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Microsoft Has Built A Phone With A Battery That Lasts For A Month (MSFT)

There's a new mobile phone with a battery life that lasts for a month: Microsoft's Nokia 215, CNET reports. It costs just £19, and goes on sale in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia in the first few months of 2015. The Nokia 215 is a feature phone targeted at first-time buyers, people on a serious budget, and consumers in the developing world who want an entry-level phone at the lowest cost possible. Obviously, it's also useful for anyone who travels a lot or lives somewhere where recharging and electricity supply points are intermittent.

11 More Cool Gadgets From CES: Robot Plant Feeders, Bossy Yoga Mats, and Alien Speakers

The main CES expo hall opens to the public Tuesday morning. The evening before the main event, however, members of the press got one last chance to preview some gadgetdom's choicest selections. The post 11 More Cool Gadgets From CES: Robot Plant Feeders, Bossy Yoga Mats, and Alien Speakers appeared first on WIRED.

The Internet of Anything: The 3-D Printer That Can Spit Out Custom Electronics

Today’s 3D printers are great for building plastic stuff, things like toys and musical instruments and even shoes. Some can also print metal objects, like car parts and jewelry and, well, guns. But Jennifer Lewis helped create a new kind of printer, one that can print electronics, like hearing aids and other wearables. And soon, you’ll be able to buy one of these printers from her new company, Voxel8. The post The Internet of Anything: The 3-D Printer That Can Spit Out Custom Electronics appeared first on WIRED.

NVIDIA introduces DRIVE automotive computers at CES; teraflops of processing for autonomous driving and cockpit visualization

At CES in Las Vegas, NVIDIA introduced its DRIVE line of automotive computers, equipped with powerful capabilities for computer vision, deep learning and advanced cockpit visualization. NVIDIA will offer two car computers: NVIDIA DRIVE PX, for developing auto-pilot capabilities, and...

CyberPower's Fang Trinity gaming PC is simply insane

CyberPower's new Fang Trinity looks like no PC we've ever seen here at PCWorld. In fact, it looks more like a futuristic space pod than a computer.
Yet make no mistake, this is a real PC. And one that packs a punch too.
On paper the specs are something anyone would be happy to have in his or her system: a liquid-cooled 4GHz Intel Core i7 4790K, Gigabyte Z97 Mini-ITX motherboard, five SSDs, one 3.5-inch hard drive, a Blu-ray drive, a full-size 500 watt power supply, and a full-size GeForce GTX 980 graphics card. Gordon Mah Ung

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