Viliv S5 unboxed and handled in Hong Kong

We’ve seen plenty of Viliv’s S5 tablet PC, but the fine folks of Engadget Chinese have scored some precious unboxing time with the little dude, and it’s looking pretty great. The XP-running MID has a 4.8-inch touchscreen, a 60GB hard disk, an Intel Silverthorne-class 1.33GHz Z520 CPU, GPS, Bluetooth, WiFi, and 1GB of memory. It’s available in Korea now, though it appears to have missed its European / U.S. shipping dates at the end of March — but we’ll let you know when we start seeing these babies hit the streets. They’re supposed to be priced at $649 when they do become available in the States. There are a few more shots after the break, but hit the read link for the entire, stunningly awesome set.

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Viliv S5 unboxed and handled in Hong Kong originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Apr 2009 11:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cheap Geek: Magellan GPS, Corsair Flash Drive, Logitech Mouse

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This isn’t just any day, Gearlog readers: This is Rex Manning Day, the best day of the year! So say no more, mon amour, I’ve got some extra-special deals for you today.

1. At this price, yes you can afford GPS navigation. Buy.com is selling the Magellan Maestro 3200 for $69.99. Isn’t that cheap for the peace of mind you’ll get knowing that getting lost is a thing of the past? The 3200 has a 3.5-inch screen; maps of the U.S., Hawaii, and Puerto Rico; a database with 1.3 million points of interest; and an easy-to-use interface. Free shipping makes this an extra-good deal.

2. If you don’t mind sending in for a rebate, I’ve got a great Flash drive for you: Tiger Direct is selling Corsair 8GB flash drives for only $9.99 a piece, after rebate. That’s a lot of portable storage for a small price. Even better, the drive’s rubber casing is easy to grip and water-resistant.

3. A comfortable mouse can improve your productivity and make you happier at the computer. If your current mouse doesn’t fit your hand, try the Logitech MX620. Office Depot is selling this wireless mouse for $19.99, after rebate.

Canon CanoScan 5600F: High Quality, Low Price

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You needn’t shell out the big bucks for a scanner that produces high-quality scans of photo prints and strips of film. The Canon CanoScan 5600F is an easy-to-use flatbed photo scanner that will produce results pleasing even to a serious amateur photographer. Its main downside is that it’s relatively slow, particularly when scanning transparencies, for which it foregoes the LED light source it uses to scan prints for a traditional cold cathode fluorescent lamp (CCFL). Although you can scan office documents with the 5600F, the absence of an ADF (automatic document feeder) makes this a laborious process, its real forte is photo scanning. The CanoScan 8800F is a bit faster and has slightly higher resolution, but costs about $50 more.

For the price you pay, the 5600F can’t be beat, and is deserving of its status as the new PCMag.com Editors’ Choice for a low-priced photo scanner.

Raytheon developing compact, inexpensive human microwaves

As you know, if you like your weapons “less than lethal” (but much more than comfortable) the U.S. military is your go-to guy. So great is its love for tormenting folks on future battlefields that the Pentagon has spent a small fortune on devices meant to incapacitate through the use of sound, electricity, and microwaves — including the Silent Guardian that Raytheon trotted out a while back. According to Wired, the company has recently been awarded a couple interesting contracts relating to their human microwave, including one for a “solid state source for use in non-lethal weapons,” and another for gallium nitride development. Details are murky, but GaN — a semiconductor for missile defense radars — apparently “looks very promising for high-power microwave amplification,” allowing the company to greatly reduce the size and cost of the device. The good news? Defense technology that once took up a whole shipping container and cost several million dollars might be getting much smaller, and cheaper, in the future. The bad news? It really really really hurts.

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Raytheon developing compact, inexpensive human microwaves originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Apr 2009 11:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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I Switched to Mac After a Lifetime of Windows, and It Doesn’t Matter

This weekend, my Dell laptop caught a virus that made it inoperable less than a week after a complete reformat and reinstall. So I bought a Mac laptop.

Yeah, I’ve used Windows machines for essentially my entire life, but switching turned out to be not that big a deal. Why? Because an OS isn’t that important.

What’s kept me from switching all these years isn’t because I loved Windows or hated Macs. No, it was more a combination of laziness and self-identification. That’s to say I didn’t want to switch because I didn’t want to deal with learning the ins and outs of a new OS, and also I identified myself as a “Windows guy” and didn’t want to become a “Mac guy.” Both reasons are essentially bullshit.

First, laziness. Switching from Windows to Mac or Mac to Windows or Windows to Ubuntu or whatever is easier than ever. There are differences between the operating systems to be sure, but none of them are that huge and none will have a real, fundamental effect on your experience. These days, most of what you do is online, or at least most of what I do is. When I switched, my feeds were synced online, as was my IM buddy list. Both my work and personal email accounts are online, as is my calendar. All of my files saved on my external hard drive work in, if not the exact same program, one that’s very similar on the other OS. So really, it takes about a week of adjustment and then you’re fine.

And as for identification, well, that’s a pretty dumb reason to make any kind of decision. When it comes down to it, nobody is defined by their OS. Yes, Apple ads would love for you to think of yourself as a cool hipster for owning a Mac and to think of PC users as chubby nerds, but that isn’t the case. Operating systems are just tools to get things done, and you can do whatever you want with any OS. It’s like a car: No matter what kind of car you buy, you’re still going to the same places. Driving a Hummer won’t make you a tough guy, and using Windows won’t make you a nerd.

