Archive for the ‘RichardNottenburg’ Category

Motorola CTO Richard Nottenburg takes off

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

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Seriously though, how many are surprised to hear that Motorola’s Chief Technology / Strategy Officer Richard Nottenburg is jumping off the sinking ship? Apparently dude “left to return to the New York area to be with his family and pursue other opportunities,” which is code for a) he was passed over for CEO of the new mobile devices company, b) he was fired, or c) he finally wised up to the direction the company’s taken. Either way, we can’t really blame him.

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Original post by Ryan Block

Bug-bot video reveals swarming drones, extreme rocking

Sunday, May 4th, 2008

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We know that you love swarming bug-bots as much as we do, so of course we were thrilled to tell you about BAE Systems’ MAST project the other day. Luckily, the Army-contracted company didn’t stop at mere photos to scare the living daylights out of humanity, they also created a really cheesy, yet deeply frightening video to go along with them. Enjoy a glimpse of the Skynet-controlled / shredding-guitar future of warfare after the break — and don’t say we didn’t warn you.

Continue reading Bug-bot video reveals swarming drones, extreme rocking

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky

European Commission gives approval to in-flight calling over Europe

Monday, April 7th, 2008

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Not even a week after hearing that Air France was forging ahead with an in-flight calling trial, the European Commission has now voiced its approval of using mobiles on planes in European airspace. After six months of deliberating, the decision was finally made to give airlines the choice of offering up services in order for guests to dial loved ones at 3,000-meters or more. The EU telecoms commissioner, Viviane Reding, went on to warn operators to “keep the cost of calls made on planes at a reasonable level,” and of course, not all is clear just yet. For starters, the European Aviation Safety Agency still needs to green-light the whole ordeal by approving any hardware that would be used, and we won’t be seeing any 3G action up high just yet. Still, at least one less hurdle stands in the way of you phoning home from over Europe (and simultaneously making enemies out of all your neighbors trying to get a few decent minutes of shuteye).

 

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Original post by Darren Murph

First manned flight using hydrogen battery doesn’t cause rain, only tears

Friday, April 4th, 2008

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You’re looking at the world’s first manned flight powered by a hydrogen battery. Boeing’s prop-driven aircraft set the lone pilot aloft for about 20 minutes at a speed of 100-kilometres (62 miles) an hour at an altitude of about 1,000 meters. The 800-kilogram (1,760-pound) craft with a 16.3-meter (51-foot) wingspan is capable of flying for about 45 minutes under the power of its hydrogen fuel cells — the airplane’s batteries provided an additional boost for takeoff. The fuel cells harvest the energy produced by the chemical transformation of hydrogen and oxygen into water — that makes the craft clean as well as near silent. Unfortunately, the technology is nowhere near the point of powering commercial aircraft. At best, the fuel-cells could act as a secondary power source… in another 20 years.

 

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Original post by Thomas Ricker

Air France launches in-flight calling trial

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

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Not even half a year after Air France enabled passengers on its single OnAir-equipped Airbus A318 to send / receive messages and e-mail, the airline has went live with the second phase of the in-flight experiment. As of this week, guests who find themselves aboard the aforesaid aircraft can make / receive calls on their mobile at 30,000 feet. Reportedly, a dozen simultaneous calls are possible “per picocell network, as well as unlimited text messages and e-mails,” and while pricing details weren’t disclosed, you can rest assured it won’t be a bargain. Nevertheless, the voice aspect of the trial is scheduled to carry on for three months, and we’re assuming the results (read: whether annoyed passengers start assaulting chronic yappers) will determine if it gets rolled out to more of the fleet or quietly buried.

[Via WiFi Net News]

 

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Original post by Darren Murph

Phase One introduces elusive 645 medium format camera platform

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

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It’s been a solid tick since we’ve heard any rustling in the bushes from Phase One, but the company’s striking back with a vengeance with the 645 (also known as the Mamiya 645AFDIII). Hailed as the “world’s most flexible, open medium format digital camera platform,” the unit plays nice with a smorgasbord of high-end lenses (Mamiya’s 645 family, Hasselblad V-lenses and Pentacon Six lenses, for starters), and can achieve shutter speeds from 1/4000 second to 60 minutes. Unfortunately, that’s about all the details we’re given for now, and while pre-production units are sneaking out at this week’s Photo Imaging Expo, we’ll be forced to hang tight until Q2 before indulging in full technical specifications. No worries — we figure most folks will need a quarter or so to save up, anyway. [Warning: PDF read link]

[Thanks, Harsh A.]

 

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Original post by Darren Murph

Pentax canceling the 645 Digital to focus on K-series DSLRs?

