Archive for May 2004

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Accessories (36)

  • Coming soon from Linksys

    The Wireless Weblog got the inside scoop on a whole bunch of new wireless networking gear coming from Linksys later this year. We could care less about the "enterprise-grade" stuff, but they did also get a look at a few of the more consumer-type products Linksys has on the horizon, like: The WRE54G Wireless-G Range Expander (pictured above), a repeater which helps expand the range (duh) of your 802.11g WiFi network. Should be out next month. The WMA54G Wireless-G Media Adapter, which is basically an 802.11g version of their WMA11B Wireless Media Adapter which lets you stream audio and video files off of a PC. Due out in the third quarter of this year. The NSLU2 Network Storage Link for USB 2.0 Disk Drives, which lets you connect a USB device(!) like a hard drive to a home network over Ethernet. Should be out next month.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony's Bluetooth GPS receiver

    From Sony, a new Bluetooth GPS receiver for use with their line of Clie handhelds. Probably for Japan only, but even if this does make it over to the States there will be a lot of peeved Clie owners who wouldn't be able to use the GU-BT1 (pictured near left) even if they wanted to. It turns out that Sony has this annoying habit of removing Bluetooth from their handhelds when they sell them here, like with the PEG-TH55 (pictured at far right), which comes with built-in Bluetooth everywhere except America. Sony, we're not even sure where to start with guys anymore.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • First look at the F2304, HP's new 23-inch widescreen LCD

    ExtremeTech has a review of the F2304, that new 23-inch widescreen LCD screen from HP that we were drooling over last week. They love its super high-resolution (who wouldn't?), but they wish it had come with a remote control, something which would sorta make sense if HP is going to pitch this as an LCD monitor which can double as an HDTV.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sneak peek at Apple's new aluminum Cinema Display?

    Ok, so you're finally going to be able to get a Cinema Display that matches the brushed aluminum of your G5 PowerMac: a friendly anonymous tipster sent us what are supposed to be (and yes, they could be/are probably fake) photos of the new aluminum Cinema Display LCD that Apple is said to be introducing at their Worldwide Developers Conference next month. We don't have an exact screen size for the line (it looks like a 30-incher), just that'll have better resolution and consume less power than previous models.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Gateway's 30-inch LCD HDTV

    ExtremeTech checks out Gateway's 30-inch LCD TV, which is the very same model flat-screen TV we use to watch Elimidate here at Engadget HQ — though you might not actually be able to buy this (or any TV) from Gateway for much longer — they're still sorting out whether or not they're staying in the consumer electronics biz. We sorta hope they do, since they've tended to price things pretty aggressively, forcing other manufacturers to drop prices on their home electronics to stay competitive. Anyway, ExtremeTech doesn't think that the image quality on Gateway's LCD TV is as good as it could be (its contrast is good, while its dark value could be a bit better), but anyone buying this TV is probably more focused on getting a flat-panel HDTV on the cheap than getting the best picture quality possible. And now that the early adopters have all bought theirs, there is a whole generation of consumers who mostly care about the fact that their new TV is thin more than anything else and are probably willing to skimp on something like dark levels in order to save a little money.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony's new XBRITE LCD screens

    A pair of new LCD monitors from Sony using their new XBRITE technology which is crisper and clearer than most LCD screens, though you do have to deal with a little more glare. The 17-inch SDM-HS74P and 19-inch SDM-HS94P should both be available in July. [Via Designtechnica]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The iPod's iPAL

    Capitalizing/cashing in on the success of the iPod, Tivoli Audio has gone and designed a version of the PAL, their minimalist portable FM radio, called (most imaginatively) the iPAL that matches the color scheme of Apple's player and has a line-in jack for use as an external speaker. [Via Tech Digest]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Pretec's 12GB CompactFlash card costs more than a new Honda Civic

    We'd mentioned this once before, but Digital Photography Review is saying that Pretec's 12GB CompactFlash is supposed to retail for nearly $15,000 when it comes out later this year rather than the $9,999 we had heard it was going to cost. At least in Japan it's supposed to retail for that much. So basically you can choose between buying a little piece of plastic with some memory on it that you're probably going to lose anyway, or a brand new 2004 Honda Civic, which actually costs a little less.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • A WiFi SD expansion card from palmOne?

    We'll believe it when we see it, but Brighthand reports that palmOne is getting ready to come out with an SD expansion card for adding WiFi to their Tungsten T3 and Zire 72 handhelds (but definitely not the Treo 600). There are already a ton of these WiFi expansion cards available for Pocket PCs (including a new one from SanDisk that comes with 256MB of memory onboard as well), but maddeningly there still isn't a single one available for Palms. Our sources in the industry tell us that there isn't a technical problem causing the holdup, rather palmOne's intransigence and insistence on squeezing a ridiculously one-sided deal out of the companies that make these expansion cards.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Dell's new multifunction printers

    Dell has decided they're going to hit HP where it hurts: their printer business, and are saying that they're adding a couple of multifunction models to their line up of printers (up until now they've only sold printers that, um, print), an inkjet photo printer and a laser printer aimed at businesses. Both the Dell Photo All-in-One Printer 922 and the MFP Laser Printer 1600n will be able to copy and scan documents, and the laser printer, which has an Ethernet port for sharing it over a network, will also be able to send and receive faxes.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Gadget Tracker: The 802.11g Network TrackerCam

    We seem to recall Craig from GearBits wondering how long it would take for one of these gadgettracker things to surface, but there's a new wireless network video camera from Eageltron that uses 802.11g rather than its slower cousin 802.11b (the big deal about network cameras is that they can connect directly to your home network — no PC needed — and you can access their video stream from anywhere). You have to use the TrackerCam in conjunction with their Compex NetPassage26G-USB adapter if you actually want it to go wireless — something which makes it much lamer than the standalone WiFi cameras from Linksys and D-Link — but if you want to take advantage of the higher quality video signal that the extra bandwidth of 802.11g allows, this is pretty much your only option for now. Oh, and unlike a lot of other gadget tracker-type network cameras, you can also remotely control the camera's pan and tilt.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Pics of Sony's 20GB digital audio player

    Yes, we know about how it makes you convert your MP3s to Sony's weird ATRAC 3 format before you can load them up. And we also realize that it's not any smaller, lighter, or cheaper than the iPod. But that doesn't mean that we can't be oddly fascinated with the photos AV Watch has posted of the VGF-AP1, Sony's first stab at a digital audio player with a hard drive. PS - We're especially impressed that in one of the screenshots they're listening to The Wedding Present (you gotta scroll about two-thirds of the way down to see it). [Via Player Blog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Iomega's new 160GB external hard drive

    You might have forgotten that Iomega, the company that made those Zip Drives that were so ubiquitous a few years before everybody just started using CD burners, was even still around, but they keep on kicking. At least sort of. We're not sure how much longer they'll be in the business of selling external hard drives (it's a tough game), but they've got a new one out, the 160GB USB 2.0 Desktop Hard Drive. Maxtor and LaCie sell their 160GB drives for a little less than the $199.95 that the Iomega retails for, but the USB 2.0 Desktop Hard Drive does come with their Automatic Backup software for, um, making automatic backups.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Biodegradable cardboard speakers

    We're sure the sound on these is absolutely amazing, but NXT has a new line of almost completely bio-degradable cardboard speakers called SoundpaX that pack flat (get it?) for storage and unfold when you want to use them. These definitely aren't the first cardboard speakers we've seen.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • HP's new 23-inch LCD monitor

    CNET was lucky enough to get a first look at the f2304, a beautiful, ultrahigh resolution, widescreen 23-inch LCD monitor from HP that can double as a high-definition TV. It's supposed to retail for just $2,099 when it comes out, which is actually pretty decent for an LCD of this size.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Blu becomes red: Sony's red laser Blu-ray DVD player

    In case you hadn't noticed (and we wouldn't be offended if you hadn't), there's a format war going on over whose high-capacity disc is going to succeed the DVD. We won't bore you with the details this time around (we know we certainly have at least once before), but one of the biggest complaints about the blue laser Blu-ray disc format that Sony has been pushing is that it isn't backwards compatible, and that its players won't be able to read regular DVDs or CDs (which require a red laser — it has something to do with the wavelength of light of each laser). Now they're saying that they've figured out how to get a red laser Blu-ray player (which is sort of a contradiction) to play Blu-ray DVDs, regular DVDs, and CDs. It's still gonna be a couple of years before you can buy one.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Linksys' Wireless-B Media Link for Music is out

    That new wireless digital audio adapter from Linksys that lets you wirelessly stream MP3s and WMAs stored on the hard drive of your PC using 802.11b, is out. The Wireless-B Media Link for Music (which can also tune in to Internet radio stations) actually gives you two options: you can either hook it up to your stereo or attach a couple of speakers to it and use it like a boombox to listen to music anywhere in the house. It's also fully integrated into RealNetworks' Rhapsody online music service, if you swing that way.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Digi-Frame

    From Digi-Frame, a new, um, digital picture frame. The DF-1710 comes with a CD-ROM drive for loading it up with digital photos, optional WiFi if you want to stream photos from another PC, a remote control for slideshows, and either a 10GB or 20GB hard drive. The catch? It costs two grand, which for that kind of money you could get a Tablet PC which does basically the same things plus a lot more. [Via TRFJ]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • ThinkOutside's Stowaway Universal Bluetooth Keyboard for PDAs due out next month

    We've been hearing about Think Outside's Stowaway Universal Bluetooth Keyboard for ages and it sounds like it's finally about to come out next month. Unless for some reason it doesn't, which wouldn't surprise us since for whatever reason making a basic portable Bluetooth wireless keyboard for PDAs and smartphones is some sort of insurmountably complex task for manufacturers. We can't believe that there aren't a half-dozen of these for sale by now — by all rights we should be sick of hearing about Bluetooth keyboards, not praying that someone will deign to sell us one.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Gateway kills off its 20GB MP3 player

    We've been nervous for a while now that Gateway is about to eliminate their entire line of consumer electronics (their $3000 plasma TV forced everybody else to cut prices), and the fact that they've killed off the DMP-X20, their 20GB MP3 player, isn't helping. The DMP-X20, which was basically a rebranded version of e.Digital's Odyssey 1000, never got much love, but we always figured Gateway would get it right the second time around. Doesn't look like there will be one now.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The official digital camera of Kill Bill

    For some unknown reason Kill Bill has an official digital camera, and it's a limited edition black Exilim EX-Z40, Casio's superslim four megapixel digital camera with a 3x optical zoom lens and a 2-inch LCD screen. [Via Digital Photography Blog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Acer's widescreen 17-inch LCD monitor

    We're a sucker for anything widescreen, even going so far in our attempts to satisfy our thirst for all things 16:9 as buying Samsung's 17-inch widescreen LCD, the SyncMaster 172W, even though we could have spent the same amount of money and gotten regular-sized 19-inch monitor. The Inquirer has a review of another 17-inch widescreen LCD, this AL1751W from Acer, which unlike our Samsung, built-in speakers and S-Video and component video inputs for hooking it up to something besides a PC.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • That Virtual Laser Keyboard from iBiz? It's actually not out yet

    Remember that Virtual Laser Keyboard from iBiz that we said last week was coming out? We were wrong. They jumped the gun a little bit with their announcement last week, and now iBiz is saying that it actually isn't quite available yet and that they're still waiting for product certifications for the laser, which we're assuming they have to prove isn't going to be blinding anyone.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The OnAir USB HDTV

    Despite their claims, we're not absolutely, 100% sure that this is the first of its kind, but SASEM's new OnAir USB HDTV is definitely one of the first external HDTV tuners for PCs using USB 2.0 (you can forget about using USB 1.1 — it's just too slow). The OnAir USB HDTV is also compatible with PCs running Microsoft's Windows XP Media Center software — but frustratingly, only for standard-definition broadcasts.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Fendi's Juke Box iPod carrying case

    It actually looks like a terrible way to transport any gadget, but Fendi says that Karl Lagerfeld designed a new bag for them called the Juke Box specifically for carrying around some of the forty iPods he owns (it has space for twelve). Normally we'd think that the  $1,500 price tag would prove to be the obstacle preventing most people from picking one of these up, but in this case, we'd think it'd be the other eleven iPods most people are lacking.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • World's slimmest DVD recorder from Toshiba

    We weren't aware that was was something that really mattered all that much to most people (since it's not like you'll be carrying it around in your pocket), but Toshiba has just announced the world's thinnest DVD recorder. The RD-XS33 also manages to find room for a 160GB hard drive, too.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The first 80GB MP3 player?

    We're pretty sure this is the first 80GB MP3 player: the Xclef 500 from Digital Mind Corporation, which manages to squeeze 80 gigs in there by using one of those larger 2.5-inch hard drives rather than the smaller ones you'll find in the iPod. The result is a much bigger and heavier model than Apple's player, but is comparable to other MP3 players with 2.5-inch drives with Creative's Nomad Zen (in fact, they have a surprisingly straightforward chart comparing the Xclef 500, the Nomad Zen, and the iPod on the site). Anyway, the Xclef 500 also has the usual extras — an FM tuner, support for WMA audio files, a built-in microphone for recording voice memos — but they do also mention that it's possible to upgrade the drive yourself, so it's conceivable you could pop one of those new 100GB hard drives from Toshiba when they come out. [Thanks, Mark]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Even more on the Layla's keyboard

    And since we're still salivating over the prospect of Sony Ericsson's updated version of their P900 smartphone with a built-in keyboard, here's a small pic of what looks like the keyboard itself in action (though it's hard to tell whether it's an actual photo or a just another 3D illustration). [Thanks, Andrew]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Garmin's cf Que 1620: add GPS to Pocket PCs

    So few new Pocket PCs come with CompactFlash card expansion slots these days that you'd wish that they'd do an SD version of this instead (yes, we know how hard that is to do), but Garmin has a new CompactFlash GPS module for Pocket PCs coming out. The cf Que 1620 also has 64MB of internal memory for storing maps, so you don't have to worry about having enough spare storage space on your Pocket PC itself.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The USB Aquarium

    Because you really want a keep a tank filled with water right next to your computer, there's a new USB-powered illuminated aquarium from AddLogix with a high-intensity blue LED and a small motor that creates a current in the water. The USB Mini Desktop Aquarium comes with two fake plastic fish, but we're guessing/hoping that there's no reason you couldn't put a bunch of guppies in there. [Via I4U]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • IOGEAR's stubby WiFi card

    A new 802.11g wireless laptop card from IOGEAR that lops off the part that sticks out so you don't have to pop it out every time you pack up your laptop (though, honestly, it looks the same size as every other wireless card in that photo). The Wireless-G Notebook Network Card should be out now. [Via Wi-Fi Networking News]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Pretec's $10,000 12GB CompactFlash card

    We had just started saving our pennies for one of those $4,500 8GB CompactFlash memory cards when word has just arrived of a new 12GB CompactFlash card from Pretec that's set to sell for ten thousand dollars when it arrives later this year. So basically you can choose between buying a 60-inch high-definition plasma TV or some little plastic card that you're probably going to lose about five minutes after you buy it.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • iBiz's Virtual Laser Keyboard is out

    Our long wait is over: iBiz Technology's Virtual Laser Keyboard, which connects to a PDA or cellphone and actually projects an image of a keyboard that you type on rather than actual physical keys, is finally out. We're not gonna say it doesn't work, because we've tried it out, and it does, but tapping away on a flat surface for more than a few minutes at a time gets tired pretty fast.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sharp's 20GB MP3 player

    Somehow this has slipped totally underneath the radar: Sharp has a 20GB MP3 player out. We don't know much about the HRGB201H, other than that it uses USB 2.0 to connect to a PC, has a decently-sized LCD screen, a design that doesn't exactly blow us away, and is being sold on a French website for the grossly overpriced amount of nearly $500.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Fuji Xerox's perplexing color copier

    We're gonna go out on a limb and say that something got lost in translation in this news story over at Nikkei Net Interactive's about a prototype of a new color copier from Fuji Xerox that can copy whatever is on the screen of a PC. Because as far as we can tell, it doesn't do anything that you couldn't already do by just doing a screen capture (or even busting out a digital camera). There has to be something we're missing, right? We're gonna have to refer this one to Gareth.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The RemoteRemote 2: new remote control for the iPod

    Maybe it's only because we've been paying such close attention lately, but there have been tons of new accessories for the iPod lately, the newest of which is the RemoteRemote 2, a (you guessed it) remote control for the iPod. Do you have to pop a receiver into the top of your iPod for it to work, but the RemoteRemote 2 does use RF (rather than infrared) so it will work through walls and all that stuff. [Via The Unofficial Apple Weblog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Apple (11)

  • Why Apple created an iPod division

    Robert X. Cringely takes it upon himself to explain why Apple created a new division of the company just for the iPod. Mac types aren't going to like this, but he thinks that Steve Jobs could be trying to make it easier for Apple to get out of the business of selling computers: [W]hat if sales don't rise significantly, or they rise for a few quarters and then plateau or even decline? Under that scenario, I can imagine that Apple might stop Mac sales entirely and become a consumer electronics and software company. Think about it. The upgrade to G5 cycle isn't going as well as Apple had hoped it would, but if the company did an Intel upgrade cycle EVERYONE would move up. That's 20 million users instead of four to five million. Such a move would boost profits (the software's already paid for, remember, so the margins can be HUGE) and make the company look even better, at least for awhile... In order to pay for new business adventures, parts of the company that are viewed as likely to die are starved of funds and milked of cash. Look for this to happen eventually for the Mac division. Seems a bit farfetched, but on the other hand, Steve Jobs has a history of making unpopular moves that later on turn out to have been very savvy business decisions.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Next iPod will definitely have a color screen

    MacOSX.com are absolutely, 100% positive that the next version of the iPod is going to have a color screen, but that otherwise it'll be about the same as the iPods that are out now, which we already  sorta knew. Which only raise the question of whether the next iPod will be able to double as a digital photo viewer and connect up to a TV for playing stored video files or whether Apple is saving all that for some even later version of the iPod. [Via The Unofficial Apple Weblog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Obvious iPod engraving

    There are a lot of things that Apple won't engrave onto an iPod for you, but apparently there is at least one you can get away with (click the photo to see it larger). Anyone want to bet that this was engraved by someone else after the fact? Or even more likely, that it's just a good Photoshop job? The lettering of the engraving seems just a little bit off from everything else. [Via Cult of Mac] UPDATE: The owner of the iPod in question surfaces! Mycah writes: "That is my iPod. Heh. And all I did with Photoshop on it was to crop it.It came from Apple that way." Too bad nobody took us up on that bet.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Apple creates iPod division

    Apple is reorganizing itself and creating a new division just for the iPod. Not sure whether we should read too much into this, but there have been some suggestions lately that Apple should spin off the iPod into a separate company. Not that we think that they should.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Ending the iPod mini shortage

    That "shortage" of iPod minis might be coming to an end soon - Hitachi, the company says they're going to double production at the factory in Thailand that makes the tiny 4GB hard drives used in the player.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • More on Apple's new iPod

    The news first leaked out about this a couple of months ago, but someone who claims to have actually played with a prototype of the fourth-generation iPod which is due out sometime soon says that you won't be able to actually watch videos on its color screen (just look at digital photos), but that you will be able to connect it up to a TV via its dock and use that to watch video clips stored on its hard drive. Why you couldn't just watch those clips on the actual screen of the iPod itself is beyond us, except that perhaps Steve Jobs wants to prove a point about how video shouldn't be watched on a small screen. The 4G iPod is also supposed to use Apple's new Home on iPod software which let's you store your Mac's home directory on your iPod and then access it from any Home on iPod-enabled Mac.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • More on Apple's QuickTake, the camera that time forgot

    Several people wrote in that there was actually a second digital camera from Apple (actually, their third, if you count the QuickTake 150), the QuickTake 200, which came out in 1996 and had the same resolution as the QuickTake 100 (640x480), but looked more like a regular camera and had more internal memory (a massive 2 megabytes), a 1.8-inch LCD screen, and even a slot for 5V SmartMedia memory cards. And here are a few of the different links people sent in with more info on the QuickTake 200: Read - MacDirectory Read - AndyBaird.com Read - Apple.hu [Apple's Hungarian site, which still has the QuickTake listed for some reason] [Thanks, Peter, Jon, Jason, and Noah]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Apple's digital camera

    Over at Digital Media Thoughts, Kent Pribbernow wonders whether the next big move for Apple should be a digital camera that could be integrated with iPhoto and maybe even the iPod. We don't think this is going to happen (for a lot of reasons), but what really piqued our interest was something one of the commenters on Kent's post brought up: that Apple already did a digital camera (which was certainly news to us). The QuickTake 100 came out in 1994 and had a VGA quality resolution of 640x480 pixels (what you'll find in a cameraphone these days) and had enough storage space for eight images. Obviously things didn't work out. [Via Digital Media Thoughts]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Problems with Apple's 17-inch Studio Display?

    Apple is being lame and refusing to admit that there is a problem with some of its 17-inch Studio Display, with few hundred people now complaining that the LCD monitors go dim inexplicably and have power lights that flash incessantly. The thing is that most of the defects are cropping up around 18 months, which is after Studio Display's warranty has expired, giving Apple little incentive to make repairs for free. Anyway, some angry Apple customers have put together an online petition. [Via BoingBoing]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Auction for lavender iPod mini canceled

    That supposed lavender iPod mini being sold on eBay that we posted about earlier today? Well, don't bother bidding (not that you would have), because the auction is over — whoever was selling it just mysteriously canceled the auction a couple of days early and lending credence to the theories that this was a very stupid hoax. The jig is up!

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • iRiver coming after Apple, at least sort of

    TechNewsWorld speaks with Jonathan Sasse, the president and CEO of iRiver America (the company behind the iHP-120 [pictured at right], one of the few MP3 players that can hold its own with the iPod), where he talks about the company's future plans and its strategy for taking on Apple. He doesn't get too specific, saying that "Apple can keep the "iPod crown" since the "portable entertainment crown" is still up for grabs", but it's clear that Steve Jobs' decision to focus solely on music is creating a huge opportunity for iRiver, Samsung, Creative and others to see who can dominate the portable media game and be the first to come out with THE industry-defining personal video player. We get why Steve is doing this, but it could turn out to be as short-sighted a move as the one Sony made a few years back when it all but ignored MP3 and digital music. [Via DAPreview]

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Apps (2)

  • Gmail to support mobile devices? Looking good!

    Wow, we sent in a couple suggestions to Google regarding their new Gmail service (it is in beta) and here's the email we got back: >>> You might be interested to hear that we are announcing these upcoming features: - Automatic forwarding of your email to another account - Plain HTML version of Gmail - Import/export Contacts We hope you enjoy Google's approach to email. Sincerely, The Gmail Team >>>> Very cool! We're looking forward to forwarding/notifying our cellphones via SMS when we have new Gmail and since there will be plain HTML, that means access on all/most of our devices. If Google does this right, Gmail might be the best email solution for mobile devices (and you get a gig of storage).

    By Phillip Torrone Read More
  • Advice to TiVo: get your software onto PCs

    Despite the regular predictions of its demise (and we're probably due for another spate any week now), TiVo says it managed to add another 264,000 subscribers last quarter, brining them to a grand total of 1.6 million customers. That is still way short of the kinds of numbers everyone expected them to have by now and they're still losing money, but considering all the competition they have these days it's not so bad, and the company says they'll hit "sustainable profitability" (whatever that means) by the end of their next fiscal year. So here's some free advice for TiVo: create a version of your software that works on a regular PC and then either license it to manufacturers so they can put it on their PCs instead of Microsoft's Media Center operating system or sell it directly to consumers so they can install it themselves (or do both). Like it or not, standalone digital video recorders (like the ones that run TiVo now) are going to disappear and be replaced by both amped-up cable set-top boxes and living room PCs, and since TiVo isn't having much luck getting cable operators to put TiVo software in cable boxes, you're going to have to do the next best thing and try and get yourselves onto PCs. Yes, there are plenty of other excellent options already out there for the PC (we won't bother naming them all), but TiVo has the best user interface, not to mention great brand recognition, which means you have a small window of opportunity to become THE digital video recording software for the living room PC. The alternative is to become merely a footnote in the history of digital entertainment.

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Big Tech (6)

  • Linux startup says HP and Dell's recycling program is a scam

    In some of the most shameless self-promotion we've seen in a while, the co-founder of a tiny Linux startup called Symbio Technologies is saying that HP and Dell's recently announced PC recycling programs are a scam to sell more PCs and put smaller companies like themselves out of business. Symbio sells software that lets you reuse old PCs by turning them into thin-clients (sorta like dumb terminals) that can be used for checking email and running basic applications, and if people are having their PCs recycled rather than reused it's bad for them. We would sympathize with their plight, except that their vitriol is a bit disingenuous since if they don't end up getting recycled most people just end up tossing their old PCs in the trash. It's not like most schools are dying for lots of crappy old PCs to be dumped on their doorstep.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony's 1TB digital video recorder with seven TV tuners

    And almost as if to taunt us, one more from Sony today: a massive digital video recorder called the Type X with more than 1 terabyte of storage and not one, not two, and not even three TV tuners, but SEVEN TV tuners for recording up to seven different shows at the same time (we defy you to even find seven simulataneous TV shows worth recording). This one looks like it might not hit stores for a while. And yes, it'll probably only be for Japan.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • palmOne opens flagship store. At an airport.

    We don't know whether or not they're getting bought out by Dell, but we do know that palmOne has just opened up a new flagship retail store. And no, it's not in SoHo or at the Mall of America, or even near their headquarters in the Bay Area. It's at the International Airport in Philadelphia. We hadn't even been aware that palmOne had a chain of stores, but over the past couple of years they've quietly opened up eleven different "retail locations" (read: kiosks [it's all about kiosks today!]), and say they don't plan to follow the example of either Apple or Gateway and open up a bunch of stores.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Dell to buy palmOne?

    Somehow this makes no sense to us since Dell's only foray into the world of handhelds so far has been with Pocket PCs, but there's a rumor going around that they're going to buy palmOne, the company which makes the Treo 600 and all those Tungsten and Zire PDAs.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • DisConnecting Sony's iPod killer

    Ok, Sony just opened Connect, their new online music store, so where's their iPod killer? Despite it being the perfect time to come out with one (remember that Apple came out with the iTunes Music Store after they came out with the iPod, not before), the Sony execs quoted in this Reuters article sound increasingly pessimistic about the whole thing, with one admitting that right now they are only "aggressively looking into a hard-drive device" and another saying that they hadn't "ruled out" doing one. Neither statement inspires much confidence that we can expect to see a Sony hard-drive player anytime soon. They've been hinting about this for way too long now, and it doesn't sound like they're even close. Maybe they're just waiting for everyone to stop caring.  We know we're getting close to that point.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Nokia and the NBA: together forever

    Nokia has dropped what we can only presume to be a ridiculously large amount of money to become the official phone of the NBA and the WNBA. Usually these things are just meaningless branding excercises, but there is an upside to the deal: if you're a basketball fan and you own the right kind of Nokia phone you'll be able to get game highlights, news, scores, logos, and video clips delivered to your handset. [Via The Wireless Weblog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Computing (27)

  • The gentle sounds of a dying drive

    We doubt that it takes a trained ear to recognise the sound of a hard disk drive in its death throes, but just in case you feel the need to get acquainted with the range of experimental-techno noises that one can make, Hitachi Global Storage Technologies have obliged by putting up a few audio files on their support pages. We particularly like the cheap sci-fi weaponness of "Head stuck to platter (Phaser Noise)". [Via Slashdot Japan]

    By Gareth Edwards Read More
  • Anime sex doll case mod

    Why do we get the feeling that there are more than a few Japanse businessmen (and lonely American geeks) who would pay top dollar to boot up this Mini-ITX small form factor PC that's masquerading as an anime sex doll plastic model?

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The battery life of MP3 players

    Rather than just bitch about how terrible the iPod's battery life is (about eight hours, or hardly enough for our next flight to Tokyo), Reuters actually brings up a few alternatives like Dell's Digital Jukebox, which has a battery that clocks in at around 20 hours and iRiver's iHP-120 (pictured at right), which can last 16 hours before recharging and has a battery that is supposed to survive for four or five years before it needs replacing. The iPod's battery, by contrast, has a life expectancy of only 18 to 24 months. [Via PlayerBlog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • This week's iPod rumor: that it'll have direct audio encoding

    This week's next-generation iPod rumor is that it'll have a microchip for encoding audio files with the iPod itself. Not as a big deal as having a color screen or being able to play videos, but it does mean that in addition to being able to transfer files over from a computer, you'll also be able to hook up your iPod to a CD player or turntable or radio and create AAC audio files (which is the digital audio file format Apple uses) on the fly.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Compact networked storage from Logitec

    Logitec has three Network Attached Storage devices on the way that get a definite "want" rating. Ranging from 160GB to 300GB, they come with the expected LAN connection, plus three USB2.0 ports; additionally, plug a digicam or flash drive into the port on the front and press the "copy" button and your files are zapped onto disk. All models support up to 128 users and 100 shared folders, and at 60 x 213 x 181 mm and 1.4 kg in weight, they're admirably compact. Supported OSs are Windows and Mac OSX. Pricing is Y36,300 for the 160GB version, Y49,500 for the 250GB, and Y59,800 for the 300GB. The first two models are out mid-June in Japan, with the 300GB following in mid-July.

    By Gareth Edwards Read More
  • Sony's PCV-V200G all-in-one desktop PC

    PC Mag review of the PCV-V200G, the latest in Sony's V series of all-in-one desktops, which is basically a like a fat (not flat) LCD 15-inch screen with a PC squeezed into it. The specs actually are not bad: it's got a 2.8GHz processor, an 120GB hard drive, a DVD burner, 512MB of RAM, a wireless keyboard and mouse, and a TV tuner (with digital video recorder software) for recording and watching programs.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Alienware doubles down on video card slots

    Alienware, the elite video game computer maker, is working on a potentially revolutionary technological advance in desktop video. In the 3rd or 4th quarter they will allow users to pop not one, but two, off-the-shelf video cards into their gaming machines. Double the result? Well, maybe not double but according to the company "significant performance gains" can be expected. Most Windows users would never need something like this, but for gamers looking to render their frags in maximum FPS this could become standard issue.

    By Weblogs Inc Read More
  • How to make your PC quiet

    The Register has a guide to quietening your PC, something which wouldn't normally be a big deal except that PCs are starting to show up in parts of the house like the living room where a whirring fan and loud spinning hard drive might actually prove to be a distration while you're watching back-to-back episodes of Elimidate. Or you could just be one of those people who is easily annoyed by a noisy PC — and you certainly aren't alone.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • OLEDs Finally Get Big

    They used to max out at about 7-inch but today Samsung announced they'll offer a 17-inch OLED monitor next year. The monitor will be about 1/3 as thick as an LCD monitor and consumes less power too. We wish it were a widescreen, but instead Samsung is sticking with a high resolution standard format 1600 x 1200 resolution. Not to be outdone, Seiko Epson showed off a 40-inch OLED screen at a press conference today. Just when we finally had our hearts set on Philips' 40-inch LCOS HD TV, isn't it a gadget junky's curse to learn something even more trick is coming along? It all depends on how long you can wait. Philips' LCOS model should be in stores this year (the 60-inch model is already on sale), but should Seiko Epson deign to grace us with this display, it probably won't be available until 2007. [via Slashdot] Read - Samsung Read - Seiko Epson

    By Eric Lin Read More
  • Sony: VAIO Video Pocket to arrive soon

    Sony makes the first move and has decided to create a video iPod killer before Apple can get the jump on them. The VAIO Pocket Video is planned to be launched in the "very near future" — i.e. "earlier than 2005" — according to the chief of the VAIO division, Keiji Kimura. The portable player will include a hard drive, MPEG-4/MPEG-2 video decoding, and (here's the good part), 802.11g-based Wi-Fi for wirelessly streaming video to a TV. It's obvious they're trying come up with a competitor to those new personal video players running on Microsoft's Portable Media Center software, the first of which are due out later this year and are expected to cost around $400. We saw a product manager from Microsoft's TV division deliver a speech earlier this week where he confirmed that you'll be able to buy movies for the PMC from video download services CinemaNow and MovieLink.

