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  • DAP Tech M9010 hits the FCC packed with radios, shows them off in epic teardown

    by 
    Terrence O'Brien
    Terrence O'Brien
    11.29.2011

    The M9010 from DAP Tech may only be running Windows Embedded Standard 7 on a rather miserly 1.3GHz Atom, but it's got more communication options than you can shake a stylus at. There's a Gobi 3000 chip for connecting via both EVDO and HSPA, GPS, 802.11 a/b/g/n, Zigbee, Wireless USB and Bluetooth, not to mention a laser barcode scanner and a camera capable of decoding QR codes. Wondering what that stunning set of antennas and sensors looks like? Well the FCC pried open the case and gave the rugged computer a thorough teardown. Check out the gallery below for all the gory gadget images you can stomach. %Gallery-140386%

  • Gateway Media Console with CableCARD and Windows Embedded Standard 7 hands-on

    by 
    Vlad Savov
    Vlad Savov
    01.06.2011

    Microsoft's working hard to get people believing in its Windows Embedded Standard platform as a real set-top box contender and one of its vanguard devices is the above Gateway Media Console. It's still a concept product in the Acer / Gateway labs, but what it promises to deliver makes us wish it hurries up and makes the leap to retail nice and quickly. Based around a Sandy Bridge Intel CPU, this machine runs Windows Media Center and gives you access to all the internet-connected content that you can enjoy on your Windows 7-equipped PC, but it also boasts a InfiniTV 6 CableCARD tuner that permits up to six HD broadcast TV streams at a time. Those can then be networked out throughout your house -- whether over a wireless or wired connection -- and then recorded on whatever laptops, desktops or other Windows devices you have lying around the house. The end result is that the kids can be recording a pair of channels upstairs in their bedroom while you watch the football game in the living room and your mother-in-law enjoys whatever she's into down in the basement -- all coming in from the same, single coax cable plugged into the Media Console. There's a hidden optical drive as well and Microsoft tells us this thing could range between $500 and $700 when it does eventually make its way out for sale. %Gallery-113077%