Archive for the ‘Mac Pro’ Category

Apple Laptop and Desktop Black Friday Promo

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Despite all the iPhone hate, Apple’s laptops deserve all that love. Same with its desktops. Check out what retailers are planning to offer come Black Friday, which is tomorrow:

Current Model Retail MacMall BestBuy Amazon
13″ White MacBook $999 -$100 -$100 -$81
13″ 2GHz MacBook $1299 -$119 -$100 -$79
13″ 2.4GHz MacBook $1599 -$149 -$150 -$129
15″ 2.4GHz MB Pro $1999 -$200 -$100 -$200
15″ 2.5Ghz MB Pro $2499 -$250 -$100 -$210
17″ 2.5GHz MB Pro $2799 -$250 -$100 -$105
1.6GHz MacBook Air $1799 -$149 -$150 -$55
1.8GHz SSD MacBook Air $2499 -$179 -$150 -$129
20″ 2.4GHz iMac $1199 -$119 -$100 -$69
20″ 2.6GHz iMac $1499 -$129 -$100 -$80
24″ 2.8GHz iMac $1799 -$159 -$150 -$119
24″ 3.06GHz iMac $2199 -$159
Mac Pro 2.8GHz $2799 -$250 -$150 -$174


Note:
MacMall and Amazon’s prices take into account the mail-in rebate.

Source: Mac Rumors

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Original post by Rico

Get Your Lala Out for 10 Cent Music

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

lala_home_logo.gifThe major record labels plan to start selling digital songs for a dime apiece. The catch: You can′t carry them with you on an iPod.

Thomas Hesse, Sony BMG’s president of digital business and U.S. sales, came up with the new pricing approach for the “Web song” while in discussions with Lala Media, a digital music retail store and service. The Web song is stored online and can be listened to only through a computer’s Web browser.

Sony, the three other major record labels and thousands of independent labels plan to sell Web songs via the revamped website Lala has unveiled.

They hope customers will also buy, for an extra 79 or 89 cents, a version of the song they can download and transfer to portable devices or burn to CDs. But the 10-cent Web song demonstrates the willingness of the music industry to seek new revenue models in an era of declining CD sales.

Hesse said he wanted to give consumers a way to discover new artists and buy music in an inexpensive way.

Now he’s on to something … 

Check out what a dime will get you these days at www.lala.com.

Get more at the Los Angeles Times.
 

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Original post by nafiz

Navman intros slimline S100 GPS unit

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

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It looks like those wanting a GPS unit that’s a bit more stylish than the usual fare now have a new option to consider from Navman, which has just introduced is IDEO-designed 𔒜 model. In addition to being shiny, this one measures just 13.5-mm thick, and packs a 4.3-inch “super flat” touchscreen, all the usual PMP features, 3D maps, Navman’s trademark NavPix photo navigation, and SirfStar’s InstaFix II, which promises to deliver a GPS fix five times faster than normal. It also uses Mio’s new “Spirit” software with Glide Touch, which provides “simple tap and slide functionality,” but apparently not full multi-touch. No word on a release ‘round these parts, but folks in the UK will be able to pick this one up in November for $199, or roughly $340.

[Via NaviGadget]

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Original post by Donald Melanson

Did The Chinese Spacewalk Take Place On Earth… In A Pool?

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

Shenzhou-Launch.jpg

You might remember my entry from September 25 equating the Chinese Shenzhou VII space launch with Capricorn One, the 1978 movie starring OJ Simpson, James Brolin and Sam Waterston. The gist was the Chinese supplied commentary and quotes from the launch a full day before it occurred! In less elegant times we’d call that lying.

It gets better!

Now there’s a rumor… a pretty substantial rumor… the Chinese astronauts’ space walk was a fake too. Do I know it was faked? Absolutely not. However, I’ve got a $30 Chinese Rolex on my nightstand. I know you can’t take everything at face value. Allow me to be a skeptic because the whole scenario is interesting to say the least.

The charge is instead of sending an astronaut into the void of space the EVA was actually simulated in a pool–a place astronauts often train. The evidence: bubbles!

From Inside China Today. “[O]n October 1, CCTV broadcast “space walk by Shenzhou VII” where on the screen, bubble-like objects were found multiple times, rising slowly before the mask of the astronaut in the weightless conditions of space. There were also some bubbles popping up when the capsule gate opened and they flew obliquely across the top of the screen.”

