SanDisk i100 128GB SSD for mobile tablets

SanDisk unveils 128GB mobile tablet module

Currently, a mobile tablet is likely to offer on-board storage in one of three sizes: 16GB, 32GB, and 64GB. At Computex in Taipei today, SanDisk revealed a new SATA III SSD for mobile tablets and ultraportables that bumps storage up to the 128GB generation.

Sandisk's i100 drive is part of the company's integrated storage device series (iSSD) especially designed for tablets and ultrathin notebooks, which debuted last year. Claiming to be the world's smallest, fastest 128 GB SATA III BGA SSD, SanDisk says these units require as little as 10mW of power when their parent device is in sleep mode.

By Tim Conneally -
Dept of Defense logo 200 pix

You hack us, we bomb you -- what's the right way to respond to cyberattacks?

Today's Wall Street Journal discusses the Pentagon's first formal cyber strategy. The interesting part is that it takes the position that some acts of computer sabotage ("cyberattacks") --shudder! I hate that term -- are "acts of war" and may be dealt with through conventional military force.

This is both obvious and frightening at the same time. The idea that you respond with literally lethal bombs in an attempt to shut down civilian or military infrastructure facilities is going to strike many as "disproportionate." There's something to proportionality, but you can take it too far. Recently, Palestinians in Gaza fired an anti-tank missile at an Israeli school bus. Would the proportional Israeli response have been to fire an anti-tank missile at a Palestinian school bus? If you feel you've been attacked wrongly you have every right to hit back hard, is there no good reason to limit yourself to the weapons of the enemy?

By Larry Seltzer -
Nokia Bubbles

Nokia gives 3 reasons 2011 won't go as well as hoped

Finnish mobile telecommunications giant Nokia on Tuesday said it has lowered sales projections for its Devices and Services division, and because of this it has dropped its prior full-year projections altogether.

Nokia gave three clear reasons for dropping its net sales outlook to a figure "significantly lower" than its original EUR 6.1 billion to EUR 6.6 billion projection for the second quarter 2011.

By Tim Conneally -
Cloud App

Apple looks to steal Computex and D9 thunder with iCloud

In a simply unprecedented announcement -- well, since founder Steve Jobs' return as chief executive 15 years ago -- Apple tipped off a new product coming next week. Before Wall Street's opening bell this morning, the company dropped a press release explaining that Jobs would present next week's Worldwide Developer Conference keynote and that the new iCloud service would be announced. Jobs and team also will unveil Mac OS X "Lion," which was expected, and the next version version of iOS.

From a competitive buzz perspective, surely Apple is looking to steal some thunder coming from Computex, which opened earlier today in Taipei, and the D9 conference, which starts tonight here in California. Both venues will produce major news ahead of WWDC. Intel kicked off Computex by announcing new chips, a new tablet platform and Ultrabook, a portable category competitively aimed at Apple's MacBook Air and iPad. Google Chairman Eric Schmidt will be D9's first-day headliner. Apple has little to no direct presence at either event.

By Joe Wilcox -
Xara logo

Get hands on with Xara Photo & Graphic Designer 7

Equipping yourself to deal with all your graphics needs typically requires an entire library of programs: a drawing tool, photo editor, desktop publishing application, web graphics package, Flash animation tool, and so on. Or alternatively you could just install Xara Photo & Graphic Designer 7, which crams all this functionality -- and more -- into a single,  easy-to-use package.

Would you like to correct a few photos, for instance? Open the Photos toolbar and you can crop, rotate or resize an image; tweak brightness, contrast, saturation, temperature, blur or sharpness; fix red-eye; adjust levels; apply perspective correction; and more.

By Mike Williams -
Asus UX series

What's the big deal about Intel Ultrabook?

With the new Ultrabook, Intel seeks to bring together the best qualities of laptops with those of tablets. It's an evolution long-time coming. Finally, near Instant-On and all-day battery life capabilities may reach the masses.

Wake on Resume?

By Mike Feibus -
Intel logo (200 px)

Intel tries to redefine mobile computing (again) with Ultrabook

Computex kicked off today in Taipei, with Intel looking to open a new mobile computing category. Now that iPad and other tablets are killing off the netbook category, Intel is looking to start another -- Ultrabook. Intel is pitching Ultrabook as a laptop with tablet-like features, which based on size, features and performance looks lots like Apple's MacBook Air.

Ultrabooks will be thin and light, measuring less than 20 mm (0.8 inches) thick and selling for less than $1,000. By thickness (16.3mm), the Samsung Series 9 fits the category definition but costs considerably more, starting at about $1,300. The laptop is available now.

By Joe Wilcox -
Video editing

Lagarith codec: Preserving video file quality like it was lossless

Video editing can be a destructive business, especially when carried out over multiple sessions. Every time you save your movie with a regular lossy codec, the quality degrades just a little, and it'll only get worse over time.

