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#803376 Quote
Yume WWDC: Has Apple turned to Oracle for iCloud
The Cius is the first Android tablet aimed at the enterprise. Will it hit or miss   Itrsquo  been no secret amongst my friends that despite my reservations about the iPad, I still  <a href=https://www.stanleycup.it>stanley termos</a> quietly crave having one.The reason I havenrsquo;t actually gone out and gotten one is not ideologicalndash;itrsquo  because I really donrsquo;t have <a href=https://www.cup-stanley-cup.us>stanley usa</a>  a use case I can justify to the boss  aka, my lovely wife . I have too many computers at home and donrsquo;t travel very much right now to really need such a device. Plus, I am hoping for something else to come alonghellip; a wish that seemed initially granted yesterday when Cisco announced the new Android-based Cius tablet, due out in early 2011. Of course, for any open source fan like myself, hearing Android and tablet in the same sentence is usually enough to send us into fits of glee: the success of recent Android phone models  particularly HTCrsquo  Incredible and EVO  has proven that Android is a heck of a mobile platform.My excitement waned a bit when I heard about the size of tablet itself: a mere seven-inch screen, compared to the iPadrsquo  9.7-inch diagonal screen. Even my little D <a href=https://www.owala-water-bottle.ca>owala tumbler</a> ell Mini 9 has a bigger screen than a Cius. Presumably, this is a trade off for battery power, since Cisco has stated that a big part of this devicersquo  functionality is going to be telepresence, and I would imagine that and the 1.6-GHz processor will be sucking up loads of power.Still, itrsquo  too bad the screen had  Ezve Microsoft slates Windows 8  release preview  for early June
When you buy a PC what do you think the single most expensive part  Is it the CPU  Nope. The hard drive  No way. Itrsquo  long been Windows, and, with the coming of Windows 7 on netbooks and lower-priced PCs, Windows may not only be the priciest part, it may cost you mor <a href=https://www.stanley-uk.uk>stanley in uk</a> e than everything else in the PC combined. Now, thatrsquo  real value for your money!Windows 7 Starter Edition is expected to cost netbook vendors $50. Thatrsquo  not much, but itrsquo  a good deal more than the $15, and less, it currently costs them to put Windows XP Home on their machines.  Adding insult to injury, Microsoft has decided that Starter Edition can only go on a netbooks with a 10.2-in. Or smaller  screen , with no more than 1GB of RAM, a hard disk drive of  <a href=https://www.polenefr.fr>polene france</a> no more than 250GB or a solid-state drive no bigger than 64GB, and a single-core processor no faster than 2 GHz.  In short, if a netbook manufacturer wants to produce a high-end netbook, Microsoft is forcing them to use Windows 7 Home Premium. And, guess what  According to a report, Mike Abary, a senior VP at Sonyrsquo  Vaio PC unit, says that Windows 7 Home Premium will add $200 to a unitrsquo  cost. On an advanced netbook, or low-end notebook, that could eas <a href=https://www.polenes.com.es>polene bag</a> ily mean that Windows is the most expensive part of the entire package.    Itrsquo  not just the vendors that Microsoft is playing pricing games with. Microsoft has done a great job so far in flimflamming the buying public about Windows 7rsquo  pricing so far
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