Both major graphics chip vendors are taking the covers off of new technologies that let you use multiple graphics chips.
Advanced Micro Devices showed CNET Reviews its ATI Hybrid Crossfire design the other day, and various previews of Nvidia's new 3-way SLI popped up around the Web as well. The two takes on multichip graphics processing couldn't be more different from each other, and each reflects where their respective vendor seems to be throwing much of its energy lately.
(Credit: AMD)
Being populists, we're most excited by Hybrid Crossfire design. When supporting motherboards and systems come out next year, budget AMD graphics card will be able to share processing tasks with the graphics chips built into forthcoming AMD-based motherboards.
Based on the demo AMD showed us, the two low-end chips working together make even new 3D games playable, which is more than can be said for either an integrated 3D chip or most budget 3D cards by themselves. We saw a Hybrid Crossfire rig give games like Crysis, Unreal Tournament 3, and Call of Duty 4 roughly 10 frames per second over their scores, with just a budget Radeon card by itself. Nvidia is rumored to be working on its own version of such a solution, but we have yet to hear anything official about it.
3-way SLI will take up a lot of motherboard real estate.(Credit: Nvidia)
On the other end of the price spectrum, we have Nvidia's 3-Way SLI. This is actually a step down from the outlandish quad-SLI technology that Nvidia introduced in 2006, but that was also a generation ago in chip technology, which meant no support for DirectX 10 graphics. 3-Way SLI only works with Nvidia's GeForce 8800 GTX and 8800 Ultra graphics cards, so 3-way SLI is really only for those who already have very high-end systems. Forgetting even the monitor or the rest of the computer, that's $1,500 in graphics cards alone.
If that price doesn't make you blink, the good news is that early benchmarks show 3-Way SLI delivering amazing 3D performance, at least for the most part. HotHardware reports that 3-Way SLI support in Crysis is broken (supposedly, a developer patch is on the way), but otherwise, 3-way SLI tests in DirectX 10 games such as Bioshock, and Company Heroes have shown significant performance gains over traditional two-card setups.
What's also exciting is that there's no wait for 3-way. You'll need a special 3-way connector (and we have no details on where or when those will be available), but 3-way SLI will work on any Nvidia 680i SLI motherboard that has three PCI Express x16 slots.
Friday, December 14, 2007
This week in cell phones at the FCC
Nokia 6500s(Credit: i-tech.com.au)
Only the most passionate cell phone geeks know that the Federal Communications Commission holds a treasure trove of information on upcoming handsets. Because the FCC has to certify every phone sold in the United States, not to mention test its SAR rating, the agency's online database offers a lot of sneak peeks to those who dig. And to save you the trouble, Crave has combed through the database for you. Here are a selection of filings from the past week on new and upcoming cell phones. Click through to read the full report.
LG KF510D
LG RD3500
NOKIA 6500S
SAMSUNG SCH-U940
SAMSUNG SGH-F110
SAMSUNG SGH-L170
SAMSUNG SGH-L258
Review: 2008 Mercedes-Benz S63
Click the image to read the full review(Credit: CNET Networks)
How do you improve upon what is arguably the most technologically advanced production car on the market? Easy--make it go faster. When we reviewed the Mercedes-Benz S-Class sedan last year, we were blown away by its arsenal of tech features, including its night-vision camera, preternatural voice recognition system, and optional massage seats. With the S63, Mercedes keeps all the technoluxury intact and bolts on an AMG-tuned 6.3-liter V-8. The results are...well, see for yourself.
Auctioneers ask for double Kindle's retail price
Auctioneers at eBay were asking for more than double the retail price of Amazon's Kindle e-Reader on Friday.
A check of eBay at 2:45 p.m. PST showed prices for the e-Book reader went as high as $930. TechCrunch reported that a Kindle, which retails for $399, was bid up to $1,500 earlier in the week.
Has Amazon really discovered untapped consumer demand for digital-book readers?
The e-tailer, dabbling in electronics manufacturing for the first time, sold out of Kindles soon after introducing them last month. The device connects to the Web to download books--a feature that separates it from other e-readers that must sync to a PC to load a book.
Amazon has said it won't start delivering on new Kindle orders until after Christmas.
The company said it sold out of the Kindle in under six hours after the handheld went on sale. Some critics questioned how many Kindles Amazon had in stock. The company declined to say.
First take: Cowon A3
Cowon's A3 portable video dynamo. Click for more photos.(Credit: CNET Networks/Corinne Schulze)
After spending the last 24 hours abusing Cowon's latest A3 portable video player, I have to say I'm pretty impressed...mostly. As a high-capacity portable video player, the A3 offers spectacular video resolution (800x480) and supports just about every file format under the sun. Along with its built-in video recording capability and a high-quality video output, the Cowon A3 is an undeniable force to be reckoned with in the PVP marketplace.
It's not all gumdrops and unicorns, however. I was a bit disappointed to see that aside from a dramatic jump in format support and screen resolution, the A3 is almost indistinguishable from the Cowon A2. Last year, we called Cowon out on the A2's frustrating miniature joystick navigation and lack of support for DRM-protected WMV and WMA files, and yet, the new A3 still hasn't addressed these drawbacks. Competitors such as the Archos 605 WiFi and Creative Zen Vision W, might not have DivX 6.0 format support, but they trump the A3 on navigation and support for video and music download services.
Using the center select button on the A3's joystick takes nerves of steel.(Credit: CNET Networks)
That said, if I'm being completely candid here, most of the digital video geeks I know rip their content from DVDs or pull it off their computer-based DVR systems. The kind of serious file hoarder who's putting down $399 for a 60GB portable video player isn't buying DRM-wrapped movies from CinemaNow at $15 a pop. Still, it would be nice if Cowon offered the option.
Despite all the wizardry packed into the A3, my gut tells me it's going to be a hard sell for Cowon. Archos is selling their 160GB Wi-Fi-enabled PVP, the 605 WiFi, for the same $399 price as Cowon's 60GB, non-Wi-Fi, A3. Granted, the A3 is technically superior to the Archos in many ways, but the allure of the 605's increased storage, touch-screen interface, and Wi-Fi capabilities, is hard to resist. Could there be a prizefight brewing?
I'll be working on a full review of the A3 soon, but in the meantime, take a closer look at our Cowon A3 photo gallery.
