Now we know the technology was developed very fast. This include in the electronic control field. Now we are can control television with easy using remote control. Many developer increase way of technique to increase make more easy another equipment electronic. They using many algorithm to do it. But where you can buy idea with approve by experiment of courses?
After i search in the internet, Now you can buy on some journal of Automation and Management. They call by mechatrinics. They have many concept in automation like Intelligent Robotic Systems Automatic, Data fusion achitecture and any other technology concept journal can you get it in there. Read the rest of this entry »
January 6th, 2009 by power
In the digital era, every one like to be got prefect in entertainment. New technology in plasma LCD was satisfy the customers, but is not will not use if your television broadcast is not support HDTV. But now satellite television was born to make satisfied customer which can provide best broadcast full HD television.
How best quality if compare with Cable TV? I cant say that Satellite TV is better than cable TV . But here the feature satellite TV Setup is Easy and Affordable, » All Customers have Access to Digital Benefits, Every Channel is Digital Quality, You Get Local Channels in High Definition. That is one packet in satellite TV. The most popular Satellite TV is DIRECTV. Read the rest of this entry »
October 22nd, 2008 by power
News is that Sony Corp will sell three new Vaio all-in-one PC models that will include high-definition Blu-ray disc drives. The Vaio JS model will include a 20.1-inch LCD, Windows Vista Home, and an optional Blu-ray disc drive. The Vaio LV model will feature 24-inch LCD, available Blu-ray ROM drive, available rewritable Blu-ray drive, built-in DVR functionality, and a 1080p HDMI input. The Vaio RT model sports a 25.5-inch LCD and built-in Blu-ray optical drive to play, record, and edit HD video, an Intel Core 2 Quad CPU, up to 8GB of RAM, and more. The product includes a built-in Blu-ray disc drive for high-def movies and a new Dualshock 3 controller with rumble functionality.
Toshiba this month began selling the new XD-E500 up convert DVD player in an effort to capitalize on consumers unwilling to invest in Sony’s Blu-ray format. The player is said to provide standard DVD images closer to high-definition quality, allowing consumers to utilize their existing DVD library.When this is happening Samsung is predicting that Sony’s Blu-ray technology to be superseded within five years, despite winning the high definition format war in February. Read the rest of this entry »
October 17th, 2008 by power
Movie downloads are great…if you want to watch them on your PC, that is. Media extenders and other devices will let you stream content from your PC so you can view it on your TV, but they’re often difficult to install and don’t always work as advertised. Transferring that content to a DVD should offer a simpler solution, but copy protection schemes have made it a legal headache—especially for retailers who want to allow their customers to browse content digitally and burn their own DVD right in the store.
While the idea of direct-to-DVD downloads has been tossed around for years—and a few other products are in the works—your only (legal) option, for now, is the Dell Qflix DVD Burner. This $120 drive allows you to burn copies of DRM-protected downloads so that you can watch away from your PC. It works as advertised, but right now its appeal is pretty limited. Read the rest of this entry »
October 17th, 2008 by power
Battered by a year of flagging prices for flash-memory chips and by an inability to get traction in sales of digital media devices, SanDisk (SNDK) may soon get scooped up by South Korean electronics giant Samsung Group.
SanDisk shares gained $4.18, or more than 31%, on Sept. 5 after Samsung said it’s considering options for SanDisk that include an acquisition. SanDisk issued a statement that neither confirmed nor denied that a deal is in the offing.
Before the gains, SanDisk’s stock had dropped some 60% since the year began. As the market leader in flash-memory cards for digital cameras and other consumer electronics devices, SanDisk has been hurt by pricing pressure caused by an oversupply of the chips on which the cards are based.
Royalties Aplenty
But SanDisk has two strengths that make it attractive to Samsung. It has a strong patent portfolio relating to NAND flash and memory controllers, and it has annually collected $400 million to $500 million in royalties—much of it from Samsung, the world’s largest manufacturer of NAND chips. That contributed to the $254 million in licensing and royalty revenue SanDisk collected in the first six months of 2008, accounting for more than 15% of overall sales for the period. Read the rest of this entry »