Archive for the ‘HP’ Category
Wednesday, September 8th, 2010
Fujifilm · Kodak · Nikon · Olympus · Panasonic · Pentax · Samsung · Sony · Laptop · Dell · Fujitsu · HP · Lenovo · Mobile phone · HTC · Motorola · Nokia · Sony Ericsson · Subscribe · Gadget Reviews …
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Nikon announced three CoolPix camera models: P7000, S8100 and S80
Tags: ericsson, htc, lap, laptop, mobil, moto, motorola, One, panasonic, sony-ericsson, top, view
Posted in Fuji, HP, IR, Lenovo, Nokia, One, RC, Uncategorized, W, a, ad, ana, c, dell, dg, dot, ericsson, f, film, gadget, gt, htc, ic, it, kodak, l, lap, laptop, m, mid, mobil, mobile, moto, motorola, nas, nikon, no, ny, o, olympus, panasonic, pen, pentax, phone, r, review, reviews, sa, samsung, son, sony, sony ericsson, sun, to, top, view | No Comments »
Monday, September 6th, 2010
Tags: ces, curve, eon, frequent-fliers, processor, Que, samsung, taste, the
Posted in 120, 14, 20, 21, 28, 2g, 32, 4, 50, 53, 8, AR, Acer, Asus, Atom, Content, DED, Dash, EA, Eee, HD, HP, IM, IR, Kin, Lenovo, OS, One, PC, Que, RC, RF, Shows, Storage, Tron, UI, UK, Uncategorized, Vs, W, a, ad, ads, age, amp, ati, back, bat, battery, book, books, build, by, c, cash, cat, cell, ces, cheap, chip, classic, con, curve, dedicated, design, dg, drive, ds, dual, eon, ex, f, f1, feature, fines, for, form, free, full, gadget, gadgets, gb, gesture, go, graphics, gt, hard, hat, hi, ic, ign, image, images, in, intel, is, it, key, keyboard, keys, l, lap, laptop, laptops, las, lay, life, low, m, ma, magazine, make, mall, man, me, memory, money, multi, nc, nes, netbooks, no, not, o, of, ons, pace, pad, performance, pos, power, powerful, pr, pro, processor, q, r, rig, roc, room, sa, samsung, screen, sharp, show, six, sm, sp, space, sport, sports, stream, stunt, sun, target, taste, the, this, ti, to, tom, top, toshiba, touch, tp, trackpad, up, value, video, web, with, www | No Comments »
Monday, September 6th, 2010
HP Mini 5103 now available Stateside on Coolest Gadgets .
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HP Mini 5103 now available Stateside » Coolest Gadgets
Tags: 5103-now, cool, coolest, gadget, gadgets, mini, side, stateside, stateside-on-coolest, tat
Posted in HP, Uncategorized, W, a, ad, c, cool, dg, gadget, gadgets, gt, in, l, m, mini, no, o, side, tat | No Comments »
Sunday, September 5th, 2010
Product: PCM-M10 Linear Recorder Manufacturer: Sony Wired Rating: 7 College is about procrastination. More precisely, it’s a chance to hone the important responsibility of shirking skills and techniques you’ll later use in the real world. So why shouldn’t note taking (or lack thereof) be a part of that learning experience? Eschewing the rigors of traditional real-time (paper and pencil) transcription means you’ll need a recorder that’s up to the task. The Sony PCM-M10 should be at the top of your list. Make no mistake, the M10 is not your traditional dainty audio archiver. While it’s the smallest in Sony’s professional line of recorders, this palm-sized linear recorder weighs in at about 6.5 ounces (with two AA batteries) and is also about as thick as two iPhones or a deck of cards. Still, if you don’t mind hauling this brick along with the rest of your gear, you’ll be blessed with some of the cleanest, most pristine audio recordings you’ve ever heard. That’s largely thanks to two omni-directional mics with a wonderfully flat and wide frequency response. Whether you’re in a crowded lecture hall or a small round table setting, these mics do an exemplary job filtering out ambient noise while honing in on the voice(s) you want, regardless of the recorder’s positioning. The M10 comes loaded with 4 GBs of built-in flash memory and can