Archive for February 9th, 2009

BenQ Joybook Lite U101 Review

February 9th, 2009

BenQ Joybook Lite U101 Review
The BenQ Joybook Lite we reviewed was imported from Taiwan. BenQ says that if the system offered in the U.S. If the BenQ Joybook Lite U101 in the U.S., we will in this review. With only about every 10-inch mini-notebook has the same processor, RAM, and operating system, competitors to find some way of differentiation.

BenQ, the newest player in this market, hopes to do by creating a little visual flair. While the BenQ Joybook Lite U101 has a run-of-the-mill Netbook information, including an Intel Atom processor, 1.5 GB of RAM and Windows XP Home, and sometimes the system is an interesting, artistic covers and a 10-inch , 16:9 screen (the first on a Netbook to date). However, its keyboard tight and short battery life is an agreement for some circuit breakers.

iStuff Memory Foam Laptop Sleeve

February 9th, 2009

iStuff Memory Foam Laptop SleeveIf you protect your laptop and want to keep it in great conditions it is difficult to find as comfortable or durable as the case iStuff Laptop Sleeve. Not only that it absorbs all the shocks, if you happen to drop, but it looks remarkably well because of the powerful black-and-white contrast.

The iStuff Laptop Sleeve is versatile – you can carry it on its own, but also sleek and slim enough for a pocket ora bag

The iStuff Laptop Sleeve is perfect for your laptop – from high quality thick neoprene and built for durability. Slot in your laptop in the bag, and it remains comfortable and warm from the memory foam. The sleeve will also protect your laptop from any knocks and bumps it could be that during the working day as well as the recording on your laptop in the form.

This laptop sleeve is sleek, protective and a bargain!

Dell Netbook Ditches Everything to Lower Price

February 9th, 2009

Dell Netbook Ditches Everything to Lower Price

Netbook have a “race to the bottom”. If you have any doubt that the winner will be the company that manages the cheapest, lowest specced machine, which is still shifting units, then stop. Their uncertainty is assuaged, massaged away from Dell seductively inexpensive mini 9n.

What does the “N” stands for? “Nothing,” of course. The 9n has stripped from memory, storage and web cam, in a blind, slow and easy to fill your computer with only 512 MB of RAM and a 4 GB Solid State Drive. My MacBook Pro with 4 GB of RAM alone.

Nevertheless, it is cheap, and if you look in this new-fangled “Cloud Computing” companies, this might be for you. In fact, the decent keyboard alone would be enough to sell. That and his sweet, Mac-beating screen.

Bandai brings netbook trend to Japanese toddlers

February 9th, 2009

Bandai brings netbook trend to Japanese toddlers

The tendency to netbooks has invaded the realm of Japanese children with the launch of Bandai’s new Gachapin & Mukku Netbooks. Gachapin and Mukku are cutesy characters on Japanese television, but the hardware of their sporting icon faces little kid stuff. Within the Netbook you will find a 120-gigabyte hard drive, 1 gigabyte of RAM, wireless, a webcam and a 1Seg television tuner. While that might seem powerful as a toy for a child, all parents think this is a toy purchase.

The Gachapin & Mukku Netbook goes on sale in March.

Via Bandai

Samsung introduces Lapfit monitors

February 9th, 2009

Samsung introduces Lapfit monitors

Lapfit Samsung monitors are here to solve a problem that most laptop owners are using the secondary monitor. Behold, a laptop-integrated display usually sits only a few centimeters above the desk. This can lead to an unnatural panning effect when you try to move the mouse or drag a window from your laptop’s display to the higher secondary level. Samsung solution is the new low-profile monitors that are at the same height as your (desktop-replacement-sized), laptop displays. The 19 – (LD190G) and 22-inch (LD220G) UbiSync Lapfit monitors offer a 10-30 degree slope, a 1360 x 768 (16:9) Pixel Resolution, 4ms response, and a 20000:1 dynamic contrast. Gut, a physical solution to a problem solved long ago of a laptop, or from your laptop operating system – Sammy way.

via I4U