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" Men's Backpacks " Amazing laptop bags company with international shipping

Various laptop bags for men and women is now available with so fast international shipping and there's some


Men's Backpacks

You are on the go and you appreciate the freedom that only a backpack can offer, but you’re not in grade school anymore. It’s time to move up to a stylish pack designed specifically for your computer, your music and your gear. From the Cool-Mesh™ ventilated back panel, to the internal Media Pocket, to the SafetyCell™ Computer compartment, they’ve designed these cases to enhance your active lifestyle.

Computer Travel Pack
Edge Backpack
ECO Laptop Backpack
Select Backpack
Academic Backpack
SecurePack















A brace of laptop bags

Tech Air has oodles to choose from, and sent us two to take a look at, each designed to cope with our 13.3-inch notebook with ease.

With so many bags on offer we suppose the people at Tech Air are rather daunted by the prospect of giving them names, but the numbers they are known by are not very evocative. We were sent the Z0132 and the 3714. See what we mean? The former is a modern alternative to the classic ‘toploader’, the latter a backpack. The brown and cream colour scheme of the Z0132 is quite appealing, and if you don’t like it there is a black and red alternative. It is a little disappointing that the main zipped compartment does not have a divider. We’d have preferred a separator of some kind so that we could keep our notebook away from paperwork.

When you upgrade a notebook there is often more than just the cost of the computer to consider. Somehow a bright, shiny, new notebook deserves some bright, shiny accessories. And these include a new bag.

But what to choose? Backpack, slipcase, briefcase, casual bag, trolley, there are plenty of options.



There are additional compartments on each side, one secured with a Velcro strop, the other zipped. Again there’s a disappointment in that there are no separate holders for pens, a phone and suchlike. We always like to keep ‘bits and pieces’ in their own secure pockets. There is a small amount of foam padding protecting the main pocket. This probably isn’t enough to ensure complete protection from knocks and we might be tempted to use a neoprene sleeve for added security. That would also give use the ability we desire to separate notebook from papers. The lack of frills mean this bag is quite small and neat. It comes with a shoulder strap, is shower-proof, and has a two year warranty. It is a snip at £19.99. The other bag Tech Air sent us is in a different league. The 3714 is a backpack and if it is pockets you want this is a good place to look for them. It’ll swallow a 13.3 inch notebook easily and leave space for plenty of papers and additional odds and ends. The notebook compartment is well padded, and on the front of its outer section there are five compartments which can perfectly well accommodate things like a mobile phone, calculator (does anyone carry one of those any more?), portable hard drive etc. The main pocket has plenty of additional space, and a divider within it means you ought to be able to keep two sets of papers separated.




 If you carry a music player the ideal place for this is in upper of two front pockets, as this pocket has an exit hole for earphones. The lower front pocket is zipped around three of its four sides and has three pen holders, two compartments that are the right size for train tickets and a further small enclosed pocket which could accommodate a USB drive or two. Given that this pocket has a fair amount of expansion capability we think it is underused. A mesh on its flap would have allowed all manner of odds and ends to be accommodated safely. As it is, we’d be reluctant to put small things in this pocket as they may fall out when it is fully opened. There are four straps – two on each side – which you can use to crush the contents of the main pocket together. Not too hard, obviously. This is the kind of backpack that could become fairly heavy. If you are a light traveller you might even get away with using it as an overnight bag. Which makes it a great pity that there’s no waist strap. The shoulder straps are nicely made, though they could have more padding. There is a very well padded carrying handle too. The 3714 has a lifetime warranty and costs £34.99.

