Tuesday, April 7, 2009

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New Nokia E63 Mobile Phone Arrived Nokia E63 helps you to get things done when and where it matters most. Stay on top of your important emails and communicate your ideas while they're fresh. stay connected with your Nokia E63 mobile phone, Check information and make bookings on the Internet while you're on the go. Keep your friends & co-workers in the loop. Share stories, photos, & videos
Dimension
113 x 59 x 13 mm, 87 cc - Processor ARM 11 369 MHz
Connectivity
Bluetooth v2.0 with A2DP, USB, GPRS Class 32 (100 kbps), HSCSD, 3G (384 kbps), WLAN Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g
Weight
126 g - OS Symbian OS 9.2, Series 60 v3.1 UI
Battery
Talk time Up to 11 h, Stand-by Up to 432 h
Memory
120 MB internal memory,
Display Size
320 x 240 pixels, 2.36 inches (Full QWERTY keyboard)
Display Colour
TFT, 16M colors
Band
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 (UMTS 900 / 2100)
Entertainment
FM radio, MP3/AAC/MPEG4 player, 3.5 mm audio jack, Games - Office applications, Push to talk, Voice command/dial, Built-in handsfree, Printing
Camera
2 MP, 1600x1200 pixels, LED flash, Video QVGA 15fps
Tones
Polyphonic, MP3, True Tones
Messaging
SMS, MMS, Email, Instant Messaging

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Thursday, February 26, 2009

LENOVO THINKPAD X200 REVIEW

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The Lenovo ThinkPad X200 is an modernize and development of the ThinkPad X61 12.1" screen ultra portable and, as the given name suggests, make use of a bit from the devise cue of the much hyped ThinkPad X300 ultra-slim notebook. To be sure, the X200 is not as expensive neither as cutting edge as the X300, the high-end features and supermodel thin X300 out perform what you'll get intend-wise with the X200.DesignIt's so unproblematic to inscribe about the appearance of any ThinkPad laptop, it's black, all over, and if you have a difficulty with that then seem elsewhere. Cheek to the side, there are perceptible design differences from the X61. The most visible transform we see between the X61 and X200 is that the exhibit is widescreen as an alternative of the "customary" 4:3 ratio facet screen seen on the X61. The query is, when do we begin calling widescreen as a normal for a laptop screen? There are few notebooks left that aren't widescreen so this revolutionize comes as no shocker.PerformanceThe X200 is very imposing in terms of unrefined power in a diminutive package. This is one of the 1st systems we've witnessed with the Intel Montevina platform on board and the news is superior, we're finding improved performance but no forfeit with battery life or the high temperature increasing. Honestly, 2.40GHz of dual core power and a 3MB L2 cache, Intel Turbo Memory, SSD storage space and 4GB of DDR3 RAM operating at 1066 MHz might just be too much for a notebook this size, but the alternative is there if you're like Tim the Tool Man Taylor and want additional power for no other


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reason than the fact it's extra powerful.The ThinkPad engineers have yet again elevated the bar on plummeting both heat and noise. The X200 has taken up the "owl-like" fan blueprint that was seen in the X300. The X200 has an array of Wi-Fi options: the Intel Wi-Fi Link 5100, Wi-Fi Link 5300, Intel WiMAX Wi-Fi Link 5350 and ThinkPad 11b/g Wireless LAN Mini PCI Express. Lenovo has been running on building their goods more pleasant to the environment.ConclusionThe ThinkPad X200 is a very commendable successor to the ThinkPad X61. The astonishing battery life capabilities and chilly and quiet running presentation are authentic highlights. Having such high power in a diminutive package while still sustaining a cool and quiet computing occurrence further adds to the impressiveness there.Pros+ Commanding performance with the new-fangled Intel Montevina platform, standard clock speed processor of up to 2.40GHz+ Sprints very cool and calm thanks to only one of its kind fan design+ Innovative widescreen flaunt and additional width that spells more keyboard breathing space and easier for dual-window viewing.+ Unbelievable battery life, almost up to 10-hours potential on the 9-cell battery.Cons- No en suite high-definition video output port- No touchpad accessible, just Touch Point- No incorporated optical driveValue For MoneyOur Rating

