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2010
15
Mar
Just to give you a little update on Akihabara News website development. 3 Month after the launch of Akihabara News V5 aka WTF… We have this weekend rolled-out the final touch of Akihabara News V5.1 aka ROLF.

More here:
Welcome to Akihabara News V5.1 aka ROLF (Name Code)
Tags:
akihabara,
akihabara-news,
archive,
Article,
design,
electronics,
featured-post,
News,
Pda,
reader,
rolf,
skin,
thumbnail,
wtf
2010
11
Mar
We thought that Google’s Reader Play is perfect for tablet computers , but the New York Times ‘ Nick Bilton has other ideas. He thinks that the feature is perfect for TVs and other larger screens. [ NYT ] More??

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We Thought Google Reader Play Is Perfect For Tablets, But What About TVs? [Google]
2010
10
Mar
Kitchen Garden – February 2010 Requirements: PDF Reader, 63.4 MB Overview: Kitchen Garden Magazine – UK’s No.1 for growing your own fruit and.
More here:
Kitchen Garden – February 2010 – Hymoo
2010
10
Mar
Kitchen Garden – February 2010 Requirements: PDF Reader, 63.4 MB Overview: Kitchen Garden Magazine – UK’s No.1 for growing your own fruit and.
Read more here:
Kitchen Garden – February 2010 – Hymoo
2010
10
Mar
Kitchen Garden – February 2010 Requirements: PDF Reader, 63.4 MB Overview: Kitchen Garden Magazine – UK’s No.1 for growing your own fruit and.
Read the rest here:
Kitchen Garden – February 2010 – Hymoo
2010
9
Mar
I honestly never had the chance to play with any kind of Teclast products, goods or models… And that’s a shame! I just hope however that their products are as good as their marketing campaign. Now if you want to know, the K3 is a e-Book reader with a 6” display, a 3D UI, TTS support (Text To Speech), 4G of internal memory with SD Card expansion slot and Mp3, WMA, FLAC, ACC, OGG support (Mp3 player), Screen rotation support, … Funny though, I spent 4 years of my life in Hong-Kong with quite a descent time in both Beijing and Shanghai but never ever I stumble upon this kind of “Amazon” (Not the river… the ancient Greek thingy) .

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Teclast K3, yet another marketing lesson to promote your e-Book reader
2010
5
Mar
The Entourage eDGe is taking some knocks in this early review from Laptop Mag.
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The Entourage eDGe Takes Some Knocks in Review
2010
3
Mar
For all the fuss made at its launch back in August, Sony’s Reader Daily Edition has all but dropped off the map in terms of interest. Remember, Sony’s response to the Kindle gave us a 7-inch touchscreen device with free AT&T 3G data for …
For all the fuss made at its launch back in August, Sony’s Reader Daily Edition has all but dropped off the map in terms of interest. Remember, Sony’s response to the Kindle gave us a 7-inch touchscreen device with free AT&T 3G data for …
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Sony Reader Daily Edition reviewed: unworthy of cost premium or …
2010
3
Mar
For all the fuss made at its launch back in August, Sony’s Reader Daily Edition has all but dropped off the map in terms of interest. Remember, Sony’s response to the Kindle gave us a 7-inch touchscreen device with free AT&T 3G data for …
Continued here:
Sony Reader Daily Edition reviewed: unworthy of cost premium or love
2010
1
Mar

The K6 is Teclast’s latest e-Book reader. Based on the K3 model that just happens to be pretty popular over there but this time with a larger 6” e-Ink Display the K6 is going to be Teclast’s future bestseller!



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Teclast to introduce a new e-Book reader in China
Tags:
china,
displays,
future-bestseller,
haleron,
mass,
News,
pretty-popular,
reader,
Samsung,
size-full-wp-image-36674,
teclast,
time
2010
24
Feb
Adobe released an update to fix a vulnerability in its Flash and Reader Download Manager (DLM) software. The patch is listed as critical and Windows users.
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Download-Manager Hole – Patched | Technibble
2010
23
Feb
Old wine in new bottle holds true for the new look of Luxurylaunches . All set to elevate the LUXURY quotient and mesmerize every luxury-seeker in this all-new avatar, Luxurylaunches promises to bring the best of every bit of opulent news to our reader’s attention.

