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2012
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June
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- Mobile Miscellany: week of June 25th, 2012
- PSA: The end of MobileMe is nigh, time to move on ...
- Scientists develop flush-efficient toilet system t...
- Users reporting BBM down, joins Instagram in being...
- Android Army: US soldiers to leverage portable bat...
- IRL: Bose SoundLink, DropCopy and Worldmate Gold
- Don't worry, you're not the only one: Netflix is c...
- Sony Smart Wireless Headset pro hits retail with $...
- HP plans to hold off on building ARM-based Windows...
- FCC Fridays: June 29, 2012
- Flickr brings in Nokia map data for precise geotag...
- Delta expanding Gogo in-flight WiFi to select inte...
- University of Tokyo builds a soap bubble 3D screen...
- Samsung brings out WB100 camera with 26x lens for ...
- Sony drops VAIO T from free PlayStation offer, hik...
- Recon goggles gain Facebook integration and augmen...
- Crowd-funded group building asteroid-mapping teles...
- BMW and Toyota sign deal to collaborate on sports ...
- Maingear Pulse 11 review: a small and surprisingly...
- Onkyo to deliver 11.4 DTS Neo:X surround sound on ...
- Google helps train developers, hook up universitie...
- Chrome 20 browser released: exclusive 64-bit Linux...
- Microsoft reportedly plans Windows 8 upgrades all ...
- Rice University researchers create spray-on batter...
- Qualcomm restructures itself for summer, R&D divis...
- Google TV will get subscription billing, support f...
- Hulu Japan lands HBO content, but don't expect any...
- Recon Instruments defrosts its Android SDK at Goog...
- Control4 delivers home automation Starter Kit for ...
- Yamaha Vocaloid on Miselu Neiro synth: exclusive h...
- Dolphin unveils Garage, API access for add-ons and...
- BT kicks off 330Mbps 'FTTP on Demand' trials, reve...
- Google Play lets you update and uninstall apps fro...
- Netflix fires back in UK streaming war, says it ha...
- Epic Games: Infinity Blade on iOS more profitable ...
- Google Drive SDK version 2 supports Android and iO...
- AIR.U to bring Super WiFi to small college towns, ...
- Nexus 7 guidebook appears on Google Play, teaches ...
- Nokia Lumia 800 and 710 get Windows Phone 7.5 upda...
- Google I/O keynote roundup: Project Glass, Nexus 7...
- Google+ has 250 million users, more mobile than de...
- Google brings incremental app updates, added encry...
- Android 4.1 Jelly Bean home screen revealed, autom...
- Lenovo begins Ice Cream Sandwich rollout to ThinkP...
- Google makes the Nexus 7 tablet official: Android ...
- MediaTek MT6577 helps push dual-core Android 4.0 s...
- Nintendo 3DS XL caught on video, gets manhandled a...
- Engadget HD Podcast 305 - 06.26.2012
- Apple pitches data center near Reno, gambles iClou...
- Pioneer SMA wireless speakers put AirPlay, HTC Con...
- YouTube for PS Vita now ready, will help you watch...
- Cisco rolls its first Linksys 802.11ac WiFi router...
- Qualcomm to deliver Snapdragon SDK to Android deve...
- Boogie Board Jot eWriting pad hands-on (video)
- Dell outs XPS 14 with optional mobile broadband, X...
- Apple's Podcasts app for iOS hands-on
- Google's Jelly Bean cup runneth over, kills grass ...
- Google: Chromebooks now serve web-happy students i...
- T-Mobile to offer prepaid and monthly4G service at...
- Bing Maps gets another 165TB of satellite images, ...
- Toshiba Excite 13 review: a big-screened tablet wi...
- Sony kicks off an Xperia Ion TV ad campaign for th...
- White Sprint Evo 4G LTE rumors given weight by blu...
- Microsoft's Xbox 360 $99 on-contract deal expands ...
- Gmail for iOS gets notification support and persis...
- Microsoft job posting hints at Connected Car strat...
- The New York Times is coming to Flipboard Thursday
- Asus Transformer Pad Infinity shows up at Best Buy...
- ICS officially available for AT&T Samsung Galaxy S...
- ASUS' high-end Transformer Pad TF700 is coming to ...
- Virgin Media revamps mobile tariffs with Premiere ...
- Samsung pegs LTE Galaxy S III for South Korea in J...
- UK 2012 Olympics Super Hi-Vision tickets are avail...
- Chinese astronauts go hands-on, manually dock with...
- Switched On: Surface tension
- iPhone 4 and 4S now available to purchase outright...
