Search Results for: AI

Using the Web to design and decorate your home

By Ted Kritsonis

Whether you’re moving into a new place or looking to design your dream home, the Web offers some interesting tools to help make that a reality for you, and all at a price you can afford.

Following the Olympics with Samsung’s Omnia II on Bell

Text and photos by Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla

Using Samsung’s Omnia II smartphone which is the official handset of the 2010 Olympics and which runs Windows Mobile 6.5, we took time to discover Bell’s Olympic offerings. The first application we tried out was Live TV which enables subscribed users real time access to ongoing events.

Top 10 Desktop Wallpaper Sites

By Tim Teatro

Alright, I’ll admit it. I’ll be the first to stand in front of our circle of readers and say it: “my name is Tim, and I have a problem. I’m addicted to desktop wallpaper.” I even have small tray apps and scripts which cycle my wallpaper randomly every few minutes.

Canadians spent more than $4.66 billion on tech devices in 2009

Text and photo by Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla

Canadians purchased more than 83 million IT products – eight per cent lower than the year before – at an average price of $56 per unit. The most popular among these items was the computer notebook, which came down 15 per cent in average price, fuelling a 31 per cent rise in the total units sold.

Mobilicity is Canada’s newest wireless carrier

By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla

Mobilicity squeezes into a picture that’s got providers Rogers, Fido, Bell, Telus, Virgin and Wind all competing for 3G customers and selling the latest batch of app phones and smartphones.

Defining the Apple iPad Ecosystem

By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla

Just like with Macs, iPhones and iPods, the new iPad is certain to have a ton of accessories available right after it begins shipping. There will be screen protectors, cases, stands, sleeves and a variety of docks and they will likely be expensive.

Why the netbook could die in 2010

By Ted Kritsonis

Netbooks may have turned hot at the right time with their diminutive form factors and recession-friendly prices, but the honeymoon with consumers is over, and there’s plenty of reason to believe that netbooks will start to die slow deaths this year.