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LENOVO T400 REVIEW

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In this 1st look we will envelop all of the basics, and provide you a small number of hints of what to look forward to from the complete review that will be approaching in no time.DesignThe design of the T400 has tainted a bit. The alterations are delicate to the untaught eye, but they are there. The right elevation is now smoothly sloped comparable to what can be instituted on the elder T4x series, where the sides slant inward instead of dropping off flat. The 1st clue concerning this is the optical drive bezel which sports a pleasant beveled periphery. The rubber feet have also been to some extent tweaked; now sense softer and you obtain a supplementary springy nub.PerformancePointless to say, in the midst of the Intel T9600 Core 2 Duo processor in our T400 arrangement, this system executed very well no affair what we threw at it. Mutual with the rapid 7200rpm system drive, functions loaded unusually quickly. Artificial benchmarks also backed this up, peaking well in excess of 6,000 in PCMark05, and receiving scoring around 27 seconds in wPrime. Easygoing gaming was even probable with this arrangement, with Half-Life 2 getting frame rates well above 100 frames per second for the duration of low detail scenes and towering 30's during exploit.I ought to say that the battery life of this laptop was the major surprise. Even with the top row Intel T9600 and ATI 3470 enthusiastic graphics the idle power draw of this laptop is


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lower than ever. The keyboard present has remained the same, with only extremely minor differences in the feel of the key presses. A few of this may be accredited to the differences in keyboard providers (NMB, ALPS, and Chicony) though, as my T60 was served with the "clickier" Chicony keyboard, whereas the T400 is much quiet as you click on it.The exhibit on our review sculpt is a 6-bit LG LED backlit panel. Lenovo's authorized spec sheet lists this display as 300:1 contrast, but the LG specification is 500:1.OverallThe new 14-inch T400 ThinkPad is the newest Lenovo laptop based off of the Intel Montevina platform. This computer proffers all novel features such as hybrid graphics, LED backlit screens, and power saving refinements that let the laptop gets astonishing battery sprint life. With all these transforms taking place, Lenovo has also remained to keep the laptop looking as boring as ever, just how ThinkPad holders like it.Pros+ Typical boring ThinkPad looks+ Surprising battery life+ Hybrid graphicsCons- Too boxy for the present generation- Variation in the keyboard specValue For MoneyOur Rating
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TOSHIBA L305-S5899 REVIEW

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These days, we’re in the center of a techno frenzy, no matter how bad the economy goes. Somehow everything we buy becomes obsolete within a couple of months, there’s always something much better and if we try to add even a single option to the list, the price manages to skyrocket and quadruple itself in an instant. I don’t know what you think, but this kind of environment makes laptops like this TOSHIBA L305-S5899 a very considerable choice for me. I know, when you look at the spec sheet, you don’t see anything special and yes, it barely runs Vista (but after all, which computer doesn’t?) but if you accept the idea of using your laptop for 1 year maximum then buy a new one, it’s better to buy one like this and keep the remaining funds enough to purchase the mediocre models of upcoming 3 years… For an untrained mind, this may look like a real waste, it may even be considered as a spoiled act, but no matter what you buy, your laptop is doomed to become “old & useless” within 12 to 15 months anyways!FIRST IMPRESSIONSo, keeping this in mind, let’s start to evaluate this Toshiba… With the first glance, it’s obvious that Toshiba is not manufacturing this model as a catalogue candy. TOSHIBA L305-S5899 is probably one of the most boring looking Toshiba that you can ever find (and I’m talking about a 15 year period by the way), which is kinda good thing because it secures you that you’re paying only for the technical abilities, not a tasteless chrome look-alike cheap plastic keyboard or an incredibly annoying graphic art on the back of the screen (as you can understand, I’m not that much of a fan of HP’s new “artsy fartsy” laptop series. Seriously, which sane soul would want a laptop computer looking like it’s been made out of a dub of a 67’ Impala owned by a drug-selling gang leader in Los Angeles?). If you’re into laptop art, this is a perfect thing to go actually, an empty canvas which can hardly go worse… Besides it’s incredibly simple and boring design, the computer gives the impression of a solid construction, a real work horse.As you can guess from the previous paragraph, there’s not much to mention about it’s technical specifications, first impression can be summarized as “perfect average”, nothing’s present to make this laptop climb from average to mediocre, or drop to poor…PERFORMANCEThe computer comes with a 2 GHz Intel Pentium Dual Core T3200 processor with 667 MHz front side bus with 1 MB L2 Cache, which is a very outdated and humble processor to run it’s standard installed operating software – Windows Vista Home Premium Edition. With a processor like this, I guess downgrading to XP or even installing a version of Linux is much more feasible, since the clock speed is not that much and –again- it’s from the first generation of Dual Cores… I know, this may sound irrational to you, but after all, this is a pretty cheap laptop, which you’ll consider either to use as a digital typewriter or as a start up machine, so you’ll not be needing all the fancy stuff that comes with the Vista anyway (I’m aware of the oxymoron here, Vista and fancy?). Seriously the only good thing about Vista is to be able to perform undo action as many cards as you want on Freecell, and that just doesn’t worth to wait for each and every single action for hours…The size of the RAM you get is 2GB, which is somehow the industry standard for start up laptops these days. The good news is that it’s upgradable to 4 GB’s, and since the type is very common – PC 6400 DDR2 SDRAM- it’s easy and cheap to get this upgrade. If you ask me, giving 30-40 Dollars for such upgrade somehow makes this a pretty decent machine too.For general storage, the computer comes with a 5400Rpm 120GB SATA hard drive. Since the Vista takes around 15 GB’s alone by itself –and adding the additional vital programs you’ll have-, you’ll probably be facing 70-80GB’s of hard drive space in the end, which is pretty low, especially if you’re a guy like me who downloads almost 20GB’s a day from the net… There’re many alternate brands and models on the market today offering much more hard drive space, and to be honest with you, if the difference is only a couple of dollars and if you’re dealing with these low numbers, that difference between capacities can easily become crucial.General graphics performance of the computer is no better than the rest of the performance. Yes, as you can guess, it comes with an on board Mobile Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 4500M chip, which uses between 128 - 1342MB’s of memory according to demand. Again, if you’re going to use Vista (still ignoring the downgrading suggestion huh?) this will automatically mean that you’ll always be using the extra shared memory, which is quite a kill joy when it comes to watching anything decent on the screen. The 15.4” WXGA TruBrite wide screen provides a 1280x800 resolution, which is enough for web browsing and most of the applications that your general system components allow. The TFT screen also provides native support for 720p content, which means it’s DVD friendly but you can forget (of course!) about true full HD… Bottom line is that this computer is good for creative activities as long as you use MS Notepad for those!Since we’re talking about DVD’s, for the money you pay, you’ll be getting a Multiformat


