Hardware

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Antennagate

HOW do you make amends without admitting you’re wrong? How do you offer millions of your customers a solution to a problem you say hardly matters? Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs gave it a good shot at a press conference Friday (http://bit.ly/jobs_antennagate) aimed at addressing user complaints that gripping the new iPhone 4 in a certain way would dramatically reduce signal strength.

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Posted by Chin on 07/20 at 07:28 AM
HardwareGadgetsIT industry • (2) CommentsPermalink

Tuesday, July 06, 2010

Apple’s death grip

THE recent kerfuffle over the iPhone 4 “death grip” highlights how a simple problem can be blown out of proportion, not only by media hype but by a woefully inadequate response, in this case, from Apple.

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Posted by Chin on 07/06 at 12:34 AM
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Tuesday, June 01, 2010

Cable madness

THE MagSafe charger for my MacBook died last week. It had given me some warning. Every so often, the power indicator on the magnetic connector would refuse to light up, and I would have to jiggle the cable to just the right position to get it working again. Finally, it had become so unreliable that I decided I had to buy a new one. After all, it’s hardly good form to start a three-hour lecture by fumbling with the cord of your power adapter for 10 minutes, hoping the charge light will come on while your battery is draining.

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Posted by Chin on 06/01 at 12:01 AM
HardwareGadgetsPersonal computingMac OS X • (3) CommentsPermalink

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

iDiots

LIKE it or not, the technology world is ruled by hype, and the epicenter of hype these days is Apple. Everywhere you look, it’s the iPhone this, or the iPhone that. There are applications for anything and everything, and we’re supposed to drool over them while we visit the Apple App Store and eagerly surrender our hard-earned money to the technology world’s equivalent of the Soup Nazi. Well, I’m not buying. I’ve seen the iPhone and it’s a cool, shiny device, but I don’t need it. How many people can say that? 

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Posted by Chin on 05/11 at 01:05 AM
HardwareGadgets • (14) CommentsPermalink

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Verzio Skii: A dual-SIM phone with a lot of extras

NOBODY I’ve shown the Verzio Skii to can believe that this slim, dual-SIM touch-screen phone costs less than P5,000. Visually, everything about the Skii from Verzio of Singapore—black piano finish, the brush metal back cover, chrome trim and one-centimeter profile—speaks of an expensive phone. That Verzio has managed to pack so many features into an attractive candy-bar phone that sells for only P4,990 is no mean feat.

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Posted by Chin on 11/29 at 05:18 PM
HardwareGadgets • (1) CommentsPermalink

Monday, June 15, 2009

E-books to go

Some writers suggest that dedicated e-book readers are on the way out, since Apple’s iPhone and other smart phones can do the same job, I disagree. For most serious book readers, the tiny screen just doesn’t cut it. The real challenge to Kindle and other dedicated e-book readers will come, not from mobile phones, but from small and inexpensive netbooks.

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Posted by Chin on 06/15 at 06:41 PM
Consumer electronicsEntertainmentHardwareGadgetsPersonal computing • (4) CommentsPermalink

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

Netbook redux

Jaunty Jackalope Netbook Remix on an Acer Aspire One

IT was a long slog rather than a jaunt. This weekend, I installed the beta version of Ubuntu 9.04—otherwise known as Jaunty Jackalope--on an Acer Aspire One netbook with 1 gigabyte of RAM and an 8GB solid state drive. Since I had been satisfied with how Version 8.04 ran on the same model, I was eager to see how the latest release would play. To keep things interesting, I decided to install the Netbook Remix edition, which is specifically tailored to run on small format laptops. Unfortunately, the process took longer than it did the last time, and it was dawn by the time I figured out how to get the Aspire One’s built-in Wi-Fi card to work.

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Posted by Chin on 04/07 at 07:35 AM
HardwareGadgetsOpen SourcePersonal computingPortable computingUbuntu Linux • (3) CommentsPermalink

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Lauren’s laptop

ARE you just not cool enough to be a Mac person? Strangely enough, this question wasn’t triggered by a new snooty Apple commercial but by Microsoft’s latest marketing campaign, a series of ads that emphasize what most of us already know: you can get more hardware for your money if you don’t buy a Mac. The first of these ads features a bubbly redhead named Lauren, who wants to buy a fast notebook PC with a 17-inch screen and a large keyboard for less than $1,000. 

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Posted by Chin on 03/31 at 09:16 AM
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Sunday, October 05, 2008

Eee Box: A quick start

There is a tendency to equate the Asus Eee Box with the Eee PC, but it would be a mistake to think of the two as desktop and portable equivalents of one and the same machine. Despite the similarity in name, the two are configured differently, making them suitable for different tasks.

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Posted by Chin on 10/05 at 07:16 PM
HardwarePersonal computingWindows • (2) CommentsPermalink

Monday, August 11, 2008

Ubuntu netbook

ACER’s Aspire One is a solid netbook, but it can be much more. In the last two weeks, I’ve been using it as a full notebook, running office applications, editing digital photos, surfing the Web and watching videos on a robust, full-featured system. The remarkable thing is, I’m doing it on a such a small, lightweight computer (less than a kilo) that has only 8 gigabytes (GB) of storage and 1GB of memory. The key to unlocking the Aspire One’s power was to replace the Linpus Lite Linux operating system that comes installed with the netbook with Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy Heron).

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Posted by Chin on 08/11 at 09:31 PM
HardwareGadgetsOpen SourcePersonal computingUbuntu Linux • (1) CommentsPermalink

Monday, July 28, 2008

Ace in the hole


IT’S difficult to write about the Aspire One from Acer without gushing. Out of the box, this mini-notebook is the perfect traveling companion for anyone who simply needs to surf the Web, send e-mail and perform typical office tasks such as typing up documents, working on spreadsheets or giving a presentation. Its compact size—6.7”x9.8” and less than an inch thick—and weight—less than a kilo—make the Aspire One extremely easy to bring along anywhere. The netbook is slightly longer than the pioneering Asus Eee PC, but Acer has put that extra space to good use by building in a larger keyboard that most touch typists will appreciate (about 85 percent of a full-sized one) and a glossy black frame around the LCD screen that makes it look brighter.

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Posted by Chin on 07/28 at 09:48 PM
HardwareGadgetsOpen SourceLinuxPersonal computing • (3) CommentsPermalink

Monday, July 07, 2008

The shape of things to come

First shot of Dell’s mini-notebook, courtesy of Gizmodo

In the next month or two, it should be interesting to watch as Dell, the world’s third largest computer company, rolls out its “Dell E” series of mini-notebooks. The company has not announced the new line, but the new netbook has been making waves on the Internet ever since Gizmodo bumped into Michael Dell at the All Things Digital conference in May and took pictures of his shiny new notebook that sported a fire-engine red high-gloss finish. Since then, more intriguing details have surfaced.

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Posted by Chin on 07/07 at 07:25 PM
HardwareGadgetsOpen SourceLinuxPersonal computingUbuntu Linux • (3) CommentsPermalink
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