be expanded to another 16 GBs thanks to a microSD slot on the left hand side. There’s even a handy crossover memory function that lets you record from the internal memory directly to any additional storage you have. No worrying about preemptive cut offs. Max the M10 out at 20 GBs, and you’ll get over 9 hours of 24-bit 96 kHz audio. Ratchet down the audio quality to 64 kHz, Mp3 mode and that’s an insane 690 hours — enough for a year’s worth of lectures. We also loved the recorder’s 5-second pre-record buffer, which captures audio to a continuously filling buffer while the recorder is in the record/pause mode. That means if you happen to miss something (“this will be on the test, class”), you can simply release the pause button and those missing 5 seconds will have been recorded. When playing back your audio files, you can adjust between 75 percent and 100 percent (double time) in 5 percent increments. The M10 actually lets you preserve pitch over this entire range, however, which is extremely useful when transcribing a lecture or interview. When it comes to offloading those files, it’s as easy as connecting the recorder to your computer via the included USB cord. Drag and drop files onto you Mac or PC and you’re done. Whether you use the M10 as a companion to normal note taking or a tool for fevered last minute transcriptions, you won’t find much to quibble with. Yes, it’s probably overkill for the needs of the average college student. But you can talk to us about practicality after you’ve dropped the philosophy major. WIRED Spectacular recording quality in both MP3 and WAV formats. Ten recording modes. Forty plus hours of battery life. Built like an Abrams tank: Toss it in a bag and forget about it. Current street price is actually about half the MSRP. Handy wired remote for controlling things from the comfort of your lap. Can double as a media player and play non-DRMd WMA and M4V files (with metadata). TIRED Prepare to part with a month’s worth of beer money. Bulky. Menu structure can be confusing. Crappy built-in speaker (use headphones).
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Pro-Grade Linear Recorder Slurps Up Sound
Tags: ati, computer, cut, Gear, lte, pen, phones, player, pro, real, recording, street, the, with, world
Posted in 100, 16, 20, 4, 64, AR, DED, DRM, Dash, Deck, EA, Gear, HP, IM, IR, Kin, Mac, OS, One, PC, Que, RC, RF, RIP, Red, Rob, SD, SIM, Storage, Tron, UI, Uncategorized, W, Wired, XpanD, a, ad, age, arc, art, asti, ati, audi, audio, back, bag, bat, batteries, battery, beer, bin, brick, button, c, cap, car, card, ces, clean, computer, con, connect, control, creme, crowd, cut, data, dj, ds, eco, era, ever, ex, extreme, f, file, filter, flash, flat, flo, for, form, fort, frequency, ft, full, fun, gb, go, gt, hall, hand, handy, hanks, hat, head, headphone, headphones, hi, hose, ic, ice, image, in, iphone, is, it, job, l, lap, las, lay, learn, life, line, lit, long, lte, m, ma, make, mall, man, me, media, memory, men, menu, met, micro, microSD, mist, mod, money, more, mp3, nation, nc, nec, nes, no, not, note, ny, o, of, ons, other, overkill, palm, paper, part, pause, pen, pencil, phone, phones, php, player, plus, pos, pr, pre-, price, pro, product, professional, q, quality, r, rad, ram, real, record, recorder, recording, remote, rice, rick, rig, ring, roc, rom, rosso, sa, second, side, sm, son, sony, sp, speaker, still, street, student, table, talk, tan, tech, test, that, the, thin, things, this, ti, tim, time, to, tool, top, tp, two, up, usb, view, voice, wide, wire, wired.com, with, world, worth, www, yo, you, you're, you've, your | No Comments »
Saturday, September 4th, 2010
