Tuesday, August 03, 2010

Create a Better Emergency Contact Number with Google Voice [Emergency]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5603492/create-a-better-emergency-contact-number-with-google-voice

Create a Better Emergency Contact Number with Google VoiceEverybody's got a go-to in case of emergency (ICE) contact, but emergencies have a nasty habit of not caring whether your ICE contact is available to pick up the phone. Reader snappingleather's clever solution: Expand your ICE reach with Google Voice.

Use an extra Google Voice number to make an In Case of Emergency contact number that dials multiple family members at once.

A lot of us have more than one Google account (in fact, Google just launched a new feature specifically for multiple account owners), so the idea would be that you set up one of your non-primary accounts with Google Voice, then make that number, when called, ring everyone you'd consider an emergency contact—maybe your significant other, your parents, your sister. The only caveat:

While Google Voice allows you to use two Voice accounts for the same number, you do have to trade off features. That is, let's say your significant other already has a Google Voice account. If you created a new Voice account and set his/her number to ring when that Voice number was dialed, you could do that. But they wouldn't be able to use SMS with their default Voice account. (Then again, if no one you'd list as an ICE contact uses Google Voice, you're in the clear.)

It's a clever idea, and one you could also incorporate with the ICE contact you've already added to your phone.

[via #tips]

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The Best Things to Buy in August [Buying Guide]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5602613/the-best-things-to-buy-in-august

The Best Things to Buy in AugustMajor retailers are reminding you it's back to school, back to work, and back to seasons without so much sun. Before you buy what they're selling, consider the nice chunk of change you can save in August with these smartly timed purchases.

Each month, we take a look at the chart and list of the best times to buy anything we compiled back in January and pull out the items you should be on the lookout for that month. Here's a full-size blow-up and cut-out of what to look for this month (click for a larger view):

The Best Things to Buy in August

Now, onto the best deals you can find throughout August. As always, this isn't so much a list of things to "Run out and buy right now," so much as, "Buy this now, rather than later, if you're in the market." Normally we'd include some all-season deals, but in the summer, the best deals are often toward the tail end—big appliances in the post-remodel-season wind-down.

Older computers: John Morris of CNET tells MSN Money that July and August can sometimes yield savings on slightly older computer models, as AMD and Intel's release schedules see computer makers ramping up to release new gear around this time of year.

Laptops: Per Gizmodo's post, and the knowledge that this is when big-box retailers and direct-sale makers start piling on with the back-to-school deals.

Outdoor Toys and Camping Equipment: CNN's Money site quotes eToys.com's Sheliah Gilliland as stating that retailers are eager to move the space-hogging pools, playgrounds, squirt guns, and other summer toys for as much as 65 percent off as the pre-holiday season approaches. Yahoo! Finance suggests it's also a good time to pick up your camping gear.

Kid's Clothing: Because even if you don't have a kid going back to school, you might have a kid you can buy gifts for now. If you do have kids, think beyond the immediate fall needs.

Wines: Somewhat obvious, sure, but you can also lock down some hard-to-find, small-run wines in the early fall harvest season, according to SmartMoney.com.

Linens and Storage Containers: They're aimed at the incoming college crowd this time of year, as AOL Shopping suggests, but you don't need to show a college ID to pick up some things you almost always find yourself in need of.


We're combing the comments of these monthly pieces to see what other deals our readers find during particular months, in the hopes of kicking out an upgraded buying guide in 2011. Got a hot tip on off-season or space-making sales you've seen? Share them in the comments.

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Quantum computers could overturn Heisenberg's uncertainty principle [Mad Physics]

Source: http://io9.com/5603298/quantum-computers-could-overturn-heisenbergs-uncertainty-principle

Quantum computers could overturn Heisenberg's uncertainty principleThe uncertainty principle is at the foundation of quantum mechanics: You can measure a particle's position or its velocity, but not both. Now it seems that quantum computer memory could let us violate this rule.

The theoretical underpinnings of the uncertainty principle are, like most things to do with quantum mechanics, extremely difficult to follow and require a minimum of six degrees to really understand, but the great physicist Paul Dirac provided a more concrete illustration of what the uncertainty principle means. He explained that one of the very, very few ways to measure a particle's position is to hit it with a photon and then chart where the photon lands on a detector. That gives you the particle's position, yes, but it's also fundamentally changed its velocity, and the only way to learn that would consequently alter its position.

