Mon June 07 2004
Pocket Loox Pocket PC announced |
10:38 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones Fujitsu-Siemens's latest two Pocket PCs, the Pocket Loox 410 (300MHz, Bluetooth) and 420 (400MHz, Bluetooth+WiFi), are now officially available. Save for the processor speed and built-in wireless connectivity both models are exactly the same. For the Loox 410, the suggested retail price is EUR 299, for the LOOX 420 it is EUR 399. The 410 also comes bundled with MobileNavigator 4 (NAVIGON) for EUR 599. |
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Fri June 04 2004
$5 off $5 Deal at Handango |
06:23 PM by Colin Dunstan in Miscellaneous | Lounge At Handango, [...] Edit: Sorry Morpheus, we received a message from Lindsay Rall, Senior Marketing Manager of Handango, to remove the code. Of course we honor this request. |
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Wi-Fi Attack Plan of London |
09:50 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones Julian Priest made an *impressive* study of how wireless networking in London has developed over the last three years from hacktivist pastime to mainstream pursuit. He compares networks built by freenetwork groups, commercial hotspot providers, and public sector initiatives; he examines the sales and uptake of WLAN equipment; and he makes some direct measurements of wireless activity in the Greater London area. Overall it is a must-read for everyone who is interested in the definite uptake development of WLAN technology. |
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Bloglines Support |
06:04 AM by Alexander Turcic in Miscellaneous | Announcements If you are using Bloglines, you really should click this link. |
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Thu June 03 2004
Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code under Fire :) |
06:05 PM by Colin Dunstan in E-Book General | Reading Recommendations FaithfulReader.com, a Christian book site, has assembled eleven authors who have all written their own books in response to Brown's "The Da Vinci Code." They even go so far in explaining you the potential damage that his conclusions could inflict on a person's faith. Interesting how important they take a work of FICTION. |
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Hyatt Hotels debuts Wi-Fi Net service |
03:03 PM by Alexander Turcic in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones Hyatt Hotels & Resorts announced that it has begun the rollout of wireless Internet service. Within 12 months, the company said it would offer wireless access based on the Wi-Fi standard in the lobbies, public areas and some guest rooms of more than 200 properties. The service coverage will be provided by T-Mobile, and is expected to cost users $9.95 a day, unless they are existing T-Mobile subscribers. Wi-Fi is expected to be available in more than 25,000 hotels by 2007 worldwide (currently the number is around 6,000 hotels). |
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USB 2.0 Hi-speed Flash Sticks Review |
01:10 PM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones Ars Technica has an informative review of 10 different USB 2.0 Hi-speed flash memory drives. The Transcend JetFlash2A - 128MB (US$38) and the SimpleTech Bonzai Xpress - 256MB (US$80) were the overall winner of the test (with the Transcend the only bootable one!). I love those tiny sticks and the fact that you can run entire operation systems (preferably Linux) on them. |
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Non-Profit Wifi |
09:34 AM by sUnShInE in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones Residents of Savannah, Georgia will be happier than ever to hang out in downtown parks now. The non-profit group, Savannah Spanish Moss, has created the city's first-ever free public wifi hot spots. The technology promises to turn public parks into public libraries, foster economic development and create new ways for downtown businesses to reach visitors. After the G-8 Summit, the wireless network available along River Street and in Reynolds Square will remain, and, hopefully, expand to other squares, Forsyth Park and City Market. The same fever has hit the nation's capital, where the Open Park Project, a non-profit group touting "hotspots for democracy" has placed an open Wifi router at the SupCt, and will be placing routers around The National Mall within a year. OPP hopes to reach tourists, protesters and tech junkies alike. |
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