Podcasts about intellimouse

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Best podcasts about intellimouse

Latest podcast episodes about intellimouse

Brad & Will Made a Tech Pod.
240: The Mouse That Changed Everything

Brad & Will Made a Tech Pod.

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2024 53:59


We're taking another close look at a product that broke out and redefined its entire category, this time the venerable IntelliMouse Explorer. These days it's hard to remember that it was Microsoft who banished the infernal ball and introduced the optical mouse to the mainstream, so we head back to 1999 and discuss what mice were like beforehand, how mechanical and optical sensors work, debate PS/2 versus USB, make an argument that the whole PC gaming accessory ecosystem owes its existence to this product, and more.Our last game-changer product deep-dive, about the Xbox 360: https://techpod.content.town/episodes/183-hiroprotagonist-loves-an-inhale-a0zOAKKo Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod

Zomia ONE
Sovryn Shorts: "Kamala Harris Was Right: The Tale of a Mouse"

Zomia ONE

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2022 33:00


It's time for Sovryn Shorts! Quick takes on the quick breaks in the news cycle, and sometimes even reviews! If you can't get enough of Dr. Brian Sovryn, these hot shots are for you! In this episode, the Man of Tomorrow discusses...Kamala Harris being right about something!? And what does that have to do with the Microsoft Pro IntelliMouse? You'll have to listen to find out! Sovryn Shorts is on! SHOW NOTES: --"Kamala Harris Doesn't Use..." Link: https://politi.co/3rpLsfW --"History of the Microsoft IntelliMouse" Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IntelliMouse --"2019 Microsoft Pro IntelliMouse" Link: https://amzn.to/3nv9CEo APPENDIX & SPONSORS: --"Support Sovryn Tech on Patreon" Link: https://www.patreon.com/sovryntech --”The Sovryn Tech Amazon Wishlist” Link: http://wishlist.sovryntech.com --”Listen to Free Talk Live” Link: https://www.freetalklive.com --”Use Fastmail!” Link: https://fastmail.sovryntech.com --”Use Booking.com and Earn $25!” Link: https://booking.sovryntech.com --"Buy the Insurgo PrivacyBeast X230!” Link: http://bit.ly/2GoFjdj --"Surveillance Self-Defense" Link: https://ssd.eff.org/ --"RetroShare" Link: http://retroshare.net/ --“Books of Liberty” Link: http://booksofliberty.com/ --"Dark Android: 2017 Edition" Link: http://darkandroid.info --”Sovryn Universe, Vol. 1” Link: https://amzn.to/2MrvfEy ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Donate with BTC: 3GYKVWkVE6iAYEnExfiNfCHJkSDFYWEs43 Donate with CashApp: $sovryntech Donate with Venmo: @bsovryn ------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://sovryntech.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sovryn/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sovryn/support

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 248: Korv innan tårtan

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2021 88:20


Inledning En oväntad framgång med Lineageos Första tossdan i mass firas med massipantåta Fredrik tog första löprundan på bra länge. Vaderna lade märke till det. Christian tar promenad och knät verkar tåla det. Uppföljning Joakim Ewenson fick fel namn av Christian i förra avsnittet. Clubhouseuppföljning Ämnen BankID slutar stödja iOS 10 och 11 i sommar. EU tittar på lagstiftning om att kräva 5 års uppdateringar från telefontillverkarma. Hur länge ska vi förvänta oss att telefoner och appar uppdateras? Verizon “tipsar” kunderna om att slå av 5G för att spara batteri Comviq läckte kunders hemliga nummer till webben Speluppdatering M1! Spekulation kring om och varför Apple skulle kunna tänkas deaktivera Rosetta i vissa regioner Jocke tittar på gamla Apple-reklamfilmer. Får en tår i ögat och imponeras av det underförstådda. Spotify väntas gå om Apple inom podcasts till sommaren. “Apple hade enligt 9 to 5 Mac en andel på poddområdet på 34 procent i USA. Nu är den nere på 23,8 procent.” Stensåkrakorv grillad - ost och bacon (Stensåkra känt från avsnitt 244, då med sin falukorv) Film & TV Paramount lanserar streamingtjänst i Sverige. Christian pratar om hur utbudet ser ut på marknaden för streamingtjänster. Länkar Fössta tossdan i mass Lineageos Oneplus nord Aurora Första torsdagen i mars Joakim Ewenson Teknik med Ewenson Varmilo-videon Kritik mot svenska mediers Clubhouse-hajp: ”Har vi inte lärt oss något?” Flera medier inför Clubhouse-restriktioner och uppmanar anställda till försiktighet Oklart om Clubhouse följer EU-lagar. Android 5 Comviq läcker nummer Brütal legend Intellimouse explorer Intellimouse explorer 3.0 Apple extended keyboard II Brütal legend med värdiga styrdon Bananens krökningsvinkel Big News (iPhone 4-reklam) Imac G3-reklam Holiday, misunderstood (iPhone 5-reklam) The Archives (iPhone 7-reklam) Första iPod-reklamen Spotify går om Apple på poddar? Stensåkra ost och bacon Paramount + kommer till Sverige, igen Björnstad Duck tales Sea dragon Fredrik Björeman, Joacim Melin och Christian Åhs. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-248-korv-innan-tartan.html.