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • 40% of PCs to be media PCs by 2008

    Maybe it's because most people will be buying laptops by that point, but research firm Parks Associates projects that 40% home computer sales will be media and entertainment PCs. We're not sure how broadly they're defining a "media PC" (and we're not about to drop a few grand or whatever it costs to actually buy the report), but this somehow seems oddly plausible to us these days. Though since we actually own two Media Center PCs, so perhaps we're not the best judge of these things. [Via Panbo.com]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sort of run OS X on a PC

    We're not eager to be the ones who destroy a PC trying to get this to work, but there's a new PowerPC emulator that'll sort of make it so you can run OS X on a PC (really depends on how loosely you want to define the word "run"). Install PearPC 0.1 at your peril. [Via MacSlash]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony's monolithic Media Center PC

    We hesitate to say that Sony is back, as they're doing such a good job of shooting themselves in the foot by crippling their products with all sorts of annoying copy protections and useless proprietary formats, but you've gotta admit that at least everything they've announced this week looks hot, from the PlayStation Portable, to that 1 terabyte digital video recorder and that multimedia tablet PC. The latest this week is their new monolith-from-2001-like Vaio R line of Media Center Desktops, which look as if they were designed to intimidate everything else in the house. The first in the series, the VGC-RA810G, will have up to 1.6 terabytes of storage, a 3.6GHz processor, 1GB of RAM, a gap in the middle for air cooling the processor (supposed to make things quieter), and a double-layer, dual-format DVD burner. [Via eHomeUpgrade]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Alienware's new Media Center PCs

    Reminding everyone that their computers can be used for purposes other than playing video games, Alienware is introducing three new desktops running on Microsoft's Windows XP Media Center software. And since they're actually meant for use in the living room, the DHS-301, DHS-311, and DHS-321 all look like more like stereo components than regular PCs. [Via Digital Media Thoughts]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • pt's "how to Tuesday" Overclocking your Pocket PC

    Okay, we're moving the "How-to's" to Tuesday, why? To compete with American Idol of course. This week's how-to is how to overclock your Pocket PC. Why would you want to do this? speeeeed of course, up to 50% faster in some cases, but you can also (in theory) get better battery life and better performance if you underclock your device when you don't need all the speed and overclock when you do. There are many different tools and articles that really dive in to the specific results on Pocket PC models; we have links to those at the end of this article. This how-to is to just get you up and running quickly, literally. Ingredients: A PC/Mac whatever to install an application on the Pocket PC XScale Pocket PC (iPAQ 2215, iPAQ 4155, iPAQ 4355, Axim X3, Asus A620, Asus A716, iPAQ 3955, Toshiba e740, Toshiba e750/755, Toshiba e800, Axim X5, iPAQ 5455, 5555,  but should work for all XScale 400MHz Pocket PC's). No fear, that's right. When you do something like this there is a chance, albeit a small one that you can screw up your device- if you're worried about this, don't do it. For our example we're going to use Immiersoft's XCPUScalar. Get the application here and install. There is a trial version that doesn't have all the features activated and you can only use it 15 times for the most part, but it's good enough to test with. If you like it, buy it $12.95 is a small price for that time you'll be getting back and battery life you're saving. After installing, go to Programs > XCPUScalar. Tap the application to start. On the main screen you'll see a few options, for our example we're using a HP 2215. You can slide the slider to adjust the speed, we're going to punch it up to 472 mhz. And that's pretty much it, you can tap OK and speed demon through your apps, or tap File > Cancel to cancel the changes. In the full version the device will adjust based on CPU load, so when nothing is going on it slows down, but when you're playing a game it goes fast. There's a meter tab that gives you a great view of what the current status of CPU, Battery Life, Memory Storage and Memory program. In the advanced section you can set the speed to scale as percent of the CPU load. And last up, under options you can get even more speed by setting frequencies over 500 MHz, this might not work, it might mess up your device and you'll need to soft reset, but it's fun to play around with. So what type of speed gains can you expect? Generally speaking, I noticed a pretty good speed bump, so if you find yourself waiting on apps or run some intense stuff, it might be worth checking out. Besides if you have a Xscale Pocket PC phone, it's cool to say you Overclocked your Phone. Here are results other people are getting with Overclocking tools on their Pocket PC and some links. MTekk: Benchmarking the Overclocked Xda II (with Spb Benchmark, GXMark and PPC Mark). PC Counselor: Benchmark and Battery Life Tests on the HP 2215. ImmierSoft: Overclocking tool we used in this example. Pocket Hack Master: Great Overclocking tool. Comments? Questions? Email me: phillip@flashenabled.com or visit me here : http://www.flashenabled.com  Stay tuned this week for e3 coverage!!

    By Phillip Torrone Read More
  • More stubby WiFi cards

    Responding to our post the other day about IOGEAR's supposedly stubby WiFi card that won't jut out of your laptop (so you won't have to pop it out every time you pack it away in your bag), a couple of people wrote in with suggestions for other non-jutting wireless cards, the PCWA-C300S 802.11g WiFi card from Sony (pictured at right), and 3Com's 11a/b/g Wireless PC Card, which has a special "XJack" antenna that tucks away when not in use. [Thanks, Mike and Wes] Read - PCWA-C300S Read - 3COM 11/a/b/g Wireless PC Card

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The digital kiosk that does it all

    A company called KIS is pushing a couple of new digital kiosks called the KIS 770 and 780 SNAPTRAX that do just about every single thing you'd think could ever be done with a digital kiosk. Each one combines a digital photo printer, an Internet terminal, a WiFi wireless access point, a digital music download station (that can burn CDs or transfer music to an MP3 player or laptop), and can also sell downloads and ringtones for cellphones. We've got this crazy digital kiosk at home, and it can also print out digital photos, access the Internet, download music and ringtones, and burn CDs. It's called a PC, and it's why we think that maybe these things won't catch on.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Supersizing the Mirra Personal Server

    Om Malik reports that Mirra is coming out with a 250GB version of their Mirra Personal Server, which is basically a hard drive that you connect to your home network (over Ethernet only, right now) and that can make automatic backups of any important files. The best part is that you can actually access the files on a Mirra from anywhere over the web, not just from other PCs in the same local area network, so if your laptop gets stolen or wiped out while you're traveling you can still get access to everything you need. Should be out by the end of the month.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • A desktop Tablet PC from Wacom?

    Wacom has been showing off a desktop PC running on Microsoft's Windows XP Tablet PC Edition operating system at the Australian version of CeBIT (you know, that tech trade show nobody goes to anymore). Before you dismiss this as just crazy talk, the idea behind all this is that you'd use one of Wacom's special interactive LCD screens, like the Cintiq 18SX (pictured above), and you could use Windows XP Tablet PC Edition's special handwriting recognition software and all the special applications designed for it just like you would with a regular Tablet PC. You just wouldn't be able to carry it around like a laptop.  [Thanks, Christopher]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Turn your G4 Cube into a G5 Cube

    We were gonna write that the Dress Cube was the easy way to turn your plastic G4 Cube into a sleek, aluminum-sided faux G5 Cube, but it actually sounds like it was a severe pain in the ass to get one of these shipped over from Japan.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • A lavender iPod mini?

    Some woman on eBay is selling what she claims is an extremely rare lavender-colored iPod mini. Either she's color-blind or a huckster, since it looks to us like she's just taken a bad photo of a pink iPod mini, but suffice it to say, there are enough people want to believe in this that the bidding is now up to $420. There is one thing we know for certain: in a few days there is going to be one incredibly disappointed iPod mini owner. [Via iPodlounge]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Longhorn to require PCs from the future

    As if to taunt us not only with the sheer inferiority of our current machines, but also with their imminent obsolescence, word has leaked that the "average" PC running Longhorn (the code-name for Microsoft's next-generation Windows desktop operating system) is expected to have a dual-core 4 to 6GHz processor, a minimum of 2GB of RAM, a 1 terabyte hard drive, 1 gigabit Ethernet (which is still pretty uncommon right now), and a graphics card that's three times as fast as the ones you can buy right now. It's a good thing Longhorn isn't due out until 2006, or a lot of us would be in trouble. [Via Slashdot]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • HUSH's hushed ATX Media PVR

    And speaking of getting a little peace and quiet in the living room, HUSH has a new silent entertainment PC called the ATX Media PVR that besides being completely quiet, also sports a 160GB hard drive for, a DVD burner, 512MB of RAM, and a 2.8GHz processor. [Thanks, CaliberX]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • OMwave's silent DH-1 entertainment PC

    The enterainment PCs keep coming, the latest is the DH-1 from OMwave, which runs its own multimedia software on top of Windows XP rather than using Microsoft's Media Center operating system. Besides having up to a 3.2GHz processor, 500GB hard drive, 5.1 channel surround sound, up to 2GB of RAM, and built-in WiFi, the DH-1 is also designed to run completely silent, something that is actually a big issue when you're trying to watch a DVD and would prefer not to be distracted by the whirring cooling fan and hard drive of your living room PC.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Mobile video editing workstation-in-a-box

    If you're thinking of doing some high-end video editing while on the go (and have the cash for it), you might want to invest in the MaxPac 8200, a $16,900 portable workstation-in-a-box with three 19-inch LCD monitors and space for up to five hard drives. [Via TRFJ]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The VigoBox: a digital set top box that records up to 5 shows at once

    Somehow we're guessing that there aren't going to be enough cable operators to carry all the different obscure digital set top boxes that are cropping by the dozens these days, but Vigoto's Vigobox stands out from the rest if for no other reason than that it has a built-in digital video recorder than can record up to 5 different channels at once and then stream the saved programs to TVs in different parts of the house. [Via Designtechnica]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Your Mac can record HDTV

    In the US, all of the new HDTV cable boxes are required to have a Firewire port on them. And if you have Mac running OS X, all you need to record some high-definition TV on your computer is a long enough Firewire cable — and the right (i.e. free) software. Apple conveniently provides an HDTV-capable recorder in their developer tools, which a crafty coder has pulled out and given to us as a slightly modified, slightly friendlier version. The app still isn't exactly user friendly — apparently even Apple engineers can be known to write applications only other engineers can use — but Mac OS X Hints has some clear instructions on how to use the application to record HD programming, which should do the trick until someone puts a nice, user-friendly face on this recorder.

    By Eric Lin Read More

Cybersecurity (7)

  • Law enforcement hard drive duplicator

    These spy devices are already being used by the police, FBI and auditors to duplicate hard drives in order to collect forensic evidence.  Logicube's new Forensic MD5 is a handheld IDE hard drive data capturing system with data transfers speeds up to 3.3 GB/min. The handheld has built-in USB connectivity and slot access to PCMCIA for laptops. It can also search for hundreds of words while capturing at full speed.

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • Text message spam to get worse. Much worse.

    It might not be much of a problem here yet, but text message spam is going to get worse. You might have yet to receive your first piece of text message spam to your cellphone (we've only received two or three so far), but in South Korea they've already reached the point where 10% of all messages received are spam. It's way too easy send text message spam (you don't even need a phone, you can blast them out from a PC) and they're harder to filter (just try installing a spam filter for text messages on your two-year-old phone!). [Via TechDirt]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Hack turns NEC's DVD burner into a double-layer burner

    This is helpful for about three people, but hackers have created a very unofficial upgrade for NEC's 2100A and 2500A DVD burners that lets them burn to those new double-layer recordable DVDs that can hold twice as much data on them than regular DVD-Rs. Saves you the expense of having to buy a whole new DVD burner (something we're sure NEC will be thrilled about), but we wouldn't recommend this for anyone who isn't prepared to destroy their drive in the process.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Scamming the scammer

    A guy selling his Powerbook on eBay realized he was being scammed by a buyer in Europe with a stolen account — the scam being that you send the Powerbook to what you think is a legit escrow service, but is actually in cahoots with the scammer (one of our good friends actually fell for this once!). You send them whatever you're selling, and they just keep it. So he decided to scam the scammer, sending him the P-P-P-Powerbook, in the form of a tricked out plastic three-ring binder, instead. Even better, the seller marked the value of the package at the full price of a Powerbook, so that the scammer had to pay several hundred dollars in import duties just to get customs to release the package. Anyway, it turns out that the seller has been posting updates about his saga to SomethingAwful.com, and several readers started staking out the barbershop/Internet cafe (we weren't aware these existed) that the scammer had the laptop shipped to, reporting back with glee the scammer's befuddlement upon discovering that he'd been had. [The link is down right now, but MetaFilter has the dish]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Bluetooth Special Interest Group says not to worry about Bluesnarfing

    They sorta have to take this position since they have a special interest in its success, but the Bluetooth Special Interest Group says that all the concerns about Bluesnarfing, Bluejacking, and whatever other ways people have come up with the hack into Bluetooth-enabled cellphones and PDAs are way overblown and that only a small number of devices are actually at risk. Nonetheless, FedEx says they're going to take some extra precautions with the 40,000 Bluetooth-enabled PowerPad mobile computers they are going to start issuing to their couriers next month.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Spies like Comcast?

    Could Comcast use that new combination cable modem/802.11g wireless access point they're carrying from Linksys to snoop around on their subscribers' home networks? Om Malik did a bit of poiking around and found that the Wireless-G Cable Gateway uses something called the Cablehome 1.0 standard, which sounds innocent enough, except that it's basically put into networking gear so that cable operators can see how many computers are attached to your home network and what exactly they're doing. Not a big deal, since they can already monitor what you're doing if they want to, right? Well, the big difference here is that they can actually take things a step further and disable specific devices and computers that are connected to your home network, like a PC that is engaged in illegal file-sharing or, say, Vonage's broadband telephone adapter, which competes with Comcast's Voice over IP service. A big corporation spy on its customers? Nah, it'll never happen.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Teachers snoop around student's cellphone

    We don't know if the student in this story should laugh or sue (probably sue), but Christopher Klump, a high school kid in Pennsylvania, had his cellphone confiscated the other day by school officials, who then proceeded to read all of the student's text messages, listen to his voice mails, and call people in his phone book. And if that wasn't bad enough, they even sent a text message to the Christopher's 10-year-old brother while pretending to be him. One school official claimed that she read a text message on the cellphone from his girlfriend that read "I need a tampon", and since she is really down with all the latest slang and knew that tampon was slang for a large marijuana cigarette she concluded that the student was dealing drugs. (Right lady, I'm gonna go smoke up a phat tampon right now.) Anyway, like you'd expect, Christoper and his parents are filing suit for privacy violations in state and Federal court this week.

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Entertainment (5)

  • Hello Kitty Dreamcast

    Perversely enough, Sega's Dreamcast game console continues to live on, but now as a special Hello Kitty edition that was surely never intended for purchase outside of Japan. [Via Gadget Madness]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The "Treo 660"

    We're not going to bother posting or linking to that photo of the "Treo 660" that's going around. It's obviously a fake, and not even a very good one at that.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • pt's "How-To" Tuesday…How to play purchased music on other systems…

    So you've got an iPod, you go and buy music but then your machines dies, or have many many computers and devices you listen to music on, or maybe sometimes you use an operating system not supported by iTunes, how can you listen to your purchased music? Well, usually you can't- why? Because the songs you purchased are DRM protected, that means you can only listen to them on specific computers and devices. For most folks the limits of a few computers or devices are fine, but for the gadget geek- nope, we have too many computers and devices. It would be like buying a DVD but only being able to watch it in some rooms, or only some TVs. Now to be clear, this isn't a way to take music you bought and give it to someone else, this is so you can listen to your own purchased music on other systems or devices. In fact, your personal info is still in the file. The application we're going to talk about is called hymn, and here is the description from the site: The purpose of hymn is to allow you to exercise your fair-use rights under copyright law. It allows you to free your iTunes Music Store purchases from their DRM restrictions with no sound quality loss. These songs can then be played outside of the iTunes environment, even on operating systems not supported by iTunes. It works on Mac OS X, many unix(-ish) variants and on Windows. A little history hymm started out as "Playfair" which was on Sourceforge, where you could grab the source / program. Then, Apple had requested for it to be removed, so PlayFair outsourced itself to India, where it was later removed, again. Now the application is called "hymn", or "hear your music anywhere". According to the site "Anand Babu has taken official ownership of the project. FSF India (Free Software Foundation of India- http://fsf.org.in/) is providing legal support". How it works hymm decodes the songs you have purchased using the key from your iPod and/or your operating system and make a new file which is not protected, it keeps the cover art and song data as part of the file. Since this is using your key, you can only do this for your songs, which I personally think is fair- they're the songs you bought, you should be able to put them on your other computers or devices. The application works on a Mac or PC and the source code is also available from the hymm site. Here's how to use the application. Download the appropriate application (Mac or PC) from hymn, here: http://hymn-project.org/download.php Install the application as per the instructions. The Mac version allows you to drag and drop the files, for the PC side you need to use the command line version. Mac: It's pretty simple, all you need to do is grab the .m4p files from your music folder and drag them in to the main window. They are usually in: (home)/music/iTunes/iTunes Music/(artist name)/(album name)/ The songs will appear in the list and you can then covert them. Click convert! You'll be asked where you want these files to go and once converted it will become a m4a file, which means you can play it on other systems/devices. Keep in mind that your username/data is still in the file. PC: For the PC you'll need to use a Command Line Interface, which means you'll need to type in what to convert. To make this simple, create a hymn folder on your C: drive. Place the application in there, also move your m4p files in to that folder as well. The music you purchased is usually here: C:\Documents and Settings\(user name)\My Documents\My Music\iTunes\iTunes Music Click the Start Menu, then click Run...Type cmd, this is the command program. Type: cd c:\hymn this will get you to the folder you created in command line mode. Type dir to see a listing of the files in the folder. You should see your m4p files as well as a file called "hymn.exe". Type hymn. You'll see a list of options. To keep this simple, convert one file by typing the following (for this example, our file is called test.m4p). hymn test.m4p You'll notice a small pause, and then when you see the command line again, it's done! Double click "My Computer" then double click the hymn folder, you'll notice there is a new file test.m4a, and this is an unprotected file with all the data as well as your personal data inside of it. When you click once on each file (the m4p as well as the m4a) you'll notice one says "protected and one does not in the side panel. There are many other options in the application as you could gather, from specifying more files, or having the output extension AAC. There ya go, that's it, here are some links. Hymn: http://hymn-project.org/ Hymn manual: http://hymn-project.org/docs/hymn-manual.html

    By Phillip Torrone Read More
  • The NES Buckle

    Yes, it's a belt buckle made from vintage Nintendo controllers. No, you won't look cool wearing it. [Via MetaFilter]

    By Peter Rojas Read More

EVs and Transportation (3)

  • Road markers getting smarter

    Almost missed this article from last week's Circuits section of the New York Times about replacing those reflective road markers with smart, illuminated ones that come with mini-cameras for detecting speeders (drivers are going to love that!) and tracking stolen cars and have built-in solar cells and batteries so they have the power to light up at night or on foggy days. [Thanks, Marcus]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Auto-safety headband

    Australian drivers might all start looking like Tron-inspired tennis players due to some Australian automotive creatives who have developed this safety headband (come on just admit it's a helmet). The headband is made of foam with a shiny cover (just to make it look less lame?), is designed to be worn while driving your car, and will only cost about $30. It's actually not such a bad idea — the Australian Automotive Safety Research Centre say its shown definite safety benefits over years of crash testing, and that in 44% of the car-driver head injuries, the headband could make a difference. Designers think that a prototype will be available at the end of the year, and a Japanese manufacturer is looking at the device for not only car drivers, but passengers as well, along with some non-automotive uses, like for high-impact sports players. We're not so sure (X-treme!) athletes will like the look, and we're little doubtful that this will turn out to be the new airbag, since (and this is why it's a bald guy in the photo) no one who cares about how their hair looks is going to drive around with one of these things on. Hello, helmet head?

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • A Bimmer with WiFi

    If you're a power executive or head of state you don't actually drive yourself around. While they ride in the back of their blacked-out Bimmers, these guys have business to take care of, which is why HP is teaming up with BMW to put build a WiFi access point into custom, high-end models. Apparently installing and setting up a Bluetooth connection between their mobile phone and laptop is too difficult for these guys (hell, it's too difficult for most of us too!), so instead of giving them a headache, HP has created a hotspot that uses a GSM/GPRS connection for a mobile access point. Of course, the BMW will have Bluetooth too, just in case your driver wants to make a hands-free call or something. [Thanks, Anil]

    By Eric Lin Read More

Gaming (21)

  • Video Friday: Phantom-Infinium Labs

    Hey folks, I'm trying out an experiment. On Friday (or maybe another day later) we're going to post videos of a gadget, an interview or something robotic :-] This week we have some exclusive interviews with some of the folks from Infinium Labs, they make the much talked about Phantom game console and game service. Is this the real deal? You decide. Phantom—What is the Phantom Game Service? Video. Phantom—tour of the service: Video. Phantom—the biz model video: Video. Phantom—info for developers: Video. Phantom—hacking the system? Video. All of these are, Windows Media 9 series- thanks Joel! Let me know what you think about the videos and what you'd like to see next. torrone@gmail.com

    By Phillip Torrone Read More
  • The truth is out there... no one cares about an X-Files video game for cellphones

    Maybe they're hoping to cash in on the wave of mid-Nineties nostalgia that we're mere months away from, but clearly waiting for a time when hardly anyone would care elkware has decided it's the right monent to create a line of X-Files video games for cellphones. No specifics on what the games'll be like, but if they're smart they'll rip off Majestic, a game which itself was just an X-Files ripoff.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Lose weight the Dance Dance Revolution way

    CNN writes about the weight-loss wows of DDR (Dance Dance Revolution), the arcade game from Konami which is sorta like a combination of SuperSimon and the old school Nintendo PowerPad. Apparently portly schoolchildren, used to sitting on their asses while playing video games, have found DDR's workouts so beneficial that they're actually losing weight — and some schools have even been incorporating it into PE classes. All of which seems truly sad if you're a critic (aren't we all?), but super fun if you're the lucky fat kid.

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • Sony's PSP and Nintendo's DS to come out the same week in Europe?

    We'd already heard something about the Nintendo DS launching here on the States on November 29th of this year, but casting some doubt that it'll be ready that early s the news from MCV that both Sony and Nintendo are targeting the same week in March of next year to launch both the PlayStation Portable and the Nintendo DS in Europe and the UK. Guess we'll see if one of them blinks and tries to rush their portable console out sooner. And we'll still don't have a concrete date for when the PSP will come out here. [Via PortaGame]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • DIY arcade at home

    Popular Science has a piece on how to bring back the joy of the ol' arcade with a crappy PC. Lots of Street Fighter-lovers are taking matters into their own hands and building their own DIY home arcade systems (you can see lots of pics at ArcadeAtHome.com). The designer of this beauty just mounted a computer into an original Choplifter cabinet, jimmyed the keyboard and controls, and in no time at all (a mere 20 to 40 hours?) he had 2,700 different gaming options. If you close your eyes, you can even pretend like you've travelled back to the 13-year-old you shelling out quarters in the back of that sleazy Pizza Hut arcade.

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • The WI-FI Network Gaming System

    Thrustmaster just announced their new WI-FI Network Gaming System, which lets you connect together a couple of video game consoles over a home network for head-to-head competition or get online to play over the Internet. The frustrating/annoying thing is that this won't be out until October of this year, which seems like an awfully long time to wait, especially considering that Linksys and Netgear already have similar products already out.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Even more from E3!

    Our pal Ethan Rasiel hit E3 last week, and just sent over a bunch of photos of what he spotted there: A shot of some unusual folding keyboard/mouse pad thing that comes with Infinium's Phantom PC game console. A giant Game Boy Advance SP. Keeping it old school with a couple of shots from the Classic Gaming Expo part of E3. It's scary how much of this stuff we've actually owned. [And we couldn't help but include this shot of Ethan getting fed grapes by a couple of booth babes who were promoting the new "Rome: Total War" game.]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Play Wolfenstein 3-D on your Smartphone

    We don't tend to talk too much about specific games or software programs (it's sort of a slippery slope for a gadget blog), but we couldn't help passing along the news that somebody has ported Wolfenstein 3-D, a game on which we wasted a significant percentage of our youth (and the very first first-person-shooter), to Microsoft's Smartphone operating system so you can play it on phones like Motorola's MPx200 and Samsung's i600. [Via MSMobiles]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • More from E3: the Universal Light Gun

    E3 may have ended on Friday, but we're still digesting the last of the pics and reports our correspondents have amassed, like these blurry action shots of the Universal Light Gun, which uses E-Real's Realistic Game Technology. They don't give a whole lot of details about how exactly it works, but they say it'll also work with all sorts of non-gun accessories like swords, boxing gloves, tennis racquets, golf clubs, etc.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Continuing E3 coverage

    To make it easy for you, here's a roundup of all of our coverage of the big E3 video game expo: Spotted at E3: bongo drum controllers for Donkey Kong: Jungle Beat Live from E3: Day Three PSP not expected to be profitable LCD shortage to affect the Nintendo DS? The Tapwave Zodiac at E3 VIA's MoMA Eve portable game console Live from E3: Day Two Sega's new game console? Think again Logitech making peripherals for the PlayStation Portable Nintendo to unveil the N5 at E3... next year Nintendo DS = Nintendo's Game & Watch? Live from E3: Day One Live from E3: It begins PSP vs. DS Final specs for Apex's ApeXtreme PC game console Does the Nintendo DS have Bluetooth or not? What to expect from the Nintendo DS The PistolMouse FPS More, more, more on Sony's PlayStation Portable Sony's PSP is unveiled Make videophone calls with an Xbox Logo for the Nintendo DS? HP's built-to-order gaming PCs The Nintendo DS! A portable console from VIA? Phantom to materialize on November 18th Turn the Game Boy Advance into a text messager GPS attachment for the Game Boy Advance? Sega's new game console? And of course you can always just keep checking gaming.engadget.com (which even has its own RSS feed!) for all the latest video game news from Engadget.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Live from E3: Day three

    Our E3 correspondent, Kevin Christley, offers up his latest report live from the floor show at E3, spotting a ton of great stuff: We got a chance to take a look at the VIA MicroATX motherboard (pictured at right), a fullly functioning PC on a board that fits in a 3.5-inch x 3.5-inch form factor. One of the planned hardware applications for this motherboard is the MOMA Eve handheld gaming console that will be capable of playing ordinary PC games such as Half Life, which we saw running on the demo unit that VIA had set up and demonstrated for us. The next batch of goodies involved hardware and software applications that run on Nintendo's Gameboy Advance.  RedSky Mobile's Pioneer Personal Navigation System is a $200 fully-featured color GPS/Mapping system for turning your GBA into a high-end color GPS handheld. It features an 8-channel GPS receiver with battery back-up (to re-acquire quickly in case of a power failure), a USB port so you can download maps from your PC, and a 3.3v embedded antenna.  Battery life will be from 4 to 6 hours. You must provide your own GBA though. Majesco had an interesting Instant Messenger application for the GBA with a special RF module that plugs into the back of any Gameboy Advance SP or Classic. Unlike other services, there is no registration or monthly charges to chat or send text messages (though only to other similarly outfitted GBAs within a 3 mile radius), and it has an internal battery that allows the unit to receive messages even when the GBA is turned off.  The internal battery can be charged with the standard GBA SP battery charger and it trickle charges when your GBA is turned on. It stores up to 1500 messages and has automatic message retry and delivery confirmation. Suggested retail is $99.00. Mayflash.com was showing off their GBA SP Movie Player for playing movies and MP3s and reading eBooks on a GBA, using your PC to convert or create content that can be put on a CF memory card and plugged into your GBA for viewing. It works with all GBA systems sold worldwide and is selling now for $34.99. Mayflash also showed off the GBA SP AV Adapter that allows you to connect and display any video source (using RCA video, left and right sound inputs) on the GBA screen. It comes with a headphone-out jack for audio output. You can control the volume, brightness, saturation and hue with the GBA's  L and R buttons and the on-screen display options. It's available now for $19.95.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Tapwave Zodiac at E3

    Tapland is at E3 with a report on how the Zodiac, Tapwave's Palm-powered game handheld, is faring at the show. There have been a few bits of good news, like that CompUSA is going to sell the Zodiac nationwide, but otherwise it sounds like they've gotten a little lost in the shuffle lately. Although, they did get Gary Coleman to show up, so it can't be all bad.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • VIA's MoMA Eve portable game console

    As expected, VIA introduced a portable game console of their own yesterday (why does every manufacturer suddently think they should have one of these?). The MoMA Eve is actually designed to play PC games as well as custom-built games, and will have a 533MHz processor, a 20GB hard drive for storing games (and videos), built-in WiFi, and a CompactFlash memory card slot. Games can be uploaded from a PC, but here's where things get weird: you have to have a SIM card that'll let you play games that you've purchased on the console, but if you want to spend a little more, you can buy a second SIM card that will completely unlock the MoMA Eve entirely. There are a lot of problems here besides a complicated content protection system. First, the price. The MoMA Eve is supposed to cost "under $500" which means it's going to cost a lot more than most people will want to pay for a portable game console, even with all those fancy features. Second, the design. Yeah, we love the white plastic, but did they not realize that without folding up there's no way anyone can carry one of these around?

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Live from E3: Day Two

    Engadget E3 correspondent Kevin Christley has his second report from the floor show of the E3 gaming expo: Our first impressions: The Nintendo DS's second screen turns out to be a software configurable touchpad (without raised bumps as previously speculated).  The unit is a bit bigger than the current Game Boy Advance, more shaped like a checkbook with dual 3-inch screens, one on top and one on the bottom next to the standard Nintendo gamepad. It is fully Game Boy Advance compatible (it has a slot for the carts), and has a DS cart slot to take advantage of the new dual screen features as well.   There were quite a few games (working and very playable), such as PacN'Roll, a Gundam game, a Submarine demo, Pokemon, and more.  as PacN'Roll, a Gundam game, a Submarine demo, Pokemon, and more. The cool thing is that the unit has a wireless feature and could communicate with 3 other DS's with built-in instant messaging software that not only lets you tap out the letters using a Palm-type software keyboard, but lets you draw as well.  All in all, it's a very promising handheld, and seems poised to attract the adult crowd as well as the kids.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sega's new game console? Think again

    How remember that supposedly huge announcement from Sega, the one where everyone thought they were going to announce their dramatic return to the console business? It turned out that the big news was that they're co-publishing the Matrix Online with Warner Bros. Big deal! [Via Blogging E3]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Is there still an N-Gage 2 on the way?

    The reasons why are bit more complicated than we could be bothered to explain, but AllAboutSymbian thinks they've found a clue that Nokia, gluttons for punishment that they are, have an actual N-Gage 2 in the works, not just the N-Gage QD (pictured at right) that's already been announced. [Via Portagame]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Live from E3: Day One

    More pics from pt, who is reporting live for us from the E3 floor show: The logo for the Nintendo DS? 1 The actually not bad-looking controller for the Phantom PC game console from Infinium Labs. And the Phantom console itself. The N-Gage lives! (Sort of) The EyeToy in action.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Live from E3: It begins

    There's at least one moblog that's getting updated regularly, and that's one run by pt, Engadget columnist, who is currently posting up photos live from E3. He'll have some proper reports for us soon (the WiFi there is spotty), but in the meantime, we'll post a few teasers to set the scene:

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Pac-Manhattan

    We strongly recommend every city get it's own version of Pac-Manhattan, (Pac-Fresno?). The Sunday New York Times features a Manhattan "big game" — the kind we wrote about last week with the Manchester-based interactive city game, Uncle Roy All Around You — but this is a game we might actually really want to play. New York University students from an Interactive Telecommunications Program created Pac-Manhattan and recently test drove the competition dashing through downtown, communicating via cell phone. Pac-Man and the various Ghosts update their locations by phone, then a central team plots the player's movements. The resulting screen plays a lot like the original classic. We even like the fun Pac-outfits: Pac-Man's yellow profile jutting out fin-like and the Ghosts own brightly-colored ponchos. What's with the blue ghost though, he looks a little intense (or winded) doesn't he?   

