Saturday, July 11, 2009

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T90

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T90 12.1MPSony Cyber-shot DSC-T90
Product Description
The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T90 camera combines style with power and intelligence. At just under 5/8¿ (15mm) thin, the T90 comes in 5 sophisticated colors and has a stylish look. With the T90 taking great pictures is now easier than ever. The iAuto mode goes beyond the traditional auto mode, thinking and working for you; recognizing scenes, lighting conditions, faces, and automatically adjusts camera settings resulting in clearer images, and faces with more natural skin tones and less blur. T90 also features HD Movie mode, recording in 720p for capturing your precious moments on video. Compose, review, and share your memories on the 3.0¿ (230k pixels) touch-screen LCD.
Product Description
The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T90 camera combines style with power and intelligence. At just under 5/8¿ (15mm) thin, the T90 comes in 5 sophisticated colors and has a stylish look. With the T90 taking great pictures is now easier than ever. The iAuto mode goes beyond the traditional auto mode, thinking and working for you; recognizing scenes, lighting conditions, faces, and automatically adjusts camera settings resulting in clearer images, and faces with more natural skin tones and less blur. T90 also features HD Movie mode, recording in 720p for capturing your precious moments on video. Compose, review, and share your memories on the 3.0¿ (230k pixels) touch-screen LCD.

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Excellent Netbook - MSI Wind U123

MSI Wind U123
The original MSI Wind burst onto the scene in spectacular fashion, nabbing the first-ever Editors' Choice in the netbook category. Of course, it helped that this fledgling field wasn't the mob scene it is today. The Wind U123 (003US) ($385 street) is a nice follow-up, and it's full of life—battery life, that is. Its 87Wh battery is the biggest battery yet found on a netbook, though it was added at the expense of making this model look like the Hunchback of Notre Dame (though the hump is on the bottom). Overall the U123 could use more of a lift, as its performance scores fell well short of the competition, and everything else is just middle of the road.
Msi Wind U123-003US Netbook PC, BlueIntel Atom N280 1.66GHz Processor; 10.2" Wide Screen Display; 160GB Hard Drive; 1GB Memory; Big-Size Keyboard and Touch Pad; Built-in 1.3 Mega Pixels Webcam; Bluetooth; Carrying Bag included; Genuine Windows XP Home Edition; 9 Cell Battery.Bigger Size, Better Vision - 10.2" Wide LCD Display! The Wind, an acronym for Wi-Fi Network Device," featuring a speedy and energy-efficient Intel Atom 1.6GHz Processor top rovide longer operation hours and better mobile lifestyle.Specifications:Intel Atom N280 1.66GHz Processor Front-side Bus: 533 MHz; Cache: 512KLCD Size: 10.2" WSVGA LCD Backlight LED Resolution: 1024 x 600Chipset: 945GSE+ ICH7-MIntergrated Graphics: Intel GMA950HD Audio, Stereo speakers Internal Speaker x 2Memory:1GB DDR2 533MHz (Max 2GB)160GB SATA Hard Drive LAN: 10/100WLAN: Built-in 802.11b/g WLAN Card Bluetooth Card Reader: 4-in-1 Card Reader, SD/MMC/MS/MSproWebcam: 1.3 MP WebcamUSB2.0 Port X 3Video Port: VGA (15-pin, D-Sub) X 1Audio Port: Mic-in Port X 1, Headphone Output X 1AC Power Adaptor Output: 20V DC, 40W / Input: 100 240V AC, 50/60Hz universalBattery Pack: Li-ion 9 cellsDimensions: 10.24"(L) x7.09 "(D) x0.78 "1.30"(H)Weight: 2.23lbs (6 cell)Carrying Bag includedOperating System: Genuine Windows XP Home Edition.

