eviGroup’s new 10.2-inch tablet, the Pad, went on sale in its premium 3G-toting form a week ago, but if the €599 plus €30 shipping ($932) sticker price is too rich for your blood they’ve a cheaper model available from today. The entry-level eviGroup Pad has the same specifications as the premium model but lacks 3G; it’s on sale from today for €549 (again with €30 shipping; $852).
Your money gets you a 1.6GHz Atom processor, 160GB hard-drive, 1GB of RAM and WiFi a/b/g; the battery is good for 3.5hrs of “normal” runtime and the Pad comes with Windows 7 Home Premium and the Seline10 voice-recognition app. Full story...
Samsung have announced a new iPod shuffle competitor, and they’ve taken the Apple MP3 player’s shake functionality to its reasonable-logical conclusion.
Remember the LG GD880 spotted yesterday? The company have officially launched the slender touchscreen handset as the LG Mini, and according to the pre-MWC press release it’s the smallest and slimmest full-touchscreen handset on the market today.
It’s taken a while, but the Pandora open-source handheld has finally been given the production green-light.
AMD have outed their latest DirectX 11 compatible video card, the ATI Radeon HD 5570, and it’s specifically targeted at those with low profile cases.
Talk of the HTC Dragon has been minimal since the Nexus One grabbed the limelight earlier this year, but a leaked Dopod roadmap for 2010 has reignited some of that old speculation.
A little over a week since we saw it leak into the wild, the Samsung Monte S5620 has been officially launched.
It’s been more than a month since Google officially unveiled the Nexus One smartphone, and no lack of support issues have brought the technology giant to unveil yet another welcomed thing – a dedicated phone support line specifically tailored to the problems and havoc that Nexus One owners have been facing for the last thirty or so days.
Black Hawk Safety Net may sound like something out of a summer blockbuster, but it’s actually the name of the Chinese hacker site that allegedly collected more than 180,000 hackers, as well as over 7 million yuan (roughly 1 million USD) and provided them with “cyberattack lessons and malicious software”.
Microsoft recently announced that they would investigate some user upgrades to Windows 7 that provoked a new warning message (not seen XP or even the problem-ridden Vista) suggesting that users “consider replacing their batteries”.
Droid owners may welcome the Android 2.1 update coming this week to the, well, Motorola Droid, reported via Motorola’s own Facebook page.