HP working on WebOS netbooks

During the Fortune Brainstorm Tech conference this week, Palm CEO Jon Rubinstein has confirmed that the company, under the new management of HP, will also be creating WebOS netbooks, alongside tablets, Smartphone and printers.

Says Rubinstein: “We’re working a wide variety, as Todd said, smartphones definitely, slates, netbooks, working with the guys in the printer group. webOS [...] will have a unified user interface across all of these, will have a unified developer environment, and it’s all based on the foundation that we build in webOS from day one.

When we developed webOS, we thought about making this scalable across a variety of mobile devices; that’s what we’ll be delivering going forward.”

While tablets, printers and smartphones had been confirmed in the past by either HP or Palm, netbooks had only vaguely been mentioned.

In April, HP purchased Palm for $1.2 billion, after outbidding RIM, Apple and Lenovo.

With the acquisition, the company also acquired all of Palm’s patents and its WebOS mobile operating system.

Via: afterdawn.com

HP Printers: OfficePro 8500 For Excellent Hardcopy

When the HP OfficePro 8500 printer was released last year a portion of us thought that paying $399 was a hard pill to swallow, but they did not understand how much printer they were getting for their money. However for all those who did not want to pay that price we can now tell you that this excellent hardcopy printer now costs less than $300.

For those of you who use a printer a lot, then the HP OfficePro 8500 is perfect thanks to its large printer ink cartridges, and is ideal for the modern day home and business with laptops and desktops with its LAN and wireless connectivity.

The larger HP ink cartridges are said to offer 1,400 pages of color and 2,200 black and white printing. This is certainly unheard of with inkjet printers and is something more common with laser printers – although the cost per sheet works out to be half the price of the laser version.

Lamont Wood from Information Week has spent some time reviewing the HP OfficePro 8500 printer and concludes that it is perfect for the smaller office or home, but would struggle when demand is high. For more details visit the source link.

Via: product-reviews.net

Canada to recycle or not to recycle

The environment is obviously one of the biggest issues of the moment. The federal political parties are spending their summers trying to sell Canadians on their plans for the future, provincial governments are unveiling regulations to address waste, and municipalities are getting into the game with increasingly sophisticated recycling programs.

As our environmental policies move far beyond establishing emissions standards or cleanup requirements, law and regulation are increasingly focused on creating incentives for business to reduce polluting activities and for consumers to adopt environmentally-friendly habits.

Given the desire to re-orient longstanding practices, laws not traditionally considered part of the environment file should also be examined to determine whether they are consistent with promoting “greener” behaviour. In fact, Parliament recently passed a new law that tries to embed sustainable development into government policy. The notion of “green copyright” sounds odd, yet the policy choices found in BillC-61, Industry Minister Jim Prentice’s controversial copyright bill, disappointingly run directly counter to the current emphasis on the environment.

For example, Canadians trash an estimated 184,000 tonnes of old computers, cellphones, and printer cartridges each year, with many of these items containing potentially hazardous materials such as mercury and lead.

In response, the Ontario government recently proposed a new electronic waste fee on consumer electronics to encourage the recycling of older devices.

Despite attempts to reduce e-waste, Bill C-61 establishes new barriers to the reuse of electronics. If enacted, it would prohibit the unlocking of cellphones, forcing many consumers to junk their phones when they switch carriers (there are an estimated 500 million unused cellphones in the U.S. alone).

Similarly, the U.S. version of Bill C-61 has resulted in lawsuits over the legality of companies that offer to recycle printer ink cartridges. In one lawsuit, Lexmark sued a company that offered recycled cartridges and though it ultimately lost the case, the lawsuit created a strong chill for companies set to enter that marketplace.

Bill C-61 also creates new barriers in the race toward network-based computing, which forms part of the ICT industry’s response to the fact that it accounts for more carbon emissions than the airline industry.

Network-based computing — often referred to as “cloud computing” — benefits from the efficiencies provided by large computer server farms that are often situated in close proximity to clean energy sources.

Network experts argue Canada could parlay its high-speed optical networks and environmental advantages in the north to become a global cloud computing leader with zero carbon emissions, yet the new copyright bill now stands in the way.

The bill prohibits companies from taking advantage of cloud computing to offer network-based video recording services (as are offered by some U.S. based providers). It also stops consumers from shifting their music, videos, and other content to network-based computers, limiting these new rights to devices physically owned by the consumer. In fact, the bill even blocks consumers from using network-based computer backup services — such as the MobileMe service just introduced by Apple — since multiple personal copies of purchased songs or videos is forbidden.

Via: canada.com