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Will LinkedIn and Second Life kill the recruitment industry?

by Karl Flinders, computerweekly
Microsoft saved thousands of pounds recruiting technical staff through LinkedIn rather than hiring a headhunter. KPMG found its recruits through Second Life.
Social networking has meant that databases of potential job applicants, once the prize possessions of recruitment companies, are now public property.
Microsoft recruiter Declan Fitzgerald used that fact to his advantage when he was asked to find nine workers with niche IT skills to work on a security project.
"Finding nine techies with skills in the rare Assembly and X86 software languages is not that easy and traditional methods would not work," says Fitzgerald.
By using social networking site LinkedIn he was able to find suitable people and saved about £60,000 in recruitment company fees.
Indian IT supplier HCL claims to have saved £300,000 in recruitment fees in a year, while brewer SAB Miller saved £1.2m in recruitment fees in a year by employing 120 people directly from LinkedIn.
KPMG held a 48-hour virtual world jobs fair in Second Life in Septemberlast year.
Experienced professionals, recent and prospective college graduates, and others interested in career opportunities with the KPMG network took part. More than 10,000 applicants registered for the online event through KPMG's global website.
David Bloxham, director of recruitment services at recruitment firm GCS, says social media will change recruitment. "I do not think the recruitment industry will stop, but it will have to change."
He says with social media the candidate database in effect becomes public, and recruitment firms will have to add value to survive.
"We will have to provide referenced candidates. We can become experts in using social networking technology and we will have to find candidates that are passive and not actually looking for work, through sites such as LinkedIn," he says.
But social media is unlikely to have as big an impact on the recruitment industry as the recession, he says.
William Scott-Jackson of Oxford Strategic Consulting, who specialises in human resources, says LinkedIn and other social media platforms are useful for finding a small number of people with niche skills.
"This has always been the case in areas where skills are short, such as certain IT roles," he says. "But if you have thousands of people with similar skills it is better to go through recruitment firms."
Consolidation is inevitable in the recruitment sector, driven by social media and the economic downturn. Recruitment firms that harness social media and add value to it will be in a better position to prosper.

Google to launch netbook operating system next year

By Stephen Shankland, silicon.com
Google has announced it is developing an operating system based on its browser, Chrome.
The company announced Google Chrome OS on its blog Tuesday night, saying netbooks from unnamed manufacturers will include it in the second half of 2010. Linux will run under the covers of the open source project but the applications will run on the web itself.
"Google Chrome OS is being created for people who spend most of their time on the web and is being designed to power computers ranging from small netbooks to full-size desktop systems," Sundar Pichai, vice president of product management, and Linus Upson, engineering director, said in the blog post.
The move has widespread implications.
One is that it shows just how serious Google is about making the web into a foundation not just for static pages but for active applications, notably its own such as Google Docs and Gmail. Another: it opens new competition with Microsoft and, potentially, a new reason for antitrust regulators to pay close attention to Google's moves.
The move also gives new fuel to the netbook movement for low-cost, network-enabled computers. Those machines today run Windows or Linux. Google Chrome OS provides a new option that hearkens back to the Network Computer era of the 1990s espoused by Sun Microsystems' Scott McNealy and Oracle's Larry Ellison.
Google is making sure its standard antitrust rebuttal, that "competition is one click away", remains intact with Chrome OS, though. "All web-based applications...will run not only on Google Chrome OS but on any standards-based browser on Windows, Mac, and Linux, thereby giving developers the largest user base of any platform."
Another bit of intrigue comes with the corporate politics. Google has argued that offering its Android mobile-phone operating system isn't a big enough competitive issue with Apple that chief executive Eric Schmidt must step down from Apple's board. Offering a full-on PC operating system could intensify the Federal Trade Commission's "discussions" about Schmidt's dual Apple and Google responsibilities.
Google has a track record of upsetting the status quo, though, taking on strong incumbent players and rattling cages well beyond the computing industry. Google Docs competes with Microsoft Office. Gmail competes with Yahoo! Mail and Microsoft Hotmail. Google Books aims to digitise the publishing industry. The Android operating system is designed to make smartphones cheap and ordinary.
With Google Chrome OS, the company hopes to start afresh with personal computing.
"The operating systems that browsers run on were designed in an era where there was no web," the Tuesday blog post said. "So today, we're announcing a new project that's a natural extension of Google Chrome - the Google Chrome Operating System. It's our attempt to rethink what operating systems should be."
Among the benefits Google touted are "speed, simplicity and security", Pichai and Upson said. "We are going back to the basics and completely redesigning the underlying security architecture of the OS so that users don't have to deal with viruses, malware and security updates."
Google is talking to netbook partners now, and the project will become open-source "soon". It will run on members of the x86 and ARM processor families, Google said.
Google declined to comment on its plans beyond the blog posting.
The company also didn't mention how exactly it hopes to profit from Chrome OS but it seems likely it's the latest variation on trying to get more people using the web more often and more deeply -behaviour that correlates with more searching and more search advertising.
"Any time our users have a better computing experience, Google benefits as well by having happier users who are more likely to spend time on the internet," Upson and Pichai said.