Review: Venturi Mini
Click the image to read the full review(Credit: CNET Networks)
The Venturi Mini in-car audio and communications hub is an innovative, feature-packed device. Its effectiveness as a Bluetooth hands-free speakerphone will depend on the location of your car's 12-volt power outlet, and its phonebook transfer feature is temperamental to say the least. But its simple design, intuitive controls, and competitive price tag make it an attractive option for those looking to bring hands-free calling, Bluetooth audio, and hardwired digital audio playback into the car. See our full review here.
Auctioneers ask for double Kindle's retail price
Auctioneers at eBay were asking for more than double the retail price of Amazon's Kindle e-Reader on Friday.
A check of eBay at 2:45 p.m. PST showed prices for the e-Book reader went as high as $930. TechCrunch reported that a Kindle, which retails for $399, was bid up to $1,500 earlier in the week.
Has Amazon really discovered untapped consumer demand for digital-book readers?
The e-tailer, dabbling in electronics manufacturing for the first time, sold out of Kindles soon after introducing them last month. The device connects to the Web to download books--a feature that separates it from other e-readers that must sync to a PC to load a book.
Amazon has said it won't start delivering on new Kindle orders until after Christmas.
The company said it sold out of the Kindle in under six hours after the handheld went on sale. Some critics questioned how many Kindles Amazon had in stock. The company declined to say.
First take: Cowon A3
Cowon's A3 portable video dynamo. Click for more photos.(Credit: CNET Networks/Corinne Schulze)
After spending the last 24 hours abusing Cowon's latest A3 portable video player, I have to say I'm pretty impressed...mostly. As a high-capacity portable video player, the A3 offers spectacular video resolution (800x480) and supports just about every file format under the sun. Along with its built-in video recording capability and a high-quality video output, the Cowon A3 is an undeniable force to be reckoned with in the PVP marketplace.
It's not all gumdrops and unicorns, however. I was a bit disappointed to see that aside from a dramatic jump in format support and screen resolution, the A3 is almost indistinguishable from the Cowon A2. Last year, we called Cowon out on the A2's frustrating miniature joystick navigation and lack of support for DRM-protected WMV and WMA files, and yet, the new A3 still hasn't addressed these drawbacks. Competitors such as the Archos 605 WiFi and Creative Zen Vision W, might not have DivX 6.0 format support, but they trump the A3 on navigation and support for video and music download services.
Using the center select button on the A3's joystick takes nerves of steel.(Credit: CNET Networks)
That said, if I'm being completely candid here, most of the digital video geeks I know rip their content from DVDs or pull it off their computer-based DVR systems. The kind of serious file hoarder who's putting down $399 for a 60GB portable video player isn't buying DRM-wrapped movies from CinemaNow at $15 a pop. Still, it would be nice if Cowon offered the option.
Despite all the wizardry packed into the A3, my gut tells me it's going to be a hard sell for Cowon. Archos is selling their 160GB Wi-Fi-enabled PVP, the 605 WiFi, for the same $399 price as Cowon's 60GB, non-Wi-Fi, A3. Granted, the A3 is technically superior to the Archos in many ways, but the allure of the 605's increased storage, touch-screen interface, and Wi-Fi capabilities, is hard to resist. Could there be a prizefight brewing?
I'll be working on a full review of the A3 soon, but in the meantime, take a closer look at our Cowon A3 photo gallery.
New multigraphics chip designs from AMD and Nvidia
Both major graphics chip vendors are taking the covers off of new technologies that let you use multiple graphics chips.
Advanced Micro Devices showed CNET Reviews its ATI Hybrid Crossfire design the other day, and various previews of Nvidia's new 3-way SLI popped up around the Web as well. The two takes on multichip graphics processing couldn't be more different from each other, and each reflects where their respective vendor seems to be throwing much of its energy lately.
(Credit: AMD)
Being populists, we're most excited by Hybrid Crossfire design. When supporting motherboards and systems come out next year, budget AMD graphics card will be able to share processing tasks with the graphics chips built into forthcoming AMD-based motherboards.
Based on the demo AMD showed us, the two low-end chips working together make even new 3D games playable, which is more than can be said for either an integrated 3D chip or most budget 3D cards by themselves. We saw a Hybrid Crossfire rig give games like Crysis, Unreal Tournament 3, and Call of Duty 4 roughly 10 frames per second over their scores, with just a budget Radeon card by itself. Nvidia is rumored to be working on its own version of such a solution, but we have yet to hear anything official about it.
3-way SLI will take up a lot of motherboard real estate.(Credit: Nvidia)
On the other end of the price spectrum, we have Nvidia's 3-Way SLI. This is actually a step down from the outlandish quad-SLI technology that Nvidia introduced in 2006, but that was also a generation ago in chip technology, which meant no support for DirectX 10 graphics. 3-Way SLI only works with Nvidia's GeForce 8800 GTX and 8800 Ultra graphics cards, so 3-way SLI is really only for those who already have very high-end systems. Forgetting even the monitor or the rest of the computer, that's $1,500 in graphics cards alone.
If that price doesn't make you blink, the good news is that early benchmarks show 3-Way SLI delivering amazing 3D performance, at least for the most part. HotHardware reports that 3-Way SLI support in Crysis is broken (supposedly, a developer patch is on the way), but otherwise, 3-way SLI tests in DirectX 10 games such as Bioshock, and Company Heroes have shown significant performance gains over traditional two-card setups.
What's also exciting is that there's no wait for 3-way. You'll need a special 3-way connector (and we have no details on where or when those will be available), but 3-way SLI will work on any Nvidia 680i SLI motherboard that has three PCI Express x16 slots.
Advanced Micro Devices showed CNET Reviews its ATI Hybrid Crossfire design the other day, and various previews of Nvidia's new 3-way SLI popped up around the Web as well. The two takes on multichip graphics processing couldn't be more different from each other, and each reflects where their respective vendor seems to be throwing much of its energy lately.
(Credit: AMD)
Being populists, we're most excited by Hybrid Crossfire design. When supporting motherboards and systems come out next year, budget AMD graphics card will be able to share processing tasks with the graphics chips built into forthcoming AMD-based motherboards.
