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DELL Debuts New Monitors

January 4th 2008 02:50
There's an unwritten law in technology that when we have reached a peak in any given field, where pushing any further would be plain silly, what should be upgarded is not the specs but the looks. My friends, we have reached that peak with monitor sizes, it is simply impractical to carry around a 30" LCD and call it a computer monitor. DELL is well aware of this as it discovers a new way to bleed the poor ass customer dry.

Introducing the Dell Crystal LCD Monitor.


Dell Crystal display


Dell Crystal display 2


Is it truly a revolution for monitors? No. Does it push any new technological boundaries? No. Does it look unbelievably cool, perhaps even something a Macaholic would be using? Yes.

There's no use pushing the tech, just pretty it up and sell it for a premium. There we go.
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Small PC - Big Power
Sometimes I wonder why people buy expensive computers. I've brought it up many-a-times in the past, if cheap computers were made available (as new) they would sell bucket loads.

The new Wal-Mart PC costing less than $200 but being able to do the typical word editing/internet surfing has been a huge hit and the first batch has sold out. Why? Well trust someone to spin this against Microsoft but personally I think it’s all about price vs. feature ratio.


It features a 1.5ghz CPU, 80gig hard drive 512mb ram comes with a DVD burner, runs Linux and comes in a small box – I’m even starting to want it.

For years, well since ever, computers have been price fixed, as new components have come out they have been adopted and have driven up the prices despite people not making use of the extra power. Most people will find that a computer from five years ago can accomplish the same tasks as a computer that was built last week, at a much lower price.

There is of course the problem of out dated components. Even though something might be more than capable of handling most tasks the age of its pieces could be its downing factor. If incompatible with modern hardware peripherals (be it keyboards or modems) consumers would have to purchase newer systems that pack an extra brunt despite the lack of need for it.

Now what of the software side? Well Linux has always been free, Windows is another story. Will the success of this new computer push Microsoft to compete with Linux on a crazy, almost psychotic manner, as it has already overseas?

Well we can certainly hope so, and maybe we can hope for a future where expensive PCs are not shoved down peoples throats.
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It Just Works, Doesn't It?

October 15th 2007 00:51
If this was Microsoft they would have been torn apart by now, those SOBs get torn apart for some crazy bugs no one cares about yet Apple has been screwing over some of its customers quite sometime with a piece of software that doesn't work, where are the complaints?

Bootcamp on certain 24" iMacs (ones with outdated nVidia 7300/7600 videocards) doesn't work, in fact it hasn't been working since the launch of the iMac last year! Get this, Apple has been screwing over its customers with a buggy piece of crap software for the past year and no one has complained about it until now via this typical Apple fanboy blog post (typical in the sense it gives no sources and says it's a secret) showing off just how 'content' iMac users are.

I wouldn't tolerate it of Microsoft if my system didn't support software it should, heck, I can barely tolerate the fact that some games from the Windows 98 days don't run on Vista. But you know, Bootcamp is unimportant, the very reason those damned IntelMacs exist is just an extra thrown in. It's only a 'beta' version of the software which magically exempts it from working for about a full year.

This just goes without saying, too many Mac owners are too busy justifying their purchase that they don't dare complain about their faulty products. No one who uses a Windows machine would be that forgiving of Microsoft and rightly so, about time Apple fanboys got with the program and stopped allowing Apple from pushing them around. Theres no pride in owning a Mac, especially if one of its key features is stuffed.

You know what? Let me highlight the fact, look at the comments section,

You don't know what you've got till it's gone. Those white iMacs were actually quite a bit better than the current ones which have a glare-plagued screen and weak graphics. Come back, come back!

Well Wait for the xMac announcement in November.

Anyone know if the current iMacs have MXM slots either.

The name of the update strikes me as odd simply because Apple has never admitted to using the MXM card slot AFAIK.

It may be a MXM slot but you need a EFI rom on the video card for it to work.

I was wondering the same thing. Anyone know if an upgrade is possible? Maybe 8600GT 512MB DDR2 from MXM based notebooks.

So the first five posts is not about the fact Apple has not repaired a fatal software problem since almost about a year ago, it's either about how bad the new iMacs are (i.e. buy the old crappy one that doesn't actually run Bootcamp!), how we should wait for another rumoured announcement for another piece of crap that will probably have plaguing issues of its own, and the next three is all about 'awww, I wanna upgrade my Mac' to which I have the simple response of YOU CAN'T!