- Ask Engadget: best online storefront for a small b...
- E-book price fixing trial set for 2013: Apple, Mac...
- Military hunting smartphone safety to hold off ene...
- Hitchcock classics Dial M for Murder (3D) and Stra...
- HTC teases voice control and/or dog translator for...
- Sony Xperia Ion review: an Android handset with a ...
- Amazon Studios adds first four original shows to i...
- Mobile Miscellany: week of June 18th, 2012
- Judge dismisses Apple vs. Motorola in its entirety...
- Ringbow hits Kickstarter, promises directional pad...
- Google drops cost of Maps API to keep developers, ...
- Excalibur Almaz wants to offer the first private t...
- Satechi introduces Portable Energy Station to add ...
- Engadget Mobile Podcast 143 - 06.22.2012
- Google's Turing doodle celebrates his genius, remi...
- ASUS N56VM laptop gets Ivy Bridge processor, Keple...
- FCC Fridays: June 22, 2012
- D-Link unveils Cloud Router 1200 and 2000, dishes ...
- Sony patent filing for glasses would share data fa...
- Moving from Cupertino to Mountain View? Samsung's ...
- Alan Turing's breakthrough machine gets a loving L...
- Negative radiation pressure in light could make so...
- Remembering Alan Turing at 100
- All-carbon solar cell draws power from near-infrar...
- AMD Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition review roundup: a b...
- Firefox teases something 'big' coming for Android ...
- Engadget Podcast 299 - 06.22.2012
- Valve announces Steam for Schools, helps teachers ...
- Eurocom Monster 11.6-inch notebook: Ivy Bridge, Ke...
- AMD launches Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition, demands r...
- Sony Xperia Go makes a trip to the FCC, doesn't br...
- Next 3DMark teased, who says benchmarks don't need...
- Nintendo announces $199 3DS XL with 4.88-inch top ...
- HP unveils 2311x IPS LED-backlit monitor and two n...
- Pentax K-30 weather-sealed DSLR hands-on with samp...
- Huawei Ascend P1 XL hands-on
- Microsoft releases SmartGlass SDK to developers
- Editorial: Windows Phone 8 looks good, but can it ...
- Stitcher adds Smart Station to its redesigned iOS ...
- Google files for a patent on peer-to-peer location...
- Google Play lets top devs reply to user reviews, s...
- Google launches Endangered Languages website to sa...
- Sprint Galaxy S III won't hit stores tomorrow due ...
- UK pins the slow move to LTE on carriers, Australi...
- Acer Iconia A510 Olympic Tab now on sale in the UK...
- Kinetis L Series MCUs use ARM Cortex-MO+ to sip le...
- iFixit rips open new 15-inch MacBook Pro and 13-in...
- Nokia Lumia 610 with NFC hands-on (video)
- Qualcomm: all new Windows Phone 8 devices to be po...
- Chromium OS gets ported to Raspberry Pi
- Windows Phone Marketplace has 100,000 published ap...
- Google I/O 2012 app unveiled for Android, keeps at...
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June
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Home >Unlabelled > Eurocom Monster 11.6-inch notebook: Ivy Bridge, Kepler, 16 GB RAM, multiple personalities
Eurocom Monster 11.6-inch notebook: Ivy Bridge, Kepler, 16 GB RAM, multiple personalities
Posted on Friday, June 22, 2012 by kusanag1
Eurocom Monster 11.6-inch notebook: Ivy Bridge, Kepler, 16 GB RAM, multiple personalities
Mobile gamers and server pros aren't exactly cut from the same cloth, but Eurocom is targeting them both with its Clevo rebadged, 11.6-inch, sub-four-pound Monster notebook. That idea is crazy enough to work, since a fully spec'd model will have an Ivy Bridge Intel Core i7-3920XM processor, 16GB of DDR3-1600 of RAM, a 240GB SSD, 750GB Hybrid drive or 1TB HDD, and on-board NVIDIA GT 650M graphics running at 850MHz. The 1366 x 768 screen might be a touch undersized for gamers, but they could let that slide since the processor can be safely overclocked up to a decent 3.8GHz. As for business pros, the company claims the Mo nster could be used as a portable server, run multiple VMs of Windows and Linux, or high-end engineering apps like MatLab. As usual with Eurocom, you can configure the system in dozens of ways, including matte or glossy screen, Sandy Bridge or Ivy Bridge processors and multiple RAM or disk setups. Pricing and delivery dates weren't given, but if it's up your alley, check the PR and your wallet -- or hit up Ned in accounting.