Product: KDL- 40EX500 Manufacturer: Sony Wired Rating: 6 For every one person looking for a crazy, pimped out big-screen, there are four others looking for a no-frills boob tube. Sony straddled that line with the KDL-40EX500. This 1080p powerhouse has all the motion-smoothing tech of its pricey brethren, but delivers it in a basic, financial-aid friendly package. The EX500 offers few surprises in the looks department (See: black monolith), but still has quite a few highlights. An impressive four HDMI inputs make cameos on this bargain display, as well as a healthy helping of composite, component, digital and RCA A/V inputs. At 40 inches it’s the perfect size for small to medium-sized rooms, and it’s remarkably lightweight — comparable to an empty keg — which makes it a cinch to move. In fact, its agreeable heft and swiveling stand made it the perfect display for our 1337-sweet LAN parties. We even clocked the process: From start to finish, we had the set broken down and in the backseat of a car in four minutes. In terms of picture, the EX500 delivers all the goodies. Thanks to Sony’s on-board BRAVIA Engine 2 processor, our Blu-ray collection was surprisingly crisp and vibrantly colored. Even exceptionally dark flicks like The Dark Knight — virtual kryptonite for LCDs — displayed convincingly deep blacks and grays. Fast and furious visuals like gaming and sports were handled with equal aplomb courtesy of 120-Hz video processing and blur reduction. Not only did this make midnight marathon movie sessions a visual treat, but the 10 hours we spent speeding through Split/Second ‘s raceways proved remarkably easy on the eyes. Though we’re huge fans of the EX500′s cross section of price and visuals, we did have a few gripes. For some reason Sony went twinkle toes with the audio. The display’s underpowered duo of 10-watt speakers not only produce brittle sound, but also ruin some of the awesomeness of the visuals. If we’re to believe we’re jumping across platforms trading rockets with other Xbox Live-ers, then it shouldn’t sound like we’re shooting spitwads. Also, the display’s lack of advanced features like web connectivity or even Sony’s trademark XrossMediaBar makes us suspect the EX500 won’t age gracefully. Still, even with these setbacks we can’t deny the sweetness of the EX500′s value proposition. If you can live with a sharp-looking TV that’s better seen than heard (and possibly shelling out for a surround sound system to makeup the difference), then the EX500 is worth a look. WIRED The meat and potatoes TV for the rest of us. Great colors and high-speed motion performance. Ambient light sensor automatically adjusts brightness and contrast. Easy setup out of the box. TIRED Speakers lack oomph, bang, crash. Light on advanced features. Completely forgettable remote. 120-Hz video processing can give standard-def video that dreaded soap opera look.
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Sony’s No-Frills LCD TV Easy on Eyes, But Not Future Proof
Posted in 1080p, 120, 20, 4, 50, 8, AR, AVI, DED, Dash, EA, EOS, Gaming, HD, HP, IM, IR, Jump, Kin, OS, One, Ovi, RC, RF, RIP, Red, Surround, Tron, UI, Uncategorized, W, Wired, a, ad, ads, advance, age, aming, art, ati, audi, audio, auto, automatic, awesome, awesomeness, back, big, black, blu-ray, blur, box, bravia, bright, broken, c, call, cam, car, cd, cds, ces, cia, clock, collection, color, colors, con, connect, connectivity, contrast, crazy, dark, def, digital, display, dj, dre, ds, eco, end, engine, era, eu, ever, every, ex, eyes, f, fan, fast, feature, features, for, form, four, friend, ft, full, fur, go, goodies, gray, grip, gt, hand, handle, hanks, hat, health, healthy, help, hi, high, high-speed, house, hug, ic, ice, image, in, is, isp, it, ken, knight, l, lay, lcd, led, light, lights