Philips Tapster stereo Bluetooth headset loves your voice, needs your touch

Philips Tapster stereo Bluetooth headset loves your voice, needs your touch

While they may not have an particularly desirable impact on your image, wireless Bluetooth headsets are convenient, and their continually dwindling size gives us the hope that some day you could wear one without anyone noticing. But, smaller size equals smaller buttons, an issue Philips is looking to dodge entirely with its latest stereo Bluetooth headset, the Tapster. It relies on touch inputs, not moving ones (other than a wee power button), meaning you’ll be able to administer a gentle stroke to adjust volume or a light tap to answer a call. It all sounds quite intuitive and convenient — providing of course the thing doesn’t start dialing when someone bumps into you on the subway. No word on price, but if all goes well you could be pairing these over Bluetooth 2.1+EDR A2DP, AVRCP, HSP, and HFP by the end of the year.

[Via Shiny Shiny]

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Philips Tapster stereo Bluetooth headset loves your voice, needs your touch originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Feb 2009 10:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Return of the $999 MacBook Air

Oh, MacBook Air. So thin, so sexy, so crazy-expensive. Or not, if you’re willing to go the refurbished route. Now reappearing at Apple’s online store: the refurbished MacBook Air for $999 shipped (plus sales tax in some states).

This model sports a 1.6GHz Intel Core 2 Duo …

Originally posted at The Cheapskate

How-To: Adding RAM to Unibody MacBooks

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What’s the first thing you do after buying a new computer? Apart from a good few fingers of scotch to dull the pain of your dwindling bank account? For me, the first online purchase with a new Mac is RAM, and after picking up a shiny new unabomber MacBook I made the traditional trip to Crucial.com, memory suppliers to the smart and beautiful.

And I mean traditional. One of the "features" of the Mac is that the memory comes in matched pairs. This means that it takes up both slots, and therefore bumping up from 2GB to 4GB means buying a pair of 2GB sticks and throwing out the old ones. I have a box somewhere around here full of useless RAM. Can’t use it, can’t sell it. Maybe I’ll make a nerd-necklace for the Lady.

The new MacBooks and MacBook Pros are designed to be easy to open and operate upon. Pop open the battery hatch and you can simply tug the hard drive out — a huge improvement on the old MacBook Pro — changing a drive on that thing was like playing a particularly tricky game of Operation.

But oddly, adding more RAM is actually harder on the new MacBook than on the old white plastic one. Not much harder, but certainly a lot scarier. Read on to find out why. Warning: Lots of pictures

In the old MacBook, the RAM slots were reached through a hatch in the battery compartment. You undid a few captive screws and pulled out the L-shaped cover. Once there, you flipped a couple of levers and out popped the RAM, ready to be replaced. Total time taken, five minutes. Experience level needed — n00b.

With the new aluminum MacBooks, there is a little more work. First, flip the little lever to remove the battery cover:

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The battery pulls out by the little plastic tab, just like the hard drive. Go ahead and remove the battery. Then the work begins. You’ll need a small Philips screwdriver to take out a total of eight screws, three long and five short. Check the data sheet and diagram and print it before shutting down the computer. Or just look in the instruction manual that came with the Mac. Or, failing both of these, do what I did and pull it up on another device:

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And we’re in! See what I said about being scary? The machine is barely two days old and already it’s opened up on the slab. I don’t have a problem with this (I once took a hot air gun to the inside of an iBook to reflow solder on a dry joint) but for the average user this is probably a little too much. But then, I guess that’s what the Genius Bar is for.

Next up, the RAM. I always use Crucial. The prices are good, the online selector means I always buy the right sticks and the stuff turns up fast. This order was placed on Wednesday afternoon and arrived this morning, and that’s slower than usual.

I bought 2x2GB of DDR3 memory, running at 1067 MHz, to give me a total of 4GB, the maximum allowed in the MacBook. The price was OK, at €56 (about $70) plus taxes and shipping. All in, €73.07 ($92.05). Certainly not the least I have paid, but then Apple always wants us to put the good stuff in our machines. Actually, buying the extra memory from Apple would cost $150, double the price, and much less fun.

Here it is, freed from its anti-static bag. The new stuff is at the top, with twice as many chips. I guess that’s better.

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The instructions for memory removal say to flip a lever, but in my Mac you just pull a plastic retainer to the side and the memory springs up.

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Then you take out the second one and pop in the new sticks. Pretty simple, and almost no pressure required. Then the back plate goes back on. Make sure you don’t let the tiny screws stick to your arm and then drop onto a cowhide rug like the one in this room. Just saying, is all. Before it goes back on, here’s a quick look at the bottom plate:

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It’s every bit as solid as the rest of the machine. After screwing the plate back in place and replacing the battery and hatch cover, its time to see if we broke anything. Hopefully it will go well, as I pulled of some rather important stickers from one of the sticks:

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Oops. Let’s switch it on and see:

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It lives! Fantastic. Now to see if it’s working properly. Here’s a before and after of the About This Mac panel.

Before

All working fine, although the Startup Disk section seems to have gone missing. The disk is still there – I saw it – so I’m not too worried. Total time, including going to buy a new set of tiny screwdrivers and digging the lost screws out of the rug, was around 20 minutes. You could do it quicker by not taking so many photographs.

Does it feel faster? Yes. Lightroom, where I processed the images you see here, screams along now. Flipping between library and develop modules, for instance, feels faster than my old MacBook Pro. €70 well spent, I’d say.

