High Tech - News, Reviews and Tests
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Nantero to roll out Carbon Nanotube memory in 2007Feb 3, 2006 - in News
Sometime next year, you may be able to throw out your old memory chips and replace them with new faster and cooler carbon nanotube (CNT) memory. Greg Schmergel, co-founder, president and CEO of Nantero told TG Daily that his company is on track to bring drop-in memory sometime next year.
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Sophos' Graham Cluley: The end of the widespread virus era is at handFeb 3, 2006 - in Reviews
As the threat of serious damage from what was supposed to have been a widespread outbreak of the Nyxem virus, subsides, Sophos' senior consultant Graham Cluley spoke with TG Daily about the changing nature of malware. The new threats, he said, aren't coming from the "Kama Sutra" viruses of the world, but instead from narrower, more targeted, and perhaps more ingenious sources.
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China leads rise in international patent filingsFeb 3, 2006 - in News
A burst of international patent applications from China, Korea and Japan boosted global filings to a record high last year, the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) said on Friday.
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DDRdrive uses PCIe to increase speed of mainstream solid state disksFeb 3, 2006 - in News
Gigabyte's i-Ram and HyperOs Systems' HyperDrive III solid state disk recently gave us a first impression that solid state storage is making its way into the mainstream: And there is more to come in the near future: DDRdrive will soon release a PCI Express device that uses external power to ensure the memory will not lose its stored data.
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Sophos: Zero damage reports from Nyxem 'February 3' virusFeb 3, 2006 - in News
Sophos Labs' senior technology consultant Graham Cluley told TG Daily this morning that the total number of incident reports called in to his company, as a result of the impact of the Nyxem/'Kama Sutra' mass mailing worm in Europe, was zero.
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Teac launches 4 GB and 8 GB 1" hard drivesFeb 3, 2006 - in News
Teac on February 2 (in the US) announced the launch of external 1" portable USB 2.0 hard disk drives in 4 GB and 8 GB capacities.
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Corning moves to produce LCD glass substrates in ChinaFeb 3, 2006 - in News
Corning on February 1 announced that its board of directors has approved funding for the establishment of an LCD glass facility to be located in China.
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The TeraByte Drives Redefine External StorageFeb 3, 2006 - in Reviews
TeraByte drives do not need to be slim and sexy, because their capacity of almost 1,000 GB speaks for itself. We looked under the hood of two amazing storage mammoths by LaCie and Maxtor.
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Kama Sutra e-mail virus primed to strike on Feb 3Feb 2, 2006 - in News
Important information stored on home computers could be wiped clean by an e-mail virus called Kama Sutra that is timed to strike today.
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Stratos offers satellite-based broadband serviceFeb 2, 2006 - in News
Satellite phones have been around for years, but Stratos adds a twist to satellite communication: The company offers satellite broadband access in most places of the world. Using a compact satellite terminal weighing two pounds, users can surf the web, upload video or even broadcast the news from remote parts of the world at up to 492 kbps (downstream).
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British Navy spoils sailors with iPod docking stationsFeb 2, 2006 - in News
The HMS Daring, costing almost $1.1 Billion USdollars, is the British Royal Navy's newest Destroyer. The 150 meter long ship is filled with high-tech armament - but not all of the technology is targeted at the enemy: Sailors will be able to plug in their iPods into docking stations available in almost every crew cabin.
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Samsungs intros 100 GB, 120 GB 2.5" hard disksFeb 2, 2006 - in News
Samsung today announced two new 2.5" PATA and SATA aimed at the notebook and blade server market.
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Symantec readies security subscription serviceFeb 2, 2006 - in News
Symantec expects to begin offering a new consumer security service similar to Microsoft's Windows OneCare Live by September of this year, a company executive said this week.
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In loving memory of our friend Claire GoodhueFeb 2, 2006 - in News
We started TG Publishing in California in August, 2001. Coming off of the worst breakdown in the tech sector; we were suffering from the hangover of the Internet Bubble bursting, and we had very little idea how the company was going to survive and whether we could keep the team intact. It was a very difficult time. In those early days, one person went out of her way to help us more than anyone else. Her name was Claire Goodhue.
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Nvidia's GeForce 7800 GS breathes life into AGPFeb 2, 2006 - in News
If your computer system is potent enough for your current needs and doesn't justify the upgrade to PCI Express, there is still a way to keep the graphics power up to date: Nvidia today released its 7800 GS graphics processor for AGP-based graphics cards that promise a speed upgrade over 6800 GT models.
