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Apple tablet PC out in 2010?
Rumors of an iPod-like tablet have been swirling for months, with some speculating that Apple is developing a large-screen iPod touch—say, a 7- to 9-inch touchscreen device—that would be large enough for HD movies and maybe a few desktop-style apps. Such a device would provide a better gaming experience than the iPod touch too.
But please don’t call it a netbook, a bargain-bin class of laptop that Apple execs have dissed as “junky.”
There’s no smoking gun in the latest report, but it does appear as though Apple is up to something. As reported by CNN, Munster’s sleuthing led him to conclude that an Apple tablet is only months away.
The signs include: Apple’s recent interest in chip designers, including the company’s acquisition of low-power chipmaker PA Semi a year ago; Apple’s efforts to add multi-touch features to its core products, including iPods, iPhones, and Macs; and the quintessentially Apple need to differentiate itself in an established market. (Think iPods, iPhones, Macs, etc.)
Admittedly, Munster’s evidence is pretty slim. But when combined with other reports, including one from the Chinese-language Commercial Times that says Taiwan-based Wintek will soon supply touch panels for an upcoming Apple subnote, an touchscreen tablet seems very possible.
One thing’s for sure: An Apple tablet, subnote, or whatever you want to call it, won’t copy the successful-if-unspectacular netbook formula of a shrunken laptop with a cramped keyboard and tiny screen.
There’s certainly a market for a portable media player larger than the iPod touch, iPhone, or other smart phones. But what would people pay for such a device? If Apple’s sweet spot is $700, the alleged tablet would need some fairly robust wireless communications and productivity tools too.
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Kaspersky AntiVirus has been our AV product of choice for over a year, and for this new version the Russian security specialist has wisely refrained from tinkering too much with the established formula.
The most obvious change is the updated interface. It's cleaner and simpler than earlier versions, with just a few buttons and some pretty graphs showing things like number of infections detected and network activity during updates. For less experienced users, it's Kaspersky's most approachable version yet, with expert features hidden away under a "settings" button.
There are some changes under the bonnet too. Nothing dramatic, but Kaspersky 2009 boasts an updated virus-scanning engine, which is designed to make use of multiple CPU cores to speed up security scans. It's also the first version of Kaspersky to use whitelisting: the company has licensed a whitelist from enterprise security specialist Bit9 to help it skip over legitimate applications without wasting resources on scanning them.
Thankfully, these new features haven't bloated the package's footprint. Kaspersky AntiVirus 2009 added just one second to the time it took our test system to boot to the Vista desktop, though hard disk and CPU activity continued for a further 19 seconds. Once it was up and running it added 46MB to our RAM footprint - pleasingly small by the standards of commercial AV packages.
News
avast antivirus review.
31/12/2009 21:10———
avira antivir review!
27/12/2009 19:05———
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c net downloads faces bad trojan.
25/11/2009 21:11———
twittertrain phishing scam.
23/11/2009 20:13———
short update
22/11/2009 12:20———
Website launched
22/11/2009 12:19———
windows 7! faster or slower system than xp or vista?
22/11/2009 11:57———