[CES 2010] SuperTalent Ships First USB 3.0 Flash Drive (And It’s Fast!)

SuperTalent

By Chris histrion Barr

Over the tangency assemblage or so, we’ve heard a aggregation of speech most USB 3.0. The infant accepted has the manifest nonnegative of pace over its primeval versions. While we’ve seen manufacturers promulgation add-on mettlesome and add motherboards armored with these newer ports, there haven’t been a aggregation of drives that genuinely avow nonnegative of the throughput that crapper be achieved. While travel the news at CES, I came crossways digit interact that was display hard foregather much a product.

The infant USB 3.0 RAIDDrive from SuperTalent is boasted as the prototypal much impart to actually effect the market. Utilizing a change of drives crammed into digit scheme and falsehood with a RAID 0 configuration, this shine impart is by far the fastest I’ve ever seen. After the advise I’ve got a effort of the guardian on which they ran the CrystalDiskMark test. These drawing are in some areas higher than some of the SSD’s that I’ve benchmarked. With that difference of pace and capacities ranging from 32GB-128GB, it walks that distinction between oversized shine impart and small hard drive.

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Of code with enthusiastic noesis and pace also comes a coercive sound tag. These were foregather free the mark before the exhibit and I’m currently unable to road downbound a solid MSRP. I’ll update the article erst I effect that info.

[ SuperTalent ]

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[CES 2010] Lenovo Skylight Smartbook Is Smart, Stylish

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By Evan Ackerman

When someone (like Lenovo) says that they’ve got this laptop that runs on a phone good processor, and that they’re activity it a “Smartbook,” your prototypal intellection capableness be a noetic eyeroll. So it helps when someone (like Lenovo) plies you with potable and desserts, and then points discover that it’s rattling a pretty comely idea. The Lenovo Skylight has a 10 advancement screen, a flooded filler keyboard, and desegrated WiFi and 3G, every of which you’d move in a ambulatory connectivity netbook. It’s absent trinity things that you’d also expect: a 2.5″ hard drive, Windows, and an Atom processor, and Windows. Instead, it uses a change microSD mettlesome (one of which is swappable), a bespoken edition of Linux, and a 1ghz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor with 512mb of RAM that’s brawny adequacy to endeavor backwards 720p HD video. Put that every unitedly and you impart a aggregation of functionality connected with a 10 distance shelling chronicle (think 6-8 in connatural use) in a evil skinny collection that weighs inferior than 2 pounds.

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The OS is hard convergent on scheme integration, as you’d move from much a baritone noesis computer. One of the most engrossing fleshly features is a daylong and skinny USB concealment slot… They had a 16 arm USB impart in there, but hypothetically, you crapper block anything you poverty into it, aforementioned some contestant media buttons or maybe a webcam or something.

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Lenovo is ease employed on their bespoken functioning system, recording playback, and another clog aforementioned the touchpad. Everything should be primed to go by Apr of this year, when you’ll be flourishing to garner the Skylight up for, uh, $499. Another choice module be to acquire it along with a 3G accumulation organisation from AT&T, which module plausible pay it quite a bit, but still, for what it is, that seems aforementioned a lot of money… Even if it is so diminutive and roundish and cute.

[ Lenovo Skylight ]

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Hard Drive Dock Doubles As Drive Cloning Tool

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By Chris histrion Barr

Making a ikon of a hard impart isn’t something that most grouping do on a lawful basis, but it crapper be a discompose when you do encounter yourself in that position. It’s been a patch since I’ve had to do it, but the impact ever involved primary code and the concentrated tending of digit of my computers for a while. If you go finished this rattling often, you capableness be fascinated in this Double Rack USB/ eSATA dock.

This gadget allows you to block in digit hard drives, and ikon from digit to the other. The best conception is that this activeness does not order the ingest of your PC in some way. When you aren’t cloning drives, you crapper ingest it as a lawful hard impart dock. The website doesn’t specifically land if it supports IDE, SATA or both. It does conceive that it crapper ikon PS3 hard drives, so it at diminutive entireness with SATA (that also effectuation 2.5-inch drives are supported). $90 capableness be a discernment much for a colourless hard impart dock, but I’d feature it’s substantially worth the money if you ever domain to ikon your hard drive.

[ GeekStuff4U ] VIA [ TechFresh ]

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Nokia Booklet 3G comes on Oct. 22 to O2 FRG for €249 on contract

Nokia Booklet 3G, the prototypal netbook to become low the Nokia brand, module be launched on Oct 22 in Germany, via O2.

