Tag Archive | "a-friend-via"

RIM working on Bluetooth watch, other spellbinding accessories?

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RIM working on Bluetooth watch, other spellbinding accessories?

Posted on 13 August 2009 by Engadget.com

We’re not sure why we didn’t hear more about this way back at RIM’s WES conference way back in May, but it was apparently mentioned by VP Antoine Boucher at the time that they’re working on a Bluetooth-enabled watch. Furthermore, it’s said to be more advanced than the models Sony Ericsson has put forth so far, featuring streaming audio (3.5mm jack on the watch, perhaps?) and Twitter / Facebook updates in addition to the usual things like caller ID and text messages. Note that the image floating around today of this thing isn’t real — it’s just a Sony Ericsson MBW-100 with a swapped logo — so it remains to be seen what this magical wrist accessory will look like, assuming it’s real and coming to retail. It seems Boucher also mentioned a high-end Bluetooth headset codenamed “Alpha 1″ that’ll allow you to stream music and get navigation directions through some sort of totally awesome silicone earpiece boasted to possibly be “the best solution on the market.” It’s pretty hard to pique a lot of interest these days with something as vanilla and ubiquitous as a headset, but at any rate, it’s interesting to see the depth of RIM’s apparent commitment to the accessory market right now.


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RIM working on Bluetooth watch, other spellbinding accessories? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 16:16:00 EST. .

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RIM working on Bluetooth watch, other spellbinding accessories?

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Samsung Instinct S50 now reportedly the Instinct HD, ‘HD’ officially the new black

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Samsung Instinct S50 now reportedly the Instinct HD, ‘HD’ officially the new black

Posted on 13 August 2009 by Engadget.com

It’s already gone through more than its share of name changes, but it looks like Sprint’s upcoming Samsung m850 Dash, most recently known as the Instinct S50, has now apparently found one that’s stuck: the Instinct HD. No word if that means it’ll actually handle HD video in one way or another, of course, nor is there any word on anything like a price or release date — although with the FCC business out of the way, it seems like this one could be getting fully official sooner rather than later.

Samsung Instinct S50 now reportedly the Instinct HD, ‘HD’ officially the new black originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 14:11:00 EST. .

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Samsung Instinct S50 now reportedly the Instinct HD, ‘HD’ officially the new black

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Mysterious Android touchscreen MID pics surface, Charles Fort notified

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Mysterious Android touchscreen MID pics surface, Charles Fort notified

Posted on 13 August 2009 by Engadget.com

It sure seems like the world is ready for an Android MID or, until it gets one, rumors and leaks to that effect. Tell us, what do you make of a slate-style device featuring the word “android” in the appropriate font, pics of the thing browsing the web (which, truth be told, look just as real as they could be ‘shopped in), a couple perfunctory specs (Rockchip CPU, somewhere between a 4.3 to 5-inch display, 3G, MSN Messenger and GTalk, WiFi) and a source for the images that fails to cough up names / links to the “handful” of Chinese tech sites that are allegedly all a-buzz about this thing? Well, we don’t know either — but if you do get your hands on one of these guys, send it our way, will you? Thanks — and in the meantime, hit that read link for the whole sordid tale (and a couple choice pics).

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Mysterious Android touchscreen MID pics surface, Charles Fort notified originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 10:42:00 EST. .

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Mysterious Android touchscreen MID pics surface, Charles Fort notified

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Hang your head, Sequoia e-voting machine; you’ve been hacked again

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Hang your head, Sequoia e-voting machine; you’ve been hacked again

Posted on 13 August 2009 by Engadget.com

Hang your head, Sequoia e-voting machine, you've been hacked again
Oh, Princeton University, won’t you leave the poor electronic voting machines alone? Haven’t they suffered enough without you forming teams with researchers from the University of California, San Diego and the University of Michigan to spread their private moments even further asunder? That group of brainiacs came together to devise a new, even easier hack that allows someone with no special access to take complete control of a Sequoia AVC Advantage voting machine — an example of which the team purchased legally at a government auction. The machine does not allow modifications to its ROM (because it has an O in the middle), but the team was able to use a technique called return-oriented programming to modify how the machine executes existing code, taking the bits they want and, ultimately, devising a way to re-program its behavior by simply inserting a cartridge into a slot — presumably after blowing on it for good luck. The hack only works until the machine is powered off, but the attack even foils that, intercepting the switch signal and making the system only appear to power down. Today’s top tip for electronic voting polling stations: unplug your boxes overnight.

Hang your head, Sequoia e-voting machine; you’ve been hacked again originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 09:19:00 EST. .

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Hang your head, Sequoia e-voting machine; you’ve been hacked again

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HTC reportedly moves a million Magic smartphones, boogies down at midnight

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HTC reportedly moves a million Magic smartphones, boogies down at midnight

Posted on 13 August 2009 by EnGadgetMobile.com

These days, the whole “I shipped a million!” claim is becoming more and more common, but it’s still worth pointing out that HTC has managed to move a whole bundle of its Android-based myTouch 3G (or Magic, as it were) since debuting in April. Or, that’s the story, anyway. According to a dangerously brief blurb over at Digitimes, the outfit’s head honcho quipped that the Magic has “surpassed one million units,” and he also noted that it would begin to focus more on the mid-range market as opposed to always dealing devices at the high-end. So, raise your glass high for this one folks, and let the countdown to a million Hero handsets begin while you’re at it.

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HTC reportedly moves a million Magic smartphones, boogies down at midnight

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Texting makes kids dumb — science fact!

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Texting makes kids dumb — science fact!