TechZilla
¿Es este el mejor mouse de la historia? Intellimouse Optical de Microsoft.

TechZilla

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2020 5:50


Hoy hablaremos del Intellimouse Optical, el primer mouse que dejo atrás la bolita para incorporar ruedas en esta nueva serie llamada Retro TechRecuerda si me quieres apoyar:Insta: https://www.instagram.com/techzillastudio/Twitter:https://twitter.com/TechZilla5

The History of Computing

In a world of rapidly changing technologies, few have lasted as long is as unaltered a fashion as the mouse. The party line is that the computer mouse was invente d by Douglas Engelbart in 1964 and that it was a one-button wooden device that had two metal wheels. Those used an analog to digital conversion to input a location to a computer. But there's a lot more to tell. Englebart had read an article in 1945 called “As We May Think” by Vannevar Bush. He was in the Philippines working as a radio and radar tech. He'd return home,. Get his degree in electrical engineering, then go to Berkeley and get first his masters and then a PhD. Still in electrical engineering. At the time there were a lot of military grants in computing floating around and a Navy grant saw him work on a computer called CALDIC, short for the California Digital Computer. By the time he completed his PhD he was ready to start a computer storage company but ended up at the Stanford Research Institute in 1957. He published a paper in 1962 called Augmenting Human Intellect: A Conceptual Framework. That paper would guide the next decade of his life and help shape nearly everything in computing that came after. Keeping with the theme of “As We May Think” Englebart was all about supplementing what humans could do. The world of computer science had been interested in selecting things on a computer graphically for some time. And Englebart would have a number of devices that he wanted to test in order to find the best possible device for humans to augment their capabilities using a computer. He knew he wanted a graphical system and wanted to be deliberate about every aspect in a very academic fashion. And a key aspect was how people that used the system would interact with it. The keyboard was already a mainstay but he wanted people pointing at things on a screen. While Englebart would invent the mouse, pointing devices certainly weren't new. Pilots had been using the joystick for some time, but an electrical joystick had been developed at the US Naval Research Laboratory in 1926, with the concept of unmanned aircraft in mind. The Germans would end up building one in 1944 as well. But it was Alan Kotok who brought the joystick to the computer game in the early 1960s to play spacewar on minicomputers. And Ralph Baer brought it into homes in 1967 for an early video game system, the Magnavox Odyssey. Another input device that had come along was the trackball. Ralph Benjamin of the British Royal Navy's Scientific Service invented the trackball, or ball tracker for radar plotting on the Comprehensive Display System, or CDS. The computers were analog at the time but they could still use the X-Y coordinates from the trackball, which they patented in 1947. Tom Cranston, Fred Longstaff and Kenyon Taylor had seen the CDS trackball and used that as the primary input for DATAR, a radar-driven battlefield visualization computer. The trackball stayed in radar systems into the 60s, when Orbit Instrument Corporation made the X-Y Ball Tracker and then Telefunken turned it upside down to control the TR 440, making an early mouse type of device. The last of the options Englebart decided against was the light pen. Light guns had shown up in the 1930s when engineers realized that a vacuum tube was light-sensitive. You could shoot a beam of light at a tube and it could react. Robert Everett worked with Jay Forrester to develop the light pen, which would allow people to interact with a CRT using light sensing to cause an interrupt on a computer. This would move to the SAGE computer system from there and eek into the IBM mainframes in the 60s. While the technology used to track the coordinates is not even remotely similar, think of this as conceptually similar to the styluses used with tablets and on Wacom tablets today. Paul Morris Fitts had built a model in 1954, now