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Samsung’s P3 unboxed and caught on video 01 December 2008 at 11:52 am by admin

Word on the street has it that the Samsung P3 will be getting its official launch at CES in January, and to whet your appetite we’ve got a video unboxing for you courtesy of those crazy kids at Generation MP3. Apparently the same form factor as the venerable P2 (but in an all aluminum enclosure), the PMP sports haptic touch, WQVGA 3-inch (480 x 272) display, Bluetooth, microphone, speaker, FM tuner, plays all the expected media formats, and will be available in 4GB, 8GB, 16GB, or 32GB. Also in the video, we get a pretty extensive look at those widgets everyone’s been talking about. But don’t take it from us — you can see for yourself after the break.

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Samsung’s P3 unboxed and caught on video originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Dec 2008 11:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ Why the iPod Touch Didn’t Get Google Street View By admin 24 November 2008 at 11:28 am and have No Comments

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The new 2.2 update for the iPhone brings a lot of great new features. Google Street View, direct viewing, listening and download of podcasts and a few small but neat tweaks. The iPod Touch also got a 2.2 upgrade, but it lacks one headline feature: Street View. Why? To answer that, we should take a look at the different goals Apple seems to have in mind for the two products, and also at arbitrary, software-based product differentiation in general.

On launch, the iPod Touch was immediately labeled the “phoneless iPhone”. There were some other hardware differences (camera, volume buttons) but the description was essentially correct. If didn’t want a contract, or if you lived outside the US, you bought the Touch.

As the two lines matured, they grew apart. The 2.0 iPod Touch gained built-in support for the Nike+ system, a dongle which sits in your sneaker and tells the iPod how far you have run. The iPhone 3G got GPS. These were hardware differences and made sense: The way Apple uses GPS pretty much mandates an always-on Internet connection to be useful, and the iPod Touch, lacking 3G, needed another way to track a runner’s distance.

But the lack of Street View is a software diference. Why wouldn’t Apple include it in the Touch? You might say that, without an Internet connection in the street, it would be useless, but my computer can access Street View and I never take it outside. In fact, out in the street is arguably the least useful place for Street View — you can just open your eyes and see the real street in front of you.

This seemingly `arbitrary crippling of devices isn’t unique to Apple. Camera makers do the same thing. Take Canon as an example. All Canon cameras use a version of the company’s DIGIC chip to process images. But while the high-end (more expensive) cameras have RAW support, auto-bracketing and higher shutter speeds, the cheaper cameras don’t. Because it’s a lot cheaper to make a lot of the same chip, Canon simply switches the extra features off in firmware. Otherwise, all the products in the range would start to look very similar.

In fact, most camera manufacturers do this, and Canon is one of the more open ones. Because it makes public the inner working of parts of its software, hackers can re-enable many of the disabled features. Take a look at the Wired How-To Wiki to find out how easy it is.

So why is Apple playing this game? After all, the iPhone and the iPod Touch are clearly quite different already — one is a phone with a contract, the other isn’t. Our guess is that it’s not a devious scheme to make iPod Touch owners upgrade to the iPhone, although Apple conspiracy nuts will probably think otherwise.

We think it might simply be about usability. Why add features that will simply not work a lot of the time? As it is, the Maps application will cache some data so it is still available without a connection. It’s limited, but if you scroll around the map a little before you leave the house, you at least get something you can use later. But if the Touch did have Street View (and transit times, and walking directions) then these options would have to be deactivated when offline.

If they were left on, this would clearly be confusing for the user. And adding the ability for the iPod to change its UI depending on a network connection would be both inconsistent and also require a branching of the code base to achieve it. This may sound trivial, but if the iPhone development team is too busy to offer copy and paste, then forking the code to add extra features to the iPod Touch is clearly going to be a low priority.

Yes, I’d like to have Street View, but I don’t expect to get it soon. As a long time Apple customer, I’ve learned that I have to do things the Apple way, whether I like it or not.

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+ iPhone 2.2 firmware update available now, Google Street View and plenty more By admin 21 November 2008 at 12:43 am and have No Comments

It’s here. Google Street View and over the air Podcast downloads from iTunes. Yup, public transit and walking directions too and the ability to share your location via email. Bug fixes, Safari enhancements, the ability to toggle auto-text correction, and plenty more… just like we heard in the pre-rumor run-up. Now get outta here, your iTunes update awaits.

