Latest Microsoft Wireless Laser Mouse 6000 And 7000

Mouse

The worldwide leader in software, services and solutions, Microsoft has added two new mice to its line of award-winning input devices with the latest Wireless Laser Mouse 6000 (right) and 7000, packing with high-end technology features in sleek designs to deliver supreme performance and comfort, aiming to enhance your computing experience.

Both Wireless Laser Mouse feature the same 1,000 dpi (dot-per-inch) sensitivity, one button access to Flip 3D and 2.4 GHz wireless technology, which is good for a 30 foot range.

“Our research shows that consumers are more mobile than ever when it comes to using their computers,” said Sean Butterworth, product marketing manager at Microsoft. “With the Wireless Laser Mouse 6000, they can easily take their notebook computer and mouse with them, from the desk to the kitchen or to their local coffee shop, without having to compromise on size and comfort.”

The new Microsoft Wireless Laser Mouse 7000 and Wireless Laser Mouse 6000 will be available in coming March for about $70 and $50, respectively.

Yellow Dog Linux 6

Yello gog

Terra Soft on Tuesday announced the release of Yellow Dog Linux v6.0, a new version of their operating system that works on, among other platforms, G4 and G5-equipped Macs. The software is available immediately for YDLnet Enhanced users; it will be published on DVD in two weeks, and public mirrors will have it available within a month.

Yellow Dog Linux 6.0 is built upon CentOS, a derivative of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). Key features include the Enlightenment (E17) and Gnome user interface, Gnash, a Flash work-alike, Ekiga VoIP, and more. With Yellow Dog Linux installed, Mac users can operate an open source operating system, installing software compiled to run on PowerPC systems including Web, database, e-mail and network services — more than 2,000 software packages are included on the install DVD alone. YDL v6.0 introduces a new level of multi-media support and functions with the latest Enlightenment window manager for a rich, dynamic, and powerful end user experience.

source:pcworld

Verizon’s New HTC Smart Phone

HTC

It’s nice to see Verizon Wireless expand its selection of Windows Mobile smart phones. The nationwide carrier recently added the HTC SMT5800, which comes hot on the heels of the XV6800, also made by HTC, and the SCH-i760, manufactured by Samsung. How does the SMT5800 stack up against the others? To find out, I got my hands on the new PDA phone and did some subjective, real-world testing.

On the outside, the 5800 is noticeably smaller than the other two–almost 0.5 inch shorter than the Samsung i760 and about 0.3 inch narrower than both the i760 and the 6800. The 5800 is 10 ounces lighter, too, though I prefer the i760’s sturdier feel.

All three handsets come with a slide-out keyboard, though the 5800’s keys are arrayed more closely together than the others’ because of the handset’s compact size. Its rounded-edge keys are flat and raised ever so slightly. Overall, I found the keyboard comfortable enough to type on.

Like the i760, the 5800 has alphanumeric keys on the outside, along with a five-way navigation key, a home key, and a back button. The dial pad on the front of the new model is essential because, unlike the i760 and the 6800, it doesn’t have an on-screen number pad. That’s because the 2.4-inch LCD on this HTC smart phone isn’t a touch screen. I find touch screens extremely helpful for quickly navigating menus and entering information; a non-touch-based system like the 5800’s requires more scrolling.

The HTC SMT5800 runs the Windows Mobile Standard operating system, which offers many of the same features as the Professional version of the OS (used on the i760 and the 6800), including the ability to synchronize with the Outlook contacts saved on a PC, and the ability to view Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and PDF attachments. You can edit Word and Excel files on the 5800, too, but you can’t create such files from scratch as you can on the i760 and the 6800.

Both e-mail and text messaging work well on the 5800. I synced my Yahoo account within a few minutes (though the process can take longer if you download a large inbox). To view my Hotmail (Windows Live) messages, I had to use Internet Explorer: The Windows Mobile software won’t allow users to sync Hotmail through the phone’s e-mail client.

The 5800 provides some fun apps, too. My favorite is the 2-megapixel camera’s panorama mode. It can stitch six (or fewer) pictures directly on the handset; and in my experiment with stitching, the resulting wide-angle snapshot came out nicely.

The 5800’s main drawback is its short battery life. According to Verizon, the 5800’s battery lasts for up to 3.5 hours, which is similar to what I experienced. I ended up recharging the phone more frequently than I would have liked. Verizon’s Web site lists longer battery-life estimates for the other two handsets: up to 5 hours for the i760’s chunkier battery pack and 5.4 hours for the 6800.

