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New Intel Core i7, i5 and i3 pricing and specs leaked

January 2, 2010 in Bloggers Park, Motherboards & CPUs by Techjockey

More Ho Ho Sinful sauce has trickled out of Guangzhou, so we thought it’d be rude not to serve you up a feast of velly blue HEXUS.beans.

Here for your delectation from HEXUS is a full list of prices and specs for the next generation of Intel processors.

In June, HEXUS brought you the news that Intel was expanding the Intel Core brand by adding Core i5 and Core i3 to its Core i7 offerings, with the three brands now referring to entry-level, mid-range and extreme performance Intel Core processors respectively.

We then estimated, based on information available at the time, how this new naming system would tally with existing and future families of processor. Now the table below shows all the new information we’ve received, including some price cuts to models already available.

Best gadgets of 2009

December 15, 2009 in Bloggers Park, Digital Cameras & Players, Internet, Motherboards & CPUs, PCs & Laptops, PDAs & Mobiles, Technology Junction by Techjockey

2009: Sony PS3 Slim
2009: Sony PS3 Slim
We predicted a “Slim & Lite” PS3 back in mid-2008. So we were a little wide of the mark with our timing, but at least we were on the money in other areas. Trimmed down to a lean fighting force, the Slim has helped the PS3 reduce the Xbox 360’s sales lead in the UK, and with a huge catalogue of killer titles, there’s never been a better time to buy one. Our advice? Opt for the mammoth, 250GB version, which can be had with a three-game bundle for under £300 – that’s a bona-fide bargain.

2009: Philips Cinema 21:9
2009: Philips Cinema 21:9

The first/only TV to have the true cinema aspect ratio and therefore deliver films just as the director intended. Also a cracking set with a bullet-like response time

2009: Apple iPod Shuffle 3G
2009: Apple iPod Shuffle 3G

A bit of an own-goal this one. Over-miniaturised, with some irritating, proprietary earphones it’s also sonically a let-down. We’ll stick with the Touch

2009: Samsung LE40B650
2009: Samsung LE40B650

Delivering stellar visuals and a welter of online widgets including YouTube, this cemented Samsung’s place at the telly manufacturers’ top table

2009: Sony Vaio P-Series
2009: Sony Vaio P-Series

Halfway between netbook and notebook, the ultra-portable P-Series is a seriously covetable bit of kit: a laptop that can fit in a suit jacket pocket, no less

2009: Fujifilm Finepix Real 3D W1
2009: Fujifilm Finepix Real 3D W1

At last, a 3D digital camera. It’s carrying a few extra pounds and you can’t print pics yourself yet, in 3D at least, but props to Fujifilm for pushing the envelope

2009: Palm Pre
2009: Palm Pre

We had incredibly high hopes for this one. It didn’t quite deliver everything on our wishlist, but it remains an exercise in OS design others should learn from

2009: HTC Hero
2009: HTC Hero

Winner of both Gadget of the Year and Phone of the Year at the 2009 T3 Awards, the HTC Hero is the best Android phone yet, and the only mobile to date that matches the iPhone in most respects – it even bests Apple’s phone in certain areas. Google’s open-source OS means it’s a joy to use as a phone, messenger, media player, browser and app platform – there are 17,000 apps and counting at the Android Market – but the Hero also won plaudits for HTC’s handset design. With its understatedly stylish looks, decent battery life and stunning multi-touch screen, it’s a veritable cornucopia of techy delights. We can’t wait to see what HTC does with Google’s high-fl ying platform next.

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2009: Apple iPhone 3GS
On the face of it, the 3GS was disappointing, with scant new features – a three-meg camera with video replaced the two-meg, stills-only affair found in previous iPhones, and there was now a compass built in. That said, the “S” for speed meant a real jump in download rates and processor performance over the 3G and maximum storage stormed up to 32GB. That’s why, despite HTC’s glorious Hero, the iPhone still ranks as our number one phone overall. Apple shifted a cool 7.4 million iPhones last quarter, a year-on-year uplift of seven per cent. Clearly, the iPhone juggernaut remains on course.

printable battery

December 14, 2009 in Digital Cameras & Players, Motherboards & CPUs, PCs & Laptops, PDAs & Mobiles, Technology Junction, Tips & Tricks by Techjockey

A team of scientists led by Prof. Dr. Reinhard Baumann over at Germany’s Fraunhofer Institute have come up with just such a battery, which is significantly different from regular batteries not just due to its shape and size.
 

For starters, the battery is environmentally friendly as it contains no mercury, instead relying on layers of zinc anode and manganese cathode.

The normal voltage of the battery is about 1.5V, but by lining up several of these tiny batteries together, voltages of up to 6 V can be achieved. To put it into perspective, 6 volts of electricity is the same amount that you would get from 32 4 AA batteries.

The batteries are “printed” using a method similar to how rubber signs are painted on t-shirts: a rubber lip presses a printing paste through a screen onto the substrate. Each layer is slightly thicker than a hair.

The life of each of these batteries is limited, so the researchers envision many uses such as lighting up clothes at night, greeting cards, etc.

World’s first universal quantum computer

November 25, 2009 in Bloggers Park, Computer, Internet, Motherboards & CPUs, PCs & Laptops, Technology Junction by Techjockey

Scientists have unveiled the world’s first universal programmable quantum computer, capable of processing two quantum bits or qubits which store more data than the simple “on” or “off” bits of conventional computing.

But, the test programme has revealed significant hurdles which the scientists claim must be overcome before it is ready for real work, the ‘New Scientist’ reported.

A team, led by the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Colorado, has developed the experimental device which uses beryllium ions to store qubits in the way they spin while the laser-pulse quantum gates perform the simple logic operations on the qubits.

According to the scientists, the trick to making a quantum logic gate is in designing a series of laser pulses that manipulate the beryllium ions in a way which processes information. Another laser then reads off the results of the calculations.

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