Just because you’re a business man doesn’t mean your gadgets have to look as dull as your grey suit. Accessorise with this troupe of business-savvy tech and you’ll be standing out from the boardroom crowd in no time…
Just because you’re a business man doesn’t mean your gadgets have to look as dull as your grey suit. Accessorise with this troupe of business-savvy tech and you’ll be standing out from the boardroom crowd in no time…
The Palm Pre just got another little update to its webOS operating system. webOS 1.0.4 fixes a number of security problems and bugs in the OS, but has the unfortunate side-effect of stopping homebrew developers from installing their apps.
If anyone wants me I’m busy! The love for ET 1602 continues we have been having fun together although I still find at times I revert to the mouse I think that’s out of habit. I have had some questions comments on previous blogs which I shall address here.
PS3’s changing backwards compatibility has been a bone of contention throughout the console’s life. Arguably, now that there are so many games on the PS3, BC simply isn’t needed any more. And yet, the PS2 is still a powerful force in the console market and a linchpin in Sony’s games business. Now a new patent has come to light, pointing to a possible return of backwards compatibility in Sony’s latest console.
Bonjour, bonjour as our Gallic cousins say, and what better way to start your day than with a healthy dose of gadget news? Are you ready to fill up on your Techie Breakie?
Mozilla is gearing up to launch its latest Firefox browser incarnation tomorrow, June 30. It’s been a long time coming, having started life as a more straight-forward Firefox 3.1 update. Instead, the proposed changes became so exhaustive that Mozilla changed the version number to Firefox 3.5 to signify the amount extra work that had gone into it.
Palm Pre is off to an encouraging start and is putting the company in healthier financial straights, but right now the handset still has one problem – its Palm App Catalog is still a little thin on, well, apps. That’s because Palm has been dragging its heels over the webOS Mojo SDK, which will finally allow anyone with a knowledge of programming to make their own Palm Pre apps. Fortunately for those eager to start testing the limits of Palm’s new webOS, a version of the Mojo SDK has been leaked onto the internet.