Stylish Laptop Sleeves and Cell Phone Covers

You can say goodbye to the boring old laptop cases of the past - there’s no need to cart your computer around in a dull case when there are so many stylish choices out there! Not only are there cool styles to choose from, laptop bags now also come in the funkiest colors, shapes and styles as well. Depending on where you will be taking your laptop, it’s important that you choose the right case that will both protect your laptop from getting damaged and also look great! Even though your laptop is perfectly safe at home, if you want to bring it to a coffee shop, a friend’s house or to school, it’s very important that you get a laptop sleeve to keep your computer safe. Anything can happen if you carry your laptop around and it’s better to be safe than sorry. Luckily, it’s easy to do it in style with these fashionable laptop sleeves!
Tote your laptop and phone around in style!
How to Choose a Laptop Sleeve
Make sure you buy the right size sleeve for your laptop. Even though some shopping sites might say that their case is a “standard size”, it might just mean 15” which obviously won’t fit every computer! It’s important to get a perfect fit for your laptop to prevent it from shifting around in the case. The snugger the fit, the more protected your laptop is. You can also opt for a laptop messenger bag and many backpacks now have a built in padded protective for your computer. However, laptop sleeves make it easy to transfer your laptop to any bag and it’s the least bulky way to tote it around. The only drawback is that there is no place to put accessories or chargers in a laptop sleeve so make sure you have plenty of room to store those safely.
Case Logic laptop sleeve from Walmart.com, $19.99Cassette laptop sleeve from Topshop.com, $30Black and white fleur laptop sleeve from Amazon.com, $15Treque Snap-On Cover for Blackberry Tour in Pink from WalMart.com, $9.88iFrogz Luxe Blackberry Bold Cell Phone Case in Blue from BestBuy.com, $29.99Burberry Style Checkbox Cherked Pink Brown cover for LG VX11000 Voyager 2 from Amazon.com, $7Good Eye for an iPhone cover in Ginkgo from ModCloth.com, $23.99Stylish Laptop Sleeves and Cell Phone CoversTelegraph Hill laptop sleeve from ModCloth.com, $29.99
Cool Cell Phone Covers
Getting a cool case or cover is a great and simple way to add some style and personality to your cell phone! There are so many options out there that it’s easy to get a bit overwhelmed. Do you want a big Hello Kitty face on the back of your iPhone? Do you want your Blackberry to be covered in pink crystals? Or do you prefer something more simple - a sleek black and white zebra print case or a rubber shell in a bright color? If you get bored of your Hello Kitty phone, it’s super easy to just snap it off and replace it with something else that suits your fancy - some of our friends seem to change their cell phone covers every month! Whether you have a flip phone, iPhone or snazzy Android phone, there is a definitely a case out there that will snap on and off just like a mini wardrobe for your phone! We chose some of our favorites for the Kidzworld gallery!
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Accessories for large laptops

 Lugging around a big laptop is not good for your back. Now that that’s out the way, and you’re still not swayed from owning that admittedly gorgeous 17-inch laptop, here’s a bunch of laptop accessories that will go well with your titan top.
LAPTOP BAGS
It helps naught to have fancy laptop accessories if you don’t even invest in the bare basics, like a suitable laptop bag for your 17-inch laptop. Thankfully, we recently wrote a post on the best laptop bags for large laptops, which will get you started on the right foot. While that posts is worth reading because it recommends specific items, we learnt two main things from buying bags for larger laptops. Firstly, comfort is almost everything, because the side effects of discomfort can be severe. Secondly, aesthetics matter but less than they normally would – a laptop bag should look good, but not at the price of comfort.

EXTERNAL STORAGE
Photo: monkeyc.net / Flickr
Though external storage is recommended for all laptops, people who use a 17-inch laptop are more likely to need it. Why’s that? Well, a huge majority of us who use larger laptops do it for work-related reasons, and whether you’re using yours for design, video-editing, 3D graphics modelling, or anything else resource intensive, you’ll need tons of storage space. Very quickly, that once ‘generous’ seeming 500GB built-in hard drive will be filled up. Avoid that. Fortunately, we share in your pain and have put together a few external hard drive buying guides.
VINYLS
Though these surely don’t count completely as accessories, we love Vinyls and since you’re spending so much money buying a large laptop, it’s only right you customise it with aesthetic laptop accessories. The folks over at Gelaskins have made the Vinyl space their own, with unbelievable products. Though they’re most famous for their MP3 player skins, their laptop skins are also awesome.
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You can ride this bag to office or college! lol

Tired of carrying heavy bags to your college or office? Here's a solution to zip through the problem.
A professor at the Lovely Professional University in Jalandhar [ Images ] has designed a bag called 'Bag-O-Moto', a bag on wheels.