I watched the broadcast on youtube and sure enough at 5:49 a distinct bubble does float away from the astronaut on the right. The whole thing just doesn’t look like space–at least not the way it does when American astronauts are out working. Maybe ours are faked?

astronaut-reflection.jpg

Epochtimes.com adds to the intrigue by pointing out there are reflections of lights visible on the mirrored surface of the astronaut’s space suit. Again, this is plainly visible in the youtube video (and the screencap above).

“More tellingly, rows of lamps were visible in the reflection of mirrors on the astronaut’s wrists. At 8 min 41 seconds, the mirror on the astronaut’s left wrist showed clearly three rows of lamps with five or six in each row.

The surface of Zhai Zhigang’s watch, at 8 min 54 seconds, also reflected the lamp arrays, indicating the light source did exist and was fixed in its position.”

Maybe I’m just too skeptical when it comes to the Chinese government. I’ve taken them to task on my personal blog when they spun the truth pre-Olympics.

So, when the deputy chief engineer of the Beijing Meteorological Bureau says, “Even if the rare extreme weather hits Beijing in August, people will not feel muggy. High humidity will not accompany the hot weather in August because their climax periods are different, ” I’d hide the silverware and other valuables.

There’s no way for me to know if these rumors are true. A quick Google check shows nothing in the mainstream media nor on usually trustworthy space oriented websites. However, big fires often start after something small begins to smolder.

Stay tuned.

Original post by Geoff Fox

Happy Birthday, NASA: 50 Years and Counting

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

Nasa%20Anniversary%20Logo.jpg

Although most of the fanfare surrounding NASA’s 50th anniversary centered on July 29, which marked half a century since America’s space agency was created by an act of Congress, it was actually 50 years ago today–October 1, 1958–that NASA opened its doors to its employees. So break out the Tang, and set off a few bottle rockets! Through triumphs, tragedies, and disappointments, our space program has persevered, opening our eyes to incredible worlds and wonders, and its mission continues.

NASA has compiled an impressive list of achievements. It’s launched numerous successful manned missions, culminating with the six Moon landings. Manned space stations going back to Skylab have tested the ability of humans to live and work for prolonged periods in space. Earth-observing satellites have greatly deepened our understanding of Earth’s oceans, climate, geology, vegetation, resources, and more.

Orbiting observatories, exemplified by the Hubble Space Telescope but also including satellites to study celestial objects at every conceivable wavelength, have made numerous discoveries. Our fleet of robotic space probes has visited all of the planets in our solar system, revealing them and their moons and enigmatic worlds, as well as comets, moons, and asteroids fascinating and enigmatic worlds. (Five of these probes are heading clear out of the solar system on one-way journeys to the stars.)

NASA’s efforts have revolutionized our understanding of the universe and our place in it. Particularly in its early decades, the space program helped engender an excitement that led many students to pursue careers in sciences. And NASA technology has been applied to numerous areas unrelated to space.

Along with such obvious things as missile design and communications systems, NASA technology has found applications in areas as diverse as wireless headsets, plasma displays, freeze-dried foods, single-crystal silicon solar cells, portable electric vacuum cleaners, cochlear implants, bicycle helmets, air purifiers, airplane collision-avoidance and anti-icing systems, oil-spill remediation, flame-retardant coatings, better two-way radios, anthrax detectors, skis, tennis racquets, and dialysis machines.

Of course, NASA has had its share of tragedies as well–the launch-pad fire that killed the Apollo 1 astronauts, the Challenger and Columbia disasters–and failed missions, such as the Mars Climate Orbiter, which crashed into the Red Planet because subcontractor Lockheed Martin had used English units of measurement instead of NASA-mandated metric units, and of course Apollo 13, where only the heroic efforts of both mission and ground crews saved the astronauts from death.

What do the next 50 years offer? It’s been 35 years since astronauts walked on the Moon, but it looks like we′re going back. NASA’s Constellation program is developing a new set of spacecraft for manned missions as a successor to the Space Shuttle. It probably won’t be until at least 2020 until we return to the Moon (I’d like to see them aim for July 20, 2019, the 50th anniversary of the first Moon landing), and perhaps 2030 before we get to Mars, the limiting factor largely being money.

However, if life were discovered on Mars by a rover or other unmanned craft, that would speed things up–as would teaming with an international partner or partners. China, which just completed its third manned space flight and has its eyes set on the Moon, is a likely rival. Many other nations, including Japan, Brazil, and India, have initiated unmanned space programs.

