Posts Tagged ‘pretty-limited’

PostHeaderIcon Cherrypal to ship $99 Android-based netbook

We haven’t heard from Cherrypal in a while; they’re the company that makes ultra-low-end computers for the developing world market. Remember when the OLPC market wanted to do a hundred-dollar laptop? Well, it looks like Cherrypal is actually doing it

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Cherrypal to ship $99 Android-based netbook

PostHeaderIcon Well, of course Google is working on a tablet

There is much excited talk right now about Eric Schmidt letting slip that Google is indeed working on a tablet . Yeah, I think we all knew that. The only real surprise is that it’s running Android, possibly with Chrome tacked on as the browser

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Well, of course Google is working on a tablet

PostHeaderIcon Plextor has a NAS of its own in the PX-NAS2

Plextor , Plextor… Seems they have a new Network Attached Story for you to consider . It’s the PX-NAS2, and it’s the company’s first NAS. Two bays in this bad boy—that means you can slip two hard drives in there, if you please.

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Plextor has a NAS of its own in the PX-NAS2

PostHeaderIcon DPS plug-in from Bongiovi Acoustics

There’s a disturbing trend in music technology. Although home studios are rising, music is generally still recorded in specially designed environments and at high fidelity. Then for distribution, we compress the hell out of each track and do all sorts of terrible MP3-related things to them

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DPS plug-in from Bongiovi Acoustics

PostHeaderIcon Who actually needs a 64GB SD card?

The idea of having a 64GB card in your camera is a strange one. I take a fair amount of pictures in RAW, yet I rarely if ever run up against the edge of my 8GB card

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Who actually needs a 64GB SD card?

PostHeaderIcon Redundant Clock is redundant

How delightfully meta.

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Redundant Clock is redundant

PostHeaderIcon DARPA planning to test Mach 6 hyperplane in April

This rather unconvincing video shows a current project of DARPA’s, in which a jet is accelerated first by regular propulsion, then ramjets, then scramjets — eventually pushing the vehicle to a ridiculous mach 6. That’s somewhere around 1700-2000 meters per second, or ~4000MPH . That’s if they can keep the thing from breaking apart.

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DARPA planning to test Mach 6 hyperplane in April

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