Monday, May 23, 2011

Dell XPS 15z review

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/dell-xps-15z-review/

For years, Dell's been teasing supermodel-thin laptops, each one flawed out of the gate: too pricey, too underpowered, and with underwhelming battery life. This time, Dell told us we'd get something different -- a laptop without compromise. Recently, Round Rock killed off the Adamo and nixed the XPS 14, and then rumors started to spin -- a spiritual successor would be the slimmest 15.6-inch notebook we'd ever seen, be crafted from "special materials" and yet cost less than $1,000. Dell even stated that it would have an "innovative new form factor" of some sort.

The company neglected to mention it would look like a MacBook Pro.

This is the Dell XPS 15z, and we're sorry to say it's not a thin-and-light -- it's actually a few hairs thicker than a 15-inch MacBook Pro, wider, and at 5.54 pounds, it weighs practically the same. It is, however, constructed of aluminum and magnesium alloy and carries some pretty peppy silicon inside, and the base model really does ring up at $999. That's a pretty low price to garner comparisons to Apple's flagship, and yet here we are. Has Dell set a new bar for the notebook PC market? Find out after the break.

Continue reading Dell XPS 15z review

Dell XPS 15z review originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 21:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Total Convergence (1998) - converging technologies and media create new opportunities and revenue models - http://bit.ly/lZylme

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Square iPhone-Based Mobile Payment System Kills Cash Registers and Wallets [Money]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5804589/square-introduces-iphone+based-mobile-payment-system

Square iPhone-Based Mobile Payment System Kills Cash Registers and WalletsInteresting announcement today from Square's office in the the San Francisco Chronicle building, (where news usually goes to die) Square introduced a new mobile payment system that lets you make credit card purchases with an iPhone app.

The system, called the Square Card Case, lets you see everything the merchant has on offer, and works with Square card readers and payment systems. It's basically an account that you can debit on the go without pulling out your credit card, Square CEO (and Twitter founder) Jack Dorsey calls it an iTunes Store for real-world purchases. It launched at 50 merchants around the country today.

Honestly, the demo was a little confusing, but the bottom line is once you have an account, when you go into a merchant if you open your Square app you can use your phone to make payments instead of swiping a card.

Square iPhone-Based Mobile Payment System Kills Cash Registers and WalletsWhen both a customer and merchant are running the Square app in the same location, the customer's name and photo will show up on the merchant's version of the app. The merchant enters the transaction, it immediately shows up in the customer's version of the app and the billing is done behind the scenes with the credit card data you've previously given Square.

When a customer makes a purchase at a Square merchant, they get emailed or text messaged a receipt that lets them set up a tab. The tab stays in a "card case" on the customer's phone, and from then on you can use it at the store to make a purchase. After you have an account, you can also open the card case to see all the merchants in the area that accept payments.

It's very cool, but setting up a customer account took several steps, and it seems like the kind of thing that's going to take a real push to get over the initial inertia. Square will need to sign up thousands of its merchants before this is practical and people start using it.

Square card readers jack into an iPad or iPhone, and after a simple signup allow anyone to accept credit cards without having to get an expensive merchant account. It basically brought credit card processing to anyone. It's been a hit. Bands, DIY crafters, food trucks, coffee shops, drug dealers, everyone loves Square. They've shipped more than 500,000 card readers, done more than a million purchases just in May, and done more than $1 billion in transactions.

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Samsung Infuse Review: Oh Finally, a Phone for Giants [Video]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5804592/samsung-infuse-review-its-huge

A list of people who might need a phone that sprawls as far and wide as the Infuse: Godzilla, Shaq, the Nathan's hot dog contest winner who isn't the Japanese guy, people who'd giggle every time they say, "My phone is bigger than yours."

WHY IT MATTERS
The funny thing about choices—at least when it comes to computers, smartphones and politicians—is their tendency to melt together into amorphous, indistinct blobs. In the case of phones, they congeal into hulking black slabs, a lot of them running Android. It's hard to stand out. (How many formerly epic 4.3-inch phones are there now?) Unless you're genuinely outstanding. The Infuse, at 4.5 inches, is the next logical step. The fundamental questions: Does the human race need a phone this big? How long before other phones are just as gigantic? Can a phone possibly get any bigger?

USING IT
A refrain: Size matters. Samsung has accomplished a genuine feat of engineering here, divining the absolute limits of how large a phone can be before it ruptures the boundaries spacetime and the English language. You'll feel a surge of dork shame shimmy down your spine every time you pull it out in public, or press it against your face (unless you are a huge dork, live in Asgard or have a deep, unironic appreciation for things sized according to the same design principles as clown shoes). But it is usable, for a single reason: It's very, very thin. Meaning even your tiny human hand can wrap around it, if not entirely comfortably. But is 4.5 inches better than 4.3 or 4 or 3.5 inches? No, maybe, yes—in that order.

