HTC Touch Diamond2 “Topaz” for Europe makes it past the FCC

Those clever fiends at the FCC have apparently been having all sorts of good times with HTC’s upcoming Touch Diamond2 of late, recently putting through a “TOPA100” handset that sounds quite a bit like the leaked codename “Topaz” phone that turned into the Touch Diamond2 at MWC. Unfortunately, it seems the FCC just has the Europe version of the phone (slated for Q2 of this year) at the moment — a US version for AT&T is supposedly in the works, as shown in the original leak, but we’re still in the dark as to when that might arrive.

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HTC Touch Diamond2 “Topaz” for Europe makes it past the FCC originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 11:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cheap Geek: Canon MiniDV Camcorder, Logitech Speakers, Garmin Nüvi GPS

canoncamcocrder.jpg

As the saying goes, it’s five o’clock somewhere. OK, so maybe it’s a little early to start happy hour, but it’s Friday, so kick back with some superb bargains. Check out Gearlog’s deals for Friday, March 6:

1. If you’ve been thinking of buying a camcorder, now’s your chance. The Canon ZR950 MiniDV Camcorder with 48X Optical Zoom and 2.7″ LCD is only $149.99. The camcorder has a list price of $279.99, which saves you almost half of the original price. Hurry, the sale is first come, or ends at midnight tonight.

2. If you’re tired of using the tinny computer speakers that you’re straining to hear, try the Logitech Z Cinema Advanced USB Surround Sound System for just $79.99 from Tigerdirect.com. The system normally runs at $299.99. The set includes one large subwoofer, two satellite speakers, and a remote control.

3. The Garmin nüvi 760 4.3-Inch Widescreen Bluetooth Portable GPS Automobile Navigator is 62 percent off from Amazon.com. Originally $599.99, the GPS system is on sale for only $226.49.

Mac mini gets ripped to shreds, isn’t so dull

There’s something slightly disconcerting about seeing a fine, new piece of hardware torn apart before your very eyes, but we’ll freely admit that we get some satisfaction out of it. The new Mac mini (above) looks about like what you’d expect it to on the inside, and very similar to the previous model, albeit slightly rearranged. It’s a fairly sparse affair, nothing wildly unexpected going on in there — well, with the exception of the tiny magical troll running at a steady pace to keep the gears grinding — ever-so-silently, of course. There are a few more shots after the break, but hit the read link for the entire, supremely interesting set.

[Via Engadget Spanish]

Continue reading Mac mini gets ripped to shreds, isn’t so dull

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Mac mini gets ripped to shreds, isn’t so dull originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 11:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CE-Oh no he didn’t! Part LIX: Elevation’s McNamee predicts death to iPhone on June 29

CE-Oh no he didn't! Part LIX: Elevation's McNamee predicts death to iPhone on June 29Roger McNamee, founding partner of the Palm-rescuing investment firm Elevation Partners, has had some interesting things to say about what to expect from the Pre. Now, though, he’s really out done himself with what he has to say about the iPhone. In an interview with Bloomberg, McNamee (aka “Chubby Wombat Moonalice” when playing bass) predicted that the Pre will bring the downfall of Apple’s wunder-handset, saying:

June 29, 2009, is the two-year anniversary of the first shipment of the iPhone. Not one of those people will still be using an iPhone a month later. Think about it — if you bought the first iPhone, you bought it because you wanted the coolest product on the market. Your two-year contract has just expired. Look around. Tell me what they’re going to buy.

We don’t know the future, but we can sure tell you what we’re not buying right now. And besides, we don’t know too many early adopter types that could resist the siren call of 3G halfway through their existing iPhone contract, thereby re-upping their contract for another few millenia. That should be plenty enough time for Apple to whip up something new… or at least for Roger to get a haircut.

[Via Daring Fireball]

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CE-Oh no he didn’t! Part LIX: Elevation’s McNamee predicts death to iPhone on June 29 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 11:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Click: A Visual Tour of Camera Interfaces

Digital cameras do more stuff than ever—detect smiles, track specific people, shoot HD video—but while some are adding dials and buttons to manage feature bloat, others are shedding buttons like dead, obsolete skin.

Here’s a sampling of user interfaces across compact cameras from every major digital camera maker: Canon, Nikon, Sony, Panasonic, Casio, Olympus and Fujifilm. User interfaces matter in these cameras more than ever because they’re increasingly the major way you drill down to change settings or switch modes—rather than manually cranking a dial, like on a pro DSLR. Some are pretty good (Canon, Samsung) while some are pretty bad (Casio).