Budgetary considerations, particularly in light of the current economic situation, could play a major role in determining our future in space. Both John McCain and Barack Obama have vowed to continue funding the Constellation program if elected President.

As a senator, McCain has been supportive of the space program over the years, though he’s promised that as President he would watch the budget like a hawk, and NASA programs could prove expendable. At one point, Obama suggested taking money from NASA to fund an early education program, but now says that any such an offset would have to come from elsewhere. His stated reason for the change is a growing realization of how the Bush Administration’s anti-science tack had cut into dollars for basic research. In August, he came out in favor of $2 billion in additional funding for NASA. He also wants to resurrect the National Space Council to help provide focus and direction to the space program. As to what either of them would actually do in office, only time will tell–and a lot may depend on the effects of our current economic crisis.

Manned landings on the inner planets (Mercury and Venus) are improbable due to these worlds′ searing surface temperatures, though astronauts might fly by Venus on the way home from Mars. Manned exploration of the outer solar system will probably have to wait for NASA’s centennial.

As for unmanned missions, several flights are currently underway. The New Horizons mission, due to fly by Pluto in 2015, was conceived and launched when that ice-world was still classified as a planet. The Dawn mission is headed towards two of the largest asteroids, Vesta and Ceres. (Like Pluto, they’re now officially classified as “dwarf planets”.) The Messenger mission, launched in 2004, is en route to Mercury, using “gravity assists” from close flybys of several worlds (Earth, Venus, and Mercury itself) as it matches speeds with the innermost planet, which lies deep in the Sun’s “gravitational well.” Messenger won’t actually enter orbit around Mercury until 2011.

Mars has been an object of intense interest to NASA since the space program’s early years. Ongoing missions such as the Spirit and Opportunity Mars rovers are still going strong, and the Phoenix Mars polar lander, which in its short stay has already detected water as well as soil possibly conducive to life. Additional rovers and missions to return samples of Martian soil to Earth are in the works.

Last winter, NASA tested a prototype submersible in the icy waters of Lake Mendota in Wisconsin, and there’s talk of testing this sub in Lake Vostok, an enormous lake that lies more than 2 miles beneath the Antarctic ice cap. Its eventual mission could be to explore the subsurface ocean beneath the icy crust of Jupiter’s moon Europa.

One of the great quests that NASA is involved in, and will be in the coming decades, is in the finding of planets orbiting other suns. James Webb Space Telescope, a 6.5-meter telescope, is scheduled to replace Hubble in 2013. It’s most sensitive in the infrared part of the spectrum, and has the potential to take images of large planets orbiting other stars. (Currently, such planets are only detectable by indirect means, either by noticing minute, periodic changes in a star’s brightness as a much smaller planet passes across the star’s face, or through shifts in a star’s spectrum as the planet wobbles back and forth due to the pull of an unseen planet.)

In part thanks to NASA, our understanding of the physical universe is a quantum leap ahead of where it was a half-century ago. The cosmic background radiation left over from the Big Bang. Planets mapped and studied from up close. Planetoids lurking at the fringe of our solar system, and whole planetary systems orbiting other stars. Moons with vast oceans under their crusts. Moons with ethane/methane seas. Dark energy, and a universe expanding at an ever-increasing rate. The sky, imaged at every conceivable wavelength. Sure, we can make projections about various programs and missions to come, but with the pace of both technology and discovery, we must leave room for possibilities as unimaginable to us as the world and cosmos as we understand them today would have been to the people of 50 years ago.

Post by Tony Hoffman

Original post by Gearlog

The Less Dangerous Method Of Launching Astronauts

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

chinese-launch.jpg

To her dying day my mother-in-law believed the Apollo space program was simulated in a studio. Maybe she had it right. Maybe it really did go down along the lines of Capricorn One, the 1978 movie starring OJ Simpson, James Brolin and Sam Waterston (hmmm… which actor does not belong in that group, Sam?). From IMDB:

“Classic conspiracy tale about the first manned mission to Mars. All appears to be going well until the astronauts are pulled off the ship just before launch by shadowy government types and whisked off to a film studio in the desert. It transpires that the space vehicle has a major defect which NASA just daren’t admit. At the studio, over a course of months, the astronauts are forced to act out the journey and the landing to trick the world into believing they have made the trip.”

