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Archive for July, 2008

ASUS “high-end” Eee PC S-series

Posted Thursday, July 31st, 2008 by Alex Ion

The Eee PC from ASUS have always been a great addition to the market and really managed to set a trend. A lot of other companies tried to compete with them, with good or not very good results. But know what? ASUS is not stepping on the second place. They’re going to build a “high-end” Eee PC S-Series that should feature dual-core Atom processors, 120GBs of hard disk, 32GB SSDs, a 10-inch LED backlit display (16:9 aspect) and a battery that should keep it on electricity for some 4-5 hours.

If everything goes well the new high-end Eee PCs should be available from September from prices ranging from $700 to $900

Does it need any more comments? Probably not, and knowing ASUS to build high quality I’m pretty sure their new S-series are going to really kick ass and the company will easily break the annual targeted shipments of five million units. What do you think about the new Eee PC S-Series?

via DigiTimes

Sanyo’s XACTI DMX-HD800

Posted Wednesday, July 30th, 2008 by Alex Ion

One of the best video cameras for bloggers,  the XACTI DMX-HD700 from Sanyo is getting an update. Not sure if it was needed but the fact that we have a new gadget to play with it’s great. AkihabaraNews attended the launch event where the new Sanyo XACTI DMX-HD800 and said it’s a “huge step forward in video quality”. Along with the 8.0 megapixel 1/2.5-inch CMOS sensor, there’s a SD/SDHC slot for more memory, 5x optical zoom, 2.7-inch LCD and face tracking.

The new 720p video camera (it actually records in 1280×720) managed to reduce noise thanks to Sanyo’s 3DDNR filter and eased up the way the video is pulled out, to your PC thanks to an improved interface.

Reviews should come out pretty soon, and I bet they’re going to be positive, but meanwhile all we know is that the camera goes on sale in Japan on August 22nd for ¥50,000 (some $465).

Pentax wide-angle Optio E60

Posted Tuesday, July 29th, 2008 by Alex Ion

Though I’ve been writing about digital cameras for over 3 years now, I can’t consider myself a professional photographer, simply because I’m not. However I do know when a camera is worth the money, I can see the specifications and who is it going to be happy with a certain model. Take the Pentax gift for example. The Japanese company is planning to release a wide-angle 10 megapixel budget camera to the market, dubbed Pentax Optio E60.

Optio E60 is a 32-96mm equivalent wide-angle lens that helps frame wide portrait shots, scenery, or other very horizontal subjects, has a beginner focus that includes a fully automatic mode that changes all settings itself, has face detection, 3x zoom factor and for those with a little bit more experience it packs ISO-based blur correction.

The new Optio E60 runs on AA batteries (no Li-ion batteries here) and should be shipped on black (only) from October. Price should be close to $140.

My opinion? Too bad it doesn’t have optical image stabilization and what’s with so many (absurd) megapixels?

Sony’s 16.4-inch VAIO FW laptop

Posted Monday, July 28th, 2008 by Alex Ion

Like always, Sony managed to come up with another great piece of VAIO. This time it’s the 16.4-inch VAIO FW that really got our attention both with the design and the big/wide display. But wait, there are things that should be said about it, like the fact that it has a built-in Blu-ray drive, the design or maybe the brand new Centrino 2 platform?

The base product will start at $999 and includes a 2.26GHz Intel Core2 Duo P8400 mobile processor, 3GB PC2-6400 DDR2 SDRAM, Multiformat DVD±RW/CD-RW, 16.4″ WXGA LCD widescreen display with XBRITE-ECO technology and 1600 x 900 resolution, 250GB Serial ATA hard drive (5400 rpm), ATI Mobility RADEON HD 3470 graphics card with 256MB (up to 1530MB total available video memory), built in Bluetooth, i.LINK (IEEE 1394) port and 3 USB 2.0 ports and Memory Stick PRO slot.

The laptop weighs 6.4 lbs, is just 1.5-inch thin for portable power, has a lithium-ion battery and runs on Windows Vista Home Premium Edition SP1.

To be honest I’d definitely buy one if it wasn’t that heavy. If you want to make up your mind the guys at NotebookReview got their hands on one for a test drive.

How To Disable iPhone’s Backup Process

Posted Friday, July 25th, 2008 by Alex Ion

iTunes’ full image backup of your iPhone can take much more than you’re willing to wait, if you made changes to the installed applications. I’m not talking about a minute or two, but tens of minutes, and it’s time we don’t have these days, so the solution is to disable the iPhone’s backup process, and skip it, isn’t it?

But there are two things (risks) you should consider before doing what ZeroLogic found out.

  1. Don’t interrupt your ongoing backup process to skip it. Not that something will block or you losing warranty on your iPhone. It’s just that you may forget to do it correctly again and restoring would be useless because you’ll have only corrupted files.
  2. Using this “solution” means that you won’t have a phone backup, so act with caution.