Now, technically speaking, the uncertainty principle doesn't forbid you from measuring both the position and the velocity of a subatomic particle - it merely prevents you from measuring both with any great precision. It's possible to get a rough idea of both or a highly accurate measure of one, but those are your only options. So you could weaken the photon burst so that the particle's velocity was less affected, but this would give you a fuzzier sense of its position and still change its position, if to a smaller degree than if you set out to measure its position exactly.

That's more or less been the status quo of quantum mechanics since Werner Heisenberg first published his theories in 1927, and no attempts to overturn it - including multiple by Albert Einstein himself - proved successful. But now five physicists from Germany, Switzerland, and Canada hope to succeed where the father of relativity failed. If they're successful, it will be because of something that wasn't even theorized until decades after Einstein's death: quantum computers.

Key to quantum computers are qubits, the individual units of quantum memory. A particle would need to be entangled with a quantum memory large enough to hold all its possible states and degrees of freedom. Then, the particle would be separated and one of its features measured. If, say, its position was measured, then the researcher would tell the keeper of the quantum memory to measure its velocity.

Because the uncertainty principle wouldn't extend from the particle to the memory, it wouldn't prevent the keeper from measuring this second figure, allowing for exact (or possibly, for obscure mathematical reasons, almost exact) measurements of both figures in flagrant disregard of Heisenberg's principle. If this wouldn't destroy uncertainty completely, at the very least it would fundamentally alter our understanding of quantum mechanics and particle physics. (It might even reopen the possibility of that interstellar ansible, but you didn't hear that from me.)

The mathematics of all this appears to be sound, but we're still a long way from testing it in the laboratory. It would take lots of qubits - far more than the dozen or so we've so far been able to generate at any one time - to entangle all that quantum information from a particle, and the task of entangling so many qubits together would be extremely fragile and tricky. Not impossibly tricky, mind you, but still way beyond what we can do now. Quantum computers better be ready the day they come online, because we've got one hell of a to-do list waiting for them.

[Nature Physics via Ars Technica]

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Apple Security Breach Gives Complete Access to Your iPhone [Security]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5603319/new-apple-security-breach-gives-complete-access-to-your-iphone

iphone-pacman.jpgRight now, if you visit a web page and load a simple PDF file, you may give total control of your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad to a hacker. The security bug affects all devices running iOS 3.1.2 and higher.

Update: Initially we thought that this exploit only effected iOS4 devices, but it turns out all iPhones, iPod Touches and iPads running 3.1.2 and higher are susceptible.

The vulnerability is easily exploitable. In fact, the latest one-click, no-computer-required Jailbreak solution for iOS 4 devices uses this same method to break Apple's own security (although in a completely benign way for the user).

How it works

It just requires the user to visit a web address using Safari. The web site can automatically load a simple PDF document, which contains a font that hides a special program. When your iOS device tries to display the PDF file, that font causes something called stack overflow, a technical condition that allows the secret ninja code inside the font to gain complete control of your device.

The result is that, without any user intervention whatsoever, that program can do whatever it wants inside your iPhone, iPod touch or iPad. Anything you can imagine: Delete files, transmit files, install programs running on the background that can monitor your actions... anything can be done.

This is not the first time that something similar has happened. At the beginning of the iPhone's life there was a problem with TIFF files that also caused the same security breach. Apple patched the bug after a while, but back then there were very few iPhones compared to the current installed base. Apple says that there are 100 million iPhones, iPod touches, and iPads in the world. Obviously, malicious hackers are racing to get a slice of that market.

How can you avoid it?

Right now, the easiest way to avoid this problem is by not going to any PDF links directly and not loading any PDF from any non-trusted source.

You can also jailbreak your iPhone and install a program that will ask for authorization every time your browser encounters a PDF (just look for "PDF loading warner" in Cydia).

Apple Security Breach Gives Complete Access to Your iPhone

While this doesn't solve the security problem at all, at least it will remind you every single time.

Apple hasn't commented on the situation yet. [Macstories and Digdog]

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BlackBerry Torch Impressions: The BlackBerry, Weirdly Evolved [Blackberry Torch 9800]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5603176/blackberry-torch-impressions-the-blackberry-weirdly-evolved

BlackBerry Torch Impressions: The BlackBerry, Weirdly EvolvedBlackBerry Torch. The name of the phone that RIM hopes will revitalize BlackBerry is so metaphorically heavy handed that it almost inflicts blunt-force trauma. The iconic BlackBerry metastasized into a slider with sparkly new software, it's wonderfully weird.