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • A portable game console from VIA?

    Details are sketchy right now, but we're hearing that VIA Technologies is going to unveil a portable game console of their own at this week's E3 video game show. Introducing a new handheld gamer when your name isn't Nintendo or Sega is a tough prospect even during the best of times (just ask Nokia or Tapwave about it), but to try and launch it the same week as Sony's PlayStation Portable or Nintendo's DS is crazy. On the other hand, VIA's portable console is supposed to play PC games (albeit older ones), so the library of games is there, assuming there is some means for transferring games from a PC, that is. By the way, VIA's chips were originally supposed to power the ApeXtreme PC gaming console from Apex that is coming out soon, but they were unceremoniously dropped a couple of months ago in favor of AMD.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sega's new game console?

    Amongst the most salacious of all the pre-E3 speculation is the prospect of Sega re-entering the game console market after a hiatus of several years following the honorable failure of the Dreamcast (hey, we owned one!). There was also a rumour that Samsung, possibly in cahoots with EA, was planning a portable console of their own. This one was rapidly debunked, but nobody seems ready to say that Sega is abosolutely, positively NOT going to introduce a new game console this year. [Thanks, Elchin]

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Laptops (7)

  • 40 companies are test driving the OQO

    OQO has selected a lucky group of 40 major potential corporate customers to test drive the OQO Model 01. They are pretty confident — and we can hardly disagree — that "OQO will sell every unit it can make during the first year or two." The Model 01 — which measures 4.9 inches x 3.4 inches x 0.9 inches — will, supposedly, be available in the fall. It will have a 1GHz CPU, 20GB hard drive, 256MB RAM, Windows XP, 800x480 Wide-VGA 5-inch screen, 802.11b wireless, Bluetooth, FireWire (1394), USB 1.1 and a digital pen.

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • A PowerBook clone from ASUS

    Sometimes it seems like the only thing that ASUS knows how to do only one thing these days, and that's rip off Apple. Not that we have a problem with it. We've mentioned their knockoff of the iBook a couple of times, their latest is the W1N, a laptop made of brushed aluminum that's reminiscent of the PowerBook and has a 15.4-inch widescreen LCD screen (just like the PowerBook!), a 1.7GHz processor, up to an 80GB hard drive, up to 2GB of RAM, a dual-format DVD burner, a built-in subwoofer so you can get a little more bounce for the ounce out of its speakers, and built-in 802.11g WiFi. Someone please tell us they know a place we can buy one. [Thanks, Bill]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony VAIO A Series - high-end multimedia laptops

    Another gem from Sony is part of the newly launched VAIO A series of multimedia laptops. At the top of the series, the VGN-A190 features a Pentium M processor 735 with 1.70 GHz; a 17-inch WUXGA (1920x1200) display with Sony's XBRITE technology; DVD+-RW drive and 802.11b/g connectivity. The optional AV Dock transforms the laptop into a fully loaded entertainment system featuring features a TV tuner, personal video recorder, high-end digital audio amplifier and premium Sony speakers. If you're close to a Sony Style store go check it out, we just played with it this week at the 54th street store in NYC. [Via Mobile Mag]

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • Sony bringing world's thinnest laptop to America

    When it came out in Japan late last year there was a lot of speculation over whether Sony would ever bring their superslim half-inch thick Vaio X505 laptop to the States. Well, they've just confirmed that it'll go on sale here next month, but you'll pay handsomely to induce some laptop envy in your friends — this baby is gonna have a sticker price of three grand.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Casio's laptop fuel cell

    Casio is showing off what is supposed to be the world's smallest fuel cell for laptops, one that's about the same size as a laptop's lithium-ion battery but that can provide four times the juice, or up to 16 hours of power (which is finally long enough for those New York to Singapore flights we're always taking). Should be out in 2007.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony's new 17-inch widescreen laptop

    Second stunner from Sony today: there's nothing official yet, but Sony will follow the lead of just about every other manufacturer and introduce a 17-inch widescreen laptop that will supposedly come with either a 1.8GHz or 2.0GHz processor, an 80GB hard drive, and an 128MB video card. More details are sure to come. [Thanks, Bill]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Averatec's new budget laptop

    PC Mag review of Averatec's new budget laptop, the AV3225HS, which comes with a 1.67GHz processor, 512MB of RAM, a 40GB hard drive, a DVD/CD-RW combination drive, a 12.1-inch LCD screen, and built-in 802.11g WiFi. Not bad for a laptop that goes for under a grand.

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Microsoft (4)

  • A $50 iPod from Microsoft?

    We always figured it would be Sony that came gunning for Apple, but apparently Yusuf Mehdi, the corporate VP of MSN, told people at a conference that Microsoft was going to go head-to-head against Apple and sell its own line of Microsoft-branded MP3 players that would have the "look and feel" of the iPod and cost as little as $50. We're not sure whether he was just shooting his mouth off or not, but he did say that the release of the players would coincide with the launch of their new online music store later this year. Could this be related to the Xbox 2 player we first heard rumblings about back in April? [Via MacMinute] UPDATE: Ok, this one got really screwed up. Click here for a correction and full explantion of what Yusuf Mehdi really said.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Microsoft to quit making WiFi gear

    After a good run of just over a year and a half, Microsoft is ditching out of the wireless home networking game, and killing their line of WiFi access points, cards, and USB adapters. Which is a shame, since despite the evil empire stuff, they actually made some good products. We picked up an 802.11g USB adapter from Linksys for one of our Media Center PCs a few weeks back and had to return it because it was so awful. We replaced it with a similar model from Microsoft, which has worked like a charm. Anyway, we're not exactly sure why Microsoft is doing this, since sales had been pretty solid, except that WiFi gear is becoming a commodity, and it's hard to make money in a commodity business. [Via Wi-Fi Networking News]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Microsoft wants hard drives of the future to come with Flash memory

    Besides requiring customers to buy crazy advanced new PCs that may or may not exist when the next version of Windows comes out in a couple of years, Microsoft is also trying to get hard drive manufacturers to start building banks of Flash memory alongside their hard drives so that these PCs of the future can use a feature called "SuperFetch" which tries to predict what data is needed next and store it in a special cache. You could just do it with some of the 2GB of RAM that a PC running Longhorn will require, but using Flash memory would save power and reduce the risk of any accidental loss of data.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Microsoft and HP's new Media Center PC concept design

    Microsoft and HP are showing off a concept design for a new kind of media PC with a built-in digital set top box, dual TV tuners for recording more than one show at a time (this is taking them long enough), and a remote control with a biometric fingerprint scanner so that the PC can identify specific users and load up their personalized content and preferences.

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Mobile (56)

  • California approves cellphone Bill of Rights

    The California Public Utility Commission just approved a cellphone "Bill of Rights" that gives subscribers 30 days to cancel to their contracts after signing up (AT&T Wireless already offers this nationwide) and requires that rates be spelled out more clearly, important parts of subscribers' contracts can't be buried in fine print, and (perhaps our favorite part of this) carriers can't try to mask recovery fees as mandatory government taxes. But don't get too excited (or move to California) just yet. Governator Arnold Schwarnegger opposes the ruling, saying it'll be bad for business, and the industry trade group that represents the wireless carriers is mulling a lawsuit to overturn the Bill of Rights.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Orange UK introduces important service -- helping Brits find nearest pub

    Orange UK are expanding their "Find Nearest" service to work with text messaging, so that for a small fee you can text the word "PUB" to the number "300" and you'll instantly get a message back with the location of the nearest pub (and we're sure this will prove popular in Britain, a place where being too far away from a pub induces massive anxiety in many people). If you're lost, you just text the word "ME" and they'll tell you where you are. Of course, the somewhat unsettling implication of all this is that the cellphone company already knows where you are, but at at least you'll be able to find a pub in which to forget about all that. [Via Textually.org]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • AT&T Wireless sued for poor service in California

    Two women in California are suing AT&T Wireless, saying that the carrier grew too quickly, adding new subscribers that they knew they couldn't handle and knowingly letting the quality of its service slide, but then wouldn't let the women get out of the $175 early cancellation fee when they wanted to jump ship. Cingular, we believe the expression is called "buyer's remorse".

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Vending machines as WiFi infrastructure

    This isn't the first time we've heard the idea of using vending machines as WiFi access points, but it seems like a consortium of Japanese companies will be the first to take the plunge. Hawking (great name, folks) plans to start with metropolitan areas of Nagoya and have 1,000 WiFi'd drink machines available nationwide by the end of the year; access via them will be free. Given that there are 2.6 million drink machines in Japan (that's the subcategory, mind, not vending machines in total), you could go an awful long way towards blanket WiFi coverage if you hooked them all up, though we have to admit that the point of the whole exercise rather escapes us.

    By Gareth Edwards Read More
  • Texting on the cheap

    As obsessive cellphone users know, texting can get rather expensive. A new service, called Chatterbox is aiming to lower the cost by sending the messages over the Internet, bypassing your carrier's toll system in the process. Anyone with a GPRS phone or PDA can download the software, which works by sending the message as data over the phone's Internet connection to their servers and translating it back to the receiving phone. The software was originally developed for the deaf (one of the owners is deaf herself), who can rack up sizable monthly bills — imagine how expensive (and physically painful) all your mobile conversations, including those two hour ones with your mother, would be if there were all done via texting.

    By Simon Spagnoletti Read More
  • NEC's Power Handheld

    Spotted at the CeBIT America trade show this week: NEC's version of the Power Handheld, a BlackBerry-like mobile communicator designed by Bsquare that runs on a slick version of Windows CE.NET that mimics the look of Windows XP and has 128MB of RAM, a 400MHz processor, a large color LCD screen (at least for large one of these things), and an SD expansion card slot for adding either Bluetooth or WiFi (but not both). There's actually a version of it (pictured at right) that's coming out in the UK soon, and apparently NEC just licensed the design from Bsquare.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Handheld legal hijinks

    Brighthand has just updated its ongoing summary of all the wacky legal battles that have plagued the handheld industry over the years (noting that Research In Motion, the company behind the BlackBerry, seems to be involved in half of them), reminding us all of the antics we'd forgotten (or never knew in the first place) like how Piliot Pen Corporation forced Palm to drop the "Pilot" from "PalmPilot", how Palm sued Microsoft when they originally called the Pocket PC the "Palm PC", and how RIM sued Handspring and Palm for violating its patent on thumb keyboard design.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Verizon letting DSL subscribers cancel their landlines

    Not exactly a gadget, but obviously in response to customers who want to ditch their landlines and switch entirely to cellphones and/or Voice over IP services like Vonage, Verizon has been quietly waiving the requirement that subscribers to their DSL service also pay for a telephone landline. As long as they also sign up for Verizon Wireless cellphone service, that is. The local phone companies like to pretend that there is some technical reason why you have to have a phone line to get DSL (there isn't), but apart from Qwest (and now Verizon), all of them require you to pay for one anyway.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Wireless Internet from the top of the Empire State Building

    Either it's some sort of mind-control experiment or they're really serious about wireless Internet, but TowerStream says they're going to put a giant tower on top of the Empire State Building so they can cover Manhattan with wireless broadband (insert obvious King Kong reference here). They say they're using WiMax (which is like a long-distance version of WiFi), or at least what will pass for WiMax when the actual standard gets ratified next year and people start making equipment for it. [Via The Feature]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • 802.11b in cellphones soon

    Japanese component manufacturer Alps Electric has announced a miniature 802.11b wireless LAN chip that it says should be appearing in an unspecified and probably Japan-only cellphone soon. Power consumption, one of the main hurdles to putting 802.11b in cellphones, looks like it won't be a problem, as the new chip only draws about a milliwatt (around 50 milliwatts was the previous norm, so Alps says). They're planning to get the chip into PDAs and digital cameras too, but it looks like talks with the phone manufacturer(s) are furthest along at the moment.

    By Gareth Edwards Read More
  • Is one out of every four MP3 players sold an iPod?

    BusinessWeek decides to kick the tires on the widely held assumption that one out of every four MP3 players sold worldwide is an iPod, and finds that the truth is little murkier. Since there aren't any reliable sales figures outside of Japan, the US, and Western Europe, you have to look at the number of chips for digital audio players that were sold last year (15 million) and then compare that figure with the number of iPods sold (1.5 million), something which would give Apple about 10% marketshare. They're careful to note that this includes all types of MP3 players, including Flash-based and hard drive-based, but BusinessWeek doesn't say what the numbers look like if you only consider players with hard drives. We're sure that it's the percentages for that are way more impressive.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • DoCoMo prepares to supercharge 3G

    It's no secret that 2005 is the year when Japanese carrier NTT DoCoMo is planning to boost its 3G FOMA service to far higher speeds than at present, but a report by the government's Telecommunications Council highlights some of the results DoCoMo's getting from real-world tests. 3-4Mbps walking around indoors, 2-8Mbps in a "drive-by test" (love the jargon) in a moving car, and a maximum of 14Mbps if you're standing fairly still outside is the upshot. That all sounds pretty good if you consider that even with a so-called 20Mbps DSL connection at home it's quite possible to end up only getting 2Mbps or so of actual throughput if you're unlucky enough to be a long way from the phone company's switch.

    By Gareth Edwards Read More
  • Verizon won't forgive debt on donated cellphone

    Following up on our story from last week about a senior citizen who donated his cellphone to charity, forgot to cancel the service, and subsequently got stuck with a $1,200 bill after somebody else got the phone and racked up tons of charges, Verizon Wireless says that they're not going to let things slide and that Harold Dunn will have to pay up. [Via Mobile Gadget News]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Will the Cingular/AT&T Wireless merger mean higher prices?

    We've definitely encountered two schools of thought about whether or not Cingular's acquisition of AT&T Wireless is going to lead to higher or lower prices for cellular subscribers. It certainly seems intuitive that fewer competitors means higher prices, and that's what a recent report from The Phoenix Center (who we've never heard of before) is predicting, there is an argument to be made that a more powerful Cingular will be better able to take on reigning heavyweight Verizon Wireless, and force them into a price war.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Cingular's high-speed 3G network

    Not sure whether this is news or just news to us, but Cingular is going to start testing their new high-speed 3G cellular network in Atlanta this summer. And just like you'd expect from the American cellphone industry, they'll be using a completely different networking standard (called UMTS) than the ones that Sprint and Verizon are going to be rolling out (T-Mobile hasn't said what they're doing yet). Anyway, it's going to be at least a couple more years before they'll offer 3G nationwide, which seems like an awfully long time to wait, doesn't it? [Via Wi-Fi Networking News]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • More on the Iraq cameraphone ban that wasn't

    Just as we suspected, those news stories about Donald Rumsfeld banning cameraphones from Iraq turned out to be false. Xeni Jardin tracked down the real story: that the military issued a directive last month telling commanders to monitor usage of wireless devices — including cameraphones — at military bases, and make sure that they use encryption whenever possible and that they not be used to store or transmit classified information.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Cingular and T-Mobile end marriage of convenience

    We could usually care less about all the insider baseball stuff about the cellphone business, but since this might actually affect real people it seems worth mentioning that T-Mobile and Cingular are ending the deal they cut three years ago where each carrier gained access to the other's cellular network. Three years ago this marriage of convenience made sense since neither had enough spectrum to cover the entire country — T-Mobile needed coverage in California and Nevada and Cingular needed coverage in New York. But now that they've bought AT&T Wireless, which has its own network on the East Coast, Cingular has realized that they don't need T-Mobile anymore and is bringing their little arrangement to a close. This doesn't mean that suddenly T-Mobile customers on the West Coast are going to find themselves without service, since T-Mobile is spending $2.3 billion to buy the spectrum they need from Cingular, but despite assurances to the contrary, Om Malik predicts that the next few months could be a little rough for subscribers in California while they make the transition.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • SoniqCast'sElement Aireo MP3 player with built-in WiFi

    It sounds like we'll be waiting a long, long time (maybe forever) for Apple to go wireless and add AirPort Extreme the iPod, but CNET has a review of the first and only MP3 player (so far) to come with built-in WiFi, the Element Aireo from SoniqCast. We're not convinced that just being able to cut the cord is worth its $300 price tag or the fact that it only has a puny 1.5GB of storage (though this might actually be an advantage once you realize how long it'd take to transfer 20GB music over an 802.11b), but SoniqCast is promising a software upgrade for the Aireo that'll let users wirelessly swap tunes with each other, which is something we've wanted to see for a long time.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Which ISPs will let you share your wireless connection?

    Glenn Fleishman is trying to compile a list over at Wi-Fi Networking News of all the DSL and cable Internet service providers who are actually cool with their subscribers setting up open wireless networks and freely sharing their Internet connections. We already knew that big boys like Time-Warner don't (and are prepared to go after customers who do), and Glenn lists only Bway.net, Butler Networks, and Easystreet as explicitly allowing noncommercial wireless sharing.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Number portability for all!

    Today's the first day that cellphone number portability goes into effect for the entire country. Didn't this already happen back in November? Yeah, but only for the top 100 markets. Now the FCC is requiring portability for the rest of the country (about 25% or so of the population) that wasn't covered before. And just like last time, today is probably not a good day to try and switch your service.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • TDK Free Styla claims to bring P2P to cellphones

    This Bluetooth USB dongle for PCs is exactly the same as the one you might already have but TDK is marketing it with a different spin. They're pitching it as a cheaper way to transfer downloaded pics and ringtones than using airtime to do it and that you can use it in conjunction with Kazaa and other P2P applications to download ringtones and other content for free rather than purchase it the regular way.They're also bundling it with a software application that helps users manage and sync phone contacts, ringtones, and text messages with a PC, and they're marketing it to an audience that has probably never used Bluetooth with their phones and PCs. Costs about 50% more than a regular BT dongle.

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • Rumsfeld bans cameraphones in Iraq?

    Concerned that cameraphones might have been the source of some of those photos that leaked out of abuse at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, it's being reported that Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has banned cellphones with built-in digital cameras from all US army facilities in Iraq. [Via MetaFilter] UPDATE: News imitates farce? This story about Rumsfeld banning cameraphones looks suspiciously similar to a fake news story posted a couple of weeks ago on TheDailyFarce. Even some of the quotes are similar. It looks like somebody may have gotten duped.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Donate a used cellphone, get a bill for $1,200

    Speaking of recycling your old gadgets, it's probably a good idea to cancel the service on your old cellphone before you donate it to charity. Or you could end up with a huge bill like the one a senior citizen in Michigan is stuck with because whoever ended up with his donated phone managed to rack up over a thousand dollars worth of charges. [Via Mobile Gadget News]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Text messaging finally catching on in the US

    We'd been noticing that our friends were using text messaging a lot more than they used to, but since we're not the types to extrapolate from our own experiences, we couldn't tell how widespread texting had really become. Now confirming our suspicions is a new study which says that the US is finally starting to catch up with Europe and Asia when it comes to text messaging, and that now more than one-third of cellphone subscribers send text messages. The one metric they do leave out is the volume of text messages sent every year, and we'll bet that it's still way, way higher in Europe than it is here. [Via TechDirt]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • BT rolling out Bluephone

    We heard the first inklings about this last year, and now BT (British Telecom) and Vodafone are launching the Bluephone, a new cellphone that uses a landline connection whenever you're at home or at the office, and connects to the regular cellular network everywhere else. The phones themselves use Bluetooth to connect up to what we're guessing must be wireless base stations that you set up at home or at work. There's no reason why Verizon, for instance, couldn't do something similar here. [Via Blueserker]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Japanese legislators busted for sending text messages in Parliament

    We gotta say that the Japanese Parliament sounds a lot more fun than our Congress. Apparently things got so raucous at one point that the Japanese Prime Minister, Junichiro Koizumi had to ask legislators to stop reading comic books and sending text messages on their cellphones and pay attention. [Via SmartMobs]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • RMS is like voicemail for cellphones. Except that we already have that.

    First it was SMS, which is just basic text messaging. Then there was MMS, which is like text messaging except you can send pics and video clips (and still has yet to really catch on here), now a company called HeyAnita is trying to push RMS, or Rapid Message Service, which, believe it or not, basically lets you send a voice message to another person. We liked it better when it was called "voicemail". We can sorta see why it'd be helpful, like if you don't want to tap out a message AND you don't actually want to have a conversation with someone (we've all prayed for the machine to pick up at one point or another, but there's a much simpler solution — the cellphone carriers should create some sort of special prefix that you can dial if you want your call to go straight to voicemail. It'd be way easier than this. Don't tell us this can't be done. [Via GigaOm]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • DIY cellphone tracker

    The world might not be ready for engineer and avid DIYer Slava Persion — through step-by-step instructions he shows us how to make our very own cellphone tracking device. "Anyone with a programming and electronic background can do it" he says, which pretty much eliminates almost everyone right off the bat. We're not even going to try to describe the method, better to check it out on his website. He's concerned about cellphone tracking's privacy infringement issues, but he avidly adds one positive application of cell phone tracking: "Hostage situations, when there is no visability [sic] but the bad guy is using a cell phone. The sniper can then easily pin point the location of his cell phone and fire a few rounds to the right and the left of the phone." Um, that's exactly what we were thinking. He site also includes experiments called Sound Pain and Fun With Microwave, and he gave a lecture at the 10th annual Information Warfare Conference about electromagnetic weapons. No doubt this guy's gonna be running the DOD soon — we're going to stop writing now, ditch our cellphones and run very far away.

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • Cellphones do not start gas station fires

    Remember that gas station fire we mentioned the other day that was supposedly started by a cellphone? We weren't the only ones to question the assertion by the fire department of New Paltz, NY that the fire was caused by a cellphone ringing, and Good Morning America decided to finally do some hardhitting journalism and tackle this burning issue. They conducted an experiment in which they had a firefighter hold a bucket of gas while answering a cellphone (we're not making this up!). They called the phone a bunch of times (and even tried this with few other phones for good measure), but nothing happened. MythBusters and a few other TV shows have done similar experiments and none of them were able to get a cellphone to start a gas station fire, either. The real cause was probably regular old static electricity, which unfortunately leaves no deep-pocketed manufacturer to sue. [Via Mobile Gadget News]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Throttling your handheld

    Larry Garfield says there is one surefire way to squeeze more battery life out of our gadgets: throttling. He doesn't mean strangling your PDA (though we've all been sorely tempted to at one point at another), he's talking about doing the opposite of overclocking your handheld (that is, making its processor run faster to improve performance) and instead actually having it run more slowly — and thus consume less power — when it's tackling less computation intensive tasks like opening an address book. A few handhelds can already do this, like Sony's Clie PEG-TH55 (pictured at right), which can automatically ramp things up when you're watching a video or playing a game, and then cut back the rest of the time. Ultimately batteries are just going to have to get better, but if you've been frustrated with your PDA conking out after just a couple of hours of use, you might want to invest in some of the third-party apps out there that'll let you do this.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Cellphone rage!

    Pissed over the poor quality of his cellphone service, a man in Fargo, ND stormed into a Verizon Wireless store, stripped off his shirt and began trashing the place. Jason Perala, says that he "just lost it", but we're not buying the temporary insanity, since apparently he did have the good sense to put on a pair of safety googles before commencing his rampage.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • 2.8 million people take advantage of number portability

    The FCC says that since November some 2.8 million people decided to take advantage of the new rules for cellphone number portability and switch carriers or move their landline number to a cellphone. Which sounds like a lot, except that the cellphone companies usually get a pretty sizeable number of people switching anyway. For example, just last month 614,000 people switched carriers and didn't take their numbers with them. [Via MobileTracker]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Did a cellphone spark a gas station fire?

    We'd thought this was thoroughly within the realm of urban legend, but firefighters in New Paltz, NY claim that a ringing cellphone sparked a fire at a gas station there. And in fact plenty of people have tested this out and found that there is almost no way for a cellphone to just ignite gas vapors. [Thanks, Jen]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Magnifying lens for cellphones

    This product could change the way you see your mobile phone. The Phone Monocle is a magnifying lens that can be attached to most phones helping visually impaired users to read the tiny screens. It could be even handy when playing games on the phone. Notice the subtle advertising trick: the phone on the right has changed to ALL CAPS. That's magnific! We predict the Monocle will soon become a tchotchke. Just stick your logo on its frame and give it away during some tech trade show. [Via Mobile Burn]

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • Nike launching inane text messaging marketing campaign

    Nike has come up with a really dumb cellphone game to promote a new pair of Air Force-X MID sneakers here in New York. Basically you sign up, and then they send you text messages telling you where in the city to go to find a poster with a special code on it that you text back to them to accumulate some points. This repeats sixteen times, and if you've found enough of the special codes and earned enough points, Nike will bestow upon you the special privilege of being able to buy a pair of the shoes before they go on sale to the general public (we'd scoff, but this sort of thing is actually hugely important to some people — nah, we'll scoff anyway). We agree with Mike over at TechDirt when he asks "Where's the challenge?" but you've also gotta wonder how long until somebody just posts all the codes on the web, letting anyone earn points without actually having to do anything. [Via TechDirt]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The success of the iPod mini

    Duncan Martell writes a loveletter to Apple about the success of the iPod mini, writing that while the regular iPod is popular, the iPod mini has truly "resonated with the digerati" (wasn't this exactly what people were saying about the iPod a couple of years ago?) and how even buttoned-up industry analysts love how it lets them satisfy their "need for individual iPod expression". Though maybe we're being a little too harsh, since there is a six week waiting list for the silver one.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • AT&T Wireless leads in customer complaints

    It's been a rough past few months for AT&T Wireless, with tons of subscribers defecting to other carriers (any buyer's remorse there, Cingular?), so it's no surprise that the FCC says they've received more customer complaints than any other carrier, with Sprint PCS coming in second. At the bottom? Verizon Wireless, which happens to be kicking everyone else's ass right now. [Via MobileTracker]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Make cheap VoIP calls using a cellphone

    They're rather skimpy with the details, but i2 Telecom says they're coming out with a box called the InternetTalker MG-3 that'll let anyone make cheap Voice over IP phone calls using their cellphone. We're guessing it must be some sort of Vonage-like setup that requires a broadband connection (trying to piggyback on a cellphones Internet connection would be a really bad idea for a lot of reasons), but if that's the case, isn't it usually easier to just hook up one of those boxes to a regular telephone? Any advantage to using a cellphone over a regular phone is eliminated if you have to stay at phone use it anyway.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Get your in-flight WiFi on beginning on Monday

    On Monday, Lufthansa's non-stop flight from Munich to Los Angeles will become the very first regular commercial flight to offer WiFi in the skies. The cost to get your fix is $30 for the entire flight, or $10 if you only want 30 minutes of access, and we are so tempted to take a little weekend trip to Germany just so we have a chance to fly back on that flight. Especially since — and this is almost embarrassing — no US airlines have announced any plans for in-flight WiFi yet.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Bluetooth not making the cut

    PC World plays with a bunch of wireless keyboards and mice and discovers the same thing a lot of other people have learned that hard way — that Bluetooth doesn't do a much better job than regular old RF of cutting the cord: A newer way to go wireless is with a keyboard and mouse that use Bluetooth. This technology allows your PC to talk to as many as seven Bluetooth-ready devices up to 30 feet away—and the devices don't need to be in view of the base station or USB adapter to connect. However, Bluetooth keyboards and mice cost more than their RF counterparts. And during most of our tests, unfortunately, Bluetooth devices took longer to install, and some connections were occasionally shaky. If after that you still want to take the plunge and go Bluetooth, they recommend Logitech's DiNovo Media Desktop (pictured at right). [Via WiFi Networking News]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Vodafone Japan's karaoke phone

    Despite redeeming features such as a 1.3 megapixel camera, Toshiba's latest handset for Vodafone Japan both crosses a boundary of good taste and gives invaluable ammo to people who like to moan about how annoying cellphones are. It doubles as a karaoke system. Yes, you heard us right. You download backing tracks to the phone from the web, plug the handset into your TV, and sing into the mouthpiece. Hey presto, voice plus music issue forth from the TV speakers. Fun at parties! Just don't invite us. [Warning: PDF link]

    By Gareth Edwards Read More
  • LAPD wants to jam cellphones during terror alerts

    Speaking of cellphones and emergencies, the LAPD is thinking about a crazy scheme to jam all cellphones at high-profile landmarks like LAX, Disneyland, Universal Studios, etc during terror alerts.  The idea is that cellphones have become the detonators of choice for bombers (that's how they remotely set off all those bombs in Madrid), and that jamming transmissions would make that impossible. Besides this being illegal (the LAPD would have to get special clearance from the FCC to do this), there is just no way that hundreds of thousands of people are going to be able to deal with their cellphones being jammed on a regular basis. If you wanna see some really terrified people try telling the average person in LA that you're making it impossible for them to use their cellphone for a few hours. [Via TechDirt]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • NY State pretending to collect cellphone tax for 911

    Those "fees" that cellphone companies have been collecting for years to provide E-911 emergency response services to calls from cellphones? Um, they're not really going towards giving you better 911 service, at least not in New York State (we're not sure how bad it is in other states), where less than ten percent of the money is being used for its intended purpose. Instead the state is putting 50 cents of each $1.20 collected each month into its general fund, 24 cents goes to the state police, 34 cents goes to "homeland security", with the remaining 12 cents going to a cellular 911 system which to this day remains incomplete (and underfunded). So basically the state of New York is collecting a tax and pretending that it's for 911.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Pocket PC on a Palm?

    All this talk about Dell buying them is doing nothing to squelch the rumors (which have been circulating for a while now) that palmOne might make a handheld running on the Pocket PC operating system rather than the Palm OS. It's not inconceivable now that the once mighty Palm has split up into two companies, one for hardware (palmOne) and another to handle the operating system (PalmSource), but it's sorta like your ex-wife running off to marry your worst enemy. [Via Pocket PC Thoughts] PS - Geekzone has some speculation on what Dell buying palmOne might mean. It doesn't look good.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Naked News on your cellphone

    We know you've been waiting anxiously for this moment. Ok, maybe not, but the Naked News, you know the one with regular news and the semi-hot naked anchors, has announced that you can soon watch its informative (yet titillating) news programming on certain cellphones and other handheld wireless devices. Well, for now only the Netherlands has access, with Icemobile BV being the first to sign a contract to provide the Naked News content to its subscribers. Around since 1999, the Naked News claims they get almost 6 million visitors a month at their website, and have also just launched a weeklypay-per-view TV show so that less tech savvy home viewers can also catch "the program with nothing to hide".

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • Bsquare's Power Handheld

    While we're lusting after new smartphones with keyboards, the Register reviews the Power Handheld, a new BlackBerry-like wireless handheld from Bsquare with a slide-out keyboard and that has 128MB of RAM, a 400MHz processor, a 640x480 LCD screen, and runs on a slick version of Windows CD that mimics the look of Windows XP. No built-in Bluetooth or WiFi, but you can add either (but not both) using the Power Handheld's SDIO expansion card slot, and it does have GPRS (as well as GSM for making phone calls). So far this is only available in Europe.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Consumer groups trying to stop Cingular/AT&T Wireless merger

    Not that we expect this to make a bit of difference, but the Consumers Union and the Consumer Federation of America have filed a petition with the FCC to stop the proposed merger of AT&T Wireless and Cingular, saying that in lots of places it would result in an non-competitive local cellphone market. We would have complained more that combining two companies with poor service will merely result in one massive company with abysmal service, though we're not totally sure that the FCC can (or would) stop a merger on those grounds. [Thanks, Wayne]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • GlobalSat's combination Bluetooth GPS/GPRS module

    As we've said before, we're all about the combo gadgets here at Engadget, and the latest we've learned of is a Bluetooth module for handhelds from GlobalSat that combines a GPS navigation module (for getting around) with a wireless GPRS modem (for getting online).

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Bluetooth finally catching on, for the third year in a row.

