Test Zoho Word

April 11, 2009

Here is a test of using Zoho. com Word application. Does it work very well or not?

I am going to try and do tables…

Here is a table
I just setup in Zoho writer
It works just as you would expect

I work as a Business Consultant for Executives in the tech industry, on business strategy, product management, and marketing

 

I specialize on new and innovative products and services for the Digital Lifestyle Consumer


Do PC OEMs care about design?

November 2, 2007

Contrary to popular belief, PC OEMs do care about their product design. But they have very valid business reasons for not caring as much about product esthetics as an Apple does.

Read the rest of this entry »


CodeWeavers to run Windows apps in OSX

August 31, 2006

CodeWeavers is an Open Source effort to provide a native and real-time translation environment for Windows Applications on other OSes – Linux and now Mac OSX.

CrossOver Mac has just released in beta form. You can download and install it from here, and then try your favorite Windows Apps to see if they run or not. CodeWeavers will be keeping tabs of which apps run well (Gold medal), not so well (Bronze?), or not at all here.

CrossOver Mac was highly anticipaed by Mac Gamers who are hoping to run their favorite PC games on the Mac this way.

Final release is expected in 60 days or so, for $60.


Dell updates the E1405 with Intel Core 2 Duo

August 30, 2006

Already a recommended configuration for a business laptop, the Dell Inspiron E1405 gets updated with the Intel Core 2 Duo processor for more performance. And coupled with the 9-cell battery (an $85 upgrade) the E1405 can for up to 8 hours on a single battery charge…wow!

I got a nice configuration with a 2Ghz Core 2 Duo, 1Gig of Mem, 80 Gig HDD, 8X DVD burner and Wi-Fi + Bluetooth (and the large battery) for just under $1200. Not bad!

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Samsung, new force in Digital Cameras?

August 28, 2006

Samsung is flooding the digital photo press with press releases and advertising for its new line of compact digital cameras – the NV3, NV10, and NV7 OPS. All cameras boast a new all-black and very thin design, innovative new menu system, and aggressive pricing.


The NV3 is a 7 megapixels camera with 38-114mm zoom, a 2.5" LCD and is 17.5mm thin! It can also be used as an MP3 player (?) with stereo sound. Amazon lists the NV3 for $299.


The NV7 OPS is a 7 megapixels camera with 38-270mm zoom and offers both Optical Picture Stabilisation (OPS) and Advanced Shake Reduction (ASR) to eliminate blur. It is 21mm thick with the lens collapsed (when switched on with the lens extended thickness is 35.7mm). Amazon lists the NV7 OPS for $399.


The NV10 is a 10 megapixels camera with a 35-105mm zoom, 2.5" LCD, anti-shake reduction, a manual mode and 18.5mm thick! Amazon lists the NV10 for $349.

There is yet little hands-on information about these cameras on the web, the cameras being scheduled to be on the market mid-September.

Earlier this week the NV10 won the European Imaging and Sound Association (EISA represents some 52 magazines from 18 European countries) award in the Compact Camera category (other camera winners included the Nikon D200 and Canon 5D).

You can see sample pictures taken by the NV10 here.


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Intel Core Duo 2 Mobile (Merom) is out

August 28, 2006

Intel refreshed its mobile line of CPUs with the Duo 2 line, available in a range of speeds (1.63Ghz to 2.33Ghz).
The processor was extensively tested by PC Magazine which concludes that it is indeed a more powerful processors, but again at a cost in increased heat and power draw – both issues that have plagued Intel CPUs in the past and forced them to revise their strategy of racing for more Megahertz towards one of dropping megahertz but increasing the number of cores on a chip.

The Core Duo 2 being fully pin and chipset compatible with the 1st generation Core Duo, and Intel having priced the Duo 2 at parity with Duo 1 (one could have expected a premium price for the new line), the switch to Duo 2 by laptop OEMs is bound to be quick.

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Should you buy a 15 inch laptop?

August 21, 2006

I am not a big fan of 15″ laptops. I think they now represent the mediocre offerings of the market, either too big to be good travel laptops (see my other post for my recommendations on travel laptops with screens in the 12″ to 14.4″ range), or too small to be good desktop replacements machines – a market much better served by 17″ or more laptops. I believe the Japanese manufacturers are seeing this trend and spending their energy marketing 14″ and below, or 17″ and above.

Given the wide set of laptops available in the 12″ to 19″ range, why would anyone want a 15″ laptop? I can think of three reasonings:
1) Because they are cheap for a complete configuration (in a “mediocre” size offering);
2) Because you want a desktop replacement laptop that you can also travel with;
3) Because you want a travel desktop you can also use as a powerful desktop replacement PC.

We no longer live in an era where 14″ and smaller laptops sacrificed performance to attain a smaller size and long battery life. Those highly portable laptops now feature dual core CPUs, large hard drives, 2 gigs of memory or more, integrated DVD writers, and dedicated graphics card that can deliver great 3D output for business apps and even some of the more demanding action games.

