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Laptop Magazine, PC World, CNet and ComputerShopper have reviewed Hewlett-Packard’s new
netbook - the HP Mini 1000. The reviewed 2.25-pound Mini 1000 features a 10.2-inch 1024×600
display, Intel’s Atom processor, 512MB or 1GB of DDR2 memory, up to 16GB of solid state drive
storage or a 60GB hard drive, a built-in web camera, 3-cell battery, [...]
Saturday VentureBeat on Apple's 2008 ad budget: nearly a half billion dollars Microsoft CEO Ballmer
ordered to testify in 'Vista' case Microsoft, Rob Enderle, and their conflicting perceptions of
reality Microsoft hires away key search VP from Yahoo DigiTimes reports Fujitsu introduces first
netbook series Microsoft announces...
centerimg title="Netbook Hello Kitty" style="MARGIN: 0px" alt="Netbook Hello Kitty"
src="http://www.ubergizmo.com/photos/2008/11/hk-netbook.jpg" border="0" //centerbr /
pC'était inévitable et c'était une question de temps avant que Hello Kitty
n'entre dans le monde des netbooks, et c'est arrivé, grâce à Onkyo au Japon. Le
a href="http://www.geekstuff4u.com/notebooks/ultralight/hello-kitty-c1.html"netbook Hello Kitty/a
sera basé sur le modèle C101K3W, mais avec un design Hello Kitty. Hey, quand vous
démarrez le netbook, il aura même son propre papier peint Hello Kitty, mais à
part ça, les spécifications sont assez similaires aux autres netbooks, incluant :- /p
p ul liProcesseur Intel Atom N270 1.6GHz/li li1Go de RAM/li liChipset Intel 945GSE Express/li
liDisque dur de 120Go/li/ul p/pIl sera disponible en quantité limitée au Japon, alors
attendez-vous à voir le prix grimper avec le temps. pmap name="google_ad_map_081122121548"
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width="1"/
Dell announced the new Dell Inspiron Mini 12 end of October. The 12.1 inch (biggest netbook
screen with 1280x800px resolution) Atom powered netbook is now shipping from the Dell shop. Not
only that, you can choose your Dell Mini 9 and Dell Mini 12 in 9 ...
There's been a serious dearth of Hello
Kitty-branded products these days, but the dry-spell is thankfully at an end, with the arrival
of the Hello Kitty C1. The crazy cat's apparently first-ever netbook is (as you can see in the
photo) quite a looker, and it's packing a 1.6GHz Intel Atom N270 CPU with 1GB DDR2 SDRAM, a 945 GSE
Express chipset and a 120GB hard drive. The 10.1-inch netbook's also got two USB ports, a 1.3
megapixel webcam and WiFi. It's going to cost you 890 smackers to make this yours, but the
sassiness alone kind of makes it worth it, doesn't it?
div align="center"a href="http://www.geekstuff4u.com/hello-kitty-c1.html"img vspace="4" hspace="4"
border="0" alt=""
src="http://www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2008/11/hellokittynetbook_270x206.jpg" //a/div
div align="left"There's been a serious dearth of a
href="http://www.engadget.com/tag/HelloKitty/"Hello Kitty/a-branded products these days, but the
dry-spell is thankfully at an end, with the arrival of the Hello Kitty C1. The crazy cat's
apparently first-ever netbook is (as you can see in the photo) quite a looker, and it's packing a
1.6GHz Intel Atom N270 CPU with 1GB DDR2 SDRAM, a 945 GSE Express chipset and a 120GB hard drive.
The 10.1-inch netbook's also got two USB ports, a 1.3 megapixel webcam and WiFi. It's going to cost
you 890 smackers to make this yours, but the sassiness alone kind of makes it worth it, doesn't
it?br /br /[Via a
href="http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-10105765-1.html?part=rssamp;tag=feedamp;subj=Crave"CNET/a]/divpFiled
under: a href="http://www.engadget.com/category/laptops/" rel="tag"Laptops/a/pp
style="padding:5px;background:#ddd;border:1px solid #ccc;clear:both;"a
href="http://www.engadget.com/2008/11/22/hello-kitty-c1-netbook-packs-a-lotta-tude-into-a-small-package/"Hello
Kitty C1 netbook packs a lotta 'tude into a small package/a originally appeared on a
href="http://www.engadget.com"Engadget/a on Sat, 22 Nov 2008 08:37:00 EST. Please see our a
href="http://www.weblogsinc.com/feed-terms/"terms for use of feeds/a./ph6 style="clear: both;
padding: 8px 0 0 0; height: 2px; font-size: 1px; border: 0; margin: 0; padding: 0;"/h6a
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Oh mon dieu ! Ça y est, l’invasion va commencer. Jusqu’à
présent nous avions été épargnés, mais c’était
sans compter l’intervention de Sotec qui vient d’annoncer le lancement
d’une édition spéciale du netbook DC101…
À l’effigie du chat Hello Kitty. Le châssis est
gris, mais il ne passera certainement pas inaperçu puisque le chat Kawaii et son nom y ont
été inscrits afin de rappeler à tous qu’il s’agit d’un
modèle rare. Tellement rare d’ailleurs qu’il est vendu 890Â $ (au
Japon uniquement). Ça fait cher pour du «Â low cost » tout
de même !