    It's been a few months, so it's time once again for another research firm to trot out the obligatory "Bluetooth is just about to take off!" report that keeps getting put out year after year after year. This time it's In-Stat/MDR's turn, and they say that Bluetooth is set to grow at a rate of 60% a year for the next four years. Which means that by the time it actually catches on it'll be already obsolete and replaced with something else.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The NY Times on wireless living

    The New York Times has a whole package on wireless stuff today, including a fawning story about the Treo 600 that feels like it's about six months late (not that we don't agree completely with its sentiments), something about Europeans and cellphone porn, a reporter's diary on his attempts to go wireless, a piece about how ringtones are selling like crazy, a primer on WiFi and other networking jargon, the confessions of a someone who freeloads on their neighbor's WiFi, an article about Vocera's Voice over WiFi communicator badges being used in hospitals, and a slide show of cameraphone photos snapped by real live NY Times staff photographers.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Cellphones are the new cars

    Perhaps The Economist has not spent much time in Los Angeles recently, but they have an article about how cellphones have become the new cars when it comes to people expressing their personality and individuality: Phones are now the dominant technology with which young people, and urban youth in particular, now define themselves. What sort of phone you carry and how you customise it says a great deal about you, just as the choice of car did for a previous generation. In today's congested cities, you can no longer make a statement by pulling up outside a bar in a particular kind of car. Instead, you make a similar statement by displaying your mobile phone, with its carefully chosen ringtone, screen logo and slip cover. Mobile phones, like cars, are fashion items: in both cases, people buy new ones far more often than is actually necessary. Both are social technologies that bring people together; for teenagers, both act as symbols of independence. And cars and phones alike promote freedom and mobility, with unexpected social consequences. It's not exactly not true, since you can tell a lot about person these days by their choice of handset, but probably not as much you should be able to, since manufacturers are doing a generally terrible job of making actually interesting, stylish phones.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • FreeFi's free advertiser supported WiFi

    Since almost nobody wants to actually pay for WiFi when you can usually find it for free someplace else, FreeFi is starting a new network of advertising supported wireless hotspots (they say it's the first, but Wi-Fi Networking News notes that it's actually the second). To get online you just have deal with a set of ads next to your browser that have to stay up for as long as you want to stay connected. This is great if this encourages more places to set up WiFi, but we'll be mightily disappointed if it only results tons of places that are already free now deciding pile on the ads.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • "itz 0vr" - Breaking up by text message

    We don't know who these people are, but a survey by a Swiss messaging services provider (whatever that is) claims that nearly ten percent of people admitted to taking the high road and broken up with their siginificant other via text message. Other interesting tidbits: 45% of women surveyed admitted to snooping around on their partner's cellphone to see who had been texting them and 4% of those under 25 said they had quit their jobs by sending a text message (rather than using the traditional method of storming out angrily). [Via Textually.org]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Cameraphones starting to cause real problems for real people

    We hadn't noticed, but apparently cameraphones are starting to cause real problems for real people, as opposed to hypothetical problems for hypothetical people — and we're not talking about them being used to take sneaky pictures of other people at the gym. Since there are plenty of workplaces and government buildings don't allow the use of cameras of any kind (including both cameraphones and PDAs with built-in digital cameras), they're actually starting to inconvenience the owners of the cameraphones themselves, who are finding that they can't bring their brand new expensive gadgets with them to work or when they have jury duty.  Rob Enderle over at eWeek suggests some kind of modular system where users would be able to pop the cameras out of their phones and PDAs (sorry, but that is never going to happen) or (somewhat more plausibly) that people abandon their all-in-one gadgets. The easiest solution (at least for us) would be for manufacturers to just make two versions of each smartphone and PDA, one with a camera, and one without. PalmOne is already supposed to be coming out with cameraless version of the Treo 600.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Is Toshiba out of the PDA game?

    It's not much more than speculation, but Brighthand's Steven Bush says that it looks like Toshiba has all but given up on selling Pocket PCs here in the US. He does mention the one wild card possibility — that things have been quiet because they're getting ready to make the switch from Pocket PCs to Palms — but the more likely scenario is that we haven't heard much out of them lately because they're simply getting out of the game.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sprint's new "Fair and Flexible" billing plan

    Sprint just came out with a new billing plan for anyone who doesn't usually make a lot of calls on their phone, but doesn't want to worry about being socked with massive overages for the months when they do: First, you pay $35 a month for 300 anytime minutes with unlimited nights and weekends. So far so good. Then you pay $2.50 for each block of 25 minutes that you use, then once you've reached 650 minutes, that $2.50 buys a 50 minute block of minutes. That is until you've reached 1,250 minutes of usage, at which point you don't buy blocks anymore, you just pay 7 cents a minute. Still with us?

    By Peter Rojas Read More

News (99)

  • Crazy for CoCoPod?

    If you've been crazy for the CoCoPod, there's finally a US retailer with the temerity (or foolhardiness) to sell the 20GB iPod clone from S-Media (yeah, we'd never heard of them before, either). Obviously S-Media was able to keep the price down by refusing to pay anyone to actually design the CoCoPod, though we will give them props for including one feature that you won't see on many other hard drive MP3 players — an SD memory card slot for copying photos from your digital camera.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • SpotCode

    High Energy Magic is pushing something called SpotCode, which they're describing as software for turning a cameraphone with Bluetooth (which are a lot more common in Europe than here) into a mouse. It's probably a bit disingenuous to say that SpotCode can really turn a cameraphone into a mouse, since all it does is let you select something on a screen and rotate virtual knobs, not move a cursor around like you'd expect/hope. We don't doubt that it works, and it's a neat-o proof-of-concept, but you could achieve the same level of interactivity by installing a regular old touchscreen instead — plus you wouldn't have to mess around with Bluetooth or require anyone who wants to use the screen to own a cameraphone. So when you think about it, this really just a slightly fancified version of SemaCode, that barcode reading software for cameraphones we all got excited about a few weeks back. [Via Slashdot and Mobile9]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Panasonic's new digital video recorder

    New standalone DVD recorder from Panasonic with a built-in 160GB hard drive for saving up to 284 hours of TV shows (you may also enjoy going outside every once in a while) and an SD memory card slot for looking at your digital photos on something other than that tiny LCD screen on the back of your camera. And though it's not quite TiVo, the DMR-E95H does have access to an electronic programming guide, courtesy of TV Guide, something a lot of early models lacked (imagine the horror of having to — gasp — manually program your DVR!).

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Pinnacle's ShowCenter now doubles as a digital video recorder

    Pinnacle just upgraded its ShowCenter digital media adapter, which already could wirelessly stream audio and video files stored on a PC to your home entertainment setup, so that it can also now double as a digital video recorder and record and playback TV shows. That is, if you have a PC with enough hard drive space and a TV tuner card — the ShowStopper 1.5 doesn't actually have any onboard storage of its own, so it's more like a fancy way of remotely controlling your PC. [Via eHomeUpgrade]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Update on the $50 Microsoft iPod: Denver Post bungles story

    We're correcting our post from earlier today about a $50 ipod clone from Microsoft. Basically, it looks like the Denver Post got it really, really wrong when they published this yesterday: Microsoft Corp., the world's largest software maker, will begin selling portable music players for as much as 80 percent less than Apple Computer Inc.'s iPod. The Microsoft-branded devices will "look and feel" as good as the iPod for as little as $50, said Yusuf Mehdi, corporate vice president of MSN at Microsoft Corp., at the Goldman Sachs fifth annual Internet Conference in Las Vegas. The iPod sells for $249 to $499. Microsoft, based in Redmond, Wash., will release a number of music players when it launches its online music service later this year, giving customers more choices than Apple, Mehdi said. If you go and look at the original transcript of Mehdi's remarks, here's what he actually says: I've spent time with a bunch of hardware manufacturers who will launch hardware products when we ship our service that will look and feel as good as the iPod product. And they will undoubtedly be a little bit less expensive and so head-to-head against Apple we'll have a device that will be available to the consumer. We won't produce it but it will be available to the consumer. We gave a lot of input. And then we'll have a bunch of other devices, some that we've already talked about, one the Portable Media Center, which is a device that's a little bit bigger and a little more expensive that has video and audio, much higher end looking device. It's for people who really want to sort of look at music videos and not just music, which is very powerful, we'll have that offering. And then a bunch of devices in between, little ones that cost 50 bucks and you can go running with. He doesn't say that they'll be Microsoft-branded players or that they'll be making the players themsevles, and he doesn't say that they'll have a $50 iPod clone, just that there will be "little ones that cost 50 bucks and you can go running with." [Thanks to everyone who wrote in with this. We're just as frustrated about this story as you are.]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Nikon's new four megapixel Coolpix 4100 digital camera

    Another addition to Nikon's Coolpix line of digital cameras, this one the four megapixel 4100, which also sports a 3x optical zoom lens and a 1.60-inch LCD screen. The one semi-noteworthy thing about the Coolpix 4100 is that it has 14.5MB of internal memory so you can use it without a memory card, something which used to be pretty common with digital cameras before the cost of memory cards came down, but these days is becoming rarer and rarer. Should be out this summer.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • iRiver's new MP3 players double as portable photo viewers

    A couple of new MP3 players from iRiver, the 20GB H230 and the 40GB H340, both of which have small 2-inch color LCD screens for viewing digital photos. Even more useful, you can directly connect a digital camera to either of them using a USB cable and transfer photos straight to their hard drive, no PC needed. Has anyone else noticed how iRiver is becoming like that girl you turned to when your high school girlfriend wouldn't put out (not that any girls, sleazy or not, would even talk to us in high school)? They keep doing all the things that Apple won't — it's like, Apple won't do a personal video player? We'll put out two! An MP3 player with a digital camera? Of course! Apple's working on an iPod with a color screen for looking at digital photos? Hey, we have a couple of those out now! [Thanks, kage]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Serbian man invents walking stick to fight off packs of wild dogs

    We're not sure where to begin with this one: so a Serbian inventor, after being "attached by stray dogs" in Belgrade, decided to invent a walking stick with two retractable blades (or can fire two blanks), a built-in thermometer, a special compartment for holding your "meds", a panic button which triggers an alarm, and, of course, a compass. We're just not sure what disturbs us more: the prospect of elderly people everywhere armed with deadly weapons or the fact that packs of wild dogs roam the streets of a European capital. [Thanks, Brian]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Smart wool and warm feet

    A New Zealand company has teamed up with Austrailan wool growers  to create a new pair of socks made out of "smart wool" (as opposed to regular dumb wool) that has conductive fibers woven into it and that can be heated up to keep your feet warm during those bitterly cold winters. They do need a battery, so you can now add your socks to long list of things you'll need to remember to recharge every day.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The HMP-A1, Sony's new personal video player

    A second personal video player has turned up from Sony. The HMP-A1 has a 20GB hard drive, a 3.5-inch LCD screen, support for playback of MPEG1, MPEG2, MPEG4, and AVI video files and MP3 audio files, and looks a lot like their 20GB Vaio Pocket digital audio player, just with a bigger screen and a lot less buttons. Comes out in Japan on June 26th. [Thanks, Sid and Kakyou]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The stomach shocker

    The latest magic bullet for helping people lose weight is the Transcend Implantable Gastric Stimulator, a new device that some obesity docs are starting to implant into people's stomach muscles and, in much the same way a pacemaker works, the 42-gram titanium stimulator literally shocks the gullet into satiety. Though it sounds scary enough, the device is a lot less invasive than the other alternative: banding, stapling, and surgically dividing the stomach. Implanting a Gastric Stimulator can be completed in less than an hour at an outpatient facility, and compared to the 3-hour surgery and several day hospital stay of the more traditional weight-loss surgeries that's a simple fix (isn't that what we all want?). About 450 patients worldwide have gotten the implant, mostly in Europe, since its already for sale there, but don't necessarily run out and drop the $6K price, as there is only a 50/50 chance that you'll see any results. Since the device relies on the feeling of fullness to stop consumption, and we know all too well that satiety doesn't stop some of us, people can easily eat right through the stimulator's vain attempts to put a stop to your overeating. Maybe they could make a temporary option which we could just switch right before Thanksgiving and switch off sometime after New Year's.      

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • Radar Golf

    Somehow we were under the impression that the entire point of golf was to tramp around the course aimlessly trying to find your ball, but some enterprising amateur golfer wants to put an end to all that with the Radar Golf System, which uses a special handheld reader to help you track down golf balls that come with RFID tags embedded inside of them.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • palmOne's Bluetooth GPS Navigator

    A new Bluetooth GPS receiver from palmOne designed specifically for use with their Tungsten T3 and Zire 72 handhelds. Although we suspect you could probably use the GPS Navigator with any Bluetooth-enabled PDA or laptop, it does come with 3D navigation software that'll only run on a Palm. Comes out on June 11th.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Egg-shaped MP3 player

    From EraTech, the same company behind that coin-sized MP3 player that is never going to go on sale here is the EMP-ZII, an egg-shaped wearable MP3 player with a color screen for showing digital photos (which seems to be the one feature everyone is putting into their players this year). Comes in 128MB, 256MB, and 512MB varieties. [Via I4U]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The fresh2 deodorizing light bulb

    A new light bulb called the fresh2 which is actually supposed to clean the air at the same time it does the other stuff that light bulbs do, like provide illumination. The bulbs have a special titanium dioxide coating that oxidizes and breaks down odors in the air when exposed to the fluorescent light of the bulb itself (we wish now that we'd paid more attention in AP Chemistry). We'll admit that it's clever, but we're not quite sure that the benefits of cleaner smelling air is worth putting up with the hideousness that is fluorescent lighting. [Thanks, Michael]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Cramping Japan's digital TV style

    In a harbinger of things to come once the broadcast TV flag goes into effect here in the US, Japanese viewers seem a bit peeved by some of the new restrictions on taping digital TV broadcasts. In early April the NHK and the National Association of Commercial Broadcasters, a buncha private TV broadcasting companies, began airing their digital TV programming with a new caveat attached: one copy each, please. The transmitted signals now only allow for a single copy and require a special user-identification card to watch their digital programs. Japanese viewers are livid and the companies implementing the changes received 15,000 complaints in the first week alone, saying that the new system gets in the way of their freedom to edit recorded programs on their PCs (we hope no one gets in the way of our plans to start editing Summer off of The OC). To the broadcasters, though, the issue is that since repeated digital copying doesn't reduce image or sound quality they're concerned about a booming black market in Japanese TV cropping up in the rest of Asia.

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • Haier's wireless UltraWideband digital camcorder

    Haier has been showing off a prototye of a digital camcorder which uses Ultra Wideband (you'll be hearing a ton about UWB soon — it's basically a way to connect things together wirelessly like Bluetooth, except that it's much, much faster) to wirelessly beam a live 20Mbps video stream back to a plasma TV. [Via The Unofficial Bluetooth Weblog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Minox's new DD100 digital camera comes with "stainless steel look"

    We like the looks of the DD100, Minox's new compact two megapixel digital camera, but we can't tell whether it is really made of stainless steel or not. The company says has a "stainless steel look", but it's a bit hard to decipher (and impossible to tell from the photo) whether this is just a mangled translation from the original German and that its casing really is made of stainless steel, or (and this is far more likely) that it just has that simulated stainless steel that's made of plastic. And not to be totally nitpicky, but the other odd thing in their press release is that it says the camera can only use SD cards up to 128MB in size, a limitation we've yet to see on another digital camera.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Casio's waterproof wireless TV

    It's not quite Sony's LocationFree TV, but Casio has a new waterproof wireless TV you can use in the pool — the XFER XF-1000, which is a battery-powered LCD TV with a 10-inch screen with a wireless base station that connects up to your cable box or DVD player and has a range of 30 meters. This one's Japan-only for right now.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Speed reading CeBIT America

    We're not sure we can be bothered to hit CeBIT America, the not-too-terribly-exciting tech trade show which begins today (apart from the panel we'll be speaking at on Thursday, that is), but we did drop by the Digital Experience media event last night, which is basically a press-only preview that let's you catch all the good stuff without actually having to bother with the show itself. Not that there was much good new stuff at Digital Experience either, but we did get a chance to play with a few of the gadgets on display there. Here are some highlights: Some snaps of Motorola's MPx, which is more or less this year's Treo 600 — aka the smartphone that's supposed to make all your dreams come true. Dual-hinge thing works as well as we hoped it would, and we were pleased to see that they've improved the keyboard. They haven't said anything official yet, but the Motorola rep said that they're aiming to have this out by September. It wasn't officially being shown, since CeBIT America isn't really a consumer show, but we cajoled Nokia's rep into showing us the N-Gage QD, which is a lot lighter and smaller than we'd anticipated. Should be out next month as scheduled. And a bunch of different new Nokia phones, none of which are out here yet (except for the 6820). Starting clockwise from the top left, the one megapixel 7610, the 6620, the 6230, the N-Gage QD, and the 6820.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • New from SanDisk today

    A couple of new gadgets out from SanDisk today: First, what they're claiming is the first six-in-one Flash memory card reader (pictured at right) that fits into a laptop's PC card slot and can read six different card formats: SD, MMC, Memory Stick, Memory Stick PRO, xD-Picture Card, and SmartMedia. And then also their new SD expansion card for adding WiFi to Pocket PCs that also sports 256MB of memory onboard. Read - 6-in-1 PC Card Adapter Read - SD WiFi Combo Card

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Relax in style

    We live pretty large here at Engadget HQ, but not this large (yet): a $23,000 jacuzzi from Aegean Spas that comes complete with a waterproof 15-inch LCD television. [Incidentally, this is the second jacuzzi we've heard of with a built-in flat-screen TV — La Scala also sells one with a plasma display.]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Magic Book

    Scientists in New Zealand have figured out a way to put 3D images and animations into books. Well, not exactly into books. What you do is look through this special pair of glasses which can detect where on the page you're looking, and then the computer it's connected to will automatically draw the graphics that would correspond with your viewpoint. Which sounds awful. If we wanted to look at multimedia crap we'd just stare at a computer screen, we're not sure how this is any better that that.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Two new LCD TVs with built-in DVD players from Toshiba

    There are plenty of regular TVs out there with built-in DVD players, but there are surprisngly few LCD televisions with them (and not a single plasma display, as far as we know), and Toshiba has just come out with two of them: the 17-inch SD-P7000 (pictured at right) and the 14-inch SD-P4000, all of which sport slot-loading DVD players.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • MP3 player taped to a soda can results in flight evacuation

    An America West flight from Phoenix to Washington, D.C. was evacuated because of a bomb scare when an MP3 player wrapped around a soda can (which we suspect would look like a pretty stupid explosive device) was found in the cabin. All we want to know is, what kind of player was it, and what music was on it? [Via BoingBoing]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Arex MobiDV-H10 combo camcorder/digital camera/MP3 player

    Another one of those combination tapeless camcorder/digital cameras/MP3 players, this one the Arex MobiDV-H10 from RWC. The Arex MobiDV-H10 records to SD memory cards (like most of the others), snaps four megapixel still images, and has a 1.5-inch LCD screen, a lens that rotates up to 230 degrees, and built-in speakers for listening to your MP3s. Comes out next month, but this one looks like this one might be for Japan only, at least at first.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The WiFi Lamp

    It's tempting to write off the WiFi part of this as a gimmick, but this new lamp from Violet actually does actually connect to the Internet over WiFi, and a bit like the Ambient Orb, can be set to change colors in response to online information like whether the stock market is up or down, the weather, if you have a new email waiting for you, etc.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • One-hand typing

    CeBit America is coming up next week in NYC and there's probably some interesting stuff to see. One new product that caught our attention is Gabrielor's Rounded Keypad. This keypad design supposedly puts all of the necessary key functions within the reach of one single finger. Whether this idea ever makes it into the next generation of cellphones, remote controls or other devices remains to be seen.

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • The Frogtalk

    Quite a step up from Jabra's slug-on-your-ear is the Frogtalk, a Bluetooth headset from the same people who make that nifty one-handed keyboard, the Frogpad (which itself got Bluetoothed recently). Originally manufactured by the hearing-aid maker Gennum Corp, this headset has enough juice for 200 hours of standby and 4-6 of talk, weighs about half an ounce and best of all it's much more charming than your average cellphone headset. Besides working with cellphones, the Frogtalk is also compatible with Bluetooth-enabled Macs and PCs. 

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Pioneer's high-def digital video recorder

    Lest we forget, there's a high-definition digital video recorder/cable set top box called the Voyager 4000 from Pioneer which comes with a 120GB hard drive and dual tuners for recording two shows at once. This was actually announced last year, but for some reason it's still not available from any cable providers (and you can't just buy one yourself). [Via eHomeUpgrade]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Toilet abuse

    In true Deutsch fashion a German inventor is selling a device called the WC Ghost that fits under the rim of a toilet and belligerently degrades any man who tries to pee standing up. German women are buying the device, secretly installing it and when the suspect lifts the seat an angry female voice berates the victim and demands the seat return to its down position. There must be some applicable German word that perfectly encompasses the idea behind a device like this, in English we might say neutering (unless men are buying it, then that's another desire altogether). The company manager says they've sold 1.6 million devices so far and that they're looking into expanding into the UK, Canada, and Italy.    

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • Sony halts production of DSC-T11, world's slimmest five megapixel camera

    And just when we were starting to get really excited about buying one, Sony says that they're halting production of the DSC-T11, the world's slimmest five megapixel digital camera (the one which is just shade thinner than the previous record holder, Sony's DSC-T1). It's only supposed to be temporary while they try to fix some defect with the camera, but all it means is that the DSC-T11 is that much further away from ever being sold here in the States. [Via Digital Photography Blog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Five new DVD recorders from Toshiba, including two with TiVo

    A cavalcade of (well, five, to be exact) new DVD recorders from Toshiba. The two were most excited about are the ones that come complete with TiVo's digital video recording software. Both the RS-TX20, which has a 120GB hard drive, and the RS-TX60, which has a 160GB hard drives, should be on sale in August. The other three are the RD-XS53, which comes with a 160GB hard drive built-in; the D-R3, which is just a regular standalone DVD recorder; and the D-VR3, which combines a VHS recorder with DVD burner. [Via PVRblog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Verilocation

    Alright, sometimes privacy concerns over cell phone tracking can be more than just a conspiracist's trumped up delusion. The Daily Telegraph highlights a new service called Verilocation whereby a user can track any chosen cell phone in four British mobile carriers: T-Mobile, O2, Vodaphone and Orange. Mainly used by employers checking-up on hooky-playing employees, the service uses the global system for mobile communications to pinpoint the cell phone's exact location and displays the detection on the user's computer screen. The system can be both pay-as-you-go and subscription-based, and employers should be warned that England's Data Protection Act requires the consent of potentially tracked employees. But what fun is had in abiding laws? — then you couldn't catch Nigel abandoning his cubicle for the local pub.    

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • eyeBlog

    Connor Dickie, a student at Queen's University's Human Media Lab, created these eye-contact sensing glasses which detect onlookers and record the scene to eyeBlog — a video weblog. If these shades could somehow stop that creepy guy who keeps staring at us on the bus we're gonna be the first buyers (though something tells us nothing could stop his peeping ways). And while recording and instantly publishing the exploits of stare-ers might not deter someone, maybe the shade's garrish bedazzled-look will scare some of them off.

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • The megapixel race is ending

    Reuters notices a trend about digital cameras that's been pretty obvious for a long time now: that megapixels are becoming less and less relevant (after a certain point, most people can't tell the difference, espcially if you're not making prints) and that stuff like ease of use, thinness, performance, lens quality, etc are becoming more and more important to people. We're lusting after Sony's ultrathin five megapixel DSC-T11 ourselves.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • iRiver's new MP3 players

    Player Blog just noticed that iRiver has a couple of new hard drive MP3 players on their website, the 20GB H320 and the 40GB H340, both of which have large (well, large for an MP3 player) color LCD screens for looking at digital photos. The new iPod is supposed to have a color screen for looking at digital photos, too.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Hands Free Panda

    We know that Jen is going to want one of these: a sort of stuffed toy panda bear with a pouch for holding your cellphone that doubles as a hands free speakerphone and is supposed to move its lips in time with whoever is calling (though we have no idea exactly how it does this). Shouldn't we get some sort of veto over whether or not a stuffed bear mouths or words when we call someone? [Via BoingBoing]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Ferrari's digital camera

    First it was that Ferrari laptop from Acer, now there's a limited-edition Ferrari digital camera, too. The camera, which is really just a red version of the Camedia AZ-1 from Olympus and has a resolution of 3.2 megapixel and a 2.5-inch LCD screen, is supposed to be introduced during Monaco's Grand Prix next week. [Via Digital Photography Blog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Engadget visits NYU's ITP Spring 2004 Show

    We managed somehow to find the time last week to hit NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program Spring Show, where all the grad students show off whatever crazy projects they're working on (a few of the kids there are responsible for Dodgeball and Pac-Manhattan). Here are a few of the highlights, or at least the ones we remembered to snap photos of: USB Flash drives are a dime a dozen these days, but the Digital Locket, which is handcrafted and made out of sterling silver with 18 karat gold inlay, is meant hold something a lot more valuable than corporate secrets and PowerPoint presentations — your precious memories. We forgot to ask how many of your precious memories it can store. Next up is Socialight, which we'd describe as an amped up version of Dodgeball (which is itself sort of a mobile version of Friendster). It involves signing up for yet another of those friend of a friend social network websites, but if you have a phone that can run the Socialight software and that supports location-based services (right now only the Nokia 6600 fits the bill) you can see if your friends (and your friends' friends) are in the area or leave messages for your pals around town that they'll only pick up when they actually pass through that specific location. Lego-type construction blocks called Glowlees that light up when they're connnected together. The Floating Plant TV, which as you may have guessed, is a television that hangs from the ceiling. The part that's hard to tell from the photo is that it has an attached video camera so that it can "watch the watchers". We had to explained what this one was. We knew it was a black box, but it turns out it's a black box with a webcam in it. The only way to see inside is to visit the web address for the cam, http://128.122.151.199, which seems to be down right now. We forget to check when we got home, so now we may never know what was contained within. And finally, a colored LED display called Glowbits with individual lights that can be programmed to move forward and backward as well as spell out different words and phrases.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Best Buy not your best buying experience

    Sometimes buying from Best Buy isn't the best, as one of our readers (who goes by the name "Arsonist") relates: Logitech makes what is apparently a great high-res gaming mouse — the MX-510 — which has 800dpi and 5.8 Mpx/sec sample rate. Great. Went online and saw it for sale for $45.99. Great. Checked in-store availability. It's at the one about 10 minutes from my home. Great. Travel to store and get mouse. (It really is in stock!) Great. Go to the cash register and the Register Kid says, "$53". I say, "Uh, no, it's in this handy printout for $45." He says, "No. Best idea is to drive home, buy it and come back to the store". Hmmmm. Redirect to customer service counter. Customer Service Kid says, "Oh, okay. Want repair plan? No? $53." Great. "Pour quoi?" I query. Customer Service Moral Support Group (all 3 members) descend on me and say that, "Online pricing is different". I say, "So, how about I go over to one of the PCs in the next aisle and order it online and then you can hand it to me for $5 cheaper?" Kid says, "Well, you could do that yes. However, our pickup schedules are not immediate." You gotta love that logic. If you've had a similarly frustrating or baffling experience shopping for electronics (and you know you have), send them in.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Pay at your table with Ingencio's Bluetooth credit card machine

    A company called Ingencio is pushing a new wireless credit card machine (with built-in Bluetooth) that lets customers at restaurants (or just about anywhere else) swipe their cards themselves when it's time to pay. It's supposed to cut down on a practice called "skimming", where waiters or whoever at restaurants or stores sneakily run your card through a magnetic reader that copies down all of the information on your credit card, including the special numbers and codes that aren't printed on the card itself. You better hope that it uses some pretty strong encryption or else it'll be a field day for thieves — or at least the ones who are smart enough to do a little Bluetooth hacking.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • As long as they're not using it....

    You'd think that considering that for the past six months AT&T Wireless has lost more customers and received more complaints than any other cellular carrier you wouldn't willing associate yourselves with the brand name, but after hinting about it a few months back, AT&T confirms that once AT&T Wireless has been swallowed up by Cingular they'll be taking advantage of the unused name and launching a brand new wireless service. Even more confusingly, AT&T announced that they'll be leasing capacity on Sprint's network, so that anyone who is an AT&T Wireless customer now won't be able to use their current cellphone with the new AT&T Wireless (the networks are incompatible).

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • WiFiFoFum

    There's a new free software app for finding WiFi hotspots for Pocket PCs called WiFiFoFum that besides just listing the name and signal strength of every nearby wireless access point actually sows the relative location of each of them on a radar-type screen. Every time we ever write about those keychain WiFi detectors someone always writes in to complain about how the little gadgets can only tell you if you're in the presence of WiFi, and really not much more than that. If we can be bothered to write back, we usually tell them that you can't expect more out of a $20 tchotchke and that they need to invest in a wireless PDA with something like WiFiFoFum installed on it. [Via Pocket PC Thoughts]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Omnifi's new DMP2 -- A digital entertainment hub for your car

    We wrote a story for Slate a few months back about (among other things) the DMP1 from Omnifi, a with an MP3 player for your car with a hard drive that you could sync up with your PC's music collection over WiFi (if your car was parked within range), or detach and just connect up over USB 2.0 if you needed to. Now making it even easier than ever to distract yourself while driving, they're coming out with a new version called the DMP2 that handles video as well as audio — though you still have provide the in-car TV. Besides being able to play MPEG2, MPEG4, DivX, and XviD video clips, the new version improves on the original with a larger, 60GB hard drive and a bump up in speed of its WiFi connection from 802.11b to 802.11g, something which should make transferring over all those MP3s considerably less of a chore.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • NTT's home IP videophone

    Fusty old Japanese telecoms monopoly NTT is straining to go all cool and IP as its conventional phone and dialup businesses wane, and it's come up with its vision for the home phone of the future: a touch-panel VoIP videophone that hooks up to a DSL or fibre connection. The only shortcoming, apart from an unfashionable lack of portability, is the price; about US$600. Too expensive for PC-less grannies and PC'd-up young bloods alike, we don't see this one taking off (we'll settle for a webcam, thanks). NTT deserves some kudos for developing it with what seems like remarkable speed, though—this vision of the future goes on the market to NTT broadband subscribers in June.

    By Gareth Edwards Read More
  • The Scabber

    Reader Simon Sollberger writes in that he invented a contraption remarkably similar to the BushPig, the off-road, motorized skateboard that has made its way over here from Australia (though his doesn't look like it's motorized). His was called the "Scabber", which we're guessing was named that because of all the scrapes and scabs you're gonna get from falling off of it.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Does England want Any Question Answered?

    If you've ever been caught in the frenzied battle of a British pub quiz, then you'll know the real reason that a few English cellphone carriers have launched a new service that can provide any exact answer to any bizarre question — pub quiz cheaters. Orange, Vodaphone, and O2 have all recently introduced Any Question Answered (AQA), a service which combines human and computer-automated research to answer a caller's random text message. The answers come in the form of short precise answers, which the makers contend will rival the unclear answers received from Internet search engines. The service currently employs about 30 researchers but if AQA gains popularity they are looking to extend throughout Europe and raise the researcher number to around 1,000. Since each call costs about one pound (currently $1.76) the average user might have to be really desperate to use the service, but come Sunday night around 7pm or so the bloodthirsty pub-quizzers, aided by a series of pints, might light up the AQA line (which is technically cheating, right?).

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • BushPig

    We're by no means fans of the name BushPig (is that an Australian thing?) but the motorized, off-road, two-wheeler is getting lots-o-press — Time Magazine called it one of the Best Inventions of the Year and Wired is featuring it at NextFest this weekend in San Francisco. Maybe it's the new extreme-sports segway: or not. Created by Australian designers and brought to the US by Wheelman North America, the Bushpig is ridden like a skateboard but the rider's feet fit inside the wheels. The motor propels the device to up to 20 miles per hour, and a handheld wired throttle changes the speed. Try not to get yourself killed.