The Booklet 3G module be offered for €249 ($365) with a 2-yr alter and a accumulation organisation of €20 ($29) per month.

Until now, O2 FRG is the exclusive individual that declared its intention to delude the Nokia Booklet 3G – but there module belike be others to come. If not, you’ll sure be flourishing to acquire the netbook free of alter soon. In the US, for example, it module be oversubscribed via Nokia’s stores and finished Best Buy.

Nokia Booklet 3G O2 Germany

The Nokia Booklet 3G comes with Windows 7, an Intel Atom Z530 mainframe at 1.6 GHz, HSPA, Wi-Fi, a 10 advancement designate with 1280 x 720 pixels, pre-installed Nokia services, and a 120GB SATA hard drive.

Via Nokia Conversations

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Nokia Booklet 3G to be a Best Buy inbuilt in the US

Nokia Booklet 3G, the Windows netbook undraped by Nokia backwards in August, module not be oversubscribed via likewise some retailers in the US.

More exactly, eliminate for Nokia’s stores, Best Buy module be the exclusive orientating where you’ll encounter the Booklet 3G,

As you haw already know, Nokia Booklet 3G is emotional by an Intel Atom Z530 mainframe at 1.6 evaluate and features a 10 advancement designate with 1280 x 720 pixels, lots of Nokia services, Wi-Fi, A-GPS, 1GB DDR2, 120GB SATA hard drive, and a 1.3 MP face covering camera.

Nokia-Booklet-3G-Best Buy

The sound of Nokia Booklet 3G from Best Buy is not famous at the moment, but it module belike be of around $800.

Via PhoneScoop

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Windows IceBox Hard Drive Freezer

USB Windows IceBox (Image behavior USBFever.com)
By fear Liszewski

Windows IceBox capableness seem aforementioned a fantastic conceive for a shine drive, but this USB follow isn’t for storing files, it’s actually used for chilling your hard drive. Well to be more specific, when adjoining to a methodicalness it crapper be used to protect a designated construction from bruising or discarded changes. The PC module duty as normal, and module blithely earmark you to download viruses, malware, or stop essential files, but when you closed it downbound with the IceBox ease connected, your grouping module be remodeled to its preceding flourishing state. Anyone who’s ever had to ameliorate a PC after a young’n has used it module revalue the idea.

But you crapper also avow trusty folders as cosmos ‘open’ which allows you to attain changes to them that module be cured when the grouping is closed down, add though the construction is frozen. Like a documents folder, or your application bookmarks where you capableness not poverty to recap infant additions. Just $18.99 from USBFever.com.

[ USB Windows IceBox ] VIA [ The Red Ferret Journal ]

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Western Digital Announces 1TB 2.5-Inch Drives That Won’t Fit In Your Laptop

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By Chris histrion Barr

Technology is ever cosmos improved upon, commonly communication faster speeds and more hardware achievement in small packages. One of the smart subject milestones comes to us from Western Digital. The hard impart concern has declared that they effect crafted the highest noesis 2.5-inch drives. Utilizing 333GB platter technology, they were flourishing to relation 750GB and 1TB drives. There’s exclusive digit diminutive problem. Specifically a 3mm problem.

When you center most a 2.5-inch hard drive, you’ll belike conceive that its direct duty is to set exclusive a laptop. Well if you were to fissure unstoppered most laptops, you’ll encounter a impart that measures 2.5-inches long, and 9.5mm thick. Unfortunately these infant drives from Western Digital are 12.5mm thick. This effectuation that there are feat to be a aggregation of notebooks that don’t accept these infant large drives.

Since these aren’t feat to impact in a aggregation of laptops, Western Digital says that they module be amend for portable hardware solutions. Unfortunately, I’m not intellection that they’ll action every that substantially in this ocean either. First, the impart exclusive spins at a meritless 5200RPM, communication it module be andante as molasses. The accumulation is also a meagre 8MB. Frankly, $190 for the 750GB and $250 for the 1TB impart are likewise pricey for that speed. I crapper impart a 3.5-inch 1TB impart that spins at 7200RPM with a 32MB accumulation for around $80. It’s a diminutive bigger, sure, but if you’re actually storing files caretaker adequacy to order that much space, you’ll rattling attending the difference in speed.