Saturday, March 8th, 2008

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Pentax’s 31.6 megapixel medium-format 645 Digital has been announced for over a year now — we’ve even seen one in the flesh — but it’s never actually shipped, and now it looks like it never will. According to Impress, Pentax is killing off its digital medium format cameras to focus on K-series DSLRs, but the 645’s film versions will live on. Considering the ever-more-competitive field of excellent prosumer cams out there, we can’t say we fault the decision, but if there are any engineering samples lying around, we’ll be happy to take ‘em off Pentax’s hands.

 

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Original post by Nilay Patel

IBM plots global-scale shared computer to host entire internet as application

Friday, February 8th, 2008

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Well, it sure looks like IBM is keeping all its supercomputing bases covered these days, with it not only working on a chip-sized supercomputer, but a global-scale shared computer that’d be capable of “hosting the entire internet as an application.” That latter word comes in the form of a white paper ambitiously dubbed “Project Kittyhawk” (we’re guessing they found “Project Mulitvac” a little too obvious), which aims to explore the construction and implications of such a massive scale computer. That apparently wouldn’t be a SETI or Folding@home-style shared computer consisting of everyday PCs, however, with it instead relying on IBM’s petaflopping Blue Gene/P as a common platform, which would effectively be able to run any web-scale application you could throw at it. Of course, none of that has moved very far beyond the page just yet, so you can rest easy that there’s still no supercomputer out there that’s capable of bringing the entire internet to the halt on a whim, at least that we know of.

[Via Slashdot]

 

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Original post by Donald Melanson

AT&T says SIM-only service available contract free, 2-year plan was a mistake

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

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Apparently, the news we got (and saw on the company’s website) yesterday concerning AT&T’s offer of a SIM-only service plan was off the mark… or so says AT&T. According to the telco’s reps, a SIM card can be had sans-contract, saying that its attitude towards the service hasn’t changed and that pre-paid, post-paid, or any other millions of varieties of arrangements can be made to tap into its sweet service. So move along folks, nothing here to see.

 

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky

AT&T offers SIM-only service, attempts to maintain “most open” status

Sunday, January 20th, 2008

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It looks like all that shouting AT&T has been doing lately about its “openness” is starting to manifest itself in the way the company does business. It’s come to our attention that the mobile telco has started offering a SIM-only plan, thus providing the ultimate in open options. The idea being, of course, that you can bring any random / crappy / salvaged GSM-compatible handset the provider’s way, and it’ll let you hook a towline onto its satellites. Of course, you could just get one of those cheapo giveaways and pop out the card, but this is so much more open and free, like San Francisco in ‘69, a car-less road, some land of your own, and a good old-fashioned whiskey on the rocks. Oh, you still have a sign a two-year agreement… enjoy your freedom!

[Via The Boy Genius Report]

 

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky

Ajoka makes belt buckle, crams a video camera in it

Saturday, January 12th, 2008

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It’s not often that we see a pair of new wearable PVRs within the span of 24 hours, but sure enough, Ajoka is launching its Belt Buckle DVR just after we peeked the VIEVU PVR-PRO. ‘Course, we’re fairly certain this one’s arriving a little late to be an official member of the “multifaceted belt buckle” fad, but with all the utility crammed into this one, it’s got a fair shot at gaining traction, regardless. As for specs, this hidden camera can record video at a paltry 176 x 144 resolution, and considering that no built-in memory is included, you better bring your own SD card. Also, you can transfer captures and recharge the battery via the USB port, but sadly, no price is disclosed.

 

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Original post by Darren Murph

Jingle Bells played with graphics card, Santa wonders why

Monday, December 24th, 2007

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As if an office full of guitar-controlled lights weren’t enough to get you in the holiday spirit, along comes a self-proclaimed geek to play Jingle Bells on his graphics card. We know, it’s hard to really grasp what we mean, so jump on past the break to catch a video that will undoubtedly do our explaining for us.

[Via TheInquirer]

Continue reading Jingle Bells played with graphics card, Santa wonders why

 

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Original post by Darren Murph

NVIDIA reveals GeForce 8800 GTS 512MB

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

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Not even two months after NVIDIA tempted gamers on a budget with the GeForce 8800 GT, the outfit has loosed a new beast just in time for those eleventh hour holiday shoppers. Based on 65-nanometer fabrication, the 8800 GTS 512MB boasts 128 stream processors, twin dual-link DVI ports, PureVideo HD technology, DirectX 10 support, a 650MHz core clock / 970MHz memory clock and hardware decode acceleration for smooth playback of “H.264, VC-1, WMV and MPEG-2 HD and SD movies.” According to the company, this card provides some 25-percent more processing power than NVIDIA products previously offered at the same price point, which, if you’re wondering, is around $299 to $349.

