Recent Comments:
Sprint leaks XOHM WiMax service details and devices {Engadget}
Sep 2nd 2008 3:21PM omxohmz
Sanyo's Katana Eclipse flip phone lands at Bell Mobility {Engadget Mobile}
Aug 13th 2008 12:16AM There are phones fuglier than the RAZR?
Popcorn Hour's A-110 HD media streamers gets hands-on treatment {Engadget}
Aug 13th 2008 12:09AM Still happy with my Xbox 1. Once they get GPU decoding implemented and get h.264 to work, there won't be any reason to change devices anymore.
NAO humanoid robots gets a price tag, exhaustive overview {Engadget}
Jul 23rd 2008 7:25PM They should pit it against NOA's humanoid, Reggie.
Eee PC 1000H gets a $100 price drop {Engadget}
Jul 19th 2008 7:15PM Cool. Another Apple topic. You idiots don't even need help from Engadget anymore, do you?
Hitachi introduces second-gen 1TB Deskstar 7K1000.B hard drive {Engadget}
Jul 9th 2008 5:15PM Re: filling atoms with data. Just look at the human brain. It can store at least a few TB of data, right? Or perhaps a few dozen or a few hundred TB? Which raises the question: can the brain actually store MORE than one bit per atom?
Voice search comes to Google Maps for BlackBerry devices {Engadget}
Jul 3rd 2008 11:24AM Google and RIM should get their shit together and fix Gmail syncing issues on Blackberries. Now that would be progress.
Heat from data center used to warm Swiss swimming pool {Engadget}
Apr 3rd 2008 5:44PM DakStaka @ Apr 3rd 2008 4:32PM:
"That's a great solution. The pool where I used to live in Hobart uses the heat in the sewerage pipes"
Are you saying that other people's warm poop heats your swimming water?
AMD brings DisplayPort to pros with ATI FireGL V7700 {Engadget}
Mar 31st 2008 1:16PM HDMI cables cost a lot because our brainless consumers don't mind paying a lot for them.
Conceptual hotel takes a note from the Death Star {Engadget}
Mar 6th 2008 2:13PM Geology carries little relevance here, since the Europe-Asia divisions are usually political. It is due to Europe's influence a few centuries ago that it earned the right to be called a continent in the first place. Yep, it's just a small area on the physical continent of Eurasia.
The former Soviet republics, other than the Central Asian ones (i.e. the five "-stans"), are generally considered European, the three Transcaucasian countries (Azerbaijan, Georgia & Armenia) included.