Samsung Infuse Review: Oh Finally, a Phone for GiantsAT&T calls this a 4G phone, and while they're not quite lying with a shit-eating grin—it's on average around 5x faster on AT&T's network in NY than an iPhone 4 in spots I tested—it's terribly, terribly inconsistent. But hey, the battery life in this thing is all-day, despite powering a screen approximately the same size as the one in the Dallas Cowboys' stadium. The software is basically the same as the current Captivate on AT&T—Android 2.2, with Samsung's glommed on, oh-so-glossy TouchWiz interface.

LIKEY
Super AMOLED Plus is perhaps better than any phone screen technology out there except the retina display, even with its 800x480 pixels stretched across the wider canvass. Colors are super rich, blacks are inky, and it's usable enough in sunlight. It's fairly quick. And this is one of the better phone cameras I've seen in a while, with solid 8MP stills and pretty okay 720p video. (Also Samsung's custom software, which echoes its point-and-shoot cameras is a plus—the sole nice thing I have to say about TouchWiz).

NO LIKEY
Sorry, but there's not a single carrier or phone maker on the planet who currently makes an interface that's better than Google's for Android. They're all worse, more confusing, uglier. (The ability to install custom UIs after rooting doesn't negate this. Normal people don't root their phones, they just complain about them sucking.) Non-removable bloatware, while minimal here, is increasingly agitating on Android phones. The tradeoff Samsung made to offset the juggernautiness with lightweight plastic makes it feel cheap. More pixels would be more better, since it'd make text sharper in lots o' cases. AT&T's 4G branding, at least in NY and SF.

Samsung Infuse Review: Oh Finally, a Phone for GiantsSHOULD I BUY IT?
Because the Infuse would be borderline generic if it weren't so massive, like a washed-up action movie star, this is one of those easy yes/no questions: Do you want a humongous phone?

Specs
Samsung Infuse
Price: $199 w/ 2-year contract
Screen: 4.5-inch, 800x480 Super AMOLED Plus
Processor and RAM: 1.2GHz Hummingbird, 1GB RAM
Storage: 16GB
Camera: 8-megapixel, 720p video (rear); 1.3MP, VGA (front)
Carrier: AT&T

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Droid 3 details leaked: dual-core processor, 4-inch qHD screen, no LTE?

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/droid-3-details-leaked-dual-core-processor-4-inch-qhd-screen/

Droid 3
You've probably already seen the leaked pictures of the Droid 3, but what you really want to know is what's going on underneath that chrome trim. TechnoBuffalo claims to have the inside scoop and it sounds like the latest landscape slider from Motorola is packing a number of nice improvements. According to a tipster the screen has been upgraded to a 4-inch qHD panel and inside is one of those fancy dual-cores all the cool phones are rockin' these days -- presumably of the Tegra 2 variety like its Droid X2 cousin. As spied in the photos it also has a new 5-row keyboard layout and front facing camera for video calls, while the rear-facing shooter is getting bumped to 8 megapixels. There is one disappointing, but not entirely shocking, detail though -- the Droid 3 will lack LTE. We can't confirm these specs, but they're perfectly logical assumptions and raise no alarms and no surprises.

Droid 3 details leaked: dual-core processor, 4-inch qHD screen, no LTE? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 10:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Smarter elevators sort riders, stand ready to enforce social hierarchies

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/smarter-elevators-sort-riders-stand-ready-to-enforce-social-hie/

While we're still awaiting pneumatic tubes that can whisk us to our destinations, elevators have been gaining a few IQ points. For example, they can be voice-activated or recognize an ID badge and route riders to their floors, meaning fewer seconds staring uncomfortably until the doors open. But they can also track workers' comings and goings, and bosses at Philadelphia's Curtis Center can program elevators to deliver specific employees directly to them. Not coincidentally, intelligent lifts can also ensure executives rarely have to ride alongside the hoi polloi -- a feature Bank of America, for one, paid for but says it doesn't use. The Wall Street Journal seems to worry this is the end of elevator democracy, but we support anything that reduces our time trapped in small metal boxes.

Smarter elevators sort riders, stand ready to enforce social hierarchies originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 11:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Xi3 modular PC reborn as Chrome OS desktop, promises independence from local storage

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/xi3-modular-pc-reborn-as-chrome-desktop-promises-independence-f/

Chromebooks a tad too mobile for you? Sensing the market is at last ready for Google's web-based OS, Xi3 decided to ship the ChromiumPC, an updated version of the modular, Chrome OS-based desktop it trotted out as a concept last year. The computer (also known as the 5 Series) has a processor module and two I/O ones -- a design whose promise is that installing a different operating system should be as easy as swapping out that first board. And, cheekily, the company expects it to go on sale July 4th, a day when Chromium OS owners can "declare their independence from the built-in obsolescence of other computers." Got that, folks? Your mature operating system and local storage are useless. No word yet on pricing, so here's hoping Chrome OS isn't a moot point or anything by the time we find out. Full PR after the break.