, lightweight, line, lit, live, lock, m, ma, mad, made, make, mall, man, me, meat, media, men, mid, minutes, movie, nc, nec, nes, night, no, not, ny, o, of, ons, opera, ota, other, pack, package, part, parties, pen, perfect, performance, person, php, pic, picture, ping, pos, power, pr, price, pro, processing, processor, produce, product, q, r, race, rad, rant, ray, remote, rice, rig, roc, rocket, rockets, rom, room, screen, sea, second, sensor, setup, sharp, shoot, shooting, site, sm, smooth, son, sony, sound, sp, speaker, speakers, speed, sport, sports, stand, standard, star, still, surprise, system, table, tan, tat, tech, that, the, thin, this, ti, tie, to, tom, tp, treat, tube, tv, up, value, vibrant, video, virtual, was, web, weight, wire, wired.com, with, worth, www, xbox, yo, you | No Comments »
Saturday, September 4th, 2010
Product: KDL- 40EX500 Manufacturer: Sony Wired Rating: 6 For every one person looking for a crazy, pimped out big-screen, there are four others looking for a no-frills boob tube. Sony straddled that line with the KDL-40EX500. This 1080p powerhouse has all the motion-smoothing tech of its pricey brethren, but delivers it in a basic, financial-aid friendly package. The EX500 offers few surprises in the looks department (See: black monolith), but still has quite a few highlights. An impressive four HDMI inputs make cameos on this bargain display, as well as a healthy helping of composite, component, digital and RCA A/V inputs. At 40 inches it’s the perfect size for small to medium-sized rooms, and it’s remarkably lightweight — comparable to an empty keg — which makes it a cinch to move. In fact, its agreeable heft and swiveling stand made it the perfect display for our 1337-sweet LAN parties. We even clocked the process: From start to finish, we had the set broken down and in the backseat of a car in four minutes. In terms of picture, the EX500 delivers all the goodies. Thanks to Sony’s on-board BRAVIA Engine 2 processor, our Blu-ray collection was surprisingly crisp and vibrantly colored. Even exceptionally dark flicks like The Dark Knight — virtual kryptonite for LCDs — displayed convincingly deep blacks and grays. Fast and furious visuals like gaming and sports were handled with equal aplomb courtesy of 120-Hz video processing and blur reduction. Not only did this make midnight marathon movie sessions a visual treat, but the 10 hours we spent speeding through Split/Second ‘s raceways proved remarkably easy on the eyes. Though we’re huge fans of the EX500′s cross section of price and visuals, we did have a few gripes. For some reason Sony went twinkle toes with the audio. The display’s underpowered duo of 10-watt speakers not only produce brittle sound, but also ruin some of the awesomeness of the visuals. If we’re to believe we’re jumping across platforms trading rockets with other Xbox Live-ers, then it shouldn’t sound like we’re shooting spitwads. Also, the display’s lack of advanced features like web connectivity or even Sony’s trademark XrossMediaBar makes us suspect the EX500 won’t age gracefully. Still, even with these setbacks we can’t deny the sweetness of the EX500′s value proposition. If you can live with a sharp-looking TV that’s better seen than heard (and possibly shelling out for a surround sound system to makeup the difference), then the EX500 is worth a look. WIRED The meat and potatoes TV for the rest of us. Great colors and high-speed motion performance. Ambient light sensor automatically adjusts brightness and contrast. Easy setup out of the box. TIRED Speakers lack oomph, bang, crash. Light on advanced features. Completely forgettable remote. 120-Hz video processing can give standard-def video that dreaded soap opera look.
