Laptop Battery for Dell jg168
- fasophiafrance
- 2017年4月26日
- 讀畢需時 10 分鐘
Each VAIO replicator dock shows a glowing LED on its cabled Ethernet port, regardless of whether or not the VAIO is in it, and when half-a-dozen people came out of the meeting and plugged in their laptops, these LEDs remained stubbornly on. By squinting (I’m getting old) at the tiny pixels making up the taskbar dock in Windows 7 on a super-hi-res VAIO screen, I could just see that the usual wired network connection glyph, a square with a mouse top-right, wasn’t visible. Despite sitting in their docks, all these laptops were still stuck on the Wi-Fi! I walked around the whole lot, looking at their LEDs to verify I wasn’t going potty.Lenovo's latest ThinkPad laptops feature a hot-swappable, dual-battery system to help extend time between charges on the go.The company has equipped its new ThinkPad T440 and T440s with what it dubs Power Bridge technology, which allows an additional, external battery to be added without powering down the laptop.The ThinkPad T440 and T440s both come with a built-in three-cell battery, with the option of adding a second three- or six-cell battery for more power, which Lenovo said will add another four hours or ten hours, respectively.
Lenovo said the Ultrabooks could offer up to 17 hours of battery life with the extra six-cell battery, but it wasn't clear how much of that was off the initial battery.Even with the extra battery, both laptops are lighter than their predecessors, according to Lenovo. Connecting a three-cell battery to the base will add around 180g in weight, while the six-cell adds around 340g.Both PCs run Intel’s Haswell Core processors, come with 1TB of hard-drive storage or a 512GB SSD, and up to 12GB of RAM. There’s support for mini-SD, USB 3 and Ethernet, and users can also opt for touchscreen models.The T440 features a 14in screen, weighs 1.8kg and starts at £859 ex VAT, while the T440s is thinner and lighter at 1.5kg, and features a 1080p display, but costs £1,195. Both laptops will be available to buy from November.Lenovo also introduced the ThinkPad X240, which also boasts the dual-battery setup. The laptop starts at £999 ex VAT and features a 12.5in HD screen, offers up to 1TB of hard-drive storage, 8GB RAM and supports HDMI, Ethernet, Bluetooth and also comes with a touchscreen option. It weighs 1.34kg, not including a second battery. It will also be available from November.The secondary batteries will have to be purchased separately, a spokesperson said, but it's not clear how much they will cost.
The bumper pack of RAM can be found inside Dell's Precision M6500 mobile workstation. The 17in laptop also packs a Core i7 Extreme Edition processor and Nvidia Quadro FX 3800M graphics, and is pitched at professionals running the most demanding of applications."This expanded memory enables mobile workstation professionals to reach unlimited power as well as manage and view massive amounts of data while working remotely," Dell claims on its Inside Enterprise IT blog. "Our oil and gas customers, who currently use 16GB of memory on the Dell Precision M6500, will be pleased to learn we are now the first to offer 32GB of system memory. They can now review larger slices of the earth to find oil, enabling faster and more accurate drilling to find oil and gas reserves.Dell claims CAD applications will also benefit from the doubling of available memory. "CAD/CAM engineering customers who work with fluid dynamics will be able to load larger data sets in memory which will greatly improve their work time," the company claims. "Jobs that took multiple hours to complete can now be done in fractions of the time."
Although the Dell web page for the Precision M6500 states that up to 32GB of RAM is available, we couldn't find a way to configure the system with any more than 16GB of memory and so can't give a price. But with the laptop starting at $3,199 and 16GB of memory costing an additional $1,181, it's not going to be a toss-up between a Precision M6500 and a netbook in Dixons.Since Henry Ford first produced the Model T, personalised motorised transport has been a world-changing technology. In recent times, however, it’s lagged behind the machines we have on our desks and in our bags and pockets.That’s beginning to change. The latest versions of BMW’s iDrive, Audi’s MMI and Mercedes’ Comand APS systems are building voice controls, apps and even 4G into vehicles. And it isn’t just the premium marques, either. Earlier this year, Ford announced Spotify support in its EcoSport compact MPV.