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • The swear toy

    A couple of irate parents in Ohio are convinced that the Blues Clues version of Fisher-Price's Learn Through Music Interactive Learning System is teaching their four-year old daughter to swear (hey, they're gonna learn it sooner or later). The local ABC affiliate WTVG has a hard-hitting look at the offending toy, but wusses out and refuses to actually play whatever it is that's freaking them out on the air.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Congress set to ban sneaky cameraphone photos

    The party's over. There's a bill before Congress that would make it a federal crime to secretly videotape, photography, film, broadcast, or record someone who is naked or in their underwear anywhere that a "reasonable person would believe that he or she could disrobe in privacy", like a gym or a dressing room. Violators face up to a year in jail. The bill passed the Senate unanimously and is will almost certainly make it through the House as well. To be honest, while there is definitely some potential for abuse of the law, it's much smarter to do this rather than just banning cameraphones altogether (Saudi Arabia did it!) — if you have to criminalize something, it should be the behavior, not the technology. [Via SmartMobs]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Canon quits making analog camcorders

    In another one of those signs of times, Canon is going to stop making analog video cameras, and focus entirely on digital camcorders from now on. Though to be perfectly honest, we'd just assumed they'd done this already. Anyway, production of their final two analog models will wind down this summer.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • CellsForCash

    CellsForCash.com is offering, um, cash for your old cellphones, which if you're too lazy to sell them on eBay, might not be such a bad prospect. You might want to give eBay a shot first, though, since they're only offering a mere 75 bucks for such high ticket items as the Treo 600 and Samsung i700, and 70 bucks for Motorola's MPx200. [Via LockerGnome]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • FireWireless

    Get ready for FireWireless: the 1394 Trade Association, the shadowy organization in charge of FireWire (hey, someone's got to be in charge!), has just laid down a specification for taking the connection standard wireless. Besides being able to sync your iPod wirelessly, there also plans to use this to connect together TVs, set top boxes, A/V receivers, etc. [Via Slashdot]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Desperately seeking a noise gun

    We've gotten a bunch of great responses to yesterday's letter from a reader who was desperately seeking a "noise gun". We're still not exactly convinced he was looking for a directional sound device, like the HyperSonic Sound, since it sounded more like he was interested in redirecting his neighbor's sound right back to them (rather than just assaulting them with a tightly focused beam of sound), but here's a sampling of the emails we received: What these people are looking for is a HyperSonic Sound device... essentially laser beam sound. developed by inventor Woody Norris, who also developed most of the underlying technology that lead to the sonagram. We've been working with it for a year or so, applying it to marketing situations, specifically delivering  tightly directed audio to individuals in a crowded public environment. But the military is investigating it as well, using it as a non-lethal but debilitating weapon... probably more like what your reader is looking for! Read - HyperSonic Sound I have always wanted to equip my car with an Active Noise Cancellation Device attenuated to cancel the 808 bass sound emanating from other cars. Imagine boom cars reduced to a trebly screech while their pilots scramble in befuddled futility to compensate for their sudden lack of intrusive, "Hey, ain't me and 50 Cent cool", mating call. Read - Obnoxious Neighbor Active Noise Cancelling Read - Noise-cancelling car stereo What your correspondent wants is a Bogen sound cone.  These are speakers that you can hook up to any stereo, but will shoot noise extremely far and with relatively poor quality. They're generally used for PA systems. Remember when The Blues Brothers wanted to announce their big concert near the end of the film? They drove around in a car with two sound cones on top.  Read - Bogen EZ Horn Loudspeakers Thanks to everyone who wrote in. SAMBA & Co., we hope this helps.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The FreePad

    And while we've been drooling over that new multimedia tablet from Sony, it's been brought to our attention that a Norwegian company called Screen Media has a new Linux-powered tablet of their own on the way. The FreePad is meant for doing the basics like checking email and surfing the web, and only has a 300MHz processor, 64MB of RAM, built-in WiFi, a CompactFlash card slot, and 10.4-inch LCD touchscreen. Not sure when this should actually be out. [Thanks, Marc]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • TAZ I personal video player delayed until September

    This was supposed to be out last year, but now the CEO of Tight Systems says that the TAZ I, their personal video player with a 60GB hard drive and dockable mini MP3 player, won't be out until this September. Which probably really means November. At least they have what looks like a real picture of it up on the site now. [Via I4U]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Amoi wants to make it in America

    We'd never heard of them before but little-known Chinese cellphone manufacturer Amoi (which implausible as it sounds is a shortened version of "avec moi") have opened up an office in California and have set their sites on the US with their new A90 handset, which just received approval from the FCC to be sold in this country. The phone itself is no great shakes, but we'll be very interested to see whether they're able to get any interest in their phones from the carriers here. [Thanks, Bill]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Grizzly bear fighting suits for sale on eBay

    You may not think you need a special suit of armor for fighting bears, but you really do. Fortunately that semi-obsessive guy in Canada (yes, the one from Project Grizzly) who makes them is selling a couple of his creations on eBay. [Via Slashdot]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Looking for a noise gun

    We get our fair share of unusual email here at Engadget, but this one was too good not to publish (apologies for all the caps, but that's how it arrived): WE HAVE EXTREMELY NOISY NEIGHBOURS AND WOULD BE INTERESTED IN KNOWING IF THERE EXISTS A 'NOISE GUN' WITH WHICH WE COULD RETURN ALL THEIR NOISE, BUT WITH INTEREST. THE RANGE WOULD HAVE TO BE UP TO 200 METERS. AWAITING YOUR NEWS, SAMBA & Co. We believe this "noise gun" is more commonly known as a speaker hooked up to a microphone, but if you think you have what they're looking for, drop us a line.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • RFID in San Francisco libraries

    In typical San Francisco fashion, when the city's public libraries started looking into an RFID monitoring system there was no end to the loud lamentations over various privacy losses. One group calling themselves SNAFU (the San Francisco Neighborhood Antenna-Free Union) even claimed that RFID tags would supposedly shower library patrons with cancer-causing emmissions. (Maybe the critics didn't know that their neighbors in protest-mecca Berkeley have been using an RFID library system for awhile, along with Santa Clara and San Mateo.)  On Thursday though, despite all SNAFU-type protests, the San Francisco's Library Commission approved the RFID system's original $300,000 funding and determined to push the project forward.   

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • Coming from Cornice

    Cornice, the company which makes those mini 1.5GB hard drives found in MP3 players from Rio, Philips, and others, says there are plans for a 3GB version that can withstand a drop of 1.5 meters (which is critical if these things are going to start showing up in cellphones), a minidrive-based USB storage device, and that Samsung is going to use their drives in a video camera.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Canon's new PowerShot S60 digital camera

    You'd think from its name that the PowerShot S60, Canon's follow-up to their five megapixel S50, would actually have a resolution of six megapixels, but it doesn't. It has the same five megapixel sensor as its predecessor, just with a 3.6x wide-angle optical zoom lens and a new thinner body.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Phantom to materialize on November 18th

    We no longer take them seriously, but Infinium Labs, the company behind the all-too-appropriately named Phantom PC video game console which never seems to materialize, says that they're setting a firm launch date of November 18th for the console. If they do ever release the Phantom (which unlike the Xbox or the PS2 is designed specifically for playing regular PC games), it looks like Infinium is going to take the unusual approach of giving the hardware away for free in exchange for a two-year subscription to their download service which costs $29.95 a month (the console will cost $199 on its own) and'll let you rent or buy games online.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony's iPod!

    We take it all back: we have no idea when or if this will make it over to the States, but Sony has finally gotten its act together and come out with a 20GB MP3 player . We're not sure that the VGF-AP1 is exactly an iPod killer, but it does have a 20 hour battery life (about double that of the iPod), a 2.2-inch color LCD screen, and can connect directly to some Sony digital cameras for offloading digital photos. [Thanks, Eduard]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Voice over raw fish

    In another grandiose and satisfyingly expensive solution to an everyday problem, Japanese sushi chain Toriton has installed an IBM voice-recognition system for ordering in its shops. The aim is not, as one might suspect, to enable diners to whisper the names of a few choice morsels into a countertop mike and shortly thereafter see platters of sushi gliding toward them down the conveyor. It's to help out Toriton's harried band of chefs, who are fielding orders and marrying bits of fish to pillows of rice at such a rate of knots that they're screwing up 30 orders a day. Given that having your hands full of toro and sticky rice isn't all that conducive to picking up a ballpen or tapping at a keypad, the company opted to install mikes through which the chefs intone the seat numbers and order details of whatever customers are yelling at them, which then flash up on a screen and spool out of a printer. The result is a mere 10 slips on the path to raw fishy ecstasy every day, instead of 30.   [Via Slashdot Japan]

    By Gareth Edwards Read More
  • USB powered frangrance diffuser

    What's scary is that this isn't even the first one of these: it's a USB powered fragrance-oil diffuser (basically a fancy Glade Plug-In) from Osmooze called the USB P@d that actually let's you control the time, duration, and intensity of the scents it, um, diffuses. [Via Tech Digest]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Get wooden

    These have been around for at least a couple of years, but Swedish company Swedx is bringing its line of wooden LCD monitors, keyboards, and mice to America. And they don't just glue wood paneling onto regular peripherals (though that would be so Seventies if they did), they actually custom-make the panels to fit LCD panels made by Samsung and they build the mice out of solid blocks of wood. Tempting, but it's hard enough as it is to toss out old computer equipment, just imagine how tough it'd be to throw out an obsolete piece of hand-crafted wood. [Thanks, Jason]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Audio feud

    We've been hearing about the wows of directional sound — those audio laser-like beam so focused that only the person caught in its narrow path can hear the sound — for a bit too long now. It was supposedly going to revolutionize everything from riot control to billboard advertising to museum displays, but no single contender has yet to claim and perfect the technology. But there's been a growing sound feud between two inventors battling to reach the summit first and thus conquer the awaiting vast millions of dollars market share. Both Elwood "Woody" Norris, of American Technology Corporation (ATC) and F. Jospeh Pompei at Holosonic Research Labs have created parallel directional sound devices which harness the same principles and work in the same way — both systems use a signal processor, an amplifier and a platelike device that shoots out a beam of ultra sonic sound. 65-year-old Norris has a lifetime of audio patents and has gotten Sony to start selling his device in Europe, while Pompei has a shmancy MIT education and developed a prototype for Daimler Chrysler (though the prototype was sacked before manufacturing because the sound bounced back and forth across the seats). Since joining forces seems out of the question, each inventor is striving to outperform the other, making the devices smaller, better and more affordable than the $1,000 to $2,000 they are now.        

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • Ricoh's five megapixel Caplio GX

    From Ricoh, a new five megapixel version of their Caplio RX digital camera which they claim has the world's fastest shutter response time for an auto-focus camera (just 0.12 seconds). The Caplio GX (how are they naming these things — doesn't "G" come before "R" in the alphabet?) also has a wide-angle 3x optical zoom lens.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Lilipod

    Despite the separation anxiety it might cause, you really DON'T have to take your iPod with you everywhere. Though if the pain is really too much to face, there's a new waterproof hard shell case called the Lilipod that'll supposedly keep your iPod safe no matter where you go or what you do, and even float if you drop it into the water while you're parasailing or whatever it is people do these days. [Via MobileMag]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Paging radiation

    We always thought that the obiquitous clunky cop pager was just a sign that law enforcement trails behind on the technology curve, but Wired News points out that often times that belt clip-on is actually a radiation pager, which are being increasingly deployed after 9/11 to detect any high levels of radiation that could result from a dirty bomb. They're mostly being worn by border patrol agents, firefighters and various cops who would respond to a dirty bomb explosion. The pagers cost about $1,500 to $2,500 each and start vibrating when the wearer is thouroughly doused. About 1,000 were used by security at various New Year's festivites, as well as at the 2002 Super Bowl. It's a nice idea, but you've really gotta hope that you never have to find out how good this thing is at actually detecting radiation.

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • How not to steal a Cadillac

    A quick note to anyone thinking about stealing a car: you may think you're being very clever, but merely tearing off the automobile's XM satellite radio antenna does nothing to disable its OnStar tracking system: Police caught the two people who stole a car from Broome Oldsmobile in Independence Saturday because they failed to disable the OnStar tracking system in the vehicle. David Clutts, the executive manager of the dealership, said the two stole the 2004 Cadillac Saturday morning, but police found them later in the afternoon. The suspects had ripped out the XM antenna thinking that would deactivate the system, but they failed. Police tracked the car and thieves, later identified as Scott Hazel, 40, Kansas City, and Catherin M. Curns, 38, Kansas City, to Merriam, Kan.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The hiPod

    We're starting to get the impression that all Isamu Sanada does all day is come up with concept designs for new Apple products (will they just hire him, already?), and his latest is the hiPod, a combination iPod/PDA/cellphone with a flipscreen that you wear on your wrist. [Via The Cult of Mac]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The world record for fastest text messaging

    Setting a world speed record for the one skill that we hope will become obsolete in the very near future, James Trusler has emerged as the world's fastest text messager, tapping out, "The razor-toothed piranhas of the genera Serrasalmus and Pygocentrus are the most ferocious freshwater fish in the world. In reality they seldom attack a human" on his cellphone in a mere 67 seconds, shaving nearly a minute off of the previous record. [Via TechDirt ]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Will Moxi fail?

    Phillip Swann, who we thought mainly stuck to dissing celebs for how bad the look on HDTV, has penned a column panning Comcast's decision to start offering Digeo's Moxi Media Center to its cable subscribers. He says Moxi is doomed to fail because it tries to do too much and that the average person is likely to be overwhelmed by all of its functionality; he even lamely trots out that old cliche of how the average person can't set the clock on their VCR (c'mon Phil, you can do better than that!). It's funny, they used to say the same thing about TiVo — that it was too complicated for anyone to use — but now Swann's complaint is that Moxi isn't enough like TiVo, and that Comcast should be marketing it as a digital video recorder rather than this all-in-one digital entertainment hub. We'd be inclined to agree with him, except that the Moxi isn't meant to be the only fancy digital set top box that Comcast offers to its subscribers, it'll simply be the one that the power users go for. Most people are going to want just a regular old digital cable box, a lot of people will want one with a hard drive for recording TV shows, and a few early adopters will take the plunge and opt for the Moxi, and get the most bang for their buck. It might take the general public a few years to acclimate to this stuff, but they will, just like they have for digital video recorders. [Via Atmaspheric endeavors]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Nextlink Bluespoon Chameleon

    The Bluespoon Chameleon might be one of the largest and heaviest Bluetooth headsets from Nextlink, but it's still smaller and lighter than just about anything else on the market. (It's a good thing big pockets are out of style, because you'd definitely lose this in those the pockets of those old XLarge phat pants.) Like all the other Nextlink headsets, the Chameleon uses a feather spring to keep the headset in your ear. It's a bit difficult to get it in the first few times, but once you learn the trick it's all gravy. And unlike all the other Nextlink headsets, the Chameleon actually has covers you can change so your headset can match your visor or trucker hat or however else you like to accessorize. Since it supports both headset and hands-free profiles, the Chameleon will work with just about every Bluetooth phone — as well as every wardrobe.

    By Eric Lin Read More
  • Alaska Air's portable video player

    These days most big planes have video screens built into seat backs or armrests — or at least they should, if they expect to remain in business. Some airlines hook these up to satellite TV feeds, while others have touchscreen-driven video (and music and games) on demand systems. But what about long trips on small planes — say, a trip across the States on a 737 or an Airbus A300? Because they only have small planes that can't fit seatback video systems, Alaska Airlines is now renting out personal video players on longer flights. The digEplayer 5500 has a 7-inch 16:9 widescreen LCD and comes loaded with about 10 movies, a few TV shows, and over 100 songs, which should be more than enough to keep you busy for the duration of your flight, and is probably more than the poor battery can handle (heaven knows our laptop batteries are looking pretty low after just an hour and a half of watching DivX movies). Anyway, this player must have one helluva battery if it's supposed to last for an entire crosscountry flight.

    By Eric Lin Read More
  • NHJ's V@mp MPM-201 personal video player

    No word on when it might come out, but NHJ is showing off a concept design for a personal video player called the V@mp MPM-201 with a 20GB hard drive, SD memory card slot, a 3.5-inch LCD screen, and a built-in TV tuner (and why so few of the other PVPs coming out sport this last feature, we have no idea).

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Phraselator P2

    Since it's our God-given right as Americans not to have to learn to speak other languages (hey, if it was good enough for Jesus...) it's good thing that there's a new version of the Phraselator, a handheld that can do instant translation. The Phraselator P2 has even better speech recognition and a wider vocabulary than its predecessor, and can recognize more than 15,000 phrases in 53 languages. Supposedly troops in Iraq have even been using a customized version of one of these.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Epson's Stylus Photo R800

    We hardly ever post about printers here, mainly because they all seem so indistinguishable these days, but PC Mag gives some love to Epson's new Stylus Photo R800, which uses eight ink catridges (most inkjets use only four), saying that it can produce true photo quality prints that'll satisfy both professionals and serious amateurs.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Happy pic, low res meal

    Nokia is playing hard trying to introduce cameraphones in the huge Indian market. Go to any McDonald's in New Delhi and northern India and take home a framed picture — captured on a Nokia cellphone — of your kids wearing a Galidor or a Hello Kitty outfit. The picture will be delivered to the child in a frame with his Happy Meal box.  We can't wait until this promotion comes to the US so the Engadget team can be clicked too.  

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • The vending machines of Japan

    Whether there's a labor shortage or people there simply dislike having to interact with another person, we don't know, but we do know that you can buy almost anything from a vending machine in Japan: rice, toilet paper, eggs, fried food, porn — pretty much anything except another vending machine. Anyway, PhotoMann.com has a gallery of a bunch of the crazier ones they've found there, even managing to track down the white whale of obscure Japanese vending machines, one that sells "used" schoolgirl panties. It's quite a relief to know that the urban legends were true. [Via MetaFilter]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Coke's sodaphone

    Once again, courtesy of a mandatory filing made with the FCC, we've gotten the scoop on yet another new cellphone. But this one isn't some super-futuristic design from Samsung or Motorola that we'll all be lusting after in a few months: rather, it's a soda can-shaped cellphone that Coca-Cola had custom-made for a contest its running this summer. They're going to start putting a few of the sodaphones in 12-packs this summer, and if you find one of them you press a button which instantly connects you to an operator who'll tell you that you've just won a Chevy SUV. Another button activates the a GPS homing beacon on the can so that Coke can immediately deliver the prize to your location (Coke actually did something similar in Australia last year). One question? What happens to the phone if you put a winning 12-pack in the fridge before opening it up?

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Separated at birth?

    Reader Edward Zieba notes that Popular Science's "PDA from the year 2010" looks eerily like a handheld from the TV show "Earth: Final Conflict".  Coincidence? Probably not, but it wouldn't be the first time that a sci-fi show has influenced gadget design.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Three new Easyshare digital cameras from Kodak

    A trio of new of new Easyshare digital cameras from Kodak, the four megapixel DX7440, which has a 4x optical zoom lens, and the five megapixel CX7530 and three megapixel CX7330 (pictured above), both of which have 3x optical zoom lenses.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The MPx on the radio

    Yeah, so we'll cop to being excited about Motorola's new MPx smartphone which is coming out later this year (you know, the one with the dual-hinge that flips open in two ways and comes with both built-in WiFi and Bluetooth). But we're not quite that jazzed up (yet) to listen to Kevin Goulet, Motorola's Director of Product Operations, talk about the phone for 46 minutes. But in case you are (and we wouldn't think any less of you if you were), Internet radio station WebTalkRadio.com has what you're looking for. UPDATE : We broke down and ended up listening to it. We're so predictable. (Though, the upshot is that we discovered that they don't actually spend the full 46 minutes talking about the MPx.)

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Hunting for Uncle Roy

    If you ever had the urge to walk into "Where's Waldo" — and really who hasn't — you should check out the Orwellian-sounding "Uncle Roy All Around". The Manchester, UK-based game is a high-tech version of hide and seek where players can interact online and on the street and work together to search for an elusive "Uncle Roy". The game, developed by a group of artists called Blast Theory along with the Mixed Reality Lab of the University of Nottingham, began in 2003 and extends for a few week session per year — this year it takes place on April 18th to May 8th. Gameplay takes place for about an hour each day in which a virtual Uncle Roy sends out digital hints of his whereabouts via wireless PDA, with street players searching the cityscape, constantly querying passersby if they are Roy or not (that doesn't sound irritating at all), while online players direct the street players to various destinations through text messages. The companies behind "Uncle Roy All Round" say the game changes the way the players interact with the city, which sounds enlightening and all that but we have a sinking suspicion that this hunt for the phantom Roy will turh out a little more like "Waiting for Godot".

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Layla is legit

    We managed to get our mitts on the actual source for all this speculation about "Layla", that new version of Sony Ericsson's P900 smartphone that comes with a QWERTY keyboard: an actual PowerPoint presentation meant for Cingular that turned up on SonyEricssonInfo.com, a website the manufacturer uses for disseminating information to dealers. As we guessed, the images we saw are Photoshopped — but by Sony Ericsson themselves, rather than some gadgethead with way too much free time. That means that the design probably isn't official or anything and might change drastically before the phone sees the light of day (the presentation lists the ergonomics of the keyboard as "being evaluated"), but the presentation does mention that it is supposed to be compatible with American GSM networks and have RIM's BlackBerry email technology built-in when it does arrive sometime later this year. [Thanks, Andrew]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sharp's new 30-inch AQUOS LCD TV

    AudioRevolution.com review of Sharp's new 30-inch flat-panel LCD television, the AQUOS LC-30HV6U. The best part is how, in all earnestness, the reviewer recommends wall-mounting the TV so as to take "full advantage of the sheer bitchin'-ness" that the AQUOS offers. You can't argue with that.   [Via Designtechnica]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Motorola's broadband video phone

    Video phones over regular phone lines are crap, video cellphones are still a year or two from reality here in the US, but Motorola and WorldGate have a new broadband video phone coming out that makes video calls over a regular high-speed Internet connection. So it will work (they say it can get 30 frames per second video with full duplex speakerphone for the audio), but obviously this is really only a step up from just using a headset and a webcam, not some major advance in and of itself. And in fact there are already several other broadband video phones (like from D-Link) that you can buy right now.  [Via Digital Media Thoughts]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • How the other half lives - 40% of Americans have no idea what a DVD recorder is

    We didn't bat an eye when we heard that only 2% of American households own a DVD recorder (they're still relatively expensive), but the accompanying statistic that a full 40% of the population has no idea what a DVD recorder even is really brought us back down to earth. Yes, we seriously live in a totally different reality than the rest of the country (no surprise there), but what is even more clear is that manufacturers are doing a terrible job of marketing these things to the general public.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Undersea MP3

    We hardly think 64MB is enough music for a proper dive (actually, maybe it could be), but there's a new underwater MP3 player from H20 Audio designed specifically for scuba divers who don't want to forego listening to Usher while in the briny deep (you could also just try being entertained by the wonders of the sea). The Oceanic DV-64 can be submerged to depth of 200 meters, but getting your MP3 while undersea will cost you — this baby retails for $399, or as much as a 20GB iPod.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Flash MP3 player with a color screen

    This looks to us a lot more like palmOne's Zire 21 handheld than an iPod (as I4U suggests), but check out this MP3 player from LIVE (at least,  that's who we think makes it), which features a 1.8-inch color LCD screen. The CA-C90 comes in 128MB, 256MB, 512MB, and 1GB versions.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Go to prison, get a flat-screen TV

    There's apparently one surefire way to get your hands on a flat-screen TV: get sent to prison in Oregon, which is now letting inmates there buy small 7-inch LCD TVs for watching inside of their cells. The TVs have to be made out of clear plastic, too, so that prisoners can't hide anything inside of them.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Mitsubishi's 5 second hand dryer

    A newish electric hand dryer from Mitsubishi that can get your hands nice and dry in just five seconds, as opposed to the 30 seconds it takes with regular models. We'd say something snarky right now, but unfortunately, we gotta give props to Mitsubishi for this one — we plan to really make something of those extra 25 seconds we'll be saving. [Via IDFuel]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Japanese schools discovering downside to webcams in classrooms

    We've mentioned before how much Japanese parents really seem to love those new webcam monitoring systems that are being installed at nursery schools and kindergartens around the country — they're becoming so popular that local city governments will commonly cover the around 600,000 yen ($6,000) installation cost. Well, the backlash has begun. The cameras are apparently creating some potential legal pitfalls for the schools, mainly because some parents have begun using the web photos to back up various complaints. So as a result, some schools have begun to censor footage, stopping the cameras when kids get too irritable or simply moving misbehaving kids away from the camera's watchful eye. None of which is a good idea, since the last group of people you want to piss off is obsessive parents.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The mini on eBay

    Apparently a few entrepreurial types in Britain are buying up iPod minis (or is it "iPods mini"?) here in the States and then bringing them home and putting them up for auction on eBay.co.uk, where some of them are now going for over £500. Sure, there's a shortage, and the European release has been bumped back a few months, but is that really any reason to shell out a nearly thousand bucks for an MP3 player? You could freaking fly to America and pick one up yourself for that kind of scratch.  

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Nintendo (14)

  • Nintendo says they'll show off the next GameCube at next year's E3

    We sorta already knew this, but for some reason everyone is reporting (or rereporting) the news that Nintendo is going to take the wraps off of the next version of the GameCube at next year's E3 video game expo. Or maybe just that it's official now. Either way, you gotta love how the announcement of an announcement is enough to qualify as news these days.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • DIY original Nintendo controller wristband

    Some guy has been making wristbands out of original Nintendo controllers, and it sounds like it's incredibly easy to do yourself. First just bust open the controller, remove all the wiring and buttons from it, bake it in the oven over half of a tin can that's been bent to fit over your wrist. Then once the controller has melted, take it out, let it dry, then replace all the buttons and  seal it with silicone. The result? Well, it looks exactly like what you'd think you'd end up with when you melt an NES controller.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The tongue-controlled Game Boy Advance

    From Simmunity Corporation and newAbilities Systems, a Game Boy Advance SP for quadriplegics (or perhaps anyone able-bodied who wants to give their wrists a rest) that's been modified so it can be controlled using only your tongue. Right now it only works with games that don't require multiple buttons to be pressed at the same time and a few custom-made games. [Via Slashdot]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Details on the Game Boy Evolution and GameCube Next

    N-Sider has exclusive details on the next Game Boy (not the Nintendo DS, mind you), the Game Boy Evolution, and the next version of the GameCube, the GameCube Next. No pics of either, of course, but the Game Boy Evolution won't be out until 2006 and is supposed to have a flip-top design similar to that of the Game Boy Advance SP, and will use mini-discs rather than cartridges (sounds sorta like the PlayStation Portable), have graphics quality like that of the Sega Dreamcast, built-in Bluetooth for wireless multiplayer gaming, and will be backwards-compatible with older Game Boy games, though it sounds like since it uses a disc you'll have to download the games onto the Game Boy Evolution's internal memory using some sort of adapter. Then there's the GameCube Next. N-Sider actually lists two different sets of specs for the GameCube Next, it doesn't sound like Nintendo has settled on one configuration or the other yet. Both are listed as having 15GB hard drives and using high-capacity blue laser optical discs which can store a lot more than today's regular DVDs, and the actual design of the console is supposed to echo the Nintendo 64 rather than the original GameCube. [Via hello, nintendo]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Nintendo DS to come out on November 29th?

    They're pretty careful to note that these haven't been confirmed yet, but EBgames.com has the Nintendo DS on pre-sale and is listing a retail price of $199.99 and a shipping date of November 29th of this year. November 29th sounds about right — it'd be just in time for the big holiday shopping season — but $199.99 seems a little bit higher than the $150 a bunch of people were predicting. [Via Designtechnica]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • LCD shortage to affect the Nintendo DS?

    Sorta makes sense, since they'll be needing twice as many of them, but the president of Nintendo, Satoru Iwata (pictured at right), says he's worried that a shortage of LCD screens might cause problems for the Nintendo DS and probably push up its cost (though it sounds like Nintendo won't bump up its price, they'll just abosrb the loss). PS - Speaking of important people from Nintendo, our own Bernie Yee is moderating a panel about video games at the Smithsonian this Sunday that features Shigeru Miyamoto, aka the man who created Donkey Kong.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Nintendo DS = Nintendo's Game & Watch?

    People were speculating about this long before yesterday's reveal, but now there's no avoiding the fact that the Nintendo DS is a throwback to the good old days of Nintendo's old Game & Watch handhelds, of which we ourselves owned several back in the halcyon days of the mid-Eighties. [Thanks, Sidartha]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Does the Nintendo DS have Bluetooth or not?

    Blueserker says that USA Today got it wrong and there actually won't be any Bluetooth in the Nintendo DS. Nintendo's website doesn't actually specify that it'll have Bluetooth, insteady saying that it uses both 802.11 and their "proprietary communication protocol, which provides low battery consumption" and has a range of at least 30 feet. Which sure sounds a lot like Bluetooth, except for the proprietary part. We doubt that the vast majority of gamers who end up buying one of these will care either way.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • What to expect from the Nintendo DS

    GamerFeed has put together a list of all the games being developed for the Nintendo DS. All the usual suspects are there — a couple of Super Mario games (including a four-player version of Super Mario 64), Metroid Prime, Mario Kart, a Pokemon game (of course!), etc. [Via Portagame]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Logo for the Nintendo DS?

    The quality is, well, terrible (was there not a single decent camera on the premises?), but Planet GameCube has a blurry photo of what is supposed to be the logo for Nintendo's new DS portable game console. Let's hope that the coverage of E3 gets better than this.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Nintendo DS!

    USA Today, of all places, has the first real pic of Nintendo's new double-screened DS portable game console. As expected, one of its two 3-inch LCD screens is touch-sensitive (though not both as had been speculated), and it comes with built-in Bluetooth for wireless multi-player gaming. It's also backwards-compatible with Game Boy Advance games. We're secretly hoping that this isn't the absolutely final design — we would have expected something a little less clunky from Nintendo, especially after the Game Boy Advance SP.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • GPS attachment for the Game Boy Advance

    The big E3 video game expo is this week, and besides everyone waiting with bated breath for the official unveilings of the Nintendo DS and the PlayStation Portable, the first few announcements are starting to dribble out, like this one about a GPS navigation attachment for the Game Boy Advance from RedSky Mobile. Besides being able to tell you where you are, there are also plans for multi-player games that take advantage of the GPS, though it doesn't sound like any are actually in the works yet. [Via Slashdot]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Turn the Game Boy Advance into a text messager

    Majesco says they're coming out with a new software application for sending text messages from a Game Boy Advance, though they give precious little detail about how this would actually work (How does it get a cellular connection? How are messages tapped out?). We're on the case.

    By Peter Rojas Read More

PC Gaming (3)

  • Final specs for Apex's ApeXtreme PC game console

    More E3 news: Apex just announced the final specs for the ApeXtreme, its game console/DVD player/digital video recorder that can play regular PC games and is due out later this year. (A similiar console is in the works from Infinium Labs). Nothing too crazy, but for $499 you get AMD's AthlonXP2000+ processor, NVIDIA's nForce IGP graphics processor and GeForce4 MX graphics card, 256MB of RAM a 40GB hard drive (for recording TV shows — though not too many of them), and 5.1 channel surround sound.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • HP's built-to-order gaming PCs

    Clearly gunning for Voodoo, Alienware, Falcon Northwest, and all the other niche players, HP says they're going to start offering built-to-order gaming PCs. They already have a line of high-end gaming PCs called Compaq X Gaming (which definitely is not a lame attempt to cash-in on the X Games), and these new custom-built PCs will fall under that brand line. Anyway, you should be able to customize the machine of your dreams beginning sometime this summer.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The FragBook

    Gaming laptops are supposed to be the new new thing right now, at least now that big boys like Dell has decided to start cramping the style of niche players like Alienware and Voodoo. You'd think that the market would be sorta reaching the saturation point — there's only so many people in the world willing to shell out four grand for a laptop just playing Half Life on it — but Falcon Systems thinks there's room for at least one more, and has just came out with a laptop version of their FragBox gaming desktop called the FragBook. They are doing a few things to differentiate themselves from the Alienwares of the world, and are offering the FragBook in any color you want — they'll custom paint your laptop with any automotive finish you'd like (including adding any sort of artwork or logo you'd like onto it) — and are throwing in a padded aluminum briefcase far carrying your laptop to LAN parties for free with every purchase. Anyway, they're offering the FragBook in two versions, the FragBook TL, which has a 15-inch LCD screen and the FragBook DR which features a 17-inch widescreen LCD.

