PC World's 20 Most Innovative Products of 2006
Craig Sender writes "PC World has put together a list of their choices for the 20 Most Innovative Products of 2006. The List includes Office 2007, Nintendo Wii, Sony Reader, Sony PlayStation 3, the BlackBerry Pearl, and some other interesting choices."
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http://www.pcworld.com/printable/article/id,128176 /printable.html
Ridiculous that the article is stretched across 8 pages.
Good lord, how is this innovation in anything except crapiness? Office 2007 is the opposite of ODF, which is the wave of the future in documents. Fighting against the community for profit is hardly innovative -- MSFT has been doing it for years.
Can this article please be re-labeled as an advertorial?
I'd like to see advertising revenue figures from 2006 for the featured items' companies on PCWorlds financials... I wonder how closely they'd tie in to the rank of the products.
I'm sure it's part of their sales strategy (I work in print publishing... you can bet advertisers get preferential treatment in editorial content).
"Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
PC World brings you the top 20 most frequent advertisers' current most hyped object!
But wait! There wasn't an iPod! But iPods are the most innovative things evar!
Number 0 must be the iPod Video, now with rubber ducky control built in!
Is anyone else annoyed at the amount of ads you have to see not just once, but _every_ time you have to view the "next" part of the webpage? This is the internet fer god's sake! Put all the content on one page or you're not getting my possible viewing revenue!
in girum imus nocte et consumimur igni
Can someone explain to me exactly what is innovative about this? I do not understand how a hardware upgrade is innovative. Can I get on this list since I put a new video card in my machine this year?
Why bother.
Anything in alpha testing can't really be called a product, much less the most innovative product (or in the top ten) of the year.
1. Microsoft Office 2007
2. Intel Core 2 Duo
3. Parallels Desktop for Mac
4. Nintendo Wii
5. Samsung 32GB SSD
6. Sony Reader
7. YouOS
8. Dell XPS M2010
9. Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 750GB
0. T-Mobile Dash
I'm surprised this made the "Innovative" list, and not the "Vaporware" list.
Since Google bought them, all they've done to the actual app is stamp "BETA" on it. They brag that it works on Macs, but the last upgrade was over 18 months ago, before Apple announced the Intel transition, and they still have no Universal binary for Macs. The PPC binary works, mostly, if you're willing to put up with workarounds. Oh, and random crashes.
It's a sad state of affairs when "making no forward progress" counts as "innovative" these days.
wow, a new hard drive that's bigger than last year's model. Innovation is dripping off of this one.
I assume others will speak to the inclusion of Office.
What?
While games may eventually need the space provided by Blu-Ray discs, I can't see that happening for another 4-5 years at least. In the meantime, proper compression techniques and at worst multi-DVD games will be more than enough. As for beating HD-DVD, I'd say the chips are historically stacked against Sony. They didn't win with Betamax, MiniDisc, Memory Stick, or UMD. I'd be surprised if they win with Blu-Ray. Besides, the price of an Xbox 360 + HD-DVD player is about the same as a PS3, and HD-DVD standalone players are generally cheaper than standalone BD players. To top it off, early HD-DVD transfers have been much better than on BD, giving HD-DVD an early quality lead.
It'll probably be at least another year before there's a clear winner in this format war, but if I was a betting man I'd have to go with HD-DVD for now. It has much more going for it than Blu-Ray. Sony might pull it out of their collective asses with BD, but don't count on it.
Even if PC World is too clueless to realise it, there is a difference between "innovative" and "better than the same thing was last year, due to incremental advances". Core 2 Duo: Good? Hell yeah. Innovative? Not exactly.
750GB HDD: A nice upgrade from the 500GB ones? Sure. An innovation? Well, the number is bigger than it was last year.
That logitech control puck thing: Cute? Sure. Innovative? Well, it has a few more buttons than the Griffin PowerMate that has been around for years.
And so on and so forth. There are almost no actual innovations. Mostly just feature bumps and price/performance increases. Now, that is what makes the world go round, most of the time; but don't call it "innovation".
It could be.
But then
Now, compare that to this system.
http://www.obsoletecomputermuseum.org/compaq/
Yes, the "luggable" computer. But, all you have to do to make it "innovative" is to add more speakers (speakers with a portable computer, how
And reviews like that are why PC World is disparaged.