So here is what you have to do to disable the iTunes iPhone backup process:

This command will change a hidden setting in the iTunes preferences that will force it to skip the backup process.

1. - Quit iTunes.
2. - Open Terminal.app
3. - Copy and paste this in, then hit return:

defaults write com.apple.iTunes DeviceBackupsDisabled -bool true


4. - Open iTunes
5. - Plug in your iPhone (2.0 or 3G) and sync.

It will take a few seconds, assuming you don’t have a ton of music or podcasts.

Changing the ‘true’ in step 3 to ‘false’ will re-enable the backup feature.

Let me know how it goes by leaving a comment here. I will not be held responsible if your phone takes a crap and you have no backup. :)

Enjoy!

Image courtesy of ArsTechnica

Creative Aurvana X-Fi Review

Posted Thursday, July 24th, 2008 by Alex Ion

Noise canceling headphones are not new to the market and we showed at least a couple of them in the past, but this time we took Creative’s Aurvana X-Fi for a test drive and will definitely tell you everything about it.

Weighing about 250 grams, with a great design using the black and silver scheme, these headphones use two AAA batteries and have on-ear controls to switch the device on and off or to adjust volume levels. But these are somehow standard, so why not get deeper and see why it would be worth it to buy and why wouldn’t.

PROs on the new Creative Aurvana X-Fi Noise Cancelling Headphones

  • The noise canceling feature is great. It cancels out ambient noise really well and makes your music sound much more clearer.
  • The “cans” are larger, extremely easy to wear and will offer the great comfort we all need when listening to music.
  • Aurvana X-Fi is adjustable for a variety of different head sizes and comfort levels
  • The X-Fi Xtreme Fidelity feature will restore detail and will expand your music and movies to surround sound.
  • The X-Fi CMSS-3D feature is a virtual surround-sound effect that you’ll want to use with movies and games because it gives the sound a sense of physical depth
  • The X-Fi Crystalizer feature really makes music sound better - it really does work with lossy files
  • There’s the possibility to turn on and off the noise-canceling and other features.

Of course there are disadvantages so here’s what could have been built better:

  • We would have appreciate a li-ion battery instead of two AAA even though it means it works just right after taking it out of the box
  • The size and the weight of the headphones, are a big drawback. However I do agree that comfort and great noise-canceling need larger cans.

Price is somewhere at $300 so if you’re picky with your headsets, that would be a great solution.

Sony DAV-IS10 Review

Posted Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008 by Alex Ion

These days I’ve been working on redesigning my apartment so I really had a hard time to decide if I should install a home theater system in my living room (office, too) so I took some time reading reviews about all sorts of devices. Some were cheap some were expensive, but now I can tell that I’ve made my mind.

I got Sony’s utra-compact 5.1 home cinema system that an average person could setup in no time, Sony DAV-IS10 got my attention with its black finish and the slick hidden controls that light up once touched.

Sony’s new technology, Bravia Theater Sync, the whole system is extremely powerful : 5 satellites x 50W and 2-way subwoofer x 100W. That makes a total of 450 watts which is more than my neighbors can bear. But I still love it. It also comes with a compact, single disc DVD/CD player/ receiver with touch-sensitive controls, has a Digital Media Port to enable WiFi and Bluetooth streaming and an iPod docking.

The specs are speaking for themselves and I still can’t understand how a satellite as big as an apple can sport 50W (real) but it’s a Sony. They know stuff.

Just to be brief, here are the things I enjoyed the most with the new Sony DAV-IS10:

  • Incredibly small surround satellites. Despite their size, they deliver a surprisingly powerful performance.
  • The active subwoofer fills the gap. It has dual drivers that take care of the midrange frequencies that the satellites can’t manage.
  • Image quality is excellent. Colors are rich and vibrant without overwhelming natural tones and there is very little noise, especially with upscaled images.
  • The stylish design is impressive, but you would’ve expected this from a Sony, wouldn’t you?

A review wouldn’t be complete if we wouldn’t tell you what are the weaknesses of this home theater system.

  • Though it was built for maximum discretion, we’d go for slightly bigger cabinets for more midrange depth and detail.
  • I’d love it to have 1080p video upscaling

That would be all on Sony’s DAV-IS10. Do you own one? Do you love it?

Creative GigaWorks T20 Review

Posted Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008 by Alex Ion

It’s that time of the month again when we get great products to review, and this time we got the Creative GigaWorks T20 to please our ears. They are a standard 2.0 speakers solution for desktop PCs that every gamer or computer user will appreciate because they offer quality sound at an affordable price. It’s the best in the GigaWorks brand so far, so you may want to stay on and read the rest.

With a sleek and eye-catching design, with a mid/low range driver and a high range tweeter, finished in smart dark metallic grey plastic with rounded corners, GigaWorks T20 speakers are pretty large. But, and there’s a but, wish they wouldn’t be THAT rounded. Might be a bit unstable. All in all, I like the looks really much, so let’s go on.

