Friday, August 7, 2009

Dell quietly introduces trio of LCD monitors photo

Dell quietly introduces trio of LCD monitors




Dell recently introduced three new LCD monitors without much fanfare, where they are the Dell ST2310 ($229) as seen above, the E2210H ($199) and E2010H ($139) which will be available in 23″, 22″ and 20″ sizes, respectively. All three of them will cater to movie buffs, featuring additional wide 16:9…

Waring Pro Cordless Wine Opener

Waring Pro Cordless Wine Opener

Don’t want to be a party pooper, where the flow of booze stops with the wine due to someone having forgetten to bring the wine opener? Not whether you own the Waring Pro Cordless Wine Opener, that is. that $45 device will come in a rubberized body with brushed stainless accents, and will be powered…

Milwaukee Cordless Detection Tool news

Milwaukee Cordless Detection Tool



The Milwaukee Cordless Detection Tool somehow reminds me about the Black Cat by Edgar Allan Poe. that tool supposedly is able to detect stuff hidden behind your wall under something in concrete, as well as give out crucial info on the location and depth of wood, PEX, PVC, and metal behind gypsum, O…

Digital Summer, August 19th, Temple, San Francisco

Digital Summer, August 19th, Temple, San Francisco


On August 19th Ubergizmo and Girls in Tech are partnering up to create DIGITAL SUMMER in Temple, San Francisco, one of the few sustainable nightclubs in the world. The event combines three passions: Photography, Technology, and Fashion.We are bringing the most worldly, professional, and glamorous cr…

RadioShack Netogether in SF and NYC - Techmakeovers

RadioShack Netogether in SF and NYC - Techmakeovers




I (Eliane, Ubergizmo) was with Beth Blecherman (Techmamas) that AM at the Justin Herman Plaza in front of the ferry building in San Francisco, hosting Tech Makeovers at the Radioshack Netogether. My colleagues from Gadgetspin, Gina Hugues (TechieDiva) and Ponzi Pirillo (ponzarelli.com), were hostin…

Friday, July 24, 2009

Yamaha FZ 150 Price review, Specs more information

Yamaha FZ 150 Price review and Specification

Recently king of two wheelers Yamaha India reveals its new stylish FZ series Yamaha Fazer 150 in India. Yamaha India is on top registering sales growth since last few months. This is due to Yamaha's new models FZ-16, FZ-S and R15. Yamaha Fazer 150 is derived from its international parent Fazer 1000.

1. Lava Red
The technical specifications of the new Yamaha Fazer remain unchanged and Yamaha FZ16 and FZS, looks have definitely been improved with the introduction of the new half fairing, which is quite similar to the one found on Yamaha’s 1000cc sports tourer, Yamaha FZ1 Fazer.

Yamaha FZ 150 is available in four colors; Electric Blue, Midnight Black, Lava Red, and Flaming Orange.

The Price ranges would be around Rs. 70,000 – 80,000.

Striking Features of Yamaha FZ 150
* Big center mass
* Condensation, no open areas. Everything is tight, lithe and muscular.
* Tough looking front forks and Tough looking chassis.
* Midship Stubby silencer.
* Wider tyres
* High contrast and rugged shaped body parts.

2. Blue color
Engine Specifications:
* Displacement: 153cc
* Engine: 4-stroke, SOHC, Single Cylinder
* Maximum Power: 14 Bhp @ 7500 rpm
* Maximum Torque: 14 Nm @ 6000 rpm
* Gears: 5 Manual
* Clutch: Constant Wet Multi Plate
* Bore: 58
* Stroke: 57.9
* No. of Cylinders: 1
* Valve Per Cylinder: 4
* Chassis Type: Diamond
* Cooling Type: Air Cooling

3. Flaming Orange
Dimensions

* Length: 1975.00 mm
* Width: 770.00 mm
* Height: 1045.00 mm
4. Midnight Black
Others

* Weight: 141.00 kg
* Ground Clearance: 160.00 mm
* Fuel Tank: 12.00 ltrs
* Wheelbase: 1335.00 mm
* Headlamp: 12V35W / 35W+35W
* Wheel Type: 5 Spoke 17" Alloys
* Wheel Size: 100/60 - 140/60 mm
* Tubeless: Tyres

source of : www.letmeget.com

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Synaptics ClearPad 3000 takes multi-touch to new heights some information

Synaptics ClearPad 3000 takes multi-touch to new heights some information



Synaptics has just introduced its ClearPad 3000 Series capacitive touch pad sensor solution. The technology is inherently thinner than resistive-based sensors that have to use more layers. Most importantly, capacitive sensors require less pressure to use, which makes the overall user experience bet…


Synaptics ClearPad

Navigon 8410 GPS information

Navigon 8410 GPS information




The Navigon 8410 GPS is a 5″ personal navigation device (PND) that has a nice design, built with quality materials. The 5″ Touch display is big ample to see the map comfortably, but without becoming a clumsy device to install in a car. The Navigon 8410 comes with a voice recognition software called…





Navigon 8410 GPS

Pocket camera information

Pocket camera information


The Avatar Digital Binocular Sports and Spy Camera is one these oddities that you can see coming from China. It’s a gadget that starts from a good concept (who doesn’t love forceful magnification?) but ends up with a bitter taste of poor implementation. We can’t be too harsh, considering we





Pocket camera

Is that the HTC Firestone? information

Is that the HTC Firestone? information


With that leak of the HTC Firestone, you might wonder: “how many HTC phones can be leaked in one week?” Apparently, many! whether that is true, and we’re not saying that it is, the HTC firestone would be a touch-phone with… a big speaker in the front (isn’t that nearby the microphone, by the way?…