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Microsoft: No delays to Vista Beta 2, 2006 releaseFeb 2, 2006 - in News
Clearly denying press reports that Microsoft would not be releasing a Beta 2 edition of Windows Vista, a company spokesperson yesterday told TG Daily that comments made last week by co-president Jim Allchin actually referred to a change in plan, but not a scrapping or skipping of the beta system.
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The GeForce 7800GS Shows AGP Ain't Dead YetFeb 2, 2006 - in Reviews
For those of you who thought next-generation graphics meant trashing your AGP setup and investing in a PCIe motherboard and card, think again. NVIDIA is not about to let AGP die yet and has paved an upgrade path for AGP graphics with the launch of its GeForce 7800GS card.
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Gates: Web site censorship doesn't workFeb 2, 2006 - in News
Microsoft chairman Bill Gates said government attempts to censor Web sites or blogs will fail, since banned information can get out in defiance of official efforts.
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Microsoft updates Windows Server 2003Feb 2, 2006 - in News
Microsoft is making the second release of Windows Server 2003 available. Among the highlights, it provides new bells and whistles in areas supporting branch office function, identity management, virtualization, and data storage.
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Adobe may not deliver native Intel Mac support until 2007Feb 2, 2006 - in News
Adobe Systems on Wednesday said it has no plans to re-release its current applications as Universal binaries that can run natively on both Intel- and PowerPC-based systems.
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Readers' Responses to Strip Out The Fans, Add 8 Gallons of Cooking OilFeb 2, 2006 - in Reviews
Your response to Strip Out The Fans, Add 8 Gallons of Cooking Oil was amazing. Thousands of readers shared their enthusiasm and sent tips on how to optimize our setup. So here, without further ado, is an addendum with some often-surprising feedback.
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JVC and NICT develop 8MP robotic vision systemFeb 1, 2006 - in News
JVC has partnered up with Japan's National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NIICT) to develop a newer and more compact robotic imaging system. An eight megapixel color sensor acts as the core of a new system that JVC says is, "close to the limit of the human vision". The sensor is 1/18 the weight and 1/19 the size of a previous sensor developed by JVC.
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Intel to discontinue some Itanium 2s, Xeon MPsFeb 1, 2006 - in News
The Register learned this afternoon that Intel has informed some clients that it will be discontinuing eight classes of lower-end Itanium 2 processors, and three classes of Xeon MP processors.
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Art Lebedev to take pre-orders for OLED mini keyboardFeb 1, 2006 - in News
The famous Optimus OLED keyboard may actually be coming to the market in May, but only in a miniature version for now. Dubbed the Optimus mini three, the keyboard will have three keys with miniature OLED screens on top.
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Live Labs emphasizes the 'search' in Microsoft ResearchFeb 1, 2006 - in Reviews
Microsoft's announcement last week of the founding of Live Labs could revolutionize the way the company's brightest minds communicate with its most capable engineers. Or, just as likely, it could be another way to refocus energy and attention toward beefing up the MSN Search engine, and bolstering its competitive position against Google.
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Software to outsmart Internet censorship in ChinaFeb 1, 2006 - in News
With all the publicity Google's China business received over the past week, it only has been a matter of time until software promises to circumvent censored search results.
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NEC, Sony and Toshiba team to develop 45 nm processFeb 1, 2006 - in News
NEC, Sony and Toshiba agreed to collaborate on the development of a 45 nm process technology for semiconductors. The companies hope that the miniaturization will result in higher performance and functionality as well as lower power consumption of integrated circuits.
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Vendors form collaborative to push AJAXFeb 1, 2006 - in News
The market for AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML), a technique for developing interactive Web applications, is heating up with the announcement today that several vendors, including IBM, BEA, Borland, Novell, Oracle and Red Hat, have formed a collaborative to help push AJAX in the open-source community.
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Security vendors team against spywareFeb 1, 2006 - in News
A group of security vendors today announced they have joined forces to reduce confusion surrounding identifying and eliminating spyware.
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Peugeot Citroen to sell diesel hybrids in 2010Feb 1, 2006 - in News
French carmaker PSA Peugeot Citroen on Tuesday unveiled two demonstration vehicles powered by diesel-hybrid engines and said it wanted to sell tens of thousands of them annually from 2010.
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