It has the Bass, Treble and Volume controls as well as the headphone jack and auxiliary-in (for easy connection to an MP3 player) on the right channel speaker. It also features a twin phono to 3.5mm adapter and a two metre 3.5mm cable for connection to a PC, so you can only imagine that game consoles or other devices can be linked to it, easily.

Though you may believe a 2.0 system without a subwoofer to give the bass that extra ‘oomph’ wouldn’t perform well, you got that wrong. Really wrong. Most of the time the subwoofer is usually responsible for problems involving poor bass and resulting in a lot of cross over between the speakers. This is why the GigaWorks T20 feature a porthole - dubbed a BasXPort by Creative - in the top of their slender, that will offer a fuller sound and compensating for a subwoofer.

The best thing about the Creative GigaWorks T20 is obviously the quality you get for its price. Some $80 in the US. You may want to buy that set of speakers yourself and see they’re great.

Lenovo’s new SL, R, T and W series ThinkPads

Posted Monday, July 21st, 2008 by Alex Ion

Lenovo is throwing new models of laptops at us like there is no tomorrow, like there is a new chipset and they want to be the first ones to overcrowd the market with new stuff. It’s their new and improved line of ThinkPads.

 Lenovo W500 ThinkPad

At the starting line we have first the SL series intended to be a small business line. The price ranges from $699 to $1199, they have an optional HDMI port, Blu-ray and 3G add-on from AT&T, Ericsson and WiMax for around $30. The SL series will come in 3 models: SL300 (13-inch), SL400 (14-inch) and SL500 (15-inch).

Second at the starting line, as a new entry is the W series (split from the T series). They try to steal our eyes with Switchable Graphics, which lets you switch from discreet to integrated graphics without rebooting the computer, along with Display Port.

There’s also the R series that represents the budget series.

All of these models have one thing in common, they all run on Centrino 2 schemes. As for the pricing, the SL400 and SL500 (already in stores) starts at $799, while the others will hit the shops in August and will go from $899 and may reach $1999 for the W500.

via Engadget

Nokia N95 8GB Review

Posted Friday, July 18th, 2008 by Alex Ion

Everyone kept telling me that this little piece from Nokia, the N95 is such a great phone and that we should do a review on DevicePedia.com. So what we did? We got one, used it for 2 weeks and now we’re ready to tell you why Nokia N95 rocks and something about those nasty things that you only find out, using one.

Nokia N95

So I got myself a Nokia N95 8GB and used it intensly. But here are the first things that we’ll start with. The GOOD part. The specs, which are great.

  • Screen 240×320 px, 2.6 inch, TFT LCD - Exceptional video quality, vivid colors and high brightness controlled by ambient light detector
  • Camera 5 Megapixels (Back): it’s a 2592×1944 resolution, autofocus camera with Carl Zeiss Tessar optics (f/2.8, 5.6 mm, 10 cm ~ infinity focusing range) and 1/1000th ~ 1/3rd s mechanical shutter provide the best quality you can get from a camera phone.
  • Second camera CIF video call (Front)
  • Operating system Symbian OS v9.2, S60 3rd Edition, Feature Pack 1
  • Input Keypad
  • MicroSD memory card if 8GB is not enough
  • Networks HSDPA (3.5G), Quad band GSM / GPRS / EDGE GSM 850, GSM 900, GSM 1800, GSM 1900
  • Connectivity: wireless LAN (802.11 b/g, up to 54 Mbit/s) and UPnP (Universal Plug and Play), Bluetooth 2.0 EDR (up to 3 Mbit/s) and USB 2.0 Full Speed (12 Mbit/s) via Mini USB with mass storage class support.
  • Built-in GPS receiver and the Smart2Go software
  • Exceptional video quality, vivid colors and high brightness controlled by ambient light detector
  • Standard 3.5mm jack that’s great with your new pair of expensive headphones
  • Runs on Symbian OS 9.2 S60 3.1 (3rd Edition Feature Pack 1)
  • TV-quality video recording @ VGA resolution and 30 frames per second
  • powerful ARM11-based TI OMAP2420 processor running at 330 MHz
  • Form factor Slider. Slide up to reveal the keyboard, slide down to reveal the multimedia buttons.

Not all is great with our Nokia N95 8GB Review so there are things we didn’t like. The BAD.

  • The battery. The specs Nokia comes gave us, are only true when you disable GPS, WiFi or if you don’t surf the Internet. Because if you do, you’ll have to recharge the battery daily. We won’t mention those that speak at least 2 hours on the phone daily (business people) which may see this as a big drawback.
  • I would have enjoyed the Sirf Star III GPS chipset instead of the Sirf Star II (which is older and less precise).
  • The sliding part is a tad too loose - moves and rattles. Also, I would enjoy a lock to prevent it from sliding out.
  • The 22MB free RAM is just too little for this beast

All in all, that’s a great mobile phone that we’d have put a better battery inside to make it one of the best.