All this comes up because of today’s launch of a Chinese rocket carrying Chinese astronauts. From Xinhua, the Chinese news agency:

“The spaceship Shenzhou-7 blasted off on a Long March II-F carrier rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in the northwestern Gansu Province at 9:10 p.m. after a breathtaking countdown to another milestone on China’s space journey.”

That’s pretty cool… except yesterday, long before the astronauts had been strapped in, Xinhua published another account. As relayed by the AP, this ran BEFORE they lifted off!

“”After this order, signal lights all were switched on, various data show up on rows of screens, hundreds of technicians staring at the screens, without missing any slightest changes …

‘One minute to go!’

‘Changjiang No.1 found the target!’…

“The firm voice of the controller broke the silence of the whole ship. Now, the target is captured 12 seconds ahead of the predicted time …

‘The air pressure in the cabin is normal!’

“Ten minutes later, the ship disappears below the horizon. Warm clapping and excited cheering breaks the night sky, echoing across the silent Pacific Ocean.”

Finally, the Chinese perfect news BEFORE it happens. That’s better than live, right? Maybe OJ did go to the Moon!

Original post by Geoff Fox

USB-enabled PicoLCD SideShow display may soon be a collector’s item

Friday, September 12th, 2008

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Remember way back when everyone and their third cousin twice removed was hopping on the SideShow bandwagon? Yeah, those were the days. We’ll admit, we still think SideShow has had a lot of promise, but you know what they say about a technology without support. At any rate, Mini-Box has decided to offer up a (comparatively) inexpensive way for folks to indulge in a minuscule auxiliary display, and while the $49.95 PicoLCD 4≴-Sideshow won’t provide any looks at high-res widgets, the basic blue display is a real champ at showing off stock prices and birthday reminders. Worst case scenario? You can probably use it in a random DIY project that you’ve been meaning to get to.

[Via SideShowDevices]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Wearable Fitbit automatically tracks your exercise routines

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

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Although the world already has a set of headphones that encourages you to work out, the newly announced Fitbit is just a hair more sophisticated. Designed to be worn or carried around in a spare pocket, the personal tracker is about the size of a standard flash drive and includes a built-in motion sensor to keep tabs on “exercise intensity levels, calories burned, sleep quality, steps and distance traveled.” When it ships in late December / early January for $99, the unit will reportedly boast a fancy OLED display for quick readouts, and hey, it should even arrive just in time to complement your entirely meaningless New Year’s Resolution.

[Via Gearlog]

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Original post by Darren Murph

CSR demonstrates Bluetooth low energy transfer

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

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We know you′re not really down with digesting any more catchphrases, but the technology formerly known as Ultra Low Power Bluetooth / Wibree is now being dubbed Bluetooth low energy. Now that we’re clear on nomenclature, you may be thrilled to know that CSR showcased its recently unveiled BlueCore7 dual mode (Bluetooth low energy and Bluetooth v2.1) chip at a Bluetooth SIG Medical Working Group meeting. According to onlookers, the handset was able to transfer data to another nearby mobile using just 3 frequencies rather than 32, resulting in an unquantifiable decrease in power consumption. Sounds like a winner on the surface, but we have this weird that mass adoption of this tech is like, years away.

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Original post by Darren Murph

Panasonic VIERACast internet-enabled plasmas due this summer

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

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After slipping past their original spring release date, Panasonic’s PZ850 series of plasmas are no longer the only ones with YouTube support, but those desiring internet features, high contrast ratios and easy-access calibration settings can expect them on shelves this summer. The 46-, 50- and 58-inch versions should all be available in mid-June, with the 65-incher rolling out in August. Other than the IP features (Picasa access is also part of the package) the THX-certified PZ850s support h.264 playback from the SD card slot, RS-232C, 24p native playback, and a variety of display modes and settings to get the picture just the way the director intended, the way you like it, or anywhere in between. Check after the break for a list of prices, and our video hands on from CES 2008.