All three phones support Verizon’s 3G EvDO network, so Web page downloads were relatively speedy across the board. But unfortunately, the 5800 lacks Wi-Fi connectivity. Calls on the 5800 sounded fine, with good audio quality and adequate volume on both the earpiece and the speakerphone. You can pair the 5800 with a Bluetooth earbud or headphones as well.

At $250, the SMT5800 is the cheapest of the three phones. The SCH-i760 costs $350 and the XV6800 sets you back $400 (prices are as of January 25, 2008). I was moderately impressed by the 5800, but if I had to choose from among the three, I would go with the Samsung SCH-i760: It hits the sweet spot in price, performance, and features.

source:pcworld 

Users Hate Vista !!

Visat

You rarely hear about a new OS causing people to panic. But IT consultant Scott Pam says that’s exactly what his small-business clients are doing when they install Windows Vista on new PCs and run smack into compatibility or usability roadblocks.

Pam’s clients are not alone : Since InfoWorld launched its petition drive on Jan. 14 to ask Microsoft to continue selling new XP licenses indefinitely alongside its Vista licenses, more than 75,000 people have signed on. And hundreds of people have commented — many with ferocious, sometimes unprintable passion. “Right now I have a laptop with crap Vista and I’m going to downgrade to XP because Vista sucks,” reads one such comment.

Where does all the vitriol come from?

IT managers and analysts suggest a range of reasons, some based on irrational fears and others based on rational reactions to disruptive changes.

Emotional Effects

“When we first deployed Vista, people told us it sucks, that it’s not as good as XP,” recalled Sumeeth Evans, IT director at Collegiate Housing Services, an 80-person college facilities management firm.

A month later, he surveyed the staff to see if their views had changed, and they had: “They said it was very good, that they were getting used to it. We asked what was different, and they said they originally didn’t like Vista because it was a change. That’s human nature.”

Microsoft’s overzealous schedule in replacing XP with Vista has exacerbated resistance to change, said Michael Silver , a research vice president at Gartner. The company had originally planned to discontinue XP sales on Dec. 31, 2007, just 11 months after Vista was made available to consumers and 14 months after it was made available to enterprises. The date for new license sales to end is now June 30.

In practice, XP’s consumer availability ended for many users even sooner — just six months after Vista’s release — since storefront retailers Best Buy and Circuit City and most computer manufacturers’ Web sites stopped selling XP-equipped computers in July 2007. Typically, Microsoft has given customers two years to make such a transition, Silver noted.

Burton Group executive strategist Ken Anderson suggested that the strong emotional identification with XP represented a fundamental shift in how people, including IT staff, now think of operating systems. They have become a familiar extension of what we do and how we work, thus not something want to change often. “When technology becomes part of you, you don’t want people to mess with it,” he said.

Anderson likened the reaction to XP’s impending demise to what happened in the 1980s when Coca-Cola replaced its classic Coke formula with New Coke, causing massive protests by customers who had no reason to change what they drank. The protests forced the company to bring back what we now call Coke Classic. “XP has come to the point of being Coke Classic,” he said, with Vista playing the role of New Coke.

The Further the Better

The Englewood (N.J.) Hospital Medical Center switched to Vista shortly after its enterprise release, since it had been in Microsoft’s early adopter program. Most users — mainly nurses and other medical staff — didn’t really notice the upgrade and had few complaints, noted Gary Wilhelm, the business and systems financial manager (a combination of CTO and CFO) at the 2,500-employee facility. That’s because they don’t really use the OS, but instead work directly in familiar applications that load when they sign in using their ID.

Capacitor manufacturer Kemet saw a similar ho-hum reaction from most of its staff, says Jeff Padgett, the global infrastructure manager. And for the same reason: Users have little direct interaction with the OS. But the staff did push back on Office 2007, whose ribbon interface is a departure from the previous versions. They rebelled to the degree that Padgett has delayed Office 2007 deployment and may not install it at all.

Back at the Englewood hospital, Wilhelm did hear anti-Vista grumbling from people in the administration department, who work more closely with the OS itself for file management and so on. And at Kemet, another group of hands-on users complained about the switch to Vista, noted Padgett: “The people who suffered the most were engineers and IT people.”

The phenomenon of hands-on users being the most resistant explains why so many small-business users and consultants have reacted so strongly against Vista, noted Gartner’s Silver.

Conversely, those enamored of the latest technology tend to be Vista enthusiasts, said David Fritzke, IT director at the YMCA Milwaukee, which has been adding Vista to its workforce as it buys new computers. “Some users bought Vista for home and then wanted it more quickly at work than we had initially planned to deploy it,” he said. Fritzke also found that younger users adapted to Vista more easily

source:pcworld

Security Pros: Kill ActiveX

Acivex

A wave of bugs in the plug-in technology used by Microsoft’s Internet Explorer (IE) browser has some security experts, including those at US-CERT, recommending that users disable all ActiveX controls.