Based on the demo AMD showed us, the two low-end chips working together make even new 3D games playable, which is more than can be said for either an integrated 3D chip or most budget 3D cards by themselves. We saw a Hybrid Crossfire rig give games like Crysis, Unreal Tournament 3, and Call of Duty 4 roughly 10 frames per second over their scores, with just a budget Radeon card by itself. Nvidia is rumored to be working on its own version of such a solution, but we have yet to hear anything official about it.
3-way SLI will take up a lot of motherboard real estate.(Credit: Nvidia)
On the other end of the price spectrum, we have Nvidia's 3-Way SLI. This is actually a step down from the outlandish quad-SLI technology that Nvidia introduced in 2006, but that was also a generation ago in chip technology, which meant no support for DirectX 10 graphics. 3-Way SLI only works with Nvidia's GeForce 8800 GTX and 8800 Ultra graphics cards, so 3-way SLI is really only for those who already have very high-end systems. Forgetting even the monitor or the rest of the computer, that's $1,500 in graphics cards alone.
If that price doesn't make you blink, the good news is that early benchmarks show 3-Way SLI delivering amazing 3D performance, at least for the most part. HotHardware reports that 3-Way SLI support in Crysis is broken (supposedly, a developer patch is on the way), but otherwise, 3-way SLI tests in DirectX 10 games such as Bioshock, and Company Heroes have shown significant performance gains over traditional two-card setups.
What's also exciting is that there's no wait for 3-way. You'll need a special 3-way connector (and we have no details on where or when those will be available), but 3-way SLI will work on any Nvidia 680i SLI motherboard that has three PCI Express x16 slots.
CompUSA clarifies details on store closings
As CompUSA begins shuttering the last of its stores, it's also tying up loose ends.
(Credit: CompUSA)
The retailer, which was bought by a private equity firm December 7 and will shut down, put up a customer help Web site Friday where it gives details on how warranties, gifts cards, and more will be handled.
The closing sale will last approximately eight weeks and all sales will be final. Any extended warranties purchased for products through CompUSA will be honored by a third-party provider, Assurant Solutions. Gift cards, rain checks, and rebates purchased prior to December 12 can be redeemed at any time during the final sale. For those who have a gadget currently in for service with CompUSA, the repair will be completed and the gadget will be returned to owners.
(Credit: CompUSA)
The retailer, which was bought by a private equity firm December 7 and will shut down, put up a customer help Web site Friday where it gives details on how warranties, gifts cards, and more will be handled.
The closing sale will last approximately eight weeks and all sales will be final. Any extended warranties purchased for products through CompUSA will be honored by a third-party provider, Assurant Solutions. Gift cards, rain checks, and rebates purchased prior to December 12 can be redeemed at any time during the final sale. For those who have a gadget currently in for service with CompUSA, the repair will be completed and the gadget will be returned to owners.
Top 10 bewilderingly lame gadgets
Microsoft Zune(Credit: CNET Networks)
If you can't say anything nice, my grandmother always cautioned me, you should consider being a journalist. (Naw, she didn't, really. She was a much nicer lady than I am.)
We do enjoy a good bit of snark--if only to set off the cheerleading of which we're sometimes accused. After touting all the great things technology can do for you, 'tis the season to dish dirt on paltry products. Along with sister site CNET Reviews, Popular Mechanics just published their picks for the least convincing tech products of 2007.
See the full catastrophe on CNET Reviews: "Worst tech of 2007"
Compare ours with Popular Mechanics' list: "The top 10 worst gadgets of 2007"
Apple publishes QuickTime fix for streaming flaw
A new version of QuickTime is available from Apple that plugs security holes in the software for both Mac and Windows users.
QuickTime 7.3.1 was published Thursday afternoon in order to plug unspecified "security issues," according to Apple's Web site. But the fixes appear to correct the Real Time Streaming Protocol issue identified in late November that could lead to unwanted visitors if you visited a Web site that contained code taking advantage of the flaw.
Four separate patches are available on Apple's site, three for the Mac OS X big cats Panther, Tiger, and Leopard, and one for Windows. You'll also likely be prompted by Apple's Software Update feature to download the fresh version.
Apple also published release notes about a new implementation of Java Friday morning for software developers running Tiger, Mac OS X 10.4, that fixes multiple vulnerabilities. The problems were corrected with Leopard, according to Apple.
QuickTime 7.3.1 was published Thursday afternoon in order to plug unspecified "security issues," according to Apple's Web site. But the fixes appear to correct the Real Time Streaming Protocol issue identified in late November that could lead to unwanted visitors if you visited a Web site that contained code taking advantage of the flaw.
Four separate patches are available on Apple's site, three for the Mac OS X big cats Panther, Tiger, and Leopard, and one for Windows. You'll also likely be prompted by Apple's Software Update feature to download the fresh version.
Apple also published release notes about a new implementation of Java Friday morning for software developers running Tiger, Mac OS X 10.4, that fixes multiple vulnerabilities. The problems were corrected with Leopard, according to Apple.
MetroPCS releases the Samsung r410 QWERTY phone
Samsung r410(Credit: Samsung)
MetroPCS isn't exactly known nationwide as a carrier of stylish phones, but it looks like that may be about to change. It just announced the Samsung r410, which appears to be quite an attractive phone with a full QWERTY keyboard. Similar to the LG Rumor, it has a regular number keypad on the exterior and a hidden QWERTY keyboard that slides out for easier text messaging. Other than that, there's not much to talk about in the features department aside from e-mail, instant messaging, a VGA camera, and Bluetooth. It's also not too pricey at $199 before any discounts. (Source: Engadget Mobile)
Top 10 bewilderingly lame gadgets
Microsoft Zune(Credit: CNET Networks)
If you can't say anything nice, my grandmother always cautioned me, you should consider being a journalist. (Naw, she didn't, really. She was a much nicer lady than I am.)
We do enjoy a good bit of snark--if only to set off the cheerleading of which we're sometimes accused. After touting all the great things technology can do for you, 'tis the season to dish dirt on paltry products. Along with sister site CNET Reviews, Popular Mechanics just published their picks for the least convincing tech products of 2007.
See the full catastrophe on CNET Reviews: "Worst tech of 2007"
Compare ours with Popular Mechanics' list: "The top 10 worst gadgets of 2007"
Sprint ends three charges, adds two more
As any cell phone user can attest, a number of taxes and fees always make into your carrier bill. Though the archaic federal excise tax ended last year, the remaining charges can still add an extra $10 to your bill each month.
