ST2410 61 cm (24") Full HD Widescreen Monitor

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Bring the Action Home


The new DellTM  ST2410 24" Full HD Widescreen MonitoDell delivers true cinematic-picture quality to your entertainment with a 16:9 aspect ratio. Give your DVDs and Blu-ray movies the big-screen attention they deserve with clear 1920 x 1080 resolution. Play your favorite games and edit your photos and media on a screen that revels in superior Hi-def clarity.
Dell ST2410 24 inch Full HD Widescreen Monitor
Dell ST2410 24 inch Full HD Widescreen Monitor - Sleek & Smart Design






Sleek and Smart

Complement your desktop with a stylish monitor that is designed to fit most home and office environments — its slim, glossy black bezel is both elegant and functional. And for maximum comfort, its tilt-adjustability feature has a panel tilt of 4° forward and 21° backward.

Seamlessly connect your desktops, notebooks and gaming consoles with the DVI (HDCP), VGA analog port and an HDMI port that helps retain the rapid transfer of high-quality video and


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WHATS IN YOUR COMPUTER? FOR BEGGINER

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Do you know what is inside your computer? Maybe you peeked when the service technician was installing something for you. When you first open up the CPU and look inside, a computer is a very threatening machine. But once you know about the different parts that make up a complete computer it gets a lot easier. Today's computers consist of around eight main components; some of the advanced computers might have a few more components. What are these eight main components and what are they used for? We will start with beginner level details to get


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COMPUTER TECH BIGGEST MYTH.

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Illustration by Keith NegleyAs it turns out, Windows Vista really wasn't all that slow; and no, your PC probably won't fry if you open it up without wearing a wrist strap. Thanks in large part to the Internet, the tech world is teeming with lies, half-truths, and misinformation. We've dug up some of the Web's most notorious nuggets of conventional wisdom to see which hold up to scrutiny and which are merely urban legends.
Of course, there's often a grain of truth in even the most fanciful myth. That's why we provide a handy-dandy set of numbered warning signs to indicate how accurate each of these myths is, with 1 being True and 4 being Outrageous--a complete fabrication. After all, they say numbers never lie.

The Claim: Vista Is Slower Than Windows 7

When Windows Vista came out, it soon acquired a reputation for being slow and a resource hog. Once Windows 7 arrived, people


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Online game are the gold mine in future tech.

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GONE are the days when video gaming was a private pursuit. Gaming services such as Microsoft's Xbox Live not only connect players in living rooms the world over, they can also record every move each gamer makes. Academic researchers are learning to use information mined from this mountain of data to build more stimulating games - and commercial games designers are beginning to take notice.
"All of the big games publishers are getting into data mining," says Julian Togelius of the Center for Games Research at the IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark. "They're talking to universities, even hiring researchers to work on some of these 


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Pearl display-equipped graphite Kindle DX

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Amazon's Latest Graphite Kindle DX Now Shipping







If you're inching for a new Pearl display-equipped graphite Kindle DX that Amazon promised to be shipping today, yeah it's on green light now. However, unlike the previous Kindle debuts of Amazon, where they're shortage of supplies this seems a bit slow with listing still on stocks.


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watch out great iPad offer

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HP Slate 500
We know how we anticipate the next iPad's great competition, ooh, yeah, now this was a breaking confirmation apparently by HP itself on its own site, revealing Palm-OS-less HP Slate. Today, the slate running Windows 7 Premium boasting 8.9-inch touch screen, a 1.6GHz processor and 1GB of RAM, and that it has two cameras – video and still, were confirmed. Along with new leaks that it is Energy Star certified. But the greatest questions that needs verification is whether it’s capacitive touch, what the graphics card is, and how it scores on battery life.


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Attention smart phone buyers: Android is ready

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I have, of late, fallen in love with Android, and my hunch is, you will too. I've carried an iPhone in my hip pocket for what seems like aeons, content in the belief that no other device could navigate to a little park in a town 100 miles away, sync a grocery list with my wife's phone, tell me where to get decent sushi in Park City, remind me of the bones-to-water ratio of veal stock, and stream music or New York Times headlines to me on demand — both at the same time, even.
I was wrong. The latest Android phones, running the latest Android software, can do all of this and more — most of what an iPhone can do, in fact. In some cases, the Android phone does it better.
If I sound at all surprised, it's because Google's little mobile OS did not explode out of R&D with any competitive edge. It was clumsy, both aesthetically and functionally, did not have a huge line of developers waiting to write apps, and was available first on an underpowered phone sold only by T-Mobile, the fourth-place U.S. carrier. Inauspicious beginnings, you might say.
Last fall, Android got its biggest forward push when Verizon Wireless, the country's biggest carrier, rolled out the Motorola Droid, first in a line of Droid-branded phones from Motorola and HTC. It was made of sturdy metal, with a fast chip and a Lucasfilm-licensed name. Most important was its software: It ran the vastly improved 2.0 version of


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