
Saturday, July 31, 2010
WD TV Live Plus gets reviewed, lauded for value

Google Earth gives you snow and rain

Weather maps are cool, to some geek heads, but as much as they (the idea) sound fascinating, I totally have no idea what that green snug means. Sad thing for me. Thought that I could know how's today's weather courtesy of the mighty Google, but my puny brain just can't comprehend it. Anyway, if you're from the States, or some parts of Europe, head over and try that cool feature out. Maybe you'll learn a thing or two about the weather today!
SOURCE Google Lat Long Blog
PS3 firmware 3.41 said to be causing hard drive upgrade problems
Friday, July 30, 2010
AT&T's next Android phone? Motorola Sage?

Wi-Fi Coming to New York City Subways

Good news for any New Yorker who hates interacting with others during their daily commute (read: all New Yorkers): Wi-Fi and mobile service are coming to a subway near you. Yup, now even the Mole People won't be able to escape the outside world.
According to Bloomberg, after three years of stalled progress, Transit Wireless LLC — a conglomerate of wireless and construction companies that was awarded a contract to undergo this project with New York Transit — has finally found the money to move forward. Broadcast Australia has footed the bill, which will bring NYC up to speed with Singapore, Berlin and Tokyo — all of which currently have Wi-Fi in the tubes.
Back in 2007, Transit Wireless LLC had promised to get the job done in 10 years, now it has two years to outfit six stations near New York's Union Square, and then four more years for the other 271 platforms. The Wi-Fi comes in the form of smoke detector-size antennas, and will afford passengers access on platforms, mezzanines and in sections of the tunnels (not the whole tunnel). Overall, the whole deal will cost $200 million dollars — which begs the question: If the city's willing to go to the trouble to go wireless, why do I have to take a shuttle nine weekends out of 10 because they're "doing repairs on the tracks"? But I digress…
Pretty soon, it seems, a goodly portion of NYC will be Wi-Fi ready; AT&T outfitted Times Square with free wireless two months ago and ubiquitous coffee chain Starbucks offers pro bono access as well. Just think, that whole "I was stuck in a tunnel" excuse is never going to be the same…
Motorola Droid getting Android 2.2 next week
Samsung's Q3-bound tablet to boast 7-inch display, Android OS

Stealth Computer debuts paperback-sized LPC-100 mini PC
Best Buy partners with Clearwire, will Connect customers to 4G
Tethering the Samsung Vibrant without rooting

If you’ve got a Samsung Vibrant and want to take advantage of that unlimted 3G account you can tether without rooting the phone. This method uses a USB cable to provide internet access to Windows XP and Windows 7 computers. Samsung’s own Kies software handles the tethering, as long as you have the magic number to get connected on T-Mobile USA networks; ‘epc.tmobile.com’ for the APN name and ‘*99#’ as the phone number. [Zedomax] made the video after the break which takes you through the tethering ritual.
RCA BRC3108 portable Blu-ray ships to Target, seriously undercuts Panny's DMP-B15

2010 Ninja Party badge
Hack a daySamsung's 4-inch Windows Phone 7 handset gets named: Cetus (SGH-i917)

Apple iPhone 4 Hits Stores In 17 More Countries; Adds More Carriers To Its List

Apple has been reported to be in an expansion mode to include more consumers in its customer base for the iPhone 4. The smartphone was recently made available in its unlocked form for the first time in Canada, even though the pricing of the device was considered to be too high.
Apple is also making its latest phone available for sale through more carriers by including T-Mobile UK and 3 UK to its list of carriers. 3 UK has announced that it will offer the 16 GB version of the iPhone 4 free of charge along with a two year contract that covers 1 GB worth of data, 5000 text messages and 2000 minutes for a monthly price of £45. T-Mobile's iPhone 4 tariffs have been fixed at £60 that includes 500 text messages and unlimited calling options. However, the carrier's data plan for the iPhone 4 only allows for 500 MB of data download.
Virgin Mobile has also announced itself to be a carrier for the iPhone 4 in Canada by offering subsidized prices of $160 and $270 for the 16 GB and 32 GB models of the phone. Canadian carriers Bell and Roger had earlier announced their prices and plans for the iPhone 4 though Telus, which had earlier promised to sell the iPhone 4 from July 30, is yet to make an official statement regarding its pricing and tariffs for the phone.
Source: Electronista
QWERTY Shoes

DMC's 5-inch Copia color e-reader landing this fall for $99, others to follow
Official: HTC rolling out Android 2.2, 720p video, iTunes sync to unlocked Euro Desires this weekend
Sony refuses to get caught up in a price war with Kindle, intends to compete on quality
Droid 2 cases arrive at Best Buy, Droid 2s soon to follow?
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Canadian iPhone 4 launch details emerge: Rogers offers 6GB for $30, iPad sharing for $20

YouTube increases clip limit to 15 minutes, Cosby Show VHS rips now available in just 2 clicks

BoingBoing |
Amazon sees e-book sales surpassing paper versions, has Mirasol technology in the Kindle labs
All Things D Pocket-lint, USA Today |
Nintendo issues a 3DS release date date

A steampunk USB drive that could clean H. G. Wells' house

Nintendo posts Q1 loss on strong Yen and lower DS prices

Although foreshadowed, it's hard to believe that the once mighty Ninty, a company with unshakable profits even during last year's global economic downturn, just recorded a Q1 net loss of ¥25.22 billion ($288 million) compared to a net profit of ¥42.32 billion during the same 3-month period a year earlier. Revenues dropped from ¥253.50 billion to ¥188.65 billion. Lower DS portable gaming machine prices coupled with a strong Yen (86.5 percent of its sales were outside of Japan) helped pull Nintendo into the red. Regardless, Nintendo continues to forecast a full year net profit of ¥200 billion on revenue of ¥1.4 trillion. We'll see.
Evatran's Plugless Power gives your wheels a wireless proximity-based charge

Trading gas nozzles for electric sockets may be the green thing to do -- in more ways than one -- but wouldn't plug-in hybrids and electric vehicles be that much sweeter if you could just forget about the plug? That's what Evatran is trying to do with its Plugless Power technology, shown off at Plug-In 2010 in San Jose, which charges your car automatically when you pull up to the company's specially-designed curb. The "station block" above is a wireless induction charger (yes, a car-sized Powermat) that beams electricity to a shoebox-sized device you mount to the undercarriage of your vehicle, magnetically detecting and gravitating towards said shoebox even if you park somewhat crooked. The system presently works with 80 percent efficiency when firing electrons across a two-inch gap (engineers are shooting for 90 percent by the time it hits production) but of course the base station itself doesn't get power from the ether -- it requires one of the company's own Level 2 wired chargers (and compatible wiring) to run. Should your residence or place of business be equipped, the 240 volt towers will set you back $3,245 this December, and the proximity charger will be available to early adopters in Q2 2011 (we're hearing April) for the bargain price of $800.
HTC beginning Froyo rollout tomorrow? Maybe, maybe not

HTC Europe director Mark Moons caused quite a stir this morning when he tweeted that the company would begin rolling out Android Froyo updates to devices tomorrow, starting with the Desire, but we wouldn't get too excited yet -- HTC tells us that it's possible a rollout will begin tomorrow, but nothing's finalized yet pending some final testing. We've certainly got our fingers crossed -- and we're sure Desire owners the world over will be hitting that System Updates button nonstop for the next few days.