[Thanks Gustavo and badburro]

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iPhone 2.2 firmware update available now, Google Street View and plenty more originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Nov 2008 00:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ ASUS summons Core i7 power in ROG CG6190 gaming desktop By admin 21 November 2008 at 12:06 am and have No Comments

If you thought your ARES CG6155 was hot stuff during the sweltering summer, well, you were right. Sadly, your bragging days have come to an end, as a new era of cutting-edge buyers are fixing to one-up you with the purchase of ASUS’ ROG CG6190. Timed to be released alongside Intel’s potent Core i7 processor, this beast is built around the X58 chipset and includes an eye-catching chassis, 52% faster processing speed in 3D gaming applications (thanks, overclocked Core i7!), up to 12GB of DDR3 RAM and support for an NVIDIA triple-SLI GPU setup or an ATI CrossFireX rig. You’ll also notice a biometric fingerprint scanner, a unique 2-kilowatt dual power system, customized liquid cooling modules and a SupremeFX X-Fi audio card. As ASUS loves to do, we’re left in the dark on pricing, but we’d guess it’ll launch somewhere between expensive and ludicrously pricey here soon.

[Via ComputerMonger]

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ASUS summons Core i7 power in ROG CG6190 gaming desktop originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Nov 2008 00:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ Five Gadgets Which Were Killed by The Cellphone By admin 17 November 2008 at 9:08 am and have No Comments

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Calling a cellphone a mere phone seems a little silly these days. The little pocket wonders now do so much they are really handheld computers. With extras. The process of mashing one or more gadgets together in the same box used to be called convergence, but that approach quietly died as the mobile phone ate up any and every rival device.

So successful has this been that whole product categories have had the life choked out of their twitching bodies by the phone. The following list is an obituary to five of them, plus a look at the cellphone’s next victim.

The PDA

Remember the PDA? Right back to the Psion Organizer in 1984 (above), the PDA has essentially been an electronic calendar, address book and notepad. And right back to the Psion, with its squishy, non-QWERTY keyboard, they’ve been harder to use than their paper equivalents.

Still, despite this, it took the cellphone to finally kill them off. The fatal shortcoming? The address book. Who on earth would take out their PDA, call up a contact and then tap the phone number into their phone? Nobody, which is why, as the calendaring functions of phones got better, the PDA was quietly retired.

The Camera

We’re not saying that the standalone camera is dead. Far from it — one look in the street will show you how popular is the modern DSLR. But for people below a certain age, the camera-phone is the one they use, and it has already killed off the cheap, junky bottom end of the digicam market. It’s easy to see why: although the pictures from the small sensors might not be great, the camera-phone is always in your pocket, and you can snap and send pictures over the network in seconds.

This convenience more than makes up for the noisy pictures. Remember the saying: The best camera is the one you have with you.

The UMPC

The Ultra Mobile PC was a failed experiment, although once in while a company will drag the rotting corpse from its comfortable grave, slap on a bit of makeup and try to sell the idea again. The reason? Cellphones. Think about it: The UMPC was a full fledged computer crammed into a tiny box with an impossible-to-use keyboard, a pathetic battery life and an hilariously high price tag. The phone, in contrast, offers an operating system and interface designed for the modest hardware on which it will run. It’s cheap, and the battery lasts for days.

Better still, phones are only getting more powerful. The iPhone and the G1 are both handheld computers which happen to have a phone attached. And if you really do need a bigger screen, you can pick up two or three netbooks for the price of one UMPC.

The Phone

Hands up who still has a home landline with a telephone attached? Now, keep your arm in the air if you ever make calls on it. We don’t see many hands.

We still keep these old tethered phones around, for calling the emergency services if nothing else, or because its cheaper to buy an all-in-one package from the local telco. But the main phone for many people is the cellphone. Part of this is the convenience of always having it with you, even in the house.

But we think a bigger part is that the humble telephone just hasn’t kept up with technology. The handsets just don’t have the features we’re used to. And when we do use a landline, we look up the number on our cellphone and then type it in. Small wonder that most people just press the green button on the mobile instead.

The MP3 Player

Almost every phone comes with an MP3 player. We guess that in a few years, even the iPod will be dead, replaced entirely by the iPhone (and the iPod Touch, which is really just a cellphone without a phone). Music playback and a headphone jack is now a standard feature on even the cheapest of handsets (with some notable exceptions). Our prediction? The MP3 player will join the PDA in the gadget graveyard within a few short years.

Next: The Notebook

It will take some time, but its easy to imagine the cellphone completely replacing the laptop for mobile use. Sure, we might keep one at home for work, but the cellphone already does most of what our notebooks do. We can listen to music, play movies, and use the internet. One day, those big old, battery-sucking computers will be an amusing relic.

Ironically, these future phones might be lacking the one thing that gave them their name — a phone. When fast data connections are ubiquitous, voice traffic will inevitably be sent over the internet.

Photo: Wikipedia

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+ IPod Speakers Made From Paper Cups and Sticks By admin 17 November 2008 at 7:51 am and have No Comments

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Next time you’re down at the diner you might try out the CupSpeakers from Dmitry Zagga. His minimalist speaker design consists four paper cups, a couple of toothpicks and an iPod.

