Looks nice! I wish my Air didn't burn me while watching Hulu (seriously). Not ready to plunk down for an 'upgrade' yet, but I'll definitely consider the i7 variant when that comes out in a year or so.
Sounds to me like you need to be paying for a business line rather than a residential line, dontcha think? According to the article (and Engadget) the cap only applies to residential users.
Not as long as the instruction set of the processor is x86....they could extend the instruction set to include special instuctions for the decicated SPE's (a CELL term) and THEN the software would have to be specially written to take advantage of these. But maybe they have come up with a nice way to transform the x86 instructions to take advantage of their specialized architecture.
That is feasibly the only way to implement this new processor, since economically not many comapnies are going to rewrite and redistribute their codebase to take advantage of this new type of processor.
"I love my little computing companion but I often find myself missing a full sized keyboard. I have been looking at several of these portable and flexible keyboards, but I can't seem to make up my mind about which I should buy. I don't want the keyboard to be overly expensive, but I want it to be good quality. Also, how difficult is it to type on these keyboards? Thanks!"
The most commented posts on Engadget over the past 24 hours.
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.