While the surcharges are standard across almost all carriers, Sprint said this week that it would no longer bill customers for three of the fees. Gone are the Federal Programs Cost Recovery fee, the Federal E911 surcharge, and the Wireless Local Number Portability fee. As the combined cost of the charges is only about $2 each month, the net effect on customers will be little. And in any case, Sprint is replacing them with a new administrative charge ($0.75) and and a new regulatory charge ($0.20).
According to Sprint, the administrative charge will "help defray various costs imposed on us by other telecommunications carriers" while the regulatory charge is "being assessed to help defray costs of various federal, state and local regulatory programs."
As neither of the new fees are taxes nor are they mandated by the government, they would be challenged if the Cell Phone Consumer Empowerment Act of 2007 ever sees traction in Congress. That legislation promises to ban any fees not expressly authorized by federal, state, or local governments.
Sprint ends three charges, adds two more
As any cell phone user can attest, a number of taxes and fees always make into your carrier bill. Though the archaic federal excise tax ended last year, the remaining charges can still add an extra $10 to your bill each month.
While the surcharges are standard across almost all carriers, Sprint said this week that it would no longer bill customers for three of the fees. Gone are the Federal Programs Cost Recovery fee, the Federal E911 surcharge, and the Wireless Local Number Portability fee. As the combined cost of the charges is only about $2 each month, the net effect on customers will be little. And in any case, Sprint is replacing them with a new administrative charge ($0.75) and and a new regulatory charge ($0.20).
According to Sprint, the administrative charge will "help defray various costs imposed on us by other telecommunications carriers" while the regulatory charge is "being assessed to help defray costs of various federal, state and local regulatory programs."
As neither of the new fees are taxes nor are they mandated by the government, they would be challenged if the Cell Phone Consumer Empowerment Act of 2007 ever sees traction in Congress. That legislation promises to ban any fees not expressly authorized by federal, state, or local governments.
San Francisco sprouts a 'Chia' nightclub
Native ferns mark the first step toward greening the exterior walls.(Credit: Corinne Schulze/CNET Networks)
A San Francisco nightclub installed on Monday what it's promoting as the city's first vertical garden. Several plant-filled boxes turned on their sides and bolted outside near the entrance are the first step in the Zen Compound's plans to cover the facade of the building in greenery.
"The hope is to have a living building," said Mike Zuckerman, director of sustainability at the 40,000 square foot complex. He spotted a butterfly hovering near native licorice ferns on Tuesday.
Green rooftops are in vogue in cities around the country. Hanging, wall-mounted gardens, on the other hand, are few and far between--except, naturally, where ivy climbs.
Zuckerman envisions eventually shaping plants into the form of the club logo, or sculpting Styrofoam embedded with sprouts to make the facade green all over. And spray-on seeds could cover the building with plant graffiti, making it the architectural equivalent of a Chia Pet.
The existing plants, a test run, may not be ecologically perfect. They're inside of nonrecycled plastic boxes, for instance, but those last at least five times longer than bioplastic. And they will be hooked up to plumbing from the roof to be watered, though the long-term goal is to harvest rainwater.
Don't dis the plants, a sign suggests.(Credit: Corinne Schulze/CNET Networks)
Zuckerman aims to turn the compound's nightclub and restaurant, which attracts 1,300 people on a decent night, into a showcase of sustainability.
Planned for next year is a dance floor coated in piezoelectric crystals that turn the pressure from dancing feet into electrical power. He already knows someone who can handle the job for only $10,000.
"We have a mystical physicist in residence here," Zuckerman said.
Eco-chic event planning is expanding as more people seek to celebrate without expanding their carbon footprint.
A club in Rotterdam has already harnessed piezoelectrics (more at Inhabitat) to power its lights and sound system. Several other nightclubs are pushing green efforts, including the Butterfly Social Club in Chicago and even some sex clubs in Tokyo.
For now, the Zen Compound serves organic spirits with corn-based cups and straws that get composted rather than trashed. Club marketing is moving away from using paper fliers, even if recycled, to online-only promotions with Flash animation.
Zuckerman is updating the lighting with efficient fluorescent and LED bulbs, which will reap a refund from Pacific Gas " >
Plans are in the works to cover the club in a living, green skin that can be seen from the freeway nearby.(Credit: Zen Compound )
Apple publishes QuickTime fix for streaming flaw
A new version of QuickTime is available from Apple that plugs security holes in the software for both Mac and Windows users.
QuickTime 7.3.1 was published Thursday afternoon in order to plug unspecified "security issues," according to Apple's Web site. But the fixes appear to correct the Real Time Streaming Protocol issue identified in late November that could lead to unwanted visitors if you visited a Web site that contained code taking advantage of the flaw.
Four separate patches are available on Apple's site, three for the Mac OS X big cats Panther, Tiger, and Leopard, and one for Windows. You'll also likely be prompted by Apple's Software Update feature to download the fresh version.
Apple also published release notes about a new implementation of Java Friday morning for software developers running Tiger, Mac OS X 10.4, that fixes multiple vulnerabilities. The problems were corrected with Leopard, according to Apple.
QuickTime 7.3.1 was published Thursday afternoon in order to plug unspecified "security issues," according to Apple's Web site. But the fixes appear to correct the Real Time Streaming Protocol issue identified in late November that could lead to unwanted visitors if you visited a Web site that contained code taking advantage of the flaw.
Four separate patches are available on Apple's site, three for the Mac OS X big cats Panther, Tiger, and Leopard, and one for Windows. You'll also likely be prompted by Apple's Software Update feature to download the fresh version.
Apple also published release notes about a new implementation of Java Friday morning for software developers running Tiger, Mac OS X 10.4, that fixes multiple vulnerabilities. The problems were corrected with Leopard, according to Apple.
Nintendo, GameStop address Wii shortage
(Credit: Nintendo of America)
The Nintendo Wii launched more than a year ago, and the system is still incredibly hard to find. This long after the system started shipping, people are still camping in front of stores as soon as they hear about new shipments.
Friday morning, Nintendo of America's president and CEO, Reggie Fils-Aime, held a telephone press conference to address the continuing shortage of the Wii.
