Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Christmas Christmas Christmas


At last, we are closing the world's most awaited festive season to celebrate Christmas and New year. Christmas has always been a prosperous and fun filled festival for hundreds of millions of people around the world each year. Christmas cards, crafts, decorations, Xmas recipes, shopping, Christmas songs, stories and more of fun filled enjoyable to the core events are there with Christmas. You may check out the site Sulit.com.ph for more of such interesting events. You will come to know there is a lot more to enjoy with this festival by checking out of Sulit.com.ph. May this year's Christmas give joy and Prosper to the entire world.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Review Corner - http://inqbation.com/

Here is an innovative and effective web desiger's website. Washington DC web designer. Ignite your web site performance and catapult your social media marketing efforts through world-class web design and expert SEO services. Their services are very good and worth spend time and money. Once you try and you will come to know the excellence of their web services. Its really awesome. I have been making use of their service since when I come across their site two months ago. I have never thought of switching the service provider for my web designs afterwards. You may get more information at the following site. http://inqbation.com/

Friday, August 27, 2010

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Review Corner- www.offermyoffer.com/

A nice site to try for a range of offers. This time I have come with an offer for car insurance. Just check it out with the following link.
tesco car insurance

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Review Corner- www.offermyoffer.com/

A nice site to try for a range of offers. I Personally tried and got satisfied. Click the below link for more info.
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Monday, May 3, 2010

Review Corner-Downoadbuyer.com

Downloadbuyer.com,a very innovative site offers a variety of Turbocad solutions online like TurboCAD 17 Pro Platinum They also offer so many discounts and free delivery. Also there are so many attractive offers which will not be available with any other sites.Try once and get a chance to explore the opportunities they offer with this site.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Shuttle Barebone XS35 with Intel Atom D510 and Nvidia Ion 2


Previously we mentioned about Shuttle XS29 and XS29F that are based on VIA’s Nano based solution, now the famous PC manufacturer has upgraded to much more powerful system based on Intel latest Atom D510 processor. Named as XS35, the tiny nettop machine will be designed with Nvidia Ion 2 integrated graphics solution targeted for much graphics intensive multimedia applications.

The Intel Atom D510 is a dual-core SKU running at 1.66GHz and when combined with NM10 controller chipset, it offers various interfaces that are able to extend its connectivity with Ethernet, USB 2.0 ports, legacy IOs, audio ports, video ports such as VGA, HDMI and even DisplayPort. In order to enhance its graphics processing as compared to predecessor Atom-based nettops, a newly designed Ion 2 GPU has been optimized to work on all series of ‘Pineview’ processors that can be targeted to deliver an impressive 1080p HD (High Definition) media decode and playback with DirectX 10 compatibility. Other hardware specifications include a 2.5-inch hard disk drive, an optical drive as well as a multi-format card slot for expansion storage. All these are well packed into a sleek casing with VESA mounting interface that can be attached to the back of any display panels suitable for space constraint environments.

No pricing information yet, the Shuttle Barebone XS35 will be commercialized by second quarter of this year as one of the most powerful but yet fan-less nettop machines in consumer market.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

The Real Reason Steve Jobs Pulled Apple From Macworld


Last year Apple stunned, excuse the pun, the Mac world and announced it would no longer attend Macworld Expo or any other trade show event effective after Macworld 2009. Many reasons circulated why Apple would make such an incredible decision with most boiling down to expense. Apple didn’t need trade shows, trade shows needed Apple was the governing thought. While that may be true — Macworld 2010 attendance and vendor participation will reveal that answer — there really is more to the reason for Apple’s ignoring the industry standards of dog and pony shows. Three words: Steve Jobs ego.

It’s no new news to make reference to the iCEOs audacity as folklore is strong when concerning Jobs character. Apple does like to put spin on things no matter what the announcement and when it told the world that it was removing itself from the trade show circuit due to cost and the desire not to be forced for product release dates, it sounded “about right” on the surface. However, one has to scratch their head and wonder why not even a year after that announcement, Apple declared to the world, in a building on the same block Macworld is held, the iPad. Okay, so it must have been the cost thingy, right? Well, maybe, but for a company with tens of billions — ya, billions — of dollars in cash, this argument doesn’t seem that valid, either.

Digging deeper into the iPad launch, one finds many interesting facts. First, the gathering was by invite only. A typical Apple strategy. Second, only well known organizations received these invites. Third, the hands-on demonstration was limited, for example CNET was only allowed to have three of its members take a look at the device to prevent “inner cross-over”. Lastly, the public was visibly forced out and prevented from entry. In the end, Steve Jobs ran the show from start to finish down to who was allowed to sit in the halls of his majesty. Plain and simple, Steve is a control freak and he couldn’t command what IDG did with Macworld Expo. So, he pulled Apple out of it.