Imagine any BlackBerry released in the last year. Now imagine that the screen and trackpad sprouted downward, uncontrollably, until it reached the bottom of the phone, completely smothering the keyboard. Then a seam appeared at the bottom. You push up with your thumb, and the screen smoothly slides along a track for a quarter of a second before shooting skyward, clacking into place. Solid, is how it feels. Now it's 30 percent taller, the touchscreen, trackpad and four ever-present BlackBerry buttons floating above the keyboard you've probably always loved. But this whole production is hardly thicker than the BlackBerrys that don't split in two. That's the Torch. At first glance, it looks, feels, is almost exactly like any other BlackBerry released in the last year, except that it happens to be a revival of the vertical slider—a squarer, better constructed exploration of what the Pre tried to accomplish. Oh, and the ridged, ripple-y rubber back is nice. I'm pretty sure you'll never drop it.

BlackBerry Torch Impressions: The BlackBerry, Weirdly EvolvedAn immediate disappointment in a world where 800x480 has become the default display resolution for anything that credibly claims to a decently equipped phone is the Torch's 3.2-inch screen, whose resolution is a mere 480x360. You could try to make the argument you don't need a super high res screen for a mostly text-oriented, and I would direct your crazy eyeballs to the screens on the iPhone 4 or the original Droid screen, where text is super crispy, and simply awesome to read. It's jarring after staring at those phones to see such jaggy-looking text—it's like staring back at 2006, but with cataracts. (Not to mention, it's clearly trying to be way more than just a corporate email device.)

BlackBerry Torch Impressions: The BlackBerry, Weirdly EvolvedThe keyboard is, like most of the new keyboards RIM designs, a marvel. Their thinnest keyboard ever, it types just like the current BlackBerry Bold, and the overall balance of the phone when it's popped open makes typing effortless and natural—it really is exactly what you'd expect from a BlackBerry. The touch keyboard feels usable. The words "not bad" stick in my mind.

It is odd, though. Almost schizo, really: a (non-clicky) touchscreen; a full keyboard; an optical trackpad. Conceptually, the Torch really begins to make sense in context as a product of RIM's particular psychology. The Nielsen numbers released yesterday might illuminate what that is: Over the last year, BlackBerry's marketshare in the US has crept downward as Android's exploded and iOS has steadily inched up. More importantly—if Nielsen's polling is worth a crap—while the overwhelming majority of current iPhone and Android owners plan on sticking with their phones, a majority of BlackBerry owners say their next phone is going to be Android or iPhone. It's a fine recipe for an existential crisis.

BlackBerry Torch Impressions: The BlackBerry, Weirdly EvolvedSo, you immediately get the sense that the Torch is a flagship for RIM in the same way that the T-Mobile G1 was for Google when it launched Android nearly two years ago—the phone had to do everything, be anything, to any developer or consumer, since it was it was trying to launch a brand new platform. In this case, RIM's trying to re-launch BlackBerry, with OS 6, which has the deeply unenviable task of trying to be great for suits—BlackBerry's lifeblood—and dudes in jeans. The catch is that BlackBerry, from the beginning, has been truly designed for the former—I mean, the BlackBerry feature getting it kicked out of the UAE is the security of its communications, not its beautiful, easy-to-use interface—it's just happened to have been adopted by lots of normal people in the meantime. Microsoft, confronted with the same existential problem with Windows Mobile—does it exist for businesses or for people? Both?—ultimately punted, and started from scratch with Windows Phone 7, aiming primarily at consumers. (Remember it too had decent marketshare, once upon a time.) That's where RIM sort of finds itself: Can it do both?

BlackBerry 6, it's quickly apparent, is not a clean start. It's still very much a BlackBerry. Which is the point, as RIM's director of user experience research made clear on BlackBerry's official blog a week ago. "Fresh, but familiar" is the goal. The interface, initially, is very reminiscent of the Storm 2, even in the little ways it seems slightly cleaned up. What's seriously noticeable is that the home screen now uses a drawer metaphor—a handful of icons are visible, and you drag up to reveal everything hidden below. Flicking left or right takes you to a different "drawer" (or "panel," in Android parlance). Each one is a section, like frequent apps, media apps, or downloaded apps. It's not very immediately obvious what to do—I guessed, having used Android so much. Universal search is finally on BlackBerry, so you can just start typing and finding stuff, which is a good thing. Otherwise, it looks and feels very "familiar," as RIM is wont to say.

