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Posts Tagged “

Trinity

peripherals

ASUS EAH3850 Trinity Prototype Video Card Goes Triple Penetration With Three Cores

What the crap? As if shoving two GPUs onto a single card wasn't enough to play contemporary games at a decent frame rate, Asus has just made an EAH3850 Trinity, a tri-core card with its own connected water-based cooling system. When you break it down, it's three RV670 cores in one card, generating output for four DVI ports allowing you to power four monitors (or one gigantic one at insane-o resolution). More »

portable media

Trinity DS-CHFMT iPod Cupholder Dock

If you're not too bothered by the idea of an iPod transmitting its signal into your car stereo via staticy-sounding and hissy FM, Trinity has devised its DS-CHFMT dock, formed in a shape that fits into almost any cupholder. Hey, looky there—it conveniently positions the iPod's controls at your fingertips. All you have to do is plug it into your car's accessory outlet, insert your iPod via its dock connector, and you're ready for some ear-jangling but effortless static. More »

gadgets

Lumi Flasher: "I HAVE AN iPOD!"

Look at me! I have an iPod! Look at me! Steal my iPod! Look at me! These things hold music?? More »

cellphones

HTC Stereo Converter

If you've picked up an HTC Trinity, Artemis, or TyTN/Cingular 8525, you probably noticed that the only headset port is the 11-pin mini USB kind. Pretty gimpy if you want to use your Shure or your V-Moda Vibe headphones to listen to music. Brando's got the HTC stereo converter shipping December 27, which allows you to use any standard headset with your swanky new HTC phone. We're sold. More »

cellphones

HTC's 2006 Roadmap

Our favorite amateur softcore pornographer BengalBoy got his hands on HTC's 2006 roadmap. HTC, in case you forgot, makes Windows Mobile 5-based smartphones for other manufacturers like QTek and Dopod to sell with their own branding. More »

gadgets

Trinity DAW: Linux-Based, Portable Audio Editing

The Trinity DAW from the Trinity Audio Group is a self-contained audio recording box that its maker calls "the world's first professional, portable recording studio." It's a Linux-based handheld unit (9.5"W x 6"D x 1.85"H) with a 6.5-inch LCD screen, 128MB of RAM, a 20GB hard disk and can record 24-bit audio at 96 kHz. It has a couple of quarter-inch XLR inputs and can handle phantom power, and its fanless design keeps the noise down for even the quietest of audio recording sessions. More »