Pssst...Subscribe to Our Free Newsletter  
 

THE LATEST NEWS
Saturday, February 21, 2004

8-Megapixel Digital Cameras Debut
According to PC World, "Canon, Konica Minolta, Nikon, and Olympus all announced 8-megapixel cameras aimed at advanced photographers.The new cameras are expected to ship this spring and to be priced around $1000." Hmmm, so 8 million pixels is 3264 x 2448 and a picture size of up to 23MBs. In other words, that's huge.
Email this Link


Court Endorses Ban on DVD Copying Software
Source: EFF "Consumers suffered a setback to their digital rights today when a California federal court sided with the major motion picture studios in ruling that a company creating tools people can use to make backup copies of their DVDs is liable under copyright law. Citing the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), the court ordered 321 Studios, creator of DVD backup tools, to stop selling its DVD Copy Plus and DVD-X COPY products within seven days."
Email this Link



THE LATEST NEWS
Friday, February 20, 2004

Get Ready for High Definition Audio
From the Intel Developers Conference comes new information on Intel's High Definition Audio (HDA) spec that includes support for up to 7.1 channels, DVD-Audio support (multi-channel 96KHz/24-bit, two-channel 192KHz/24-bit) and dynamic jack configuration (jack-sensing.) Dolby also announced several new logo programs for motherboard audio hardware makers and C-Media took the wraps off its first HDA-compliant codec, the CMI9880. Holla!
Email this Link


Golf Goes Electronic
"Promising to do for golf what the ATM did for banking, the new TeePod Information System from 4everSports, based on the VIA EPIA VE5000 Mini-ITX mainboard, enriches the game of golf by providing a revolutionary web-based scoring, information, communication and management system all in one."

Let's think about this for a minute. It's a good thing to bring electronics to golf. People have been craving that jump in technology ever since Microsoft Golf appeared, haven't they? No more mulligans, no more mistakenly entered scores, all those things for which golf clubs have suffered ignomious fates are now in the power of the microchip. But ATM machines? Does that mean if you're a guest playing on someone else's course you'll have to pay an extra green's fee and then the course you're actually a member of will then charge you an additional fee because you used someone else's?
Email this Link



THE LATEST NEWS
Thursday, February 19, 2004

Cisco Releases Video System for Internet Phones
According to Reuters, "Cisco Systems Inc. unveiled a system for its Internet-based telephones that promises to allow real-time videoconferencing with television-quality images for less than $200 per user." Proving once again that VoIP is heating up, and maybe even the holy grail of telephony: the video phone.
Email this Link


Prescott This....
Notice, if you will, the distinct lack of fanfare with which Intel's next iteration Pentium 4, codenamed Prescott, arrived. Why, you ask? Well, 3.2GHz and 3.4GHz versions of the 90nm CPU, according to Intel, may perform the same as the larger (130nm) Norwood processors at similar clock speeds. Huh? Hey, would I lie? (No, I wouldn't. It's actually slower in some cases compared to the older Norwood version.) Of course, that flies in the face of everything we know about CPUs when you double the internal L2 cache, as has been done with the Prescott, and shorten the internal data pathways, ditto. What gives? Intel was a little roundabout on the reason, relying on that old fallback, "Well, the current software doesn't make use of the extra SSE instructions, yada-yada-yada."

Some say its because of the Prescott's longer pipeline. Some say Intel put a toll booth on the data plaza. Whatever, Prescott shrank (in size) and grew (in L2 cache) so Intel could make versions faster later on, hitting that (currently) magic 4GHz mark. It's really no big deal except there are bound to be some unscrupulous hardware vendors hiding Norwoods under the giant processor fans in their PCs for sale when you should be getting Prescotts. (They're priced the same and, well, you have to get rid of old inventory somehow, don't you?) Eyes open, folks.
Email this Link



THE LATEST NEWS
Wednesday, February 18, 2004

Yahoo and Google Part Ways
Yahoo annouced that it was dumping search darling Google in favor of its own search engine Inktomi. According to Reuters, "Yahoo recently has made major investments in the sector with acquisitions of search provider Inktomi and Overture Services, a key Web-search advertising company. Its conversion project began late Tuesday night with the U.S. Yahoo site and will continue over the next several weeks."
Email this Link