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DVD±RW/CD-RW drive with double-layer support which records up

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HP COMPAQ 2230S REVIEW

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The HP Compaq 2230s is an ultra-transportable consumer laptop that is aimed towards diminutive businesses analogous to the Dell Vostro or Lenovo SL series line of appliances. This laptop provides consumers a less classy alternative than the HP Elite Book series, with a beginning price of $999 as an alternative of $1,679.DesignThe design of the HP Compaq 2230s is to some extent like a black Apple Mac Book, with a spotless all-black plastic peripheral. As far as business laptops go, it is HP’s effort to contend with the Dell Vostro line, proffering a more customer look and feel to a business laptop. The all-black color scheme persists into the interior of the laptop, with the palm rest, touchpad, keyboard, and dapper all wrapped in matching black.PerformanceSystem presentation with the Intel P8400 processor and 2GB of memory with Windows XP was enormous. The laptop had outstanding boot and shutdown times, and illustrated no signs of lag throughout day-to-day functions. Graphics recital was limited with the Intel 4500MHD incorporated chipset, but the benefit of the incorporated chipset is superior battery life. If you were gazing to spice up your day at work with a game or 2, grown-up games such as Half-Life would sprint extremely well on the slower graphics established inside this laptop.The cooling arrangement on this laptop worked extremely well, keeping the


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organization cool to the touch even while it was underneath a stressful load. Under battery authority the system fan lingered off the preponderance of the time, only twirling up if you were doing something processor concentrated. Battery power pack presentation was good considering the stock power pack in the HP Compaq 2230s is only a 4-cell 37Wh representation. This in all probability the negligible battery found in a business laptop, and has no upgrading path to a superior battery.OverallThe HP Compaq 2230s is a traditional-looking laptop with a few features aimed towards small business utilizes. Unlike most business or small business laptops, this laptop doesn’t offer the rocky experience, only a rugged gaze. The plastic utilized throughout the design is scrawny even when evaluated to the HP Pavilion lineup.Pros+ Rock-hard keyboard+ Pleasant touchpad and soft touch buttons+ VGA and HDMI harvest with Intel 4500MHD incorporated graphics+ Exceptional cooling arrangementCons- Supple framework- Elevated price considering configuration and toughnessValue For MoneyOur Rating
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HP COMPAQ 6730B REVIEW