The better ones tend to use a list or grid style, where everything is clearly laid out and easy to access, and more UIs seem to be trending toward the branching list model—when you highlight something, you can see its parameters underneath it. Fonts are rough on some but clearly polished on others. This is a make-or-break issue, since quick visibility is key when you shift from a button UI, or a visual one that only relies on icons.

Canon actually now has two sets of user interfaces: The old one you’re used to if you’ve used Canon lately, and a totally new one that they’re rolling out on two of their new cameras. It’s slicker, with pop out animations and a more modern font, but I think a bit more confusing since it doesn’t show you everything at once. It uses a list style for displaying settings. Once you get the hang of it, though, it’s a solid UI.

Nikon has a few different UIs, but the style isn’t even consistent within one camera. Oddly, its touchscreen camera shares its ugly UI with some of their other cameras, with few, if any tweaks to make it touch-friendly. It’s only Nikon’s second-gen touch camera, but its meh UI stands in contrast to the pretty capable one on their DSLRs.

Sony, too, uses the same UI on their touchscreens as they do on their non-touchscreen cameras. It works about as well in touch as it does on non-touch cameras—which is better than Nikon’s I feel, since it uses a cross bar type of GUI that Sony’s good at. Maybe slightly bigger buttons would help. Overall, Sony’s is one of the nicer camera UIs—not terribly confusing.

Too much stuff happens on the back of their cameras, but Panasonic’s touch UI seems ‘specially designed for fingers, with big, finger-friendly options. (I didn’t notice it on their other cams, so I think it was just for the touch FX580, but I could be wrong.) Their standard non-touch UI isn’t too bad—I’d put it in the middle of the pack.


Olympus goes with a unique icon style, but it’s pretty confusing in terms of trying to get to stuff quickly or navigate backwards and forwards, since you don’t know what becomes before or after something in the hierarchy, conceptually speaking. That said, it looks better than the messy menu on the back of their latest DSLR.

Casio has the worst UI out of any camera I checked out. It’s cluttered, tiny, ugly and every other sin in the book.

Basic, boring, not particularly helpful.


I mentioned how much I liked Samsung’s list UI on the TL320 earlier. It’s straightforward, easy to navigate and looks pretty good. When you highlight something, its sub-settings pop up as a list on the right, so you know what you’ll be adjusting when you drill down a level. Their other UI isn’t quite as good, but it’s also fairly straightforward, if slightly more cluttered.

Here are all the touch UIs together. You’d think Panasonic’s was the best, except it’s wildly inconsistent about when you can touch a menu item and when you can’t. So Sony wins by a nose. Weird, Sony winning a UI battle, I know. Nikon’s touch interface is just too grotesque to be considered.

Camera UIs can definitely get better, and really need to, because it’s clear that the feature-bloat train isn’t going to slow down anytime soon. But it’s a tricky balance: How do you simplify a user interface for quick, easy access to functions while containing the smorgasbord of new features crammed into every generation of cameras? Can you even make a truly usable touch camera? Uneasy questions without easy answers.

PMA is an annual show where we get to see tomorrow’s digital cameras—the ones that’ll be populating pockets and purses for the rest of the year.

Skivvies for your girl robot

This would look great on Tina Turner in "Beyond Thunderdome."

(Credit: Ingrid Goldbloom Bloch)

It would be easy to dismiss ladies’ underwear made out of recycled materials as a gimmick, and maybe it is, but it can’t be denied that at least it’s an attractive gimmick. …

Verizon’s Nokia Intrigue, AT&T’s E71, LG Zenon, and others expected shortly

We’ve stumbled across a… ahem, major national retailer’s stock sheet for the next few weeks, and things are looking up — particularly on AT&T, where we’ll have a couple of long-awaited releases. Let’s start with the unknown, though: there’s a “Jackfrost” due at the end of the month, and without even a manufacturer listed, it’s impossible to know what this thing could possibly be. More importantly, though, the long-rumored LG Zenon (which spikes the less-trademarkable “Xenon” spelling we’d seen before) is slated for mid-April, and the even longer-rumored E71x — which may simply be known as the E71 by the time it launches — should drop by at the beginning of next month. Moving over to Big Red, that Nokia 7205 Intrigue that’s been kicking around in spy shots since the early part of ’08 might finally launch in just a few days’ time. All told, we have a lot of emotional closure around the corner with these launches, don’t we?