More here:
Luxurylaunches dons a new glamorous look
Tags:
announcements,
auto-20px,
bring-the-best,
elevate-the-luxury,
every-bit,
holds-true,
luxury,
luxurylaunches,
new-bottle,
new-look,
News,
other stuff,
our-reader,
reader
2010
13
Feb
In today’s Remainders: the unfun. Wait! Don’t go. The items themselves are fun! They just involve unfun. We have a no fun WiFi school bus; a no fun eBook from the White House, an unspectacular Samsung smartphone reveal, and more.
Boring Bus
I recently took my first trip on a WiFi-enabled airplane. At first I thought, “How cool! I’ll never be bored on a flight again!” But I quickly realized that in-flight WiFi, in some perverse way, made me MORE bored. That special in-the-air-with-nothing-to-do time had been invaded by the regular old routine of checking e-mail and reading through my RSS feeds. So it is with a heavy heart that I read this story about a school district in Arizona that plopped a mobile WiFi router on top of a school bus, effectively turning it into a mobile study hall. And the worst part is the kids are just going along with it. Apparently all of the regular back of the bus mischief has subsided and now the kids just sit and do homework. That’s no fun! I remember one time when I was on a school bus a weird kid put SIX FRUIT ROLL UPS in his mouth at one time and nearly suffocated himself in the process. If we’re entering an age in which WiFi is the replacement for adolescent fruit roll up shenanigans, count me out. [CrunchGear]
Boring eBook
For the first time, this year’s Economic Report of the President will be made available as a free eBook. They have versions prepared for Nooks and Kindles and will offer an ePub version for the Sony Reader and other devices that get down with ePub. I applaud the effort, but I imagine that I’d have such a hard time concentrating on this to begin with that it would take approximately one E-Ink page refresh for me to give up completely. [Engadget]
Boring Reveal
Oh Samsung. You tried to keep your new Bada smartphone under wraps until MWC. You were so close. But then you went ahead and put up this gigantic billboard mere days before the event. Sure, the ad doesn’t reveal much about the Wave’s specs—just that it has a camera and a full touchscreen—but talk about fudging your big unveiling. [Unwired View]
Boring Sergey
TED curator Chris Anderson brought Google’s Sergey Brin on stage for an unplanned Q&A about his company’s recent cyber-beef with China. Wired made note of Brin’s statement that he was remained “optimistic” that Google and China could work something out, and quoted him as saying he thought Google could “really work within the Chinese system.” On the whole, it seemed like Sergey might’ve been backing down from the no-censorship ultimatum his company announced earlier this year. But a quick read through a transcript of the question and answer session reveals that he addressed the ultimatum explicitly—it’s still there, just sugarcoated a little bit:
Yes, we’ve made a statement of intent. That we intend to stop censoring, and you know, if we can do that, within the confines of Chinese policy, we’d love to continue Google.cn and our operations there. And if we cannot, then we’ll do as much as we can but we don’t want to run a service that’s politically censored. I’m not talking about things like porn and gambling and things like that. Political censorship.
So, no, Google’s not backing down. Just being diplomatic. [Wired]


