ASRock launches MultiBook G12 at CeBIT, we go eyes-on

ASRock had a surprisingly large presence at CeBIT this year, so it follows logic that it would bring along some new kit to show off. The MultiBook G12 is its 12-inch offering to the bursting-at-the-seams netbook arena, and while it didn’t look all that different from the units it’s going up against, we suppose a little more competition can’t hurt matters. Details on specs were rather scant, with ASRock only telling us that it will ship with a dual-core Intel CPU, up to 2GB of DDR2 RAM, integrated graphics, a 12.1-inch panel (1,280 x 800), room for a single 2.5-inch SATA drive, gigabit Ethernet, 802.11b/g/n WiFi, audio in / out, a built-in optical drive, four USB 2.0 ports, a 56k modem, VGA output and a fancy-ish design on the lid. The on-hand rep wouldn’t give out a hard price to quote, but he did say that it would be priced “very competitively” when it ships worldwide in the April / May time frame.

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ASRock launches MultiBook G12 at CeBIT, we go eyes-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Mar 2009 16:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia Fixes Faulty U.S. 5800 XpressMusic Phones

Nokia_5800_0305
Nokia has found a fix for the 5800 XpressMusic phones that made their debut two weeks ago to a slew of customer complaints regarding connectivity to some 3G networks.

"We have concluded this was an isolated situation related
to a configuration change in the North American variant," said a Nokia spokesperson in a statement. "We have now adjusted
the configuration and will resume sales shortly."

Nokia sells the 5800 phones for $400 as an unlocked and unsubsidized
device in the U.S. and the phone is available only through the
company’s stores.

Last week buyers reported problems with the phone that prevented the device from connecting to 3G networks such as AT&T’s. Users did not have any issues logging on to the EDGE network. Nokia pulled the U.S. version of the phone off its shelves and offered the European model temporarily. It was a setback for Nokia which introduced the phone in Europe last year to great success. The phone was billed as the
company’s first touchscreen device for the mass market. It includes free year long access to any music as part of the company’s
‘Comes With Music’ service. But in the U.S., the phone has been offered without any carrier support.

Nokia now says the updated 5800 XpressMusic phones will be available in all its stores next week. The company has also fixed issues around some of the earpieces selling with its phones. A few users had complained about the quality of the earpieces. "This was a hardware problem impacting a limited
number of units," said the Nokia spokesperson. "In an unlikely event that customers are still experiencing this issue,
they should contact local Nokia Care where the audio component will be
replaced."

See also:
Nokia’s Upcoming Music Phone Takes a Shot at Apple

Photo: (Jonathansin/Flickr)

Pandigital’s 10.4-inch PanTouch Clear WiFi digiframe is industry’s thinnest

Pandigital just got official with its PanTouch Clear line at CES this year, but already the company’s stepping things up with the industry’s slimmest digiframe. The 10.4-inch PAN1000DWPCF2 was introduced at this year’s PMA expo in Las Vegas, and aside from the 1,024 x 768 resolution, 2GB of internal storage space, 6-in-1 card reader, inbuilt WiFi, USB socket and support for audio / video playback, the device also ditches the traditional “rear housing” to make it just 0.33-inches thick. From what we can tell, this here frame is probably the one to snag if you’re dead set on hanging one upside your wall, and the programmable on / off times enables you to leave the office knowing that your frame will go dark at the appropriate strike of the clock. Pandigital plans to toss in a dark espresso wood frame as well as white and charcoal interchangeable mats, but you’ll have to wait until May to hand over your $229.99 and bring one home.

[Via CNET]

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Pandigital’s 10.4-inch PanTouch Clear WiFi digiframe is industry’s thinnest originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Mar 2009 16:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Olympus declares 12 megapixels is enough

A correction has been made to this story. See below for details.

LAS VEGAS–Olympus has declared an end to the megapixel race.

“Twelve megapixels is, I think, enough for covering most applications most customers need,” said Akira Watanabe, manager of Olympus Imaging’s SLR planning department, in an interview here at the Photo Marketing Association (PMA). “We have no intention to compete in the megapixel wars for E-System,” Olympus’ line of SLR cameras, he said.

Instead, Olympus will focus on other characteristics such as dynamic range, color reproduction, and a better ISO range for low-light shooting, he said.

Increasing the number of megapixels on cameras is an easy selling point for camera makers, in part because it’s a simple concept for people to understand. Even though having more megapixels can enable larger prints and enlargement of subject matter through cropping, adding megapixels comes with some drawbacks.