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The HP Compaq 6730b is the "business" version of the 6730 notebook line freshly launched by HP. Business connotes balanced mobility and supremacy. There is a 6730w for "workstation substitution" and 6730s as an entry product.DesignThis is a "business" engine. The HP Business line, in my estimation, never actually proffered attractive sculpts, and this one is no real revelation. It seems to have the similar case as the nc8430 but they spiced that nice Dura Finish coat on the palm rest area. This appends up to the sexy glance. The machine looks extremely rock-hard, the finish is proficient.PerformanceThe notebook came with Microsoft Vista Business 32bit and straight away shows the Windows Experience Index score. The WEI imitates the poorest score of the diverse tests and the 6730b is at a stumpy 3.4 mainly due to the video chip, but I wouldn't look forward to elevated scores without a devoted video chip anyway. Here are a few video benchmarks with Aero facilitated and with Aero immobilized. Booting the component "naked" is comparatively speedy, but as you stuff it with requests and services, it slows down. I'm fresh to Vista but even though I didn't set up all of my compiler elements and tools yet, I have the experience that it creeps more than my aged nc8430 under XP Pro SP3.Mine boots in about 6 minutes and 50


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seconds (with most of the hopeless services turned off). And evidently, 2GB of RAM is not sufficient. Opening just 2 applications, Outlook and Total Commander, already leads to dreadful "Running low on memory. Close applications". So go ahead and purchase an additional 1GB or 2GB, even if Vista 32bit can't pact with 4GB. It can employ 3GB to 3.5GB. It seems like on mine, it utilizes 3GB for Windows and 700+MB for the video card.OverallI would certainly advocate this notebook for any business user or developer. Enjoying movies is a delight and the technology is positively falling in the HP "balanced mobility" label. The battery lasts more or less 6 hours and that makes it a high-quality rationale to buy this machine if you're hitting the road.Pros+ Strapping Finish+ Touch-sensitive control buttons+ Brilliant speakers+ Extremely quietCons- Keyboard navigation keys- Refusal of recovery DVDValue For MoneyOur Rating
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HP MINI 1000 QUICK REVIEW

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The year 2007 saw the advent of Netbooks in the form of the Asus Eee PC. Initially aimed at emerging markets, these light-weight, affordable, laptops come in smaller sizes spanning 5 – 10 inch screens and are relatively more environment friendly. Soon to follow Asus’ canny lead were Everex , MSI, Dell and HP each trying to gain a hold over the fast emerging niche market. With sales growth projected at 21.5 million this year, it’s easy to see why competition is heating up with established brands vying to produce the best. Contending for the top position in the Netbook market is Hewlett-Packard’s latest Mini 1000. Let’s review it to see if it has what it takes to out-sell competition.The combination of Intel’s Atom CPU, 1GB RAM and Windows XP OS, being used by almost all of the latest netbooks on the market, performance wise, there doesn’t seem to be a significant difference. We’ll have to look, then, at the features that distinguish it from its competitor’s models.The Mini 1000 definitely seems to be an improvement over HP’s earlier offering, the 2133 Mini-Note PC. Though its essential design remains the same, the use of plastic ensures a lighter unit which is also slimmer. The swirls on the shiny cover give it a classy, understated appearance. Opening the display, you notice that the keypad without a doubt is its best feature. Said to be 92% the size of a regular sized laptop keypad, the flat keyboard and large keys lends themselves to the best touch typing experience on a Netbook. The touchpad at the bottom has two buttons on either sides with the scroll pad in between and a tiny button just above to turn the pad off and on. The glossy display itself has an edge-to-edge glass cover similar to that of Apple’s latest Macbook. While the glass adds to the looks of the unit, it subtracts from the


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user experience by causing glare issues compounded by the fact that the display doesn’t open as much as other models. Two USB ports and a single switchable headphone and microphone jack leave you wondering what HP was thinking about when it used space to create an exclusive HP Mini Mobile Drive when a third USB port or a separate headphone jack would’ve been more welcome.With a battery life of 2 hours and 45 minutes, the Mini is bested by both the Asus Eee PC (245 minutes) and the Dell Inspiron Mini 9 (201 minutes). But the sound quality of the speakers, located near the hinge, is very good on this Netbook. Another significant plus is the ease with which one can upgrade the RAM. All that’s required is for the memory slot on the flip side to be opened, the old DIMM to be removed and the new one to be fitted in.Other downsides include the poor quality of the web camera and the slightly less significant annoyance of a noisy fan that kicks in when the bottom begins to heat, which it does to a certain extent.Pros:Great keyboard, aesthetics, portability and screen size.Cons:Price ($400 for Linux and $500 for Xp), web cam quality, bulky power brick and no VGA output.Hp mini 1000 ratings:Value for moneyOur rating

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