A bad upgrade to a ubiquitous software package, a chip, 2 game systems, 2 hard drives, 2 phones... Now I remember why I don't read PC World.
...do none of those products really strike me as "innovative"? Maybe I'm just missing the old days when innovation meant a complete change from the norm. However, the Wii is pretty neat. :)
US businesses that currently accept chip and PIN/signature
So for MS Office 2k7 to make the number one position, i wonder how many LAPTOPS Microsoft had to give away. Just kidding, just kidding - i couldn't resist.
I'd be surprised if they win with Blu-Ray.
_ supporting_Blu-ray
Ignoring ANY merits of the two formats and pretty much EVERYTHING ELSE that either has going for it, it's pretty easy to predict that blu-ray will win over HD-DVD. Why? Because even if the PS3 is a horrible, horrible failure and only sells 10 million units over the course of its lifetime, that's 10 million more blu-ray players in homes, which HD-DVD likely can't hope to match.
Plus, as everyone seems to forget, it's not only Sony backing blu-ray: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_corporations
Where's the Zune man? I'm listening to some tunes right now. Oh shit! this is my third play NOOOOOOOOOOOOO *squirt*
Frankly I'm disappointed that the gadgets we already have really don't work so hot. Like Cell Phones. Why can't I get usable USB or Bluetooth drivers and sync software for my Samsung A640, even from Samsung? Oh yeah I forgot, Sprint wants me to pay for a service to email them to myself. Ditto my Sanyo 3100, Samsung A840, Samsung A900 or Sanyo 8400?
Why does my Xbox360 still require bizarre router settings to connect wirelessly to my router? Oh yeah I forgot, Microsoft does not care. Why did I have to return 3 different routers until I found one that worked with all my clients and VPN tunnels? Oh yeah I forgot, they're lazy. Why did the wireless print server I picked up naturally assume that it had to have the same IP address as my router and afforded absolutely no options to switch it? Oh yeah I forgot, the vendor bought the product instead of developing themselves. Plus the quality of their firmware is shit. Why am I still shopping for an affordable NAS that actually does what it's supposed to do without bugs and the feature set is actually what they say it is instead of vague promises and bullshit? Oh yeah I forgot, all the goodness is in the next version of their $700 unit. Sorry.
See I'm not a big fan of best new gadgets because next year either they will be abandoned as the shit they probably are, or, they will be shit anyway and still be around bolstered by hype, consumer indifference and marketing.
Yes. About 22 years worth of "difference". Seeing as how I believe that the Compaq luggable was around in 1984.
Yes. Hence the term "luggable".
"gamers system"?
Compaq was making them back in 1984.
The reason they fell out of style is because you have all the limitations of a laptop with the weight of a desktop.
Gamers who want to move their EXPANDABLE desktop machines buy something like this:
http://www.thinkgeek.com/computing/bags/37dc/
There, the portability of a cinder block with the expandability of a desktop system.
Surprisingly enough, they make great gifts.
Why is Parallels Desktop on there? I've seen it - it's almost a complete rip-off of the VMware UI. There is nothing new in that program at all...except that it runs on Intel Macs. Oh boy!
accepting a submission. maybe then, you can see that it's full of crap (i.e. it has much more advertisement than quality content).
I believe that the 750 gig drives were considered innovative because the 750 gig drive were the first to 'get perpendicular'.
While the features of the Olympus E-330 are new for a digital SLR (live view and electronic dust cleaner) , Panasonic's DMC-L1 has the same features described as #14 most innovative product. This isn't surprising at all, since Panasonic and Olympus share technology, including the Four Thirds lens mount. In fact, it would have been better to list Four Thirds instead of a specific camera, since it's a cross-platform lens system specifically for digital cameras.
This is gonna be the next big thing in all kinds of PC's. Flash drives. We'll be able to say bye-bye to the last of the important moving parts in a PC, that happens to be the most defect prone (because of moving parts), and also the most important (assuming your data is worth more than your hardware). I've been wanting these for years for reliability reasons at work. I can't wait until these things get shoved in a vanilla IDE (or is it SATA these days?) format. Hard drives with platters will be completely extinct in 5 years.