    By Peter Rojas Read More

PlayStation (9)

  • PlayStation Portable to double as a cellphone?

    You have to look closely, but PSPInsider snapped this pic of what looks like some sort of cellphone-type attachment for the PlayStation Portable, a development which could prove troublesome for Nokia's N-Gage. Anyway, unless Sony has made some sort of crazy breakthrough we weren't aware of, this has to be a mock up. And if it's not, we're going to insist that our next Treo be completely clear. [Via PortaGame]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Live from E3: More PSP pics!

    Engadget correspondent Phillip Torrone managed to snap a few more PlayStation Portable pics for us while he was at E3 last week: The elusive white PlayStation Portable. The PlayStation Portable with some sort of digital camera attachment. A ton of Universal Media Discs, those tiny 1.8GB discs that'll store games, movies, and music for the PSP.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Get hands-on with the PlayStation Portable in September

    This is either good news or bad news depending on your point of view/level of impatience/geographical location: Sony says that the public will be able to get hands-on with the PlayStation Portable, complete with game demos, at the Tokyo Games Show being held in Japan this September.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • PSP not expected to be profitable

    According to this Reuters article Sony don't expect to make a profit with the PSP—at least during the immediate post-launch phase. Kaz Hirai, the head of Sony's US gaming division said that until lots of titles are available they can't count on recouping the development costs. "Hopefully, this will have a 10-year lifecycle, at which point I'll look back and say 'Yes, definitely profitable.'" 

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • PlayStation Portable to come in colors

    Yeah, the black is nice, but Portagame just noticed that a couple of the photos of the PlayStation Portable in action show it in white, yellow, blue, and green, as well. (It sounds like Sony has learned at least one thing from Apple.) We've got dibs on a white one.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • More, more, more on Sony's PlayStation Portable

    We're not sure how we're going to wait almost an entire year for it to come out, but in the meantime, here's a roundup of a few of the links we've found about the PlayStation Portable, as well as some more info about it, like that there will be a few optional attachments for it like a USB camera, a GPS module, a GPRS add-on for connnecting to cellular data networks (when WiFi isn't available), and a keyboard. (And incidentally, that picture we posted on Sunday was pretty close). Read - CNN.com Read - Ferrago.com Read - GamesIndustry.biz Read - AP Read - Playstation.com - PSP accessories Read - IGN - First PSP games Read - BusinessWire - EA announces four titles for PSP Read - Gamespot.com

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony's PSP is unveiled

    E3 opens tomorrow, which means all the press conferences are today. Now that we know what the Nintendo DS looks like, it's time to finally take a peek at the PlayStation Portable. Here's the front from a Reuters photo, and the back from SpyMac: We have full specs too: the unit itself is 170 x 74 x 23 mm, 260 g, with a 480 x 272 16:9 TFT LCD and stereo speakers. It has the same keybad layout as PS1, with a D-Pad, an analog pad, the circle, square, triangle, x buttons and 2 shoulder buttons. Downloads and connectivity over USB 2.0, Memory Stick Duo and 802.11b. And as Sony announced before, the games come on a 1.8 GB UMD  (Universal Memory Disc) - which Dolph Lundgren and the other undead Universal Soldiers will guard with their lives, as well as unique 128 bit key.

    By Eric Lin Read More
  • Sony to use Connect to sell online game downloads for the PlayStation Portable?

    Sony's new Connect online music store isn't impressing much of anyone, at least not so far. But it could be that they don't care whether or not they sell much music because they're planning to use the site to sell downloads of video games for their forthcoming PlayStation Portable. At least that's according to PC Pro, which says that a "highly-placed" source revealed Sony's future plans for the site to them. Definitely makes sense, since unlike trying to sell music downloads, an online store for PSP games wouldn't have to compete with likes of Apple, Real, etc. [Via Designtechnica]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Pre-order the PlayStation Portable

    Seems just a tad premature, but Expansys has the PlayStation Portable available pre-order on their website. They don't list a price, mainly because Sony hasn't set one yet, and as far as we know, the portable game console isn't due out until late this year at the earliest.  They also list specs for the PSP, but on closer inspection they're the same as the ones announced last year, and we'll see at E3 whether these have changed or not. [Thanks, Chris] 

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Reviews (42)

  • The PowerfulBook R6

    We've been wowed by some of his reimaginings of Apple products before, but we're beginning to wonder how exactly Isamu Sawada makes a living. You usually can't pay the rent coming up with new designs for PowerBooks and iPods all day, at least not if you don't work for Apple. Anyway, his latest concept is the PowerfulBook R6, a PowerBook sequel that comes with a built-in digital camera for web conferencing and an oversized touchpad that doubles as tablet for writing on with a stylus. [Via The Cult of Mac]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Tablet PC 2005 preview

    PDA Buyer's Guide has a preview of Lonestar, Microsoft's codename for the new version of the Tablet PC operating system which'll be called Windows XP Tablet 2005 when it comes out. As expected, Lonestar has better handwriting recognition than the original OS, better integration into Microsoft Office, and few other improvements.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • PlusDeck 2 review

    Electronic Music 411 has a review of the PlusDeck 2, an actual cassette deck for the PC that you can use to make MP3s out of your old tapes. It also it works the other way and lets you create custom mix tapes out of your MP3s, though, something which makes us seriously consider taking on Funkmaster Flex this summer.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Playing with ClearPlay's DVD player

    In this week's Circuits section of the New York Times David Pogue reviews the DRC232N, RCA's new family friendly DVD player which uses ClearPlay's software to automatically edit out anything the least bit objectionable from movies. The ClearPlay DVD player doesn't use some sort of advanced artificial intelligence to figure out when the good parts are coming up — instead they have (presumably very easily offended) human editors deciding what goes and what stays from each movie (we interviewed the president of ClearPlay competitor CleanFlicks for a story in the Vilage Voice a couple of years ago, and he said there some movies, like Reservoir Dogs, for example, that were so offensive that they would have to snip out everything but the opening and end credits). Human editors mean that nothing accidentally slips by, but it does add the frustration (not that we intend to ever discover this first-hand) of having to download filters for each new movie you want to watch, burn them to a CD-R, and then upload them to the DVD player. Anyway, we've said it before and we'll say it again: it's dumb to pay good money for a movie only to cut out parts of it, but ultimately you shouldn't stop people from doing whatever they want with movies, books, and music that they own.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Double-layer DVD burner roundup

    This has been the week for double-layer DVD burners (you know, the ones that can burn discs that hold up to 8.5GB of data on them, nearly twice the 4.7GB of a regular DVD). Blank double-layer DVDs might be hard to come until later this year, but there were three new burners announced from LaCie, BenQ, and Iomega (pictured at right) this week; we'll even toss in a link to a review of the very first double-layer DVD burner to come out, Sony's DRU-700A, for good measure. Read - LaCie Read - Iomega Super DVD Writer 12x Dual-Format USB 2.0 Drive Read - BenQ DW830A Read - Sony DRU-700A

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • First look at iRiver's PMP-120 personal video player

    Gear.IGN.com has a first look at the PMP-120, iRiver's new personal video player coming out this summer that won't be running on Microsoft's new Portable Media Center software (they have another one coming out later that will be). They didn't actually get their hands on one yet, but they do have loads of details about it, like that it'll have a 20GB hard drive, a swappable battery, support for playback for all sorts of audio and video files, though frustratingly it doesn't have a widescreen LCD, which is one of the features we're most looking forward to on the PlayStation Portable. [Thanks, Austin]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of the Rio Karma

    Pocket Lint review of the 20GB Rio Karma, the MP3 player that seems to have emerged as the first runner-up to the iPod's pagaent winner. Yeah, isn't quite as minimalist or whatever as the iPod, but it does cost a lot less and have a bunch of other features like a 15 hour battery life, support for playback of Ogg Vorbis audio files and an Ethernet port in its docking station (if you want to share the music on it over a network).

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Dyson DC12: a high-tech vacuum cleaner

    According to the chairman of Dyson Japan, their new product — the Dyson DC12 — "costs about three and a half times as much as an average vacuum cleaner, but that was justified by the technology. " And here at Engadget, we don't need any more justification than that. Although not robotic (you can't get everything you want!), the DC12 costs around $650 and fits inside a cube measuring 8 inches by 10 inches by 12 inches. Its motor is about half the size and weight of conventional motors but with 50% more power.The DC12 will be available in June, but exclusively in Japan.

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • The HDPS-M1: Sony's 40GB portable digital photo storage drive

    This might not ever get sold here in the States, but Sony just introduced a new portable 40GB hard drive aimed at digital photographers that comes with built-in CompactFlash and Memory Stick slots (note the absence of an SD card slot) for storing all your digital photos when your camera's memory card gets filled up. The HDPS-M1 goes on sale in Japan next month.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of Apple's Bluetooth mouse

    A brief review over at The Gadgeteer of Apple's wireless, which despite being futuristic enough to use Bluetooth, still does not have more than one button (which to this day remains a major gripe about Mac mice). You also have to remember to switch it off, or it just kills the battery.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Hands-on with Sony's wireless LocationFree TV

    We checked out Sony's new LocationFree Portable Broadband TV a couple of days ago at the big Home Entertainment Show that was going on here in New York last week (but we only have these bad photos to show for it since we forgot to bring our digicam and had to use our Treo 600 instead). You'll probably be sick of hearing about LocationFree in about four or five months when it comes out, but if you haven't heard of it, it's basically a wireless tablet with an LCD touchscreen that you can use to watch TV, or surf the web, do email, etc. The twist is that it comes with a wireless base station that you connect to your cable box or TiVo and that can stream your TV shows to you anywhere in the world over the Internet. Part of the demonstration involved them streaming live TV from Japan to one of the LocationFree TVs. To get it to work over the Internet they have to obviously compress the signal (you can choose the level of compression depending on how fast your Internet connection is at home), but it does work. And you don't have to limit yourself to TV, either. If you have one of those multi-disc DVD changer carousels you can stream your entire movie collection to yourself. The first two LocationFree TVs will come in 12.1-inch and 7-inch versions and should be out in September.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of Sony Ericsson's Z1010 3G video phone

    Geekzone checks out a phone that we definitely won't be seeing over here, the Z1010, Sony Ericsson's new 3G video phone which comes with not one, but two built-in digital cameras, an external one for taking still shots and recording video clips, and then another internal one for making video calls.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of Creative's new MuVo Slim MP3 player

    Just in case that pink iPod mini doesn't go with your corporate dress code, CNET has a review of Creative's MuVo Slim, their new Flash-based MP3 player which comes in 128MB and 256MB flavors. The fact that it's the size of a credit card and 0.25 inches thin is supposed to appeal primarily to businessmen, as opposed to everyone else who wants a small MP3 player. The design's not too bad, with sleek silver and black casing vaguely reminiscent of an 80's Walkman, but as we've said before 256MB is just not enough to get by these days. Though they do say it has great sound quality and battery life, which is more than can be said about a lot of other Flash players out there. Just add a suit with oversize shoulder pads and you're good to go.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Hands-on with the Phantom gaming console

    We almost don't want to believe it, but Gamers.com got a hands-on with the Phantom, that PC gaming console from Infinium Labs which has been so shrouded in disinformation, false starts, and premature product announcements that a lot of people are convinced it's never going to come out. The tried out Unreal Tournament 2004 and said they couldn't tell the difference between playing in on the Phantom and playing it on a regular PC. [Via Designtechnica]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • DSC-T11 vs. DSC-T1

    At this point you're probably sick of hearing us talk about the Sony's DSC-T11, since it is now the third day in a row that we've somehow managed to squeeze in a reference to the world's thinnest five megapixel digital camera. And normally we wouldn't inflict this on you, but I4U has a review (as softball as it is) comparing the DSC-T11 with its ever-so-slightly huskier predecessor, the DSC-T1. The review itself isn't going to help you pick between the two (when a review concludes with "This is a question everybody needs to decide for themselves," you know you're in trouble), but there are a ton of photos showing the cameras side-by-side.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Two reviews of Sharp's TM100 cameraphone

    A couple of reviews, one at Pocket Lint, the other at MobileBurn, of the TM100, Sharp's new slider-style cellphone which it seems like no one (including us) can write about how much it looks like it Sony Ericsson's T610 handset. It's missing built-in Bluetooth, but the rest of the phone isn't so bad — a nice high-resolution LCD screen, VGA quality digital camera, tri-band GSM and Class 10 GPRS, which is faster than regular GPRS. Right now this is only out in Europe, but T-Mobile is supposed to have it here in the States later this year. Read - Pocket Lint Read - MobileBurn

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • First review of Sony's iPod "killer"

    The Guardian has the very first hands-on review of the VGF-AP1, Sony's long overdue response to Apple's iPod. Apart from the fact that it's heavier and bigger than the iPod and the sheer folly of forcing people to convert their MP3s to Sony's ATRAC 3 format if they want to listen to them (admittedly, these are huge flaws), the VGF-AP1 has great sound, excellent battery life of more than 20 hours, a 2.2-inch LCD screen you can use to look at digital photos or display the cover art for whatever album you're listening to, and the ability to have photos transferred directly to its 20GB hard drive from a digital camera.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Digilux 2's twin - Panasonic's Lumix DMC-LC1

    DC Resource has a review of Panasonic's five megapixel Lumix DMC-LC1 digital camera, which is pretty much the same camera as Leica's Digilux 2. Panasonic actually manufactures both cameras and they share similar retro-stylings, but the Lumix (for whatever reason) actually costs a few hundred bucks less. [Via Photography Blog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Slimmer and lighter than the iPod - A review of Cowon's iAudio M3

    Eliot Van Buskirk checks out one of the very first 20GB MP3 players which is both slimmer and lighter than the iPod, the iAudio M3 from Cowon. The trick is that they offloaded the LCD screen and controls to an external remote, though that might actually be a plus for some people since you can keep the player in your bag or pocket the whole time. Also has an FM tuner, as well as another feature the iPod lacks, namely a built-in microphone for making voice recordings. [Via DAPreview]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony is definitely not pulling a fast one with the the DSC-F88

    Oooh, this makes sense: Sony's decided to call their brand new five megapixel digital camera the DSC-F88, which surely won't get mixed up by anyone with their eight megapixel DSC-F828, and this absolutely, definitely won't trick any consumers into thinking they're getting an eight megapixel camera when they're really only getting five. That said, we do like how the F88's lens rotates for taking self-portraits, which is a critical feature for all the narcissists out there.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Checking out IXI's Personal Mobile Gateway

    Rather than offering a combination cellphone/PDA/camera that does tries to do everything in one device, a company called IXI is pushing their idea that people should instead carry a whole bunch of gadgets that use Bluetooth to connect together in a little network via a Personal Mobile Gateway, or PMG. IXI is hoping that the technology starts to show up in all sorts of mobile gadgets, and InfoSync has a review of three of the first products in IXI's line-up: the neoFone (pictured at right), a cellphone with a built-in mini-router that also serves as the network's connection to the Internet, and the first two PMG Companion gadgets: the neoChat NC-10 (pictured at left), which does email and instant messaging, and the neoSnap NS-10, a wireless digital camera which can automatically beam photos to a moblog. We're not saying that Personal Mobile Gateway is such a bad idea, since we think people should have the option of carrying as many or as few gadgets as they want (it's so lame to think that just because you want an all-in-one supersmartphone that everyone else should want one, too), but unless a few of the big boys like Nokia, Motorola, or Samsung get on board, this isn't going to catch on.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of the Pentax Optio S4i

    Review of Pentax's new four megapixel ultracompact digital camera, the Optio S4i, which is the updated version the Optio S4 (just with a bigger LCD screen, better image quality, and a docking station), which was itself the follow-up to the three megapixel Optio S (hey, naming gadgets is easy — just keep adding more numbers and letters).

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of the Nokia 6230

    Engadget pal Nick Bicanic has been raving to us about his new Nokia 6230 cellphone, so we asked him, Why not do a quick review of it for us? Luckily for us, he obliged: So I've been following the Nokia 6230 for a while now, and when the local dodgy Hong Kong grey market import shop (I'm in Vancouver, Canada) finally got one in, I bought it immediately. For the record the 6230 is not "officially" available in North America yet — the market here is just way behind the rest of the world — but since it's a tri-band GSM phone it works perfectly well here. Here are my initial thoughts on some aspects of the phone after a few hours of playing with it: First things first. As a phone it's small and cool and has a very bright screen. The only colour they had was silver, though the Nokia site shows one with an iPod-like white finish which looks VERY nice. The phone includes a VGA camera which takes 640x480 JPEGs and shoots 15 frames per second, 128x96 resolution, 3gp video clips, and has an MMC memory card slot (the phone actually comes with a 32MB card). Creating video clips using the phone is fairly easy (it was one of the first thing I tried to do), and the phone can also play back AAC and MP3 audio files — as well as any video clips you've recorded. The 6230's built-in loudspeaker is great, and the MMC card slot is handy for getting video clips off of the phone or loading up with music to listen to, though one headache is that the phone has to be turned off to remove the card since the slot is actually underneath the battery. I wasn't able to test out the phone's built-in Bluetooth, or try its EDGE or GPRS data connections, but I did spend some time doing the old phone switchover (backup everything from one phone onto the computer then transfer it back onto the new phone - and before someone says "use the SIM card, stupid" - yeah, you can't really do that if you run multiple SIMs). Interestingly enough (ok, well interestingly enough for me) this procedure always involves initial IR setup for the new phone, but in this department the new PC software suite available from Nokia (version 6.1) finally solves the irritating bugs that plagued the earlier versions. Even so it took about 20 minutes to update my contacts/datebook correctly (and it even grabbed my images) — why manufacturers can't figure out a surefire way to easily transfer all this data between phones is beyond me. So far I'm happy, but I'd like the next one to have a metal shell and improved resolution for recording video clips.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Lots of pics of Motorola's MPx100 Smartphone

    Smartphony has a gallery with a bunch of photos of a couple of new smartphones coming out this year, Motorola's MPx100 and Sagem's my-S7 (pictured above), both of which run on Microsoft's Smartphone operating system, and has both pics and videos of the MPx, Motorola's new Pocket PC Phone which you'll be drooling over in about four months. [Via Smartphone Thoughts]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of Minolta's five megapixel DiMAGE G500

    Imaging Resource review of Minolta's new five megapixel DiMAGE G500, which is basically the Konica KD-510Z, just rebranded with Minolta's logo. Besides a 3x optical zoom lens, one of the finer features of the the DiMAGE G500 is that it has slots for both SD and Memory Stick memory card, something you're not gonna see on too many other digital cameras. [Via Photography Blog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Down on KiSS Technology's networked DVD player

    PC Mag isn't too impressed with the DP-1500 DVD, KiSS Technology's wireless networked DVD player which can stream Internet radio as well audio and video files stored on your PC's hard drive, saying it's missing a few key features (like that you can't use playlists for listening to your MP3s), and for almost half the price you can get Gateway's Connected DVD Player which does essentially the same thing.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of Sony's Clie TJ27

    InfoSync review of the Clie TJ27, Sony's budget Palm-powered PDA with a color screen and built-in digital camera. It's actually about the same as the TJ37 (we linked to Infosync's review of that the other day, too), but without the WiFi. Doesn't sound like they much care for it, especially since it lacks much of the bundled software that comes standard on other Sony handhelds.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of the Voq Professional Phone

    The Inquirer reviews the Voq Professional Phone, a new Microsoft Smartphone-powered cellphone from Sierra Wireless that we thought was supposed to have been out by now. The design of the Voq isn't anything special, except for its fold-out QWERTY keypad, which'll be a first for a Smartphone (though obviously not for a smartphone).

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • First look at the Nokia 9500

    MobileBurn got to play with a prototype of Nokia's 9500 smartphone, a slab of a handset with built-in WiFi and Bluetooth that unfolds to reveal a QWERTY keyboard and a large color LCD screen. Let's hope they do something about the keyboard before this actually comes out, because it sounds like it isn't so great.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • PSP vs. DS

    Sam Gibson over at Ferrago has some first impressions of both the PlayStation Portable and the Nintendo DS. He isn't quite as down on the DS's prospects as the rest of us are, saying that despite it being an ugly duckling (to put it kindly!), that Nintendo's portable console has a few things going for it, like that it'll cost a lot less than the PSP, it's backwards-compatible with the Game Boy Advance, and that Nintendo is willing to experiment with all sorts of weird attachments and add-ons.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of the N-Gage QD

    Pocket Lint has one of the first actual hands-on reviews of the N-Gage QD, Nokia's new version of the star-crossed N-Gage gamephone they introduced last year. The QD seems almost quaint now that the Nintendo DS and the PlayStation Portable have been announced, and from Pocket Lint's write-up it doesn't sound like Nokia's console will have much going for it other than a several month headstart over its rivals. The N-Gage deathwatch begins now.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of Motorola's V600 cameraphone

    MobileTracker has a review of the V600, that long-awaited cameraphone from Motorola which sports a large color screen, quad-band GSM, a VGA-quality digital camera, built-in Bluetooth and can even play MP3s as its ringtones. Motorola took their own sweet time getting this out (you can get it from either Cingular or AT&T Wireless), but Jon says that it is largely deserving of the hype, even if it should have been out last year.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Another review of Leica's retro-styled Digilux 2

    Sure, we'll cop to being obsessed with the retro stylings of the Digilux 2, Leica's latest five megapixel camera. Besides having one of those legendary lenses, the Digilux 2 doesn't just mimic the look of a vintage Leica, it actually keeps things totally old school with manually operated controls for aperture, focus, and focal length that are adjusted using the rings on its lens and a shutter speed dial that works just like it would on a regular analog film camera. We know we've linked to at least one review of this before, but we figured another one couldn't hurt (and it is a Saturday).

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Trilobite review

    It seems like today's the day for robotic vacuum cleaners (if you've got a Roomba you owe it to yourself to check out this week's edition of pt's How-to column) and Pocket Lint has a review of the Roomba's archrival, the considerably more expensive Trilobite from Electrolux. The Trilobite does exactly the same thing as the Roomba (i.e. it vaccums your floors) but it's a bit smarter and can do things like automatically recharge itself when its batteries run low.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sharp's TM100 is, well, sharp

    It has the sleek shape of the Sony Ericsson T610. It has a cool slide out keypad like the Siemens SL55. It has the same unbelievable QVGA LCD screen found on the Sharp GX30. Throw in tri-band GSM, Class 10 GPRS (which is faster than the regular GPRS), a VGA camera, great sound, and just about the only thing the Sharp TM100 is missing is Bluetooth. This slick little cameraphone has just hit Europe on T-Mobile and so far it looks like a hit. Of course, who could complain when a phone this hot is a freebie with certain contracts, and even without one is quite affordable otherwise. This is good news for our friends in Europe, but don't be a hater — the news is just as good for us here as PhoneScoop has discovered that the FCC has approved the TM100 for use in America, which probably means T-Mobile will sell it in the States, too.

    By Eric Lin Read More
  • The world's smallest MP3 players?

    Guess we're just gonna have to take this one on faith, but Samsung says they're coming out with the world's smallest MP3 players, the 128MB YP-T5H and 256MB YP-T5V, which are just 23 x 54 x 23mm in size and weigh a mere 24 grams. Despite their dimunitive size, both have FM tuners and built-in microphones for recording voice memos.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Review of Sharp's Zaurus SL-6000 wireless handheld

    A remarkably lengthy review by Bargain PDA of the Zaurus SL-6000, Sharp's latest Linux-powered handheld, which slides open to reveal a small QWERTY keyboard, and comes with a high-resolution 4-inch LCD screen, a 400MHz processor, built-in WiFi, and both CompactFlash and SD expansion card slots. It's also one of a growing number of PDAs with what's called "USB host capability", that is you can use it with regular USB keyboards and mice.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The SWIMMAN - an even better underwater MP3 player

    That MP3 player for scuba divers we mentioned yesterday isn't your only option for getting your MP3 on while underwater. There's also the SWIMMAN, a waterproof player that has twice as much memory as the Oceanic DV-64 (i.e. 128MB vs 64MB) and costs $150 less. [Thanks, Lucas]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The NHT-815DV, Kenwood's networked home theater in a box

    A new high-end 6.1-channel home theater surround sound system from Kenwood that sports a progrssive scan DVD player, an Ethernet port (for streaming audio and video files off of a PC over a home network), a PCMCIA card slot for adding a Flash card reader (though, maybe you could pop a WiFi card in there, too), and a special Dolby Headphone mode for simulating 5-channel surround sound on a pair of stereo headphones. The NHT-815DV should be out in July.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Yamada Astrapix 550

    The Inquirer review of the Yamada AstraPix 550, a 2.1 megapixel digital camera which besides being able to double as a camcorder and a webcam, also comes with a built-in MP3 player for listening to music. We're sure that like any good combination gadget it probably does all of those things rather poorly, but for under a hundred bucks, you can't really complain.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Another review of that iBook clone from ASUS

    PDA Buyer's Guide review of the S5Ne from ASUS, which is about as blatant a ripoff of the iBook as you're gonna find. The specs on the S5Ne aren't bad for an ultralight — a 12.1-inch LCD screen, 256MB of RAM, 1GHz processor, built-in 802.11b, a 40GB hard drive — but apparently its battery life isn't so hot. Oh, and the other thing is that at $1,699, it actually costs a lot more than a 12-inch iBook.

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Robotics (13)

  • Electrolux's new Trilobite robotic vacuum cleaner

    Electrolux is already onto the second version of their Trilobite robotic vacuum cleaner, which with its retail price of around around $1800 we're guessing is going to do a terrible job competing with iRobot's $200 Roomba Robovac. (The only honorable way to settle this would be to have the two robots fight each other to the death). Anyway, besides being able to recharge itself automatically (something the Roomba can't do), the Trilobite 2.0 has a few new features like it can detect stairs and be programmed to clean at specific times. [Via I4U]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Control the RoboSapien with an iPAQ 2215

    The RoboSapien is the $99 entertainment robot that you can get at places like BestBuy. It actually walks fairly well and is fun to use to mess with your organic pets. Of course the first thing we like to see are hacks and other ways to operate it. This video shows controlling the robot with an iPAQ 2215 and the Nevo remote control application. Click here to view (Windows Media).

    By Phillip Torrone Read More
  • The ironing robot

    We were expecting some sort of crazy futuristic robot that we could set up in front of an ironing board and charge with pressing our entire wardrobe, but the Dressman can only iron one thing: dress shirts (which isn't so bad). Anyway, it's basically a mannequin that you pull a shirt over (the shirt has to be still damp from being washed), and that then inflates with air to press the shirt flat while warm air dries it.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • NASA wants to bring robot planes to US skies

    The biggest obstacle to having commercial airliners flown entirely by computers isn't technical. Sure, there's lots more that needs to be done, which is why NASA is launching a pilot program to test out pilotless aircraft (pun intended), but no matter how safe (or even safer) a robot plane might be, there is something oddly disconcerting about the thought that there might not be anybody at all sitting up in the cockpit. NASA says they hope that unmanned planes could be sharing airspace with regular aircraft within four years.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Robots rising up in protest

    We all knew the day would come sooner or later when robots would rise up against their human masters. We just always figured it be a lot more violent than this peaceful protest. Throw some molotov cocktails or something! [Via BoingBoing]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • CubeSolver -- a Rubik's puzzle solver robot

    This is what we would do if we didn't have to blog all day. The CubicSolver is a Lego Mindstorms robot that solves the Rubik's cube puzzle. It even includes a color-recognition software module based on a Logitech Quick Cam API.   [Via Joi Ito]

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • Origami-robot

    If for some bizarre reason pre-folded origami were ever to become next season's must-have trend (hey, weirder things have happened, it could be like the new Martha's breakout decor), then one PhD student over at Carnegie Mellon's Robotic Institute is going to be well-prepared. Devin Balkcom created the first ever origami-folding robot, which uses an industrial mechanical arm to pick up the paper, rotate it and place it on a worktable, where a ruler descends down and presses the paper into a groove. The resulting origami-shapes look more like the work of your distracted kid-brother and are not as precise as an eager human origami-maker. But if that origami-revolution ever hits we'll know who'll be laughing all the way to the bank. If you go to his website you can see a quicktime clip of the bot making hats and airplanes, http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~devin/.  

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • Asimo demos his skills

    Wired News is reporting about Wired's NextFest performance of Asimo—the friendly little robot from Honda. There are two nice video clips of Asimo balancing his 'body' in one foot and climbing stairs up and down. Notice that Asimo is controlled remotely and doesn't listen or react to the people on stage like it seems. Videos of Asimo's rival, Qrio, made rounds on the web last year when Sony put him to dance in front of cameras. Watch clip #1 Watch clip #2

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • Robo doc

    After intensive surgery would you rather have your regular doc check your stiches via unnerving robot or settle for an unfamiliar albeit live physician? That's the question that a recent study at Johns Hopkin's has asked — if you can really call a 60-person survey, conducted by a doctor who also owns the robot-manufacturing company, a study. But this new "study" has found, that yes, patients prefer their own physician by way of robot-screen rather than settle for an unknown mystery doctor. InTouch Health Inc., owned by John Hopkin's urologist Dr. Kavoussi, has developed the robot system which uses a video camera, speaker and computer screen to conduct "telerounding", the robotic version of the short checkup visits doctors do throughout your hospital stay. From some distant location (maybe down the hall, maybe in the next state), the doctor uses a joystick to move the robot and to interact with eager patients. Probably the next step would be to just keep a similar screen, camera and speaker in every hospital room, and ditch the lone, wandering-robot altogether.

