Mar 3 2009

Apple quietly intros 2.66GHz MacBook Pro, offers larger SSDs

Flying under the radar of Tuesday’s broad desktop overhaul were quiet updates to Apple’s MacBook Pro notebook line, which now includes a faster 15-inch model, new high-end chip options, and larger solid-state drive (SSD) choices that are also offered alongside the company’s 13-inch MacBooks.

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Mar 3 2009

Linux Foundation Purchases Linux.com

darthcamaro and several other readers have noted that the Linux Foundation has bought Linux.com from Sourceforge Inc. (Slashdot’s corporate parent). The Linux Foundation (employer of Linus Torvalds) will take over the editorial and community stewardship for the site; Sourceforge will continue to supply advertising on it. “[Linux Foundation Executive Director Jim] Zemlin says the Linux Foundation wants to build a collaborative forum where Linux users can share ideas and get information on the Linux operating system. A beta of the site will be released in the next few months. … Linux.com is being redesigned as a central source for Linux software, documentation and answers regardless of platforms, including server, desktop/netbook, mobile and embedded areas.” What do you think should be on Linux.com?

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 2 2009

Photo may show next-gen Mac mini retail box

A new photo claiming to show the retail packaging for Apple’s long-awaited Mac mini refresh has surfaced online, adding to speculation that March will serve as launch pad for several new desktop Macs.

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Mar 2 2009

5 Great Technology Bargains

When you’re strapped for cash for a can’t-avoid-it purchase, sometimes it’s worth sacrificing a few frills. We zeroed in on a desktop, a laptop, a color laser printer, a camera, and an HDTV. Each represents a great value in its category.

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Mar 2 2009

Apple planning a March 24 event?

We’re not exactly making plans yet, but word on the street is that Apple’s planning a March 24 desktop hardware event. Both World of Apple (which has a decent track record) and a site called My Apple Guide (which we’ve never heard of but apparently has a “rough” prediction history) say the event’s on the books

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Mar 1 2009

Testing Lenovo’s ThinkPad W700ds Dual-Screen Notebook

MojoKid writes “Lenovo’s ThinkPad W700 is a unique product, targeted squarely at mobile professionals who require the power, features, and performance of workstation-class product in a notebook. The machine has a few stand-out integrated features, like a Wacom Digitizer Tablet and X-Rite Color Calibrator. In addition, the ThinkPad W700ds version and adds a secondary, slide-out 10.6″ WXGA+ display, which increases monitor real-estate by 39% spanning across its two panels. HotHardware’s video demonstrates the machine’s arsenal of toys for the graphics pro, in a somewhat portable desktop replacement notebook.”

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Feb 27 2009

Availability of Apple’s high-end iMac starting to fade

The number of digital storefronts reflecting availability of Apple’s high-end iMac configuration is dwindling this week in yet another sign that long-overdue updates to the all-in-one desktop line may be inching their way closer to market.

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Feb 26 2009

5 Great Alternatives to the Twitter Interface

I do use Twitter daily, just not the Twitter site. Sometimes, I use desktop-based applications (TweetDeck and Twihrl are both favorites), and I frequently use the Web to manage my Twitter account. There are a growing number of useful applications for Twittering, and all of them do the job better than the standard Twitter interface.

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Feb 25 2009

Pimping the Gnome Desktop on Ubuntu

If there’s one thing Linux is better at than any other operating system, it’s allowing you to pimp the desktop.

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Feb 24 2009

Red Hat Returns To the Linux Desktop

CWmike writes “Red Hat used to be in the desktop business along with all the other Linux distributors. Then, they left. Now, however, Red Hat is switching from Xen to KVM for virtualization. As part of that switchover, Red Hat will be using not only KVM, but the SolidICE/SPICE desktop virtualization and management software suite to introduce a new server-based desktop virtualization system. Does this mean that Red Hat will be getting back into the Linux desktop business? That’s the question I posed to Red Hat CTO Brian Stevens, in a phone call after the Red Hat/KVM press conference, and he told me that, ‘Yes. Red Hat will indeed be pushing the Linux desktop again.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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