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The trouble is, most cars on the road aren’t new. They’re secondhand, reasonably priced automobiles. The closest most of these cars will have come to a computer is having a laptop slung in the boot.But it shouldn’t be this way. Computers are everywhere – and they’re cheap. To prove it, reviews editor Jonathan Bray upgraded his gold, 2008 Citroën Berlingo XTR with the latest, greatest tech.We started with satnavs, but we wanted to do more than mount a smartphone on a windscreen bracket or purchase a TomTom Go 500 – we wanted a head-up display (HUD). Handily, Garmin has recently launched its very own retro-fit HUD device.An HUD projects turn-by-turn instructions and other data onto the windscreen. Driving with a unit mounted on the dash has a few key benefits.For one, it offers an unobscured view of the road ahead. Even the display area is transparent, and since you’re looking at a reflection in the windscreen, rather than an LCD screen, your eyes have less refocusing to do, which makes them less tired.Installation isn’t as much of a hack as you may think. The device sticks to the top of the dashboard, and you apply a small, reflective square of transparent plastic film to the windscreen to reflect the instructions without ghosting.
The HUD comes with an integral plastic reflector for those who don’t want to stick something permanent to the windscreen.To get it going, we paired an iPhone 5s with the HUD over Bluetooth, installed the Garmin satnav app, and plugged the unit into a cigarette-lighter power outlet. It took time to get used to having turn icons on the windscreen, coupled with the audio instructions from the phone, but otherwise it worked flawlessly, and the display was viewable in all conditions.There are a few problems. First, you can only use Garmin or Navigon satnav software with the HUD. These work well enough, but we prefer TomTom and CoPilot. Second, the apps cost extra; we’d have hoped the software would have been included.If you’re feeling flush, Pioneer’s £600 NavGate HUD offers a much richer, full-colour display; hooks up to the driver’s sunvisor to deliver a larger display area than the Garmin; and pairs with our preferred satnav app, CoPilot.You don’t have to spend hundreds to get a head-up display. The effect can be achieved on the cheap via a dedicated smartphone app. Sygic sells a HUD plugin as an extension to its excellent satnav app – just place your phone screen-side-up on the dashboard.
LG Electronics wants to raise shipments of 3D notebook computers by 30% in 2011, as it makes a huge bet on booming sales of 3D products led by televisions.LG, the world's second-largest maker of TVs, forecast global sales of 3D notebook computers would increase five fold next year to 1.1 million units and jump to 13.8 million units by 2015."With the availability of more 3D content, consumers are enjoying a new experience, and we think that'll drive growth of the 3D computer market," Harrison Park, LG's mobile communications PC business team leader, told reporters.Interest in 3D has grown fast driven partially by the blockbuster movie "Avatar," released at the end of 2009, which single-handedly raised awareness to 60% from 40% among US consumers.LG introduced three models of 3D notebook computers priced at between 1.6 million won ($1,331) and 1.9 million won, a roughly 20% premium to conventional 2D products.With the need to wear glasses to watch 3D content singled out as a major obstacle to the technology's takeoff, 3D is more likely to succeed on screens watched by a single viewer like computer and mobile phone displays, some experts say.
Child's next XO device will feature mulittouch and be based on Fedora Linux.The new version of the low-cost laptop, the XO 1.75, will arrive next year, with an ARM processor and the option of either a conventional 8.9in LCD display or a touchscreen.Lead software engineer Chris Bell said OLPC has been working on bringing touchscreen and multitouch to the XO software, and highlighted a port of the virtual keyboard from mobile OS Meego to the Sugar OS to show how it could look.He added that the multitouch work will carry over to future versions of the OLPC line-up, referencing the XO 3 tablet. A prototype of the super-thin device was shown off at the end of last year, with promises it will cost less than $100 and arrive in 2012.Bell also revealed that OLPC will continue to use open-source Fedora as the base for the XO operating system, despite it not being supported by new processor supplier ARM.
