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Posts Tagged “

Liebermann

Go-L Shufflufagus Introducing the Go-L Shufflufagus. 5,000 terabytes of solid-state storage, vapor-chilled batteries with nanoceramic stickulon paper booster, and 256-character display (on the back; pictures available upon signing of NDA). (You rock, Betty.)

laptops & pcs

Go-L/Liebermann: Photoshop Lazarus

Breaking news! Liebermann can use Photoshop! Also he can continually run his company into the ground, then engage other 'ventures' into giving him money! Also I think he drives an ice cream truck! I mean, seriously, look at this thing. If anybody wants to pay me cash money to healing brush together a masturbatory mutant PDA with a screen just tall (yet thick) enough to display a picture of your glistening hard-on dressed up in a tuxedo and wearing a sign that says "I am a totally legit American businessperson," I do accept freelance work ($10 to touch it). (Thanks, Betty!) More »

laptops & pcs

LiebermannWatch 2004

Alright, team, it looks like it's time to get to work. Libermann/Go-L Computers has released their "all new" batch of "groundbreaking" laptop and desktop PCs, including the "world's first PCI-Express Notebook Computer," an updated 17" Hollywood Gold XPress. I almost hate to give them the publicity, but it's just so much fun to find out which Taiwanese or Korean vendor they're buying from and pawning off as their own now. More »

laptops & pcs

New Go-L Laptop: Who Makes the New Yorker?

So Liebermann has a new version of its New Yorker model that is a dead ringer for an Apple Powerbook 15-inch, which according to the misleading flash splash page will have both a Pentium-M, Centrino, Pentium 4, and Athlon64 inside. Amazing! Since the previously announced New Yorker was a Centrino, I'd say this new model is a Dothan-based Centrino machine, but it doesn't answer the most pressing question: what's the name of laptop manufacturer Liebermann is repackaging/rebranding this model from? Also, the New Yorker looks awfully thin, but the bottom edge doesn't seem even, implying to me that there might be some plastic or something underneath the base that they're occluding with the dark background. The pictures of the previously announced New Yorker look like a slightly different case (note the lack of front plugs). Actually, zooming in on the image, you can see extra thickness on the right side. Shady. (Thanks, 8etty!)
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laptops & pcs

Is Liebermann Inc. fake?

To be perfectly honest, we're now completely bored with this whole "Are they? Aren't they?" controversy over whether or not Liebermann Inc. (the company offering that massive Grand Canyon monitor and a line of super decked out laptops) is a real company. We know that the products they're offering do exist — other companies resell the same products, too — but what no one seems to know for certain is whether Liebermann is actually selling them or not. The Liebermann website, which touts a possibly fictitious "Miguel Liebermann" as the company's founder and lists product specs with a few inaccuracies, hasn't helped their case. Either way, it'll be obvious soon whether or not they're a genuine outfit or not, because either customers will be able to order stuff and receive what they paid for, or they won't. In the meantime, let's not waste any more time thinking about them or giving them any more free publicity. If they're for real, it's up for them to prove it now. Until then, we're moving on, and barring all further mention of Liebermann from the site.

laptops & pcs

Liebermann's too-good-to-be-true laptop?

We're still not entirely sure whether or not Liebermann Inc. is an actual company, but after Monday's post about their Grand Canyon line of massive multi-panel displays, several readers wrote in about another one of Liebermann's products that they'd noticed on their site: an awe-inspiring seventeen-inch laptop that could (almost) make one forget about Apple's seventeen-inch Powerbook. The Hollywood, if it is a real product, has a massive 17-inch WXGA display with a resolution of 1440x900 pixels, a 3.2GHz processor, up to 4GB of RAM, up to an 80GB hard drive, a 128MB video card, a DVD burner, four built-in surround sound speakers and subwoofer, an integrated digital camera for video conferencing, and optional 802.11b/g and Bluetooth.
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laptops & pcs

There's a reason why they call it the Grand Canyon


We think we just found our next monitor: Liebermann Inc. is coming out with a new line of "Grand Canyon" displays, the largest of which is a four panel behemoth that is 92 inches wide and has a resolution of 6400x1200 pixels. There's also a three panel "Cinerama" line which has a maximum size of 57 inches and resolution of 3840x1024.
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