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sold off its Vaio business. Now Toshiba is following suit. Nothing getting sold this time around, but the Japanese company has said it shying away from consumer PCs in certain low-profit regions in favor of beefing up business offerings. Toshiba explains its retreat from the consumer space calling it
stanley cupe volatile and over-dependent on sales scale and volume in a press release from earlier today. This comes right around the time that plummeting consumer
stanley cup laptop sales are actually starting to level out. Still, it hard to hack it down
stanley mugs where they ;ve settled. so-whatever-happened-to-post-pc-1612947222 In the meantime, Toshiba will focus on business-to-business sales and promoting the Internet of Things while it scales consumer sales back and totally pulls out in some unspecified markets. While Toshiba press release doesn ;t specify what regions are affected, a representative has reached out to use to confirm that the U.S. consumer business will remain intact. So if you were hoping for a new ultra-widescreen Toshiba laptop, there still hope so long as you live in the right place. [Toshiba] Update: This post originally stated that Toshiba was scaling back consumer PC sales in all regions and has been updated to reflect that Toshiba US consumer business will remain intact. ComputersLaptopsToshiba Eeez Listen to Thomas Edison s Scary Talking Dolls and Never Sleep Again
launched Dymax Redux, competition
stanley cup to redesign updated versions of the map. The winners will be unveiled sometime this fall, but in the meantime, it worth taking a look
stanley cup back at some of the awesomely tessellated Dymaxion spinoffs that already exist. First, a bit of background. What makes the Dymaxion World map so enduring Its a brilliant mathematical object. Fullers projection
stanley cup bears far less distortion than other flat maps, like the Mercator projection or the Peters projection, and it divides up the globe into a contiguous surface without dividing any of its land masses. Because it isnt a traditional shadow projection its not distorted on one axis or another, so you can read it from any orientation and rearrange its contents in any number of ways. But its the Dymaxions distinctly optimistic point of view that makes it so unique. Patented at the end of World War II, it shows us all seven continents as a single archipelago, or one island in one ocean. It took him decades of tinkering to figure out the right projection, but it was important to him that we see the earth as a single, interconnected network. For the layman, engrossed in belated, war-taught lessons in geography, the Dymaxion World map is a means by which he can see the whole world fairly and all at once, explained LIFE magazine when it published the map in 1943. The writers at LIFE also found a way to rearrange the map to articulate a bit of wartime racism against Japan: The ruthless logic