Tuesday, July 19, 2011

The Immigrant's Cheese

It's called Limburger, and it supposedly smells horrible: Originally from Liege, Beligum, Limburger accompanied mid-nineteenth century Germans and Belgians immigrating en masse to America for its rapidly modernizing, expanding economy. For them, it was a nostalgic, cheap saloon food. They...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/andrewsullivan/rApM/~3/rhcBVFyUFaA/the-immigrants-cheese.html

Julie Berry Lori Heuring Nicole Scherzinger Jill Arrington Tami Donaldson

gScreen SpaceBook: Back to the Future with Dual Screens?

gScreen has released two SpaceBook-branded laptops that sport dual 17.3” 1080p monitors. That makes SpaceBook the laptop with the most real screen estate with over four million pixels. gScreen has achieved dual screens by making them sliding - the other screen will slide behind the other one to maintain a regular laptop form factor. The slide effect also allows SpaceBook to be used as a normal one-screen laptop. 

gScreen SpaceBook specifications
  SpaceBook 17 i5 4G SpaceBook 17 i7 8G
Screen size 2x 17.3" 2x 17.3"
Resolution 2x 1920x1080 2x 1920x1080
Processor Intel Core i5-560M (2.66GHz dual core) Intel Core i7-740QM (1.73GHz quad core)
Graphics NVIDIA GeForce GTS 250M 1GB NVIDIA GeForce GTS 250M 1GB
RAM 4GB DDR3 1333MHz 8GB DDR3 1333MHz
Hard drive 500GB 7200rpm 500GB 7200rpm
Optical drive Super-Multi DVD drive Super-Multi DVD drive
Wireless 802.11 b/g/n 802.11 b/g/n
Connections Headphone jack, mic-in, Ethernet, 3x USB 2.0, eSATA+USB, FireWire, HDMI, memory card slot Headphone jack, mic-in, Ethernet, 3x USB 2.0, eSATA+USB, FireWire, HDMI, memory card slot
Dimensions (WxHxD) 16.5" x 1.9" x 12.6 16.5" x 1.9" x 12.6
Weight 10lb 10lb
Price $2395 $2795

{gallery 1244}

For a quick history lesson, gScreen was founded in 2003 and has solely concentrated on dual-screen laptops. They first revealed their plans in 2009 and originally SpaceBook was supposed to come out in early 2010, but it was delayed. However, after more than a year, gScreen is now taking pre-orders. They also seem to have some kind of promotion regarding to the pricing so the prices listed above are the original prices, not discounted ones. 

Frankly, the specifications are straight from early 2010 as well. There is no Sandy Bridge, only Arrandale and Clarksfield, both of which are 18 months old (or more) by now. As for the graphics, gScreen offers NVIDIA GeForce GTS 250M with 1GB of VRAM (no word on the type, though DDR3 is likely) in both models and this GPU is roughly two years old. gScreen doesn’t even offer any BTO options so these are the only options you have; no Blu-Ray, SSDs, or anything like that (although you should be able to install them on your own). There is also no word on the panel type, only that they have LED backlighting. Given the high price and gScreen's aim at professional market, IPS displays would be a nice addition, but with outdated CPU and graphics, a TN panel seems inevitable. 

gScreen doesn’t say anything about the battery life, only that it's a 6-cell, but considering that we are talking about Arrandale and especially Clarksfield with no GPU switching, the battery life can’t be too good. The second screen will also draw extra power so battery life is very likely less than 90 minutes. Considering the presumed bad battery life and the fact that SpaceBook is a 10-pound monster, portability really becomes a moot point. You lose a lot of portability if you need to be plugged in all the time and the weight of SpaceBook means that it won't be your "everyday and everwhere" kind of laptop. 

Given the above, we have to ask: exactly what is the market for the SpaceBook? gScreen claims that they focus on filmmakers, photographers, designers and CAD engineers. However, who would pay over $2000 for a laptop with very out dated hardware and use it as a work machine? If you work with video or other intensive content, then you are going to want the fastest machine you can find, or at least a computer that offers good performance for the buck. Gamers won’t even take a look at machine like this considering its hefty price tag and relatively poor specs. Engineers likewise wouldn't even think about outdated hardware with no professional GPU features (e.g. Quadro or FireGL).

