Greenpeace Faults HP, Lenovo and Dell’s Efforts to Eliminate Toxins

Ewaste_2
PC makers HP, Lenovo and Dell’s green efforts have environmental activist group Greenpeace seeing red.

In its latest report, Greenpeace has slammed the three companies for backtracking on their commitment to eliminate vinyl plastic (PVC) and brominated flame retardants (BFRs), regarded as toxins, from their products by the end of the year.

Apple and Acer are the
only ones sticking to their promise to phase out these substances, said Greenpeace in its latest ‘Guide to Greener Electronics’. With the
exception of achieving certified PVC-free power cords, Apple had already eliminated the other toxins by the end of 2008, said the group.

“If Apple can find the solutions, there should be no
reason why the other leading PC companies can not,” said Casey Harrell,
Greenpeace International toxics campaigner in a statement. “All of them should have at least
one toxic-free line of products on the market by the end of this year.”

While HP and Dell have yet to set a new deadline for completely eliminating the toxins from all of their products, Lenovo has
delayed its deadline to the end of 2010, said Greenpeace.

Overall Nokia and Samsung rated the highest on the agency’s score card, while Nintendo came in last.

Greenpeace’s Latest Report

Photo: Greenpeace

Panasonic DMC-GH1 handled on video, coming to North America in May

Panasonic’s HD Micro Four Thirds shooter honestly can’t arrive soon enough, with its continual autofocus while shooting, on-the-fly aperture switching and all around loveliness. Thus, it’s with a heavy heart that we present to you the following tidbit: according to Doug Borbath, a senior project manager at Panasonic Canada, the DMC-GH1 won’t ship to North America until “late May,” though the pricing remains pretty much in line with what we’ve been hearing. It’ll sticker at $1,899CDN, which equates to just over $1,500 here in the United States. That price does include the pretty astounding 14-140mm (28-280mm in Four Thirds terminology) stock lens, though it doesn’t include the optional external microphone ($200; available “around the same time”) nor the super wide angle Lumix G Vario 7-14mm/f4.0 ASPH (price unknown; available at GH1 launch). Check the read link for some seriously enviable footage.

[Thanks, Jive]

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Panasonic DMC-GH1 handled on video, coming to North America in May originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Mar 2009 16:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft Skymarket for Windows Mobile 7 Coming in 2009?

This article was written on September 01, 2008 by CyberNet.

windows mobile 7.jpgIt was just a few days ago that Google unveiled their idea to come out with a central market for Android developers to share their latest creations, and now Microsoft is hot on their tail. The istartedsomething blog noticed a few job postings that Microsoft made regarding something called Skymarket.

The details are sparse, but the launch of Skymarket will be done alongside that of Windows Mobile 7, which is currently slated for early 2009. The job descriptions, however, say that the marketplace will be available for developers as early as this fall. Whomever gets the position at Microsoft will have to draw up a “product offering, pricing, business model and policies that will make the Windows Mobile marketplace ‘the place to be’ for developers wishing to distribute and monetize their Windows Mobile applications.

One thing I can’t wait to see is how much of the cut Microsoft decides to take from developers for the sale of their applications. Steve Ballmer always kind of shrugged off Apple’s App Store because he thought developers wouldn’t want to give up 30% of their revenue to Apple. Well, as it turns out some developers are still able to make a good chunk of money since they are exposed to a lot more users than they would ordinarily be.

By the time 2009 comes to an end we will have three application stores/markets that will be heavily competing for users, and it will be interesting to see which of them comes out on top. Will it be Apple, Microsoft, or Google?

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Review: Clear Spot Portable WiMax Wi-Fi Hotspot

Today Clearwire yanked the cloth off of its rumored Clear Spot portable WiMax-to-Wi-Fi hotspot, a shiny little battery-powered device that lets you bestow real 4G bandwidth upon anyone in Wi-Fi range.

The $140 thing fits in your pocket, runs for four hours on a lithium-ion battery, connects up to 8 laptops via Wi-Fi, and works like a charm when you’re in a decent WiMax coverage area. (You still need to connect a WiMax modem, which costs $50 and requires a data plan.)