"This wasn't an obvious decision - ARM is not a release architecture in Fedora, and so we're committing to help out with that port," said Bell in a update on the OLPC site."Our reasons for choosing Fedora even though ARM work is needed were that we don't want to force our deployments to learn a new distribution and re-write any customisations they've written, we want to reuse the packaging work that's already been done in Fedora for OLPC and Sugar packages, and we want to continue our collaboration with the Fedora community who we're getting to know and work with well," he explained. Whatever you buy, register it with Immobilise. Logging your kit with the free service provides you with a way of proving ownership should your possessions be stolen and subsequently recovered. The local police service are often on campus during Freshers' Week offering the opportunity to sign up, as well as offering general theft prevention advice.Protect your laptop with anti-virus and internet security software, too. It's very common, obvious advice – and viruses seem a thing of the past, but nothing makes you feel helpless like an infection.Big name broadband providers offer this kind of software free when you sign up. Before you leave for university, find out if you can get this protection through the account holder for your home address. If not, it's roughly £40 for total protection.Be sure to get anti-virus and internet security software – they are often packaged separately, but can be bought as an all-in-one product. Make regular back-ups as well.Finally, you'll be needing some software to work on. The student edition of Microsoft Office includes everything most students need (Word, PowerPoint, Excel and OneNote), and will set you back £109.99. iWork from Apple has much the same functionality but for a fraction of the price (£42 for Pages, Keynote and Numbers – its documents are compatible with Windows, too).
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If you require specialist software, such as a voice recognition programme, look into the Disabled Students' Allowances as you may be able to get a financial contribute to the cost.hile being glued to a mobile device has become a dangerously common part of 2014 life, a couple in Vermont has reaped financial rewards by rejecting 21st-century technology at their bakery, August First.Wife-and-husband team Jodi Whalen and Phil Merrick banned laptops and tablets from their Burlington-based bakery earlier this year, after determining that laptop patrons spent much more time, and much less money, at the eatery than the average customer.The pair decided to do away with tech as they faced more and more customers glued to their screens. Whalen said when they envisioned creating August First, they didn’t plan on it being a place where people settled for hours to do work.“When we were dreaming of what August First will be – will it be this place with seven people staring at their screens?” Whalen told the Guardian.
“Or would it be a place where people come to see people they know, chitchat, laugh?”As a business owner, Whalen said cutting the cords was the hardest decision she’s had to make. “I literally lost my hair,” said Whalen, who is finally recovering from a bald spot that popped up as she and her husband decided to give customers a one-month warning that they would no longer be allowed to use laptops and tablets in the bakery.Starbucks caught flak in 2011 when it admitted that it was covering electrical outlets in some New York City stores to deter freelancers and college students from camping out to use the shop’s free Wi-Fi. But the coffee behemoth’s tune seems to have changed this year, as it rolls out wireless charging stations in Silicon Valley to meet customers’ demands.August First’s owners are not anti-technology by any means. The store has had active social-media accounts since it opened in August 2009 and used to hold tweet-ups. But the marathon Wi-Fi-workers were causing a clear dent in business. Whalen explained that while the average customer spends $15 and less than an hour at a table, laptop customers would spend around $5 an hour and could stay for four hours, sometimes causing more losses by spreading papers and books across four-person tables.“We simply can’t survive as a business with so many people using their laptops here,”
Whalen said.This is a sentiment echoed by other cafes which have joined a trend that can include banning Wi-Fi all together, at certain times of day or on weekends, when dining spots get more traffic. While August First began with a three-hour lunchtime laptop ban, its popularity among regular customers, and the boon it gave to business, drove Whalen and Merrick to upgrade the short ban after a little over one week, in favour of announcing the total ban. August First is a laptop-free zone where people can ‘çhitchat and laugh’. Photograph: August First For August First, the ban resulted in 20% year-over-year sales growth in the early months, and now hovers around 10%, both an improvement from the company’s pre-laptop ban average of 5%.Whalen said that despite signs posted around the bright-yellow bakery advertising the ban, she still has to enforce it about twice a week. Though patrons usually respond with a polite “Oh, OK,” some have responded by yelling.“Anytime you make a rule that bucks the norm, there’s definitely going to be people who are upset by it,” Whalen said.
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