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Sony’s No-Frills LCD TV Easy on Eyes, But Not Future Proof
Posted in 1080p, 120, 20, 4, 50, 8, AR, AVI, DED, Dash, EA, EOS, Gaming, HD, HP, IM, IR, Jump, Kin, OS, One, Ovi, RC, RF, RIP, Red, Surround, Tron, UI, Uncategorized, W, Wired, a, ad, ads, advance, age, aming, art, ati, audi, audio, auto, automatic, awesome, awesomeness, back, big, black, blu-ray, blur, box, bravia, bright, broken, c, call, cam, car, cd, cds, ces, cia, clock, collection, color, colors, con, connect, connectivity, contrast, crazy, dark, def, digital, display, dj, dre, ds, eco, end, engine, era, eu, ever, every, ex, eyes, f, fan, fast, feature, features, for, form, four, friend, ft, full, fur, go, goodies, gray, grip, gt, hand, handle, hanks, hat, health, healthy, help, hi, high, high-speed, house, hug, ic, ice, image, in, is, isp, it, ken, knight, l, lay, lcd, led, light, lights, lightweight, line, lit, live, lock, m, ma, mad, made, make, mall, man, me, meat, media, men, mid, minutes, movie, nc, nec, nes, night, no, not, ny, o, of, ons, opera, ota, other, pack, package, part, parties, pen, perfect, performance, person, php, pic, picture, ping, pos, power, pr, price, pro, processing, processor, produce, product, q, r, race, rad, rant, ray, remote, rice, rig, roc, rocket, rockets, rom, room, screen, sea, second, sensor, setup, sharp, shoot, shooting, site, sm, smooth, son, sony, sound, sp, speaker, speakers, speed, sport, sports, stand, standard, star, still, surprise, system, table, tan, tat, tech, that, the, thin, this, ti, tie, to, tom, tp, treat, tube, tv, up, value, vibrant, video, virtual, was, web, weight, wire, wired.com, with, worth, www, xbox, yo, you | No Comments »
Saturday, September 4th, 2010
Music discovery tool Shazam has launched a major new update to its blockbusting iPhone and iPod touch app to incorporate iOS4 multitasking and much more. The app, which has been one of the most popular in the history the app store listens to tracks you don’t know the name of and searches a database to provide a song title, artist and album.
Tags: calls, charts, for, hand, history-the-app, most, new-incarnation, Red, tool, update, version, video, week, with, www
Posted in 20, 4, 50, AR, EA, Entertainment, HP, IM, Kin, MIT, Music, OS, One, Ovi, RC, Red, Shazam, Tron, Uncategorized, W, a, ad, amp, app store, apps, arc, art, artist, arts, ati, best, bling, book, bust, by, c, call, calls, car, cat, charts, cover, data, day, ds, ebook, encore, end, ex, f, face, facebook, feature, for, form, free, gt, hand, hands, help, hi, history, iPhone Apps, iPod Touch, ic, in, ios, ios4, iphone, ipod, is, it, itunes, l, launch, link, live, lock, low, m, ma, make, me, men, more, multi, multitasking, nation, nc, nes, new, news-, no, not, o, of, ons, open, other, paid, pen, phone, php, pop, popular, pos, pr, preview, pro, q, r, rad, review, rom, sea, search, skin, sm, son, sp, star, story, support, supports, target, the, ti, to, tool, touch, tp, tube, twitter, unlimited, up, update, upgrade, upgrades, user, version, video, view, watch, week, with, www, yo, you, you're, your, youtube | No Comments »
Saturday, September 4th, 2010
Development is complete on the long-anticipated Duke Nukem Forever game, with Gearbox boss Randy Pitchford confirming the title is now in the final polishing stages ahead of next year’s release.