Top 10 SLR Digital Cameras

1. Nikon D90
Max. Megapixels: 12.3Megapixels, Optical Zoom: 6X Zoom, Zoom Range Min. (mm): 18, Zoom Range Max. (mm): 105, Weight (ounces): 40.5, Media Slots: SD Card.
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2. Canon EOS 50D
Max. Megapixels: 15.1Megapixels, Optical Zoom: 11X Zoom, Zoom Range Min. (mm): 18, Zoom Range Max. (mm): 200, Weight (ounces): 50.6, Media Slots: CompactFlash,
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3. Canon EOS Rebel XSI SLR Camera Body Only
Max. Megapixels: 12.2Megapixels, Optical Zoom: 3X Zoom, Zoom Range Min. (mm): 18, Zoom Range Max. (mm): 55, Weight (ounces): 25.8, Media Slots: SD Card, Order by Amazon shop...


4. Olympus E-30
Max. Megapixels: 12.3Megapixels, Optical Zoom: 3.8X Zoom, Zoom Range Min. (mm): 14, Zoom Range Max. (mm): 54, Weight (ounces): 43, Media Slots: CompactFlash, xD-Picture Card,
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5. Nikon D5000
Max. Megapixels: 12.3Megapixels, Optical Zoom: 3X Zoom, Zoom Range Min. (mm): 18, Zoom Range Max. (mm): 55, Media Slots: SD Card,
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6. Canon EOS Rebel XS
Max. Megapixels: 10.1Megapixels, Optical Zoom: 3X Zoom, Zoom Range Min. (mm): 18, Zoom Range Max. (mm): 55, Weight (ounces): 28, Media Slots: SD Card,
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7. Nikon D60
Max. Megapixels: 10.2Megapixels, Optical Zoom: 3X Zoom, Zoom Range Min. (mm): 18, Zoom Range Max. (mm): 55, Weight (ounces): 28.8, Media Slots: SD Card,
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8. Sony DSLR-A700
Max. Megapixels: 12.24Megapixels, Optical Zoom: 6.56X Zoom, Zoom Range Min. (mm): 24, Zoom Range Max. (mm): 157.5, Weight (ounces): 45.1, Media Slots: Memory Stick,
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9. Pentax K20D
Max. Megapixels: 14.6Megapixels, Optical Zoom: 3X Zoom, Zoom Range Min. (mm): 18, Zoom Range Max. (mm): 55, Weight (ounces): 36.5, Media Slots: SD Card,
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10. Nikon D300
Max. Megapixels: 12.3Megapixels, Optical Zoom: 5X Zoom, Zoom Range Min. (mm): 18, Zoom Range Max. (mm): 200, Weight (ounces): 47.2, Media Slots: CompactFlasH
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Does Google Know Too Much About You?

googleby Ian Paul, pcworld
Do you trust Google? If you use its multitude of online services on a daily basis you might, but is that assumption wise? For some, Google is a wonderful company with a broad selection of useful online tools that make life easier, but for others Google is a looming, unregulated monster just waiting for the moment to drop the ‘don't' from the company's unofficial motto, "Don't be evil."
Recently, at the Aspen Ideas Festival, WNYC talk show host Brian Lehrer asked Google CEO Eric Schmidt if Google's constantly growing importance to users in the United States and around the world meant that Google needed to be regulated as a utility by the Federal Government. The surprise wasn't in Schmidt's response (which was "no"), but the fact that everyone in the room laughed at Lehrer's suggestion.
But is it that funny? Google tracks your online behavior to deliver relevant advertising; the company inadvertently controls a large amount of what you see online through its search results; it's amassing the greatest library since Alexandria; it has a huge share of the online video market; and offers a wide range of services that bring more and more of your daily online habits into its online sphere. Heck, Google has even flirted with offline advertising.
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Royal Family turns to Twitter

by Barry Collins, pcpro
The Royal Family is latching on to the social networking phenomenon, Twitter.
The Royals have laid claim to the @BritishMonarchy account on the social-networking site, but anyone expecting a Tweet from the Queen herself is set to be sorely disappointed.
A spokesman for the Palace told the BBC that the Royal Family intends to use Twitter as a "news service rather than a personal voice", immediately snuffing out speculation about how the Queen was going to condense the Christmas speech into 140 characters. Early messages on the Royal Family's account provide a rather dry summation of duties, such as timings of the changing of the guard, royal visits and the distribution of honours. Curiously, the Royal Family are only followng three people: tennis star Andy Murray, someone called Paul Fright, and the Copenhagen Communique (which claims to "represent a progressive business consensus in support of an ambitious deal in Copenhagen").