The U. S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT), part of the federal government’s Department of Homeland Security, put it bluntly in advisories posted in the last two days: “US-CERT encourages users to disable ActiveX controls as described in the Securing Your Web Browser document,” the organization recommended.

  • Vulnerabilities

US-CERT’s advice was prompted by multiple vulnerabilities in high-profile ActiveX components used by members of the popular Facebook and MySpace social networks, as well as users of Yahoo Inc.’s music services.

Three new vulnerabilities in the photo uploader software used by both Facebook and MySpace were disclosed Monday by researcher Elezar Broad, who on Monday also posted sample attack code for a pair of critical bugs in Yahoo’s Music Jukebox. Last week, Broad had pinned the Facebook and MySpace ActiveX controls with two other flaws. All five of the Facebook/MySpace vulnerabilities originated with an ActiveX control developed by Aurigma Inc.

As the number of vulnerabilities mounted, security professionals began ringing the alarm. On Monday, for instance, Symantec analysts urged users to “use caution when browsing the Web” and told IT administrators to disable the relevant ActiveX controls by setting several “kill bits” in the Windows registry.

  • Aggressive Security Tips

US-CERT, however, offered up more aggressive advice as it recommended users move IE’s security level to the “High” setting, which completely disables all ActiveX controls.

Setting IE’s security level to ‘High’ disables all ActiveX controls. To get here, select Internet Options from the Tools menu, then click on the Security tab. Click Internet at the top for the zone, then move the slider up to the maximum.

“That’s the easiest way to protect yourself,” agreed Oliver Friedrichs, director of Symantec Corp.’s security response group. “But it can also have an adverse impact on your browsing experience.” A compromise, said Friedrichs, would be to disable “only those plug-ins that pose a current and imminent threat,” such as the flawed ActiveX controls used by Facebook, MySpace and Yahoo.

Disabling individual ActiveX controls, however, requires editing the Windows registry, a task too scary for most consumers to contemplate.

 source:pcworld

Groqit – Personal Inventory Management Pen

Groqit

Groqit helps you keep track of what you own, and avoid buying it twice, by simply reading the barcodes on items you own.

You can use a Groqit without a computer. Just read the barcodes on items you own and take the Groqit with you. It will tell you when you wand a barcode in a store whether or not it has it already in your own inventory.

As a Groqit owner you can use the groqit.com website to translate barcodes, lookup items by author or title and store a backup copy of your personal inventory online (just in case) for free.

The Groqit is avilable from the groqit.com website for $95.

source :reuters

Apple unveils higher capacity iPod, iPhone models

Ipod-iphone

aid on Tuesday it has introduced models of its popular iPod touch handheld computer and iPhone with double the memory available in previous versions.

Apple, which previously said it had sold more than 4 million iPhones since its introduction last June, says the iPhone will now also sell with 16 gigabytes of memory.

Apple has doubled the capacity of both its iPhone and iPod Touch allowing new customers to spend $100 more and get twice the storage for music, movies, pictures, and podcasts than available with previous models. Introduced today, the 32GB iPod Touch sells for $499 and the 16GB iPhone goes for $499.

Pricing on existing iPod and iPhone models stays the same. But if you’re in the market for a new iPhone or iPod Touch, spending $100 more to double your capacity is a pretty good deal.

Of course the larger capacities may rile some existing iPhone and iPod Touch users as was the case when Apple dropped the price of the iPhone.

Could this be seen as another stab at the early adopters? Of course that was not Apple’s intentions, but that is an obvious consequence of an upgrade of this magnitude less than a year after the initial release. But it’s okay, early adopters, pull that knife out of your back and listen to what Apple has to say is the reason for the upgrade.

Greg Joswiak, Apple’s vice president of iPod and iPhone product marketing said in the release, “For some users, there’s never enough memory.” This is definitely true, especially with music collections shifting completely digital, but Greg, it still stings for those of us picked up a 16GB iPod Touch merely months ago to have a new bigger and better model become available.

It’s kind of funny to think about it, but who would have thought the world would get so upset over a product improvement? Isn’t that what companies are supposed to be doing?

source:pcworld

New Kodak Chips Could Improve Cell Phone Cameras

Kodak

Photography company Eastman Kodak Co. on Monday introduced chips that can boost the picture-taking power in mobile phones, and help manufacturers cut development costs.

Kodak says its KAC-05020 Image Sensor is the world’s first 1.4 micron, 5-megapixel device that allows capture of high quality images in small cameras, with quality that equals what is available from current devices using larger, 1.75 micron pixel designs.