There are many examples of Steve’s ego getting in the way of catching a bit closer to Apple-related “stuff” such as when he pulled the less than flattering biography iCon from Apple Stores world wide. The stories are extensive how Apple would fail during Jobs’ day-to-day absence during his liver ordeal of 2008/2009. Since Jobs micro-managed everything, down to what color ties his lieutenants could wear (just kidding on the last one…I think) no one thought Apple had a chance without Jobs running the ship. Really, it does not take much to run the case for Apple leaving Macworld because Jobs doesn’t like how he can’t run the show.

I’m on record for loving Apple and its products and I admit many of the reasons I came back to Apple in 2001 was because of the many great things Jobs brought to Apple. Yet, I am also very vocal about what a pompous jerk Steve Jobs is, as well. From suing blogs due to printing leaked information and talking about how they are “breaking the law”, and yet he forgets about all those free long distance calls he made in the 70s using Woz’s Blue Box as well as “ripping off” Xerox PARCs mouse and GUI for the original Mac, to naming his company similar to the then worlds most popular record label and then telling companies with iPod-like names today to “change your name, it’s simple enough;” it’s tough to accept Jobs as the genius the world wants to paint him.

As long as Jobs has a strong product on stage with him, he’ll continue to ride his high horse with little worry of being jousted off of it. Yes, Jobs can give the pseudo finger to IDG and then show the world the iPad weeks before the revised Apple-less Macworld Expo but remember this, Steve, not all empires last for ever. Rome fell and so well you. How you want to be remembered in history depends how you treat those in the present.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Apple iPad

Apple Inc. will sell the newly unveiled tablet-style iPad starting at $499, a price tag far below the $1,000 that some analysts were expecting.

The iPad, which is larger in size but similar in design to Apple's popular iPhone, was billed by CEO Steve Jobs on Wednesday as "so much more intimate than a laptop and so much more capable than a smart phone."

Jobs, 54, a pancreatic cancer survivor who got a liver transplant during a 5 1/2-month medical leave last year, looked thin as he introduced the highly anticipated gadget, though he seemed to have more energy than he did at Apple's last event in September.

The iPad has a 9.7-inch touch screen, is a half-inch thick, weighs 1.5 pounds and comes with 16, 32 or 64 gigabytes of flash memory storage. It comes with Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity built in. Jobs said the device has a battery that lasts 10 hours and can sit for a month on standby without needing a charge.

The basic iPad models will cost $499, $599 and $699, depending on the storage size, when it comes out worldwide in March.

Apple will also sell a version with data plans from AT&T Inc. in the U.S.: $14.99 per month for 250 megabytes of data, or $29.99 for unlimited usage. Neither will require a long-term service contract.

Those 3G iPad models will cost more — $629, $729 and $829, depending on the amount of memory — and will be out in April. International cellular data details have not yet been announced.

Apple had kept its "latest creation" tightly under wraps until Wednesday's unveiling, though many analysts had correctly speculated that it would be a one-piece tablet computer with a big touch screen, larger than an iPhone but smaller than a laptop.

Raven Zachary, a contributing analyst with mobile researchers The 451 Group, considered the iPad a laptop replacement, especially because Apple is also selling a dock with a built-in keyboard.

But Forrester Research analyst James McQuivey said he doesn't believe the iPad added enough for consumers to justify buying yet another gadget, or to call this a new category of devices. In an e-mail, he criticized its lack of social features such as ways to share photos and home video and recommend books.

Sitting on stage in a cozy leather chair, Jobs demonstrated how the iPad is used for surfing the Web with Apple's Safari browser. The CEO typed an e-mail using an on-screen keyboard and flipped through photo albums by flicking his finger across the screen. He also showed off a new electronic book store and a book-reading interface that emulates the look of a paper book, putting the iPad in competition with Amazon.com Inc.'s Kindle and other e-book readers.

Like iPods and the iPhone, the iPad can sync with Apple's Macintosh and Microsoft's Windows computers. Jobs said the iPad will also be better for playing games and watching video than either a laptop or a smart phone. Software coming with the iPad includes a calendar, maps, a video player and iPod software for playing music. All seem to have been slightly redesigned to take advantage of the iPad's bigger screen.

Tablet computers have existed for a decade, with little success. Jobs acknowledged Apple will have to work to convince consumers who already have smart phones and laptops that they need this gadget.

"In order to really create a new category of devices, those devices are going to have to be far better at doing some key tasks," Jobs said. "We think we've got the goods. We think we've done it."

Applications designed for the iPhone can run on the iPad. Apple is also releasing updated tools for software developers to help them build iPhone and iPad programs.

"We think it's going to be a whole 'nother gold rush for developers as they build applications for the iPad," said Scott Forstall, an iPhone software executive.

A new newspaper reader program from The New York Times and a game from Electronic Arts Inc. were also demonstrated during the event. The audience, which included many journalists and bloggers, clapped and even gave Jobs a standing ovation.

Shares in Apple rose $2.04, or 1 percent, to close Wednesday at $207.98. The Cupertino, Calif.-based company's shares have more than doubled over the past year, partly on anticipation of the tablet computer. Shares in Amazon rose $3.27, or 2.7 percent, to $122.75.