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Posts by: Rafe Needleman

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Hands-on: JooJoo Web tablet

Rafe Needleman  |  Dec 08, 2009

Chandra Rathakrishnan and his baby, the JooJoo. (Credit: Rafe Needleman/CNET)

CNET snagged the first journalists' demo of the new JooJoo (formerly CrunchPad) Web slate on Fusion Garage CEO Chandra Rathakrishnan's San Francisco media tour. Quick impressions: Yeah, this is a really cool device. Everyone reading a tech site like CNET Asia will want one. But will they pay the US$499 going price for it? We don't think so.

The JooJoo Web slate is based around a 12.1-inch diagonal 720p capacitive touchscreen. The specs include: 1,366x768-pixel resolution, a built-in camera, mic, and speakers, one USB port, and a card slot. There's 4GB of cache memory. What's the processor? Rathakrishnan wouldn't say. He also won't say who makes the touchscreen.

The hardware is slim and pleasing to hold. The screen is gorgeous, and huge, and the plastic back is gently curved. The unit is very slim, thinner than a MacBook Air. There are no buttons on the device, save the single power switch.
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Filed under:  Gadgets, Notebooks, Web
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JooJoo: The tablet formerly known as CrunchPad

Rafe Needleman  |  Dec 08, 2009

Fusion Garage's Chandra Rathakrishnan shows off the JooJoo in a videoconference. (Credit: Screenshot by Rafe Needleman/CNET)

Monday morning, former TechCrunch partner Fusion Garage revealed details of its plans to release its Linux-based Web browsing tablet.

Known as the CrunchPad until TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington announced on his blog that Fusion Garage had removed his company from involvement the product, it was expected to be a touch-sensitive slate computer designed for browsing the Web. It was said to have no local storage aside from what was necessary to load and run the operating system. Arrington said he was hoping to bring the product to market for under US$300, but did not expect it to be a big seller.

More recently, Arrington said litigation over the breakup was imminent.

Hands-on of the JooJoo

Fusion Garage has been quiet about the public but one-sided airing of the two companies' disagreements until now.

In a Web videocast Monday, Fusion Garage CEO Chandra Rathakrishnan laid out his position on the drama, and revealed plans for the release of the product.
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Filed under:  Gadgets, Notebooks, Web
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Mole and Vue Webcams reviewed

Rafe Needleman  |  Nov 16, 2009
The entry hall in my house has been a test bed for home monitoring cameras for years. I like to be able to record people coming into the house and see what's going on around the front door. Anyone with a family and occasional babysitters will understand. So I continue to look for simple, robust video-monitoring solutions, and vendors keep obliging by improving the state of the art in home remote cameras.

The Vue.
(Credit: Rafe Needleman/CNET)

The latest: Two interesting and very different products, Avaak's Vue and the Astak Mole. Both are very easy to get up and running, and neither require monkeying with arcane router settings to get offsite access to the video streams--something that can be a problem with the Panasonic BL-C131a cameras that I otherwise favor. (I've also tried the Logitech WiLife system, and find it quite good.)

The Vue
The Vue is the most unusual remote camera I've seen. The product is unchanged from my March 2 preview, but I had a chance to experiment with the shipping version recently. The big benefit of the Vue: The cameras are tiny, battery-powered and thus completely wireless, and the system is extremely easy to set up. You plug an included controller box into your router or switch and tuck it out of the way, and then you can place the cameras anywhere in your house on their clever little stick-on magnetic dome mounts. The standard kit comes with two cameras.
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Filed under:  PC & Peripherals
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YouTube going 1080p

Rafe Needleman  |  Nov 13, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO--At the recent NewTeeVee Live conference, YouTube director of product management Hunter Walk announced that the video-streaming service is getting a new high-quality streaming option: Full-HD, or 1080p resolution. The current "high-quality" option, when available on YouTube videos, is 720p, referring to the number of horizontal scan lines that make up the image.

Walk said the new resolution, as well as a new full-screen player, will roll out to all users within days.

YouTube co-founder Steve Chen announced high-quality YouTube viewing at NewTeeVee 2007. He also said, then, that YouTube stores all video it receives at the resolution it's uploaded at. So when YouTube ads a resolution option, as it did then and is doing now, it simply needs to re-encode videos for the new player, not get new raw content.
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GE debuts miniature ultrasound scanner

Rafe Needleman  |  Oct 21, 2009

Jeff Immelt holds the GE Vscan ultrasound scanner.
(Credit: Rafe Needleman/CNET)

SAN FRANCISCO--In a wide-ranging interview at the Web 2.0 Summit, Jeff Immelt, CEO of General Electric, announced a low-cost and very portable ultrasound scanner called the Vscan.

"It's about the same size as a BlackBerry," Immelt said, holding up a white device that appeared to fold in the middle like a flip-phone. The top of the device showed an ultrasound image (of a patient's liver, we were told), while the bottom showed control keys.

"This is Moore's law," he said, saying that the device had the same power as a console ultrasound from two to three years ago that would cost US$250,000.

The price of the device was not revealed, but Immelt asked the audience to imagine these devices going to Africa and helping health care providers there determine "if a baby is breech," for example. "This could be the stethoscope of the 21st century," he said.

Immelt also gave a demo of an enhanced online medical records system, in which patient data is combined with clinical outcome data and research to help caregivers apply effective and current treatments to patients. Medical records, he said, don't win only because they give patients portable electronic files, but rather, "it's about making better clinical decisions faster."
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Filed under:  Future Tech
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