The BlackBerry Storm ad that might have been

This, shall we say, confrontational BlackBerry Storm ad by NY ad agency Guava has been making the rounds today, depicting a blackberry “bullet” taking a violent path through a familiar-seeming piece of fruit. An anonymous source told us that RIM considered it but eventually got cold feet — and we can understand why. Nonetheless, it’s an awesome bit of smack, so hit up the break and check it out for yourself.

[Thanks, Michael]

Continue reading The BlackBerry Storm ad that might have been

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The BlackBerry Storm ad that might have been originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Feb 2009 18:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple, Psystar File to Protect Secrets Before Battling in Court

Openpro
Apple and Mac cloner Psystar have filed a protective order to ensure trade secrets are not leaked before their November trial.

Filed Wednesday, the 18-page order requests restrictions on expert testimony as well as access to software. If honored by Judge William Alsup, the order will allow both companies to label sensitive materials as "CONFIDENTIAL" or "CONFIDENTIAL — ATTORNEY’S EYES ONLY." 

Apple in July filed a lawsuit against
Psystar alleging copyright, trademark and shrink-wrap
infringement. Psystar has been selling Mac clones — non-Apple PCs hacked to run the Mac operating system — since April. Earlier this month, Psystar filed a counterclaim alleging that Apple is misusing copyright laws by attempting to prevent other companies from installing Mac OS X on their systems.

The outcome of the lawsuit could dramatically impact Apple’s
business. If Alsup rules in Psystar’s favor, the case would
effectively legitimatize Mac clones, opening doors for other Hackintosh
businesses as well. Apple frequently stresses that "software is the
key ingredient" to the success of its hardware, and thus surrendering
OS X to other
companies would be detrimental to its Mac sales.

Apple and Psystar are scheduled to go to trial Nov. 9.

Stipulated Protective Order and [Proposed] Order [pdf]

See Also:

Photo: Psystar

PlayStation Network snags 20M users, Xbox Live still way more profitable

Sony announced a landmark this week for its PlayStation Network: 20 million users worldwide, as of February 20. According to the presser, that breaks down to 5 million in the first 14 months of service, 5 million more 8 months later, and an additional 10 million the 7 months after that. There’s quite a few caveats to consider here, as that includes PSP and PS3 users as well as anyone who wishes to use the official PS forums, whether or not they own one of the aforementioned consoles.

However, more interesting to us is a note about the service generating $180 million life to date in revenue. It’s a stark contrast to Xbox Live‘s reported $1 billion revenue since its 2002 launch, as of E3 2009. Based on figures from leaked to Seattle P-I this week, which said XBL had 10 million subscribers worldwide and a 56 percent Gold subscriptions rate in February 2008, we can do some fuzzy math. Assuming those Gold members paid the $50 annual subscription — or $4.16 monthly, the cheapest per month option — that amounts to $23.3 million for the month, not accounting for discounts or free Gold trials. Presuming no subscription growth for sake of argument — we know it’s growing — that’s $280 million annually, well over PSN’s life to date revenues. Say what you will about mean ol’ Microsoft charging for online play, the numbers seem to go in its favor.

[Via Joystiq]

Read – Leaked XBL data
Read – Comparing XBL vs. PSN
Read – Sony press release

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PlayStation Network snags 20M users, Xbox Live still way more profitable originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Feb 2009 18:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Play against 50 Cent in ‘Blood on the Sand’

50 Cent is pimping the launch of his second video game, “50 Cent: Blood on the Sand,” by giving fans the chance to play against him.

Blood on the Sand cover(Credit: THQ)

Xbox Live Gold members will be able to bump heads with Fif’ and his buddies by sending a friend request to gamertags …

What’s New in the Next Release of Windows 7

The Engineering Windows 7 blog has a list of thirty six “visible” changes coming in the next version of Windows 7. Here’s a quickie list of the ones worth knowing and hotly anticipating or whatever:

Aero Peek—where all the windows on the desktop become transparent except the one you’re highlighting—will now work with Alt+Tab. Just pause for a second on the thumbnail you want to scope out. Pretty awesome, since it means less mousing, more peeking.