"With office campuses and institutions spread over acres, carrying one's personal belongings alongwith the laptop and books has led to many cases of cervical problems among youngsters. To address this problem, we decided to design a user friendly bag," says Lovi Raj Gupta, professor, LPU.
"Bago-O-Moto is a gadget on four wheels with a steering handle (plus support aid) stretched out, enabling the user to put all his weight on one foot (the user literally mounts on the gadget on one foot) placed on the platform and holding the steer handle with his hands - while pushing the ground with the other foot - which gives the necessary push/thrust to the gadget to move forward," says Lovi Raj Gupta.
The wooden roller board mounted on four strong caster wheels is capable of bearing a weight of 100 kilograms. The platform is further fitted with a collapsible and foldable handle bar, which serves the dual purpose of support handle when you are riding it and a pull-handle when you are using the gadget as a trolley.
The bag which costs Rs 800, can be folded easily once you reach the destination.

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New lawsuit to challenge laptop searches at U.S. border

 Criminal defense lawyers, press photographers and a university student are challenging the Obama administration's search policy permitting officers at U.S. borders to detain travelers' laptop computers and examine their contents even without suspecting the traveler of wrongdoing.
In a federal lawsuit to be filed Tuesday in the Eastern District of New York, the plaintiffs allege that the Department of Homeland Security policy violates constitutional rights to privacy and free speech.
At issue is the government's contention - upheld by two federal appeals courts - that its broad authority to protect the border extends to reviewing information stored in a traveler's laptop, cellphone or other electronic device, even if the traveler is not suspected of involvement in criminal activity. In the government's view, a laptop is no different than a suitcase.
After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the George W. Bush administration took an expansive view of the government's authority at the border in an effort to stop terrorists from entering the country, and to find evidence of terrorist plots.
The Obama administration has followed suit, the plaintiffs said, with a pair of DHS policies issued by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in August 2009 that reaffirmed the policy of suspicionless searches at the border.
"Keeping Americans safe in an increasingly digital world depends on our ability to lawfully screen materials entering the United States," Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said when the policies were issued. "The new directives . . . strike the balance between respecting the civil liberties and privacy of all travelers while ensuring DHS can take the lawful actions necessary to secure our borders."
But the American Civil Liberties Union, which is filing the case on behalf of the plaintiffs, argues that laptops and smartphones, unlike a suitcase of clothes and toiletries, contain highly personal information, from financial records to family photos. The government should have a "reasonable suspicion" that a crime has been or is about to be committed before reviewing such information, the plaintiffs contend.
Justice Department spokesman Charles Miller said that once the lawsuit is filed, "we'll review it and make a determination on how we'll ultimately respond in court."
ACLU attorney Catherine Crump said this case may be more likely to succeed than previous challenges, which involved criminal defendants whose laptops contained child pornography.
"The plaintiffs in our case are extremely sympathetic, and the harms they suffered are grave," Crump said. "I'm optimistic that a judge seeing that will be more inclined to recognize that the Fourth Amendment requires reasonable suspicion for searches that are this invasive."
The plaintiffs are the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL), the National Press Photographers Association and Pascal Abidor. Abidor, a 26-year-old doctoral student and dual U.S.-French citizen, was on an Amtrak train from Montreal to New York to visit family last spring when his laptop was searched and confiscated by CBP officers.
"I had no idea how this would end, what repercussions this would have on any aspect of my life," Abidor said in an interview. "Here my laptop and hard drive were taken away from me, after having done nothing. Having no control over what might happen to me, or over what the government might believe me to be up to, was extremely frightening."
The following account is taken from the complaint and the interview.
On May 1, at an inspection point at the border of Quebec and New York, a CBP officer who had examined Abidor's two passports, which had visas for Jordan, Syria and Lebanon, asked to inspect his belongings. In the train's cafe car, the officer turned on his laptop, ordered him to enter his password and began to examine its contents.
Abidor, whose focus is Islamic studies at Montreal's McGill University, frequently travels internationally to conduct research.
She asked him about personal photos as well as pictures he had downloaded from the Internet for research, including images of rallies by the militant Islamist groups Hamas and Hezbollah. She asked him why he had "this stuff" on his computer, the complaint said. He said that his research focused on the modern history of Shiites in Lebanon.
He was later handcuffed and detained for three hours, and agents asked him to explain why he had so many "symbolic materials" in his possession.
Abidor's laptop and hard drive were returned to him 11 days later. By examining the "last opened" date of files, Abidor saw that officers had examined directory folders on his laptop as well as backup documents stored on his external hard drive. The files included personal photos, a transcript of a chat with his girlfriend, copies of e-mail correspondence, class notes and his tax returns.
Today, Abidor travels with less information on his computer. He "self-censors" photos he downloads to his computer. He said he will have to warn people he interviews for research that U.S. officials may have access to the notes, but fears this will discourage interviewees from being candid.
The NACDL and the New York Civil Liberties Union are co-counsel in the case.
Abidor is among 6,671 travelers whose laptops or other devices were searched between October 2008 and June 2010, according to the ACLU. Slightly less than half - 45 percent - were U.S. citizens.
Eighty-three percent were male, 52 percent identified as white, 10 percent as black and 9 percent as Asian. No category was provided for people of Middle Eastern descent.
The policy also permits agencies under certain circumstances to share the data found on travelers' devices, which was done 282 times between July 2008 and July 2009, according to the ACLU.