From this article, I conclude the computer and electronic revolution has run it's course. We are not getting much innovation anymore. We are just getting incremental improvements on the innovations from years past.
Religion is the main cause of atheism.
Plus, as everyone seems to forget, it's not only Sony backing blu-ray:
But also don't forget that it's only Sony gets the royalty check at the end of the day.
Well not only it's news to me, it's also news to these guys that apparently work over there:, industrynews/article.html (go to #8).
http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,128265-page,4-c
Also, I'm somewhat reluctant to treat PS3 as "Innovative".. well, maybe except the Massive Crab Damage...
When I think of innovation, I think of things like the automatic transmission when only the manual transmission existed before. Office 2007 innovations (the ribbon interface) seem to be more like moving the manual transmission's shift lever instead of implementing automatic shifting.
I could be wrong, though, and I am sure others may disagree. I DO accept my nomination for the Bad Analogy award, if one exists, and I am nominated.
I felt a disturbance in the Slash, as if a bunch of geeks said, "What the F&*K, Microsoft Office?"
Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong fix.
Why am I still shopping for an affordable NAS that actually does what it's supposed to do without bugs and the feature set is actually what they say it is instead of vague promises and bullshit? Oh yeah I forgot, all the goodness is in the next version of their $700 unit.
Which unit are you talking about, out of curiosity? I've been eying the ReadyNAS NV+ and the Thecus N5200.
I've seen benchmarks showing performance is all over the map with the ReadyNAS, and I know that it painfully slow with fsck's (a client bought a unit and put 4 500GB drives in. An fsck after he had loaded it less than a tenth full, takes an HOUR...) However, it seems much more polished than the Thecus- which has a much faster/better processor, dual ethernet, and five bays instead of four. I've also seen a lot of bug reports and complaints about odd behavior in the infrant forums, and apparently Infrant is also systematically purging any discussion of enabling ssh on the ReadyNAS. That's not cool (nor is the fact that they encrypt their firmware, and act like their raid "technology" is really advanced. It isn't. Don't be fooled: it is a SPARC processor, running LINUX, and lvm stuff. "RAIDX" isn't even remotely proprietary or worthy of a patent.)
It's so annoying that I am highly tempted to build my own box; $600-700 comes damn close to buying some damn nice commodity hardware I could run something like FreeNAS on, or maybe Solaris with ZFS. The big problem with ZFS is that it (shockingly) doesn't allow you to migrate at all from one kind of pool to another. For example- if you set up two drives with ZFS (mirrored) and then later add a third and go striped- forget it. No can do. That alone makes ZFS laughably useless. There is a lot of other cool technology under the hood of ZFS, but it lacks in basic practical areas.
I was also slightly less than impressed that Sun has been shipping Solaris with a huge bug that keeps you from activating the installation until you change the locale; the system spins its wheels for several minutes before finally rejecting your Sun Online account. They've known about the issue for months. Have they bothered to fix the one file on the CD image? No. Issued errata? No. Put a warning on the download page? No. I had to go hunting through their support forums to find a 20+ page back-and-forth between Solaris users and a hapless tech where he FINALLY hits on the solution that works...
Please help metamoderate.
Honestly, the Intel Core 2 Duo isn't what really should be on the list. The Intel Core Microarchitecture (Core 2 being the desktop brand) should be. The number of improvements that they made to the P6 architecture and the design choices have actually made it into a pretty innovative processor. Granted, its not omg shiny like the cell processor, but it is a significant step forward for an x86 processor.
If 76 Trombones really led the big parade, why did they have anyone else in it?
Hybrid hard drives: These drives, coming from companies such as Samsung and Seagate, will combine a flash-memory component with traditional platters to boost performance while keeping costs lower than those of purely flash-based drives. The drives should especially improve startup and resume times. They should also save you some time when it comes to data access, since they can cache more of the data in the flash portion, cutting down on lags due to accessing the disk platters. You'll need Windows Vista to make this work, however.
That's right, ladies and gentlemen. Linux and BSD will be completely incapable of handling hybrid hard drives.
I fail to see how the PS3 can be considered innovative by any means. All of the technologies that go into the PS3 have all been seen before and it is not at all as impressive or original that they packed it all into 1 box as the article would lead you to believe. How is a PS3 anything but a single purpose computer?