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • The man behind the Roomba

    Simson Garfinkel might obsess over whether the Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner is a boy or a girl, but at the end of the day all you really care about is whether it keeps your floors clean, right? And  in an interview in BusinessWeek, the CEO of iRobot, Colin Angle makes it abundantly clear that Sony and Honda can keep their Aibos, Qrios, and Asimos — iRobot is only interested in building "practical" robots and are working on a whole range of robots designed to do household chores. Though as far as we can tell they're still a distressingly long way away from coming out with a robot that can take our Aibo for a walk.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony's Aibo: the pathophobe's pet of choice

    James Gorman always wondered why anyone would pick Sony's Aibo robotic dog until he started reading up on hookworm and all the other obscure parasites and diseases you can pick up from pets (to say nothing of the allergies that tons of people have these days). Not that we ourselves needed any reason, since we're way past the point where we'd even consider owning a living pet.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • pt's How-To Friday…How to put your Roomba Robot Vacuum in "Hardware check" mode

    The Roomba is a fairly popular Robotic Vacuuming robot, I use one to clean up the hardwood floors every couple days or so- saving me about 30 minutes or so per month in hardcore vacuuming. When you add it all up, 30 minutes per month x 12 months x the next 50 years or so I have left- that's about 13 days. I'd like to use that time for other things, so for me the Roomba is a time machine, giving me back little bits of time. But I digress... Any way, the Roomba has a hidden feature which is quite cool and that is this weeks "pt's how-to": The Roomba "Hardware Check" mode. In this mode you can test all the functions as well as have a bit of fun. Now be careful, the Roomba will not stop when it hits something and behave normally and thus violate the 3 rules :-] The Roomba should be fully charged, unplugged and off. To put the Roomba in "Hardware Check" mode you need to hold down the S, M and L button all at the same time while turning on the unit. You'll know you're in "Hardware Check" when the battery light flashes green, yellow and red. These are all the possible colors of charging, which is kinda cool to see. To get out of this mode, press the power button at any time. The S and L buttons are what controls what function you can test, by pressing either button- these buttons cycles through all the possible tests. Here's a guide. Press the L button the 1st time lets you test the bumpers. After pressing the L button, you'll hear one beep-  tap the bumper on the left, right or center. You'll see the Roomba lights light up indicating that the bumper sensors are functional. Pressing  the L button for the 2nd time (you'll hear two beeps) lets you test the "cliff detection sensors". After pressing the L button twice, pick up the Roomba and wave your hand over the upper right sensors. As your hand blocks one or the other the S and M lights will turn on or off. Pressing the L button for the 3rd time (you'll hear three beeps) lets you test the front "cliff detection sensors" again, this time it tests the sensors on the opposite side, near the spinning brush. You can way your hand and watch the M and L lights turn on and off. Pressing the L button for the 4th time (you'll hear 5 beeps) tests if the front wheel is touching the ground or not. Lift the Roomba to test. One other cool thing about this mode is you can test Virtual Wall sensors. Turn on one of your Virtual Wall sensors and place it near the Roombad, you'll see that the S light is illuminated as the sensor is near the unit. Pressing the L button for the 5th time (you'll hear 5 beeps) will put the Roomba in "bulldozer" mode, in other words it'll just roll forward no matter what, the sensors and bumpers and picking it up will not stop it. Be careful, don't let the Roomba damage you or itself. Pressing the L button for the 6th time (you'll hear 6 beeps) will do the same thing as the previous test, but the Roomba will go backwards and the S – L buttons will flash, I'm not sure what that is for, but that is what they do. If you figure it out, email me. Pressing the L button for the 7th time (you'll hear 7 beeps) will test the center spinning brushes (the main vacuuming part). This is a good way to clean the main brush too, at least that is what I like to do. Pressing the L button for the 8th time (you'll hear 8 beeps) will test the little side spinning brush. For the Roomba Pro (new model) there is a 9th press and that tests the back filter it seems (8th is the back filter, 9th is the side spinning brush). If you press the buttons again, it starts over. That's it, lots of cool stuff huh? This summer, I'll be filming a series of short films "RoombaFilms" where the Roomba visits all sorts of places, normally this would be hard as it wouldn't just travel in a straight line, so with this mode I can film it and do cool stuff. But for now, I give you a short video, Roomba- the best robotic vacuum and dog toy you can buy. Click here to view. Questions, Comments? Suggestion for the next How-to? phillip@flashenabled.com Phillip M. Torrone is Director of Product Development for Fallon Worldwide (www.fallon.com), a creative firm best known for their award winning work on BMWFilms.com. Phillip runs the uber-geeky site http://www.flashenabled.com where he writes about the future, gadgets, art, roblogs, physics, and marathon running.

    By Phillip Torrone Read More
  • First nanobot takes baby steps

    A couple of US chemists have designed the world's first two-footed microscopic robot which can walk around its lab dish (aw, cute). The robot's legs, made from DNA fragments, are only 10-billionths of a meter long (10 nanometers) and can walk along by way of attaching and detaching itself to a track made out of DNA. Walking nanorobots will be really useful for nanoscale manufacturing so the next step is to get the nanowalker to carry an atom so that the little guys can actually assemble other nanomachines.

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More

Samsung (2)

  • Samsung's 46-inch high-def LCD TV

    LCD televisions are finally getting big enough to rival plasma displays in size, and the largest you can buy (for the moment) is Samsung's new 46-inch model, the LTP468W. Just about everything on the LTP46W is high-end: an ultrafast pixel response time of just 12 miliseconds, an 800:1 contrast ratio, and a resolution of 1920 x 1080p, which is about as high as you can get. Should be out in August and retail for ten grand.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Samsung opening showcase store that won't sell anything

    We've actually walked by this place a few times while checking out the new Time Warner Center at Columbus Circle here in New York (which has the only Jamba Juice in the city) and wondered what Samsung was up to (though not enough to do the obvious thing and just ask our pal Ethan who handles PR for them), and now we have an answer: they're planning a store that won't actually sell anything, but is just for showcasing new Samsung products. Guess that way nobody can complain when the store doesn't make any money. PS - The article also mentions that Samsung is planning an N-Gage-like gamephone with a large color screen and 1.2GB of memory. Say it ain't so! [Via TechDirt]

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Science (8)

  • Smart bullets for remote tracking

    A team at the University of Florida is working on a "smart bullet" with a tiny wireless tracking device and battery that can be shot from a paint-ball gun and is coated with an adhesive polymer so that it'll stick to your prey. We assumed this would be used for hunting what Jesse Ventura calls the ultimate foe — man — but the researchers who created the smart bullet originally created it with a small sensor inside for detecting traces of TNT, which is sorta ridiculous because you probably wouldn't want to fire any kind of bullet at something you thought contained explosives. PS - And yes, we know this sounds suspiciously like that GPS tracker rifle hoax that Computerworld fell for a few weeks back, but if you can't trust New Scientist, who can you trust? [Via The Wireless Weblog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Fermilab's 500 megapixel digital camera

    It didn't take long for someone build a digital camera that could actually use the entire 12GB of storage space available on Pretec's new $15,000 CompactFlash memory card: Fermilab just built a digital camera with a resolution of 500 megapixels. But before you start saving your pennies for one,  the Dark Energy Camera is a one-of-a-kind that is being attached to a telescope in Chile for use in Fermilab's Dark Energy Survey project. [Via Slashdot]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The wireless pill camera

    From Given Imaging, a new wireless version of their M2A swallowable pill camera with a low-power transmitter built-in that can beam photos of your insides to a special receiver you wear on your belt. Normally with these sorts of pill cameras you have to, um, evacuate them in order to get the photos, so having a wireless trasmitter built-in means no more waiting!

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The man behind HyperSonic Sound

    We've written a few times already about HyperSonic Sound, that superdirectional speaker which can project a beam of sound directly to just one person, but we hadn't known was that its creator, a self-taught inventor by the name of Woody Norris, also invented the first palm-sized digital voice recorder and a hands-free headset that uses bone conduction to transmit sound. Forbes.com has a brief profile of him and his company.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Furniture that uses bacteria to glow in the dark

    An Australian microbiologist and visual artist are working on glow-in-the-dark furniture that uses deep sea bioluminescent bacteria as its source of light. You just gotta be careful not to accidentally crack any of it open. [Via IDFuel]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • 3D and The Holograms

    The idea of 3D has long seemed like an over-priced novelty gimmick, only added to images to bump up the sticker-price — plus anything that needs extra special red-n-blue viewing glasses, is by nature, lame. But Forbes Magazine profiles the brave new world of 3D that's opening up due to breakthoughs in LCD's, graphics processing, and broadband and that's being pioneered by, who else, Japanese electronics companies. Japanese giant Sharp Electronics has already sold 3 million cell phones that transform 2D photos to 3D pics by way of software and screen filters, and Matsushita, Sanyo, NEC and Toshiba also have their own 3D TV's and cell phones. Beyond these stereoscopic displays researchers are still searching for their 3D holy grail: the Princess Leia hologram (teenage boys in '77, we know you remember), and holography is 3D's blue-sky. NTT-Docomo's Yokohama lab displays a hologram-style dancing girl (Jem?), though the lab is mum about the technique, and the Hitachi Advanced Research Lab features a technology called volumetric display, projecting a live-broadcast 3D image captured by a digital video camera and multiple-mirrors. Though we're sure these holograms are really technically-tricky, why do they always seem so '80's? Maybe Synergy knows.      

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • The Grand Challenge to become ever more grand

    Since that first robotic road race from Barstow, California to Las Vegas known as the Grand Challenge was such a roaring success (see here), the Defense Advance Research Projects Agency (the government group which held the event) has decided to double the prize money to $2 million.  We would love it if this results in there being an actual race next year. However entertaining the spectacle of a bunch of robotic vehicles exploding a few hundred feet after starting was, we were hoping for something more along the lines of the Cannonball Run).

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The US Army's rifle of the future?

    It's almost scary how high-tech the military is getting these days, and Heckler & Koch are working on a futuristic replacement for the venerable M-16 rifle called the XM-8 that has interchangable barrels for converting it from an assault rifle to a sharpshooter to a compact submachine gun on the fly, attachable grenade launcher and 12-gauge shotgun, and swappable skins for changing colors that a soldier can change depending on whether they're fighting in a city, jungle, or desert [Thanks, Noah]

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Smartphones (57)

  • Toshiba's PDA screen doubles as a scanner

    We'd been looking for the perfect way to surreptitiously scan magazines at the bookstore rather than pay for them, and we think we've found it: Toshiba's prototype for a new 3.5-inch LCD screen for PDAs that can double as portable scanner which they've been showing off lately. Oh, and they've also been showing off a new 3.46-inch OLED screen, a line of high-resolution displays for cellphones, and a 5.6-inch LCD screen for mini-PCs.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • A Bluetooth phone for Verizon

    Unless you were one of the 349 or so Sprint subscribers who actually managed to get their hands on the Sony Ericsson T608, you're probably dying for a Bluetooth phone by now if you're a Verizon or Sprint subscriber. US. South Korean CDMA subscribers (which is the same kind of network Verizon and Sprint use) have been taunting us with their fancy Bluetooth handsets for years now, but it looks like soon we'll finally get to wave back some Bluetooth phones of our own. Motorola's V710 is a classic V-style flip phone with Bluetooth made just for American CDMA networks, and it's due to launch on Verizon later this year. The V710 won't be alone either. Nokia's 6255 CDMA flip phone with Bluetooth is due out later this year, probably on Sprint. And don't forget the rumors of the PalmOne Treo 610, which could have Bluetooth in the CDMA version (and we're all but guaranteeing the GSM one has Bluetooth).

    By Eric Lin Read More
  • Nokia's new 3220 cameraphone uses light messaging

    Text messaging is so over. If you really want to communicate with your friends, you gotta use light messaging, like with Nokia's new budget 3220 cameraphone, which uses "Xpress-On" grips that let you spell out messages in the air with its LEDs by waving it back and forth in the air (trust us on this one, it works). The 3220 also uses tilt control for playing some games (a feature sure to be hacked to do lots of other things), and should be out sometime this summer.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Nokia's 7600 for the terminally stylish

    Sidetalkers of the world, unite: Tokyo's Conran Shops are to get an exclusive version of Nokia's 7600 in June. If you're quick enough to bag one of the limited edition of 300, a fearfully expensive Y73,000 gets you a serial-numbered box (which is, er, in no sense the first thing we throw away) and a strap, plus some plain black sidepieces to snap onto the phone. Maybe we should say "credulous" rather than "quick". Nokia's running all sorts of promotions for the 7600 in Japan (since it is, incredible as this may sound, the only handset they currently have that you can use here), but we don't like their chances for getting a foot in the door given that they seem pathologically unwilling to divulge which WCDMA carrier you can use it with (is it Vodafone? Is it DoCoMo?) and it costs more than twice as much as any phone the Japanese manufacturers are offering.

    By Gareth Edwards Read More
  • Verizon's worldphone debuts

    That Samsung A790 GSM/CDMA combo phone we've been hearing about is now finally available from Verizon — but only if you're a business customer. The rest of us commoners will have to wait until this summer to get one, but Verizon customers who score one will have all they need to have one phone that'll work (almost anywhere) they travel, since you can use the A790 on Verizon's CDMA network here in North America and on GSM networks when you're overseas.

    By Eric Lin Read More
  • Sprint carrying cameraless Treo 600

    About a month after it was supposed to happen, Sprint is "officially" carrying a cameraless version of the Treo 600 (the regular version of which is pictured at right). We don't know whether it's still called the Treo 600 or not, since neither Sprint nor palmOne have made an announcement about it, but a few people over at TreoCentral have reported calling up Sprint and getting confirmation from sales reps that it is coming out. We can understand why some companies wouldn't want to give their employees smartphones with cameras in them (blah blah blah trade secrets, blah blah blah security risk), but if we don't have a cameraphone how else are we going to violate people's privacy? [Via Palm Infocenter]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The SX1 McLaren Limited Edition cellphone

    Filling in for the distinct lack of black cellphones (and going nicely with the car itself we're sure) is this limited edition version of the SX1 cellphone from Seimens that's supposed to evoke the design of McLaren's Forumla One race car. The specs are the same as the original, with the addition of some "exclusive extra applications", such as a menu item that accesses McLaren info (which is an interesting touch) and racing sounds as ringtone options. Yeah, we're sure that won't get you beaten into a bloody pulp. Not at all. Looks like this one isn't destined for the US though.

    By Simon Spagnoletti Read More
  • Samsung's P510 flip-phone for lazy people

    We're not sure what Samsung was thinking when they decided that people could no longer flip open a phone by themselves, but their new P510 doesn't require you to do anything as strenuous as open it yourself — you just press a button and the work is done for you. It even closes with the press of a button, too. We guess this might make it easier to use the phone when you can't spare an extra hand because you're holding on for dear life while riding the bus. Or maybe they were hoping to appeal to fans of classic Star Trek or even The Matrix or something, but Samsung already tried making phones that do that and those failed miserably. Anyway, the P510 does have one redeeming gadget factor — 65,000 color OLED display on the outside that always stays on. Maybe they've finally managed to lower the screen's power consumption to the miniscule levels OLED manufacturers have been promising us for years — or maybe the battery only lasts half a day.

    By Eric Lin Read More
  • Motorola's MPx220 Smartphone to come out in July?

    Motorola still hasn't officially acknowledged the existence of their MPx220 Smartphone, but MSMobiles says that European carrier Orange is going to start offering it to subscribers beginning in July, and that it'll definitely have both built-in Bluetooth and an integrated digital camera with flash (though it doesn't say how good — or bad — the resolution will be). There's also a rumor that it'll drop in the US the same month.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • N-Gage QD starts shipping everywhere but America

    Almost forgot to mention that the N-Gage QD, Nokia's second attempt to make a gamephone that won't be the butt of jokes, is shipping in Europe, Africa, and Asia — basically everywhere except the Americas, which won't see the QD until next month. And as you would hope/expect, the QD is definitely less laughable than the original, though we're almost going to miss the all that sidetalkin'. Almost.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Nextel confirms: Microsoft Smartphone coming this year

    This has pretty much been an open secret since last year, but Nextel is confirming that they will indeed be introducing a cellphone running on Microsoft's Smartphone operating system later this year. They didn't provide any details, but we're guessing it'll be the long-rumored i930 from Motorola.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Brighthand to palmOne: build a low-cost Treo

    Over at Brighthand, our pal Ed Hardy has some advice for palmOne: get off your asses and get a low-cost Treo smartphone as soon as possible (he may not have been that graphic). Not everyone wants to spend $500 on their cellphone or needs something as fully-featured, and he proposes they create a "Treo 500" — a smaller, more budget-conscious smartphone that trims away some of the extras from the Treo 600, like a keypad or keyboard and an SD memory card slot, and would only be 3 inches high, 2.4 inches wide, and less than an inch thick (the Treo 600 is an inch and a half longer). In fact, there has been some noise out of palmOne over the past few months that they do have plans for a whole range of different Treos, including a more entry-level model, though there's been nothing concrete about when one might surface. We just hope they get more creative with the design than that mock-up of a Treo 500 that Brighthand posted up.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Use your cameraphone as a scanner for online grocery shopping

    Online grocery store PeaPod.com is working on a clever way for people to shop for groceries at home: everytime you take something to eat out of your refrigerator or kitchen cabinet, you snap a picture of its barcode with your Bluetooth-enabled cameraphone, then that info gets beamed back to your computer, where it's automatically uploaded into your PeaPod shopping list for reordering.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Unlocking your cellphone

    Popular Science has a how-to on unlocking your cellphone so you can use it with any carrier, not just the one who sold it to you when you signed up for service. This is especially helpful if you switch carriers and want to keep using your old phone, but you gotta be careful — if you screw it up you could potentially render your handset unusable. [Via BoingBoing]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • New Pocket PC Phone from AT&T Wireless

    There's a new Pocket PC Phone from AT&T Wireless, the PPC4100 from Audiovox, a phone that has turned up with so many different manufacturers' logos on it that it is hard to remember who actually builds it. The only really noteworthy thing about the PPC 4100 is that it's a bit smaller than the average Pocket PC Phone. Otherwise, it's about what you'd expect: it has a 3.5-inch LCD screen, tri-band GSM (so you can use it most anywhere), an SD expansion card slot, 64MB of RAM, and 64MB of Flash ROM. Should be out next month.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The SPV c500 - Orange's new Smartphone

    Word has leaked out of the SPV c500, a new Microsoft Smartphone that European cell carrier Orange is going to introduce in July. Not much else is known, except that it looks like it's smaller than the other phones in the SPV series, and like them is also made by Taiwanese manufacturer HTC. [Via MSMobiles]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony's video phone

    Despite being just over the horizon for something like forty years, it's about time to concede that making video phone calls over regular telephone lines is never, ever going to catch on. The bandwidth just isn't there (though we're agnostic on the separate issue of whether or not people actually want to make calls where the other person can see how dishevled they are). Anyway, Sony has a new video phone system called the PCS-11 which makes video calls over the Internet and can automatically adjust the amount of bandwidth needed depending on network congestion.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Pantech's G800 cameraphone with Bluetooth

    We have the weird feeling this'll never come out here: Pantech's new cellphone with built-in Bluetooth, the G800, which comes with an unusually large 1.3-inch, 262,000 color external display, a 1.8-inch, 262,000 color main display, tri-band GSM/GPRS, and a VGA quality digital camera.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Next BlackBerry gunning for the Treo 600?

    The Inquirer says that Research In Motion is planning to come out with a new BlackBerry, codenamed "Charm", that'll be thinner and less clunky than their current lineup of handhelds (like the BlackBerry 7280, pictured at right), and be easier to use as a phone. Could they be gunning for palmOne's Treo 600?

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Real photo of the new Sidekick!

    We don't know how they got it (and we sorta don't want to know), but a real pic has turned up of the new version of T-Mobile Sidekick (aka the Hiptop) mobile communicator which is due out from Danger later this year. [Thanks, Rick]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sorry, Charlie -- Nokia's one megapixel 3G cameraphone

    Mobile Review has the scoop on a new 1.3 megpapixel cameraphone from Nokia code-named "Charlie NPI5" which looks something like a cross between their 6600 and 3650 handsets. Should be announced around mid-Summer, though apparently this one is going to be for Europe only since it's supposed to work with UMTS, which is a high-speed 3G cellular network that isn't available here in the States. [Via Mobile9]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Screenshots from Sony Ericsson's P900 Successor

    Mobile9 has found what are supposed to be some screenshots for the "Layla",  Sony Ericsson's still not-officially-announced successor to their popular P900 smartphone. It looks like it's gonna be called the P910 (or P910a), and from the looks of these screenshots, it'll definitely have a flip-down QWERTY keyboard. Unless, of course, Sony Ericsson changes its mind and scraps the whole thing, which they could certainly still do.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • VoiceSignal's voice recognition software for cellphones

    Reader Jonathon Robinson writes in regarding the voice recognition software on LG's VX4500: The speaker independent voice recognition MobileBurn describes sounds identical to the incredible software on my Samsung i700 Pocket PC Phone (pictured at right) called VoiceSignal. However, VoiceSignal doesn't list LG in its list of manufacturers using the software. VoiceSignal works so well its creepy. It has never needed a stitch of training and responds just as well to names like "Zolnowski" as it does "Smith." What I would like to know is this: how the heck are they able to acheive this on a handset while Via Voice and the others have been so bad for so many years — and on a desktop processors, no less? And a quick check of VoiceSignal's site reveals just over a dozen phones with its software, almost all of them Samsungs. (Thanks to Rich for also writing in with this.)

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Talk to the LG VX4500

    The new LG VX4500 for Verizon looks completely unremarkable. It doesn't have a camera or a huge display or any new high tech gadgets. So why do you care? Because it has voice recognition — speaker independent voice recognition. Which means you can call contacts, dial phone numbers, check your next appointment — all without ever training the phone to recognize your voice. If you don't believe us, Mobile Burn even includes an audio file of it working in their review. There are a few applications that add this same functionality to Microsoft phones, which made us believe that it must require a huge amount of processing power. Either the VX4500 has an awesome processor which is being wasted on a boring phone or someone has figured out how a trick to doing voice recognition on the cheap, so to speak.

    By Eric Lin Read More
  • BlackBerry on your Palm

    Just letting us know that they're still out there working on this, PalmSource and Research In Motion have confirmed that they're bringing RIM's email technology to the Palm operating system. They're calling it BlackBerry Connect for Palm OS, it should be available sometime in the second half of this year, meaning you'll be able to get BlackBerry-like email service on your wireless Palm handheld. We're guessing that this'll probably be an option for the new Treo which is due out in September.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Pics of HP's unreleased Pocket PCs

    Following on from their post yesterday, which had all sorts of secret details about these, Mobile Gadget News has actual 3D renderings of all those new iPAQ Pocket PCs which are due out from HP later. Well, worth a look, but the ones that grab our attention are the ones code-named "Gable" and "Monroe" (pictured at right), which are supposed to be wireless handhelds designed specifically to function as universal remotes and come with pre-installed software and special high-powered infrared ports.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Samsung's world phone coming out soon

    The SCH-A790, Samsung's first "world phone" that'll work with both CDMA (Sprint and Verizon here in the States) and GSM networks (Cingular, T-Mobile, and AT&T Wireless, plus most of the rest of the world), is supposed to be out next month. From what we've heard, Verizon will be the only carrier offering it here in the US, and it could be a little while longer before they actually have the phone for sale.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • CNET somehow declares the N-Gage QD to be "The Next Great Gadget"

    Ok, despite everything, we'd be generous to say that with the N-Gage QD which comes out next month, Nokia fixed a lot of the mistakes they'd made with the original N-Gage gamephone and that they might actually sell more than a few dozen of them. But to go as far as CNET does and declare it "The Next Great Gadget"? Maybe only after a night of very heavy drinking. Maybe not even then. [Thanks, Dave] UPDATE: They mysteriously just changed this to the PlayStation Portable. Very weird.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • iPAQ details uncovered

    Mobile Gadget News has what are supposed to be some unreleased details of all those new iPAQ Pocket PCs that are coming out later this year (we had something about them last week, as you may recall). Most of it isn't anything too surprising, like that the hx2700 will sport Bluetooth and 64MB of RAM, or that the hx4700 will cost around $550. But there are a couple of wildcards, namely a new line of ruggedized Pocket PC code-named "Explorers" with 624MHz processors, high-res 4-inch LCD screens, Bluetooth, and WiFi, and a couple of new handhelds code-named "Gable" and "Monroe" that are meant to be used as universal remote controls for your home entertainment setup and will have built-in Bluetooth (the Monroe adds WiFi to the mix), 1.3 megapixel digital cameras (why they'd need those is unclear), SDIO expansion card slots. We hadn't heard a word about any of these before, so it'll be interesting to see how they turn out, or if they ever surface at all. [Pictured at right, HP's h6315 Pocket PC Phone which is supposed to be out sometime soon.]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Dell's new Axim X30 Pocket PC

    There are a whole bunch of reviews today of Dell's brand new Axim X30, which is the very first Pocket PC to come out that runs on Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition, the latest version of the Pocket PC operating system. The Axim X30 is basically an updated version of the Axim X3i (it actually looks about the same), and comes in three versions: one with a 312MHz processor, 32MB of RAM; a mid-range model with Bluetooth, WiFi, a 312MHz processor, and 64MB of RAM, and a top of the line model with a superfast 624 MHz processor (the speediest we've seen in a Pocket PC yet), both Bluetooth and WiFi, and 64MB of RAM. Sounds like the only downside is that it lacks one of those new higher-resolution screens that have been showing up in a few Pocket PCs. Read - Brighthand Read - PDA Buyer's Guide Read - Aximsite Read - Bargain PDA Read - PC Magazine

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • World's first 3 megapixel cameraphone

    It should come as no surprise that the world's first three megapixel cameraphone would have to be Japanese (we'd be happy to merely see a one megapixel cameraphone surface here). And to rub it in Casio's A5406CA actually has a 3.2 megapixel built-in digital camera with an auto-focus lens, a high-resolution LCD screen, and a miniSD memory card slot. Should be on in Japan in mid-June and here in the States never.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The truth is out there about Sprint's A700 videophone

    Was SprintPCSInfo.com the subject of some weird conspiracy campaign against them at the hands of Sprint, or are they just paranoid? A little while back they reported on the existence of the APH-A700, a new cameraphone from Samsung that was supposed to be Sprint's first handset that could support live video calling. The just approved the A700 for use in the States, and that's where things get hairy: [I]t appears that our doubts about Sprint's immediate and mysterious cancellation notice for a phone that this site was the only source to have info on were correct. It now seems more likely that the A700 cancellation notice was part of a disinformation campaign to discredit this site, and attempt to put the top back on the bottle of Sprint's video phone agenda. We will have pictures and specs shortly. As you may recall, SPI broke the specifications of the A700, Sprint's first planned 1xRTT phone that supports live video conferencing. Then, within days (and posted shortly later) an internal supply memo specifically referenced the A700 as being cancelled. This was extremely odd, as Sprint never even posted internally to most departments that the A700 even existed. As flattering as any site would be to have a company leak a fake internal memo just to discredit them, the more likely (and mundane) explanation is that Sprint is simply disorganized.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • LG says no more cellphones without color screens

    LG says that's it — there will be no more cellphones with monochrome screens from them, and that every handset they make, no matter how low-end, will have color LCDs (like their new VX3200, pictured at right). Can you believe that it was only just a couple of years ago that even having a color screen on a cellphone was a big deal?

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Samsung's satellite TV phone

    Samsung is coming out with a cellphone that can receive satellite TV broadcasts, which means better coverage and more channels than you could get with a regular broadcast TV tuner. The first Digital Multimedia Broadcasting phone should be out sometime during the third quarter of this year, but the bad news is that it's only coming out in South Korea. They're also planning a satellite TV phone with RIM's BlackBerry email technology built-in.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sneak peek at HP's new Pocket PCs

    Brighthand got a sneak preview of HP's plans, and says that it'll be at least a couple of more months before they put out any new handhelds, but that there are four new iPAQ Pocket PCs in the pipeline. The line up includes: The hx4700, which should be out in late July and have 128MB of RAM, as well as both CompactFlash and SD memory card slots. The hx2700, a replacement for the h5550 that will also sport a biometric fingerprint scanner. The rz1700, a mid-range model that will replace the h1940. And the one that has been the subject already of much gossip, the h6310 Pocket PC Phone (pictured at right), which will have built-in WiFi and Bluetooth.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Sendo X smartphone to surface?

    We really want to believe Sendo when they say that the X, their long-delayed smartphone, will be out in a few weeks. They've been talking up the phone for ages, which is basically an updated version of the Z100 which never came out. The Z100 was supposed to be the first handset running on Microsoft's Smartphone operating system, but then they abruptly switched to Symbian after a falling out with Redmond (and talk about a bad breakup — everybody is suing everybody over that one). That basically reset the clock, and more than 18 months later, they still don't have a phone available.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Treo 600 gets a software update

    We might only be posting this because it is of particular interest to us, but palmOne has released a software update for the Treo 600 that fixes a few things and enhances the audio quality of calls. Be prepared to have this ruin your day — we installed the update yesterday and subsequently spent the next several hours trying to figure out what was crashing our phone. Not fun. Especially annoying: we can't see any marked improvement in audio quality yet. PS - Right now it's only for the Sprint version of the Treo. Other carriers to follow.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • DoCoMo's OnQ concept phone

    NTT DoCoMo is showing off a concept phone called the OnQ with a high-resolution, 2.4-inch LCD screen that rotates 90 degrees so you use it in widescreen mode for watching videos. It even has a cradel that doubles as a digital video recorder for transferring TV shows onto the phone (at least that's what we're guessing from the mangled automatic translation). [Via TRFJ]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • An "iPod that makes phone calls"? Nice try, Motorola, but we ain't falling for it

    Talk about a lame attempt to cash in on the iPod's cachet: At MIT's Designing Bits & Pieces Conference, a Motorola exec resorted to describing their new E398 cellphone which comes out later this year as a "mini iPod that makes phone calls". Except that apart from being able to play MP3s, which plenty of other cellphones can do (like pretty much every new Nokia these days, to say nothing of the fact that nearly every smartphone can as well), there isn't much else that the E398 has in common with the iPod. It doesn't have much internal memory — it relies on T-Flash memory cards — though it does have stereo speakers, which neither the iPod nor many other cellphones have. Nice try, Motorola, but get back to us when you've squeezed 20GB in there.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • What's next for Pocket PCs

    Brighthand reports on a whole raft of new Pocket PCs running on the newly upgraded version of the operating system, Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition, which supports those new high-resolution, 640x480 displays that are popping up and also lets you switch between portrait and landscape modes (a feature that was long overdue). Among the new handhelds to expect: a new Axim from Dell; an new version of Toshiba's e800, called the e830; the MyPal A730 from ASUS (pictured at right); and, of course, the one that everyone is waiting for, Motorola's MPx Pocket PC Phone.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • A $25 cameraphone from Mattel?

    Though it didn't get much coverage (except from Alan Reiter, of course), this year's Cameraphone Summit produced a few interesting pieces of news, like that Samsung is hard at work on a five megapixel cameraphone and wants standalone digital cameras to be something only professionals use, that Mattel is hard at work on a $25 cameraphone for kids, and Boeing wants to put cameraphones in airplanes so that people can use them to create "in-flight video networks" (which actually sounds dreadful). [Via MobileMag]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • London cabs switching to Pocket PC Phones

    London cabs are getting rid of their two-way radio links and replacing them with XDA II Pocket PC Phones so they can do all their dispatching over the Internet or even do things like have a photo of the person being picked up sent directly to the phone.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Motorola's A630 cellphone not running on Windows Mobile

    Despite reports to the contrary last week, we're hearing that Motorola's forthcoming A630 cellphone won't be running on Windows Mobile, or any other Microsoft software for that matter. One of our sources passed along this pic (which admittedly isn't totally convincing) of the A630 running on the same operating system that Motorola uses on its V80 and E398 cellphones. Which we're sure is all very fascinating for everyone. [Thanks, ROBOTMONSTER]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The first cellphone with an optical zoom

    Vodafone Japan, obviously smarting after we referred to some of their concept phones as looking like vapourware, is busily turning them into reality. Sidestepping the karaoke phone we reported on earlier and the graunching design horror that is Mitsubishi's V401D, there are some cool handsets in here. Leading the pack is Sharp's V602SH, which has a 2-megapixel autofocus camera with a 2X optical zoom (a world first), and a decently sized 2.4-inch display. It also comes with the Bowlingual dog-bark translator as standard, but we'll overlook that one. [PDF warning]

    By Gareth Edwards Read More
  • Motorola's MPx220 Smartphone by the end of the month? Nah...

    Mobile Gadget News reports on a tip that the long-awaited MPx220 Smartphone, which Motorola still hasn't officially announced yet, is supposed to be available from AT&T Wireless around the end of the month. We've heard lots of conflicting information about when this phone is supposed to arrive (remember how it was originally supposed to be out back in February?), so we wouldn't be shocked if the MPx220 didn't hit until September or even later.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • New Treo by September?