THE LATEST NEWS
Tuesday, February 17, 2004

Cingular Buys AT&T Wireless
Yikes. Only five major mobile phone companies left in the game. Cingular outbid Vodaphone and snagged Ma Bell for $15 a share or roughly $41 billion.
Email this Link


New Software Makes Game Copying Easy
321 Studios, the makers of the popular but controversial DVD X Copy have released a new copying program called Games X Copy. For $60 users can make legal "back-ups" of their favorite games. Let the games begin!
Email this Link


100,000 Orders for iPod Mini
Apple Computer, Inc. announced today that it has pre-sold over 100,000 iPod Minis. The new players do not go on sale until Friday, but Apple was happy to scoop up some advance cash. The new Minis weigh 3.6 ounces and hold about 1,000 songs. Sounds wimpy to us.
Email this Link


HP to Create Archive of Time Magazine
According to Reuters, "Hewlett-Packard Co. will create a digital archive containing every issue of Time magazine published, which Time will then make freely available to subscribers on its Web site in May. HP said the digital archive would total more than 4,000 issues from 1923 to the present." All we can say is, man, that's a lot of scanning.
Email this Link


Free VoIP from the Creators of KaZaA
Skype is the next phenomenon from the people who brought you KaZaA. Just like KaZaA, Skype uses P2P (peer-to-peer) technology to connect you to other users. Sweet.


Email this Link


 
 

The RealTechNews Official Collection of Interesting Technical Websites
(In Alphabetical Order)

RealTechNews.com -Hooray!

All About Technology
Apolemia
As the Apple Turns
Adam Bosthworth
Channel 9
Cincom Smalltalk Blog
CodeStore
CompHobby.org
CreativeBits
Cult of Mac
Daily Dose of Excel
Dan Bricklin's Log
Dan Gilmore
eHomeUpgrade
Engadget
Enterprise System Spectator
Fozbaca.org
Fullasagoog
Future Now
Gadgeteer
Gadgetopia
Gadgetryblog

Gemal's Psyched Blog
Geomblog
Gizmo
Gizmodo
 

Good Morning Silicon Valley
Google Blog
Google Weblog
Hack a Day
Hack the Planet
Hackdiary
Impact Lab
Internet Alchemy
I4U
IT Facts
Java.blogs
Joel on Software
Jonathan's Blog
Live Digitally
Lynch, Kevin
Matt Heerema
Mavromatic
Mehack
MobileMag
MobileWhack
Mobitopia
MSNsearch's WebLog
Napsterization.org
Onlineblog.com
PatrickWeb
Paul's Time Sink
Picturephoning.com
Player Blog
Ployer Technology News
 
PVRblog
Release 4.0
RFID Privacy
Scripting News
Scriptygoddess
Search Engine Watch
Shiny Shiny
SiliconBeat
Six Apart
Slashdot
SpaceNews
Swaine's World
Tech Digest
Techdirt
Threadwatch.org
Tip of the Day
UberGizmo
Unofficial Google Weblog
Unofficial Yahoo Weblog
Useit.com
Web-Graphics
What Ralph Knows
Wi-Fi Networking News
Wingedpig.com
Wohl, Amy
Wrist Dreams
Yahoo! Search Blog 
 

 

Don't See Your Favorite Tech Site Here? Contact Us to Add it Today!

 

(Please!!)
 
Subscribe with Bloglines

Hey Gang! Please sign our guestbook and say hello to the whole RealTech community: independent tech lovers like you. Take a sec to say hello. -- Sign it!

Please help us stay independent. Donate whatever you can today. (Even $1 will make a HUGE difference.)


 


Email the Editors

RealTechNews.com

Google
Search Our Website:
Web RealTechNews.com


Hosted by: Dreamhost
Underground Networks, Inc. Copyright 2005
All Rights Reserved

Place a Text Ad on RealTechNews

 
 
 
Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.