Posted on 13 August 2009 by admin

Ready for your daily dose of wildly speculative extrapolation and unfounded fear-mongering? Predictive texting is the latest suspect in the ongoing war against things that make children dumb. A new study from Australia’s Monash University has shown that predictive texters finish their exams faster and with more errors than others, because of course, when your mobile finishes your words in a text, you expect it to finish your sentences in a test. We jest, and there may be a sliver of truth to this contention, but let’s be forthright here — you could probably do more damage to your brain with a good night’s alcohol intake than you can with a lifetime of texting.

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Texting makes kids dumb — science fact!

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HTC’s Whitestone for Verizon, high-power Leo rendered again?

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HTC’s Whitestone for Verizon, high-power Leo rendered again?

Posted on 12 August 2009 by EnGadgetMobile.com

HTC’ Leo and Whitestone have been mentioned enough times in different contexts this year so that we have absolutely no doubt that they’re real — the questions at this point revolve around what they are, what they look like, and when they’re coming. We still don’t have most of those answers, but the situation might be getting a little clearer with the latest round of supposedly leaked renders. First up, the Leo (pictured left) basically sounds like HTC’s go-for-broke, ultra high-end model with an 8 megapixel camera, 4.3-inch (yes, 4.3-inch) WVGA capacitive display, 1GHz Snapdragon, and all the trimmings; how it fits in with the Touch HD-replacing Firestone is unclear, so we’ll have to keep a close eye on that one. Next, the Whitestone pictured here on the right looks a little less in-your-face than the last shot, though we don’t know whether this is a newer or older render; either way, though, we feel good in saying that Verizon’s lined up for one of the coolest Touch Diamond2 variants on the block.

[Thanks, Brian and sleepymia]

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HTC’s Whitestone for Verizon, high-power Leo rendered again?

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Dell’s slim new Inspiron Z family is totally carb free

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Dell’s slim new Inspiron Z family is totally carb free

Posted on 12 August 2009 by admin

Dell’s got a new lineup heading your way this fall, this time taking its low-cost Inspiron laptop brand to thin land. The Inspiron Z “family” isn’t anything stunningly slim, and the 11.6-inch, disc drive free Z in the low end looks positively netbook-ish, but all the laptops are CULV-powered and should probably be arriving at pretty trim price points to fend off the likes of Acer’s Timeline series. Hopefully we’ll have more details soon (Dell sure does love to tease when it comes to CULV), but for now there are some ultra-exciting laptop stacking pics below to keep you entertained.

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Dell’s Zino HD crams desktop parts into miniature enclosure

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Dell’s Zino HD crams desktop parts into miniature enclosure

Posted on 12 August 2009 by admin

Confirmed specs are scarce, but we’re taking the term “desktop parts” — about the only info Dell will spill so far — to heart. Hopefully this new Zino HD mini PC from Dell can live up to its name and kick the sometimes sluggish, laptop-inspired Studio Hybrid to the curb as Dell’s home theater PC of choice. There’s HDMI, eSATA and USB galore, so that’s certainly a good start. Should ship sometime this fall.

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Pre phones home with your location, which explains the black helicopters all around you

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Pre phones home with your location, which explains the black helicopters all around you

Posted on 12 August 2009 by admin

Wondering why you keep getting followed by shadowy figures in trenchcoats and fake moustaches? Worried that those snipers on the rooftops always seem to know exactly where you are? We think we know what’s going on: it’s the Pre in your pocket. Turns out that Palm has code tucked away in webOS that’s uploading your location periodically — once a day or so — along with a list of applications you’ve used and how long they’ve been open. Here’s our take on the situation:

  • One of the very first screens you see when you power on the Pre for the first time is a disclaimer asking you to allow Google to collect, aggregate, and anonymize your location data in order to improve the performance of location-based services. Furthermore — and this is important — “collection will occur regardless of whether any applications are active.” We don’t know whether Palm acts as a conduit for that data to get to Google, but we’d be surprised if Palm had built services to pipe location data straight to Google within webOS itself; in all likelihood, Palm’s getting the data first, which is why it’s being uploaded there. Bear in mind that you’re seeing this warning outside the context of any Google app on the Pre — it’s right in the operating system. Palm has its own terms and conditions that you agree to above and beyond Google’s, too, and they flat-out say they “may collect, store, access, disclose, transmit, process, and otherwise use your location data.” There you have it.
  • App usage is a pretty benign stat — equate it to TiVo anonymizing and selling your viewing habits, except even less interesting, because we have no evidence to suggest Palm’s trying to sell this. We can totally understand why Palm would want insight into app popularity, and when you think about it, this could actually lead to some pretty clever ranking systems in the App Catalog; the iPhone has starkly demonstrated that download volume doesn’t equate to replay value, and Palm might be able to do something about that. Oh, and seriously, you need to cut it out with the Jon & Kate Plus 8.
  • When an app crashes, Palm gets some more in-depth information about the crash, most notably a list of installed apps. You know what else collects and sends a crapload of information when an app crashes? Mac OS. Windows, too. If they really wanted to go into CYA mode, they could ask before sending the way those desktop OSes do, but we’re not sweating bullets here — we just want stability, and this kind of data helps them get there.

Bottom line: we’re all carrying phones that can identify who we are and where we are — and they have the wireless means to ferry that data wherever their makers wish. And let’s not forget that your Palm Profile lives out there in the cloud anyhow, right?

Update: Palm has issued a statement on the situation, basically confirming what we suspected — it’s collecting information to offer “a great user experience,” which we take to mean that it’s trying to squash bugs and keep location-centric apps functional, among other things. They’ve also mentioned that it’s possible to turn data collecting services off without going into details — ostensibly they’re referring to the checkbox at setup (see above) that lets you stop sending aggregated location results to Google.

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Pre phones home with your location, which explains the black helicopters all around you

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