Fils-Aime said Nintendo hadn't expected as much demand for the Wii as they're getting. Since the launch, he claimed, Nintendo has almost doubled its global production from 1 million to 1.8 million Wiis per month, and tripled its workforce at Nintendo of America's North Bend, Wash., distribution center. The Nintendo president wouldn't say whether Nintendo would further increase its Wii production, but he denied any claims that Nintendo is stockpiling Wiis.
"There was no ability for us to stockpile systems in the summer for the holiday rush," Fils-Aime said. "Enough systems would make everyone, including me, much happier."
According to Fils-Aime, Wiis will be available next week at all major retailers. If past patterns are any indication, however, that "availability" will be limited to shoppers willing to camp out before stores open on Sunday or Monday morning. Since Christmas is just two weeks away, you're probably still going to have some difficulty finding a Wii.
While that seems to be the biggest hope for Christmas Wiis, Reggie also announced a raincheck program in conjunction with GamesStop to get more Wiis out to shoppers in January. Even if Wiis are out of stock, on December 20 and 21, consumers will be able to purchase them for January.
On those two days, if you put down the full retail price of the Wii at a GameStop, you'll receive a raincheck guaranteeing you a Wii in January. The rainchecks will be available only as supplies last, but Fils-Aime said GameStop has "many tens of thousands" of rainchecks available across its 3,000+ stores. Perhaps the Wii-hungry will be camping out next week to get a raincheck for a Wii next month. We'll find out by next Friday.
"We went into the launch with very high expectations," Fils-Aime said. "What we didn't expect was to throw out the whole playbook and essentially create a whole new level of sell-through for this industry. You can't plan for that."
The Nintendo Wii launched more than a year ago, and the system is still incredibly hard to find. This long after the system started shipping, people are still camping in front of stores as soon as they hear about new shipments.
Friday morning, Nintendo of America's president and CEO, Reggie Fils-Aime, held a telephone press conference to address the continuing shortage of the Wii.
Fils-Aime said Nintendo hadn't expected as much demand for the Wii as they're getting. Since the launch, he claimed, Nintendo has almost doubled its global production from 1 million to 1.8 million Wiis per month, and tripled its workforce at Nintendo of America's North Bend, Wash., distribution center. The Nintendo president wouldn't say whether Nintendo would further increase its Wii production, but he denied any claims that Nintendo is stockpiling Wiis.
"There was no ability for us to stockpile systems in the summer for the holiday rush," Fils-Aime said. "Enough systems would make everyone, including me, much happier."
According to Fils-Aime, Wiis will be available next week at all major retailers. If past patterns are any indication, however, that "availability" will be limited to shoppers willing to camp out before stores open on Sunday or Monday morning. Since Christmas is just two weeks away, you're probably still going to have some difficulty finding a Wii.
While that seems to be the biggest hope for Christmas Wiis, Reggie also announced a raincheck program in conjunction with GamesStop to get more Wiis out to shoppers in January. Even if Wiis are out of stock, on December 20 and 21, consumers will be able to purchase them for January.
On those two days, if you put down the full retail price of the Wii at a GameStop, you'll receive a raincheck guaranteeing you a Wii in January. The rainchecks will be available only as supplies last, but Fils-Aime said GameStop has "many tens of thousands" of rainchecks available across its 3,000+ stores. Perhaps the Wii-hungry will be camping out next week to get a raincheck for a Wii next month. We'll find out by next Friday.
"We went into the launch with very high expectations," Fils-Aime said. "What we didn't expect was to throw out the whole playbook and essentially create a whole new level of sell-through for this industry. You can't plan for that."
Merry Christmas, Mom: Ustream links soldiers with home
Ustream cofounders Brad Hunstable and John Ham as West Point cadets in 1998(Credit: The U.S. Army)
To many Americans with family members serving in Iraq or Afghanistan, the most wished-for holiday gift is simply a visit with their far-off loved ones.
Ustream.TV, a start-up that lets people stream live video to the Web, is planning to help military families connect through the Internet this holiday season.
The company has given Webcams to people who have family stationed in Iraq, so they can access the Ustream service and take part in a video chat.
Ustream, headquartered in Los Altos, Calif., has a strong military background. Co-founders John Ham and Brad Hunstable met each other while attending the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. The former cadets reached the rank of captain before leaving the Army.
Frank Caufield, co-founder of heavyweight venture capital firm, Kleiner Perkins Caufield " >
Ham and Hunstable last February(Credit: Ustream)
"Having served five years and being separated from my family for a year, I know what it's like to be away from home during the holidays," Ham told CNET News.com on Thursday. "Military families sacrifice so much so their loved ones can serve their country. We're doing what we can to make a difference."
Initially, Ustream intended to send Webcams to soldiers in Iraq as well as their families. But Army officials nixed the idea for security reasons, according to an Ustream spokeswoman.
Soldiers already equipped with a Webcam will be able to broadcast themselves to their families at the same time their families will be visible to them. Service members without cameras can still watch on their computer monitors and communicate with loved ones through instant message or telephone.
Hands-on the Zumobi widget platform
The long-awaited beta for the Zumobi mobile widgets platform (at least awaited by me) became available Friday to Windows Mobile 5 and 6 users and developers who register on the site.
Zumobi, like Yahoo! Go (which just moved out of beta) and Plusmo, is an experiment in mobile widgetry that cooks up an interactive recipe for getting wanted Web content fast.
Zumobi's twist is part interface, part monetizing. The app opens to a grid of sixteen tiles, each its own app readied for your click. Four tiles cluster around a central hub, what Zumobi likes to call it's "flower." To access an app, click--I mean zoom--into the nearest "flower" foursome and use whatever navigation your phone provides to draw up the app you want.
Each widget contains a Google search bar, a share action, and the ability for the tile developer to serve up a banner ad, Zumobi's revenue-sharing model. Users interact with AP News as an RSS feed, play BlackJack, and view random or tagged Flickr photos. Zumobi encourages feedback, and places that mechanism in a suitably tucked-away, but tragically mis-mapped, star button that pops out a 5-point rating scale--when you press the '8' key, though, not the asterisk. (Credit: Zumobi)
Though Zumobi loads with thirteen default apps, there's room for three more, which users add from a gallery of about 80 apps on Zumobi.com. The company plans to enable the phone's gallery function by mid-2008. Apps can be shuffled around or deleted, but also revived if users change their minds.