known as Fitts's Law, to predict the time that's required to move things on a screen. He defined the target area as a function of the ratio between the distance to the target and the width of the target. If you listen to enough episodes of this podcast, you'll hear a few names repeatedly. One of those is Claude Shannon. He brought a lot of the math to computing in the 40s and 50s and helped with the Shannon-Hartley Theorum, which defined information transmission rates over a given medium. So these were the main options at Englebart's disposal to test when he started ARC. But in looking at them, he had another idea. He'd sketched out the mouse in 1961 while sitting in a conference session about computer graphics. Once he had funding he brought in Bill English to build a prototype I n 1963. The first model used two perpendicular wheels attached to potentiometers that tracked movement. It had one button to select things on a screen. It tracked x,y coordinates as had previous devices. NASA funded a study to really dig in and decide which was the best device. He, Bill English, and an extremely talented team, spent two years researching the question, publishing a report in 1965. They really had the blinders off, too. They looked at the DEC Grafacon, joysticks, light pens and even what amounts to a mouse that was knee operated. Two years of what we'd call UX research or User Research today. Few organizations would dedicate that much time to study something. But the result would be patenting the mouse in 1967, an innovation that would last for over 50 years. I've heard Engelbart criticized for taking so long to build the oNline System, or NLS, which he showcased at the Mother of All Demos. But it's worth thinking of his research as academic in nature. It was government funded. And it changed the world. His paper on Computer-Aided Display Controls was seminal. Vietnam caused a lot of those government funded contracts to dry up. From there, Bill English and a number of others from Stanford Research Institute which ARC was a part of, moved to Xerox PARC. English and Jack Hawley iterated and improved the technology of the mouse, ditching the analog to digital converters and over the next few years we'd see some of the most substantial advancements in computing. By 1981, Xerox had shipped the Alto and the Star. But while Xerox would be profitable with their basic research, they would miss something that a candle-clad hippy wouldn't. In 1979, Xerox let Steve Jobs make three trips to PARC in exchange for the opportunity to buy 100,000 shares of Apple stock pre-IPO. The mouse by then had evolved to a three button mouse that cost $300. It didn't roll well and had to be used on pretty specific surfaces. Jobs would call Dean Hovey, a co-founder of IDEO and demand they design one that would work on anything including quote “blue jeans.” Oh, and he wanted it to cost $15. And he wanted it to have just one button, which would be an Apple hallmark for the next 30ish years. Hovey-Kelley would move to optical encoder wheels, freeing the tracking ball to move however it needed to and then use injection molded frames. And thus make the mouse affordable. It's amazing what can happen when you combine all that user research and academic rigor from Englebarts team and engineering advancements documented at Xerox PARC with world-class industrial design. You see this trend played out over and over with the innovations in computing that are built to last. The mouse would ship with the LISA and then with the 1984 Mac. Logitech had shipped a mouse in 1982 for $300. After leaving Xerox, Jack Howley founded a company to sell a mouse for $400 the same year. Microsoft released a mouse for $200 in 1983. But Apple changed the world when Steve Jobs demanded the mouse ship with all Macs. The IBM PC would ;use a mouse and from there it would become ubiquitous in personal computing. Desktops would ship with a mouse. Laptops would have a funny little button that could be used as a mouse when the actual mouse was unavailable. The mouse would ship with extra buttons that could be mapped to additional workflows or macros. And even servers were then outfitted with switches that allowed using a device that switched the keyboard, video, and mouse between them during the rise of large server