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CES 2009

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Finally, Dell has officially unveiled Adamo. While technical specifications have not yet been announced, it does however, appear to sport a leather wrapped case. Click here for first picture in gallery.

Dell also said something about using high quality materials in the design, and I’m guessing this thing is going to be super expensive.

[via Gizmodo]

According to a new press release, “Microsoft is making this pre-release version of Windows 7 available to the first 2.5 million people who download.” Download page.

The Beta expires August 1, 2009, and Microsoft is of course pilling on the caveats in case this destroys your computer with fire — and limiting this first run of downloads to 2.5 million users.

[via Engadget]

This foldable AMOLED display from Samsung is perfect for people who love reading digital magazines and books, but still want to retain full-color pages along with the ability to fold it in half. No word yet on pricing or availability.

There was even a crease in the middle from where the screen had been constantly folded (it can actually close all the way like a book or clamshell PDA) but it didn’t seem to interfere with the display whatsoever.

[via OhGizmo]

Motorola introduces the SURF A3100. This touchscreen phone features a 3.15-megapixel camera, Qualcomm MSM7201A (528-MHz) CPU, 256MB Flash memory, 128MB RAM, 802.11b/g Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.0 w/A2DP, HSDPA 7.2Mbps, microSD card slot, and built-in GPS. Video after the break. Click here for first picture in gallery.

In light of TouchFLO and its endless competitors, the skin Moto’s developed for this thing — while tasteful and seemingly finger-friendly — really isn’t anything to get terribly excited about, but it does an adequate job of making the superficial surface of Windows Mobile reasonably finger-friendly.

[via Engadget]

Digital cameras are synonymous with being used to snap pictures, the Sony Cybershot G3 is the exception. It’s the first internet-enabled camera — made possible with Wi-Fi connectivity. Available now, priced at $500. Click here for first picture in gallery.

Oh hey! I think there’s a camera somewhere in there too. 10 megapixel sensor with 4x optical zoom, but it’s got 4GB of storage built-in (optional expansion is Memory Stick only, grrr), with a 921,600-dot, 3.5-inch touchscreen and photo browsing software integrated.

[via Gizmodo]

Razer gets it: The sleek Mamba mouse “features 2.4GHz “gaming grade” wireless technology, an optional, detachable cord, first-in-class polling rates of 1-millisecond, a “world’s fastest” 5,600DPI Precision 3.5G Laser sensor and a battery life / DPI stage indicator.” Click here for first picture in gallery.

With dual mode wired/wireless functionality, the Razer Mamba lets users immediately and seamlessly switch from wired to wireless play. With first in class polling rates at 1ms as compared to traditional wireless mice that poll at 8ms, players will have virtually lag free game play.

[via Engadget]

Direct from CES 2009, is a quick glimpse at LG’s GD910 cell phone watch, which boasts 3G data and a 1.43-inch touchscreen. Video after the break.

LG’s wrist set was on hand at the LG press conference and we managed a quick peek. We’ll fill in all the blanks tomorrow once we can see it up close, but as a teaser, this thing looks sweet.

[via Engadget]

Everything is not as it seems, or at least in this case. The Eee Keyboard is essentially a “‘fully functional PC’ with full QWERTY and a mini secondary touchscreen.” No word yet on pricing or availability. Click here for first picture in gallery.

Asus was vague as to if/when we’ll actually see the Eee Keyboard come to market (though we’re pretty sure it’s a semi-real product), but it’s a fantastic concept for a home theater PC if we’ve ever seen one.

[via Gizmodo]