It is no more impressive or innovative than adding an FM tuner to a portable MP3 player.
Imagine running a differential equation solver in real time for sound synthesis on one of those, say. Also, I think it is a tool to market Blu-ray, which is a rather interesting strategy.
This is exactly how Sony is shitting on their gamers. I don't want to solve differential equations. I don't want to sponsor a Blu-ray marketing campaign. I want to play games.
The cell processor is optimized for in-order processing. As far as games are concerned, this makes it ideal for pretty reflection and water effects, and practically crippled for gameplay elements like AI (you know, things that make games fun). If they were marketing it as a general purpose processor, it might be innovative. For the PS3, it's anything but.
Ironic that I have to hit next fifty bazillion times to see the whole article, and each time I hit next an ad for Sony/Dell/Intel/Microsoft. I got the Sony add a lot too, but then again I see forty bazillion sony products on this list, none of which match the definition of innovative. Well, maybe the marketer's definition of innovative, but not in the real world.
"All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"
Lets look at this list...
1. Microsoft Office 2007
Nothing innovative here - GUI office productivity suites have been around for decades - MS Word was the innovation on the Apple MacIntosh - but that was before MS released a usable version of MS Windows!
2. Intel Core 2 Duo
Where is the innovation here? The Intel Core 2 Duo is merely two CPUs on a single chip. Duo is neither the first 64bit processor, nor does it share resources between cores, nor does it have an onboard RAM controller. for all the above look to AMD's CPUs.
3. Parallels Desktop for Mac
Running Windows software on the Mac is not a new thing - especially now that the Mac is being sold using Intel hardware. Neither is using virtualisation software to run Windows on other platforms. For years it has been possible to run Windows on Big Blue's mainframes, and on *nix using such applications as VMware.
4. Nintendo Wii
Truly innovative interface - completely new design for use in a completely new way with a completely different range of games.
5. Samsung 32GB SSD
Using Flash EPROM for mobile storage of user data is not new. Neither is the incrementing of the maximum size available. What is new is the replacement of a mechanical permanent storage device with a solid state storage device that may yet prove to be not yet as reliable as a HDD.
6. Sony Reader
Truly innovative device that enables electronic texts to be read as easily and as casually if they were a proper book, and with a very easy UI. Only problem is that it uses a proprietary file format.
7. YouOS
Using a browser for remote desktop access is not a new development.
8. Dell XPS M2010
Portable computers have been around for decades (predating even the Mac). Wireless keyboards are not new, nor is a DVD player, nor is a 20" flat screen. Nothing new there - except the hefty weight.
9. Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 750GB
Yes - innovative method of writing data onto a HDD. But the fact of increased storage capacity is nothing new. HDDs have been increasing storage capacity for many decades.
10. T-Mobile Dash
QWERTY keyboard not new. 1.3 megapixel camera - not new. Wireless - not new.
Additional RAM storage - not new (but close). Amount of built in RAM - definitely not innovative.
11. Pioneer Inno
In one form or another a "Real Live radio receiver" that can also record onto some sort of storage medium has been around since the '70s.
13. Sony BWU-100A Blu-Ray Disc Rewritable Drive
Re-writeable optical discs - nothing new here.
14. Olympus EVolt E-330
Digital camera with LCD display - definitely nothing new here.
15. Google SketchUp
3D software is not new. Free (as in Libre or as in Beer) is also not new. Perhaps the ease of use is what is new.
16. Sony PlayStation 3
Games consoles have been around since the '70s.
17. RIM BlackBerry Pearl 8100
Two words... Palm Treo. Enough said.
18. Rhapsody 4.0
One word... Ipod.
19. Logitech NuLooq
Different. Cross between a joystick and a mouse and a rollerball. I wouldn't mind trying it out if I ever came across one in a shop.
20. Shure E500PTH Sound Isolating Earphones
Noice cancelling headsets have been around for years. Nothing new there.
So where is the true innovation? 19, 15, 9, 6, 4. That's only 5 out of 20.
The PS3 is indeed innovative. The Cell is the first non-shared memory multiprocessor in a mass market product. Whether this is a good idea or a dead end, like the Itanic, remains to be seen.
