29
Apr
Posted by Stephen In News
Microsoft is launching a new product into private beta on Tuesday morning with the aim of keeping friends and family in touch during emergencies. The idea for product, called Microsoft Vine
, came to Microsoft GM Public Safety Initiatives Tammy Savage
four and half years ago during Hurricane Katrina
. Development started a year and a half ago.
Vine is designed to keep family and friends in touch when other communication methods are either broken or not particularly efficient. Times of crisis usually involve a breakdown in mobile phone or other key communication infrastructures, and Vine is designed to be as hardy as possible to keep people connected. Vine can be accessed via a desktop client (Windows only for now), text message or email.
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28
Apr
Posted by Stephen In News
Japan got the first crack at Dell’s new multitouch all-in-one Studio One 19 in March, but it’s finally headed our way. As expected, prices start at $699, with a Pentium E5200 Dual Core processor, GeForce 9200 integrated graphics, a 320GB HDD, 2GB of RAM and a slot-loading DVD burner in the low-end. Built-in webcams and multitouch features are present across the board. Check out a video of the multitouch functionality after the break: nothing much beyond the usual gimmicks, though we’re a fan of letting your kid lay down beats with his jam-covered fingers — that’s true love.
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27
Apr
Posted by Stephen In News

Eizo Nanao has announced the inclusion of a “EcoView Sense” feature into their just announced FlexScan monitors; the 20-inch EV2023W and the 23-inch EV2303W.
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27
Apr
Posted by Stephen In News

The storage advance, which G.E. is announcing on Monday, is just a laboratory success at this stage. The new technology must be made to work in products that can be mass-produced at affordable prices.
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24
Apr
Posted by Stephen In News

In a not totally surprising — yet still kind of striking — turn of events, Microsoft is reporting that its sales have fallen for the first time in 23 years. You read that right, 23 years. According to numbers that the company has just released, sales fell 6 percent year-over-year, while overall net income dropped a staggering 32 percent. Those numbers are significant, but what’s more telling is where those losses are coming from. Namely? Netbooks. Apparently, in the midst of a global downturn consumers really are buying cheaper, especially when it comes to tech, which puts a fairly significant crunch on Redmond’s bottom line. A CNN reports suggests that the presence of Linux on those devices has contributed to the hurt here, but it’s more likely that the combo of a market still unwelcoming to Vista and the wide popularity of XP on the low-power systems has more to do with these dipping profit margins. Oh, and that general, awful market depression. Still, it should serve as some kind of wake up call to Microsoft that just being the biggest doesn’t guarantee that the money will keep rolling in the way it has in years past — clearly the big picture isn’t as sharp as it’s always been. Hey Windows 7 — no pressure, right?
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