BlackBerry's gambit into handling your social networking in a better, integrated way—as webOS, and most recently Android, have tried to do—is a new social feeds app that drags Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, other apps and even RSS into a single feed, which is itself integrated into BlackBerry's central universal inbox (aka "Messages"). (So, "Messages" includes email, SMS, MMS and if you want, messages and updates from social networking apps.) Oh, and like Android, the official Facebook and Twitter apps are baked in. (Along with apps for Google Talk and AIM and others.)

Oh yes, the much-ballyhooed WebKit browser. It is, from the second you fire it up, quite obvously better than any BlackBerry browsers ever. Faster, more competent, and pinch-to-zoomy. Zooming is a little choppy on Gizmodo's heavy page, but still totally usable and dandy. The start page is cleaner, showing simply bookmarks and history, with an integrated search + address bar. It's hard to tell how decently it stacks up against iOS and Android's browser without more extensive testing.

BlackBerry Torch Impressions: The BlackBerry, Weirdly EvolvedIt's loaded with BlackBerry App World 2.0. Going off memory, it looks just like 1.0? So it could be better, it seems. (The main features are under the hood improvements, anyway.) Here's something crazy: This phone also has a separate AT&T app store. Oh, and there's no BlackBerry Maps, just AT&T Maps. This could be messy! The music player is updated with a faux Cover Flow, which is weird, since it appears to be active at all times. That is, you can page through album art at any time, so it works like skipping a track. Speaking of music, what I'm most excited about, really, is wireless syncing. (Why doesn't everybody do this, again?)

The email app looks about the same overall, though it's using WebKit as a rendering engine, for emails with fancier formatting. The very beautiful Outlook mail app for Windows Phone 7 makes it look kinda old and washed up, which has a tragic subtext to it, since BlackBerry is supposed to be all about email. The lower res screen of the Torch doesn't help here—reading doesn't feel nice, the way it really should on this thing, at least not initially.

There's a lot more to dig into, but a few things are clear right now. The Torch and BlackBerry OS 6 take what BlackBerry's already doing and move it forward slightly—they're not reinventing, overturning, or blowing up things. Even the sorta kinda half-crazy slider design of the Torch feels fundamentally like a BlackBerry, just a leeeeettle different. Which is fine, in a way—existing BlackBerry users who just want the same thing will probably love this. But is that enough anymore? Here's the question: Do people simply want a better BlackBerry or do they want something else, something completely new that also happens to be good at all the things BlackBerry is good at? I suppose we'll find out.

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NanoStudio For iPhone Puts a Recording Studio In Your Pocket [IphoneApps]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5603267/nanostudio-for-iphone-puts-a-recording-studio-in-your-pocket

NanoStudio For iPhone Puts a Recording Studio In Your PocketIt's hardly news that the iPhone can serve as a capable little music machine. But NanoStudio offers the complete music-making package, with synths, trigger pads, sequencers, samplers and much more—and, crucially, it makes them all intuitive to use.

Complex apps walk a fine line between functionality and usability—there's nothing more frustrating than a feature-laden app imprisoned behind an inscrutable interface. NanoStudio pulls off this tightrope act gracefully, packing everything you need to tap out drum loops, tweak synths, record and edit your own samples, and sequence and master it all, right on your iPhone.

It's simple enough for a beginner (me) to use within minutes, but robust enough to allow an experienced musician (the guy in the video) to produce some pretty incredible stuff:


At $15, it's a bit expensive for just noodling around with some synths, but if you suspect you'll ever have the hankering to get a little more ambitious—to get your sounds just right, or to start to pile tracks and takes on top of one another—NanoStudio's just the ticket. [iTunes]

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Rdio's Spotify-ish Streaming Service Open for Three-Day Trials [Streaming Music]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5603661/rdio-is-a-decent-spotify+like-music-streaming-service

Rdio's Spotify-ish Streaming Service Open for Three-Day TrialsRdio, the all-you-can-eat music streaming service that we've previously showed you in screenshots, no longer requires an invite, or even a credit card, to try out for three days free. After that, it's $5 per month for desktop and browser access, and $10 per month for streaming and offline access on iPhones, Android, and BlackBerry. If you've given Rdio a try, tell us what you like, and whether it might be worth the monthly outlay, in the comments. [Rdio via GigaOM]

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Flash Memory Capable of Playing More Than a Few Movies at a Time [SIGGRAPH]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5603725/flash-memory-capable-of-streaming-more-than-a-few-movies-at-a-time

