Fujitsu’s 12.1-inch LOOX R: world’s first Penryn ultra-portable?



Filed under:

That unassuming little 12.1-inch laptop is Fujitsu’s LOOX R ultra-portable. It weighs in at 1.27-kg (2.8-pounds) with an LED backlit 1,280 x 800 display, up to 4GB or memory and 120GB of disk, dual-layer DVD writer, Gigabit Ethernet, 802.11 a/b/g WiFi, SDHC slot, Firewire, fingerprint sensor, PCMCIA, and more. Lots to like already. Now this: a standard battery running for 9.7-hours with the help of a purposely unspecified Intel processor. With an expected January ship, is it any wonder we’re speculating that this is the world’s first laptop to run a mobile version of Intel’s new Penryn CPU rumored for release on January 6th? The first of many we’ll see launch in the new year.

 

Permalink | Email this | Comments


Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

PSP 3.80 and PS3 2.10 firmware updates now available



Filed under:

You knew they were coming, now PSP 3.80 and PS3 2.10 are out and ready to dance on your Sony console. That’s DivX and WMV video support with Blu-ray profile 1.1 now ready for your PS3 in addition to Internet radio and a few other goodies for your PSP. Now get to it Sony boy, you might want to call in sick to do it up right.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Virtual Cable nav system superimposes route guidance on your windshield in 3D



Filed under: , ,

We’ve seen quite a few next-gen nav device concepts, but none with as much potential as the Virtual Cable, from a New Jersey company called Making Virtual Solid. The system uses a laser, a set of lenses, and a moving mirror mounted in the dashboard to project a 3D route-guidance line above the road ahead, as though it’s actually out in front of the driver. Besides making driving that much more like a video game, the company says mass-produced versions will cost somewhere around $400 as a factory-installed option, and can be easily interfaced with existing GPS systems. Sadly, there don’t appear to be any live videos of the system in action, but judging from the number of patent applications and incredibly detailed schematics and explanations on the website, the vapor factor seems pretty low. Check the read link for a set of video mockups of the system in action.

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

All-electric dragster sets electric vehicle quarter mile record



Filed under:

The last time we saw a vehicle powered by high-power lithium-ion batteries, it was the crazy-fast KillaCycle, and it was lodged neatly inside a minivan after being too much for its owner to handle. Well, it looks like the same battery tech is behind another ridiculously fast ride, only this time it’s an actual drag racer driven by an actual race car driver, and it’s setting NHRA electric vehicle quarter-mile records: the Current Eliminator V, driven by Dennis “Kilowatt” Berube, beat the old record on Saturday by posting a quarter-mile time of 8.10 seconds at 153.6MPH at the Speedworld Motorplex strip in Tuscon. That’s somewhat behind the KillaCycle’s record of 7.82 seconds at 168MPH, but given the added weight of the car’s chassis and and problems we’ve seen others have with high-torque all-electric transmissions, it’s still pretty impressive.

[Via TG Daily]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

SiRF toots its own horn, readies location-enabling features for Android



Filed under: ,

It’s not like we weren’t already aware of SiRF’s participation in the Open Handset Alliance, but nevertheless, the company is sounding pretty ecstatic about the software developer kit it “just received.” Reportedly, the outfit is already hard at work on “end-to-end location-enabling features” for Android, and in case you couldn’t guess, it’s also providing Android platform support for a plethora of products based on its famed SiRFstarIII architecture. Essentially, the firm is hoping to take advantage of having location as a “native feature” within Android, and it makes the obvious sound a whole lot more intriguing by teasing us with visions of “out-of-the-box locative experiences” involving geo-tagging, geo-searching and social networking. Still, we’ll tip our hat to any form of tight integration, but this here’s probably nothing to get riled up over.

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!