Zumobi seems to make much of its multinavigational sensitivity, but that's secondary to me, especially when some navigational responses, like to the T-Mobile Shadow's scroll wheel, experience hiccups. I expect mobile apps to seamlessly respond to touch phones, D-pads, keypads, and swiveling displays as handsets diversify. A much sharper usability point is why users are compelled to click twice to get to the single app they want, once to zoom into the quarter-screen and once again to open the full app.
There are other issues Zumobi has to iron out with mapping keys to symbols, tightening image rendering, and filling in functions on the Zero menu, which is part inbox, part tile gallery, and part sharing hub.
The app certainly has promise, particularly if third-party developers can do for it what they did for Facebook, but I admit a little disappointment. Everything about Zumobi is so polished--the conference presentations; the Web site; the crisp, glossy app interface--but seems overcomplicated where it should be the most effortless. I wouldn't say Zumobi lacks substance, but I right now the special effects and tie-ins trump the plot.
RELATED STORIES
* Three up-and-coming mobile platforms
* Developer's pick: iPhone, Android, Zumobi
Laser gunship brings back the ball turret
The Advanced Tactical Laser aircraft flies over Albuquerque, N.M.(Credit: Ed Turner, Boeing)
The first ray guns to be used in combat may well be aerial weapons, and not phaserlike side arms in the hands of foot soldiers.
Certainly Boeing is working in that direction. For several years it's been providing regular updates on the (notably slow) progress of its marquee directed-energy effort, the Airborne Laser, to be carried aloft by a heavily modified 747 that's intended to stop ballistic missiles during their launch phase. Now the defense contractor is touting the steps it's taking with a smaller counterpart designed to strike ground targets, the Advanced Tactical Laser.
As of this month, the high-energy chemical laser that is the actual weapons portion of the ATL is now installed in a C-130H airplane, a well-proven design taking on yet another new mission. The 12,000-plus-pound chemical laser system is taking up residence alongside a separate beam control system, installed at an earlier date, that functions as the tracking and targeting apparatus.
This would hardly be the first time that the C-130, primarily a cargo and troop transport aircraft, has functioned as a gunship. The well-armed AC-130 variant saw much action in Vietnam, and has also flown in subsequent conflicts.
An earlier incarnation of the ball turret, in restored B-17 Flying Fortress aircraft flying in 2002.(Credit: SSGT William Greer, USAF )
The business end of the ATL will be a rotating turret in the belly of the fuselage--reminiscent of the one-squished-man ball turret of the B-17 Flying Fortress and B-24 Liberator planes used in World War II, hauntingly depicted by poet Randall Jarrell in his "Death of the Ball-Turret Gunner." By contrast, the 747-borne Airborne Laser will fire through the nose of the aircraft.
Sometime in 2008, the ATL is expected to demonstrate its prowess in flight, directing the high-energy laser at what Boeing calls "mission-representative ground targets." In tests at Kirtland Air Force Base, N.M., earlier this year, a surrogate low-power laser hit targets on more than a dozen occasions, and laboratory testing of the high-energy laser wrapped up after more than 50 firings, according to Boeing.
Aerial tests of the bigger, ballistic-missile-minded Airborne Laser are scheduled for 2009.
Boeing doesn't just have its head in the clouds when it comes to directed-energy weapons. It's also working on a more down-to-Earth Humvee-mounted laser shooter.
Grand stands
I've previously covered several stands that place your laptop at a more-ergonomic height when used with an external keyboard. Today I look at yet another, as well as two stands for saving desk space when storing your notebook or using it with an external keyboard and display.
RAIN DESIGN MSTAND
As I've noted in the past, if you regularly use your laptop at a desk, you should use some sort of laptop stand or riser to lift your laptop's screen to the proper viewing height, and then use a separate keyboard and mouse, placed at a healthy height of their own, for input. Rain Design's $50 mStand is just such a stand, and a stylish one, at that. Made from a single, thick piece of aluminum with an anodized finish that closely matches the look of Apple's current MacBook Pros, the mStand is perhaps the most attractive stand I've seen. It's definitely the sturdiest--it doesn't "bounce" nearly as much as other stands, thanks to the rigid material, and the wide, 10- by 7.5-inch base gives it a stable feel even when supporting a large notebook. The tilted top surface raises the front of your laptop 3 inches off your desk, with the back edge of a 15-inch MacBook Pro raised 6.5 inches, putting the top edge of the display approximately 13.5 inches off the desk. That's not quite high enough to be optimal--APC's $80 Ergonomic Notebook Stand with USB hub is better in this respect--but it's much better for your health than leaving your laptop flat on your desk.
Like Griffin Technology's $40 Elevator, the mStand has a large area underneath your laptop for storing your keyboard and mouse when not in use. A 1.25-inch hole in the back of the mStand--rimmed with white plastic to match the similar opening on the stands for Apple's Cinema Displays--provides a limited degree of cable management; instead of having all the cables hanging off the sides of your MacBook or MacBook Pro and then winding back separately, you can snake them under the laptop and through the hole. Four rubber pads on the top surface and a thick, metal lip at the front of the stand--also padded--stop your laptop from sliding around.
However, you need to be careful when placing a notebook with a front-mounted optical drive on the mStand; positioning a 15-inch MacBook Pro even a quarter-inch off-center (to the left) blocks the optical-drive slot. In addition, on the sample we received, the metal lip at the front actually blocks the lid latch button on a MacBook Pro or PowerBook; you have to lift the front of the laptop up to press the button. (The Rain Design Web site claims that currently-shipping mStands have a small cut-out area that provides access to the latch button.)
POWER SUPPORT DOCKING STAND FOR MACBOOK
Although many laptop owners take advantage of their laptop's screen when working at a desk, others close the lid, hook up an external display, keyboard, and mouse, and effectively use the laptop as a CPU. The only problem is where to put the laptop. (A similar question--where to put it?--arises when you're not using your laptop at all.)
Power Support's $40 Docking Stand offers an interesting solution: instead of placing the laptop flat on your desk, the Docking Stand provides a stable, 4.5-inch-wide mounting stand, into which your laptop slides in order to rest vertically. (Despite its name, the Docking Stand works with both MacBooks and MacBook Pros.) The computer takes up a fraction of the desk space it would normally.