So if travelling by air is your thing, make it easy on yourself and get a smaller laptop that will be easier to carry around (weight and size-wise), and a lot easier to open up and use on the cramped-up in-flights tablets (have you ever had a laptop screen crushed when the person in front of you lowers her seat?).

If flying really is not your priority (you don’t travel much or do so by car or train) and you want performance, step up to a 17″ screen and enjoy the increased real estate for a true desktop-replacement experience.

But if money is the limiting factor, then a 15″ laptop may be what you should get.

Configuration recommendations:
- Widescreen 15.4″
- Dual Core CPU, Intel or AMD
- 1 Gig of Ram
- 80 Gig of HDD (or more)
- Dedicated video card with 256 Megs of memory
- Wi-Fi
- Windows XP Media Center
- DVD Rom (or writer as an option)

Recommended models for this category:
Dell E1505 – $1000 properly configured with an Intel Core Duo, 1 Gig of Ram, 80 Gig HDD, ATI Radeon X1400 w/256MB.

HP DV600Z – $1000 well configured with AMD Turion X2, 1 Gig of Ram, 80 Gig HDD, Nvidia GeForce Go 7200 w/256MB.

Gateway NX560XL – $1200 well configured with Intel Core Duo 1.73Ghz, 1 Gig of Ram, 80 Gig HDD, ATI Radeon X1400 (w/128MB memory only though), 8x DVD-writer, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, and great battery life (go for the 8-cell battery for $39 more).

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Best Vista Business Laptops

August 18, 2006

Here are my choices for best laptops for (small) business work. I consider that a great laptop for small business work gives you portablity (these are not desktop replacement machines), power to run Vista, battery life, connectivity, DVD watching (for those hours on the plane).

Specifically, I recommend: – Dual Core CPUs only, 1.66Ghz-1.83Ghz is plenty sufficient (no need to pay extra for 2+ Ghz) – 1 Gig or Ram required – 80 Gigs of HDD required – DVD drive built-in required – 3.5 hours battery life or more required – 14" widescreen or smaller – 6 pounds or less, with 4 pounds being the top of the line in this category

Recommended Vista Laptop (powerful + graphics capability to use Vista’s fancy new 3D UI).
HP Pavillion dv2000t, $1000 or less for a good configuration. 
What’s good about it: Good for Vista in the 128MB GeForce Go 7200 configuration, Intel Duo Core (best price/performance is probably the 1.73Ghz T2250 option), Widescreen display, 12-cell battery gives more than 5 hours battery life (the 6 cell is a disappointing 2.5 hours or less), wi-fi & bluetooth, quiet, quality built, modern design, built-in webcam, 3xUSB, 1xFirewire, just under 6 pounds.

Dell Latitude D620, $1500 for a good configuration 
What’s good about it: Good for Vista, Intel Core Duo processor, WideScreen display available in 1440×900 resolution, two battery option for extra long battery life, NVidia Quatro graphics performance, wi-fi, bluetooth and cellular broadband ($200 option for Verizon or Cingular), about 6 pounds.
Dell XPS M1210, $1800 for a good configuration  What is good about it: Great for Vista, powerful but light and small, 5 pounds with the large capacity battery (4 hours), 12.1" widescreen display, Intel Core Duo processor, NVidia GeForce graphics performance, wi-fi, bluetooth and cellular broadband ($200 option for Verizon), built-in web camera.

Sony Vaio SZ160 (or SZ120 with 128MB video memory only), $1600 for a good configuration  
What is good about it: Thin, small with 13.3" widescreen display, light at 4 pounds. Good for Vista with an NVidia dedicated graphic card with 256MB of memory, which can be switched off (at boot only) for lower power Intel graphics when battery life is more important than 3D graphics. Sony claims up to 7 hours of batter life possible (w/larger battery?). Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Firewire. Maybe a tough one to find in store.

If you don’t require Vista’s fancy 3D UI…

Toshiba Satellite U205, less than $1200.
What’s good about it: Great for light mobility, 4.1 pounds, 12.1 widescreen display (1280×800), Wi-Fi, Dual Core, DVD Supermulti drive (DVD+/-R/RW/CD-RW), 3 USB & 1 Firewire ports, built-in media card reader, over 4 hours battery life.

Dell Inspiron 1405, $1000 or less for a good configuration
What is good about it: cheap for what you get! 14" widescreen at 1440×900, dual core, 8xDVD burner, 5.5 pounds, Firewire and 4 USB ports, small and light but not so thin, 3+ hours battery.

Apple MacBook, white, $1250 for a good configuration  
What is good about it: it is a Mac, a beautiful one, it is pretty powerful, can run Windows natively (Bootcamp) or as a virtual app (Parallels) as well as Apple’s iLife suite. Comes only in 13" widescreen. This is my current laptop by the way… :-)


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