You could get around this by saving the videos uncompressed, of course, but the resulting files would be huge, and slow to load and save. It's a much better idea to install and work with a lossless codec, instead -- and Lagarith is one of the best.

By Mike Williams -
Sick PC

Mac Guard assails teen girl's computer

Lots of people are dismissing blogs and news stories about Mac Defender, and the Mac Guard variant, as frivolous reporting. Reasoning: There are hundreds of thousands of Windows PC viruses and Trojans and just the one for the Mac. I disagree. This Trojan is the first Mac malware to widely spread in the wild. That makes it news.

Early this afternoon, Eastern Daylight Time, I had my first encounter with someone whose computer was infected by the Trojan. That's personal confirmation about the malware being in the wild. One of my daughter's friends called saying that she had received pop-warnings about her vintage-2008 15-inch MacBook Pro being infected with virus. She had been presented with option to purchase MacGuard to fix it. I gave her the laptop about six months ago.

By Joe Wilcox -
Microsoft corporate story badge

Software Assurance makes Microsoft less competitive

Seventh in a series. Microsoft's volume-licensing upgrade plan locks Microsoft in as much as it does customers. Businesses choosing Software Assurance commit to paying for upgrade rights typically in three-year contracts. They're obligated to pay Microsoft 29 percent of the software's value annually. While Microsoft benefits from getting this money upfront, Software Assurance makes it difficult to reduce prices in response to competitors.

Software Assurance is a Drug

By Paul DeGroot -
Duplicate File Finder logo

Safely save drive space with Auslogics Duplicate File Finder 2.1

Just how fast does your hard drive appear to be filling up these days? It doesn't matter if you purchase the latest terabyte monster or are running a more humble 80GB drive, it's amazing how quickly all that space can quickly disappear.

If you're the kind of person who finds himself or herself making multiple copies of files for whatever reason, a lot of that space can be reclaimed simply by searching for, and deleting, those redundant files. But it can be a risky business. What if you delete the wrong file? That's where Auslogics Duplicate File Finder comes in, bounding to the rescue. Version 2.1 of the program, released May 27, promises improved stability, an end to memory leaks and better memory optimization.

By Nick Peers -
xmarks

Want to sync bookmarks across browsers? Xmarks the spot

These days, an increasing number of browsers, including Chrome and Firefox 4, make it easy to access the latest version of your bookmarks from any computer you own thanks to built-in sync. The problem is that these proprietary sync technologies will only work with the browser they're designed for.

If you're wanting to switch from one browser to another, or you don't want to tie yourself to a single browser, you'll need a third-party solution in order to keep your bookmarks in sync across all machines and browsers. That solution comes in the form of a free add-in called Xmarks, which is available for various browsers, including FirefoxChromeSafari and Internet Explorer.

By Nick Peers -
Texting and driving

Will someone please develop an anti-texting-while-driving app?

Texas Street is one of the steepest and longest driving inclines in San Diego, Calif. Cement dividers separate the cars, which also must contend with exhausted riders pushing, rather than peddling, their two wheelers up the narrow and close-to-traffic bike lanes. It's essential that cars keep their lanes. Last night, one next to me didn't, forcing my Toyota Yaris into the bike lane. When I reached the stoplight at the top of the hill, at Madison, and looked over at the driver, she was texting and driving.

Texting while driving is the plague. According to the U.S. Department of Transportation's Distracted Driving website, distraction accounts for 16 percent of all fatal crashes -- 20 percent for injuries. Cell phones are involved in "18 percent of fatalities in distraction-related crashes." The problem isn't just teens, contrary to popular belief. "Of those drivers reportedly distracted during a fatal crash, the 30-to-39-year-old drivers were the group with the greatest proportion distracted by cell phones."

By Joe Wilcox -
PC

Could 70 percent of you be running Windows 7?

That sure is hell what I want to know after looking at poll results for a question about Internet Explorer 10. In April, I asked Betanews readers if you cared that Internet Explorer 10 beta runs only on Windows 7. One conclusion to draw from the 3-answer poll -- 69.33 percent do (well, those responding) use Microsoft's newest operating system.

Unfortunately, there are only 975 responses, and they don't exactly jive with an earlier poll (not that they need to). But I'm wondering, and even optimistic about percentage of readers running Windows 7, so I'm asking again. Please answer the poll below about what is the primary operating system running on your primary PC (whether work or home).

By Joe Wilcox -
Visio 2010

Software Assurance punishes some loyal Microsoft customers, encourages others to skip upgrades

Sixth in a series. In the decade since Microsoft announced Software Assurance, many customers have found it cheaper to skip upgrades rather than pay up front for the rights to them. Essentially, the licensing program does the opposite of its design.

The "Good Enough" Problem

By Paul DeGroot -
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