Continue reading Xi3 modular PC reborn as Chrome OS desktop, promises independence from local storage

Xi3 modular PC reborn as Chrome OS desktop, promises independence from local storage originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 12:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kogeto Dot brings bite-size panoramic video recording to iPhone 4 (hands-on)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/kogeto-dot-brings-bite-size-panoramic-video-recording-to-iphone/

We've seen panorama add-ons for the iPhone before, but Kogeto's offering is quite a bit more pocketable than other crowd-funded solutions. The Kogeto Dot snaps onto an iPhone 4 in your choice of pastel colors, and catches 360-degree video when placed face down. It's got an accompanying iOS app that will un-distort the video for sharing, or even broadcast it on the net in real time. We got to check out a prototype, and though there's still some residual distortion at this point in time, we're assured that it'll all get straightened out if and when the project meets its funding goal. Interestingly (and annoyingly), this implementation requires your iPhone be held perpendicular rather than upright, making previewing a capture virtually impossible until after you've stopped the recording, which seems unnatural to us. Combine that with a minimum Kickstarter pledge of $98 to secure one of your own, and suddenly the less-portable and lower-degree alternatives start sounding a little more attractive. If you're still interested, hit the source link below and get in on the action. Promo video after the break.

Continue reading Kogeto Dot brings bite-size panoramic video recording to iPhone 4 (hands-on)

Kogeto Dot brings bite-size panoramic video recording to iPhone 4 (hands-on) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 13:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AMD announces new, more energy efficient Embedded G-Series APUs

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/amd-announces-new-more-energy-efficient-embedded-g-series-apus/

AMD has just rolled out two new additions to its line of Embedded G-Series APUs, combining Fusion-based processing with reduced power consumption. Both the T40E and T40R rock the same 64-bit x86 Bobcat CPU cores and DirectX 11-capable GPUs we've already seen in previous G-Series incarnations, but AMD says the pair can operate using thirty-nine percent less power than its cousins. The single core T40R boasts a thermal design power (TDP) rating of just 5.5 watts, while the dual core T40E offers a TDP of 6.4 watts. The two applications are designed for compact fanless systems, including kiosks and mobile industrial devices, though Axiomtek is apparently planning on incorporating the new APUs in a new Pico-ITX consumer PC, as well. Full PR after the break.

Continue reading AMD announces new, more energy efficient Embedded G-Series APUs

AMD announces new, more energy efficient Embedded G-Series APUs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 14:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toyota to launch social network for people who like to befriend car dealerships

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/toyota-to-launch-social-network-for-people-who-like-to-befriend/

Man, social networks have taken on a loose definition as of late, haven't they? Toyota just announced plans to launch one for its customers, and while our initial reaction was an eye-roll and sighs of "what the world needs now," the truth is that it's really just a system that uses Twitter and Facebook to let you know when something's amiss. Dubbed Toyota Friend (and built on Salesforce.com's private Chatter network), the service will dish up battery power warnings to electric vehicle owners, along with maintenance tips -- advice that can pop up on phones, tablets, and "other advanced mobile devices." In addition to their friendly neighborhood car dealerships, folks can befriend other cars and the friends and family who own them, though it's unclear from the press release below why you'd care. (Okay, we suppose if we had a teenage driver we might want to know if they were about to break curfew.) If that all sounds like bunk, you probably won't get a test drive soon, anyway -- the service is slated to launch in 2012, in Japan, and, initially, for electric and hybrid vehicle owners only.

Continue reading Toyota to launch social network for people who like to befriend car dealerships

Toyota to launch social network for people who like to befriend car dealerships originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 14:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony BMG Greece hacked, company's security woes continue

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/sony-bmg-greece-hacked-companys-security-woes-continue/

SonyBMG.gr Hacked
It's the security nightmare that just won't end, and right now there's got to be plenty of Sony executives beginning to wish someone would pinch them already. After taking quite a PR and financial beating over the PSN breach, now the Greek site of Sony BMG has been hacked and the account info of thousands of users has been posted online. According to the Sophos blog Naked Security, the attack does not appear to have been particularly sophisticated and was carried out using an automated SQL injection tool that demands more patience than skill. While the data dump reveals the usernames, real names, and email addresses of registered SonyMusic.gr customers, other fields (including passwords and telephone numbers) are either empty or contain fake data -- suggesting the hack was not entirely successful. Here's hoping Sony takes this as an opportunity to seriously baton down those security hatches.