“It will help manufacturers reduce their costs…because of the size – you can put more chips onto one wafer, for the same amount of money,” said Fas Mosleh, CMOS Sensors Marketing Director at Kodak. “This is the kind of technology that can help upgrade all camera phones to a real camera.”

The announcement is the latest from Kodak’s growing patent licensing arm, which has become a critical contributor to its profitability as the company emerges from an expensive transition into a producer of digital imaging and printing systems. Kodak expects to earn up to $350 million a year from royalties and related revenue through 2011.

“It could be very well happening that one of those years will be a lot larger than that,” said Antonio Perez, Kodak’s chief executive, on a conference call last week. “It may be another year, a lot smaller than that. We see significant legs to our program.”

Industry analysts have looked skeptically at Kodak’s rosy outlook, noting that few details have been delivered on its patent plans, and that incremental licensing contracts are hard to count on in the long term.

Still, Kodak has introduced some products from its patent portfolio, including its own consumer inkjet printers, which it says makes longer lasting pictures. In addition, last year it unveiled camera sensor technology that significantly increases sensitivity to light, allowing users to potentially take pictures in very low light.

Key to the performance of this new sensor is the “Kodak Truesense CMOS Pixel,” a reworking of the fundamental design and architecture of traditional CMOS pixels, the company says. A CMOS (complementary metal oxide semiconductor) sensor is less expensive to manufacture, while consuming less energy and performing more functions on a single chip.

Manufacturing customers interested in the design will likely get a chance to sample it in the second quarter of this year, but devices with the technology are not likely to hit store shelves until 2009, Kodak says.

source:pcworld 

Cell Phones No Cancer Risk

Cellphone-cacer

Drinking coffee, using mobile phones or having breast implants is unlikely to cause cancer, according to a risk ranking system devised by an Australian cancer specialist to debunk popular myths.

The cancer risk assessment reaffirms smoking, alcohol and exposure to sunlight as leading risk factors, but allays concerns about coffee, mobile phones, deodorants, breast implants and water with added fluoride.

The five-point system created by University of New South Wales Professor Bernard Stewart lists the risk of cancer from proven and likely, to inferred, unknown or unlikely.

“Our tool will help establish if the level of risk is high, say on a par with smoking, or unlikely such as using deodorants, artificial sweeteners, drinking coffee,” Stewart said.

He found active smokers and ex-smokers to be the most at risk, although the risk is reduced for people who quit smoking.

Drinking alcohol was also a high risk factor, particularly for people who also smoke, although Stewart said no specific type of alcoholic drink was most strongly to blame.

Drinking chlorinated water and using a mobile phone was far less likely to cause cancer, Stewart said, although the risks associated with the long-term use of mobile phones had not been fully established.

He said there little risk from drinking coffee, using deodorants, drinking fluoridated water and having breast implants or dental fillings.

Stewart’s research was published in the latest edition of the Mutation Research Reviews journal to mark world cancer day on Monday.

 source:pcworld

Google Releases Code to Make Social Data Portable

Google

Google has unveiled a new API that it hopes will make data created by users of social networks portable.

The Social Graph API makes information about the connections people have with each other on different Web sites easily available, said Brad Fitzpatrick, a Google software engineer. Once the data is available, developers can solve the problem of requiring users to search for and add friends to new social applications and sites every time they join them, noted Fitzpatrick in a blog post.

“[The new API] makes information about the public connections between people on the Web easily available and useful,” he wrote. “You can make it easy for users to bring their existing social connections into a new website and as a result, users will spend less time rebuilding their social networks and more time giving your app the love it deserves.”

This is better than asking users to search for and add their friends – because they likely will tire of the chore if its required for very social network, he added.

The API, unveiled late last week, crawls the Web to find publicly declared relationships between people’s accounts, just like Google crawls the Web for links between pages, Fitzpatrick explained. But instead of returning links to HTML documents, the API returns data structures representing the social relationships discovered. When a user signs up for a new application, a developer can use the API to remind them who they’re friends with on other sites and ask them if they want to be friends on the new site, Google said.

Social Graph marks Google’s latest effort to make content created on social networks more easily shareable across the Web. Last month, Google and Facebook both announced plans to join the Data Portability Project, which is working on standards to allow user-generated content to be more easily shared among social networking sites.

Josh Catone, a blogger at Read Write Web, noted that the Google API could be an important tool in the data portability movement because “it allows users to find and evaluate their public social connections and take control of that information. As more and more users are beginning to suffer the effects of ‘social networking fatigue,’ anything that helps automate and make easier the process of adding your existing connections to a new network is a useful tool.”

 source:pcworld