Show full PR text The EUROCOM Monster at 4 lbs & 11.6" is capable of running 8 virtual machines with 16GB DDR3 1600 memory and 1 TB storage
Eurocom Corporation (www.eurocom.com), a developer of long lifespan, high performance, fully upgradable Notebooks and Mobile Workstations is shipping a small form factor ultraportable notebook capable of running multiple virtual machines and multiple operating systems with up to 16GB memory and 1 TB storage while weighing under 4 lbs.
"The EUROCOM Monster is c apable of running up to 8 virtual machines due to its high performance hardware; Intel Core i7 3920XM processor, NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M graphics combined with 16GB DDR3-1600 memory and up to 1 terabyte of storage with up to 410 minutes of battery life. This is the perfect system for mobile professionals who need exceptionally capable hardware for such things as mobile server applications, technical presale, CUDA and OpenCL development on the go" Mark Bialic, Eurocom President.
Virtualization increases your computer systems efficiency while increasing the value and capabilities of your investment by allowing multiple operating systems, applications to run simultaneously on a single computing system. The EUROCOM Monster 1.0 takes virtualization one step further by being very mobile.
Although many will look at the Monster as a pure gaming machine, Eurocom is seeing a great deal of interest from professionals of all kinds.
"In my case I have chos en the impressive Intel Core i7 3820QM processor with 4 cores, 8 threads and 8 MB of L3 Cache with 16 GB DDR3-1600 RAM and a 240 GB Intel 520 Series SSD. I can run plenty of VMs at the same time: w2k3 r2 sp2, w2k8 r2, CentOS 6.....with no problem. The performance with MatLab and others engineering tools is amazing. Never seen that in a 11.6 inch portable" Koldo Valle Garcia (@kanelus), Computer Science and Communications Services, Elecnor.
"Many of our professional customers are becoming very attached to their EUROCOM Monster because it has the capability and mobility that on-the-go users crave" Mark Bialic, Eurocom President.
The EUROCOM Monster is a small form factor high performance notebook with 16GB DDR3-1600 memory and 1 terabyte of storage. Graphics are controlled by the NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M GPU with 2GB of video memory, 384 CUDA cores, with the graphics clock running at 850 MHz making this graphics powerhouse the ultimate mobile computing mach ine.
The EUROCOM Monster 1.0 combines the best of both worlds of power and performance with support for high performance Intel Ivy Bridge processors, up to Intel Core i7-3920XM with 4 cores, 8 threads, 8 MB L3 Cache running at 2.90 GHz with Max Turbo frequency being 3.8 GHz.
"My experience with the little monster is great. It is a very robust but small portable. Almost rugged and very light. Nice for traveling" Koldo Valle Garcia.
With the increasing mobility of today's workforce, the need for an office like environment in the field increases. Teams working with mobile workstations on their customer site or anywhere outside their office need a system to run multiple applications, and have multiple operating systems available.
EUROCOM Monster 1.0 Specifications:
11.6-inch (39.62cm); HD 1366-by-768 pixels; Glossy or Matte Surface; Backlit LED Display with professional calibration option
• VGA Technology: on-board NVIDIA GT 650M with 2GB of DDR3 VRAM and Optimus Technology
• Chipset: Intel Mobile HM76 Express
• Processor: supports both Intel Sandy Bridge (32nm) and Ivy Bridge (22nm) Mobile Processors. Up to Intel Core i7-3920XM Processor Extreme
• Memory: up to 16GB DDR3-1600; two SODIMM sockets; Dual Channel
• Storage: up to 1TB of storage space; one physical hard drive. SSD, HDD Hybrid drive support.
• Ports: USB 2.0; 2x USB 3.0; HDMI 1.4a out; VGA; Headphone; Mic; RJ45/LAN
• Communication: 1Gigabit LAN; WLAN; Bluetooth
• Weight: 1.8kg / 3.96lbs (with battery)
• Dimensions: WxDxH 287x207x12.7-37.1mm; 11.48x8.28x0.51-1.48-inch
• Battery Life: up to 410 minutes; 62.16WH battery
About Eurocom:
Eurocom is a leading developer of long lifespan, fully upgradable notebooks, high performance mobile workstations and mobile servers since 1989. The co mpany has produced many firsts and continues to engineer VGA solutions that inspire and enable individuals and companies to reach great possibilities. Eurocom has been a leading innovator in the mobile computer industry since 1989. Eurocom is currently the only developer in the world offering a Server on the Go solution with RAID 01/5/10 support and up to 4 hard drives. For more information on Eurocom please visit (www.eurocom.com).