Nokia to launch the E7 at Nokia World
According to Reuters, the Nokia E7 will be officially announced at Nokia World 2010 as the new flagship device from the Finnish handset maker. Citing people familiar with the matter, Reuters reports that the device will feature a large screen and a full keyboard. On the other hand, The Nokia Blog claims that the upcoming smartphone from Nokia is the leaked RM-626 phone.

GeForce GTS 450 to compete with Radeon HD 5770
Believe it or not, but a Germain Web site, Heise.de, claims that NVIDIA is planning to launch yet another a mid-range card, the GeForce GTS 450. According to the latest available data, the GF106-based card will have 4 streaming multiprocessors (SMs) containing 48 shaders each for a total of 192 Cuda cores, HEXUS reports.
ATI Radeon HD 6870 details emerge
First details of the upcoming ATI Radeon HD 6870 have emerged on the Web, HEXUS says. According to a Chinese forum, the card which is to be based on the same basic design as the HD 5000 Series managed to score X11963, running 3DMark Vantage. As we see, it is obviously faster than the HD 5870 (around X9000) and the fastest single-core card from NVIDIA, GeForce GTX 480.
Canon EOS 60D goes official
Canon today officially announced its latest DSLR camera, the EOS 60D. According to the Japanese company, it is a 18-megapixel camera with Full HD video recording, a twisting & rotating 3-inch display, and a DIGIC 4 processor for in-camera RAW image editing. In addition, users of the EOS 60D will be able to tweak Picture Style, White Balance (WB), Color Space, High-ISO Noise Reduction, Peripheral Illumination Correction, linear distortion correction and chromatic aberration correction from the camera itself, rather than waiting until they have access to a computer. See the full press release below.
Canon introduces 120-megapixel CMOS image sensor
Canon today officially announces it has developed a 120 megapixel 29.2 x 20.2mm APS-H CMOS sensor. According to the Japanese company, it is the same size used in its EOS-1D series of professional DSLRs and is nearly 7.5 times larger than its largest available sensor. It also has support for Full HD recording (using 1/60th of its surface area) and can deliver 9.5fps continuous shooting. See the full press release below.