Pour rappel, le DC101 est doté d’un écran à
rétro éclairage par LED d’une diagonale de 10.1 pouces offrant une
résolution de 1024 x 600 pixels. Il est propulsé par processeur Intel Atom N270
cadencé à 1,6 GHz, 1 Go de mémoire vive, un disque dur de 120 Go à
5400 tours/minute ainsi qu’une webcam 1.3 million de pixels. Et vous pourrez aussi compter
sur trois ports USB, un lecteur de cartes Memory Stick / MMC / SD, sans oublier le
contrôleur WiFi b/g.
Source http://www.reseaux-telecoms.net/ Le premier pack netbook avec forfait de données
illimité de Bouygues Telecom est issu d'un accord avec Lenovo. L'opérateur mobile
propose un nouveau forfa...
Apregrave;s le smartphone, quoi de plus normal que de trouver un ultra-portable griffeacute;
HelloKitty ? Allons-y donc, puisque Onkyo nous propose le C101K3W, un laquo;spin-offraquo; du C1.
Coc...
Dell has been known to provide consumers with a delectable array of colorful options as far as
their regular laptops are concerned, and it seems that they are bringing this same approach to
their netbook line. Dell has just announced that they’re adding Cherry Red and
Pretty Pink to the colored iterations for their Inspiron Mini 9 and
Inspiron Mini 12, and they’ve likewise commissioned Tristan Eaton, avant garde toy
designer, to create three exclusive designs for the Inspiron Mini
line.
While this added design option definitely provides more personalization to the common netbook, is
it worth the additional $25 (pink and red) to $50 (Tristan Eaton designs) charge? Personally, I
have no qualms regarding the more expensive price of the Tristan Eaton creations, but the
additional $25 charge for the ordinary red and pink is utterly ridiculous.
I just installed VMWare Fusion on my Hackintosh it told me I had to turn off by holding down the
power button for a few seconds.
I did so, got to the grey mac screen and it told me again. So I did it again. Now I am stuck at the
apple grey screen with just the logo (no spinner).
Samsung lance son premier netbook, le NC10. Positionné comme modèle haut de gamme,
ces caractéristiques sont classiques : processeur Atom à 1,6Ghz, écran 10,2
pouces en 1024×600 pixels, disque dur de 160Go, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Ethernet etc. le tout
sous Windows XP. Les points forts de ce modèle sont sa batterie 6 cellules qui lui offre
une très large autonomie de plus de 6 heures et un clavier réellement confortable.
This week I got my hands on LG's brand new and recently released LG X110 Netbook with embedded
HSDPA which I want to test as an alternative to the HTC Shift UMPC. Since the LG X110 sports a
massive 160 GB hard disk drive, I planned to partition it into two drives, C: and D: which I do
with most of my PCs and Notebooks anyway. While C: holds the operating system (in this case
Netbook-typical Windows XP only) and programs, D: is used to store all my documents. The benefit is
that I don't have to take care about my documents in case I have to re-install the operating system
because D: isn't formatted or deleted but C: only. However, since the LG X110 is a typical Netbook,
it doesn't features an inbuilt optical drive which makes installation of an OS a little bit more
difficult. pp [ba
href="http://www.theunwired.net/?item=thought-install-windows-xp-on-netbooks-from-your-windows-mobile-smartphone"Permalink/a/b]
p(c) 2008 by a href="http://www.theunwired.net"the::unwired/a - All Rights Reserved pa
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/theunwired?a=jSnBrs"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/theunwired?i=jSnBrs" border="0"/img/a/pdiv class="feedflare" a
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/theunwired?a=sZw3n"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/theunwired?i=sZw3n" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/theunwired?a=ENRqn"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/theunwired?i=ENRqn" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/theunwired?a=ccxiN"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/theunwired?i=ccxiN" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/theunwired/~4/460967792" height="1" width="1"/
centerimg title="Hello Kitty Netbook" style="MARGIN: 0px" alt="Hello Kitty Netbook"
src="http://www.ubergizmo.com/photos/2008/11/hk-netbook.jpg" border="0" //centerbr / pIt was
inevitable and a matter of time before Hello Kitty makes her way to the world of netbooks, and the
time has arrived, courtesy of Onkyo from Japan. The a