I personally think that the hassles of a non-shared memory machine outweigh the advantages, especially when the amount of memory per processor is on the low side. The XBox 360 is a 3-CPU shared memory multiprocessor, and presents no new programming problems. Historically, non-shared memory multiprocessors are very hard to program. The Ncube, the BBN Butterfly, and the Transputer all had that problem. However, enough PS3 machines are deployed that the effort is being expended to hammer through that problem.
It may not matter, though. The idea was supposed to be that the Cell processor would result in a cheaper machine than the competition's. That didn't work out.
No, I don't want a Cell processor, but thanks for asking.
/ burn_the_house_.html
We'll again point to Chris Hecker's take on the cell processor: http://crystaltips.typepad.com/wonderland/2005/03
in short. It sucks for good games. More innovative would have been a console including a multicore/processor machine that had different types of processors for doing different things on. The PS3s processor is handicapped for AI, and since no one wants one, you won't find anyone online to play with it.
Its like putting rubber boots on Asafa Powell. Sure, he's set for rain, but what happens if he has to run a race?
The technology for perpendicular recording has been around for years. This is just yet another way to increase areal data density on a hard drive disk. It has not shown up in production hard drives because there was lower hanging fruit ripe for picking when it came to increasing areal density.
Religion is the main cause of atheism.
Well said. If I had mod points now, up you'd go.
If you want your life to be different, live it differently.
The one that impressed me most was seeing a mention of sed TV. I haven't read the article yet (too long), but now I'm all pins and needles.
Just think, right around the corner we might see awk Radio! Or Perl the Movie. Or how about groff the Board Game?
Maybe if it was only Microsoft getting HD-DVD royalties, they would have done a good job with the 360 addon.
I have freaks! I did something right...
Personally, I think the best innovation of 2006 was the YouOS. I started using this thing and I think it is probably the best way to share files between computers than anything else I know of besides VNC, terminal services etc... Its definately the most innovative thing I have seen all year.
-- Josh
"Whoopie! Man, that may have been a small one for Neil, but that's a long one for me!" - Pete Conrad
I have heard of an ASIC before. I was going a bit over the top, but I wanted to get the post out... pre-emptively. This is no ASIC. That's like calling a 747 a glider. I do not know much of the field, but anyway...
Why I think the Cell is a good idea:
1. Standard PPC core. With the wealth of PPC code out there, compilers shouldn't have a problem with that.
2. Parallel vector processors. How cool is that? Each one like a math coprocessor, only with more awesome included (sorry for the non technical terms there). Perfect for grinding out mathematical operations, that so often pop up in graphics, 3d-2d conversion, and I would imagine AI programs.
So, we have a processor that fits the bill. Anyway, I am tired, and I should get to sleep now. I was going to say something else, but I forgot what.
I have freaks! I did something right...
The choice of in-order versus out-of-order has very little to do with anything from the consumer's perspective. Keep in mind that the Xbox 360's processor is in-order as well... So I guess neither console can support decent AI algorithms? What a crock of shit.
Yes. In case you haven't noticed, the Xbox 360 is also designed for graphics rather than gameplay.
You can achieve the same level of AI (for example) on these chips as on a computer; the problem is that it's much harder. The average console game will have much shittier AI because they just can't handle unoptimized code as well as a computer. It's unrealistic to think that every game developer will spend hundreds of man-hours optimizing their code to make up for the failings of an in-order processor; it's just more efficient to spend the time on prettier graphics.
I know it's popular to dump on the PS3, mostly because it's so easy to hate Sony (rootkit CDs), but seriously, the average consumer couldn't care less, and seriously want the PS3 and Blu-ray.
While I expected the PS3 to do well (better than the gamer-geek crowd has been forecasting), it's actually done even better than I expected. Interestingly, every single person was really excited about Blu-ray.
Don't let your hatred of Sony blind you to the truth. The PS3 will have to seriously suck in order to lose this round of the console wars. A bunch of navel-gazing analysis of whether the Cell is optimal for AI is nice and all, but the real metric is going to be whether people buy the system.
