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Techies Taking Political Power From Hollywood Heroes


The realm of politics has long been a haven for aging California celebrities, including Ronald Reagan, Clint Eastwood, Sonny Bono, and, of course, the "Governator" Arnold Schwarzenegger. Since the beginning of the new millennium, though, another faction of well-known California personalities has been encroaching on that political domain.

Instead of celluloid celebrities, the new group consists of cyber-celebs, as more and more Silicon Valley tech superstars upload their names into the political database. According to CNN, perhaps the most well known of the burgeoning geek brigade is Meg Whitman, former eBay CEO. Whitman plans to run for Governor in 2010, and, further demonstrating the political shift, will run against a fellow techie, start-up entrepreneur Steve Poizner, in the Republican primary.

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Computers, Celebrities

Former HP CEO Carly Fiorina Undergoes Breast Cancer Surgery


Carly Fiorina, the former CEO of Hewlett-Packard, underwent successful breast cancer surgery Monday at Stanford University Hospital in California. Diagnosed on February 20th, Fiorina is set to participate in chemotherapy treatments at Stanford with an excellent chance for a full recovery, according to her chief of staff Deborah Bowker.

During her tenure as CEO of HP, a position she held from 1995 until her forced resignation in 2005, Fiorina was at the helm of the merger between HP and rival Compaq, a move that was widely criticized due to resulting layoffs and suspended earnings. After her consequent resignation and departure, Fiorina received even more criticism for her $21 million severance package, which included an additional $21 million in stock options and pension benefits.

Fiorina currently heads a Bay-area based charity, Carly Fiorina Enterprises, and -- after holding a position last year as the top economic adviser to presidential candidate John McCain -- has also hinted at a possible foray into politics. Because of that service, along with her appearance at the California state GOP convention the day after she was diagnosed with cancer, Fiorina has received backing from a large contingent of California Republicans for a proposed 2010 run against US Senator Barbara Boxer.

While Fiorina does plan to limit her upcoming engagements and travel in order to recuperate, Bowker told the Mercury News that after the successful surgery Fiorina is "doing great" and plans to "enthusiasically" return to all of her previous endeavors.

[From: SFGate]

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Computers

Global PC Sales Increase 15% in 2008, So Far

Global PC Sales Increase 15 Percent in 2008
Tech industry research firm Gartner has has just released its latest figures tracking the computer market, and, refreshingly, the news is good! While the rest of the economy is struggling just to avoid drowning in a sea of stagnant credit, the PC industry is soaring. According to the findings, global PC sales grew 15% since the 3rd quarter of last year.

There are a number of other interesting statistics:
  • Despite a significant increase in sales, Dell's market share still shrank.
  • Asus and Acer, companies that jumped on the netbook trend, saw huge growth.
  • HP maintained its spot as the number one computer manufacturer worldwide.
  • U.S. PC shipments grew only 4.6%.
  • Netbooks accounted for 5% of PC sales
Why exactly the PC industry seems immune to the current economic downturn is not known -- maybe everyone's staying home to watch their free music and free TV shows? -- but we're sure Apple and Dell aren't complaining. [From: Gartner.com]

Audio/Video, Computers, TV

HP and MTV Offer Thinly-Veiled Commercial as TV Show

HP and MTV Offer Thinly Veiled Comercial as TV ShowHewlett-Packard (HP) and MTV are joining forces (again) to launch a new reality mini show thats being pitched as "the 'Real World' with more computers." 'Engine Room' is a show that gathers young creative types from around the world, sticks them in an apartment in Brooklyn, and makes them create digital art using HP PCs. Episodes will run only five to seven minutes each and will air both on mtvU (MTV's channel targeted at college kids) and will be available online.

If this sounds as much about advertising as it does about programming, you're not too far off. 'Engine Room,' like 'Meet or Delete' and 'College 500' before it, fall into the category that is being called branded-entertainment. Branded-entertainment generally consists of usually short-form reality shows with heavy branding from a sponsoring company, in this case HP. In other words, it's just like the soap-operas of yore, only with more of a reality-show-twist and the 'product' actually being used in the show.

In 'Engine Room' 16 contestants will be divided up into four teams and compete for a prize of $400,000 and a chance to program the giant MTV screen in Times Square. Filming is complete and the editing is almost done. If you feel like you really need a multi-part infomercial posing as a television show in your life, then check out 'Engine Room,' which premieres tonight. To be fair, we haven't seen it yet, so it just might be good -- but if it stinks.... [From: New York Times]

Computers

HP Debuts Super Small Sub-$500 Laptop

HP Reveals ASUS Eee Competitor
The market for cheap sub-notebooks is simply exploding. It all started with the OLPC XO, then Intel jumped in with the Classmate. Soon Asus revealed its critically acclaimed Eee PC, and these low-priced, low-powered (often Linux-running) machines truly started to take the world by storm.

The latest entry into this field is the Hewlett Packard 2133 Mini-Note PC. The Mini-Note starts at $499, for the entry level model with 512 megabytes of RAM, 4-gigabytes of storage, a 1-gigahertz VIA processor, and Linux. At the top of the heap is a $749 model loaded with Vista Business, 2-gigabytes of RAM, and a 1.6 gigahertz VIA processor. The $749 model also comes with a 120-gigabyte hard drive that spins at 7,200 RPM for super fast data access. Many full-sized notebooks only come with 5,400 RPM drives, and most ultra-portables are saddled with a 4,200 RPM drive.

The first batch of reviews are in, and they're all pretty positive. Some complain about the lack of power due to the VIA processor, and the awkwardness of the side-mounted touch pad buttons, but most are blown away by the full-sized keyboard and the 8.9-inch screen that at a resolution of 1280x768 can display a full Web page without any horizontal scrolling, unlike the ASUS Eee.

The Mini-Note sounds like a strong competitor to the Eee and other cheap compact notebooks, but the price does sound a little high. An Eee PC similarly equipped to the lower end Mini-Note costs about $100 less, and for the $749 asking price of the high end model, you could buy a much more powerful laptop, though one not nearly as small.

From Engadget

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