Hardware 2.0
ZDNet Must Read
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Microsoft to charge customers $99 to remove OEM 'crapware'
So, the OEMs make money from installing crapware onto PCs, and now Microsoft is making money removing it. Makes you realize why more and more people are buying Apple hardware.
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Why Apple, RIM, Nokia and Motorola are arguing over what your next SIM card will look like
Apple’s SIM design would result in handsets costing more to manufacture.
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The case against the 'iPad mini': Fragmentation and cannibalization
What’s wrong with a mini iPad? To understand why it doesn’t make sense, we need to step back and take a look at the bigger picture.
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Can Apple make a "Retina" display MacBook a reality?
Bringing a Retina display MacBook to market would involve balancing three factors.
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Reuters: iPhone 5 to have 4-inch screen
An increase in screen size from the current 3.5-inch to 4-inch would mean an overall increase in viewing area of roughly 30 percent.
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WSJ: iPhone 5 getting 4-inch+ screen
According to sources, multiple display manufacturers are working on the new, larger screen.
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Microsoft to charge customers $99 to remove OEM 'crapware'
So, the OEMs make money from installing crapware onto PCs, and now Microsoft is making money removing it. Makes you realize why more and more people are buying Apple hardware.
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NVIDIA pushes GPU technologies to the cloud
NVIDIA leverages the Kepler architecture to take GPU computing into the cloud.
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How to boost your MacBook Pro performance
How to make your shiny aluminum workhorse even faster.
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AMD's 'Trinity' challenge to Intel's Ivy Bridge: Will it convince OEMs?
Lower power consumption means less heat generated and longer battery life for mobile devices. Both of these are important to OEMs wanting to build thin and light devices.
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AMD unveils 'Trinity' A-Series APUs
Better GPU performance could be AMD’s ace up its sleeve, especially as OEMs are making increased use of high-resolution displays on systems such as ultrathin devices.