What magic does blu-ray that anything else doesn't do? I don't see any reason to get excited about it. Probably the only media that are available on blu-ray are games for the ps3. If they came on HD-DVD or whatever the format is called, would you be less happy?
molmod.com - computing tips from a molecular modeling
I am relatively new here on Slashdot but I noticed a strange behaviour that developed in me during my Slashdot experience. Whenever a new entry of low value gets posted such as this "PC World's 20 Cheapest Advertisements of 2006" I get an uncontrollable desire to click "Read More" to read the comments of Slashdotters. I do that in spite of knowing for the most part what the comments will be like and that I won't gain anything from reading them. The problem is that more often I would click on "Read More" of such petty topics than the really inspiring/exacting ones such as "Long-lived Super Heavy Element Created". It makes no sense...
Information doesn't want to be anthropomorphized anymore.
I do not read PC World. But when you hear about an article called "The 20 Most Innovative Products of the Year" and the first place goes for "... Office 2007", your second option is to think they are talking about "Open ...". Then you go to see the article and you read "...Microsoft... introduces several new features that revolutionize how people work with documents (see our review).", you realize what everything is about...
Honesty, no.
First I've heard of this. While it probably does have its uses, I would bet it will be cited as evidence in at least one divorce case before long. Use with caution!
But the use of perpendicular recording to create said drives is.
God knows why I'm standing up for PC World's shoddy article in any way, shape or form, but just thought I'd mention it.
Rhapsody 4.0 is a bug-riddled mess. Since it came out, I've been testing other music subscription services.
Innovative: being or producing something like nothing done or experienced or created before
...I guess a title like 20 Products Likely to Advertise just doesn't pull in the readers.
Clearly a UI enhancement to the latest version of MS Office fits the definition...
"Seven years of college down the drain. Might as well join the f-ing Peace Corps." - John 'Bluto' Blutarsky
The Wii sold out. The PS3 sold out. The Wii had many more systems made (thus many more systems sold). That's kinda impressive for the underdog.
It depends on your definition of "lose". The Gamecube made more money for Nintendo than the PS2 and XBox made for Sony and Microsoft combined. So if goal is the make the most money, the smart bet is on Nintendo this generation. Sony hasn't been shy about saying they're selling the PS3 at a loss, and while that tactic might work if you sell many more consoles than your competitors (thus selling more games) it probably won't work so well if you don't (they're not Microsoft, they don't get money from almost every computer sold). They might regain their lead, but that's going to be an uphill battle for them (remember, as of now they're last place in console sales). Sony's not in a good position right now, and if you look past what your friends are saying, you'll realize that.
"What is Internet Explorer 7? Are you saying we can't access the normal internet?" - I love tech support. Really.
"Hard drives with platters will be completely extinct in 5 years"
That will happen as soon as people stop downloading and adding to the ever-increasing amount of data they are storing. In short, it will happen: never.
I do, however, expect to see hybrid drives that have a flash memory portion along with platters. So, when you are storing/loading the OS, it comes from the flash part and when you are storing/loading large data files, those will come from the platters.
The data density of platters is too large for it to be wholly replaced anytime soon. Hybrids are more likely for the next 10 years. If you disagree, consider what it would cost in flash memory, to replace your 750Gig Seagate.
Next article: Most innovative grocery store items: Generic beer: tastes, smells, and looks just like Billy Beer, but costs 10 cents less per pallet.
Who really believes that any of these things are "innovative", instead of being incremental changes to existing products. Microsoft has apparently beaten the word "innovative" to death, so it no longer has its original meaning.
Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
1. Microsoft Office 2007 - According to the article it should be the ribbon UI, haven't tested so not sure. 2. Intel Core 2 Duo - This one is not, just a better version of Core Duo 3. Parallels Desktop for Mac - More likely the honor should be given to the guy who first allowed Windows on a Mac. Plus it is just a MAc version of what Wine is for Linux. 4. Nintendo Wii - It should actually be Nintendo Wii gamestyle, the innovation is in the gamestyle, not the console. 5. Samsung 32GB SSD - This one might be one. 6. Sony Reader - Ther have been readers before, if any the innovation is the E-ink technology not the Reader, and I am not that sure of that, 7. YouOS - Don't know about it, so can't say 8. Dell XPS M2010 - THis definitively is a no-no, a hyped pc 9. Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 750GB - Again the inovation is not the product, the inovation is the use of perpendicular technology for HDD storage. 10. T-Mobile Dash - Another no-no, just a hyped phone 11. Pioneer Inno - Never heard of it 12. Farecast - THis one might be, but would need to test for accuracy. 13. Sony BWU-100A Blu-Ray Disc Rewritable Drive - how can it be innovative if they say there was a pionner model before. 14. Olympus EVolt E-330 -Not sure 15. Google SketchUp - One year late 16. Sony PlayStation 3 - The actual innovative products is IBM cell processor, not the PS3 17. RIM BlackBerry Pearl 8100 - Looks like just a expanded version of the original Blackberry, but can tell for sure. 18. Rhapsody 4.0 - Looks like any other music service, haven't test it, so I give the benefit of doubt. 19. Logitech NuLooq - It just looks like a weird mouse, no innovation. 20. Shure E500PTH Sound Isolating Earphones - If they fully isolate sound it might be innovation, guess need to test them
I haven't used the new Microsoft Orifice (I actually just went to using OO.o in place of Office, so far without issues) so it might be innovative. But some of the other items on this list, well, they simply are not.
