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Submission + - Has 2.4 GHz Reached Maximum Capacity?

An anonymous reader writes: There's been a lot of talk lately about the concept of Personal Area Networks. At CES Intel and Connectify both released software that turns Windows laptops into Access Points for file transfers, wirelessly syncing pictures from cameras, and Internet sharing. This is good, maybe great if you’re a road warrior, but what about the rest of us holed up in apartment buildings and small neighborhoods? We already have to deal with the wireless chatter of the 50 or so other linksys routers in the vicinity. What will happen when every laptop also acts as a software router? To add fuel to the fire, Intel and Netgear also announced the Push2TV device that allows you to stream your display, including Netflix videos straight to your television. Isn(TM)t this going to kill lower powered 2.4 GHz devices, like Bluetooth mice and headsets? When does the 2.4 GHz band collapse completely? Why can’t we push all this short range, high bandwidth stuff onto 5 GHz?
User Journal

Journal Journal: Classic ASP

It feels funny, but I actually have to go back and learn Classic ASP for a job, when I'm relatively well versed in ASP.NET with C#. Fortunately, the Wrox book I'm reading on it is a fairly quick read so far, so hopefully I can get up and running on it quickly.

Cellphones

Kyocera's OLED Phone Concept Charges As You Flex It 101

Mike writes "Kyocera recently unveiled a kinetic energy-powered phone with a flexible OLED display that can be folded up like a wallet. Dubbed the EOS phone, the display unfolds to reveal a wide screen, and shape memory allows the phone's keys to pop up when in use and blend in with the surface during downtime. Best of all, the phone's soft, semi-rigid polymer skin is embedded with an array of tiny piezoelectric generators — the more you use the phone, the more it charges!" So far, it's just a design idea — but a cool one.

Comment Re:OnGuard (Score 1) 97

I worked as a tech at my High School for a couple of years after college, and we used OnGuard there to lock down all the Macs. It worked very nicely, was very easy to configure for different labs to have different priveledges, etc. I would recommend it in a heart beat.

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