It’s true, Dell unleashed two new Alienware systems this morning , and naturally we just had to check out the two epically powerful rigs in person. We spent the most time with the new 17-inch M17x , and while the chassis has been updated, it’s still loaded with lots of LEDs, a trippy color-changing backlit keyboard, and chrome accents. The lid and edges have been given a more chiseled aesthetic, so we’d say it looks more muscular than ever. Obviously, the big story with the M17x is that it is now 3D capable . The full HD display is seriously beautiful, and while we didn’t get to check out a Blu-ray 3D movie on the rig, we can only imagine how breathtaking the experience is going to be. We did, however, get to check out its new integrated 1080p streaming capability, which actually is based on an integrated WHDI solution . You’ll need to pick up an extra box and hook it up to your TV, but in the demo we saw there was absolutely no lag between the clip of Final Fantasy on the laptop and on the TV. The unit we saw hanging around was packing a new Core i7 CPU and NVIDIA graphics, but it will apparently be available with AMD’s latest graphics as well. We also caught sometime with the new Aurora desktop , but like we said it wasn’t much. The tower is still crazily-lit, but has been updated with the most powerful overclockable Intel Core i5 and i7 Sandy Bridge processors as well as new NVIDIA graphics that support 3D Vision. The Aurora should be available this month for a starting price of $1,799 and the M17x for $1,499 on January 10th. Hit the break for some more images and the source link for Engadget Spanish’s short video. Gallery: Dell Alienware M17x and Aurora hands-on Dell Alienware M17x and Aurora hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 20:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Wondering what your future kitchen looks like? Take a gander at what Fulton Innovation is showing at CES this year. They’re also giving a peek at the future of retail shopping, and even parking lots. It’s all the magic of inductive charging, and now that the Qi standard has been finalized it seems like things are coming together. Really together, in everything from cereal boxes with blinkenlights to Tesla Roadsters that charge almost as quickly as with a wire but, quite obviously, without the wire. Would you like to know more? Click on through. Gallery: Fulton Innovation at CES Continue reading Fulton Innovation blows our minds with eCoupled wireless Tesla, inductive cereal boxes (video) Fulton Innovation blows our minds with eCoupled wireless Tesla, inductive cereal boxes (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 20:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Those “birthers” out there still hoping to contest President Obama’s American citizenship won’t have much of an ally in the newly installed House Speaker John Boehner, but he also won’t question their own beliefs on that front.
Continue reading …So it appears that Bill Daley will be the new Chief of Staff to President Obama. Another corporatist centrist. I guess if Obama decides what agenda to follow as Steve Benen argues, then the choice might not really matter all that much: The banker background isn’t encouraging, but I could find it relatively easy to overlook this. By all accounts, Daley enjoys the support and respect of those who’ve worked with him, and has proven himself as an excellent manager. Those are good qualities to have in this job. But it’s his political instincts that rankle. Daley has opposed some of the same Obama policy achievements I think are worth supporting, and Daley’s belief that the mainstream Democratic agenda is too liberal strikes me as absurd. The flipside, though, is that I’m not sure just how much this matters. Rahm Emanuel wasn’t exactly a choice to get excited about, and his ideological instincts weren’t quite reliable, either. Indeed, it’s an open secret that Emanuel pleaded with Obama to forget about health care reform in 2009, insisting that the political investment wasn’t worth the reward. And as we know, the president ignored him, and pursued the priorities he wanted to pursue. Emanuel’s instincts didn’t get in the way of the best two years of progressive policymaking since LBJ. That’s why I’m not worked up either way about the Daley selection. He wouldn’t have been my pick — Obama neglected to ask me for my input again — but as far as I can tell, this isn’t a White House in which the chief of staff necessarily sets the agenda. That’s the president’s job. But it’s the centrist pols who have hurt the Obama administration the most. It doesn’t matter how far right Obama goes, he’ll always be painted as a socialist Kenyan anti-American President by the right. By not making legislation actually more progressive, Obama has lost major support from his base. When will he start showing some love to the base he needs? He could have hired a progressive Chief of Staff and it would have helped him, but maybe that’s what the President wants. I heard Charley Cook tell Andrea Mitchell that the left is going to be angry for the next few years. Ya think? Greg Sargent: As many have already pointed out, Daley repeatedly criticized Obama’s agenda as too left-wing. For instance, he said : “They miscalculated on health care. The election of ’08 sent a message that after 30 years of center-right