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DailyTech

Asus reads beyond netbook at CES
EETimes.com - 5 hours ago
Asus also showed a notebook that used a 4.3-inch touch-screen display in place of a mouse pad. An ARM processor ran software widgets on the touch display ...
Asus Shows a Tablet-Style Eee PC Wired News
CES 2009: Asus shows touchscreen EeePC and Keyboard PC TG Daily
Asus shows off Eee Keyboard with 5in display Fudzilla
AsiaOne - Mobile Computer
all 104 news articles

Uber-Review

Logitech announces handful of G-Series PC gaming accessories
CNET News, CA - 14 hours ago
Alarmingly, the press release mentions no combustion threshold data, so we can't comment as to whether or not the G9x will burn through your mouse pad and ...
Logitech Wins Seven CES Innovation Awards WELT ONLINE
Logitech shows off its revamped gaming lineup - two keyboards a ... Tech Digest
CES 2009: Logitech Announces New G-series Peripherals for PC Gaming Gearlog
I4U
all 78 news articles

PC World

HTC S743 Smart Phone Is Sleek but Pricey
PC World - 17 hours ago
This ultraslim smart phone (4.6 by 1.7 by 0.6 inches, 4.9 ounces) features a 12-key number pad and a slide-out full QWERTY keyboard. ...
Meet HTC?s Latest Smartphone: The S743 LAPTOP Magazine
HTC Releases Its New S743 Phone eFluxMedia
HTC S740 review TechRadar UK
PhoneNews.com - TechWhack
all 61 news articles

Nova Killer 2 Mousepad Review
Jonny Guru, FL - Jan 5, 2009
A mousepad. But not just any mousepad, a gigantic mousepad that would ensure I would never have extra room on my desk again. And that mousepad is non other ...

Review: Razer Destructor Mousepad
Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun, NY - Dec 22, 2008
By Zheng Gu Most gamers don't think of their mouse pad as a key ingredient for success. Hardcore gamers know better, though. The Destructor is a firm pad ...
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Ezboard Fetish Foot Mouse Pad
them. There's the next version of OS/2 Warp, code-named Merlin. Code-names are not always what they ...
ezboard-fetish-foot-mouse-pad.php

1.11 Maphack Mouse Pad
lease. Every version of OS/2 from version 1.0 up to the current Warp 3.0 has disappointed me in one ...
1.11-maphack-mouse-pad.php

D2 Mouse Pad Maphack
Windows NT, Cairo, is named after a tiny town in southern Illinois. For all I know, there's someone ...
d2-mouse-pad-maphack.php

Mouse Pad Maphack
puters in the outside world, which is predominantly right-handed. COPYRIGHT 1996 Transcontinental Me...
mouse-pad-maphack.php

Free Mouse Pad
build the computing environments in which we spend so much of our time, give excessive attention to ...
free-mouse-pad.php

Advertising Mouse Pad
e of the little things that really matter. The kind of mouse most of us use depends on the character...
advertising-mouse-pad.php

Logo Mouse Pad
t up for left-handed operation. Since I am naturally sinister, this is quite comfortable. (For what ...
logo-mouse-pad.php

Covered Material Mouse Pad
e I am naturally sinister, this is quite comfortable. (For what it's worth, I find that a trackball ...
covered-material-mouse-pad.php

Fetish Foot Mouse Pad
r, I use a right-handed mouse. I am able to spread the load between my two hands, reducing the stres...
fetish-foot-mouse-pad.php

Mouse Pad Design
nd more time on some of the little things that really matter. The kind of mouse most of us use depen...
mouse-pad-design.php

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I'm following several big stories, and if they develop punch lines, I'll be writing about them.

There's the next version of OS/2 Warp, code-named Merlin. Code-names are not always what they appear to be. For example, the next generation of Windows NT, Cairo, is named after a tiny town in southern Illinois.

For all I know, there's someone at IBM named Doug Merlin, but I rather think the code-name refers to the magic IBM thinks it has up its sleeve with this release.

Every version of OS/2 from version 1.0 up to the current Warp 3.0 has disappointed me in one way or the other but I get the feeling that Merlin represents a breakthrough product.

Merlin has IBM's VoiceType technology which means that you will be able to dictate a letter or memo as well as issue voice commands to control your computer.

The Internet will be easier to access and better integrated with the operating system whose interface will be improved with an eye to making it easier to use.

IBM feels that Merlin will change how people interact with computers. Maybe. We'll see.

Equally important is IBM's new technology that simplifies the task of creating native OS/2 applications from 32-bit Windows applications.

If this works as claimed, it will lead to a greater choice of OS/2 applications and thus address one of the major and chronic shortcomings of the OS/2 environment.

There are other big developments on the horizon but I feel the need to write about something less weighty, although not necessarily less important.

I would like to write about the mouse and some issues related to it.

Since January, I've been using the 3M Precise Mousing Surface. Although it's rather expensive at over $15, it's worth every penny.

Most of us, as we build the computing environments in which we spend so much of our time, give excessive attention to the speed of our CPU and the size of our hard disk.

We should spend more time on some of the little things that really matter.

The kind of mouse most of us use depends on the characteristics of the surface it glides over. Some surfaces are better than others. We have all noticed that.

It stands to reason that inventive engineers should be able to design a near-optimal surface. That is what 3M engineers appear to have done. If you use a mouse, you should try this high-tech pad. Despite its excellence, I don't always use the 3M pad. The reason has to do with Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, a seriously debilitating overuse condition that afflicts users of mice and keyboards.

I know people with cases severe enough to require surgery. I had a mild form of this myself, but I recognized it soon enough to take steps to minimize its seriousness.

I split my work between two computers. On one, I use a trackball, set up for left-handed operation. Since I am naturally sinister, this is quite comfortable. (For what it's worth, I find that a trackball is less stressful than a mouse).

On the other, I use a right-handed mouse. I am able to spread the load between my two hands, reducing the stress on each one.

Another benefit: I'm prepared to use computers in the outside world, which is predominantly right-handed.

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