Continue reading from the original source:
Remainders – The Things We Didn’t Post: That’s No Fun Edition [Remainders]
Tags:
bada,
busses,
china,
chris-anderson,
kindle,
mwc,
president,
reader,
sergeybrin,
ups,
wifi
2010
13
Feb
In today’s Remainders: the unfun. Wait! Don’t go. The items themselves are fun! They just involve unfun. We have a no fun WiFi school bus; a no fun eBook from the White House, an unspectacular Samsung smartphone reveal, and more.
Boring Bus
I recently took my first trip on a WiFi-enabled airplane. At first I thought, “How cool! I’ll never be bored on a flight again!” But I quickly realized that in-flight WiFi, in some perverse way, made me MORE bored. That special in-the-air-with-nothing-to-do time had been invaded by the regular old routine of checking e-mail and reading through my RSS feeds. So it is with a heavy heart that I read this story about a school district in Arizona that plopped a mobile WiFi router on top of a school bus, effectively turning it into a mobile study hall. And the worst part is the kids are just going along with it. Apparently all of the regular back of the bus mischief has subsided and now the kids just sit and do homework. That’s no fun! I remember one time when I was on a school bus a weird kid put SIX FRUIT ROLL UPS in his mouth at one time and nearly suffocated himself in the process. If we’re entering an age in which WiFi is the replacement for adolescent fruit roll up shenanigans, count me out. [CrunchGear]
Boring eBook
For the first time, this year’s Economic Report of the President will be made available as a free eBook. They have versions prepared for Nooks and Kindles and will offer an ePub version for the Sony Reader and other devices that get down with ePub. I applaud the effort, but I imagine that I’d have such a hard time concentrating on this to begin with that it would take approximately one E-Ink page refresh for me to give up completely. [Engadget]
Boring Reveal
Oh Samsung. You tried to keep your new Bada smartphone under wraps until MWC. You were so close. But then you went ahead and put up this gigantic billboard mere days before the event. Sure, the ad doesn’t reveal much about the Wave’s specs—just that it has a camera and a full touchscreen—but talk about fudging your big unveiling. [Unwired View]
Boring Sergey
TED curator Chris Anderson brought Google’s Sergey Brin on stage for an unplanned Q&A about his company’s recent cyber-beef with China. Wired made note of Brin’s statement that he was remained “optimistic” that Google and China could work something out, and quoted him as saying he thought Google could “really work within the Chinese system.” On the whole, it seemed like Sergey might’ve been backing down from the no-censorship ultimatum his company announced earlier this year. But a quick read through a transcript of the question and answer session reveals that he addressed the ultimatum explicitly—it’s still there, just sugarcoated a little bit:
Yes, we’ve made a statement of intent. That we intend to stop censoring, and you know, if we can do that, within the confines of Chinese policy, we’d love to continue Google.cn and our operations there. And if we cannot, then we’ll do as much as we can but we don’t want to run a service that’s politically censored. I’m not talking about things like porn and gambling and things like that. Political censorship.
So, no, Google’s not backing down. Just being diplomatic. [Wired]


Continue reading from the original source:
Remainders – The Things We Didn’t Post: That’s No Fun Edition [Remainders]
Tags:
bada,
brin,
busses,
china,
ebooks,
gizmodo remainders,
left-image500,
reader,
regular,
samsungwave,
sergey,
ups,
whitehouse,
wifi
2010
12
Feb
Remember the SV-100B “Document Viewer” from this time last year? It’s okay, we had to look it up too. With its $1,500 MSRP and exclusive release in Japan, it hardly made waves over here. We’re expecting the SV-70 to have a similarly ripple-free reception in the States, since it too probably isn’t coming here, but there’s no telling how Japanese businesspeople will take to it, ditching the Bluetooth module that gave its predecessor a bit of charm, and even the lowly 2GB microSD card that was formerly included on the way to a lower (but still high) $1,100 MSRP. Other specs remain the same, including a relatively expansive 9.7-inch, 1200 x 825 display, 100MB of internal memory, microSD expansion slot, and 83 hours worth of battery life. Why, that’s plenty of time to read even the lengthiest of pseudo-inspirational corporate memos.
Brother’s SV-70 e-book reader is a little bit cheaper, still $1,100 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Feb 2010 08:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Continue reading from the original source:
Brother’s SV-70 e-book reader is a little bit cheaper, still $1,100
Tags:
bluetooth,
brother sv-70,
document-viewer,
documentviewer,
entry,
even-the-lowly,
internal-memory,
japan,
japanese,
reader,
remain-the-same,
since-it-too,
states,
the-lengthiest
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