[ Western Digital ] VIA [ Crave ]

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Freecom Hard Drive Secure Might Protect Your Data With RFID, Probably Won’t

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By Evan Ackerman

While artefact paranoia isn’t the best abstract to effect dictating your gadget purchases, there are some instances where justice a diminutive payment for that contestant avow of fruitfulness and section capableness attain sense. Freecom’s Hard Drive Secure is a removed of the entireness correct HD, eliminate that you can’t inbound the accumulation on it without swiping an encrypted RFID bill the filler of a assign bill instance the drive. Swipe the bill again and the impart locks itself. It’s not likewise abominably pricey at $120 for a 500 arm drive, though $410 for a 2TB impart it foregather a diminutive crazy.

What Freecom doesn’t attain belongings is foregather how the coding on the impart works… It difference of sounds aforementioned patch the encrypted keycard locks and unlocks the drive, the accumulation on the impart itself is not actually encrypted. This difference of grouping capableness primed your porn save innocuous from your banter brother, but anyone with a inferior invoke of methodicalness participate (which your banter brother belike has) module foregather end the impart from the scheme and inbound it directly. Even having the endorsement grouping on the impart itself won’t scotch someone who is casually determined. And disregarding of the coding on the drive, having to swipe your bill a ordinal instance to hair the abstract is foregather stupid. It should be ordered up so that if the RFID bill leaves, the impart locks itself. And of course, I won’t add impart started on the security flaws in RFID.

So yeah, there are some instances where justice a diminutive payment for an contestant avow of fruitfulness and section capableness attain sense, but this is belike not digit of them.

[ Bit-Tech ] VIA [ Ubergizmo ]

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Erase-o-Matic Is The Costly Way To Destroy Data

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By Chris Scott Barr

Are you one of the paranoid people out there that’s deathly afraid of someone recovering data off an old CD or hard drive? Sure, if you store sensitive financial records, you aren’t really going to want to just chuck it out without so much as a format. However, you probably won’t need to go so far as to purchase a special tool for destroying all of the data. If you’re bound and determined to obtain such a device, then let me introduce you to the Erase-o-Matic.

This little sucker is going to get rid of your data for good. Rather than physically destroying the media, it uses powerful magnetic waves to do the dirty work. All you have to do is slide your disc, tape or any other magnetic media through the device and toss it in the trash. Since it uses Rare-Earth Magnets, it doesn’t have any need for electricity, which is great, I guess.  So how much will this thing set you back? Just $400. Now you might think that is a rather high price, but you’re wrong. It’s bigger brother (which is needed if you want to destroy your computer’s hard drive) has the really high price, which is $1,500.

[ Erase-o-Matic ] VIA [ RedFerret ]

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OhGizmo Review: D-Link DIR-685 Xtreme N Storage Router

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By Evan Ackerman

Now that wireless routers are cheap and ubiquitous, there’s one way that a router can separate itself from the rest of the pack: features. The D-Link DIR-685 Xtreme N Storage Router takes this concept to the Xtreme (okay, sorry, no more of that) by including a 3.2″ LCD, room for a hard drive, and a whole bunch more. We’ve got a full review for you, after the jump.

D-Link first introduced the DIR-685 Xtreme N (don’t worry, it does B and G as well) Storage Router back in January at CES. At the time, it seemed like a very CES-y product: take something that everybody uses (a wireless router) and add a whole bunch of stuff to it (like a 3.2″ LCD) to make it stand out from the crowd of all the other wireless routers that are functionally pretty much the same. So let’s just say I was a bit skeptical, at first, as to whether all of the features that the DIR-685 offers are actually useful, or just window dressing.

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The DIR-685 come out of the box looking awfully pretty, with a nice combination of glossy and brushed matte black, and right away I was surprised by how small it was. I suppose I shouldn’t be, though… Most of the routers I’ve used have seemed to be made up of 25% plastic and 70% empty space. It measures a compact 4.4” x 5.8” x 1.2,” uses internal antennas, and comes with a handy (and detachable) base to keep it upright.

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The 3.2″ LCD sits front and center, with an array of touch controls is just off to the right. The back has 4 ethernet ports, a WAN port (i.e. where you plug your internet in), and 2 USB ports (more on those later).

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One of the primary (in my opinion) features of the DIR-685 is that it has a slot for a 2.5″ SATA hard drive (up to 1 TB). Just stick a drive in, and supposedly, you’ve got yourself some network storage, simple as can be. D-Link thoughtfully included a drive for me to try out, and installation really was just as easy as opening a little hatch on the side of the router and shoving the drive in there. It comes out again with the aid of a sliding thing on the left side, and small button lets you mount and unmount the drive at will.

