New iPhone (4G) – taller than the grownup iPhones?

We ease don’t participate the effort conceive of Apple’s 95th impact iPhone (expected to be free in June or July), so until something authorised comes up, we’ll call it iPhone 4G.

Well, the iPhone 4G capableness be a discernment assorted than the grownup iPhone models (including the 3G and 3GS), which every countenance most the same.

The folks over at iResQ effect posted some photos that reportedly exhibit parts of the infant iPhone. It looks aforementioned the iPhone 4G is most 1/4 advancement taller than the preceding iPhones (which are every 115mm tall).

Another difference is that the infant iPhone has a diminutive reflective opencast above the organism (this capableness be foregather a closeness sensor). Also, “the LCD appears to be entireness affixed to the digitizer,” this making the iPhone 4G more kindred to the first-gen iPhone than to the 3G and 3GS models.

Apple iPhone 4g taller

iResQ says that this haw not be the effort methodicalness of Apple’s infant iPhone, and add that the parts haw be “for added creation completely,” so for today we should be agnostical most every this.

Via MacRumors

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Samsung Q1EX UMPC reviewed, dismissed

Rats. Just when we thought that someone had figured out how to make a winning UMPC configuration for consumers, out comes a review to pan it. While the Samsung Q1EX sounds good on paper with its 7-inch resistive touchpanel with 1,024 x 600 resolution, 1.2GHz VIA Nano processor, 4.5-hour battery, and $775 price tag; Laptop Mag was unimpressed when it came to go-time. Unfortunately, Laptop found text entry to be too much of a chore thanks to the loss of the thumbpad used on previous Q1-series UMPCs and the lack of a digitizer that severely impacts the unit’s ability to accurately recognize handwriting under XP Tablet Edition. Boot times were slow and battery life was poor at just two hours compared to the 4.5 hours stated. Sure, you can add a dock with keyboard (pictured) and optional 6-cell battery (bringing the price to $977), but at that point, you’d be wise to look at the latest in wee netbooks offering bigger screens, the same power, and longer battery life at half the price.
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Viral Lenovo W700ds ad is physically difficult to watch


Hey, Lenovo: thanks for the $8-an-hour “cameraman,” $10-an-hour “actress,” and Oscar-caliber “plot,” but the dual displays, digitizer, and RAID array are the real porn here. Of course, the suggestive music ripped off an 90s vintage Playboy DVD doesn’t hurt — mildly NSFW footage after the break.

[Via CNET, thanks Kunai]
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Sirona dental digitizer makes cavities look better than ever


We may not all be getting dental examinations at home just yet, but we can at least be thankful that companies like Sirona are doing their best to speed up our visits to the dentist and, frankly, make them a little more awesome. Their latest device is the CEREC AC, which makes use of the so-called Bluecam pictured above to capture images of “near inaccessible areas with the utmost precision.” That’s apparently made possible in part thanks to its use of a blue LED that illuminates the area, and some built-in shake detection and automatic image capturing software that ensures that just the right images are captured. The main CEREC AC unit comes into the picture to work some CAD/CAM magic on those images and, as you can see after the break, it seems more than ready to handle a few late night games of Marble Madness should the urge arise.

[Via Medgadget]

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Panasonic’s H1 Mobile Clinical Assistant gets release date, price, music video


Remember that medical tablet Panasonic revealed at IDF earlier this year? No? Well, it happened. Details were pretty hard to come by then, but the company’s officially announced the product as the H1 tablet. The fully ruggedized slate is built on familiar netbook internals with a 1.86 GHz Intel Atom CPU, 1GB of RAM, an 80GB SSD, a 10.4-inch 1024 x 768 resolution LCD display with an InPlay Technologies digitizer, and 802.11a/b/g/n. It’s going to be available in January of 2009 for a somewhat staggering $2,799, though the figure is less painful when you consider that awesome custom handle on the back. If you can’t get enough tedious details about devices such as this, you’re in luck: hit the read link for a serious plethora of information in the press releases, and check out the awesome educational video they’ve released after the break. We think you’ll find it has a lot to offer in terms of production values and soundtrack.

Update: We were contacted by a rep for Panasonic, and it turns out that the H1 is going to run you $2,999, not $2,799.

[Via Gotta Be Mobile]


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Multi-touch display giving Dell Latitude XT users fits?


Dell’s Latitude XT is a pretty special piece of equipment, namely because it boasts multi-touch capabilities while being a Tablet PC. Unfortunately, it seems that quite a few users are growing increasingly frustrated with the touch-lovin’ screen, with GottaBeMobile going so far as to call Dell out to remedy the myriad issues with its N-Trig digitizer. Among the problems are “digitizer not found” errors upon restart, a digitizer that won’t work properly without a few reboots and a nice selection of applet loading errors to top things off. It seems the readers of the aforesaid site aren’t faring too well either, with the forums filling up with folks eager and willing to yell “amen!” and “me too!” Are you also experiencing wonky N-Trig problems? Are you fed up with Dell’s public silence on the matter? Or have you figured out a solution that you’ve been keeping all to yourself for the past seven months? Chime in down below.
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ASUS Eee Top ET1602 touchscreen all-in-one gets reviewed


ASUS’s touchscreen Eee Top ET1602 all-in-one was certainly adored in a pre-staged way by small children when it launched last month, but Slashgear’s taken it for a spin and found that it actually deserves the love. The 15.6-inch resistive touchscreen wasn’t on par with the capacitive screen in HP’s TouchSmart or the active digitizer in newer tablet PCs, but it did the job, and ASUS’s Windows XP “Easy Mode” launcher and bundled touch apps were intuitive and friendly, although certain apps would drop back into XP’s mouse-oriented interface at times. Under the hood, the netbook-class 1.6GHz Atom, 1GB of RAM, and GMA950 graphics didn’t rock anyone’s world, but they managed general browsing and 720p video playback without issue. All in all, it seems like ASUS has built an interesting little AIO for the expected US price of $450 — now if they’d just start shipping them here, we’d find out for ourselves. Hit the read link for the full review.
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