One of the unspoken truths of computing is that even power users often forget to do backups on the road
Technology blog M.I.C. Gadget stumbled upon a prototype iPhone 4 with HP Pavilion DM4 Battery a whopping 64GB storage capacity. According to the website’s source, the device is a direct leak from Foxconn, Apple’s Shenzhen-based product manufacturer, and the supplier, whoever it may be, has a “small quantity” of the phones.
Similarities to the iPhone 4 purchased HP Pavilion DM4T Battery and leaked by Gizmodo last year seems to support that claim. Both devices are labeled with the same vague information: the model number is listed as “XXXXX”, the FCC ID is “BCG-AXXXXX”, and the size is listed as “XXGB”. Also, both prototypes are missing “+” and “-” marks on the volume buttons and both feature a back-facing camera sans a silver ring that’s present on other models.
But likenesses aside, the odds of finding a 64GB iPhone 4 at your local Apple store are slim. Macrumors.com traced the the prototype’s latitude e6510 battery serial number and found that it was produced in early 2010. It’s likely that Apple had a few 64GB iPhone 4 engineering samples whipped up as a trial run, but never intended them for release.
Fans of webOS, listen up: At a company event in Bangalore, HP CEO Leo Apotheker announced that the company will ship all PCs with webOS starting in 2012.
Starting in 2010, Apotheker said, all HP PCs will offer a dual-boot solution, meaning those latitude e6410 battery who prefer Windows will still be able to load their OS of choice.
HP acquired Palm (the company behind webOS) for $1.2 billion in April 2010. The decision to load webOS on its PCs marks the company’s push to broaden the platform’s appeal and increase market share. According to Apotheker, HP hopes to create incentive for developers to design software for webOS.
You can't take it with you - at least, not if your backup latitude e5510 battery drive is a massive beast that weighs 10 pounds. These highly portable, high capacity thumbdrives offer faster and more secure backup than uploading to the cloud, plus they're packed with innovative features like fingerprint readers, one-touch backup, and super fast USB 3.0 transfers.
Perhaps the best feature? There's no Internet connection needed to access your data later, so it's ridiculously easy to transfer your media between your laptops.
At 0.48 ounces, the 8GB SanDisk Ultra Backup is the lightest of the USB drives we recently tested. It's also the least stylish; its latitude e5410 battery all-black design looks a bit dated. At 2.9 inches long, the Ultra Backup stuck out a full finger's width longer than the Lexar MX drive, making it a little more obtrusive when connected to a laptop. Still, it's about the same length as the Patriot Memory Supersonic.
Even if the Ultra Backup looks a bit staid, it has a unique backup button on top that worked remarkably inspiron 1440 battery well. Also, an activity light on the drive helps you see what is happening; during backup or file transfer, the light flashes quickly. In a ready state, the light stays steady.
The Ultra Backup comes with same Dmailer app that comes latitude e5500 battery with the Lexar MX drive, but it worked well and setup only took five minutes. While you can set the app to automatically back up files, you can also just press the backup button on the drive; it's so easy that you may find yourself clicking the backup button even as you work, saving the latest version of a Word doc or a recent iTunes download.
Unfortunately, the SanDisk Ultra Backup was the slowest drive of the bunch when it came to copying large amounts of files. When we latitude e6400 battery transferred 5GB of media files and Word documents to the drive, it took a long 8 minutes 41 seconds, which equals a write speed of just 9.8 MBps. That's two and a half minutes longer than the next slowest drive, the Lexar Echo MX (6:08, 13.9 MBps). If you're looking for fast transfers, the USB 3.0-powered Patriot Memory Supersonic blows all of these drives away with a latitude e6500 battery write speed of 41.3 MBps.
Likewise, copying those same files from the SanDisk to a latitude e4300 battery notebook took 4:45 (a read speed of 18 MBps), about 40 seconds longer than the next slowest drive, the Imation Defender F200 (4:07, 20.7 MBps). The Patriot Memory drive took just 55 seconds, a rate of 93.1 Sony Laptop Battery MBps.
Not only does the 8GB SanDisk Drive offer a relatively small amount of storage space, but it also doesn't laptopbatterymag.com offer the best value. The 8GB version we tested normally retails for $45, but was on sale for $30. That's $3.75 per GB, which isn't bad, but the Patriot Memory drive costs $210 for 64GB, which comes to $3.30 per GB. SanDisk also offers the drive in a 64GB capacity for $202, which gives you the best value. There are also 16GB ($75) and 32GB HP/Compaq Laptop Battery ($113) versions available.
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