Tags: console, link, MIT, pos, PS3, randy, randy-pitchford, shot, slim, www
Posted in 20, 360, 60, 63, AR, EA, Gaming, Gear, HP, IM, IR, MIT, OS, PC, PS3, Rand, Tron, UI, UK, Uncategorized, W, XBox 360, a, ad, age, aming, arm, art, article, ati, box, by, c, change, computer, con, console, consoles, cto, development, era, ever, ex, f, feature, final, for, ford, ft, game, games, go, gt, guess, hat, head, hi, hold, ic, in, is, it, l, link, long, m, me, men, mid, more, nc, news-, nex, no, o, of, old, ons, php, polish, pos, q, r, randy, relations, review, reviews, rom, screen, screenshot, shelves, shot, slim, sm, sp, still, target, that, the, ti, tim, time, to, tp, up, video, videogame, videogames, view, with, www, xbox, yo, you, your | No Comments »
Thursday, September 2nd, 2010
Image from Samsung Korea, via Gregory Han at Apartment Therapy Unpluggd All-in-one printer/scanner/fax machines are so yesterday. Maybe the way to go is with better, single purpose devices: A compact, portable scanner combined with a fast, monochrome laser printer. I hate my all-in-one machine. It sits on my desk, filled up with its expensive color ink cartridges, mocking me. I never print photos or make copies, and I don’t have a land line to fax anything. But I regularly need to print out black-and-white documents, and a little less regularly scan text or images. I need machines that perform these tasks cheaply and reliably, and then get out of the way when I don’t need them. This is where two new buying guides might prove very handy. The first is for scanners: IEEE.org’s “ Speed-Dating Portable Scanners ,” flirts with the MobileOffice (too big) and the DocuPen (too wimpy) before falling for the Doxie (just right, and which Wired recently reviewed ). Pink hearts aren’t usually my thing, but I could really go for a scanner that fits in a laptop bag and Just Works , so I just might broaden my horizons. The second guide is for printers: Apartment Therapy Unpluggd makes the case for old-school laser printers in “ Stark Black and White: Why The Monochrome Laser Printer Still Makes Sense “: Back when we had a color inkjet printer we were constantly running out of black cartridges. Those pieces of plastic we wasted and merely threw away requiring us to buy a new one after what only seemed liked 20 pages. Once we moved to a simple monochrome laser jet we began to notice that we could print literally thousands of pages before our toner cartridge went out. And instead of paying $35.00 for a shoddy black inkjet cartridge, that same cash can get us happily printing on our way for over a year. In “ Good Looking Printer For Small Space? ” Unpluggd recommends the Samsung SCX-4500 monochrome laser — plus the Canon PIXMA iP100 and HP OfficeJet H470 for low-footprint printers with color. The Samsung actually has a built-in scanner, but a portable model is still awfully appealing; if you’re anything like me, your papers wind up all over the house, while your all-in-one stays in just one place. If the mountain (of text) won’t come to Mohammed, Mohammed must go to the mountain. See Also: The $20 DIY Book Scanner Doxie Scanner Sends and Shares HP Plans Line of (Relatively) Affordable 3-D Printers Office Equipment Does Printer Jam at onedotzero

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For Printers, ‘All-In-One’ Really Means ‘Way-Too-Much’
Tags: a-little-less, art, back, color, devices, equipment, images, lock, may, pro, pur, rome
Posted in -1, 100, 20, 21, 3-D, 3D, 4, 50, 60, 8, AR, Apartment Therapy, Content, Doxie, EA, Eee, HP, IM, IR, Kin, LG, Mac, OS, One, Que, RC, RF, Red, SIM, Tron, UI, Uncategorized, W, Wired, a, ad, ads, age, all-, all-in-ones, amp, art, arts, asti, ati, back, bag, big, bin, black, blog, blogs, book, buying, c, canon, car, case, cash, ces, cheap, chrome, color, compact, con, concept, consumer, cup, cx, dab, day, desk, device, devices, dg, diy, doc, dot, ds, eco, ego, electronic, electronics, end, equipment, era, ever, ex, expensive, f, fast, first, for, ford, form, ft, full, gadget, gadgets, ggd, go, gt, gui, guide, hand, handy, hat, hearts, hi, hose, house, ic, ice, image, images, in, is, it, korea, l, land, lap, laptop, las, laser, led, line, lit, lock, low, m, ma, machine, machines, make, mall, may, me, men, mobil, mobile, mod, model, monochrome, nc, nes, neve, new, no, not, ny, o, of, office, old, ons, pace, page, pages, paper, part, pen, pens, photo, photos, pink, place, plan, plastic, plus, portable, pos, pr, print, printer, printers, printing, pro, product, pur, purpose, q, r, real, really, relative, review, reviews, rig, ring, road, rom, rome, run, running, sa, same, samsung, sand, scan, scanner, scanners, school, second, sense, simple, sm, sp, space, speed, star, still, sun, table, tan, text, that, the, thin, this, ti, to, top, tp, two, up, usa, view, was, waste, white, wind, wire, wired.com, with, work, www, xm, yo, you, your | No Comments »
Wednesday, September 1st, 2010
Since his company was bought out by HP, Jon Rubinstein and what remains of the Palm team have kept busy. Due out later this year is WebOS 2.0, the OS that we expect HP to use on a tablet device, and Palm has given us a sneak-peek of what’s new. Stack was the thing we liked best about the original WebOS. It puts each app or task onto a “card” and lets you swoosh them around the screen to either stack them out of the way or flip between tasks. New in 2.0 is auto-stacking, which will group card by type. Think iOS folders, only with running windows instead of apps. The next biggest change is with Quick Actions, the universal search function. If you have ever used an application launcher like Quicksilver or LaunchBar on the Mac, or Launchy on the PC, you’ll know what to expect. Tap the rebranded Just Type box on the home screen (it is always there) and, well, just type. You can launch apps, search contacts and so on, but now Just Type is opened up to third party apps, letting you search within them. This is big, and something iOS still doesn’t do. There are more tweaks and additions detailed over at Pre Central, but the last one we’ll look at is call “Exhibition”. Essentially, this lets you choose an app to display when the Pre (or whatever device it ends up on) is charging in a dock. Thus you could display a Twitter stream, a weather widget or anything else. I like this one a lot. The WebOS is looking more and more suitable for a tablet. It has the simplicity and polish of Apple iOS which will appeal to a mainstream user: something that Android is getting closer to, and Windows is hopelessly lacking. Look out for the WebOS when it comes: it could be the first proper tablet since the iPad. webOS 2.0 details: Stacks, Just Type, Exhibition, and more! [Pre Central via ★ ] See Also: HP Buys Palm for $1.2 Billion Palm webOS Headed to HP Tablet, Printer HP Slate Could Get a Makeover With Palm's WebOS Official: HP Slate Will Run WebOS Rumor: Palm May Ditch WebOS for Android Follow us for real-time tech news: Charlie Sorrel and Gadget Lab on Twitter.

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Palm Previews WebOS 2.0: Tablet Ready?
Posted in -1, 20, 21, 32, 4, 50, 8, AR, Content, DED, EA, HP, HP Slate, IM, IR, Kin, Launcher, Mac, OS, One, PC, RC, Rand, Red, SIM, Tablets and E-Readers, Team, Think, Tron, UI, Uncategorized, W, Wired, Woo, a, action, ad, additions, ads, age, amp, android, apple, application, apps, arc, art, ati, auto, ball, best, big, biggest, bin, blog, blogs, bought, box, brand, busy, by, c, call, car, card, cat, central, change, charging, cia, city, close, company, con, detail, device, dg, display, doc, dock, droid, ds, end, ever, ex, exhibit, exhibition-, f, fire, first, flip, for, full, fun, gadget, gadgets, gt, hat, head, hi, home, ic, ice, ign, image, images, in, ios, ipad, is, isp, it, jon, l, las, launch, lay, led, link, low, m, ma, main, make, makeover, may, me, met, mist, more, nc, new, nex, no, ny, o, of, old, older, ons, open, pad, palm, part, peek, pen, polish, pr, print, printer, pro, q, r, real, rig, ring, rumor, run, running, sa, screen, sea, search, silver, slate, sp, still, stream, suit, table, tablet, tech, that, the, thin, this, ti, tim, time, to, tp, twitter, uni, universal, up, user, was, weak, weather, web, webOS, widget, wind, window, windows, wire, wired.com, with, www, yo, you | No Comments »
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