The Windows key button + [number key] won’t just launch a new instance of the corresponding app in the Taskbar, it’ll switch to the app if it’s already running. And with Internet Explorer, if you keep mashing its number key, it’ll cycle through all of its tabs. To launch a new instance of a running program now, hold down shift. Logical, and nice, though as Adam points out, it could be a little simpler still.

Some smaller things are more refined touch capabilities—the keyboard and right-clicking are now multi-touch, for starters. And something I cared about was that the network icon in the system notification tray didn’t tell you if your connection wasn’t connected to the internet (like it did in Vista), so they’ve brought that back, hurray.

Windows Media Player’s UI is more better! The Now Playing screen has been “cleaned up” (though I’ll believe it when I see it), there’s more playback support for cameras, a better jump list, and easier access to advance settings.

Of course, that’s just a partial list—for all 36 things, which are just a “sampling” themselves, head over there to see if your grievance has been fixed. [Engineering Windows 7 via Lifehacker]

Indecent Exposure 39: In confectionery excitement

Candy makes dandy photographs. Also, public buildings, personal photography, and the last of the pre-PMA news.




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Originally posted at Indecent Exposure Podcast

PowerBook Explosion Prompts Office Evacuation

Macimg_0452_2
A London IT manager played the role of firefighter Wednesday when a PowerBook in his office exploded in flames.

"I went to get a fire extinguisher and was just getting ready to put out the fire when all of a sudden it went ‘Bang!’" he told Inquirer. "Suddenly flames flew up about six foot in the air and there were sparks flying everywhere."

The company requested to remain anonymous. "Steven," the IT manager, said he told the staff to evacuate when he saw smoke coming out of the battery. After it exploded and he saw the flames hit the ceiling, Steven set off the fire alarm. Then, a fire marshall arrived and sprayed the flaming laptop with a fire extinguisher.

Officials are investigating the battery. The PowerBook is believed to be three to four years old.

Usually when gadgets explode, faulty battery cells are the root of the problem. Sony was under major scrutiny in 2006 when some of its overheating laptop batteries resulted in a recall of 9.6 million notebook batteries worldwide.

PowerBook explodes in London office [Inquirer]

Photo: Inquirer

Windows 7 to get 2,000 bug fixes pointed out by testers

Microsoft has been a bit lax in communicating with beta testers of its Windows 7 operating system who have reported problems or bugs to the company — according to some of the testers, anyway. Well, apparently they’ve been really busy! Steven Sinofsky, senior vice president for the Windows and Windows Live Engineering Group at Microsoft, has just directly addressed the issue of bugs in a blog post, noting some pretty astounding figures. First, he says that over 2,000 bugs will be fixed in the release version of Win 7 because of feedback from the over 10 million downloaders of the beta OS, which ended on February 10th. Sinofsky says that at peak times in January, Microsoft was receiving one feedback report every fifteen seconds for a week straight, and has, to date, gotten over 500,000 of them. He assures testers that the company reads and considers every email and comment received. Hit the read links to find his entire post, as well as an update detailing of some of the fixes that are on the way!

[Via Daily Tech]

Read – Some changes since beta for the RC
Read – Feedback and engineering Windows 7

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Windows 7 to get 2,000 bug fixes pointed out by testers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Feb 2009 17:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Blackbox M10 headphones offer noise cancellation at a reasonable price

(Credit: James Martin/CBS Interactive)

CNET would need an army of headphone reviewers to be able to get to every set available on the market today, but despite this saturation, we never tire of newcomers trying their best to break into the public awareness. Phitek Systems isn’t a newcomer …

Originally posted at iPod accessories

HP promises fix for Mini 1000 webcam problem

Well, that was fast — we were wondering where that Gear Diary video of an HP employee fixing the defective webcam on a Vivienne Tam Mini 1000 went, and it turns out that it was pulled at ol’ Hewpie’s request. The company’s promised to release an official statement with instructions for sending in affected machines, and we’d guess it doesn’t want customers taking matters — and display bezels — into their own hands while they sort out a plan. Sounds reasonable to us — and we know you understand it too, which is why we’ve posted a similar video after the break.

Continue reading HP promises fix for Mini 1000 webcam problem

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HP promises fix for Mini 1000 webcam problem originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Feb 2009 17:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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