Archive for the 'products' Category

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fogscreen 2.jpgFogScreen is the company that changed projection technology forever – no more fixed screens. Instead, the FogScreen™ projection screen, produces a thin curtain of “dry” fog that serves as a translucent or fully opaque projection screen, displaying images that literally float in the air. It’s as simple as it is stunning. Using nothing more than tap water and ultrasonic waves, FogScreen projection screen machines employ a patented technology to create a smooth foggy airflow that captures images just like a screen. You can walk right through a FogScreen projection screen without getting wet. The microscopic fog droplets actually feel dry to the touch, just like air.

The beauty of FogScreen projection screen is that anything you can see on a computer screen can now float in the air. Otherwise it’s like any ordinary projection screen; installation couldn’t be any easier. Just replace your conventional screen with FogScreen projection screen. It works with still pictures, moving images and lasers. With two projectors, different images can be shown on both sides of the screen.

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[ZDNet Blogs posted this little piece of useful information. It looks like I haven’t been conned so far, but I was always wondering how to tell apart fake from genuine cards - the link below could be quite helpful (although the scammers will have read this info by now as well).]

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Posted by Robin Harris @ 6:29 am

If it sounds too good to be true, maybe it is

Counterfeiting is a huge business. Handbags we know about. Car parts, maybe. But flash memory cards? It’s true.

Flash is a brutally competitive business

Real flash cards - Compact Flash (CF), SD and the rest - are a great deal. Flash memory manufacturing plants cost billions and should be run at near full capacity for maximum efficiency. But flash product demand peaks around Christmas - all those cameras, MP3 players and cellphones - meaning a lot of flash product gets shipped at below full cost.

Translation: we get very good deals on real flash memory cards.

Counterfeits don’t give you what you paid for

The cost of the flash chip is about a quarter of the retail price. Packaging, shipping and margin account for the rest. That doesn’t leave counterfeiters much margin to cut costs. So they cut out the flash quantity and/or quality.

Flash chips are programmable devices, so small flash chips can be programmed to report that they are large flash chips. Or slow flash chips substituted for the high-speed chip you thought you were buying.

They also cut corners on printing, plastic molding, packaging and card cases.

Avoid being gypped

Ebay sellers have been a major outlet for counterfeits. An Ebay user has published a guide to the counterfeits to help buyers identify counterfeits - see FAKE SanDisk Ultra Compact Flash Cards Exposed - but scammers don’t like to give refunds.

Your best bet is to avoid counterfeits in the first place.

  • Buy from established commercial vendors. Some scammers have had excellent Ebay ratings, because most folks can’t tell a real card from a fake before they rate the seller.
  • Check out pricing on sites like DealRam or Google Products (3 star sellers and above only!) to find current prices.
  • If a deal sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

The Storage Bits take

The plummeting price of flash make flash a great deal. Avoiding counterfeits make it an even better deal.

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Adrian Kingsley-Hughes (ZDNet Blogs) posted a timely reminder to support the view that Apple and Microsoft are becoming more and more similar in terms of customer (non)care, marketing and user control -not just by mentioning the “almost Microsoft-esque timeframe” of its OSX updates, but also pointing to the broken Leopard feature promises, covered up by marketing hype and spin. Quite sad really but not surprising …

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Not so sure about the name, but Ubuntu (like many other Linux distros) certainly is getting flashier and more user-friendly. I think it’ll be worth trying out version 7.1 and comparing it with Suse 10.3.

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Now playing: Miki Odagiri - Floweless Island; VNV Nation - The Farthest Star
via FoxyTunes

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At Digital Life in New York City, Nokia finally shipped the new version of its popular  but pricey N95, the “iPhone killer” (which Stephen Fry would not agree with yet) with double the memory of its predecessor, 3G compatibility on the GSM platform, and support for assisted GPS. Like the old N95, it comes with a 5-megapixel camera and, unlike the iPhone, is unlocked by default. In his interview with Nokia spokesperson Joe Gallo, ZDNet executive editor David Berlind also gets a look at a prototype of Nokia’s next N81, which features a bigger display and 8GB of storage.

[via ZDNet News and Webcasts, which also features a video clip on both phone]

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Now playing: Diplo - Yazoo Dont GoNV Nation - Secluded Spaces
via FoxyTunes

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