Lenovo wants to make a 23-inch tablet

Steve Jobs would be disgusted: Lenovo says it will be creating a 23-inch tablet to invade homes later this year.

Whether it’s truly a marketable product or some sort of record is being broken, Lenovo says it will manufacture a 23-inch tablet. Senior marketing specialist William Cai tells TechRadar that the massive device won’t be designated for the corporate market only, and will be available to your very own living room – provided you want it there.

“We think that there is potential for a 23-inch tablet. We’d ha

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Stock and Trade: Omni Consumer Products

Often when the protagonist of a speculative narrative must struggle against an unfeeling world, that world is represented by a faceless conglomerate, a near-governmental corporation which seems to control facets of society wherever the character looks

So in Stock and Trade, our latest genre fiction feature series, we’re looking at fictional corporations Today, we’re featuring Omni Consumer Products

OCP is the corporation which, in the RoboCop franchise, is the creator of the RoboCop program

After the failure of the ED-209 project, which resulted in the untimely death of one of their executives, it was decided that a police robot needed to have a human intellect, and so they put a man inside the machine

There isn’t much in the RoboCop stories about the begining of OCP, but by the time of the first RoboCop movie, they have holdings in almost every industry possible, very much like LexCorp

They have diversified into retail, transportation, incarceration, religion, tourism, and even military Their next step throughout the films is to attempt to create a commercial utopia called Delta City They have a vision of an entire city, owned and run by the corporation

This actually doesn’t seem so bad when it comes right down to it A whole city in which everyone always has a job because they all work for the city, and every aspect of city services are essentially comercialized It really does sound like a fine place to reside There are a couple of issues with the plan, however:

 First, OCP doesn’t actually seem to have very good management skills Their ineptitude is first displayed with the ED-209, but there are numerous other incidents across the films and other franchise entries which make one wonder how the company stayed afloat as long as it did

Second, they decide to place this capitalist utopia on top of Detroit Rather than build their city out in some currently unoccupied land, or even on a tropical island somewhere which is what I would have suggested, had I been on the OCP board, they think it would be best to buy up crime-ridden, Mad-Maxesque Detroit, tear it down, and build on top of the ruins I guess it’s just another example of bad management

Of course, today’s Detroit is a wasteland, as the film predicted, but it’s not the type of wasteland they thought it would be The Detroit we have today maybe could do with a bit of tearing down

The first step in OCP’s plan is take-over of the police force, in an effort to control the massive crime-spree

Murphy, the first RoboCop is forced into a confrontation with the executive who had originally headed up the failed ED-209 program, ands who wants to destroy the RoboCop program, having already ordered the death of the executive in charge of it

It is only this one executive in the corporation who turns out to be truly evil, and when Murphy dispatches him, the company seems to get onto a better track, though the Delta City project still seems to be on course, and doesn’t fall apart until the end of the third movie, when OCP goes bankrupt trying to force Detroit to default on its loans, and fall to private ownership

Omni Consumer Products is clearly a symbol for the horrors of over-privatization The franchise focuses mostly on the police, but OCP is failing at all of their attempts to privatize government services

A corporation which had been wildly successful in every other industry across the world is somehow incapable of running city services They also serve the larger RoboCop theme of humanity and the role of memory and emotion in identity

Also interesting to note: There is now a real company out there calling itself Omni Consumer Products, which specializes in licensing fictional products from movies and television, and creating real versions of them for sale 

Come back tomorrow, when we’ll be taking a look at the DHARMA Initiative If you have an idea for a corporation we could feature in this series, let us know in the comments

Vet the Latest Mobile Tech with LAPTOP’s Product Comparison Tool

Our mission here at LAPTOP Magazine is to bring readers in-depth reviews, valuable how-to’s, and expert insight into mobile tech products and software. Along with the quality of our content, we count our website as a reflection of our dedication to readers. Over the years, we’ve improved it by refining the homepage, spicing up the layout of our reviews, and emphasizing our product galleries. Now, we’re at it again.

This week, we launched a new product comparison page that we’re confident will help readers in their quest for the perfect laptop, smart phone, tablet, or other gadget.

With this new tool, readers can compare up to 10 devices  side by side. The crit

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App Watch: Getting Religion on the Go

At the Metropolitan Baptist Church in Newark, N.J., prayer is done hands held together and voices raised; a well-worn, note-filled Bible is a badge of honor; and the pastor expects a responsive congregation.

It’s an environment where reading from your iPhone’s “Holy Bible” app and live-tweeting the pastor’s messages can be a bit … conspicuous.

“My wife will actually take my phone from me sometimes and put it in her purse,” says parishioner Wade Harris, flashing a grin.

Which is why he’s learned to be discreet.

“Sometimes I have the phone in the middle of the Bible,” he says with a chuckle.

From apps that let you tweet Bible verses to those that help you face Mecca or pray the right Hebrew blessings with the right foods, some of the pious are embracing mobile technology. As they do, they’re c

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Grooveshark ‘Baffled’ After Getting Booted From Android Market

Grooveshark users can stream any of the 6 million songs in its catalog to their mobile devices — except for Android and iOS users. Photo courtesy Grooveshark.

Popular music-streaming service Grooveshark got yanked from Google’s Android Market over the weekend, and the company isn’t happy about it.

“Google notified us on Saturday that it had removed our app from the Market,” Grooveshark’s Ben Westermann-Clark told Wired.com in an interview, “but frankly, we’re baffled by this. We’re always

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