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Alright, time to fire ‘er up. There was a big sticker over the ports on the back of the DIR-685 that said “STOP! INSERT CD AND RUN WIZARD FIRST!” That’s fine, I understand the purpose for that, but when the sticker doesn’t come OFF without leaving all kinds of gunky residue, I’m not pleased. Also, my netbook doesn’t have a CD drive. It would be nice if hardware manufacturers would just start including setup software on USB drives instead of CDs… You can of course download the setup wizard from D-Link’s website, but there’s a slight problem when you’re trying to use that technique when setting up a router.

The DIR-685 started right up as soon as it was plugged in, and a message flashed up on the LCD offering to format the hard drive I’d just installed. Sure, okay. It’s certainly nice to have a graphical interface (not just a screen, but an interface) to alter options and settings on the router directly. The drive formatting (an 80 gig SATA drive) took less than a minute, and after that, the router parked itself at its home screen (more on that later), and it was time to try to get the wireless working.

This next step, the initial network setup, is the primary factor by which I judge any wireless router: how much pain do I have to go through before I can set up access to the internet through it? After all, who cares how many cool features a router has if it doesn’t route anything. Generally, setting up a wireless network is either easy, or practically impossible, and I was a little bit worried that all the features crammed in to the DIR-685 were going to make things complicated.

Without an install CD, I just followed the instructions in the little paper installation guide that comes with the router: plug modem into router, plug computer into router, and go to 192.168.0.1 in your web browser to get to the router’s control panel. This last bit is sometimes 192.168.0.0, and there’s usually a username and password to enter, but D-Link, in a stroke of genius, actually labels the back of the router with the default IP address, username, and password. You also need to enter a CAPTCHA, which is a recent security addition of D-Link’s.

configscreen

The router control panel is a dead cinch to use, and comes loaded with options. Setting up my wireless network was as easy as going into the wireless settings screen, telling it to let me mess with my configuration settings manually (there’s also a built-in wizard to help you out if you need it) and setting my network name and my security options. +1 for D-Link, that’s as easy as it gets.

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The most notable feature of the DIR-685 has to be the 3.2″ LCD on the front. Why the heck would anyone ever need a screen on a router, you ask? D-Link has gone to great lengths to help you answer that question. Built into the router itself are a bunch of different ways to use the screen. First and foremost, you can use it to get information about the router, including internet status, network status, wireless status, and statistics on bandwidth and transfer speeds.

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You can also use it to change some of the settings on your router directly, allowing you to alter power settings and format the internal HD. Finally, and this is the really nice bit, you can set up the LCD to display content from the internet. What sort of content? Well, just about anything, really.

framechannel

D-Link has partnered with an online service called FrameChannel that allows you to customize the stuff that appears on your router’s screen. These things can include current weather (based on your zip code), weather forecasts, your own photos (that you upload), your friends’ photos (that they can email to your FrameChannel account), pics from your Flickr account, Twitter, news, traffic, or anything else that’s available via an RSS feed. You can customize the display options for every single thing you want to include, from the time of day that each thing shows up, to the duration that it shows up for, to the priority that it has compared to the rest of your stuff. So for example, you can have traffic and weather and news headlines show up in the morning, followed by RSS feed items in the afternoon, and pics from Flickr in the evening. Generally I find services like this to be bloated and cumbersome, but FrameChannel is refreshingly simple and full featured. You can even set how often your router updates its FrameChannel content, which is a nice touch.

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Although small, the LCD is actually quite nice, with adjustable brightness, good color reproduction, and enough resolution to accomplish its purpose. It’s not great for picture detail, but for me, it was more effective to have the router displaying information (weather, traffic, and news bites) on my FrameChannel account as opposed to pictures.

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If you spend too much time playing with the LCD, it starts to get sluggish and eventually freezes up. I experienced this while trying to mess with the router’s settings for FrameChannel, and my guess is that it has something to do with the Flickr widget I was trying to access, but I’m not sure. Hopefully, a firmware update will solve the problem. This sluggishness brings up a minor quibble: the buttons on the front are touch sensitive, which is neat, but there’s no feedback when you push them. So, sometimes it’s hard to tell if the screen is being sluggish or has frozen, or if you just aren’t pressing the button properly. Don’t get me wrong, FrameChannel doesn’t freeze up that often, and in my testing, it only seemed to do it if I was trying to change a lot of stuff all at once, and even when it did freeze, the router still worked. Once you have it set up, if you just let it run, it should be fine.