See Also:

Cable companies work to bring new online content to pay-TV subscribers

In an effort to maintain relevancy during a time when online TV viewing is on the rise, a number of big name cable companies are looking to throw in online companion packages to sweeten the pay-TV equation. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that top cable providers (namely Comcast and TWC) and TV networks are looking to assemble a large swath of online programming — some of which has been previously unavailable — and deliver it only to subscribers. As it stands, loads of shows are available right now for free via Hulu and broadcast websites, but some channels without online portals can only be caught via cable. From what we’re gathering, it seems that these operators could be working to bring some of that content to the web, essentially providing a means to tune into a Comcast or TWC lineup without having to be in front of the set-top-box.

Update: Due to some quotes taken out of context, we have revamped our story above to show a clearer picture of the cable companies’ intentions.

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Cable companies work to bring new online content to pay-TV subscribers originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Feb 2009 10:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Inspiron Mini 10 finally shows up at Dell’s website

In one of the most bizarre sequences of events we can recall, Dell’s Inspiron Mini 10 has finally arrived on its maker’s website. And this is after being briefly (and we stress “briefly“) unveiled in a 3- x 3-foot cubical at CES, being impersonated at Tecso by the smaller Mini 9 and showing up early on QVC. Yeah, weird. At any rate, we knew that the Round Rock powerhouse was looking to offer this pup up for sale starting on the 26th, so we figure now is a perfect time to host up a holding place in order to get people informed. As we’d heard, it’ll sport a 10.1-inch display, 802.11b/g WiFi, optional Bluetooth 2.1, HDMI out, an external DVD drive, upwards of 160GB of HDD space, 1GB of RAM, a keyboard that’s 92 percent the size of a standard laptop (that’s the same as on ASUS’ Eee PC 1000HE, by the way), a multitouch trackpad, 720p media playback, optional WWAN, an internal TV tuner and your choice of a 3-cell (3 hours) or 6-cell (6.5 hours) battery. Yummy!

[Thanks, John]

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Inspiron Mini 10 finally shows up at Dell’s website originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Feb 2009 09:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel responds to SSD performance allegations with a denial

Intel responds to SSD performance allegations with a denial

Did you catch the news yesterday about those chronic performance problems that cropped up in a trio of Intel X25-M SSDs under review by PC Perspective? Intel apparently did, promptly responding and identifying what it believes to be the issue: the testers. The review alleged that the drives’ write algorithms, intended to evenly spread wear and extend their lives, result in extreme fragmentation and major decreases in performance. Intel is saying it wasn’t able to replicate the results, that “the synthetic workloads they use to stress the drive are not reflective of real world use,” and that “the benchmarks they used to evaluate performance do not represent what a PC user experiences.” The reviewers were largely just copying files around and installing/uninstalling applications, which sounds fairly realistic to us. We’re thinking these two aren’t going to agree to disagree on this one, and that there will be more updates to come.

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Intel responds to SSD performance allegations with a denial originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Feb 2009 09:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG affirms that 12 megapixel cameraphone is in the works

Here at MWC, the only cellphone maker to actually come forward with proof of a 12 megapixel phone was Sony Ericsson. Still, you know that everyone else is apt to follow suit as quickly as possible, and it seems that LG will be one of the first. In fact, said company “absolutely” has a 12 megapixeler in the works. That’s according to Jeremy Newing, LG Mobile’s head of marketing in the UK, who also proclaimed that the KS360 would be LG’s first Android phone. In his words: “We’ll very much be releasing a 12MP cameraphone. However, it’s important that people realize when taking 12MP images, they’ll be using huge amounts of data, and it will be more difficult to do things like send such files.” Honestly, we’re a bit tired of the megapixel race — get an optical zoom onto a slim cellphone, and then we’ll talk.

[Thanks, Jimb]

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LG affirms that 12 megapixel cameraphone is in the works originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Feb 2009 09:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nintendo DSi gets its own video tour

Details are slowly (but surely) starting to trickle in about the totally American flavor of Nintendo’s DSi, and while you’ve already got a release date and price to mull over, how’s about a video tour to show you what exactly you’ll be getting come April 5th? The vid does a decent job of showing off those dual cameras and the slick new design, but most of all, it shows just how incredibly awesome your life will be upon actually holding one in your hands. Seriously, everything will change.

[Thanks, Pedro]

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Nintendo DSi gets its own video tour originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Feb 2009 08:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pantech Matrix PRO unboxed on video

Pantech’s Matrix PRO is certainly an interesting update on the original Pantech Duo, and although we’re not super-intrigued by a handset that can’t be updated to Windows Mobile 6.5, we’re not going to let that get in the way of some unboxing good times — and they must be good, because PocketNow’s Brandon Miniman sounds delighted in this video. We won’t hold you back — it’s after the break.

Continue reading Pantech Matrix PRO unboxed on video

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Pantech Matrix PRO unboxed on video originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Feb 2009 08:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Huge, White, Cute Network Drives from Western Digital

Wd_mybookworldharddriveThe My Book World Edition from Western Digital is just another hard drive, but it’s getting a mention for a few reasons. First, it’s huge, coming in both 1TB and 2TB flavors. Two, it has gigabit Ethernet so you can just hook it up to your router and access it wirelessly on the network for use as a music server or backup drive.

Third, you can stream media to your Xbox 360 or PS3. Fourth, it comes with a USB port so you can add even more storage. And finally, it’s cute looking. I’m a sucker for these WD drives — I have a little white Passport version which I take everywhere. WD also make some Mac-friendly drives, with FireWire ports (if your Mac still has one) and pre-formatted for Mac file systems, and we like companies that play nice with both sides of the divide.

The 1TB is available now with the 2TB due soon. They’ll cost $230 and $450.

Press release [Western Digital via New Launches]