farms to run the upcoming dot com revolution. Trays would be put into most racks with a single u, or unit of the rack being used to see what you're working on; especially after Windows or windowing servers started to ship. As various technologies matured, other innovations came along to input devices. The mouse would go optical in 1980 and ship with early Xerox Star computers but what we think of as an optical mouse wouldn't really ship until 1999 when Microsoft released the IntelliMouse. Some of that tech came to them via Hewlett-Packard through the HP acquisition of DEC and some of those same Digital Research Institute engineers had been brought in from the original mainstreamer of the mouse, PARC when Bob Taylor started DRI. The LED sensor on the muse stuck around. And thus ended the era of the mouse pad, once a hallmark of many a marketing give-away. Finger tracking devices came along in 1969 but were far too expensive to produce at the time. As capacitive sensitive pads, or trackpads came down in price and the technology matured those began to replace the previous mouse-types of devices. The 1982 Apollo computers were the first to ship with a touchpad but it wasn't until Synaptics launched the TouchPad in 1992 that they began to become common, showing up in 1995 on Apple laptops and then becoming ubiquitous over the coming years. In fact, the IBM Thinkpad and many others shipped laptops with little red nubs in the keyboard for people that didn't want to use the TouchPad for awhile as well. Some advancements in the mouse didn't work out. Apple released the hockey puck shaped mouse in 1998, when they released the iMac. It was USB, which replaced the ADB interface. USB lasted. The shape of the mouse didn't. Apple would go to the monolithic surface mouse in 2000, go wireless in 2003 and then release the Mighty Mouse in 2005. The Mighty Mouse would have a capacitive touch sensor and since people wanted to hear a click would produce that with a little speaker. This also signified the beginning of bluetooth as a means of connecting a mouse. Laptops began to replace desktops for many, and so the mouse itself isn't as dominant today. And with mobile and tablet computing, resistive touchscreens rose to replace many uses for the mouse. But even today, when I edit these podcasts, I often switch over to a mouse simply because other means of dragging around timelines simply aren't as graceful. And using a pen, as Englebart's research from the 60s indicated, simply gets fatiguing. Whether it's always obvious, we have an underlying story we're often trying to tell with each of these episodes. We obviously love unbridled innovation and a relentless drive towards a technologically utopian multiverse. But taking a step back during that process and researching what people want means less work and faster adoption. Doug Englebart was a lot of things but one net-new point we'd like to make is that he was possibly the most innovative in harnessing user research to make sure that his innovations would last for decades to come. Today, we'd love to research every button and heat map and track eyeballs. But remembering, as he did, that our job is to augment human intellect, is best done when we make our advances useful, helps to keep us and the forks that occur in technology from us, from having to backtrack decades of work in order to take the next jump forward. We believe in the reach of your innovations. So next time you're working on a project. Save yourself time, save your code a little cyclomatic complexity, , and save users frustration from having to relearn a whole new thing. And research what you're going to do first. Because you never know. Something you engineer might end up being touched by nearly every human on the planet the way the mouse has. Thank you Englebart. And thank you to NASA and Bob Roberts from ARPA for funding such important research. And thank you to Xerox PARC, for carrying the torch. And to Steve Jobs for making the mouse accessible to every day humans. As with many an advance in computing, there are a lot of people that deserve a little bit of the credit. And thank you listeners, for joining us for another episode of the history of computing podcast. We're so lucky to have you. Now stop consuming content and go change the world.