    It's not much, but we'll take whatever news we can get these days: Taiwanese manufacturer HTC is supposed to be getting a big contract from palmOne to build an upgraded version of Treo 600 (pictured at right) and that it should be out by September. Among other gadgets, HTC also makes the XDA Pocket PC Phone and a couple of cellphones running on Microsoft's Smartphone operating system. [Via PalmInfocenter]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • WiFi phones getting with the program

    The AP is waking up and noticing that making free/cheap Voice over IP phone calls from WiFi hotspots could be the next big thing — or at least that they could be if more than a couple of WiFi phones were actually on the market — and has a decent overview of recent developments, like discount long distance provider IDT's planned Voice over WiFi network, a mobile version of Skype's free VoIP software that works on wireless Pocket PCs, Vocera's WiFi communicator badges, and Dartmouth's free campuswide Voice over WiFi network. Curiously, no mention of Vonage's plans for a WiFi phone or the simple fact that making calls this way is really not much cheaper and considerably less convenient than just carrying a cellphone.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Motorola's A630 smartphone

    SlashPhone has a few new details about Motorola's other smartphone with a built-in keyboard that's coming out, the A630, which looks all set to play the role of the ugly stepsister to the MPx. Besides flipping open to reveal a QWERTY keyboard, which we already knew about, the A630 is now going to run on Microsoft's Smartphone operating system rather than its Pocket PC operating system (there is a difference), and will have a built-in VGA quality digital camera, Bluetooth, and quad-band GSM (so it'll work most everywhere). [Via Smartphone Thoughts]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The trick to getting 3D on a cellphone

    Some researchers at the Torino Polytechnic in Italy have thought up a way for cellphones and PDAs, with their puny processors, to display complex 3D models: have another computer do all the heavy lifting. The scheme is to have a special server on the network do all the graphics intensive number crunching, and then feed an image back to the handheld (whether the handheld's screen has the resolution to even make the 3D image intelligible is another matter). Make a change or need to see the image from another angle, and the request gets bounced back to the server, which then spits out what you need. Obviously there are the expected problems with lag time, but eventually the bandwidth will be there to make this a more or less seamless experience. Though given the glacial pace at which 3G is rolling out, we're not just sure whether that's gonna happen before cellphones have fast enough processors to simply do all this 3D stuff on their own. [Via SmartMobs]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Cameraphones as barcode readers

    There's a new software app for smartphones running on the Symbian operating system that lets you use the phones built-in camera (assuming it has one) as a barcode reader. It doesn't work with regular barcodes (there are already a few programs like Scanbuy that claim to do that), but it does let anyone embed a URL into a special barcodes called semacodes. We can see why something similar failed with the CueCat that came out a few years ago, since it was only for PCs, but with most cellphones actually typing out a URL is a hassle and anything that saves people some time and trouble is good. [Via The Feature]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Cellphones going Linux

    Article on TechWeb about how Linux is slowly starting to make its way onto more and more cellphones, and how there are already a handful of Linux-powered handsets from Samsung and Motorola for sale — but only in Asia. A few months back we would have advised any Linux diehards hoping to get an open source cellphone not to hold their breath waiting for one of these to show up in the States, but Motorola now says it'll introduce the E680 (pictured at right) here later this year, with more to follow.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony Ericsson's follow-up to the P900?

    These pics of what purport to be Sony Ericsson's follow-up to their P900 smartphone seem to us like someone had a little too much fun with Photoshop, but MobileBurn feels pretty certain they're legit, and we're gonna trust them on this one (they've never burned us before, so to speak). Anyway, if this is the real deal, it looks like it's basically a P900 with a keypad that flips open to reveal a QWERTY keyboard, something that we always thought that the P900 and its predecessor, the P800, should have had, though we're not quite sure how great the keyboard would be to actually type on. Anyway, the other details they've gleaned is that the phone, which is code-named "Layla", will be out in the third quarter of this year and sport a regular VGA quality camera (rather than a bump up in quality to one megapixel).

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Yakumo's omikron BT Pocket PC Phone

    We weren't gonna go so heavy on the PDAs and cellphones today, but what the heck: Yakumo is coming out with a new version of its omikron Pocket PC Phone with built-in Bluetooth. The omikron BT comes out in Europe in July. No word on a possible US release, but since all Yakumo is doing is rebadging some other manufacturers product, there's a possibility that someone else might bring this phone to the US under a different brand name. [Via MSMobiles]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Samsung's new two megapixel cameraphone

    MobileBurn has some details on the SPH-V440, Samsung's new two megapixel cameraphone which not only can record video clips of up to two hours in length, but also has a 262,000 color LCD screen that swivels around so you can hold it just like you would a mini-camcorder. And though we hate to tease anyone like this, there is basically zero chance that this phone will ever surface outside of Korea.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The POZ X301: new Pocket PC Phone with built-in WiFi

    PDA Live's spotted another new Pocket PC Phone from an obscure Chinese manufacturer that could potentially show up from Sprint or Verizon here in the States (though probably it won't). The POZ X301 has a slider design like the CU928 we mentioned the other day, but has a regular numeric keypad rather than a QWERTY mini-keyboard. The rest of the phone isn't bad, either: built-in WiFi, a low-res digital camera, a 400MHz processor, and 64MB of RAM.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Lots and lots of WiFi phones coming

    There are already a few of these on the market — with at least a couple more that we know of on the way — but Om Malik says that we should expect to see no fewer than a dozen different WiFi phones before the end of this year (probably from established WiFi players like Linksys, NetGear, and D-Link). To be perfectly honest, we'd much prefer just to have a regular cellphone with WiFi built-into it. But hardly anyone seems to want to sell us that.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Printing from cellphones to get easier, at least in theory

    The quality of pictures taken with cameraphones is still so crappy that most people don't bother printing them out, but since it's not going to be that way forever, Nokia, Samsung, and Siemens have joined up with Canon, Epson, and HP's Mobile Imaging and Printing Consortium to work on ways to make it easier for people to print photos directly from their phones.   [Via PicturePhoning.com]

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Social Media (1)

  • Moblogs have shorter lifespans than houseflies

    No surprise here: a new study from the HP Labs Information Dynamics Group that the longer you moblog, the fewer and fewer photos you end up taking, with the average user posting about 13 photos their first week, a number which falls to just four after a month (and after five weeks the median actually drops all the way down to zero). Could it be that the novelty of being able to take a crappy picture and upload it to a website where three people will look at it wears off rather quickly? Nah...

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Space (3)

  • NASA's Robonaut

    Not only is NASA working on removing pilots from the skies, they also want to replace us on spacewalks as well. Fortunately for us, the Robonaut is designed to be remotely-controlled by a human, thus preventing a team of renegade Robonauts from taking over the International Space Station. Should be a while before we see one of these in orbit, but NASA says that they've been having a lot of success having Robonauts practice doing simulated repairs on the Hubble Space Telescope.

    By Simon Spagnoletti Read More
  • The MADMEN: NASA's swarm of asteroid deflecting robots

    And speaking of NASA and robots, the agency has contracted SpaceWorks Engineering to investigate  something we thought they should have done ever since Deep Impact and Armaggedon scared the crap out of us a few years back: build a fleet of robots that can destroy any asteroid that's on a collision course with the Earth. Most unreassuringly, they're calling the robots "Modular Asteroid Deflection Mission Ejector Nodes", or MADMEN, and they're supposed to work by chipping away at the asteroid and using the resulting force from the ejection to gradually push the asteroid of the Earth's path.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • NASA's mad scientist

    Rather than bug your friends with your crazy, half-baked ideas, you should get a government grant like Ross Hoffman. He's one of lucky handful of scientists that NASA's Institute for Advanced Concepts has basically charged with thinking up hare-brained schemes, machines, and gadgets like a shape-shifting space suit or a fleet of asteroid destroying robots or weather-controlling satellites or space elevators (like the one pictured at right), which might actually get built.

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Sports (3)

  • The PistolMouse FPS

    Our pal Kevin Christley is at E3, and has just sent back his first finding, the PistolMouse FPS, gun-shaped USB mouse for first person shooter games. Works with both PC and Mac games and should start shipping next month.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Retro LED MP3 player

    With its retro-styled LED display, it's a good thing we stumbled upon Vandisori's new wearable MP3 player, especially since we've been looking long and hard for that perfect player to bring with us to the rollerdisco. [Via I4U]

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Streaming (2)

  • Delivering HDTV over the Internet

    And since we've been talking so much about digital set top boxes lately we figured we'd mentiong that a company called Matrixstream says they have a new way that cable companies to deliver high-definition video on demand over the Internet to their I-MX 1000 IP TV set top box. Even better, they say that they can even deliver DVD-quality video over a WiFi connection (doing that with HDTV is considerably more difficult). There's nothing about what whether or not there any cable providers are actually planning to use their setup.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • BBC to test downloadable programming

    Can we just say that Ashley Highfield is The Man? The BBC's Director of New Media and Technology has announced that they will begin trialing a new program to allow people to download shows from the Internet after they air on TV. The trial will begin with 500 BBC employees, who will be able to download selected programs after they air to watch them on their PC, burn them to DVD or even transfer them to PDAs to watch during their commute. If the employee trial goes well, it's expected to be extended to a select few broadband Internet subscribers from different services, and when it's finally launched to the public Highfield expects that viewers will be able to check out a week's programming from an interface similar to BBC Digital's program guide and just select and download the ones they want to watch. We knew it, you knew it, and now the BBC knows it, but people have been swapping their shows online thanks to BitTorrent and other P2P applications for ages already. But instead of suing downloaders or trying to lockdown their shows, the BBC is charging right in and helping downloaders instead. See? We told you Ashley was The Man. If this works, we can't wait until Highfield and his team get the entire BBC archives online.

    By Eric Lin Read More

Tablets (7)

  • Elanza's Webpad

    We have yet to stumble upon a single person who has actually bought one, but we keep hearing about these barebones webpads from anonymous manufacturers we've never heard of before. The latest to turn up is Elanza's ElanzaWebpad, which runs on Windows CE 3.0 and — as it isn't meant for doing much more than accessing the Internet or streaming video and audio —only has a 300MHz processor and 64MB of RAM, though it does have built-in WiFi and a 10.4-inch LCD screen. [Via PDALive]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Toshiba updates their e800 Pocket PC

    We'd heard that Toshiba was abandoning the market entirely, but if they are that hasn't stopped them from refreshing their e800 Pocket PC, the one with the high-resolution VGA screen (remember when you were lucky to get a regular PC with VGA?), adding Bluetooth to the mix and updating with the latest version of the Pocket PC operating system, Microsoft's Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Two new Tablet PCs

    A couple of new Tablet PCs coming out soon: First, the 3500 (pictured at right), a cheap convertible-style Tablet PC from Averatec that's supposed to retail for just $1,100 (and probably less with rebates). [A convertible-style Tablet is like a laptop, just with a screen that twists around and folds down.] And the V300 from ECS, a slate-style Tablet PC with a dock that unfolds and an 8.4-inch LCD, 256MB of RAM, optional built-in WiFi, and a 20GB hard drive. [Thanks, Christopher] Read - Averatec 3500 Read - ECS V300

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Details emerge about HP's new iPAQ Hx4700 Pocket PC

    iPAQabilities has the scoop on the Hx4700, one of those new Pocket PCs coming out from HP that we reported on late last week. Apparently it'll be the only one of HP's new iPAQs to feature one of those new 4-inch, high-resolution VGA displays that are all the rage these days, and it'll have both built-in WiFi and Bluetooth, 128MB of RAM, CompactFlash and SD expansion card slots, a speedy 624MHz processor, some sort of weird new touchpad in place of the regular D-Pad controller. Supposedly this'll be out sometime around the end of July or beginning of August.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Sony's wireless tablet PC

    And a third surprise out of Sony today: a wireless tablet PC that's not actually a Tablet PC (since it runs on the regular flavor of Windows rather than Windows XP Tablet PC Edition) and is just 2.6cm thick. The Vaio UGN-U70, which has a 1GHz processor, a 20GB hard drive, and built-in 802.11g WiFi, isn't meant to be anybody's main PC (its screen is rather small), but is pitched as a mobile multimedia machine for accessing watching videos, listening to music, reading ebooks, and looking at digital photos. We're not sure about that Sony iPod, and there are plenty of other 17-inch laptops out there, but someone at Sony must have realized that this is exactly what we've been looking for. Now all they have to do is hurry up and release it outside of Japan.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Zupera's SmartPad wireless mini computer

    Somewhere between a PDA and Tablet PC lies Zupera's SmartPad wireless mini computer, which runs on Windows CE.NET and has roughly the same specs as the average Pocket PC: a 400Mhz processor, 128MB of RAM, an SD expansion card slot, and optional WiFi. That is, except for its 7-inch LCD screen and built-in GPRS or CDMA wireless cellular data connection. [Via TRFJ]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Tablet PC Post opens for business

    We rarely focus on software here at Engadget (since, you know, we're usually too busy writing  about the actual gadgets themselves), but since our Tablet PC category has been looking a little thin lately, we thought we'd mention Tablet PC Post, a new site for downloading applications specifically designed to take advantage of the handwriting capabilities of the Tablet PC.

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Technology (16)

  • Bluetooth headset roundup

    MobileBurn has a roundup of four different new Bluetooth cellphone headsets, the Motorola HS810, Tekkeon's ezTalker, the Plantronics M3500, and Tekram's TM-312. They actually like the Motorola best, though they seem to feel comfortable recommending any of them.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • pt's "How-To" Tuesday, How to make your own Ringtones...

    It's Tuesday and this week's "How-To" project is how to make your very own ringtones for your phone. There is a little bit of controversy about this you can read about that here and here -now there are many ways to do this, but here's the one I am most fond of for all sorts of reasons, I'll get to those in a bit...First a little background. It's hard to tell the current value of the ring tone market, could be about $4 billion worldwide, could be less. No matter what, it looks like it's going down. I personally think it has peaked. Phones are changing a lot and just about all modern phones support MP3, WAV, and/or 3GP files as ring tones. This basically means people are going to make their own since just about any one can make these files with any average computer. It is2004 baby, we're all making our own play lists with CDs we buy for our iPods or music we purchase online, using GarageBand to make our own music, our own background screens for our desktops and phones, our own DVDs and movies with iMovie and MovieMaker- we're all becoming producers, citizen engineers, and we're not going back. Smart companies will empower us. We're not criminals- we're customers and good ones at that- I spend more than I make it seems, hello high interest credit cards! We all do this in some way now??? I bought a CD and use it in my alarm clock (a lot of alarm clocks have that as a feature)- Should I pay $3 for that? Perhaps, seems weird to me. Sometimes when the phone rings I whistle a popular tune from a CD I bought, do I need to pay for that? America is a great place, we have fair use- it's why we're great innovators and heck- making stuff for our phones for our own personal use goes beyond fair use. In this week's how to we show you how to make your own ring tones, for just your phone, for just personal use, from the CD you just bought. Getting started So let's get started. I personally think best application on the market for making ring tones for the average non-uber geek is "Xingtone" add to that, they work with the record companies, carriers and do a great job empowering the "do it yourself" crowd. What is Xingtone? From the site: "Xingtone's desktop software is easy-to-use, legal, and allows you to create mobile phone ringtones using digital audio files on your computer - music clips, sound effects, your child's laugh, your dog's bark, or any sound you like!" Before you download the application (it comes with a free trial that has 5 samples) make sure to test your phone: http://www.xingtone.com/phones.html You can also use your phone to browse directly to this site and test out the formats: http://www.xingtone.com/test.html Formats supported: mp3, mid, gcd, wav, mmf and amr. Fill out your phone number, carrier and phone type. You'll get a SMS and if your phone supports it, you're good to download the application. Next, download the application, it's PC only but a Mac version is in the works and this version works with VPC: http://xingtone.com/download.html So I bought the application, $14.95 is a fair price to do what I want to do, not only am I going to save $ but time. My friend Christian's band has a CD I really like and now I'll make some of the songs in to ring tones as well as a lot of other CDs my pals have made that I want to quickly convert to ringtones. The phone For this example I am going to use a Sony Ericsson p900 which supports MP3. Install the application, if you bought it you'll need to enter your serial number, carrier, phone and source (CD). Once configured run the application (double clicking the icon on the desktop). Pop a CD in your drive. Click Open in the Xingtone application. Choose the track you wish to import. From there you can highlight parts of the song you want, I picked a 10 second clip. Hit Trim and make any more edits. You can also adjust the volume as well if desired. When you're ready, hit upload. One thing worth noting, the file is never really stored on your system, so you can't share it with others, you're just going to put it on your phone and only your phone, from your CD. On your phone you'll get a SMS with a link to download the file. I use Opera on my p900 so I placed the link there and followed the link. Clicking the link will download the file and open Qviewer, you can listen to the file there. Click here to watch a video of that. From there you can tap Music > Save and set this as your new ringtone. And that's it. Click here to watch a video of a phone call with my brand spankin' new ringtone. From here you can do just about anything. I am going to make a few more ringtones from this CD which is available here by the way (thanks Christian!). Now that you're making ringtones, you might ask what will this mean to the record and cell phone folks? The future Some labels realize this is where it is at. Even Walt Disney's very own Hollywood record's artist Hillary Duff is working with Xingtone to get her ringtones out there. Other labels like Artemis records are putting Xingtone on the CDs adding value to the CD and making it easier for owners to make ring tones. For carriers, it might be a good idea to look at this model and empower their users to get their own music on their phones, churn, switching and new customer acquisition is what makes and breaks a cell phone company, I'd switch to any carrier that "got it" a lot of people our there will too. Look how many of us bought iPods and buy music now. Questions, comments? pt@flashenabled.com

    By Phillip Torrone Read More
  • Run Windows 98 on a Pocket PC

    We can't think of a good reason why you'd want to do this, but someone has figured out how to get Windows 98 Second Edition to run on a Pocket PC. [Via Slashdot]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • DIY remote controlled Bluetooth car

    Forget Sony Ericsson's Bluetooth toy car, and check out this DIY guide for turning any regular remote controlled car into Bluetooth car that you can control from your cellphone, PDA, or laptop. [Via Blueserker]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • WiFi on the highway

    Atheros says they're working with Mobilecast Telematics in Japan on WiFi network for cars, with the first test being to turn a 60km stretch of highway from Tokyo to Narita Airport into one long hotspot.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • JVC still might come out with a Pocket PC

    Despite having mysteriously canceled the iO, their line of multimedia-centric Pocket PCs, last year because of "component" problems, JVC says they're still considering coming out with a line of handhelds, but they're not sure when.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • A G5 iMac?

    It has to happen sooner or later, and MacRumors reports that Apple is working on a G5 iMac which should be out later this year, though no word on exactly when.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Probably not the PlayStation Portable

    Yeah, it's probably/certainly a fake, but this is the only semi-plausible renderings of the PlayStation Portable we've spotted since Sony came out with those concept illustrations last year that we've all been obsessing over.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • RCA's new LCD TVs

    Three new LCD televisions from RCA, the 30-inch LCDX3022W (pictured above), the 27-inch LCDX2722W, and the 26-inch LCDX2620W.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • WinXP Media Center controls on Pocket PC

    Rudeo Control is a Pocket PC app that functions as a remote control for a Windows XP Media Center. The app interfaces either via Bluetooth or Wi-Fi, and allows total control over music and media playback. [Via Wi-Fi Networking News]

    By Alberto Escarlate Read More
  • Guide to buying a high-definition TV

    ExtremeTech has a handy guide to buying a high-definition TV that makes at least little bit of sense out of the increasingly byzantine world of HDTV, digital TV, and flat-panel displays.

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Tomorrow (5)

  • At NextFest: OLEDs and the future of flat-panels

    Among the many gadgets and concept devices being shown off at the NextFest this weekend are a bunch of different Organic Light-Emitting Diode technologies from Universal Display Corporation, including a transparent OLED screen and a PDA with a flexible display which rolls up into a pen.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Wired's NextFest

    While everyone might be concentrating on E3 right now, up in San Francisco, Wired Magazine's first NextFest opened its doors yesterday morning. Though these two conventions are on conflicting weekends, they really don't share as much clientelle as one might think — the seeming-conflict seems more like a calculated marketing bid to aim for a more general audience and excluding the regular tech-convetion goers. NextFest highlights prototypes of science-fiction style visions of the future, is supposed to draw between 10,000 to 20,000 people, and is sponsored by big players like GE, GM, HP, Motorolla, T-Mobile, the Science Channel, Yahoo, and (the source of this writeup) the San Francisco Chronicle. Some tired goods the Chronicle features is the Moller Skycar, a driving and flying car, the kind which has been hyped every year and in every futuristic movie ever made. Then there's the "invisible cloak" which has been written about extensively for a couple years, made by University of Tokyo's Tachi Lab, and definitely does not grant the wearer invisibilty but does make a kindof cool art piece. Other less flashy but more worthwhile prototypes are HP Labs' "translating camera" which travelers can use to translate street signs by way of a digital camera, a handheld computer and some translating-software. And GE Medical Systems surgeon-aiding technology enabling patient-data-access mid-operation via the surgeons's hand signals and voice commands (if surgeons touch anything during operation they have to rewash and resterilize their hands — or at least they're supposed to). This is the first time Wired has organized this event and if all goes well, and they didn't miss the E3 crowd too much, then it'll be NextFest New York 2005.          

    By Katie Fehrenbacher Read More
  • The wireless beer pitcher monitor

    We were hoping that someone would finally invent a practical use for all this wireless technology we keep hearing about, and fortunately a bunch of Cornell students have found one: a wireless beer pitcher monitor that can tell when it's empty and automatically alert waitstaff of when you're in dire need of a refill. [Via Slashdot]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The PDA of 2010

    Speaking of flexible displays, Popular Science peers into the future of PDAs with a concept for a handheld for the year 2010 that opens up to reveal a full-sized flexible OLED screen, and has 250GB of internal storage, a high-speed wireless connection, and a bunch of other promising features: The smart communicator will have its own nervous system: sensors that assess the outside world and adjust the device's behavior accordingly. A built-in RFID (radio-frequency identification) reader will pick up data stored on RFID tags in nearby objects, so the PDA will automatically embed identification labels in the photos it takes. The onboard eye scanner will let you navigate pages with a mere glance at the menu bar. Light, heat and motion sensors will enable the device to know whether it's in your pocket or your hand, and pump up its cellphone's ring tone if needed. A tilt sensor will trigger the display to shift between portrait and landscape mode, and it'll offer finger-free scrolling. The microphone will measure ambient noise and adjust the volume to compensate in a loud restaurant. The GPS will detect when you're nearing home, and the communicator will signal ahead to turn on the heat or AC. Once you arrive, the Bluetooth network will automatically synchronize data between your communicator and your PC. [Via PDALive]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The future is flexible

    PC World makes a visit to this year's Flexible Displays and Electronics Conference and comes back convinced — surprise, surprise — that the future is with flexible, folding, and rolleable displays. Almost everything they saw at the show is still a few years off, but much to our surprise there are actually two products with flexible displays for sale right now, Gyricon's electronic ink display, which we mentioned a few weeks back (we knew it used eInk, but not that it was flexible, too), and a wristwatch from Nike with a curved LCD screen (which has actually been out for years).

    By Peter Rojas Read More

TV & Movies (8)

  • Why widescreen won

    Slate explains how letterboxed DVDs won out over pan-and-scan, which gives you a full screen picture at the expense of showing you the movie in all its full widescreen glory. Why? Well, besides the fact that the rise of widescreen TVs is making it possible to watch letterboxed movies without having those annoying black bars across the top and bottom, Slate thinks that the real reason is that filmgoers have gotten more savvy (which sounds like it was painful for them to admit), and aren't satisfied anymore with anything less than seeing the film as it was intended.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Flying USS Enterprise model

    We've gone to great lengths to avoid the obvious Star Trek (and Star Wars and Simpsons) references — they're just way too easy — but every rule has its exception, and we couldn't help but link to this scale model a guy in Japan built of the original USS Enterprise that actually flies around - sort of. You just have to watch the video and see.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The HDTV UpConverter

    Proving that you can't get something out of nothing, the Philadelphia Inquirer reviews the HDTV UpConverter, a little box from ADS Tech that is supposed to take standard definition broadcasts (aka regular TV) and convert them up to high-resolution HDTV, and discovers that the picture doesn't look all that much better. Sounds like the UpConverter amps up the brightness and contrast a little (and probably doubles the number of lines in the image signal), but if it isn't high-def in the first place, there isn't a whole lot you can do. [Via Uprez]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Toshiba's new swiveling portable DVD player

    Also new from Toshiba yesterday: a portable DVD player with a swiveling 8.9-inch LCD screen. But besides being able to rotate around, the screen on the SD-P2700 also has just about the highest resolution you'll find in a portable DVD player (a lot of those budget players you'll find use cruddy low-res screens — some of which are even recycled!). Should be out in September.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Turn any DVD into a 3D movie

    DDD has a new software program called TriDef DVD Player that they claim can convert any regular two-dimensional DVD movie into a complete 3D experience. The catch is that it only works on laptops with special 3D LCD screens, and right now Sharp's Actius RD3D (pictured at right) is the only one of those sold in the US. Supposedly it does work, but if the movie wasn't filmed in 3D in the first place, there is only so much can do.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • NY Times on the DIY home theater

    Admitting that she had almost no idea what she was doing (though we'd hardly consider anyone who writes for the Circuits section of the New York Times to be a neophyte when it comes to anything related to technology), Katie Hafner set out to build a home theater on the cheap, and has some tips for any other wannabe home cineastes who'd like to do it themselves but don't know how to get going.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • NHJ's TV watch coming to America

    The VTV-101, that TV wristwatch from NHJ with a 1.5-inch LCD screen we reported on about a month ago, is coming to America. The watch uses Sony's miniscule TV tuner, and conveniently, since it is actually supposed to tell time, has a second, smaller LCD just for displaying the time.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Olsen Twins don't look so hot on HDTV

    First it was taking Britney Spears down a peg, now Phillip Swan is tackling People magazine's annual list of the 50 most beautiful people in the world, arguing that if you could see list-makers Brad Pitt, Jennifer Aniston, Hugh Jackman, and the Olsen Twins (who go from jailbait to barely legal in a matter of weeks) for what they really are on HDTV, they wouldn't make the cut: "People Magazine has it all wrong," Swann says. "The Olsen twins are adorable, but they are also seventeen. At the age, your skin has more breakouts than an episode of America's Most Wanted. They have pimple problems and it's clear as a bell in HDTV." Swann adds that Aniston and Pitt still are affected by facial blemishes from their teenage years. "Pitt is a handsome guy, but if you saw him in real-life or HDTV, which is roughly the same thing, you wouldn't think he was so beautiful," Swann says. "The magazine clearly is basing this list on image rather than reality. Of course, it also helps to get on the list if the celebrity has a good public relations person." Turns out that the quality of high-definition broadcasts are so high that you can actually see all the little imperfections, like wrinkles, acne, caked-on makeup, etc that you don't notice on regular television. It's a good thing that the viewing public isn't obsessed with their appearance or anything, otherwise this could prove to be a real problem. [Via Uprez]

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Wearables (10)

  • Sony Ericsson's HBH-200 Bluetooth headset

    In an interesting solution to the problem of Bluetooth headsets not having screens (a problem we hadn't even realized they'd had), Sony Ericsson has come out with the HBH-200, which has a small LCD screen for caller ID. While we do lament the loss of call-screening ability as a result of headset use, we really don't see this catching on. Putting it in your pocket defeats the purpose of not having any wires and clipping it to your shirt means you have yet another remote-type thing hanging off your body. What we really want is the caller ID displayed on our watch screen, completely independent of a headset (which would also solve the problem of taking the phone out of our pocket/bag just to find out it's someone we didn't want to talk to anyway).

    By Simon Spagnoletti Read More
  • iPod modding

    Most definitely voiding whatever warranty was left, George Ryon decided he wanted a red LCD on his first generation iPod, so he busted it open and slipped in a red acetate. He assures us that it "looks better in person". It better, considering all the trouble he went to. [Via The Unofficial Apple Weblog]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Phatch - Seiko's Bluetooth watchphone?

    Can't tell if this is legit or not, but Seiko is supposedly working on the "Phatch" (and if it's real, they're going to have to work on the name, too), a watchphone with built-in Bluetooth that you use with a Bluetooth headset. So far no one has actually been able to come out with a watchphone this small, and we're a little skeptical that this is for real, since besides the problems inherent in squeezing a cellphone radio into something that small, you'd still have to find space for a battery large enough that wouldn't need to be recharged every couple of hours. But to be honest, at this point we'd settle for a regular watch with Bluetooth (and no phone) that we could sync with a handheld or a PC. Seiko was supposed to come out with one a few years back, but it has yet to surface. [Via BlogSphere.org]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Monolith 2 MP3 player

    It's black, slab-like, and they even call it the "Monolith 2" (monoliths are in these days), but while it is pretty small (it's not much longer than a lighter), light (about 96 grams), and has a newfangled OLED display, we weren't too happy to read that Star Laboratories' new MP3 player maxes out at 512MB. We need more! [Via Digital Audio News]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Nike's MP3Run

    ZDNet is calling it the ultimate MP3 player for athletes: a 256MB model from Philips and Nike called the MP3Run that comes with a special Bluetooth module that attaches to your shoe and keeps track of your speed and how much ground you've covered. You can even press a button and a synthesized voice can give an update on how you're doing, and there's a built-in strobelight to help reduce (but not eliminate) your chances of being struck by a car while running at night. [Thanks, Mike]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The future of wearable displays

    An article over at Forbes.com about wearable displays that amazingly does NOT mention the Eyetop, and instead talks about a few hadn't heard much about, like Interactive Imaging Systems' Second Sight and MicroOptical's heads-up display for eyeglasses (pictured at right). It seems like the big obstacle these are gonna run into sooner or later is that fewer and fewer people want to walk around wearing glasses of any kind.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The tennis shoe wore computers

    In about six hours expect to be sick of hearing about the "1", a new $250 running shoe from Adidas with a built-in 20MHz microprocessor and an electric motor that can automatically adjust its cushioning in real-time to respond to how hard you're running and what kind of surface you're running on. Coming with a computer inside of it also means that you'll have to get used to changing the battery on your shoes every few months. Should be out in December.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Safa's 1.5GB MP3 player

    We hate to be one of those "it's nice, but it's not the iPod mini" kind of guys, but there's a new 1.5GB MP3 player from Safa, which besides holding 2.5 fewer gigabytes than the mini, also falls pretty flat in the design department (it's not so bad as it is just boring, which in some ways is almost worse). The HMP-110R does have a couple of nice extras, though, like a built-in FM tuner, line-in recording, and support for both Ogg Vorbis and WMA files.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • The Yepp Sports YP-60 - Samsung's fitness MP3 player

    Buried towards the bottom of this article about the heated competition among MP3 player manufacturers in South Korea is the news that Samsung is coming out with a new MP3 player for fitnesst types, the Yepp Sports YP-60, which besides being able to play music can also measure your heart rate and track the total number of calories you've burned. [Via Digital Media Thoughts]

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Typhoon's 15GB My DJ MP3 player

    It's pretty much our job to not be jaded about these kinds of things, but we think we're reaching the point where all these random new hard drive-based MP3 players are just starting to seem like background noise — there are so many anonymous models from anonymous Taiwanese manufacturers coming out that it's becoming difficult to tell them apart or get particularly excited about any one specific model. The latest player to spark our ennui is the 15GB My DJ from Typhoon (which seems destined to tangle with Dell's 15GB DJ MP3 player), which actually has a decently large LCD screen and a built-in FM tuner.

    By Peter Rojas Read More

Xbox (3)

  • The Xbox Next PC: Microsoft's PC/Xbox hybrid?

    They've hinted at merging the Xbox 2 with PC gaming before, but this is huge: Microsoft is supposed to be testing the waters on an "Xbox Next PC", a $599 PC/game console hybrid that would be able to play all Xbox and Xbox 2 titles, as well as regular PC games and would come with a hard drive, a DVD/CD-RW combination drive, a regular Xbox controller, a remote control, a keyboard and a mouse. The one catch is that you'd have to use it with PC monitor or an HDTV, but that is becoming less and less of an issue for most people. No specifics on when this might come out, but probably not at least for a few months after the Xbox 2 hits stores next year.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Get a modded Xbox

    We're not entirely sure how legal this, but a company called FriendTech is offering to take your Xbox and mod it with a faster processor, an S-Video out port, and extra RAM to turn it into a digital entertainment hub that can play audio and video files (you have to add a hard drive yourself). If you actually want to play games on it, you just flip a switch and you it turns back into a regular Xbox. They'll also just sell you one that's already been upgraded for a little or sell you a kit if you want to try and do it yourself.

    By Peter Rojas Read More
  • Make videophone calls with an Xbox

    More news on the E3 tip: Microsoft is showing off a new videophone for making video calls with an Xbox (a subscription to their online Xbox Live service is required, not surprisingly), and they've even gamely trotted out a fading celeb like Jenny McCarthy to help promote it, who we're sure will be spending plenty of long nights video chatting with her Xbox.

    By Peter Rojas Read More