Archive for February, 2008
MSI ECOlution Motherboard

Everyone knows that computer motherboards tend to generate a whole lot of heat, so why not harness all the heat generated to push coolers which will thereupon keep the system cool for better performance? that sounds like a novel concept, where MSI has come up with the ECOlution motherboard in order to harness the capability of heat, transforming it into kinetic energy that will soon after ability the chipset’s cooler. I guess that is a pretty self-moving solution, considering when the motherboard is cooled down adequate, the cooler won’t have any more kinetic energy from heat and stop functioning until it is hot sufficient inside again. Hopefully the accessory on the motherboard won’t generate too much noise.
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Original post by Ubergizmo
Microsoft Slashes Vista Prices

Microsoft has decided to cut the price of its Ultimate and Premium editions of Windows Vista so that they will be able to move more copies. that comes after Vista Service Pack 1 folded to see folks rush to computer stores for an upgrade, sticking to the good old Windows XP at that point in day. Microsoft hopes that such a price cut will be able to stimulate sluggish sales figures. The following will be the revised price.
- Windows Vista Ultimate – $319 (from $399)
- Windows Vista Upgrade – $219 (from $259)
- Windows Vista Premium Upgrade – $129 (from $159)
Will these price cuts form you rethink your decision?
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Original post by Ubergizmo
Transcend JetFlash 32GB V60

Transcend has just announced its newest USB flash drive that carries a whopping 32GB of storage space wherever you go, thanks to the JetFlash V60. It measures roughly the size of an AA battery and comes complete with a suite of tools such as Website AutoLogin, PC-Lock, Mobile Favorites, Secret-Zip encryption, notes Backup and Online Update. It plays nice with Windows, Mac and Linux platforms. So far the JetFlash 32GB V60 has been slated to retail for $194 before taxes.
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Original post by Ubergizmo
DVICO TViX HD M-6500A

DVICO of Korea has just rolled out its next generation multimedia player known as the TViX HD M-6500A. Features of that set top box includes :-
- Sigma SMP8635 processor
- HDMI 1.3a
- SATA hard drive
- Support for MP3, WMA, PCM, DTS, WMV9 and WMV-HD, DIVX, XVid, HDV and MKV files formats
- Support for Network Attached Storage(NAS)
- Gigabit Ethernet connectivity
This model will come equipped with a HDTV receiver, bringing high definition goodness smack into the middle of your living room. Better invent certain you have a TV that’s up to par.
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Original post by Ubergizmo
iRiver E100 To Hit Europe

iRiver will be releasing the E100 portable media player in Europe next week, bringing the following to the table :-
- 2.4″ 262k color display at 320 x 240 resolution
- microSD memory card slot
- FM radio with recording
- Video playback
- Line-in connectivity
- A pair of 1W speakers
- Support for MP3, WMA, OGG, ASF and FLAC audio formats
- Support for MPEG-4, WMV9 and XviD video formats
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Original post by Ubergizmo
Air Force ‘Big Brother’ Blocks Blogs, substance Sites
A large organization decides that blogs cut productivity, supply misleading data and could compromise safety measure. It discontinues access for its personnel, even though data is a key weapon in competition. The question is whether that is a smart policy for a large organization, particularly the U.S. Air Force.
According to a report that week in Wired, the Air Force is eliminating access for its troops to virtually any site that uses the term “blog.” Sites are plus being blocked considering of a negative review of subject matter by supervising personnel. The move comes, according to the publication, as the Cyber Command of the Air Force Network Operations Center (AFNOC) takes by control of what sites Air Force personnel can visit, a responsibility previously borne by each major command.
Block First, thereupon Review
Maj. Henry Schott of AFNOC is quoted by Wired as saying that the Air Force personnel can still access “primary, official-use sources,” such as established media like The New York Times. The basic concept is that non-legitimate sources of news shouldn’t be read during work instance considering of credibility, shield risks, and loss of productivity.
The Air Force will block other, less-established sources on the basis that they supply less credible data. The policy, according to one Cyber Command spokesperson, is to “block first and soon after review exceptions.” that means that Air Force personnel posting to or reading from sites that might relate to technical or military subjects have found themselves caught in the filters.
The tools used by the Air Force have included Secure Computing’s SmartFilter software, running the Web defense Appliance platform from Blue Coat software. According to a press release on Blue Coat’s site, SmartFilter’s worldly control list “continuously categorizes millions of Web sites into subject matter groups, including pornography, gambling and MP3.”
The Air Force has additionally banned some sites…
Original post by Top Tech News
Judge Questions ask to Shut Down Wikileaks
The latest stage in the ongoing saga of Julius Baer v. Wikileaks was to take place Friday daylight as a federal judge considered whether to extend a temporary injunction against the whistle-blowing Web site.
The case started in early February when the Swiss banking conglomerate Julius Baer asked the U.S. District Court in San Francisco to take down the Wikileaks.org domain. Baer said Wikileaks had posted “stolen and forged bank records” provided by a “disgruntled ex-employee who has engaged in a harassment and terror campaign.”
Wikileaks says the documents are five to 10 years old and show the bank was setting up shell structures to funnel money through the Cayman Islands.
Judicial Freak-Out
Judge Jeffrey White issued a “ex parte” permanent injunction requiring Wikileaks’ domain registrar, DynaDot, to “disable the wikileaks.org domain name” and prevent it from pointing to any Web site other than a “blank park page.” The judge additionally issued a temporary restraining order against Wikileaks itself, blocking it from “displaying, posting, publishing, distributing, linking to” or providing info on how to access the documents.
Wikileaks — which says it is “developing an uncensorable Wikipedia for untraceable mass document leaking and analysis” — protested that the injunctions amounted to “prior restraint” of the press — the most offensive restriction of the First Amendment. Wikileaks compared the court’s orders to injunctions against The New York Times in the landmark Pentagon Papers case. These orders are the “equivalent of forcing the Times’ printers to print blank pages and its ability company to turn off press potential,” it said.
Hardly, said Eric Goldman, director of Santa Clara University Law School’s High-Tech Law Center. “I would put it in the bucket of judicial freak-out, but we run into those every day,” Goldman said in a telephone interview. “This is a judge who just doesn’t like…
Original post by Top Tech News