Heine House LIVE
#9 - The Sonic Movie, Valve VR, Epic's Ultimatum and Microsoft's Intellimouse

Heine House LIVE

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2019 97:56


Jason's windows 10 computer won't boot. 2 weeks worth of "this week in gaming history". Valve, Nintendo and Sony all get some VR chat, Epic buys Rocket League, the Sonic Movie, Moto RAZR and community event Microsoft #Mouse! Please consider helping Jason with his medical situation here PayPal: https://www.paypal.me/heinehousePatreon: https://www.patreon.com/JasonHeineGoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/jasonheine Website - Discord - Patreon - Twitch - Facebook - Instagram - Twitter - Heine House LIVE Podcast - All Gen Gamers Podcast - Music Discography - Bandcamp This video was directly supported by the following Patrons: George Filby, Weldon Owens, Erin Wilson, Brandon Zeller, Sam Dutch, Charles Reid, and Rick Guerra!

Señales
6: Robos de datos, la puerta trasera de Huawei y los 20 años del Intellimouse Explorer

Señales

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2019 21:40


En este episodio, Ricardo Sametband y Ariel Torres recuerdan los 20 años del Intellimouse Explorer (el primer ratón óptico), los problemas de Huawei con el 5G, las redes donde es más fácil estafar vía phishing y mucho más. Guillermo Tomoyose no participó del episodio porque estaba en EE.UU. cubriendo el F8 de Facebook. Señales es un podcast exclusivo de LA NACION

5g explorers huawei datos ee uu la puerta robos f8 la nacion ariel torres intellimouse guillermo tomoyose ricardo sametband
Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 131: Plats även för nakna tyskar

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2018 62:48


Denna vecka diskuterar pojkarna följande: Att semestra på Kanarieöarna Dokumentärtips om Lemmy Panda måste starta om Intellimouse classic-uppföljning Apple dumpar subpixelantialiasing av text i Mojave. Kommer min flerskärmsupplevelse att bli bättre nu? Vilken 4K-skärm ska man ha om man nu ska ha en? Vi surfar lite skärmar. Jocke testar Alpine 3.8 för webbservrarna. Dumpar efter tre dagar Sevärd dokumentär (med musik av Trent Reznor och Atticus Ross) The Handmaids tale Säsong 2: fortfarande inte slut. Jocke kör Linux på skrivbordet. Igen. Med Fedora 28. Bilder med bibliotek på Synology, över wifi. Det funkar! Fredrik spelar lite mer VR på mobil. Det kanske finns en anledning att Apple inte gjort något än. Länkar Gran Canaria Fuerteventura Lemmy Lemmy-dokumentären Rainbow Vår vän Christian Panda måste starta om Intellimouse classic på Prisjakt Hur man slår på subpixelantialiasing av text på Mojave Alpine Linux Fedora Thunderbird Ubuntu studio Chromium Firebug New York times och Donald Trump - slaget om sanningen Handmaid’s tale Everybody’s gone to the rapture So let us melt Projekt Titan Två nördar - en podcast. Fredrik Björeman och Joacim Melin diskuterar allt som gör livet värt att leva. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-131-plats-for-nakna-tyskar.html.

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 130: En snabb liten ettrig Linuxdistribution

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2018 58:05


Denna vecka diskuterar pojkarna följande: Doom VFR och VR-kontroller - det tar sig när man kommer till helvetet Vectrex Gubbdata - en rafflande rapport! Protracker - hur funkar det? Serial: https://www.decisivetactics.com/products/serial/ Datastorm MOD-nostalgi Amiga 500 + TF–530 + KS3.1 = nej Jocke på byamöte - raseri och elände! Långläsning men intressant: Utvecklare med mera Owen Williams har bytt från Macbook till Surface book 2 och är gediget nöjd Veckans Minecraft-modd: Bettergeo! Microsoft återlanserar Intellimouse! Serverväxlingar: Centos har blivit Alpine i Jockes kluster Datormagazin re-lanserar sin sajt. Datormagazin Retro: “runt jul, eventuellt” Facebook “råkar” klanta sig igen Lite livesändningsnytt Länkar Doom VFR Magic mouse Mighty mouse - en mus Fredrik hatar Vive Chipspartyt i Jönköping Zone of the enders, 2nd runner Metal gear solid 2 Moviebox Vectrex Scramble till Vectrex Protracker Noisetracker Kaktus och Mahoney - Pex “Mahoney” Tufvesson and Anders “Kaktus” Berkeman Mr Z MOD-filer IFF-filer Datastorm Serial Informationsfilmer om Protracker - av Wasp RJ Mical MOD-nostalgi Lång och trevlig artikel om att byta Macbook mot Surface book .gd är toppdomän för Grenada Fredriks skriverier om Surface book Bettergeo Bettergeo på Wikia SGU Intellimouse kommer tillbaka! Finns att köpa av Microsoft i Sverige! Intellimouse explorer 3 Intellimouse optical 1 Sculpt ergonomic keyboard Centos Alpine Facebook klantar sig lite. Igen. Två nördar - en podcast. Fredrik Björeman och Joacim Melin diskuterar allt som gör livet värt att leva. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-130-en-snabb-liten-ettrig-linuxdistribution.html.