href="http://www.geekstuff4u.com/notebooks/ultralight/hello-kitty-c1.html"Hello Kitty netbook/a
will be based on the C101K3W model, albeit with a Hello Kitty-centric design this time round. Heck,
when you boot up the netbook, it will even come with its own Hello Kitty wallpaper, but otherwise
the specifications are pretty much similar to that of other netbooks, including :- /p p ul liIntel
Atom N270 1.6GHz processor/li li1GB RAM/li liIntel 945GSE Express chipset/li li120GB hard
drive/li/ul p/pIt will be available in limited quantities in Japan, so expect these to spiral up in
price in due time. pPermalink: a
href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2008/11/hello_kitty_netbook.html"Hello Kitty Netbook/a
from a href="http://www.ubergizmo.com"Ubergizmo/a | a href="http://www.uberbargain.com/"Good
deals/a | Hot: a
href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2008/11/blackberry_storm_review.html"BlackBerry
Storm/a/p pmap name="google_ad_map_081121082152" area shape="rect"
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This is my review of the Acer Aspire
One, a popular netbook with some fairly typical specs: a 1.6 Ghz Intel Atom CPU, 1 GB RAM, an
8.9 inch screen, a 120 GB hard drive, 802.11b/g, a 6 cell battery, and running Windows XP Home.
Pricing varies - I paid around $439 for this, but Acer has changed the product slightly - they're
now shipping it with a 160 GB hard drive, and there are several version of the Aspire One on the
market, including an entry-level unit with Linux. I shot this review over a month ago, so keep
that in mind when I mention not having the MSI Wind yet.
I should mention that my primary complaint about this netbook has apparently been addressed in
the form of an updated BIOS: I found the fact that the fan was constantly running at high RPMs to
be quite irritating, but I've been told that a new BIOS update addresses this issue by slowing
down the fan when it's not needed. If that issue has been properly addressed, I'd have no trouble
recommending this netbook to someone looking for one - it offers a lot of value for the dollar.
Comme promis,
Epsonvient d’officialiser et de lancer au Japon son premier
netbook, le dénommé Endeavor Na01 mini. Mais
malheureusement, l’appareil se révèle être terriblement commun. En
fait, rien ne lui permet de se démarquer de ses concurrents : son apparence est trop
commune, ses caractéristiques techniques sont banales et son prix de 46 800 yens (380
€) ne soulèvera pas les foules… En dehors d’une surprise,
le Endeavor s’annonce donc comme un ultraportable « moyen », qui n’a
pratiquement aucune chance de percer sur le marché de plus en plus encombré des
netbooks.
Pour rappel, le Endeavor Na01 mini est équipé d’un
écran 10.2 pouces d’une résolution de 1024 x 600 pixels, d’un
processeur Intel Atom N270 cadencé à 1.6 GHz, du chipset graphique Intel 945GSE
Express, de 1 Go de RAM, d’un disque dur de 160 Go à 5400 tours/minute, du WiFi
802.11 b/g, d’un port Ethernet et de l’impérissable système
d’exploitation Windows XP Home SP3. L’autonomie annoncée est de 3h15, pour un
poids total de 1.28 kg.
pimg src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/11/phenom2.jpg" width="800"
height="370" style="display:block;float:none;" /From AMD's upcoming a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5086703/amds-upcoming-conesus-netbook-chip-wont-stoop-to-mid-levels"chip/a
a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5045354/amd-processor-roadmap-leaked-online-quad+core-deneb-phenoms-in-january"roadmaps/a
we know the Phenom II is due out early next year, and it's AMD's second 45nm chip, but in a recent
show and tell session AMD demonstrated the "overhead" built into the chip by overclocking one to a
crazy 5GHz. It did take a special CO2 sublimation cooling unit that carries the danger of
suffocating you if you use it in a small room, but what the hey. With a liquid nitrogen cooling
system the chip was easily pushed way over 5 gigs. You may think "yeah, I could overclock anything
with that stuff!" but it should be noted that with fairly normal high-end air-cooling the chips
could get up to 4GHz. It'll be interesting to watch AMD's battle with Intel's i7 play out. [a
href="http://www.pcper.com/comments.php?nid=6455"PCPerspective/a]/p br style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=16033138557e822c148abc6a68d6814dp=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
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