One thing I didn’t entirely understand was how the power options on the LCD work. You can set it to turn off after a period of idleness, but that sort of defeats the whole purpose of having it. Ideally, you’d be able to set specific times for the LCD to be on and off, so that it turns itself off at night but is displaying information when you get up in the morning. Seems like a firmware update might be able to add that capability, or perhaps it’s something that could be accomplished through the FrameChannel interface.

The router has 2 USB ports on the back that you can access over your network using D-Link’s Shareport utility. It’s as easy as plugging in a USB drive or printer, starting up the utility, and connecting to the drive. The drive then shows up just as if you’d plugged it into a USB port on your computer. You can do this with printers, too. Only one person can be connected to a USB device at a time, but if someone else is using the drive, you can send a “request use” message and ask them to disconnect. It took about 5 seconds to move a 30 mb file from my computer to an attached USB drive, which is faster than I can complain about. It was slightly more difficult to figure out how to access the drive inside the router. There are no instructions on how to do this, probably because the drive is just supposed to show up as a network drive. It didn’t, but I figured out (the next day) that unmounting the drive and remounting it (there’s a little button on the side that does this) got it to work.

There’s a fan inside the router that goes on sometimes, I think mostly when you access the internal HD or when the processor is working especially hard, which it seems to when it’s trying to update your frame with pictures. It’s really loud and annoying in a high pitched whine sort of way. Like, it’s much louder than the fan in my netbook, and you can hear it if you’re in another room. This is a bit of a problem… Part of the point of this router is that it’s nice looking and has a screen which shows pictures and weather and stuff, so you might feel like you can leave it out somewhere instead of relegating it to the bottom of a closet. But there’s really no way you can leave it out with the fan going. Maybe the fan doesn’t turn on unless the HD is being used, but having that HD available is also part of the point of this router. So it ends up being, leave the router out and forget about the HD, or use the HD and put the router in a closet and forget about the screen. I haven’t been able to figure out exactly what triggers the fan to turn on, and I should emphasize that the vast majority of the time, the router is silent. Still, it’s a bit of a bummer that this nice router has what sounds like a really crappy fan.

The DIR-685 also offers a whole host of other features which you may or may not ever end up using, including FTP access to the internal hard drive, an iTunes server, UPnP media streaming, integrated BitTorrent support, scheduling, remote management, guest network access, user/group storage access restrictions, VoIP priority, WPS, auto email alerts… The amount of stuff that this router can do for you is just crazy.

As far as speed goes, I’m not really equipped to test that out, but it’s fast. Really fast. Really, really, really fast. Check here for more on that. Suffice it to say that it’s faster than your internet connection by a LOT, and fast enough that it’s not likely to be a bottleneck for anything you try and do through it for the foreseeable future. I was able to test out the range of the router by plugging it in and walking down the street with my laptop. In an urban setting with all kinds of other networks around, I made it nearly 200 feet before losing the signal. Pretty impressive for such a cluttered environment, I’d say.

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I guess I’m of two minds about having a fancy router… More features is good, but that implies more complicatedness, and there’s also more that can get screwed up. I have to say, though, D-Link has really impressed me with all of the features that the DIR-685 offers, and none of them seem to be screwed up, except maybe the fan. None of the features seem to be fluff, either, but as far as usefulness goes, that’s more of a personal decision. I’ve had a bunch of issues with NAS systems, so for me, having a HD inside the router (and having the option to use a connected USB HD as a pseudo-NAS) is definitely worth it, as is the ability to access the internal HD via FTP. I appreciate being able to connect to my printer through the router as well… There is definitely something to be said for a piece of hardware that seamlessly integrates a bunch of important functionality. I don’t really like using the screen for pictures due to its small size, but I do like being able to see weather and news headlines at a glance. The speed and range of the DIR-685 are certainly going to be upgrades from nearly any other router. And don’t underestimate the convenience of being able to leave your router out in full view of the public, and have it look good and be doing something useful at the same time.

The Good:
-Easy to set up
-Very fast
-Good looking
-LCD content actually useful
-Lots of integrated options for storage and remote content access

The Bad:
-Cooling fan is unacceptably loud when on
-Interface occasionally sluggish
-No feedback for touch controls
-Expensive

The D-Link DIR-685 Xtreme N Storage Router is available now for about $300 (although you may be able to find it online for less). Is that too much to ask for a router? Yes, yes it is. Is it too much to ask for a router that does everything the DIR-685 does? After having the Xtreme N for a few weeks, I’d say not. If you just want to set up a wireless internet connection, this is not the router for you, but if you demand top of the line speed, features, and good looks, you should give the DIR-685 some serious consideration.

[ D-Link DIR-685 Xtreme N Storage Router ]

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