To provide you more details about 5m, it is a laser jet printer. It belongs to workgroup printers’ category. The most fascinating part about this printer is its working capability. It used to come with built-in processor which was very fast. The memory was also pretty impressive and 5m was able to print large number of documents within a minute. It could handle numerous printing jobs and could satisfy all the impending printing needs. The LaserJet 5m also scored brownie points on its comfortable and easy to understand user interface.There are numerous types of printers available in the market. Each and every day, established printers manufacturers are coming up with new designs and latest features but figuring out exactly which model will suit your need is a tough thing. The thing is, many printers can fit your particular need but at the same time, you will have to look at price, design, frequency of use etc.Printers can be for personal use or for business use. If the printer will be needed for office then it will have high usage and also, it needs to perform consistently good. One such printer is HP LaserJet 5m printer that offers compact size and speedy printing.
Archive for the ‘Technology’ category
HP LaserJet 5m Printer
March 2nd, 2010Latest Green technology electric car
January 6th, 2010
Twizy Z.E. Concept, a new electric car from the stables of Renault, which will be out on Indian roads by 2011.The blue and white two-seater works on the green technology principle.Welcoming Renault’s new car, Ms. Dikshit said Delhi roads would be better off with electric cars like this one.They are developing this new technology. It is very beautiful to look at and they are saying it will take them one or one and a half year more to come out. Then we will give as many incentives as we can to such cars which do not contribute to pollution,Renault India general manager Marc Nassif spoke about his company’s commitment to green technology.
Microsoft’s Upcoming Operating System – MIDORI
December 22nd, 2009Microsoft is working on a new operating system codenamed as Midori, that will eventually replace Windows as we know it.Midori is the code name for a managed code operating system being developed by Microsoft Research. It has been reported to be a possible commercial implementation of the Singularity operating system, a research project started in 2003 to build a highly-dependable operating system in which the kernel, device drivers, and applications are all written in managed code. It was designed for concurrency, and can run applications in multiple places. It also features an entirely new security model that sandboxes applications for increased security. Microsoft has mapped out several possible migration paths from Windows to Midori. In a possible link to Microsoft’s Oslo composite application initiative, the programming model will have a dependence on metadata, with the aim of allowing the system to more reliably manage applications.
The code name Midori was first discovered through the PowerPoint presentation CHESS: A systematic testing tool for concurrent software.
Midori has also been rumoured by some IT journalists as a possible replacement to Microsoft Windows and Windows CE.
In April 2009, Jonathan S. Shapiro, a driving force behind both the BitC programming language and the Coyotos operating system announced that he had accepted a position at Microsoft to work on the Midori project, and that after August 2009 he would not be working further on BitC.
New Bluetooth 3.0
December 8th, 2009
This is one of the no-brainers on the list. The Bluetooth 3.0 specification will be released this year and devices will start to hit the shelves by 2010. At this point, it’s expected that the 3.0 spec will include faster speeds, reportedly transferring files at 480 megabits per second in close proximity and 100 megabits per second at 10 meters. It will also feature an ultra-low-power mode that Gartner predicts will enable new peripherals, sensors, and applications, such as health monitoring. The technology will be backwards compatible, allowing old devices to communicate with new ones, so there’s no reason for it not take off in the upcoming years.
The World’s First Programmable Quantum Computer
November 24th, 2009With only a few intense lasers, electrodes and some ultracold ions, researchers at the University of Sussex in Brighton, England, have been able to build the first programmable quantum computer.
What makes this experiment different is that this new system is able to perform more than 150 random processing routines.
The new study is “a powerful demonstration of the technological advances towards producing a real-world quantum computer,” says quantum physicist Winfried Hensinger of the University of Sussex in Brighton, England. The researchers, led by David Hanneke of the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colo. built the computer based on two cooled beryllium ions with a temperature of just above zero.
The ions formed the quantum bits, or qubits, analogous to the bits in normal computers represented by 0s and 1s, and were trapped by a magnetic field on a gold-plated aluminum chip. To perform the processing operations, short laser bursts were used to manipulate the beryllium ions. Magnesium ions kept the beryllium ions stationary, and from getting hot. It is believed that this system may be applied to larger-scale systems.
The system built was mostly experimental, but what is important is the fact that the principal may be applied on a larger scale, and therefor become practical.