Made of aluminum with gray-plastic trim, the Docking Stand by default fits MacBook Pro models perfectly; smooth-plastic pads on the inside of the bracket allow the laptop to slide into the Stand without scratching the computer's surfaces. (Adhesive, fabric pad covers are included for added protection, if you prefer; the bottom of the bracket is already covered with this fabric.) However, you can easily adjust the Docking Stand, via three screws on the bottom, to fit notebooks up to approximately 1.5 inches thick; the caveat here is that the wider you make the stand, the less solid the base feels. Still, as long as you put your laptop in the Stand horizontally, it won't easily fall over.
If you opt to use your computer while it's "docked," the Docking Stand actually works better with MacBooks, which have all their ports on one side and the optical drive on the other--you can orient your MacBook so that your cables connect in the back, while the optical drive is in the front for easy access. When used with a MacBook Pro, keep in mind that you'll have at least one or two cables connected to each end, so there's a bit more cable clutter.
I've also found the Docking Stand to be a convenient way to store my laptop when I'm not using it; my MacBook Pro takes up much less desk space when sitting vertically. One complaint I have, for either use, is that the bottom of the Docking Stand has no protective pads and thus easily slides around a wood or metal desk. Power Support includes four adhesive, fabric pads to protect your desk, but the Stand still slides too easily. I would have appreciated rubber feet.
BALMUDA DESIGN FLOATER
If you like PowerSupport's Docking Stand, but want something sturdier and with more of a design focus, Balmuda's $305 Floater is just that--and quite a bit more expensive, as well.
The Floater does essentially the same thing as the Docking Stand, but is a much more substantial product. Made of 7 separate pieces of anodized aluminum alloy--each machined from a single block of metal--the Floater is held together by a series of stainless-steel hex bolts. The laptop "cradle" floats an inch or so off your desk (hence the product's name), supported by a thick arm connected to one end of the Floater's 4.75- by 10.6-inch base. The Floater weighs nearly two pounds on its own, and is noticeably more stable than Power Support's Stand.
The Floater's cradle is lined with numerous silicone bumpers that both keep your laptop securely in place and protect it from being scratched by the stand's metal. Polyurethane feet on the bottom of the base keep the Floater from moving and protect your desk. One detail that impressed me is that each silicone bumper and polyurethane foot is set into a recessed section of the metal, custom-machined for that particular bumper or foot.
The Floater is compatible with 15- and 17-inch MacBook Pros, the 13-inch MacBook, and the 17-inch PowerBook G4. Because these laptops vary slightly in thickness, the Floater's cradle can be adjusted up to 2mm wider or narrower using the included hex wrench and three sets of spacers of different thicknesses. You just loosen the bolts securing the sides of the cradle; slide the spacers, in whichever combination provides the appropriate cradle width, into the spaces between the cradle's sides and bottom; and then tighten the bolts.
The Floater has a similar limitation as Power Support's Docking Stand: although the Floater looks much better with MacBook Pros, it works better with MacBooks, which have all their ports on one end. That said, the Floater provides cable "tunnels" on each end of its base, which allows you to run the cables from one end down and under the stand--the result is a less-cluttered look.
Is the Floater worth $305? It's attractive, very well-made, and, like the Docking Stand, useful. But you're definitely paying--a lot--for the unique design and the production process.
RAIN DESIGN MSTAND
As I've noted in the past, if you regularly use your laptop at a desk, you should use some sort of laptop stand or riser to lift your laptop's screen to the proper viewing height, and then use a separate keyboard and mouse, placed at a healthy height of their own, for input. Rain Design's $50 mStand is just such a stand, and a stylish one, at that. Made from a single, thick piece of aluminum with an anodized finish that closely matches the look of Apple's current MacBook Pros, the mStand is perhaps the most attractive stand I've seen. It's definitely the sturdiest--it doesn't "bounce" nearly as much as other stands, thanks to the rigid material, and the wide, 10- by 7.5-inch base gives it a stable feel even when supporting a large notebook. The tilted top surface raises the front of your laptop 3 inches off your desk, with the back edge of a 15-inch MacBook Pro raised 6.5 inches, putting the top edge of the display approximately 13.5 inches off the desk. That's not quite high enough to be optimal--APC's $80 Ergonomic Notebook Stand with USB hub is better in this respect--but it's much better for your health than leaving your laptop flat on your desk.
Like Griffin Technology's $40 Elevator, the mStand has a large area underneath your laptop for storing your keyboard and mouse when not in use. A 1.25-inch hole in the back of the mStand--rimmed with white plastic to match the similar opening on the stands for Apple's Cinema Displays--provides a limited degree of cable management; instead of having all the cables hanging off the sides of your MacBook or MacBook Pro and then winding back separately, you can snake them under the laptop and through the hole. Four rubber pads on the top surface and a thick, metal lip at the front of the stand--also padded--stop your laptop from sliding around.
However, you need to be careful when placing a notebook with a front-mounted optical drive on the mStand; positioning a 15-inch MacBook Pro even a quarter-inch off-center (to the left) blocks the optical-drive slot. In addition, on the sample we received, the metal lip at the front actually blocks the lid latch button on a MacBook Pro or PowerBook; you have to lift the front of the laptop up to press the button. (The Rain Design Web site claims that currently-shipping mStands have a small cut-out area that provides access to the latch button.)
POWER SUPPORT DOCKING STAND FOR MACBOOK
Although many laptop owners take advantage of their laptop's screen when working at a desk, others close the lid, hook up an external display, keyboard, and mouse, and effectively use the laptop as a CPU. The only problem is where to put the laptop. (A similar question--where to put it?--arises when you're not using your laptop at all.)
Power Support's $40 Docking Stand offers an interesting solution: instead of placing the laptop flat on your desk, the Docking Stand provides a stable, 4.5-inch-wide mounting stand, into which your laptop slides in order to rest vertically. (Despite its name, the Docking Stand works with both MacBooks and MacBook Pros.) The computer takes up a fraction of the desk space it would normally.
Made of aluminum with gray-plastic trim, the Docking Stand by default fits MacBook Pro models perfectly; smooth-plastic pads on the inside of the bracket allow the laptop to slide into the Stand without scratching the computer's surfaces. (Adhesive, fabric pad covers are included for added protection, if you prefer; the bottom of the bracket is already covered with this fabric.) However, you can easily adjust the Docking Stand, via three screws on the bottom, to fit notebooks up to approximately 1.5 inches thick; the caveat here is that the wider you make the stand, the less solid the base feels. Still, as long as you put your laptop in the Stand horizontally, it won't easily fall over.