[Via HotHardware]

 

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Original post by Darren Murph

Update your Facebook status from Outlook with FBLook

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

From the makers of OutTwit comes FBLook, a plugin for Outlook that allows you to update your Facebook status and view notifications without having to open a browser.



<from the FBLook website>


If you are an Outlook user, you probably have it open all the time. Now you can update your Facebook status, see your friend statuses and see the number of new requests without having to open the browser or any other applications. FBLook seamlessly integrates Facebook into Outlook.



  • Update your Facebook status directly from Outlook.

  • Set your status to the name of the song you’re playing in iTunes or WMP.

  • See your friend statuses.

  • See notifications of new Friend Requests, Messages, Invites, Pokes, etc..

TechHit FBLook for Outlook runs on Windows 2000, XP and Vista. It is compatible with Outlook 2003 and 2007. FBLook does NOT work with Outlook Express.


Download: http://www.techhit.com/FBLook/


via: http://blogs.msdn.com/lokeuei/archive/2007/12/05/hey-fblook-here.aspx

Original post by Nic Fillingham

How I Use Outlook - 7 Tips

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

There are so many things you can do with Outlook, but I have to admit, I’ve never fully explorered all its features. However, the more I “live” in my Outlook at work, the more I’ve become obsessed with finding new and useful ways to get things done as efficiently and quickly as I can. On that note, here are a few Outlook tips I’ve discovered that have been making my work life easier.

1. The ClearContext add-in - every since someone told me about this add-in, I’ve been using the heck out of it. Although I can only afford the free version, I’ve found it unbelievably useful for categorizing my mail. Since I had been using a folders system prior to the Outlook 2007 upgrade, I didn’t feel much like redoing this system just to use Outlook 2007’s color-coded categories. Instead, I use a mashup of ClearContext labels and Outlook cateogries. ClearContext lets me label my mail and these labels are linked to an Outlook category list. As I visually scan my email, Outlook’s color-coded categories help me find what I’m looking for fast. When it’s time to move an email from the Inbox to its category folder, I just hit the “File Msg” button on the ClearContext toolbar and the message archives itself to the appropriate folder. (Another option for filing is SpeedFiler, which I hear is good, too).

2. Natural Language - I’ve been using Outlook 2007 for many months now, but I just discovered this feature thanks to a tip I read online. The new version of Outlook lets you enter appointments on your calendar using natural language. Instead of using the drop-down box to pick a date, you can type in real expressions like “day after tomorrow,” “one week from today,” “two months from today,” “three days from now,” and much more. You can also use expressions like “today + 3 days” and Outlook will figure that out, too. Finally, you can type in the names of holidays and use them in expressions like “the day before Christmas.”

3. Outlook Calendar on the desktop - this software lets you pin the Outlook calendar to your desktop. The calendar stays there all the time so you can always see what’s upcoming. It’s not just a view of your calendar either, it’s the real Microsoft Outlook calendar, so you get all its functionality, like direct editing, drag and drop of files, etc. Awesome.

4. Search Folders & Favorites - how did I live before Search Folders? Search Folders let you create virtual folders based on certain criteria. For example, you could make a folder of email from your boss you categorized as “Important” or a folder of your emails that have attachments. Even better, add these Search Folders to your Favorite Folders list and hide your Mail Folders list so that all you see is your Favorites. You’ll be surprised how rarely you’ll need to view your “real” folders.

5. Fast Email Searches - If you use Outlook 2007 on Vista, you have Vista’s killer search built into Outlook. However, at work, we’re still on XP. No worries though…you can download Windows Desktop Search for Windows XP like I did and experience the glory of fast searches. With either Vista or Desktop Search, results are displayed as soon as you start typing in text. 

6. Form Emails - Using templates, you can save standardized emails so you don’t have to type the same thing over and over again. I use forms for things like emailing a new user’s login information to their supervisor or emailing someone a note letting them know their issue was input as a helpdesk ticket. Creating your own form is easy - just write the email, then go to File –> Save As, and choose “Outlook Template (*.oft)” from the drop-down box. The email is saved as a template. Next time you want to use that form, open it by going to Tool –> Forms –> Choose a Form. Change the drop-down box to “User Templates in File System” and then pick the template you created.

7. Minimize to Tray - I’m surprised how many people don’t know how to minimize Outlook to run in the System Tray. This is an absolute necessity (it should be the default!). Right-click on the Outlook icon in the Notification Area (next to the clock). In the menu that displays, select “Hide When Minimized.”

Original post by Sarah Perez


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