The 10 best GMail Labs upgrades

by Barry Collins, pcpro
GMail already knocks rival webmail services into a cocked hat with its speed, storage capacity and breadth of features. However, there are plenty more power tools lurking in the ever fertile GMail Labs, which can help you tailor the service to your own needs.
To access GMail Labs, click on the little green science beaker icon next to your email address at the top of the GMail window.
1. Quick Links
Quick Links is an excellent tool for power users. It allows you to create one-click shortcuts to specific searches - so you could, for example, have easy access to any emails mentioning your company or a particular person. To create a Quick Link, type your search term into the GMail search bar and then click Add Quick Link from the Quick Links box in the left-hand panel (which only appears after you’ve enabled the Quick Links feature).
2. YouTube/Flickr/Picasa previews
To save the bother of opening up a new tab or window every time the office joker sends round a new YouTube video, this handy feature allows you to watch the video inline from the foot of the email message window. Simply scroll down when you receive a YouTube link and find the little player at the bottom of the message. There are similar previews available for links to photos stored on Picasa and Flickr.
3. Tasks
In a fairly naked attempt to borrow one of the more popular features from Microsoft Outlook, Tasks allows you to create a basic to-do list that pops up in the bottom right-hand corner of the screen. You can set due dates, print your entire task list and manually change the order of tasks using the Actions menu.
4. Offline
Laptop-wielding commuters will appreciate offline access to their inbox. Offline access creates a local copy of your inbox on your PC, allowing you to read your entire inbox even when you can’t reach an internet connection. You can also compose messages while you’re offline, and store them up in the Outbox until you reconnect. This could obviously consume a fair bit of hard disk space, and it can take a fair while to synchronise your inbox the first time you do it. The feature is dependent on Google Gears, which (irritatingly) isn’t supported in the latest version of Firefox (3.5) at the time of publication.
5. Title Tweaks
A small, but potentially invaluable, Labs feature. Title Tweak changes the order of the words in the GMail header, so that your browser tab will now read “”Inbox (20) - dave@GMail.com - Google Mail” rather than “Google Mail - Inbox (20) - dave@GMail.com”. This means you can instantly see how many messages are waiting in your inbox when you leave a GMail tab open in your browser, or from the Windows XP/Vista Taskbar.
6. Inserting Images
nserting Images allows you to embed pictures directly into email messages rather than adding them as attachments. A small icon appears in your taskbar, and you can either upload images directly from folders on your PC, or insert an image URL from a website. Pop-up options allow you to conveniently resize the image on the fly.
7. Forgotten Attachment Detector
Sounds like a novelty feature, but it saves you from the embarrassment of those: “And this time I’ve attached the photos I promised” messages. This add-on scans your email text for phrases mentioning attachments, and brings up a pop-up balloon reminding you to clip on an attachment if you’ve forgotten to do so before hitting send. Clever, if not exactly 100% foolproof in our tests.
8. Custom label colours
Labels - GMail’s alternative to folders - are very useful and this nifty add-on allows you to customise your label colours, rather than relying on GMail’s defaults. It also gives you the handy option of renaming your labels, which doesn’t appear by default.
9. Navbar drag and drop
This feature really comes into its own when you start enabling various Labs experiments. It allows you to drag and drop the various boxes where you want them in the GMail interface. So if you don’t bother with GMail chat, you can drop it down to the bottom of the screen and promote your Quick Links (see tip 1) shortcuts instead.
10. Custom Keyboard Shortcuts
Not over-enamoured with GMail’s default keyboard shortcuts, such as the rather cumbersome “gi” for go to inbox? Create your own using this feature, which adds an keyboard shortcuts tab to your settings menu. Stupidly, installing this add-on doesn’t automatically turn on your keyboard shortcuts, leaving you beating the keys in frustration for the first couple of minutes, until you realise you have to switch on the keyboard shortcuts in the General tab of settings too.