Flash Memory Capable of Playing More Than a Few Movies at a TimeLast week's annual SIGGRAPH conference was, as usual, a place where dazzling visual displays were commonplace. But solid-state storage firm Fusion-io's demo of an ultra-efficient drive took was perhaps a bit overstimulating, playing 2,000 DVD-quality movies simultaneously. Eyedrops recommended. [Fusion-io via Core77]
Photo by Paul Fraser

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The Most Beautiful Way to Clean-Up Space Junk [Space]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5603717/the-most-beautiful-way-to-clean+up-space-junk

The Most Beautiful Way to Clean-Up Space JunkSpace junk is everything from spent rocket upper-stages that measure meters across, to lost bags of tools let go by careless astronauts, to shattered Chinese satellites to flecks of paint moving at 25 times the speed of sound. Under the wrong circumstances any piece of junk could kill a perfectly good satellite or even an unlucky space-walker. How should we prevent dead satellites from adding to this dangerous cloud of debris? 

Dr Kristen Gates has one idea, and it's beautiful and simple. It's dubbed GOLD—the Gossamer Orbit Lowering Device—and it's just been revealed at the "Artificial and Natural Space Debris" session of the AIAA Astrodynamics Specialists Conference.

GOLD is not much more than a football-field sized balloon (made of gossamer-thin but super-tough material, a little like solar sails) that is flown into orbit deflated in a suitcase-sized box and then fastened to a dead satellite. It's then inflated to maximum size, and the huge bulk of the balloon massively increases the atmospheric drag that satellites experience up there in the void. This drag is due to the rare molecules of gas that hover around above the fringe of the atmosphere, and it's the same drag that resulted in the premature deorbiting of the famous Skylab satellite in the 1970s, when the mechanics of orbital drag weren't as well understood. The drag acts to slow a satellite in its orbital path, and then simple orbital mechanics means the satellite descends into the atmosphere where the denser air heats it to the point it burns up.

GOLD has numerous advantages: It's cheap, it can be built into rocket upper-stages before they're launched so that new rockets never pose a space junk threat, and its proposed material is tough enough that even though the balloon envelope will definitely be damaged by space junk itself, it'll never tear and generate more junk by itself.

The Most Beautiful Way to Clean-Up Space JunkFast Company empowers innovators to challenge convention and create the future of business.

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JailbreakMe using PDF exploit to hack your iPhone, so could the baddies; Apple looking into reports

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/03/jailbreakme-using-pdf-exploit-to-hack-your-iphone-so-could-the/

As with any jailbreak or rooting of a handset, "hacking" a phone OS is usually exactly that: exploiting a weakness to get unsigned code onto a device. That means that any other hacker, be they sufficiently nefarious, could use that same exploit to mess with your phone in the bad, not-installing-emulators-off-of-Cydia sense. Early iPhone jailbreaks (back when installing your own ringtones was a wild idea) took advantage of a TIFF exploit, the recent EVO 4G root found a hole in Flash Lite, and the JailbreakMe exploit is stuffing its code in a PDF font. Until Apple patches this exploit (when asked, Apple told us it was "aware of the reports and looking into them") we'd be extra careful about which PDFs we open -- there aren't any reports of malicious use so far, but with Safari's seamless handling of PDFs, it wouldn't be hard for some hacker to hide a potentially phone-invading PDF behind some harmless looking hyperlink. The iPhone devteam points out that this isn't the only known exploit for Safari on iOS, so there's no need to start hyperventilating about this particular one... unless it's a slow day at your mainstream media publication and you're looking for something to hyperventilate about.

Oh, and are you looking for a surefire way to steer clear of PDFs? Cydia has a PDF loading warner that lets you skip PDFs your browser is trying to load on a case by case basis. Of course, you'll need to jailbreak your phone to use it. Ironic, right?

JailbreakMe using PDF exploit to hack your iPhone, so could the baddies; Apple looking into reports originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Aug 2010 15:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TUAW  |  sourceF-Secure  | Email this | Comments

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HP Envy 14 review

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/03/hp-envy-14-review/

The HP Envy 14 is like the final revision of a C+ term paper that always had potential, but just needed an bit of extra information and refinement to get an A. In fact, when HP introduced the Envy 14, the company was rather blunt about the fact that many of the issues that plagued the original Envy systems had been addressed, including the lack of an optical drive and backlight keyboard, the frustrating touchpad and the heat caused by the Core i7 processor. On paper, the 14.5-inch Envy 14 has everything we wanted to see in those first models while still maintaining its beautiful yet tough etched aluminum chassis. It's also got a new lower $999 starting price, though our review unit rang up at $1,290. So, has the Envy 14 finally make its way to the head of the class? We've spent some quality time with the rig to find out.