I tested it on the outskirts of Portland, at a Burgerville right off of I-5 in Vancouver, WA, essentially becoming a totally unwired, totally portable wireless hotspot for anybody with a computer or smartphone in the vicinity. Anyone can see the hotspot itself, as it has a standard Wi-Fi SSID, but once on, you have to enter a password, like you do in hotels or airports where the Wi-Fi network itself is technically public.

I can’t make enough of the experience, and how much it could change businesses, sales forces or mobile bloggin’ teams like Gizmodo. You don’t even have to be plugged in, you can just all hop on and work as usual for up to four hours, more if you can find an electric socket. And with WiMax, you’re not nearly as limited as you are with 3G—though there are some constraints, you at least have access to a network that, in certain coverage areas, bestows blistering broadband speeds similar those from today’s wired cable modems.

One big constraint, of course, is that WiMax from Sprint/Clearwire is currently limited to Baltimore and Portland, OR, but is growing this year and next to many cities.

There is also an internal limit to how much WiMax bandwidth you can harness. Since the Clear Spot uses the same Motorola WiMax USB modem that Clearwire sells for its standard WiMax service, I could test how well the bandwidth was passed through.

• What I got when connecting an HP Pavilion dv4 Windows laptop to WiMax: Around 7Mbps
• What I got when connecting the same modem to the Clear Spot, then connected MacBook Pro via Wi-Fi: 3-4Mbps

That does certainly represent a bottleneck, and there’s a reason for it: The wireless hotspot itself—which you might have seen under the brand Cradlepoint for a year or more—was designed for 3G, for whom 3Mbps downstream is a frickin’ miracle. It has a gimped USB port that throttles bandwidth over 5Mbps.

Though that’s a flaw, it’s not a big deal when you consider most Clearwire WiMax plans will be sold with a 4Mbps cap.

Beyond the hardware bottleneck, my other complaints are relatively minor:
• There’s no Ethernet port, so this can’t fundamentally replace home broadband.
• In areas of low coverage, you get an error message saying the modem was not found, which is inaccurate.
• There’s no good way to read WiMax signal strength on the device itself.

The good news for patient people is that, according to Scott Richardson, Clearwire’s chief strategy officer, the company is exploring selling an unfettered WiMax account, so you’d get an experience closer to the one I got in my uncapped testing. Also, Scott tells me there will be another portable WiMax-to-Wi-Fi hotspot device available—probably in the fall—that’s even smaller, and that wouldn’t be restricted by the USB bottleneck.

This is one of those products that’s totally niche but totally cool. Like, even if there are many people who are interested in getting WiMax, or better yet, a combo EVDO/WiMax modem from Sprint, I am not anybody would, at that point, also feel the need to share it with others. Maybe it’s good for bringing your work-supplied modem home, or maybe it’s a good way to split the cost of wireless modem service between a team of people who are always working together, on separate devices.

Regardless of all these scenarios, the fact is, it’s a truly new experience, and hopefully something we see more of in the future. I would say this is one of hell of a reason for Big Cable to be shaking in its boots—that is, if only Comcast wasn’t already part owner in Clearwire. [Clearwire Clear Spot release]

Screen Grabs: Verizon Hub tells of Serena’s galavanting

Screen Grabs chronicles the uses (and misuses) of real-world gadgets in today’s movies and TV. Send in your sightings (with screen grab!) to screengrabs at engadget dt com.

We didn’t happen to spot Nelly’s shiny new BlackBerry Storm on last night’s Gossip Girl, but we did see that cast-wide Verizon contract rubbed in our faces again. Verizon’s newest non-cellphone (that’d be the Hub) made a brief appearance at the tail end of the episode to inform Lily van der Woodsen that her dearest Serena had reverted to her old carefree ways and hopped a private jet to Spain. Hope she took a worldphone over there, else making that “I’m here!” call is going to be just a wee bit difficult in GSM world.

