Wednesday, December 05, 2007
Tuesday, December 04, 2007
Carnegie Mellon's "Crusher" military bot getting $14 million upgrade
from Engadget by Donald Melanson
[Via CNET Military Tech]
Posted by
Augustine
at
12:26 PM
The 20GB+ Eee PC mod
from Engadget by Thomas Ricker
Filed under: Laptops
8GB of flash storage is currently the best you can hope for in a standard (though imported) Eee PC. However, if you're industrious and determined enough, you can marry your 4GB Eee with a $150 (or so) 16GB Corsair Flash Voyager drive for a full 20GB of storage. That's exactly what Johnx did over at eeeuser.com. He even integrated Bluetooth like we've seen before. Best of all though, the new NAND and Bluetooth radio are not soldered to the system. Rather, they are fitted to a pair of newly installed, internal USB ports slung off the miniPCIe connector. Thus, the system can be upgraded at any time. All hail Johnx... king of the Eees![Thanks, chainofcommand02]
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Posted by
Augustine
at
11:39 AM
Hama PhotoPlayer 1080i digital picture viewer
from Engadget by Joshua Topolsky
Hey there Ansel Adams -- we know you're shooting all your news pictures in an ultra-detailed, millions-of-megapixels format. Unfortunately for you, it's hard to show off your breathtaking work to friends and family. Well, a company called Hama hopes to change all that with its PhotoPlayer 1080i, a curious device that serves one basic function: it allows you to view your photos on an HD television. Basically, the little contraption is a 35-in-1 card reader which also outputs images (via component hookups) to your favorite 1080i-equipped display. The PhotoPlayer comes with a tiny remote for flipping through your majestic vision, and also includes a USB jack (for hard drives and the like), so you can go for a really, really long haul during your presentations. We can hear the "oohs" and "ahhs" already. Available now, no word on price.[Via PhotographyBLOG]
Posted by
Augustine
at
11:36 AM
Monday, December 03, 2007
Comcast CEO sees 160Mbps internet in 2008
from Engadget by Darren Murph
[Via ArsTechnica, image courtesy of AFP / BBC]
Read - Fortune interviews Comcast CEO Brian Roberts
Read - Comcast closes in on 100Mbit/s
Posted by
Augustine
at
12:59 AM
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