The only market for SpaceBook that I can see is people who really, really need a lot of screen estate while on the go and are ready to trade performance and portability (and a nice amount of $) for those features. That doesn't seem like a big market and it’s hard to see SpaceBook becoming a blockbuster. $1200 can easily get you a laptop with a quad-core Sandy Bridge CPU, decent GPU, and 1080p screen. That’s much more powerful and portable than SpaceBook while costing half as much. With the leftover money, you can grab two big desktop LCDs (even IPS panels!) and get more screen estate than SpaceBook, and still saving money. The only thing you miss out on there is transportability.

All in all, SpaceBook is an interesting concept but it isn't enough to justify the out dated hardware and high price. With 2011 hardware and some configurable options, it could potentially satisfy a niche market, but in its current state SpaceBook looks quite obsolete. We're curious, though: are any of our readers more forgiving of the design? Let us know.

Source: http://www.anandtech.com/show/4507/gscreen-spacebook-laptop-with-dual-screens

Ana Ivanovi Jessica Cauffiel Emmanuelle Vaugier Sarah Silverman Larissa Meek

Monday, July 18, 2011

Cursive As Calisthenics

by Chris Bodenner As keyboarding becomes more prevalent in school curricula and is even replacing cursive writing in some states, researchers say that the exercise of writing by hand is itself crucial for memory and brain development. Danielle Magnuson magnifies...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/andrewsullivan/rApM/~3/nxK5P3y0kyA/the-keyboard-is-killing-cursive.html

Joanna Krupa Ashley Olsen Danneel Harris Veronika Vaeková Eve

Samsung Galaxy Q 5.3-inch hybrid phone/tablet tipped for IFA 2011

Samsung is believed to be readying a new tablet/smartphone hybrid, the Samsung Galaxy Q, for official unveil at IFA 2011 in September. The 5.3-inch device would slot in-between the company’s Android handset and Galaxy Tab slate lines, Yahoo News Korea�reports, citing industry sources close to Samsung. Specifications of the handset are unknown, though the tipsters [...]

Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/dH81NP-YJ18/

Tami Donaldson Padma Lakshmi Sarah Mutch Gabrielle Union Alessandra Ambrosio

Tabletpalooza Weeks 1 and 2 Winners Roundup : It Could Be You!

It’s that time again, ladies and gentlemen, time to ring the bell for several of our winners in a contest. The contest we’re dealing with right now has a total of FIVE Android tablets in it, each of them packed with a NVIDIA Tegra 2 dual-core processor inside. We’ve got two left, and you know [...]

Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/fbSeWjaeZ4Y/

Rebecca Mader Eva Green Lauren Conrad Arielle Kebbel Jessica Paré

HTC Status hits AT&T for $50, hopes you tell your Facebook friends

HTC’s QWERTY Facebook phone has gone on sale in the US, with AT&T offering the HTC Status�for just $50 with a new agreement. The Android handset – which we reviewed as the HTC ChaCha�- has a 2.6-inch 480 x 320 touchscreen above a very usable QWERTY keyboard, and offers a dedicated Facebook button designed to [...]

Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/xyiVtgrFzkQ/

Ciara Rachel Hunter Heidi Montag Katharine McPhee T.A.T.u.

Tabletpalooza Week 3 : Acer Iconia Tab A500 Giveaway!

The final week for this Tabletpalooza has begun, and it’s for a sweet little ditty by Acer! This is the Aceri Iconia Tab A500 and it’s stocked with NVIDIA’s Tegra 2 dual-core processor for your endless entertainment! This is only one of FIVE tablets we’ve already given away or are about to give away, the [...]

Source: http://feeds.slashgear.com/~r/slashgear/~3/3Wi6CjJxwCI/

Michelle Obama Kerry Suseck FSU Cowgirls Abbie Cornish Krista Allen