
ASUS to finally ship EeeKeyboard in US this month
It's been almost a year worth of delays so we're still taking this with a grain of salt, but ASUS has stated that the EeeKeyboard will be shipping in the US by the end of the month. The PC-in-a-keyboard contains a 5-inch (800x480) capacitive touchscreen in addition to the usual key layout and features a 1.6 GHz Atom CPU, 1GB of RAM, a 16 or 32GB solid state drive, GMA 950 integrated graphics, a battery life of about 4 hours, Gigabit Ethernet, 802.11 b/g/n WiFi, Bluetooth, D-Sub and HDMI outputs for use with the real monitors, three USB ports, and an external Ultra-Wideband antenna.
Read More ...
Nvidia GF104 heading for summer
There is some new info out about Nvidia's first new card to launch after Geforce GTX 480 and GTX 470 cards. The new card is codenamed GF104 and it is currently taped out, works and performance looks good. The chip is much smaller than recently launched Fermi-based Geforce GTX 480 and 470 and the sources expect that this product might be the next “8800 GT”.
Read More ...
Intel developing new super-fast 25nm SSDs
Intel hasn’t launched a new high performance SSD since the X25-E a while back, and even today the 32GB and 64GB products from this series are the best drives that money can buy. The X25-E drives are enterprise SLC series and with read and write speeds of 250MB/s and 170MB/s respectively and are the fastest SSDs Intel has to offer, at least when it about single controller drives with no internal RAID.
Read More ...
ASUS introduces Bravo220 eco-friendly graphics card
ASUS has announced a new graphics card, the Bravo 220. Dedicated to fans living room PC, the card is based on a chip GeForce GT 220, an entry-level model has 48 stream processors. The ASUS card is fanless, which forced the company to significantly reduce the frequencies: 525 and 1360 MHz for GPU and shaders, against 626 and 1360 MHz on the reference cards. Similarly, DDR2 memory is clocked at only 400MHz (DDR2-800) against 500 MHz on the reference version and 790 MHz DDR3 version. As shown, card is perfect for home cinema but is obviosly not suitable for games.
Read More ...
HTC Nexus One: New outfit for the new Android
As the mobile device market grows, so does the number of users who use smartphones to search and access Internet. They’ve been using Windows Mobile or Symbian platforms for that most of the time in recent years, and even iPhone since not that long ago. It was all but natural for Google to meddle in this market by launching its own Android operating system. However, in order to keep the product gamma complete, alongside the large number of phones running on Android that have appeared during the past year or so, Google was expected to come out with its own telephone product.
Read More ...
No comments:
Post a Comment