
Print Power
Lots of digital photo printers are wireless, but the HP LaserJet 1320nw is a heavy-duty printer that handles more than just pics and spits out up to 22 pages per minute with 1,200-dpi laser imaging. The $450 1320nw packs plenty of power: a 133-MHz processor and 16 Mbytes of RAM. It can run on the HP Jetdirect 802.11b/g wireless Ethernet or USB 2.0 with HP Jetdirect Fast Ethernet.

Cool Keys
Microsoft's Ultimate Keyboard is wireless, rechargeable, and illuminated with a cool blue backlight smart enough to know when you've dimmed the lights or left the room. It's not available yet, but Microsoft promises a 30-foot range and metal accents. The company is only teasingly promoting the keyboard. Regardless, get ready to control your PC from your sofa.

Ready, Set, Go Wireless
For those who can't wait to go wireless, IoGear's 2.4-GHz wireless multimedia keyboard/mouse combo is ready for action. A USB receiver, 800-dpi optical mouse, and programmable multimedia keyboard are included for $80. The keyboard offers one-click access to e-mail, CD play and pause, a media player, and Web browsing. To save battery power, the USB receiver serves as a charging cradle for the optical mouse.

Easy To Adapt
Liberate your printer from the bonds of cables with the Lexmark N0450e external adapter. The $150 device connects over a 802.11g network and works with most laser and ink-jet printers, including those from Canon, Hewlett-Packard, and Xerox.

Long Lasting
Logitech's $50 V450 laser cordless mouse for notebooks lasts a year on two AA batteries and features a 2.4-GHz microreceiver. It scrolls horizontally and vertically, and it's Mac- and PC-compatible.

Mouse Support
The PilotMouse Laser Wireless is Kensington's most popular laser desktop design. The $40 mouse has three programmable buttons, a scroll wheel to make navigation and repetitive tasks easier, and a range of up to 30 feet on a 2.4-GHz wireless connection. If the precision of laser tracking doesn't impress, then the five-year warranty and free tech support surely will.

Abracajabra
Two Bluetooth stereo adapters from Jabra will give music fans a way to listen to their tunes without messing with wires. The $50 A120s, due later this summer, works with PCs and other devices with a 3.5-mm jack such as phones. The $60 A125s plugs into the iPod mini, photo, and nano. Both adapters stream music to a Jabra or other Bluetooth stereo headset and feature 10 hours of music.
Open Government: A San Francisco Treat
San Francisco took Obama's pledge of open and transparent government seriously, and launched datasf.org -- its attempt to give the city's data back to its citizens. Developers and users have embraced it, and the city's mayor is already looking ahead....

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