Dell’s 3008WFP 30-inch LCD with DisplayPort sneaks available — in US too

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So, Flight of the Conchords never made it quite clear what’s so special about New Zealand anyways, but Dell has heaped mystery upon mystery by leaking its upcoming 3008WFP UltraSharp onto its NZ online store. We knew the 30-incher was coming, with DisplayPort as its primary claim to fame, but there’s plenty else to like. The screen packs a 2560 x 1600 resolution, 370 nits of brightness, 8ms response times, a 3000:1 contrast ratio, and DVI-D (with HDCP), HDMI, S-Video, component and composite plugs just in case. Hopefully we’re looking at some sort of silly exchange rate silliness for the price, since NZ$2,699 (about $2,050 US) is roughly double what Dell is charging for its existing 30-inch 3007WFP display. Obviously, no word on when this will hit the States, but all signs point to soon.

Update: Ha! It’s now on the US site for $2,034 with a shiny green “Buy Now” button and 2 day shipping. Anyone want to purchase and tempt our envy? Also available in Japan starting tomorrow according to official Dell press release. Now, you do have a DisplayPort video card, right?

Gallery: Dell’s 3008WFP 30-inch LCD with DisplayPort sneaks available — in US too

[Thanks, JoseQ and dshankar]

 

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Man files antitrust lawsuit over printer ink

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One brave, intelligent, and super-cool Boston man has taken the law into his own hands — vis-à-vis a bunch of attorneys — and is taking HP and Staples to task for an alleged antitrust scheme. According to Ranjit Bedi, the two companies have been in cahoots in an attempt to stop the sale of inexpensive, third-party printer ink at Staples stores. In the suit, it’s suggested that HP paid Staples $100 million to refrain from sale of the cartridges. The story might be harder to believe if it weren’t for the nature of the printer ink business, which seems to be rife with companies engaging in questionable business practices (like selling cartridges which give you an inaccurate read on ink remaining, barring the use of third-party cartridges, and wildly overcharging for branded ink). If you’ve ever owned an ink-jet printer, we’re pretty sure you know exactly what we’re talking about. People — it’s time to fight back.

 

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Official Firefox 3 Beta 2

Firefox 3 Beta 2 has been officially released over at Mozilla.[Improved in Beta 2!] Firefox 3 Beta 2 includes approximately 900 improvements over the previous beta, including fixes for stability, performance, memory usage, platform enhancements and user interface improvements.

Apple finally fixes some MacBook keyboard issues

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We’re sure Apple had a fix in the works long before we got around to posting a poll about it, but if the response to Saturday’s informal questionnaire was any indication, this update is long overdue. Apple just posted a new software update for MacBooks and MacBook Pros running Leopard, which solves the problem with the keyboard freezing up sporadically for a minute or so, which had at least two Engadget editors’ keyboards in fits. Apple still hasn’t addressed the issue with dropping the first character when typing into a text box on certain MacBook Pros, but this is certainly a good move — though would it have really killed Apple to be a bit more talkative about the whole process?

[Thanks, Turgemanster]

 

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Riddell starts shipping concussion-monitoring football helmets

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We’ve seen a couple helmet systems that monitor impacts — including prototype football helmets — but Riddell is bringing the tech to market with the Revolution IQ HITS (Head Impact Telemetry System) helmet, which contains a system of sensors that stores data about the last 100 impacts, which can later be wirelessly transmitted to a laptop for analysis. Up to six $999 helmets can be linked to each $299 HITS receiver, and players and trainers can access data via a web app for later evaluation. The helmet is shipping now, and apparently the University of Missouri and several other NCAA schools have already placed orders.

[Via Technology Review]

 

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