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Druva delivers deduping laptop backup

 Three-year-old start-up Druva is opening an office in the UK and delivering global deduplicating backup software for laptops. It's Outlook and Office-aware to reduce network transmission loads and provide user self-service restores, which Druva says Avamar cannot.

The product is called inSynch v4.0 and it resides on laptops as a 7MB agent which works in the background and backs up files to a server over network links. The 40MB InSynch server software can support up to 1,000 laptops and run on physical servers or as a virtual machine.
The laptop agent performs source-based deduplication, calculating a checksum fingerprint for blocks to be backed up and ignores the block if it has been backed up already. The server distributes its most recently-seen checksums to all the connected laptop clients, so individual client laptops get a global view. Druva CEO and co-founder Jaspreet Singh says that because inSynch is app-aware as far as Microsoft's Outlook and Office are concerned it understands about things like mail headers and footers being repeated in multiple blocks inside a PST file and, unlike other reduplication products, can deduplicate them.
The software sniffs or checks what type of network connection the laptop has - VPN, LAN or WAN - and optimises the style of network transmission, with smart bandwidth throttling, so as to minimise the network burden. There is what Singh calls intelligent caching to ensure that inSynch client-server communications are fast and efficient.
Laptop users can restore files or folders on self-service basis, with a search facility enabling them to look for , say, mails sent at a particular time or to a certain person etc. Singh said: "We can restore reduplicated data on the fly. Avamar does not have self-service restore." Files can be selected and examined by the user to see how they changed over time with a file at a particular point in time selected for restore.
When it was suggested that inSynch has similarities to Apple's Time Machine backup, he said: "Time Machine does not have search; it doesn't have deduplication; and it's not application-aware."
Druva was founded in 2007 by people who came from Veritas. They saw a need for laptop backup facilities that reflected the fact that laptops were not stationary and couldn't have a backup regime based on a standard scheduled backup time and constant, reliable network connection. Likewise restore should not be based on file versions but on file changes over time; a continuous data protection scheme in effect. Instead the software uses what Druva calls "smart, opportunistic scheduling".
InSynch functionality will be coming for iPhones and iPads later this year with an enterprise server backup product due in the 2011-2012 period.
The company is headquartered in Puna, India, with an office in Santa Monica and now one in London. Its products are sold in 28 countries, using a reseller channel. It is being funded by the Indian Angel Network and Sequoia Capital, the VC firm that funded Google and many other startups. One aspect of Druva's marketing pitch is that business laptops are very poorly served by backup software. Over 30 per cent of corporate data can reside on laptops yet Druva says 67 per cent of these laptops are not backed up.
It says 750,000 laptops were lost at US airports in 2009, so 67 per cent of them probably had no backup of their data. Other backup suppliers, Singh says, do a poor job. Veritas has an ageing and very cheap product. IBM is not active in this market at all and neither is CA. He says the Druva software just sits in the laptop and works and is better than all of them.
Druva's customer list includes NASA, Emerson Network Power, Xerox, Schlumberger, Stihl and, in the UK, Capita. The US Marine Corps also use Druva's software, particularly in Afghanistan where notebooks are threatened by an unusually severe set of risks. There are more than 450 enterprise installations.
Druva's inSynch v 4.0 costs £60 per client license, with discounts for quantity, and £500 for the server software supporting up to 1,000 clients. ®
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