Thursday, October 4, 2007

Nokia 770 Internet Tablet

Nokia announced the birth of a new product range with the launch of the Debian Linux powered Nokia 770 Internet Tablet. Looking a bit like a Nokia 7710 on steroids, being 13mm wider and 10 mm taller, the new 770 is meant to be a home Internet appliance that, get this, is not a phone at all. That's right; the 770 has no mobile phone inside. Instead it relies on its Bluetooth v1.2 and WiFi (802.11b) support to connect to the Internet either through your home WiFi router or via your Bluetooth compatible mobile phone. Nokia envisions the 770 as an inexpensive (about US$350) and convenient replacement for the 2nd or 3rd PC a family might have at home. It is the kind of device that you leave on the coffee table or on the night stand next to your bed. When you need to check your email or do a quick Internet search, you just power it on instantly (like a PDA) and have at it. Thanks to the 770's massive 4.13" diagonal, 800x480 pixel display, browsing and email should be quite comfortable. In addition to the Opera web browser and the built-in email client, the initial Q3 2005 release of the 770 will also ship with a RSS news reader, an Internet radio, various media players, a PDF viewer, and Flash v6 compatibility. A user installable software upgrade that is expected in Q1 of 2006 will introduce Voice Over IP (VOIP) and Instant Messaging to the mix. Text input on the 770 works much the same as with the 7710, supporting both a virtual keyboard and handwriting recognition via a pen stylus. The UI could be considered a simpler version of the Series 90 UI seen on the 7710. Apart from the stylus, the 770 offers a 5-way d-pad controller, and home, menu, escape, zoom, and full screen hardware buttons for user interaction. As I mentioned, the 770's software is based on Debian Linux (v2.6). The new platform is called "maemo", and the user interfaced is derived from the well-known GNOME UI seen on Linux boxes around the world. Nokia plans for maemo to be an open platform (much of it being Open Source based) and will provide a SDK. The 770 runs on a TI 1710 OMAP (ARM based) processor, and has 64MB of DDR RAM, and 128MB of internal FLASH memory, of which about 64MB should be available to the user. Storage can be augmented by inserting a RS-MMC memory card. A 64MB card will ship with the device. The 770's v1.2 Bluetooth system supports the Dialup Networking, File Transfer, GAP, Serial Port, and SIM Access profiles. USB connectivity is also available, as is the forementioned WiFi support. The included 1500mAh battery should be good for about 3 hours of browsing or 7 days of standby time. Also included in the retail package is a USB cable, a travel charger, a carry pouch, and a desk stand. No stereo headset is included, but thankfully Nokia has decided to include a regular 3.5mm stereo headset jack instead of relying on the finicky Pop-Port based headsets they currently push. You can get more information on the maemo platform at the official maemo website. We'll have live photos from the Nokia 770 launch event at LinuxWorld NYC available later in the day.Source :http://www.mobileburn.com/

Intel Rolls Out Centrino Pro

California-based Intel Corp., has this week chosen to shine its technological spotlight on two significant unveilings, the first of which sees the introduction of a brand new high-performance laptop processor, which the leading chipmaker refers to as Intel Centrino Pro processor technology.The new Centrino Pro processor will essentially consist of a mix of Intel’s vPro technology, which is a set of popular features designed specifically for desktop business PCs, and the chipmaker’s hugely successful mobile Centrino brand – thus combining to bring Centrino Pro technology to expectant laptop owners.From a business efficiency perspective, IT (Information Technology) departments utilising the benefits of Centrino Pro technology will be in a position to “reliably manage both desktop and notebooks and deal with what plagues them most – security threats, cost of ownership, resource allocation, and asset management – and do so wirelessly,” claims Intel in yesterday’s official release, which also boasts that Centrino Pro technology will result in enhanced protection and IT compliance for PCs as well as more accurate inventories, and reductions in desk-side visits and business interruptions.“This is an ideal time for this product as we continue to see notebook penetration rates increasing in business,” commented Mooly Eden, VP of Intel’s Mobile Products Group, concerning the announcement. “Intel Centrino Pro processor technology brings the best of our offering with Intel vPro processor technology and adds it right into our highly successful Intel Centrino brand for laptops.”With Intel outlining that existing desktop vPro technology is already being implemented by more than 200 of its business customers, including the likes of 3M, BMW, FujiFilm, ING, John Hopkins, Pioneer, and Verizon, it would seem only natural for Centrino Pro technology’s integration to follow when it becomes ready for deployment during the second quarter.Furthermore, industry corporate software support is also well positioned for the arrival of Centrino Pro processor technology and Intel has bolstered interest with software application and solutions already on offer from the likes of Altiris, CA Inc., Cisco Systems, Credant Technologies, Hitachi, Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft Corp., LANDesk, and Trend Micro.“Intel has been one of the best in terms of understanding and internalizing manageability and building manageability into their platforms with Intel vPro processor technology, and now Intel Centrino Pro mobile processor technology extends this management capability to mobile PCs,” said Kirill Tatarinov, corporate vice president of the Microsoft Windows Enterprise Management Division regarding Microsoft’s approach.“With new Intel Centrino Pro processor technology support in SMS 2003 and System Center 2007 products, this combination will help enterprises realize the promise of dynamically managing their infrastructure

The Internet

The internet originated in the early 1970’s when the United States wanted to make sure that people could coummunicate after a nuclear war.

This needed a free and independent communication network without a centre and it lead to a network of computers that could send each other e-mail through cyberspace.

Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web (WWW) when he discovered a way to jump to different files on his computer using the random, or unplanned, links between them.

He then wrote a simple coding system, called HTML (Hyper Text Makrup Language), to create links to files on any computer connected to the network. This was possible because each file had an individual address, or URL (Uniform Resource Locator). He then used a set of transfer rules, called HTTP (Hyper Text Transfer Protocol), to link Webfiles together across the Internet. Berners-Lee also invented The world’s first browser. This lets you locate and view Web pages and also navigate from one like to another.

The WWW became available to everyone in 1991 and the number of Internet users grew from 600,000 to 40 million in five years. Today that number is much larger and there are now many browsers that provide Web pages, information and other services. You can also do research, download music files, play interactive games, shop, talk in chat rooms and send and receive e-mail on the WWW.