governing, we had moved to center left — not left.” Now that Daley has been picked, there will be a fair amount of commentary to the effect that Obama has wisely received this message and is in the midst of a course correction. But here’s the thing: Daley is wrong. Obama didn’t govern from the “left.” And as it happens, he did govern from the “center left.” This has all been argued already at length by others, but here goes. Obama’s approach to the crises he inherited were by any sane measure mostly moderate and reasonable. The stimulus was smaller and less ambitious than most liberals wanted. The health care plan he adopted jettisoned the most liberal elements and embraced solutions once championed by Republicans. The Wall Street reform bill was the most sweeping overhaul of financial regulations in generations, but as observers across the spectrum have noted, it wasn’t fundamentally transformative. Obama is winding down the Iraq War, but he escalated in Afghanistan. And he has embraced some controversial Bush policies on civil liberties and terrorism. And so on. Digby reminded me of Recount : The film has already caused intra-party squabbling, not surprisingly. Some prominent Democrats have championed the film in full-page HBO ads. Others assert that it portrays key players in the George W. Bush versus Al Gore showdown, especially Gore adviser and former Secretary of State Warren Christopher and Gore campaign chairman William Daley (brother of Mayor Richard M. Daley), in an inaccurate and unflattering light. And this: Daley understood that before the campaign hit Florida they needed to set the tone early. Daley and Eskew decided the campaign tone would be over and they would take a statesmanlike and not confrontational tone. They then decided to bring on former secretary of state Warren Christopher to join the fight in Florida. Danny Strong, the actor (“Buffy,” “Gilmore Girls”) who wrote “Recount,” told the New York Times recently that, according to his research, Christopher and Daley “wanted to concede [the election] from Day 1,” a view both men strongly dispute in the same piece. Will Daley be a fighter or a conceder?
Continue reading …Kris Williams isn’t afraid of the dark or of ghosts. She’s made a career of investigating the paranormal on TVs ‘Ghost Hunters’ and is now going abroad with ‘Ghost Hunters International’ on the Syfy channel. (Jan. 6)
Continue reading …HyperMac is known more for its power-extending solutions than its other peripherals, but this still-unannounced iPad external hard drive enclosure we spotted at the company’s booth is certainly interesting. Capable of accepting a standard 2.5-inch hard drive, the brushed metal box has two miniUSB ports around back — one to connect to your computer, and another to connect to your iPad. Unfortunately, unlike other iPad storage solutions like the AirStash , because it interfaces through Apple’s USB camera adapter, you’re limited to photos and video content only. On top of that, it only works with the iPad because the iPhone and iPod touch don’t support that particular accessory. The target price point is around $100 without any physical drive — yes, it’s a BYOHD affair — which is definitely steeper than we’d like, especially given the limited functionality. Still, if you’ve got more content than space to spare, you might want to look into picking one of these up when it drops in sometime later this month. Gallery: HyperMac’s external hard drive enclosure for iPad HyperMac’s external hard drive enclosure for iPad hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 19:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …The man who bought one of the two winning tickets in the $380 million Mega Millions lottery on Wednesday claimed his half of the second largest jackpot in history. Jim McCullar then promptly handed the oversized check to his wife, Carolyn. (Jan. 6)
Continue reading …The Obama administration is working on cutting back defense spending to levels the U.S. hasn’t seen since before Sept. 11, 2001, but the proposed changes have more to do with economic reasons than any big strategic change from within military ranks, as The New York Times explained Thursday. The New York Times: The White House has ordered the Pentagon to squeeze almost all growth from its spending over the next five years, which will require eventually shrinking the Army and Marine Corps and seeking controversial increases in the fees paid by retired, working-age veterans for their health insurance, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said Thursday. The reductions of up to 47,000 troops from the Army and Marine Corps forces — roughly 6 percent shrinkage — would be the first since the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, reversing the trend ever since. They will be made easier by the withdrawal under way from Iraq, and will only begin in 2015 — just as Afghan forces are to take over the security mission there according to agreements with NATO. But Mr. Gates said the cuts in Pentagon spending were hardly a peace dividend, and were forced by a global economic recession and domestic pressures to find ways to throttle back federal spending. Read more Related Entries January 5, 2011 Gibbs to Sign Off as Press Secretary January 4, 2011 Darrell Issa, Step Away From the Corporations
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