Archive for the ‘Hardware’ category

Samsung Announces Skype Enabled HDTVs after Panasonic & LG

March 7th, 2010

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Samsung has finalized and announced Skype Enabled HDTVs. Samsung New Series TVs like 7000 and 8000 Series Televisions will have access to Skype.

Panasonic and Samsung has already launched this facility but now Samsung will be their competitor too in this facility of providing access to Skype.

Users will be able to log in or create their account using their remote control and can make live audio and video calls through their PCs.

However It will require HD Video Processing  Webcams which should have an average quality VGA video at 22fps rather than 720p which will surely have a high cost.

Why can’t we create a folder by name CON?

January 10th, 2010

I’ve been asked this question many a times: Why can’t we create a folder by name CON? Although it seems a wonder or magic that we can’t create a folder by that name, in reality, it is not so. It has a definite reason, and in fact, a folder can be created using that reserved name.

Gone are the days when computers had only CUI OS, that is, Character User Interface Operating Systems, like MS-DOS. When I joined my first computer course nine years ago, Windows 95 was ruling. You could see Windows 98 here and there. We were in 8th standard, and working on a computer was like a dream coming true. Microsoft’s Paint Brush was the only known (for us) GUI software and was the greatest means of entertainment. The instructors taught us only MS-DOS commands and how to Shut Down the computer. Remembering such weird names as DIR, CD, MD, RD, CHKDSK, FDISK, VER, ATTRIB, REN, DEL etc. along with their syntax and usage was a great accomplishment. But I had a problem understanding this: DOS has a separate dedicated command for every action; literally every action, except… creating a file!

Yes, we used COPY CON filename to create a file with name filename. Anyone can say that it is a form of COPY command. So, why was creating a file different than all other commands? I didn’t understand it, till I found out how to print using DOS, almost four years later.

DOS uses different names for the attached devices, I learnt. PRN was one such name. TYPE filename would display the contents of a file and TYPE filename > PRN would print it instead of displaying. Curiosity brings many hidden matters out. PRN would surely mean Printer and will redirect the output to the printer instead of console. Console (monitor) is the implicit default output device, and it can be bypassed if needed. So, how to put it explicitly? There must be some means to do that. Yes, there is! TYPE filename > CON performs exactly same function as TYPE filename. These special names for the devices really mean something special for the operating system and those names can not be used as folder or file names: CON, PRN, NUL, COM1 to COM9, LPT1 to LPT9, which stand for CONsole, PRiNter, NULl, serial COMmmunication ports, Line PrinTer ports.

The time has changed and Operating System can also be fooled! But still, many people think that it is not possible to create a folder by name CON. Using the path of network drive, these special names can also be used as folder names! Here is how:

  1. Goto DOS
  2. Type MD \\.\C:\CON. The folder will be created. You can check it in Windows Explorer also, but you can’t access it
  3. To delete the folder, type RD \\.\C:\CON

In short, use the network path syntax instead of absolute path syntax.

Now on to the practical aspect of this. Why can’t we create it directly but using the network path syntax? The answer is simple. A computer can have only one default console, printer, null etc. So, if it is accessed from a network, theoretically, the console should belong to another node in the network. Since that node may not have a device which can be referred using the name CON, it will no longer be considered as a reserved name. Hence, the folder can be created.

The next time when someone asks the question why we can’t create a folder by name CON, say with confidence that it is not true…

OpenOfficeMouse crams practically a million buttons onto the back of a rodent

November 8th, 2009

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How many mouse buttons do you really need? If you’re an Apple user, you only need one. A PC owner might get by with a two button mouse, but three buttons are better, since that opens up the easy possibility of tab and new file opening.

But do you need more? Sure. Logitech sells numerous mice with thumb buttons, triggering email, volume, digital audio player track control and more.

More than that? Mouse manufacturers have got you covered! There’s a number of button rich mice on the market today. Are you the top cleric in your World of Warcraft guild? There’s rodents with a dozen buttons or more for the binding of all your healing spells.

But that’s apparently nothing compared to the number of buttons the users of the Open Office productivity suite need. The new OpenOfficeMouse developed by WarMouse in partnership with the OpenOffice.org community doesn’t just put a dozen buttons on the face of the mouse: it crams eighteen in there, each with double-click functionality.

It doesn’t end there. The OpenOfficeMouse supports up to 63 separate profiles, nuzzles a clickable scroll wheel within a hollow of its back, and boasts an adjustable resolution from 400 to 1600 CPI. It even has a built-in analog joystick which can, itself, be used to store up to sixteen different keys or macros.

Utterly insane, and probably comically beyond the requirements of the average Open Office users, but you’ll be able to pick one of these atrocious monstrosities up when they are released for $74.99 a pop.

Read more at OpenOffice.org

Apple Intros “World’s First” Multi-Touch Mouse

November 6th, 2009

Alongside refreshes to the its Macbook and Mac Mini lines, Apple today made yet another attempt to get the whole mouse thing right, with the Magic Mouse. The latest Mac mouse follows the not especially well received Mighty Mouse and its much-hated predecessor, the single button Round USB “hockey puck” mouse. According to Apple, the new Magic Mouse is “the world’s first multi-touch mouse.”

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The mouse doesn’t feature physical buttons, instead relying on touch, taps, and swipes. As Apple puts it, “the mouse itself is the button.” Users can scroll and flip through Web pages and photos, and can click or double-click anywhere on the mouse’s surface. The mouse also utilizes laser-tracking for increased efficiency without the need of a mousepad.

The Magic Mouse is Bluetooth-enabled and is customizable via Apple System Preferences. Users must have Mac OS X 10.5.8 or later and the Wireless Mouse Software Update 1.0.

The new mouse ships with new versions of the iMac or can be purchased separately for $69 from the Apple Store. It’s available now.