Core Duo? It's not even the first dual-core. Parallels desktop? I can get the same thing with Linux inside of Windows using X-Win32 (or just Cygwin!) along with vmware (or colinux.) Granted it's not Windows inside Mac, but it's the very same concept. The Wii Remote is pretty innovative, although the rest of the Wii is not.
Samsung 32GB SSD is not innovative - it's just a higher-capacity SSD. Whoopdeeshit. Sony Reader is evolutionary; it's got an e-ink display, but that's not the first monochrome display designed for daylight readability and low power consumption. The display is revolutionary - or it was several years ago when they announced e-ink. YouOS is evolutionary; in fact it's a return to an older way of doing business, but back then it was ASCII on a glass terminal instead of HTML in a web browser.
The Dell XPS machine listed in the article is basically the modern version of an old luggable like the Kaypro 4 I had back in the day. Evolutionary. A 750GB hard disk drive? Evolutionary - it's not even the first drive to use perpendicular recording. And this T-Mobile branded PDA with a Qwerty keyboard? If it looked any more like a crackberry they'd get sued.
This article is pure poop. samzenpus is going to hell. Thank you.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Nuff said.
Everybody knows 3 people with my name.
2. Parallel vector processors. How cool is that? Each one like a math coprocessor, only with more awesome included (sorry for the non technical terms there). Perfect for grinding out mathematical operations, that so often pop up in graphics, 3d-2d conversion, and I would imagine AI programs.
Game AI is more about branching than vector processing; you might have a point with collision detection, except that you'd have to address the problem in many many phases to get it to work (small batches - not much memory on the cell itself, even with that fast DMA and the ring). What it's really suited for is finite element analysis - you know, stuff like fluid dynamics simulation, radiosity, volumetric effects, etc. Alas, the Cell isn't the graphics output stage - it just feeds data into it.
So basically, it's a bear to program for.
Coming soon - pyrogyra
Each one like a math coprocessor, only with more awesome included (sorry for the non technical terms there). Perfect for grinding out mathematical operations, that so often pop up in graphics, 3d-2d conversion, and I would imagine AI programs.
Oh, and all that graphics stuff you mention? That's what the PS3's GPU is for.
Coming soon - pyrogyra
To a degree. Can you do collision detection, procedural textures, and everything else on a GPU? A GPU is still fairly specialized. Math operations are still useful outside of it.
I have freaks! I did something right...
No, but so far they aren't. If Microsoft allowed games to be played off of HD-DVD, then maybe the 360 would be as interesting as the PS3.
I have freaks! I did something right...
Bluray and HDDVD are both going to lose, well, that's what we can hope for, EVD looks much more userfriendly.
If one doesn't lose then I'm predicting that it's going to be the one with the best players and most open access to content.
Bluray is more complicated than HDDVD (B+) so HDDVD players can be simpler and easier to make.
Sanctioned players are worthless (unskippable ads anyone?) so the only good players are going to be the unlicensed ones, just like DVD today, as a HDDVD player is easier to make, the best players are going for HDDVD.
Given a player key we can actually play HDDVD today.
To play bluray we first need to build a player emulator that looks like a real player to the B+ trojan.
Funny how Sony seems to release a lot of user-hostile malware trojans with the content they peddle.
-- To dream a dream is grand, but to live it is divine. -- Leto ][