For one thing, smaller pixels can mean more noisy speckles at the pixel level and can reduce the dynamic range, so brighter areas wash out and darker areas become swaths of black. For another, images take more room on memory cards, hard drives, and Web servers, and cameras need more powerful image processors to handle them. And yesteryear’s cameras already had plenty of pixels for making 8×10-inch prints, a size few people exceed.

Originally posted at Underexposed

Nokia confirms North American 5800 3G reception issues have been fixed

It’s official: Nokia has a fix. It seems that a “configuration change” — which we’re assuming means a software-based setting of some sort — was responsible for the 3G disaster on the first batch of North America-spec 5800 XpressMusics to hit the market, and the company has been able to fast-track a new firmware (not a common occurrence for those guys, but clearly, time was of the essence here). Revised units will be on sale “shortly,” while existing owners are being asked to call Nokia’s customer care, or alternatively, they can step into a flagship store to have their device exchanged. Too bad we can’t update these things ourselves, but at least we get the pleasure of unboxing it all over again, eh? Follow the break for the full statement.

Continue reading Nokia confirms North American 5800 3G reception issues have been fixed

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Nokia confirms North American 5800 3G reception issues have been fixed originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Mar 2009 16:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The ASUS N50Vn-B1B: A Laptop Family Value

ASUS N50Vn b1b laptop.jpg

The ASUS N50Vn-B1B is a 15.4-inch general-purpose laptop that our laptops expert, Cisco Cheng, sees as a good, versatile system that can serve the whole family. I tried it too and was impressed with what I saw, as well as by some unseen things–like its relatively modest price tag.

Samsung Instinct Mini spotted by Mr. Blurrycam

Samsung may be cranking out all manner of new TouchWiz phones and Sprint might be Pre-occupied*, but nothing can stop the Instinct… from getting smaller. Yep, images of what’s claimed to be an Instinct Mini have popped up on the SprintUsers forum, and while there are no hard details available, we’re guessing Boy Genius Report’s April 19th date is close — we just saw a handset labeled SPH-M810 hit the FCC, and the original Instinct is the SPH-M800. Next up: Instinct Nano rumors. More photos at the read link!

*We’re sorry. It won’t happen again.

[Via Boy Genius Report]

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Samsung Instinct Mini spotted by Mr. Blurrycam originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Mar 2009 16:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dealzmodo Hack: Making iTunes Work For You

Whether you have an iThing or not, you might use iTunes to manage music, listen to internet radio and podcasts, and buy music and video? If you do, here’s how to get it working—your way.

There was a time in the distant past when iTunes was a nice basic music manager for devices made by Creative and others, when DRM-laced music and video was just a dream in some lawyer’s eye. Now, after the explosion of iPhones and iPods and the proliferation of legal media downloading, iTunes has become a necessary choice for music and video organizing. But as much as the player has improved since 2001, it’s still annoyingly limited, throwing up barriers for enthusiasts and casual users alike. Lucky for us (and despite Apple’s lack of cooperation), plenty of hacks, tweaks and add-ons can help fill the gaps—for both Mac OS and Windows. Here are some of the best:

Sync With Whatever the Hell You Want
iTunes nowadays will only directly sync with Apple products, but we’re a gadget site, so we sought out a few apps to make syncing your iTunes library with other devices as painless as possible:
iTunes Sync (Win): This tidy little app will sync your library with just about anything that Windows recognizes as a removable disk. The super-long supported device list only scratches the surface, but includes a lot of BlackBerry and Symbian phones—again, anything that your PC assigns a drive letter should work just fine.
iTunes Agent: Almost the same as iTunes Sync. If that app fails you, you might have better luck with this.
BlackBerry Media Sync (Mac/Win): Exactly what it sounds like, though Mac users will have to use a beta build.
Pocket Tunes Sync (Win): If you can’t connect your WinMo or Palm handset to your PC as a mass storage device for some iTunes Sync or iTunes Agent love, this’ll do. Counter to the Dealzmodo Hack philosophy, though, it’s a paid app, so try the other stuff first.

Take Full Control
iTunes doesn’t provide many control options. Aside from the main window, you can manage iTunes from its compact mode, or in Windows, shunt the buttons to your Start Bar. That’s it! Unless you install these:
You Control: Tunes (Mac): Places extremely comprehensive controls in your Menu Bar. It also recognizes keyboard shortcuts, which some people go inexplicably apeshit over, and can display pretty little toaster notifications.
iTunes Remote Control (Mac): A simple app that controls iTunes over your network. Perfect if you use iTunes as a media server.
FoxyTunes (Mac/Win/Lin): A Firefox extension that places buttons in your browser window, where your mouse probably spends most of its time anyway.
• Remote for iPhone/iPod Touch/Android: Your iPod, iPhone or G1 is now a fantastic iTunes remote. Congratulations.