Sony BMG Greece hacked, company's security woes continue originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 15:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ubiquitous iRemoTap puts your powerstrip in the cloud, turns lights off remotely (video)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/ubiquitous-iremotap-puts-your-powerstrip-in-the-cloud-turns-lig/

It probably won't help you if you leave your oven on, but if you let lights linger after leaving home, Ubiquitous' iRemotTap may help you save a few Kilowatts. This seemingly vanilla powerstip is anything but, boasting the odd addition of a tiny OS embedded in a wireless LAN chip -- all the better to turn your lights off. Users can control the internet-enabled socket stick remotely via a mobile or desktop web browser, allowing them to switch off gadgets and lights after leaving the house. Can't be bothered to log in to switch off? No worries, this plug powers devices down automatically after they reach a pre-defined power consumption limit. If you're forgetful enough to need a light switch in the cloud, Ubiquitous is hoping to sell you peace of mind for less than ¥10,000 ($122) -- whenever these taps get out of R&D, that is. Vid's after the break, if you need convincing.

Continue reading Ubiquitous iRemoTap puts your powerstrip in the cloud, turns lights off remotely (video)

Ubiquitous iRemoTap puts your powerstrip in the cloud, turns lights off remotely (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 17:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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i3D app brings glasses-free 3D to iOS, tracks your gaze like a creepy portrait tracks Scooby Doo (video)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/i3d-app-brings-glasses-free-3d-to-ios-tracks-your-gaze-like-a-c/

i3D is a new app that can create a glasses-free 3D display on iDevices, using a technology known as Head-Coupled Perspective (HCP). Developed by the folks from the Engineering Human-Computer Interaction (EHCI) Research Group, HCP uses a front facing camera to track the movements of a user's head, allowing the app to adjust the display accordingly. The result is a monocular 3D screen that creates the illusion of looking into a box. If the concept sounds a little familiar, it could be because Google unveiled a similar headtracking feature for Ice Cream Sandwich during the opening keynote at this month's I/O event. And by "similar" we mean "pretty much the exact same thing." i3D is now available for free in the iTunes Store and runs on the iPad 2, iPhone 4 and fourth generation iPod Touch. You can compare both iOS and Ice Cream Sandwich 3D generators after the break (Google's demo kicks off around the 16:50 mark).

Continue reading i3D app brings glasses-free 3D to iOS, tracks your gaze like a creepy portrait tracks Scooby Doo (video)

i3D app brings glasses-free 3D to iOS, tracks your gaze like a creepy portrait tracks Scooby Doo (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 17:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Random Hacks of Kindness brings hackers together for the greater good next month

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/random-hacks-of-kindness-brings-hackers-together-for-the-greater/

What could possibly bring hackers in 18 cities around the world together for a weekend next month? Potentially a lot of things, but on June 4th and 5th it'll be the third annual Random Hacks of Kindness (or RHoK), a globally-linked conference that's centered on the idea of "Hacking for Humanity." As with the two previous conferences, this one is community-driven from the ground up, with anyone able to suggest a problem that could have a technological solution of some sort, and everyone welcome to join in helping to solve it (some of the suggestions so far are things like tornado notification and brush fire command systems). Those interested in participating can find all the information they need at the source link below -- and don't worry about not being 133t enough to make the grade, the definition of "hacker" in this case is a fairly loose one. It seems anyone with a laptop and some ideas is welcome.

[Thanks, Rachel; image: RHoK/Flickr]

Random Hacks of Kindness brings hackers together for the greater good next month originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 18:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dell XPS 15z available in Australia and Asia, fits Sandy Bridge in under an inch of thickness

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/23/dell-xps-15z-available-in-australia-and-asia-fits-sandy-bridge/

The XPS 15z, true to Michael Dell's word, is now with us. Provided "now" is May the 24th in whatever part of the world you happen to live in. Laptop shoppers in Australia, Japan, Hong Kong, and Taiwan -- a group of nations already enjoying the glories of Tuesday -- can now buy the 0.97 inches-thick 15z for prices starting at just under A$1,400. That buys you a Core i5-2410M from Intel (2.3GHz default speed, 2.9GHz with Turbo Boost), a generous 6GB of DDR3 RAM, backlit keyboard, GeForce GT 525M graphics with 2GB of dedicated memory, a 750GB hard drive, and a 64WHr battery. The screen spans 15.6 inches diagonally and offers 1920 x 1080 resolution. Stepping up to A$1,700 gets you a Core i7-2620M (2.7GHz default, 3.4GHz TB) and 8GB of RAM. Juicy specs, we must admit. Now when's midnight coming?

[Thanks, John]

Dell XPS 15z available in Australia and Asia, fits Sandy Bridge in under an inch of thickness originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 18:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDell (Australia), (Malaysia), (Hong Kong), (Taiwan), (Japan)  | Email this | Comments

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