Mon May 24 2004
Tablet PC is dead !? |
12:49 PM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones "This one caught me by absolute surprise. Here is the background. For some time now, I and several other analysts and IT managers have been telling Microsoft that the separate Tablet PC edition idea was a bad one. This is because the last thing IT wants is another operating system to manage. After lots of pounding, Microsoft agreed to look at this issue. In two presentations at WinHEC -- Microsoft's recent hardware conference for developers -- Matti Suokko, the Mobile Platforms Division manager, and Darin Fish, the Business Development manager for the Mobile Platforms Division at Microsoft, both indicated Microsoft is considering a new direction. You would think the result would be a sigh of relief from analysts and media. Instead, the articles that resulted generally concluded that the Tablet PC is dead. Folks got to this opinion by taking the obvious shortcut of tying the platform to the unique OS and concluding that if the unique OS is gone, so is the platform -- despite the fact that pictures of tablet computers were liberally sprinkled through both presentations, including the future road map sections." So the Tablet PC is dead - another dispelling misconception about Microsoft? |
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Interactive Books - Harry Potter or Reality? |
05:28 AM by Colin Dunstan in E-Book General | Deals and Resources (No... New Zealand researchers have developed a way to overlay detailed animations and images on textbooks, children's picture books and any other title that uses illustrations. The viewer resembles a pair of spectacles on a stick or hi-tech opera glasses and is held in front of the eyes while a book is read or paged through. "You can get God's eye view if you want," said Dr Billinghurst, "or you can go in and be part of the scene." |
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Sun May 23 2004
Book Award: Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson |
01:06 PM by Colin Dunstan in E-Book General | Deals and Resources (No... The Guardian reports the winner of the 2004 Arthur C Clarke award for British science-fiction writing: Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson. Quicksilver, an opener to a planned trilogy, is a massive and complex historical novel set in the 17th century. It explores the notion that modern cyberculture has its roots in the curiosity of Renaissance alchemists. |
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Windows 98SE on Pocket PC |
05:37 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones Do you think that one of the newer Clies or Palms would have the power to run Windows? Well, if you own a PPC, you can be ready for some kind of experiment... PocketGamer is carrying a story on the successful emulation of Windows 95 and Windows 98SE on the Pocket PC. This was made possible by a Pocket PC port of Bochs, a DOS emulator. If you're keen to try this on your own Pocket PC, you'll need a minimum of a 256MB memory card (or stream the image over a wireless network) and you'll need a program like Nyditot Virtual Display to increase your screen resolution. Oh, yes, and you'll also need the emulator. |
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Plucker V1.8 (stable) and V1.82 (unstable) out |
04:45 AM by Colin Dunstan in E-Book Software | Reading and Management Download the latest version of Plucker now. More news that you even can imagine: - i-mode support (Dave Maddock) - The 5-way support in the library has been changed. (Michael Nordstr.m) New behaviour: - The following preferences have been removed: - Faster rotation. (Alexander Pruss) This looks very promising! Only wish they would also spend more time on the desktop parser - I am not a great fan of Python, the memory-eater. |
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Sat May 22 2004
Freebie at Fictionwise: Paying it Forward |
11:18 AM by Colin Dunstan in E-Book General | Deals and Resources (No... Paying it by Michael A. Burstein eBook Category: Science Fiction Hugo Award Nominee |
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iPod grounds airplane |
05:42 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Portable Audio/Video A bomb scare occured on an America West passenger plane in Phoenix Arizona this week. "An MP3 player wrapped around a soda can sparked a bomb scare at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport Wednesday morning, said an official with the Transportation Security Administration. The can was found in the cabin of America West Airlines flight 44 from Phoenix to Washington, D.C. The bomb squad was called in and a bomb-sniffing dog was taken aboard the plane. All 117 passengers were safely evacuated. They will all be re-screened before they are allowed back on a plane to continue on to Washington." So, next time you leave the plane, don't forgot to take your Coke and iPod with you. |
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Next iPod to have color screen |
05:30 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Portable Audio/Video The new iPod will not be much different in form and function from the current models, but the primary difference is the color screen. Confirmed, 100% accurate, and without any doubt - says Macosx.com No news on the rumored video output capabilities yet. |
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