Continue reading Panasonic VIERACast internet-enabled plasmas due this summer

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Original post by Richard Lawler

Sprint and Clearwire merge next-gen wireless businesses, goes by Clearwire

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

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Well, what do you know? Sometimes even the the most repetitive of rumors finally comes true. Barely 12 hours after the Wall Street Journal reported that a deal between Sprint, Clearwire and just about everyone else was dangerously close to going down, it seems as if the bottom lines have indeed been signed. Details are pretty light at the moment, but we definitively know that Sprint Nextel Corp. and Clearwire Corp. will be merging their “next-generation wireless broadband businesses to form a new wireless communications company.” Quite simply, the new outfit will be called Clearwire, even though Sprint will hold around 51-percent of the firm, while existing Clearwire shareholders will own 27-percent and the new investors will hold 22-percent. New investors? Ah yes, Intel, Google, Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks will collectively invest $3.2 billion in the new company, but that figure is “based on a target price of $20 a share of Clearwire’s common stock, and is subject to a post-closing adjustment.”

[Via CNN]

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Original post by Darren Murph

Sony looking to stuff Blu-ray recorders in select LCD HDTVs?

Monday, April 7th, 2008

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Given that Sony has primarily used its PlayStation 3 console to snag market share in the home video sector thus far, it’s not surprising to see it branching out now that Blu-ray stands alone. Nevertheless, the next logical step has already been hinted at by CEO Ryoji Chubachi at a recent press event in Taipei. Reportedly, Sony is hoping to “increase the global market share of its BD products from 20-percent currently to 50-percent by the end of 2008,” and in order to do so, it’s looking to gift select LCD HDTVs with “BD recording functionality.” Of course, it was only a matter of time before those DVD / LCD combos became Blu-ray / LCD combos, but giving users the ability to capture broadcast material without an external burner is certainly an interesting twist.

[Via Electric Pig]

 

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Original post by Darren Murph

Switched On: Zoombak puts your vehicle on the map

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

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Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about technology, multimedia, and digital entertainment.

As demonstrated by last year’s purchases of map providers Navteq and Tele Atlas, companies are betting big on the future of location-based services. Knowing, processing, and integrating the location of people and things can be a valuable bridge between the digital and physical worlds, but today most of the activity is in the simple direction of cars from a location to a destination.

Zoombak offers a portable unit about the size of a Zippo lighter that integrates a GPS receiver and cellular radio that reports back on its location when queried. The company offers the unit in two packages — one for use in vehicles and the other for use with dogs.

The receivers in both products are identical and the packages are distinguished by their included accessories: the one for pets includes a collar attachment. Unlike that of one competitor, PocketFinder, the Zoombak receiver is not waterproof, but the company offers tips on how to make it better withstand the elements.

Continue reading Switched On: Zoombak puts your vehicle on the map

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Original post by Ross Rubin

MusicStation Max offers unlimited free music downloads to your mobile

Monday, February 11th, 2008

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After the QTrax debacle, we were a little wary when we started hearing rumbles about a similar service from OmniFone called MusicStation Max that promised, flat-fee, unlimited downloads from all the major labels to your cellphone with no expiration dates — but color us surprised, it’s for real. OmniFone’s MusicStation is already a player in the European mobile music game, partnered with giants like Vodafone, and the MusicStation Max launch seems like a natural evolution: consumers will buy a pre-licensed MSM phone — the first will be available from LG in a few months — and be able to download away for 12 to 18 months, with the ability to sideload back to a computer or to other licensed phones. The exciting part, of course, is that unlike every other subscription program on the market, your music will still play when the license expires. Add to that the fact that everything from the tracks to playlists to friend recommendations will be backed up on the network in case you lose your device, and we’re definitely intrigued — but we’ll wait to see how well all this DRM actually works before we call this thing a winner.

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Original post by Nilay Patel

GETAC’s E100 tablet PC won’t bog you down, will take a beating

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

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Prior to today, it had certainly been a hot, hot minute since we′d heard a peep out of GETAC, but here we are peeking the firm’s second new product in as many days. The E100 tablet PC weighs in at just three pounds, but this dainty gizmo reportedly meets MIL-STD-810F and IP54 standards for “durability and protection against dirt, dust, water, motion, vibration, temperature and other factors that would severely damage or disable a commercial-grade PC.” Beyond its tough attire, you’ll find an 8.4-inch SVGA display (optional sunlight readable) with 800 nits of brightness, an 800MHz Intel Stealey processor, up to 1GB of DDR2 RAM, 60 to 100GB shock-resistant hard drive, 802.11b/g WiFi, Bluetooth 2.0 and optional WWAN / GPS to boot. Sadly, we’re not even given a clue as to how much this bad boy will cost, but we’ll go ahead and assume “pricey” to be on the safe side.

[Image courtesy of RuggedPCReview]

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Original post by Darren Murph


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