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Thursday, April 17, 2008

Flybook Touch Screen Laptop



Gizmodo Reports that a new Touch Screen Laptop called FlyBook will be coming to the USA in September. It comes in seven colors and will retail for around $2,500.

· 512MB DDR

· Transmeta Crusoe TM-5800,

· ATi Radeon Mobility high performance low power chipset

· clock rate at 1 GHz

· 512K L2 Write-back Cache

· LongRun technology to extend battery usage

· 8.9" wide-view 16:9 display 1024x600 (Wide-XGA) high resolution

· GSM Tri Band (900/1800/1900 Mhz)

Canova Dual Screen Laptops

The electronic revolution is still on its way, as Apple said at the beginning of this year, the first three decades are only the start.

Like Apple creating and developing news ways and means to run our electronic materials, concepts with real technological innovations appear more than ever.


Here is a concept that features the tomorrow laptop. In the same direction that the next mobile phones, this computer possesses two screens, a multi sensitive touch screen, not far from the iPhone system.

No more need for accessories or keyboard shortcuts, all specific commands of each software will be displayed on the screen. It seems that there are no limits to use that kind of computer and that it is possible to imagine to develop new softwares we ever cannot think of today.



Laptops


A laptop computer, or simply laptop (also notebook computer, notebook and notepad) is a small mobile computer, which usually weighs 2-18 pounds (around 1 to 8 kilograms), depending on size, materials, and other factors.


Laptops usually run on a single main battery or from an external AC/DC adapter that charges the battery while also supplying power to the computer itself. Many computers also have a 3 volt cell to run the clock and other processes in the event of a power failure.


Laptops contain components that are similar to their desktop counterparts and perform the same functions, but are miniaturized and optimized for mobile use and efficient power consumption, although typically less powerful for the same price. Laptops usually have liquid crystal displays and most of them use different memory modules for their random access memory (RAM), for instance, SO-DIMM in lieu of the larger DIMMs. In addition to a built-in keyboard, they may utilize a touchpad (also known as a trackpad) or a pointing stick for input, though an external keyboard or mouse can usually be attached.