Naturally after all that crud theres something about how bad Apples behaviour has been

That's really poor that it's taken over a year to resolve that kind of issue and yet again graphics card related. They seriously need to think about hiring people who know what the hell they're doing when it comes to graphics. Carmack from id said they had to inform Apple's team about graphics-related problems in their software and there's been quite a few driver problems lately.

Does this go on? Nope, back to 'I wanna upgrade my shiny computer... oooh pretty liiiights!'

ati and nvidia used to code there own mac drivers maybe they should restart that and come out with video cards with efi roms for mac systems.

Now for a strange phenomenon, a Mac user actually complaining about his systems obvious failings,

I upgraded to the new iMac 24" aluminum just to run Boot Camp beta, and to my surprise I'm still having issues. While I can run Vista with good performance scores, I can't get the drivers to go up to full 1900x1200 resolution (max in Vista is something like 1900x1080!). I've tried everything, including installing ATI's Catalyst drivers; I'm assuming this will be fixed with Leopard. Rather, I'm hoping.

Naturally to wrap it up we have more 'I wanna have nice graphix cards like teh evil Micro$oft users!!1!!1!'

This was why I asked about MXM in Alu iMacs. If Apple is using MXM in all iMacs (and they could use them in MBP / Mac Minis in the future) then pretty soon there would be enough people with the slot and EFI to justify a third party card.

They use custem heat pipes and Heat sinks.

So what was the title of the article in question? "Apple's iMac MXM Updater to cure iMac's Boot Camp woes". It would seem Apple prides itself on having an idiot customer base.
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I think one of the reasons PC users don't want to own a mac is because Apple treats its users as imbeciles. On the Mighty Mouse product page Apple declares it to be a 'two button wonder', my mouse has three buttons (scroll wheel clicks), does that make it the 'Mighty Mouse 2'?

A device so easy to use no one can use it, well almost, give it to some mac geeks who'll gawk over the Shuffle will love it to bits


[ Click here to read more ]
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The damn thing might look cool on first inspection but really I prefer ergonomics with a dual scroll wheel mouse than this saucepan


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Computer Warranty Blues, The Trilogy

February 15th 2007 13:42
Just hope this doesn’t turn into a Rocky-ology, or worse, a Pokemon-ology.

*Part One
[ Click here to read more ]
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Hewlett Packard Company Secrets?

February 15th 2007 04:42
Hewlett Packard Logo
I’m not sure if these are real valid accusations by an apparently former Hewlett Packard employee who claims to have spilled out some trade secrets from the big company.

These trade secrets were taken from Consumerist
[ Click here to read more ]
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Inside a Computer Hard Drive

February 4th 2007 13:53
This is where your computer makes all those cracking noises and stores data, really cool look into it, even if it is just a spinning disk with a needle.


[ Click here to read more ]
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Optimus Keyboard

December 20th 2006 08:24
Optimus Keyboard
The Optimus Keyboard (concept picture)
The Optimus keyboard looks amazing, it is the kind of thing geeks like me dream about. It is also one of those things that we know will be ridiculously expensive without much advantage over tried and true concepts.

Each individual key on the Optimus keyboard is a digital screen which displays an image, this image could be the letters of the alphabet or shortcut key’s for any individual software application


[ Click here to read more ]
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What surprises me most about AMD announcing the first ever Dual Socket multi-core desktop PC platform is not the fact they did it before Intel (about time AMD did something before Intel) but the fact NVIDIA claims to be ‘pleased’ by such developments indicating its relationship with AMD has not been damaged in light of the AMD/ATI merger.

“NVIDIA is pleased to be the launch partner for the launch of the new AMD Quad FX multi-GPU Platforms," said Drew Henry of NVIDIA continuing to say the Geforce 8 series will be ideal when partnered with AMD’s new platform for the ‘mega tasker


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SD card
Toshiba's new SD memory card
Toshiba has announced the world’s first Class 4 8gigabyte SD Memory cards. Well I have no idea why they give it such complex naming, but that isn’t Toshiba's fault (apparently).

Basically it is a flash card, like the ones you put in digital camera’s that can store 8gigabytes of data (that’s a lot of photographs). It’s called a ‘Class 4’ because it can be written to at a speed of four megabytes a second, and up to six megabytes a second


[ Click here to read more ]
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