Screen Grabs: Verizon Hub tells of Serena’s galavanting originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Mar 2009 15:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Giving Howard Stern Top Secret Pre Demo

howard_stern.jpgSay you’ve got a snazzy new smartphone coming out that can make or break your company. Who’s the first person you’d go to to help plug the device? A distinguished actor? Some titan of industry? A former, preferably non-disgraced politician? How about a loud-mouthed drive-time radio host?

Palm is hoping that its upcoming Pre phone will win over the Fartman, Howard Stern. But it seems that Stern himself initiated the potential relationship. A diehard Palm-user, Stern is very publicly looking for a handset to replace his long-outdated Treo. “I’m embarrassed to hold up my phone right now, it’s so old-school,” he announced on his show.

According to CNET, Palm has since approached Stern–who has ruled out the keyboardless iPhone and is looking very seriously at a new Blackberry–about giving him a secret demo.

“They’re going to show me the Pre and then take it away. They’re trying to build excitement for this thing. If people don’t buy this, I don’t see how Palm keeps going,” said the radio host turned tech pundit.

Greenpeace slams HP, Lenovo, and Dell in latest report

HP, Lenovo, and Dell haven’t fared too badly in some of Greenpeace’s previous e-waste reports, but it looks like three companies have fallen well short of the organization’s expectations this time around, with each getting called out for failing to live up to their promises. Specifically, all three had said that they would eliminate vinyl plastic (PVC) and brominated flame retardants (BFRs) in their products by the end of this year, but they’ve now apparently told Greenpeace that they won’t be able to meet that timeline, and only Lenovo has come forward set a new deadline (the end of 2010). The big winner, on the other hand, is Philips, which has jumped from 15th place to 4th as a result of some new recycling initiatives, prompted at least in part by public pressure. And, as you can see above, Nintendo is once again dead last, although we’re pretty sure that’s simply a result of sheer mass at this point.

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Greenpeace slams HP, Lenovo, and Dell in latest report originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Mar 2009 15:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Marketplace for Mobile, now in super-cheesy video form

Look, we’re certain Microsoft’s Windows Marketplace for Mobile will be a rousing success, with loads of developers set to announce apps this week at CTIA and interesting features like full-refund returns and apps certified to run on specific devices. And we’d be totally excited to point out that this teaser video shows off the interface in action, including a charmingly illiterate app review and carrier-specific stores. But honestly, here’s a better question: if Microsoft is really serious about how cool is it is to be not-cool-enough, is a totally mediocre teaser with a relentlessly corporate electrorock soundtrack and hyperactive informercial narration really the best way to sell this thing? Discuss. Video after the break.

[Via 1800PocketPC; thanks Saijo]

Continue reading Windows Marketplace for Mobile, now in super-cheesy video form

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Windows Marketplace for Mobile, now in super-cheesy video form originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Mar 2009 15:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mercedes-Benz Extends HD Radio Line (Still Extra-Cost)

Here’s another small victory for HD Radio: Mercedes-Benz will extend the use of HD Radio in its 2010 cars and SUVs from five models to 11, which covers the majority of the Mercedes-Benz fleet. It’s a partial victory, only, for HD Radio, because it’s again an option, and an option that’s part of a package (premium package). What HD Radio needs is to be a standard feature of the head unit, like the CD player is now or a cassette player was 15 years ago. The HD option will be added to the CL-, CLS-, E-Coupe (nee CLK), S-, SL- and SLK-Class models. The M-, R-, GL-, G-Class (all SUVs) and E-Class already have the option. It brings to an even dozen the automakers offering HD here. HD radio adds one or two additional stations to each currently broadcast frequency (AM or FM), in digital, one being the same programming in digital (about the same quality as satellite radio) and the other something completely different.

Galileo Celebrated with 100-Hour Worldwide Astro-Party

 

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A worldwide sky party four centuries in the making reaches its greatest brilliance this weekend. To commemorate the 400th anniversary of Galileo’s conducting the first telescopic study of the night sky, this year has been designated the International Year of Astronomy (IYA 2009) by the International Astronomical Union and the United Nations. A cornerstone event of IYA 2009 is “100 Hours of Astronomy,” a marathon series of free activities whose organizers claim will be the largest single science public outreach event in history.