- Dell Vostro 360 inadvertently revealed, shows off all-in-one specs
Are you a fan of grayscale technical drawings? Or perhaps you’re in the market for an all-in-one desktop, but don’t own an educational institution? Dell’s satisfying those key constituencies — and more! — with support documents for its upcoming Vostro 360. Ahead of any official announcement of pricing or availability, the PDF lets us glean a few specs: we’re looking at an Intel h61 Express chipset with Intel Core i3, i5 or i7 processors – or, if you’re feeling especially nostalgic, you can opt for a Pentium Dual Core. The system will max out at 8GB of memory, with integrated Intel graphics or a discrete NVIDIA GeForce GT, and a touchscreen option, if you’d rather let your fingers do the computing. Oh, and there’s a built-in camera privacy cover you can glue shut the next time you disgustedly swear off Chatroulette.
[Thanks, Emperor John Hancox]
Filed under: Desktops
Dell Vostro 360 inadvertently revealed, shows off all-in-one specs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Aug 2011 17:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
- Where IPs go to die: a theoretical look at the belly of the online beast
The key to a secure online world of tomorrow? Why, that would be an internet that spends a bit more time padding its waistline at the protocol buffet. Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed an evolutionary model, dubbed EvoArch, that simulates a survival of the IP fittest battle for the interweb’s belly. Separated into six distinct layers, the top-to-bottom structure — specific applications, application protocols, transport protocols, network protocols, data-link protocols and physical layer protocols — reveals a fiercely competitive middle tier that often sees newer, non-specialized competition cannibalized in favor of an older, more dominant framework. The team created the theoretic model as a guideline for “architects of the future Internet… to increase the number of protocols in these middle layers,” thus protecting the web from potential security vulnerabilities. Despite these proposed layer variances, however, further simulations of the model only churned out more midriff slimming eventualities. It seems our dear internet is destined for a damned if you do, damned if you don’t hourglass-shaped evolution. Full PR after the break.
Continue reading Where IPs go to die: a theoretical look at the belly of the online beast
Where IPs go to die: a theoretical look at the belly of the online beast originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Aug 2011 17:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
- Samsung Celox gets its moment in the blurrycam spotlight
Hey, what have we here? If it isn’t the GT-I9210, a version of the Samsung Celox that we saw the other week. The Samsung Galaxy II-esque LTE handset got the blurrycam treatment on its way to Korean carrier SK Telecom. The rear of the device looks the same as what we saw earlier in the month, only with the carrier’s logo tacked on for good measure. The front, on the other hand, has been redesigned and is now sporting four capacitive keys — not an unusual move for a carrier branded version of one of the company’s smartphones. In light of SK Telecom and Verizon’s use of both LTE and CDMA, perhaps the Celox will join T-Mobile’s rumored Hercules as the other 4.5-inch screened Galaxy S II variant for the US? Fingers crossed.
Samsung Celox gets its moment in the blurrycam spotlight originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Aug 2011 16:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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