Really, Truly Share Your Music
iTunes’ sharing abilities, which have been eroding since the day they were first introduced, are now officially lame. Third parties, that’s your cue:
Simplify Media (Mac/Win/Lin): It’s hard to overstate how useful this is. Simplify Media shares your library so that you can access your music remotely, via iTunes or their fantastic iPhone client. You can also access friends’ libraries directly through iTunes, as if they were connected to your LAN. Downloading isn’t enabled, but Simplify more than makes up for that with dead-easy setup and reliable streaming.
Mojo (Mac/Win): Simplify Media’s sketchy, somewhat unreliable cousin, Mojo lets you download as well as listen to other users’ music. My experience with the app has been a mixed, but when it works, it works well.
LogMeIn Hamachi (Win, with Mac/Lin console options available for advanced users): Not the most obvious way to share iTunes libraries, but a surprisingly elegant one. Hamachi is a zero-config VPN service that can connect you to another computer over the internet as if it were on your home network. That means file sharing, LAN gaming and—of course—iTunes streaming, all working seamlessly.

Install Scripts, You Nerd
You can get a lot out of iTunes with a little AppleScript, and there might be something in this for you Windows nerds, too.
• Doug, of DougScripts.com, is the preeminent master of AppleScript arts, and he’s compiled 400+ scripts to manage your music and album art, download artist info or lyrics, or control pretty much anything else the iTunes touches—perfect for Foobar-loving, OCD-having power users. And don’t be off put by the word “script,” as Doug packages them with a neat little installer. Lifehacker compiled some of their favorites a while back, but it’s worth exploring the site on your own.
• AppleScript won’t do much good for Windows users. For you, the best options are Teridon’s iTunes Scripts. These are Perl scripts or small .exe files (recommended) that mimic some of Doug’s best: Dupe deletion, advanced artwork management and sophisticated playlisting to name a few.

Miscellaneous Add-ons
There are plenty of useful hacks and add-ons that don’t fit into the above categories. I can’t stress enough how useful it would be to look at Lifehacker’s fantastic list from a while back, but here are a few of my favorites, too:
iTunes Folder Watch (Win): Monitors your music folders, automatically adding new files to iTunes.
Last.fm/AudioScrobbler (Mac/Win/Lin): Integrates iTunes with the fantastic Last.fm social network, with a plugin to upload your listening stats. The standalone app plays nicely with iTunes as well, letting you rate and tag songs as they play.
Dupin (Mac): A simple app for deleting library duplicates.
CD Art Display (Win): Presents Now Playing info and cover art however your please. Lots of skins are available, it that’s your kind of thing.
DockArt (Mac): Simple, but perfect, DockArt replaces the iTunes icon with album art.

If you’re feeling adventurous, test DVD Jon’s odd new media manager, doubleTwist. It’s not ready to replace iTunes yet, but it is, as Adrian put it, “extremely promising.”

Dealzmodo Hacks are intended to help you sustain your crippling gadget addiction through tighter times. If you come across any on your own that are particularly useful, send it to our tips line (Subject: Dealzmodo Hack). Check back every other Thursday for free DIY tricks to breathe new life into hardware that you already own.

Keepin’ it real fake, part CLXXXVII: the Toshiba TG01 doesn’t deserve this kind of love

Toshiba definitely made some waves at MWC with the Snapdragon-powered TG01, but you’ll have to wait a while to get the real thing — or you can front like you’re VIP with the Venus JXD318 here, which cops all the style with none of the substance. You’ll have to keep your friends at a distance (and possibly a little drunk) to keep the illusion alive, however: Venus didn’t see fit to clone Tosh’s stripes UI, instead going with the sadly-ubiquitous “wannabe iPhone” look, and the whole thing is controlled by those five tiny side buttons, since it’s not a touchscreen. That’s a pretty weak effort, overall — come on, KIRFers, you can do better.

[Via PMP Today]

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Keepin’ it real fake, part CLXXXVII: the Toshiba TG01 doesn’t deserve this kind of love originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Mar 2009 15:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Hue II: New and improved

When we saw Alltel’s original Samsung Hue, we thought it was a decent phone, but we had a few issues as well. Most of all, we didn’t care for the flat and slippery navigation controls. They didn’t ruin our experience completely, but they weren’t ideal for …