for weeks if not months or years, and services like hotmail have already deleted it.


Tip 4: Save information! Any information that you get from a log file (proxy server IP, things like "14P", e-mail addresses that things were sent to, etc.) should be saved to a floppy disk (they're not floppy anymore, I wish I could get out of the habit of calling them that) incase there's a next time. If you get another attack, from the same proxy, or with similar e-mail addresses (e.g: one says Blackjack 123@something.whatever and the other says Black_jack_45@something.znn.com) you can make an assumption that these hackers are the same people. In that case, it would probably be worth the effort to resolve the IP using the proxy and do a traceroute. Pressing charges is recommended if this is a repeat offender.

Tip 5: Don't be stupid. If you've been hacked, take security to the next level. Hackers do talk about people they've hacked and they do post IPs and e-mail addresses. Proof? Take a look at Defcon Conventions. I've never gone to one, but I've seen the photos. The "Wall of Shame"-type of boards I've seen have IPs and e-mail addresses written all over them in fat red, dry-erase ink. Don't be the one to go searching the Defcon website and find your e-mail address posted on the Wall of Shame board! Tip 6: Don't rely on luck. Chances are, sometime or another, you're going to be targeted for an attack. Here you can rely on luck. Maybe they'll forget? Maybe they don't know how to do it? If you think this way, a surprise is going to hit your face very hard. Another way you could stupidly rely on luck is by saying this: It's probably just a whitehat. On the contrary, my friend, it's probably just a blackhat. A blackhat with knowledge stored in his head, ready to be used as an ax. It's your data. You take the chance. Well, there you have it. If you have any additional tips that aren't widly talked about send them to info@nitesecurity.com, post them on the forums, or e-mail them to a staff member. We'll probably have another "tip" guide and include them there, with the proper credits of course. This guide and others by myself and other staff members can be found at http://www.nitesecurity.com.

Blackberry Curve 8300

Size : Dimensions 107 x 60 x 15.5 mm
Weight 111 g
Display : Type 65K
colorsSize 320 x 240 pixels
Ring tones : Type Polyphonic (32 channels), MP3
Vibration Yes
Memory : Phonebook Yes, Photo callCall records YesCard slot micro SD (Trans Flash)- 64 MB flash memory

Data : GPRS YesHSCSD NoEDGE Yes3G NoWLAN NoBluetooth Yes, 2.0Infrared portUSB Yes

Features : Colors BlackCamera 2 MP, 1600x1200 pixels, video, flashOTHER:- Full QWERTY keyboard- Trackball navigation- Java- Media player- Blackberry maps- Organizer- Calculator- Voice dial- Built-in hands free- To-do list

Apple i-phone


Size : Dimensions 115×61×11.6 mm
Weight 135g
Display : Type widescreen multi-touch displaySize 320×480 pixels,
3.5 inRing tones : Type MP3,AAC
Memory :4 or 8 GB,
internal flash memory
Data : GPRS/EDGE 220kbpsWi-Fi 802.11b/gBluetooth Yes 2.0Infrared port No3G No
Features : Colors BlackCamera 2MP (No video capturing)
OS: Darwin OS XOTHER:- Built-in speaker
RS: 25,000-30,000 in indian currency
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