LG enV3 Puts a Better Interface in Your Face

LG enV3 Puts a Better Interface in Your Face


By Sean Captain – LG is very enVious these days. (Sorry, couldn’t resist that one.) Along with a new touchscreen version of its dual-screen flip phone, the company introduced an upgrade of the classic design. The new enV3 opens up to supply a larger screen, at 2.6 inches with a higher resolut…

Sunday, July 19, 2009

INTEL CORE 2 QUAD PROCESSOR Q6600 NEW

INTEL CORE 2 QUAD PROCESSOR Q6600NEW


DG31PR Mother board 1GB DDR2 RAM,
Tntel Graphics Media Acceletor
3100 onboard Intel high definition audio
17" Flat CRT Monotor, 160GB HDD, Optical Mouse Multimedia Keyboard, DVD ROM drive Optional:-Speaker Gigabit NIC

NEW TECHNOLOGY ................................................

Hot Bikini Body Model Jessica Gomes

Stars in New York honor Mandela with birthday bash and photo

Alex rodriguez hot photo

DYA Phone Concept photo and some information

DYA Phone Concept photo and some information


Love conceptual designs? Chances are you’ll like the DYA phone concept that comes with features pulled right out from the future, including rounded bubble-buttons that are a snap to press (and fun, too), without having to actually look at them. The strange bubble composition places #1 right at the …

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Bad Blackberry manners can be costly

Bad Blackberry manners can be costly








MOBILE email has become so distracting for some workers it could be costing their employers money.

Users are paying more attention to their Blackberries, iPhones and other gadgets rather than meetings and conversations – and businesses are complaining it upsets workplaces, wastes time and costs money.

"It happens all the time, and it's definitely getting worse," said Jane Wesman, a public relations executive and author of Dive Right In - The Sharks Won't Bite.

"It's become an addiction," she said.

According to a recent poll by employment website Yahoo! HotJobs, one third of more than 5000 respondents said they often check their emails during meetings. Such habits have their price, said the website's senior managing editor Tom Musbach.

"Things like BlackBerries fragment our attention span, and that can lead to lost productivity and wasted dollars because people aren't focused on their work, absolutely," he said.



Multi-failing

But the constant pursuit of an email fix may be costly. Research shows such multi-tasking can take more time and result in more errors than does focusing on a single task at a time.

"We know that if you have a person attending to different things at the same time, they're not going to retain as much information as they would if they attended to that one thing," said Nathan Bowling, an expert in workplace psychology at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio.

"If you're attending to multiple things at the same time, you often times don't learn anything," he said.

People who text message when they should be doing something else are engaging in what Mr Bowling called counter-productive work behaviour, which also includes harassment, showing up late or playing endlessly on the internet.

"Technology allows us to do counter-productive things that we weren't able to do 10, 20 or even five years ago," he said.

Business etiquette coach Barbara Pachter said there is a "learning curve" to new technology such as BlackBerries.

"We're still at that point where we're being rude," she said, adding that user behaviour is likely to improve in the next few years.

Digital Television Transition

Digital Television Transition

Television

In October of 2005, Congress enacted the Digital Television and Public Safety Act of 2005. The bill established that, by February 17th, 2009, all analog television broadcasts from full-power stations must cease and be replaced by digital transmissions. Why the switch? Moving to digital does two things: It allows broadcasters to send more data more efficiently - in addition to the show you are watching, you may get program and scheduling information on a pop-up screen, as well as higher-quality image and sound. Moving to digital also frees up the existing analog spectrum for other uses such as cellphone and public-safety radio transmissions.

That spectrum leads to another reason: cash. That older, analog spectrum was auctioned off by the government and went for nearly $20 billion.

On Jan. 26 the Senate passed a bill that would have postponed the switch to DTV to June, which was then defeated in the House. On Feb. 4, the House voted again to extend the transition to digital television by four months until June 12. President Obama signed the legislation that pushed back the deadline and allowed some stations to turn off their analog signals earlier.

The main question everyone has about the DTV transition is: What do I need to do about it? This part is simple: If you have cable or satellite, you don't have to do anything. If you get your TV signal from an antenna, you have to buy a digital converter box in order to continue to watch television. You only need the box, and possibly a new antenna - older antennas may not pick up UHF signals, which is what DTV uses. You do not need a new television, or a high-definition television (HDTV).

So, how does one get a converter box? This is slightly less simple. Converters are sold at many locations: online, at big-box retailers, possibly your local drug store. They cost $50 to $70. You have to buy separate converters for each TV you own.

So you may be wondering why you have to shell out $50 or more to upgrade your TV when you didn't ask for this conversion in the first place. That's why the government set up a voucher plan. The idea was that people who needed a converter could get up to two vouchers (one per converter), each valued at $40. That would make converter purchases nearly cost-free, or at least pretty inexpensive.

Then things got complicated. Originally, the vouchers had a 90-day expiration date and all had been sent out, and no money remained to fund any more. But on March 24, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration announced that the backlog for digital television converter box coupon requests had been cleared and that the government now had sufficient financing to send out more.

The F.C.C. said more than 4,000 people were available to answer the agency's phone number, 1-888-CALLFCC (1-888-225-5322), to help consumers who are confused about the switch.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Latest new mobile photo

Latest new mobile photo





Latest new and hot mobile picture

All About New Technology