rob enderle

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  • Dell Streak / Mini 5 makes a cameo appearance at MTV

    by 
    Nilay Patel
    Nilay Patel
    04.11.2010

    It's been a while since we've heard much about the Dell Streak / Mini 5, but it seems like the plus-size phone (or mini-size tablet, whichever you prefer) went on a bit of an undercover media promotion tour last week: Viacom MTV exec Greg Clayman tweeted that it's "amazing," while Rob Enderle brought one to the set of John C. Dvorak's Cranky Geeks and said it would launch for around $300 on contract. What does it all mean? We're assuming it's being shown off in an effort to drum up some content partnerships: we've already heard about tie-ins with Amazon's MP3, video, and Kindle stores, and we'd bet that Dell's also going after newspapers, magazines, and video sites hard in an effort to push back at the iPad -- especially since the company is planning to bring out an entire "family of tablets" in the future. Or... it's nothing at all, and AT&T is going to completely wreck this thing before it launches, like it did with the Aero. Dreams or nightmares, the choice is yours.

  • WoW in 3D doesn't work so well

    by 
    Mike Schramm
    Mike Schramm
    02.05.2009

    3D seems to be making a reemergence lately -- there was a 3D commercial on the Super Bowl last week, I'm going to see Coraline in 3D this weekend (Neil Gaiman and stop motion for the win), and Nvidia's 3D Vision cards have recently been integrated with World of Warcraft. But not so fast there: apparently while the system does make WoW stereoscopic (sends a different picture to each eye), and while it does work for some media (apparently watching 3D HD content with the system "feels like your monitor is a window"), analyst Rob Enderle over at TG Daily says WoW in 3D isn't all that amazing.Let's not forget, of course, that this is a game going on four years old, and while it has a terrific art style, and has recieved multiple graphic updates since then, we're still dealing with old technology in terms of a graphic engine. So Enderle says that the 3D really makes you realize that there are no real physics in the game -- "the objects," he says, "look like flat cutouts fanned out in a 3D field." The physical limitations are there, too -- you need a special monitor, apparently, and it's only 22" big, which might seem fine for most, but anyone who works all day on a computer (like yours truly), is used to a little bigger screen.Not to mention that, as he says, any technology that requires you to wear glasses isn't quite as cool as it could be yet. But 3D is obviously making progress, and the more popular it gets, the easier it'll be to make and experience. Maybe someday we'll all see Azeroth as a 3D world around us.

  • Has Blu-ray already lost?

    by 
    Ben Drawbaugh
    Ben Drawbaugh
    08.28.2007

    Tech analyst Rob Enderle -- which supposedly used to believe that Blu-ray would win -- has declared "Blu-ray will lose". He still isn't sure if HD DVD can succeed when faced with upconverters and downloadable content, but because of the price of Blu-ray players, combined with the fact that some of the technology the BDA promised still isn't available, he doesn't see how Sony can come out on top of this one. While his reasons are true, we're not buying just yet. Besides, this is the same guy who's been predicting the death of Apple since 1995.[Via Digital Media Thoughts]