
If one believes the leaked documents leaked, the Lenovo Edge 91z will be a 21.5-inch all-in-one system with 1920×1080 resolution. The systems are expected to be available at the end of June.

Dropbox claimed your data was safe with them, not even their employees could open your files. However. It appears the claim was not true. Employees can open your files.

RIM is recalling about 1,000 16BG PlayBook tablets because of a software problem. The problem devices were shipped to Staples in the US and Canada.

If you like small phones, HP’s Veer may be of interest. It’s only 3.25 inches long, with a 2.6-inch touchscreen, a slide-out keyboard, and a 5-megapixel camera.

Bedrock Technologies, LLC holds a lot of patents. They won a verdict against Google recently, for a fraction of what they sought, but just lost to Yahoo! with a similar suit. It appears that Bedrock really wants licensing fees.

Galaxy Tab owners in Europe can now get the Gingerbread update. Carriers in the US have yet to announce upgrade schedules.

Google’s Chrome OS is primarily web-based. However, in case you don’t have a signal, Chromebooks will come with offline versions of Gmail, Docs, and Google Calendar so you can keep working.

The problem with folding things is that annoying crease that develops at the fold. Now scientists at the Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology in South Korea have come up with a way to avoid the crease in folding displays.

Facebook is great for connecting you around the globe. But what about your local neighborhood? Yatown is designed to connect users living near each other into a virtual “town square”.

Using a cushion of air over the keys, Apple has created a new keyboard that can tell what key you’re about to press before your finger touches the key. The idea is to provide more accurate input from ever-smaller keys.