Continue reading HP Envy 14 review

HP Envy 14 review originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Aug 2010 16:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola-Verizon tablet will have FiOS TV, ten-inch screen?

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/03/motorola-verizon-tablet-will-have-fios-tv-ten-inch-screen/

Sure, we've heard Verizon discuss Android tablets once or twice, but it's just now that we're getting our first real juice about Motorola's companion device. The Financial Times reports that Verizon and Motorola are teaming up on an Android tablet with dual cameras, Adobe Flash support and a ten-inch screen, plus mobile hotspot functionality (which implies Verizon cellular data) and -- get this -- access to pay TV. As it so happens, Moto makes a Verizon FiOS set-top box, and sources tell the Times that the television tablet may get grandfathered in to the very same technology. No word on processing power or price, but the rumor mill says we could see it as early as fall of this year. And given the timing, here's hoping the Android inside will have some Google TV mojo, too.

Motorola-Verizon tablet will have FiOS TV, ten-inch screen? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Aug 2010 17:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceFinancial Times  | Email this | Comments

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Pantech drops AMOLED completely due to shortage, may resume use in 2H 2011

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/03/pantech-drops-amoled-completely-due-to-shortage-may-resume-use/

The Pantech Vega that just hit Korea may boast a sizable 3.7-inch AMOLED screen, but don't expect future phones from the Helio manufacturer to follow suit -- after suffering the same shortages that drove HTC to Sony's SLCD-illuminated doorstep, Pantech's also temporarily giving active-matrix organic technology the boot. Now, you may not give two nickels about the technologies in Pantech's next handset, but the firm's got a finger on the industry's pulse. So when an unnamed executive says "phones to be rolled out in the first half of next year" won't use AMOLED, that hints at when the shortage for US-bound devices might also let up. In case you're curious, 2H 2011 is when Samsung's next AMOLED facility is slated to open, though by that point AU Optronics and TPO Display should be shipping the screens as well.

Pantech drops AMOLED completely due to shortage, may resume use in 2H 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Aug 2010 19:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink OLED-Displ! ay.net  |  sourceKorea Herald  | Email this | Comments

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New Kindle comes with microphone, seeds of possibility

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/02/new-kindle-comes-with-microphone-seeds-of-possibility/

Amazon's new Kindle has plenty of desirable features -- like a month-long battery, double the storage and a more responsive screen -- but some exciting new additions weren't highlighted on the press release. Diving through the official User's Guide for just such unheralded items, the Kindle World Blog discovered the unit will come with a second English dictionary, a PDF contrast adjustment and... a microphone. As you can see immediately above, that last won't be accessible out of the box -- and may just lead to audio annotations down the road -- but the hacker community (or more legitimately, Kindle developers) could do very interesting things with the discovery. We hesitate to even mention for fear the feature will get pulled, but we're dreaming of Skyping across that free 3G connection already.

New Kindle comes with microphone, seeds of possibility originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Aug 2010 19:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Wired, TeleRead  |  sourceA Kindle World Blog  | Email this | Comments

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Casio EX-S200 and EX-Z800 point-and-shoots spontaneously appear with 'super resolution' zoom

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/02/casio-ex-s200-and-ex-z800-point-and-shoots-spontaneously-appear/

We're not quite sure when they'll arrive or for how much -- we haven't heard a peep out of Casio -- but Digital Photography Review is reporting a pair of new pocket shooters from the Japanese company. Both the Casio EX-S200 (pictured) and the EX-Z800 are your standard 14.1 megapixel compacts with 720p video recording and 4x optical zoom, as well as the Exilim Engine 5.0 processing the company introduced this year and the supposedly fire-and-forget Premium Auto mode. We doubt you'll find any surprises in the spec sheet or even figure out a good reason to choose between the two, but the S200 is slightly thinner, has an autofocus assist lamp and an instant-on Quick Mode. Meanwhile, the Z800 is slightly lighter and shorter in both directions. Oh, and in case you're curious, that "super resolution zoom" is just marketing speak for a 6x digital zoom plus algorithms that will hopefully reduce image degradation -- you're still blowing up those pixels. PR after the break.

Continue reading Casio EX-S200 and EX-Z800 point-and-shoots spontaneously appear with 'super resolution' zoom

Casio EX-S200 and EX-Z800 point-and-shoots spontaneously appear with 'super resolution' zoom originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Aug 2010 22:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDigital Photography Review  | Email this | Comments

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