Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Dirt-cheap laptops might be this year's stocking stuffer

  Dirt-cheap laptops might be this year's stocking stuffer | Hands-on with HP's Stream 11, the $200 Windows laptop that wants to kill Chromebooks

 
  ITworld Personal Tech

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Learn how to harness Ruby's full power to write more robust, efficient, maintainable, and well-performing code. We've got 5 copies to give to some lucky readers. Enter now for your chance to win! Read More
 


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Is your Smartphone Secure Enough?
Learn how Samsung KNOX's multi-layered approach to mobile security protects against malicious apps, prevents attacks from one domain spreading to another domain and more. Learn More

Dirt-cheap laptops might be this year's stocking stuffer
Black Friday and Cyber Monday promise commodity-priced laptops and tablets, while the biggest-ticket items may be in the smallest packages: smartphones. Read More
 

Hands-on with HP's Stream 11, the $200 Windows laptop that wants to kill Chromebooks
HP's $200 Stream 11 has something to prove: that you can enjoy a small, cheap Windows laptop as much as users have enjoyed small, cheap Chromebooks for the past couple of years.The rise of Chromebooks for Web browsing and basic productivity has threatened the borders of Microsoft's Windows empire. The Stream 11 (and the Stream 14, its larger cousin), gives the company a chance to strike back: It bundles these low-cost laptops with a year's worth of Office 365 Personal (for the Stream 11 plus one tablet and one phone, normally $70 per year) and a $25 gift card to the Windows Store. A year's worth of McAfee antivirus protection adds peace of mind. For the first year or so that you own the Stream 11, it's a bargain.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 

Android Lollipop's default encryption devastates storage performance, tests show
If you feel your snazzy new Nexus 6 just isn't performing as quickly and smoothly as it should be, Android 5.0's default full-disk encryption could be to blame. AnandTech recently ran storage performance benchmark tests on two Nexus 6 devices: one with and one without full-disk encryption (FDE) enabled. The Nexus 6 comes with FDE enabled by default, which you can't turn disable, but the site was able to grab a non-encrypted phone from Motorola.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 

The ups and downs of Microsoft Band
Microsoft's Band, launched on Oct. 30, sold out within two weeks and has been hard to come by since then. That's left would-be buyers scratching their heads wondering what Microsoft is thinking? Read More
 


WHITE PAPER: Citrix Systems
 
10 essential elements for secure enterprise mobility
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Getting started with power-line networking
Power-line networking makes use of your electrical lines to give you a de facto wired network. It gives you the range of a wired network without any of the mess or the need to run cable behind the walls. Read More
 

Two surprises in Fitbit's new Charge fitness tracker
  Fitbit's latest wearable activity tracker, Charge, is a solid product that just might surprise you, but with two more Fitbit wearables due early next year, you might want to put your purchase plans on hold Read More
 

Yoga Tablet 2 and Tablet 2 Pro review: Innovative but imperfect
Lenovo's new Yoga Tablet 2 and Tablet 2 Pro have innovative designs and unusual features but are held back by some unnecessary flaws. Read More
 

10 productivity gadgets to add to your holiday shopping list
These gadgets will help the people on your holiday shopping list stay productive on the go, whether it's for business or personal travel. Read More
 

New trojan aims to steal your password manager's password
If you use a password manager, your master key is all that's standing between cyberthieves and all your logins Read More
 

 

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Effective Ruby: 48 Specific Ways to Write Better Ruby
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Responsive Mobile Design: Designing for Every Device
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