Posted on
March 26th, 2012 by
David
Because of how fast the technology sector adapts and changes, sometimes it is hard to remember how significant some of the overnight successes for companies truly were. After all, one year the hot product is an iPad, the next year it is an Amazon Kindle Fire, the next year, the market explodes for an entirely different product. Because the attention span of consumers is so short, you might have forgotten one of the most significant product releases in the last decade. There have been sixty million of them sold since 2004. Give up? It’s the TomTom GPS navigation system. The founder and CEO of TomTom is Harold Goddijn and he is one of the coolest businessmen around.
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Posted on
March 26th, 2012 by
David
Most phones have a plastic or aluminum casing. The purpose of the casing is to protect the sensitive inner components by creating a barrier that absorbs any damage. It is also an opportunity for users to personalize their phone by purchasing a special color or by adding a patterned case from another company.
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Posted on
March 26th, 2012 by
David
Video cameras have become such a commonplace accessory built into laptop computers that many young people forget that they can still be freestanding units! Far from the clunky video surveillance tools of the film era, new IP cameras use wireless networks to transmit streaming videos from the camera unit to a secure, central router. This allows you to use video cameras with much more discretion than ever before. That does not mean that you should not have a stylish video camera, though. For the perfect blend of style and functionality, the Zonet IP Camera is the IP camera to buy.
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Posted on
March 25th, 2012 by
David
There are few phrases less applicable in the tech sector than “if a product is good, it will pretty much sell itself.” If that were the case, the Microsoft Zune would have been phenomenally more successful and Apple would not even be considering a mini-iPad. Instead, without great marketing, a good product can get buried by a competitor. Conversely, with a crack marketing team, an unimpressive product can appear so vital to consumers that it will sell a million units. So, in these times when energy efficiency is increasingly important and technology manufacturers scramble to build better batteries, a Vice President of Marketing for an alternative energy company might seem unnecessary. Nothing could be further for the truth at Tremont Electric, though. That is why Tremont Electric is thrilled to have Jill LeMieux.
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Posted on
March 25th, 2012 by
David
Wilmington, North Carolina is the first town in America to implement a newly approved method of wireless Internet access. The White Space network will eventually allow Internet access to be available everywhere, such as rural towns in which broadband Internet companies will not lay wire. Claudville, Virginia had a White Space network during an experimental phase of testing a few years ago, because no companies would provide the area with high-speed Internet, but the Wilmington network is the first to use the new FCC-approved devices after testing.
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Posted on
March 25th, 2012 by
David
If you use your computer solely for business purposes and look for the most efficient and inexpensive tool possible, the odds are you do not truly understand the idea of a premium keyboard. There are keyboards that cost consumers hundreds of dollars because they are specialized to niche demographics that have unique demands for how they interface with their computers. Most of these premium keyboards are marketed to the antithesis of business computer users: gamers. Arguably the coolest, most powerful premium keyboard is the SteelSeries Merc Stealth keyboard and it is a gamer’s best friend when it comes to interface devices.
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Posted on
March 24th, 2012 by
David
In a world with rapidly changing technology, it is rare when one encounters a truly good idea anymore. Indeed, many emerging technologies simply seek to improve upon already existing devices or technology. So, when FXI Technologies virtually reinvented the computer with the Cotton Candy 3” computer device, it was newsworthy. The brain behind Cotton Candy and FXI Technologies is Borgar Ljosland.
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Posted on
March 24th, 2012 by
David
We all hate Spam. Not the processed meat in a can, the email messages that we did not want to receive. Whether they appear as advertisements for products we do not want or emails for services we have no interest in, everyone has received spam at some point. Sometimes, though, spam emails can be far more dangerous than annoying ads – they can contain phishing links that appear to come from a legitimate source.
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Posted on
March 24th, 2012 by
David
Anyone who works with digital photographs knows that having great photographic equipment is only half of what one needs to create amazing digital images. In many ways, the quality of your digital camera is not as important as the quality of your photo manipulation software. Adobe has long been the leader in digital photograph manipulation software, with its Photoshop software becoming synonymous with photo manipulation. Once again, Adobe is raising the bar with its Lightroom 4 software.
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Posted on
March 23rd, 2012 by
David
For those who might not have heard of it yet, there is a social network challenging Facebook for supremacy on the Internet. It’s not Google+, either! The social network is called Diaspora and it is an open-source alternative to Facebook that was founded on the belief that users ought to control their information and social network experience. Diaspora is a good idea that has been plagued by problems, not the least of which are a lack of name recognition (outside the hacker community) and the suicide last November of one of the company’s four co-founders, Ilya Zhitomirskiy. Despite the setbacks, Diaspora is poised to break out into popular culture. If it does, it will no doubt be in part because of Rosanna Yau.
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