TSF - Mundo Digital - Podcast
Edição de 28 Junho 2018 - Quinze anos depois, a Microsoft lançou um novo Intellimouse

TSF - Mundo Digital - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2018


Edição de 28 Junho 2018 - Quinze anos depois, a Microsoft lançou um novo Intellimouse

ChannelPro Weekly Podcast
ChannelPro Weekly Podcast: Episode #060 - Welcome to the Uber Uber MSSPMHSP Insurance Era

ChannelPro Weekly Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2017


Matt and Rich are just itching to tell you all about BitTitan’s latest solution update and managed services vision; a detachable workstation from HP that may or may not have a reason for being; the long-awaited return of Microsoft’s Intellimouse; the just announced debut of the new Surface Precision Mouse; a thin, fast, stylish notebook from ASUS; and some recently published research from CompTIA about SaaS channel partners. Not enough? How about some solid gold, can’t miss suggestions on how to make money partnering with insurance brokers and launching a MSSPMHSP practice. Trust us, it’ll all make sense when you listen. Subscribe to ChannelPro Weekly!    Look for us in your favorite podcast app. If you don't see us (yet) then you can subscribe via RSS in almost any podcast app using this link: http://www.channelpronetwork.com/rss/cpw Show Information: Episode #: 060Title: Welcome to the Uber Uber MSSPMHSP Insurance EraDuration: 1:43:48File size: 47.6MBRegulars: Regulars: Rich Freeman - Executive Editor, Matt Whitlock - Technology Editor Topics and Related Links Mentioned:  BitTitan Adds Process Automation and Benchmarking to MSPComplete BitTitan Urges MSPs to Get Modern HP Ships Detachable Workstation for Creative Professionals  Microsoft Teases Intellimouse Return Make Reduced Insurance Premiums Part of Your Security Sales Pitch  ASUSPRO B9440: Thin, Fast, and Stylish CompTIA research on the SaaS Channel Where's Joel? Matt's Museum Pick: Radio Shack Mouse Cleaning Kit Matt's tech pick: Microsoft Surface Precision Mouse Rich's ICYMI preview and peek ahead at the news week to come

Tech Café
Chronique des composants 1997

Tech Café

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2017 94:00


NEWS Kasparov perd face à Deep Blue. Le prochain CPU Intel sera en cartouche ! Digital et HP utiliseront les K5 et K6 AMD. L’AMD K6 MMX donne chaud à Intel... HP présente sa suite photographique. Compaq et Gateway ne fusionneront finalement pas. Heaven’s Gate : Internet rend-il fou ? Microsoft rachète WebTV Networks. Apple sera-t-il racheté par Oracle ? AOL pourrait fusionner avec Compuserve. Point MMX Le Pentium MMX késako ? intel prépare un P6 MMX à 300Mhz ! Et le MMX2 est déjà dans les tuyaux. Les tout premier portable MMX arrivent. Gateway 2000 ou Winstation 5, quel prix pour un PC MMX aujourd’hui ? Dossier Windows CE Vue d’ensemble du premier Windows ultra mobile. Les machines : Casio Cassiopea / Compaq PC Companion / Philips Velo 1 Le futur de CE…? Best Of Tech 97 Le meilleur OS : NT 4 avec OS/2 Warp en challenger. Matériel : Cyrix 6x86 P200+ avec USB 1.0 en challenger. Logiciel : 3D Studio Max avec Photoshop 4 en challenger. Le meilleur portable : Toshiba Portégé 660CDT contre le Thinkpad 560. Navigateurs Internet : Internet Explorer 3 vs Navigator Gold 3. Périphériques : le PDA US Robotics Pilot 5000 avec le lecteur Iomega Jazz en challenger. Mention spéciale : l’IntelliMouse de Microsoft. Jeux : Warcraft II avec Quake ou Wing Commander 4 en challengers. Participants : Avec l’expertise et sur une idée de Guillaume Poggiaspalla Présenté par Guillaume Vendé