Showing posts with label Microsoft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Microsoft. Show all posts

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Xbox 360 Slim Is Leaner, Meaner, Quieter Machine


When the Xbox 360 hit in 2005 it promised to revolutionize gaming. Microsoft got most of the way there (conceptually), but the original 360 hardware wasn’t without its … quirks.
Enter Microsoft’s upgrade/redo, the Xbox 360 S. Not only is the chassis slimmer (hence that weird, floating “S”), but it’s packed with a lot of the extras that used to be sold separately. The most dramatic change takes place under the hood. Redmond swapped out the 360’s power-hungry setup with a much more economical (e.g. smaller) motherboard and an integrated CPU/GPU/eDRAM chip. On top of the spatial benefits, this means that the 360’s operating volume — normally a hissy, Harrier-esque din — has been greatly reduced. The difference was almost immediately noticeable. While streaming Nextflix, we no longer had to turn up the volume to drown out the sound of the fan, and the act of the disc drive cycling up no longer made the doors on our entertainment center rattle.
The benefits of this engineering go beyond operating volume. Paired with the console’s newly integrated 802.11n, bevy of USB 2.0 ports, and a (finally) built-in optical audio port, the 360 S actually feels like the living room-ready entertainment powerhouse Microsoft promised five years ago. Playing DVDs and/or downloaded video seems like a much more natural extension of the console’s capabilities (though we’d still love some Blu-ray love), and the army of USB ports proves nifty for charging gadgets. The aesthetic impact is palpable too. Now that so many features are tastefully built in, the console finally looks like a serious, streamlined home theater device rather than a whirring, blinking gadget with countless peripheral flagella.
To be fair, this revamp isn’t quite the second coming either. In vying to be taken seriously, the 360 S has gotten rid of old favorites like customizable faceplates. Also, the power brick is back (though it has gotten smaller), and the included 250-GB hard drive is still proprietary (and not backwards compatible with older 360s). And, of course, there’s the largest elephant in the room: If you already have a 360, there probably isn’t a huge incentive to upgrade.
In the end this isn’t all bad. Microsoft ultimately set out to make a better (and Kinect-ready) version of the 360, and they’ve largely succeeded. The end result isn’t necessarily worth, say, drowning last year’s model in the tub and rushing to Best Buy. But, if you’ve yet to join the Xbox fold — or at least want an inexpensive, quiet, gaming/DVD/Netflix/Hulu box — this year’s model is your best bet.
WIRED Leaner, (slightly) meaner and quieter. Inches closer to the all-in-one entertainment box we’ve been waiting for. Cosmetic touches like touch-sensitive power and eject buttons class up the joint. Thrusts overpriced accessories ($80 for a Wi-Fi dongle?!) into obsolescence. Want to splurge on the Kinect in November? There’s an (integrated) port for that.
TIRED In many ways the same console we’ve been playing since Senior Year. Inter-console data transfers still require a wonky proprietary cable.
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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Windows Phone 7 Handsets

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer shows off nine handsets from the likes of Dell, HTC, Samsung, and LG at the launch of Windows Phone 7. Microsoft on Monday announced its initial arsenal of handsets built around the new Windows Phone 7 mobile operating system, in what many believe is the company's last ditch attempt to regain traction in the mobile handset arena that's fallen into the hands of rivals like Apple and Google.

Windows 7



Windows 7



Windows 7


Windows 7

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Wednesday, September 1, 2010

A New Computer Mouse from Microsoft

Team Microsoft (Microsoft) has developed a new computer mouse Microsoft Arc Touch Mouse. It does not just look good, but works much better than their predecessors. The new mouse is literally bending under the user. Depending on your preferences and degree of convenience, it can make a flat or convex. The preliminary cost of this gadget is $ 70.

Microsoft


Microsoft


Microsoft


Microsoft


Microsoft


Microsoft


Microsoft


Microsoft

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Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Cell Phones from Microsoft

In the beginning of this week took place the presentation of two new products of the company Of microsoft the cell phones Of kin 1 (vertical slider) and Kin 2 (horizontal slider). Both devices are oriented to the youth (of up to 25 years) audience and are optimized for the use in the social networks: on them are established the clients Of facebook, Twitter and MySpace.

Mobie Phones


Mobie Phones


Mobie Phones

The telephone Of kin Of one less in the sizes is equipped with 4 gigas byte of the built in memory and five megapixelnoy by camera, and Kin Of two more bears 8 gigas byte of memory and cameras, capable of removing HD video, writes the newspaper “Vedomosti”.

Mobie Phones


Mobie Phones


Mobie Phones

According to the communication of Internet portal “[Kompyulenta]”, the partner Of microsoft on the Russian market will become the operator of the honeycomb connection “of MTS”: specifically, it will begin the propagation of these apparatuses in the fall of 2010. The cost of models will be from 200 to 300 dollars.

Mobie Phones


Mobie Phones

Novelties are cell phones with the sliding keyboard QWERTY and the sensory screens, working under control OS Windows Of phone. Apparatus platform KIN NVIDIA Of tegra, the same as in the record players Of microsoft Of zune HD.

Mobie Phones

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