If you opt to use your computer while it's "docked," the Docking Stand actually works better with MacBooks, which have all their ports on one side and the optical drive on the other--you can orient your MacBook so that your cables connect in the back, while the optical drive is in the front for easy access. When used with a MacBook Pro, keep in mind that you'll have at least one or two cables connected to each end, so there's a bit more cable clutter.
I've also found the Docking Stand to be a convenient way to store my laptop when I'm not using it; my MacBook Pro takes up much less desk space when sitting vertically. One complaint I have, for either use, is that the bottom of the Docking Stand has no protective pads and thus easily slides around a wood or metal desk. Power Support includes four adhesive, fabric pads to protect your desk, but the Stand still slides too easily. I would have appreciated rubber feet.
BALMUDA DESIGN FLOATER
If you like PowerSupport's Docking Stand, but want something sturdier and with more of a design focus, Balmuda's $305 Floater is just that--and quite a bit more expensive, as well.
The Floater does essentially the same thing as the Docking Stand, but is a much more substantial product. Made of 7 separate pieces of anodized aluminum alloy--each machined from a single block of metal--the Floater is held together by a series of stainless-steel hex bolts. The laptop "cradle" floats an inch or so off your desk (hence the product's name), supported by a thick arm connected to one end of the Floater's 4.75- by 10.6-inch base. The Floater weighs nearly two pounds on its own, and is noticeably more stable than Power Support's Stand.
The Floater's cradle is lined with numerous silicone bumpers that both keep your laptop securely in place and protect it from being scratched by the stand's metal. Polyurethane feet on the bottom of the base keep the Floater from moving and protect your desk. One detail that impressed me is that each silicone bumper and polyurethane foot is set into a recessed section of the metal, custom-machined for that particular bumper or foot.
The Floater is compatible with 15- and 17-inch MacBook Pros, the 13-inch MacBook, and the 17-inch PowerBook G4. Because these laptops vary slightly in thickness, the Floater's cradle can be adjusted up to 2mm wider or narrower using the included hex wrench and three sets of spacers of different thicknesses. You just loosen the bolts securing the sides of the cradle; slide the spacers, in whichever combination provides the appropriate cradle width, into the spaces between the cradle's sides and bottom; and then tighten the bolts.
The Floater has a similar limitation as Power Support's Docking Stand: although the Floater looks much better with MacBook Pros, it works better with MacBooks, which have all their ports on one end. That said, the Floater provides cable "tunnels" on each end of its base, which allows you to run the cables from one end down and under the stand--the result is a less-cluttered look.
Is the Floater worth $305? It's attractive, very well-made, and, like the Docking Stand, useful. But you're definitely paying--a lot--for the unique design and the production process.
Cisco's CEO on Hollywood's Walk of Fame?
Los Angeles--Imagine my surprise to see John Chambers, the CEO of Cisco Systems, immortalized with a star on Hollywood Boulevard. Right near Levar Burton no less.
What did they give it to him for? For his fine performance of the "Are you ready?" speech he used to give during the Internet heyday. Chambers gave this speech once every few days, it seemed, between 1996 and 2000. It was rousing, until the third time you heard it. (And it turned out the answer to the question was: "For the dot.com implosion? No.")
Ape must not kill ape, or buy second-rate networking (Credit: Michael Kanellos )
Was it for his unflappable Southern charm, even under difficult circumstances? He never gets riled in public. Was he a stunt double for Ron Howard on Andy Griffith show back in the 60s?
No. It turns out that the star belongs to special effects whiz John Chambers, who transformed Roddy McDowell into a walking chimp in the original "Planet of the Apes" series.
The router king will no doubt one day get a more fitting memorial. Still, I like the idea of him in a board room bellowing "Get your hands off me you damn dirty ape."
What did they give it to him for? For his fine performance of the "Are you ready?" speech he used to give during the Internet heyday. Chambers gave this speech once every few days, it seemed, between 1996 and 2000. It was rousing, until the third time you heard it. (And it turned out the answer to the question was: "For the dot.com implosion? No.")
Ape must not kill ape, or buy second-rate networking (Credit: Michael Kanellos )
Was it for his unflappable Southern charm, even under difficult circumstances? He never gets riled in public. Was he a stunt double for Ron Howard on Andy Griffith show back in the 60s?
No. It turns out that the star belongs to special effects whiz John Chambers, who transformed Roddy McDowell into a walking chimp in the original "Planet of the Apes" series.
The router king will no doubt one day get a more fitting memorial. Still, I like the idea of him in a board room bellowing "Get your hands off me you damn dirty ape."
Merry Christmas Mom: Ustream links soldiers with home
Ustream cofounders Brad Hunstable and John Ham as West Point cadets in 1998(Credit: The U.S. Army)
To many Americans with family members serving in Iraq or Afghanistan, the most wished-for holiday gift is simply a visit with their far-off loved ones.
Ustream.TV, a startup that lets users stream live video to the Web, is planning to help military families connect through the Internet this holiday season.
The company has supplied families -- who have loved ones stationed in Iraq -- with Web cameras so they can access the Ustream service and take part in a video chat.
Ustream, headquartered in Los Altos, Calif., has a strong military background. Cofounders John Ham and Brad Hunstable met each other while attending the United States Military Academy at West Point. The former cadets reached the rank of captain before leaving the army.
Frank Caufield, cofounder of heavyweight venture capital firm, Kleiner Perkins Caufield " >
Ham and Hunstable last February(Credit: Ustream)
"Having served five years and being separated from my family for a year, I know what it's like to be away from home during the holidays," Ham told CNET News.com on Thursday. "Military families sacrifice so much so their loved ones can serve their country. We're doing what we can to make a difference."
Initially, Ustream intended to send Web cams to soldiers in Iraq as well as their families. But Army officials nixed the idea for security reasons, according to an Ustream spokeswoman.
Soldiers already equipped with a Web camera will be able to broadcast themselves to their families at the same time their families will be visible to them. Service members without cameras can still watch on their computer monitors and communicate with loved ones through instant message or telephone.
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