[Thanks, anonymous tipster]

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Verizon’s Nokia Intrigue, AT&T’s E71, LG Zenon, and others expected shortly originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 10:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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UK college begins testing facial recognition attendance system

It’s something we never really appreciated when waltzing into class way back when, but the ability to show up at your leisure without having to “clock in” and “clock out” was awesome. If you agree, you’ll probably want to shred that application for City of Ely Community College in the UK, which has become one of the first UK schools to trial a new facial recognition technology from Aurora. Officials suggest that knowing who is on campus at any given time helps them in case of emergency, as they can easily see if they’ve collected everyone into a safe area; being the Big Brother haters that we are, we tend to see things a bit differently. And besides, who really wants to show up two minutes early to class to have some machine look at your groggy, tattered up face? Have a look in the read link for a quick video of what you are (or are not, we suppose) missing.

[Via Slashdot]

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UK college begins testing facial recognition attendance system originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 10:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Everything You Need To Know About Watchmen

Feeling Watchmen information overload? Let us help! Here are io9’s greatest essays, interviews and features about the classic graphic novel adaptation, opening tonight. (With some possible spoilers, especially for graphic-novel virgins.)


What’s On Watchmen’s Cutting Room Floor?
Translating Watchmen into a single movie is next to impossible, without giving some plot lines and characters the axe. But what can you live without? Find out what was cut from Watchmen.

The Version Of Watchmen The Studio Wanted.
So we know what’s been cut and how it was made, but what would have become of Watchmen had Zack Snyder not put his foot down with the studio? (And thank god he did.)

Review: Watchmen Proves The Cold War Is An Alien World
Watchmen, opening Friday, is a masterpiece of alienation. For a beautiful two hours and forty minutes, people freak out about nuclear holocaust – and you’re hard-pressed to care. I suspect that’s the point.

How 9/11 Changed Watchmen
The horrific visions that open the final chapter of Alan Moore’s Watchmen haunt you long afterwards. But Zack Snyder’s movie tones down that imagery, and screenwriter David Hayter says it’s because of 9/11.

A Gorgeous Look At The Making Of Watchmen
Your friends don’t have time to read Watchmen before seeing the movie? Give them a crash course. The Watchmen Film Companion explains everything, and here are some of the best concept art and making-of photos.

9 Questions You May Have About Watchmen
You’ve seen the posters, the many trailers and featurettes and followed the lawsuit. But with Watchmen hitting screens on Friday, you may still be wondering what it’s all about. Let us try to help.

Watchmen’s Comedian Almost Perished In Flames
Where the Comedian goes, murder and mayhem follow close behind. So it’s only right that the actor portraying this masked sadist, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, almost set himself and the entire Watchmen set ablaze.

Watchmen’s Steamy Sex Scenes Are High-Five Worthy
We know how Zack Snyder put together the shiny blue god Dr. Manhattan, but what about the more personal scenes? We asked the cast how Snyder went about recreating the sexier panels.

io9 Talks To Zack Snyder, Dave Gibbons And The Stars Of Watchmen
We were lucky enough to be part of press interviews with director Zack Snyder, original artist Dave Gibbons and the movie’s cast. Zack talked about why comic-book movies are finally ready for a dark deconstruction, Dave talked about the “grim ‘n’ gritty” craze in comics, and Jeffrey Dean Morgan talked about one of the graphic novels’ most shocking scenes.

The Tragic Death of Dr. Manhattan’s Real-Life Counterpart
It turns out there was actually a real-life version of Dr. Manhattan, a physical chemist named Louis Alexander Slotin who was exposed to the same radioactive particles as Dr. Manhattan and many other superheroes.

Also, some Watchmen clips are here and here. And tons and tons of high-res stills are here.

DTV coupons begin flowing once more, waitlist should vanish in 3 weeks

For all of you still waiting for a little governmental assistance in buying that DTV converter box that you should’ve purchased months ago (we kid… a little), we’ve excellent news. The National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), which is overseeing the program, has announced that it has finally begun to ship $40 vouchers towards the purchase of these very boxes once more. The waitlist has grown some 4.1 million deep since the subsidy program ran dry back in January, but the agency is hoping to have that cleared within three weeks. Of course, you better not procrastinate on your second chance — who knows how quickly the $650 million it has left will last.

[Image courtesy of BreakItDownBlog]

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DTV coupons begin flowing once more, waitlist should vanish in 3 weeks originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 10:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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