I'm tracking technology, and technology is tracking me

27.9.02

Keep taking the Tablets: In six weeks, a number of PC manufacturers will launch Tablet PCs with radio-frequency pens and touch-sensitive screens. It could be just the thing if you can't type or for some reason fancy sending handwritten e-mail. But if sales fail to take off, Windows XP Tablet PC Edition should still be welcome in the industries that already use tablet computers -- and there are lots of them.
Guardian Online

Your Outlook Express inbox file seems to be corrupted and you cannot see your old e-mail: what can you do? Here are some suggestions and shareware programs that could help. If the Windows XP Service Pack 1 is too big for you to download, you can ask Microsoft for a free copy on CD. If you use unusual fonts, here's how you can embed them in your Word document files. But if you want to run USB ports from Windows NT, you are probably out of luck. Plus: looking for a cheap notebook PC.
Ask Jack

Whenever someone tells me "all Wintel machines are the same", I know I am talking to someone who has lost touch with reality. There are easily more than a dozen versions of Windows for products that range from mobile phones to data centre mainframes, and Intel now makes at least five types of processor, including four that run the x86 instruction set. Then there's AMD....
Computer Weekly > Technology > Desktop Computing > Opinion

19.9.02

Hyper-Threading for consumer PCs and Banias, a new chip for "thin and light" notebook PCs, were the things that Intel was pushing at last week's Intel Developer Forum in San Jose.
Guardian Online

Hitching a ride into space (sorry, you can't); Future Physical and its Wear Me event; University guides; discover your XP logs online; making labels and licence plates; talk like a pirate day; and six of the best newsletters for PC owners.
Web watch

Buying a £499 PC -- and why the Wal-Mart $199 machine may not be such a bargain; the Microsoft Virtual Machine (VM) is missing from Windows XP; putting video on CD to play in a DVD player; and Locust as another way to send and receive SMS messages on a PC.
Ask Jack

12.9.02

The Getaway: I went to Sony's Soho-based studio for an early look at the most expensive video game ever created in Europe.
Guardian Online

Dual-booting lets your PC run two different operating systems, and Virtual PC for Windows lets you run one version of Windows inside another. Dealing with that TimeSink directory; a way round Outlook 2002's Draconian security, which blocks attachments; getting that Microsoft Office toolbar back; software that locks a CD-ROM drive; SMS gateway software that lets you send and receive SMS messages on a PC, via a GSM modem; Streambox VCR as an alternative to Total Recorder; and why that online spell-checking site is not recommended for the red-green colour-blind.
Ask Jack

The usable £299 business PC is on the way (and "business" means you won't include a monitor or VAT in the price). The reason is simple: the "new" low-cost 1.7GHz Intel Celeron that is now starting to reach the market in volume is the "old" Pentium 4 from last April, albeit with a smaller cache. If you last bought a new PC more than a year ago, the new cheapies will very probably be faster. And if you last bought a PC in a previous century, they are a killer upgrade.
Computer Weekly > Technology > Desktop Computing > Features

6.9.02

Console wars: Sony and Microsoft are fighting it out on the high street and before Christmas will cary the battle online. The latest price cuts and announcements were focused around ECTS, Europe's leading games trade show. Some of the show highlights are covered here.
Guardian Online

Running two versions of Windows allows you to have different languages, but it's not a great idea with Windows 9x. Where to put your holiday snaps online; preventing access to a CD-ROM drive -- physically; software to capture streaming audio; train software for a man with a Mac; and lots of ways to receive SMS messages on a PC.
Ask Jack

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