It is, as he puts it, an iPod Ghetto Accessory. There’s something very right about these cheap horn speakers — the clean white lines perfectly match the 2003 2G iPod. But we very much doubt the sound would be louder than that from the earbuds alone. On the other hand, they’re likely to be a lot better than some passive speaker systems you can buy.

Product page [Zagga via Yanko via Cult of Mac]

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+ Workers Must Cope With Sluggish, Old Computers Thanks to Economy By admin 14 November 2008 at 4:01 pm and have No Comments

Powerbook
Other than slowing down consumer spending, the economic downturn is deterring businesses from buying new computers for their workers.

The typical lifespan of an office computer is three years before it’s replaced by a new one, but 46 percent of businesses are postponing on purchasing upgrades because it’s one of the easiest ways to cut costs, according to a Wall Street Journal story. Though to the average consumer three years may not seem very long to merit an upgrade, office employees use their computers heavily and tend to wear them down faster. In consequence, slower computers (and massive layoffs) amount to office productivity taking a big hit.

Of course, fewer enterprise computer sales are affecting tech manufacturers as well, which is why research company IDC is projecting U.S. PC shipments will drop 1 percent in the fourth quarter compared to quarter four of 2007. The good news for consumers is that companies are slashing computer prices up to 30 percent to boost demand, but lower prices don’t necessarily bode well in a collapsing economy.

How Old Is Your Work Computer? [WSJ]

Photo: Brian X. Chen/Wired.com

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+ Dell’s music player delayed? By admin 10 November 2008 at 7:40 pm and have No Comments

Dell’s purported music player will apparently not be here in time for the holidays.

A report in Monday’s Wall Street Journal cited anonymous sources saying that a music player with software designed by Zing, a company Dell bought last year, will not be released as planned before the …

+ Dell Kills Music Player Plans, Leaves the Field Clear For Apple By admin 10 November 2008 at 1:01 pm and have No Comments

Ipod_touch

It may have been a bad idea to begin with and Dell finally seems to have realized it. The company says it has now abandoned plans to launch a digital media player tied to an online store.

Dell had planned to launch a MP3 player this year that could potentially compete with Apple’s iconic iPod line and Microsoft’s struggling Zune player. But the company could have done well to learn from Microsoft’s experience with the Zune before it started on its venture.

With Apple’s iPod and iTunes dominating the digital music landscape,
rivals including Microsoft have failed to make a dent. Released in 2006, Zune has just about 4% of the market compared to Apple iPod’s 70%. Apple launched the iPod in 2001.

There have been other challengers to the iPod including Nokia’s Comes With Music online store integrated with the company’s handsets and online networking site MySpace’s music venture.

But few competitors have been able to match Apple’s superior design and the tight integration between its player and online store.

Dell, with its expertise in hardware, hoped to do just that counting on a recent acquisition that the company made. Earlier this year, Dell was testing prototypes of a player that had been developed based on its acquisition of entertainment and music software start up Zing in 2007, says the Wall Street Journal.

Dell had planned for a fall launch of the MP3 player as part of its efforts to boost its consumer products division but now it seems like a no-go. Dell did not respond to a emailed request for comment.

Photo: iPod Touch (Stefan Neagu/Flickr)

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+ Gadget Lab’s $5 Fix for a Broken citeRock Band/cite Pedal By admin 10 November 2008 at 12:53 pm and have No Comments

Beforeafter

Anybody who plays Rock Band is aware the bass-drum pedal is a
plastic piece of crap, destined to one day snap in half and ruin a
party. My Rock Band pedal met its ill fate over the weekend, and
instead of ordering a new one for $40, I put on my "What Would MacGyver Do?"
thinking cap and fashioned a fix that cost a mere $5. It only took a
few simple steps, and now my pedal is stronger than it ever was before,
which isn’t saying much, but I thought I’d share the process here:

You’ll need: 1.) an electric drill (Don’t have one? Borrow one from a neighbor!); 2.) two metal mending brackets (3 1/2-inch by 1 3/8-inch, includes screws and comes in packs of four for $5 at your local hardware store); 3.) super glue.

Step one
Apply super glue in between the two broken pieces to rejoin them (not entirely necessary, but provides additional support).

Step two
Position the two metal brackets side by side with the crack directly in their center.

Step three
Drill eight shallow holes in the pedal aligning with the corner holes in the
metal brackets (be careful not to go too deep, or else you’ll crack the
pedal or completely penetrate it, as I did with the left bracket, hence one missing screw).

Step four

Finished

Screw in the screws included with the mending brackets.

Et voila. Good as new. I can’t guarantee it’s indestructible, but it
feels sturdier than ever before. Hell, it looks
kind of cool, too, doesn’t it? Frankenstein monster, anyone?

Photos: raphaelmull/Flickr, Brian X. Chen/Wired.com

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