Amazon Lowers Price on Kindle eReader

amazon kindle ereaderby Nathan Eddy, eweek
Amazon dropped the price of its Kindle 2 e-reader to $299 from $359 with little fanfare, though it suggests Amazon hopes a $60 price cut will make the device more attractive in an increasingly competitive market.
Online retail giant Amazon quietly dropped the price of its heavily promoted Kindle 2 e-reader today, lowering the price to from $359 to $299—a $60 cut. Amazon issued no release announcing the price reduction, fueling speculation that the nascent e-reader market isn’t reaching enough of an audience. The Kindle 2, which debuted in February with the help of celebrity horror author Stephen King, is the successor to Amazon’s original Kindle reader.
Amazon spokeswoman Cinthia Portugal told The Associated Press the price cut was a permanent move rather than a promotional stunt. “We've been able to increase the volume of Kindles we're manufacturing and decrease the cost of doing so," she said. Although Amazon does not release shipping numbers, reports have stated that some 300,000 Kindle 2 units have been shipped by mid-April, nearly matching estimates of 400,000-500,000 units shipped for the first Kindle version.
A recent teardown of the manufacturing process by market research and consulting firm iSuppli Corporation revealed Amazon spends $185.49 on every Kindle 2. Some 41 percent of the materials cost comes from the Kindle 2's $60 E Ink Corp. display module, which supports 16-level grayscale images.The price does not include the licensing costs for using the ARM processor or the costs of intellectual property, royalties, licensing fees or elements such as software loading. In June 2008, iSuppli issued projections of e-reader sales for the year 2009. The report predicted “enormous growth” for the market this year, with 3.5 million e-readers sold.
The Kindle 2, designed to download books in less than a minute, allows users to read pages on a 6-inch gray-scale screen. Pages can be navigated via a five-way controller. There are currently 230,000 books available for download from Amazon’s Kindle online store. The AP also interviewed ThinkEquity analyst Ed Weller, who said he was surprised by the price cut following so soon after the Kindle 2 debut, but added he thought the $299 price point would prove more attractive to consumers. “They'll sell more of them, and they'll sell more books," he told the news service.
In May, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos announced the debut of a larger version of the Kindle, the Kindle DX, which comes with a 9.7-inch screen and comes with auto-rotation—tilt it sideways and the displayed page pivots from vertically to horizontally oriented. The DX was designed to make it easier to read large format documents like newspapers, magazines and textbooks. As part of the release promotion, Amazon announced partnerships with The New York Times and two other newspapers, The Boston Globe and The Washington Post, to distribute a lower-cost version of the Kindle DX to users who sign up for long-term subscriptions.
In addition to signing deals with major newspapers, Amazon also announced that three of the top five textbook publishers—Cengage Learning, Pearson, and Wiley—and more than 75 University press publishers would be making their products available to the Kindle Store starting in autumn 2009. Such a move, Bezos claimed, would make some 60 percent of textbooks available through the device.

London Cabbie Launches Twitter Taxi Service

by Ruth Barnett, skynews
A London cabbie has set up the first virtual taxi rank on Twitter.
Keen blogger Richard Cudlip has set up a "tweet a taxi" service on the microblogging site to save customers hunting for a ride home in vain.
A spate of Twitter friends contacting him to see if he was out in his cab inspired him to turn it into a business.
Last Friday, he created @tweetalondoncab, a collection of 30 drivers who met on the social networking site.
"All the people on Twitter love the idea and we've already got hundreds of followers," Mr Cudlip told Sky News Online.
"We haven't had a huge number of bookings - yet," he said.
Still a small outfit, Londoners should book at least 30 minutes in advance, he added.
Eventually, the cooperative hope they can expand and comprehensively cover the capital.
Customers must 'follow' the taxi service on Twitter and send a private message to make a booking, so that they do not reveal their location publicly on the internet.
When they receive a reply, they can liaise directly with the driver, rather than through an office.
"All the drivers have come through recommendations from other drivers so we know they're licensed black cab drivers," Mr Cudlip explained.
Twitter also allows the cabbies cameraderie during shifts as they share information about traffic or customer hotspots.
Other taxi companies and drivers are online, but most use the site to promote their switchboard number, rather than using it for bookings.

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