Technology and Gadgets Tracker 2.0

Sharing is Rewarding! Click on the red Rewards Flag

srs trend rider forex system

More 2008 CES Booth Babes Roundup

Eye candy. Yeap. More CES 2008 CES Booth Babes from around the net.

The 2008 CES officially kicked off today as the show floors were opened to industry affiliates and media earlier this morning. Normally we would wait until the end of the week to publish our CES “Booth Babes”, but let’s face it, everyone loves booth babes, so if we don’t have to wait, why should you?

Continue reading

More Booth Babes Photos CES 2008 Part 2

There are more Booth Babes Photos from CES 2008 here….Its a much better collection than the old I posted earlier.

via

CES 2008 – Alienware curved prototype display

I would gladly sell my car for this cool looking Alienware curve protype display that has a blazing fast refresh rate of 0.2 seconds. WOW. Video by Veronica Belmont for Engadget….

Nintendo Wii Nunchuck controller goes Wireless

Nintendo Wii

Thanks to Nyko, you don’t need to plug the Wii Nunchuck via cable on da Wiiremote anymore. It has gone Wireless.

It has full accelerometer support and it goes up to 30 hours of gameplay on two standard AAA batteries. That’s quite good since the Nyko Charge Station makes my Wiiremote play for only 25 hrs. Expect to see it on Amazon or your local store shelves in February 2008 for $29.99.

via CES 2008- Nintendo Wii gets Nyko Wireless Nunchuck controller

CES 2008 – The Corsair Flash Voyager 32GB drive

The Corsair Flash Voyager 32GB drive

Corsair has unveiled its Flash Voyager and Flash Survivor USB families that goes up to 32GB capacity. The new 32GB drives from Corsair can hold over 16 full-length, high-definition movies, or even an entire season of a TV series.

These 32GB USB 2.0 drives can be booted, which means users can store full versions of operating systems and applications in order to quickly re-create the necessary software environments to troubleshoot system problems.

The new Corsair drives are also shipping at prices lower than top-tier flash drives have in the past: the Flash Voyager sells for $230, while the slightly more upscale Survivor is offered for $250. Both should be available within the next few days and work with any operating system that supports removable USB drives. I am sure IT engineers will line up for them pronto.

via