I realized both of these things a couple of weeks ago after I bought a Dell Mini 9 with Ubuntu Linux. I was worried at first that I’d hate not using Windows, but after about an hour I realized that I was having almost the exact same experience I would be having if it had XP on it. It just didn’t matter.

So why switch? Well, having my system taken down twice in a week is not something I can afford to have happen. Macs, as of now, don’t really get viruses. And I have a large community of people who can help me out with it if I run into problems. That’s it.

So how’s switching been? Fine. It’s a nice OS with some features I like and some that I find really annoying. It’s fun to try something new, but it’s not blowing Windows out of the water or making me run to the returns counter. It’s a computer. I’d be equally happy with a new Lenovo with similar specs and Windows 7 Beta on it, I’m sure.

The whole experience of using all three major operating systems over the past couple of weeks has been pretty fun, actually. I enjoy using new software and learning these basics again, and all of it feels pretty familiar. I plan on installing Windows 7 on my new Apple laptop so I can access any Windows software I miss and can stay familiar with how that OS is progressing.

And in the end, I’ll keep doing what I always do with my laptop: Work on the internet, where what OS you’re using matters exactly jack squat.

Galaga Remix Lightning Review: Classic Space Shootin’ For iPhone

The App: One of the most resilient game franchises of all time just hit the App Store today in Galaga Remix, with both the classic Galaga arcade game and an updated Remix version from Namco.

The Price: $6 for full version, with a free Lite version to try as well.

The Verdict: I miss arcades! Galaga Remix does a great job at bringing one of the tried-and-true game forms of our time—the shoot-shit-in-space-that’s-falling-at-your-ship form—and does it up right.

The classic version is great, but I actually prefer the remix—mainly because the fundamentals of the game are completely unchanged. The remix adds power-ups, boss battles and the ability to save your game to start back up at the level you achieved when you had to quit playing before.

You’ve got three options for controls, which is nice: three virtual buttons you can tap to move left/right and fire, a slider that you can drag like the iPhone’s default unlock slider to move your ship, or accelerometer tilting. As you might expect, the accelerometer control is a little awkward, but the other two methods are actually very intuitive.

One weird thing: the controls, and the game in general, feel much more responsive on the updated Remix version than they do in the classic one. This is a shame.

But like I said, the Remix is pretty faithful to the original—with the same great sound effects and music (which are both totally awesome throughout), so it’s a fun diversion. And like several of Namco’s other games which were initially released with sluggish performance, an update could fix it.

Overall, a great game.

Gameplay video via Touch Arcade:


Totally faithful Galaga gameplay, with excellent sound and music

Lots of options for controls, which are responsive

Continue feature in Remix lets you pick up where you left off

Classic version runs slower and is less responsive than Remix

Acer’s dream team confirms netbook Android experiments, thinks it has a “good chance”

At Acer’s over-the-top product onslaught event last night, Acer CEO Gianfranco Lanci and product guy Jim Wong confirmed they’d been playing around with Android in the labs, but didn’t think an Android netbook was ready for primetime. Beyond the previously-confirmed Acer A1 Android smartphone, Wong confirmed that they’ve prototyped android on a netbook, and that “it has a good chance” of making it into the hands of consumers, though he didn’t foresee any desktop application at the moment. He says the big obstacle is making sure consumers get a full-fledged browser experience, and that they’ll share more when they feel it’s consumer ready. He also stated that he was pretty Acer sure everybody was testing Android on netbooks, so we’ll see which manufacturer bites first.

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Acer’s dream team confirms netbook Android experiments, thinks it has a “good chance” originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Apr 2009 10:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Corsair’s ultra speedy 256GB SSD sneaks out, hits the bench

My, how fast the cutting edge becomes dull. Nary four months ago, we were introduced to Corsair‘s first SSD: a 2.5-inch 128GB slab of MLC NAND goodness that promised 90MB/sec read and 70MB/sec write speeds. Needless to say, those numbers weren’t about to shatter any records, so the company went out and produced something that just might. The benchmarking fiends over at HotHardware managed to scoop up a 256GB S256 from the company and put it through the first of many tests. As for results? Early reports show average read speeds nailing the 200MB/sec mark, while average write rates hovered just under 170MB/sec. The only issue is the breathtaking $749 price tag (expected, anyway), but at least you’ve apparently got a few months to save up.

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Corsair’s ultra speedy 256GB SSD sneaks out, hits the bench originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Apr 2009 10:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cyberspies Hack U.S. Electric Grid

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Uh-oh. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that “cyberspies” from China, Russia, and elsewhere infiltrated the United States electric system, mapping our power grid and, “[leaving] behind software programs that could be used to disrupt the system.”

While the spies didn’t damage the grid, the national security officials who made the information public suggest that they may be able to so during a war or crisis. “There are intrusions, and they are growing,” one former official told the paper, adding, “If we go to war with them, they will try to turn them on.”

The White House is looking into ways to shield the grid from attacks.

Microsoft Zune Going International

Look out world, here comes the Zune. Following on the heels of Twitter-leaked news that Microsoft would be releasing a new version of its MP3 player later this year, Neowin claims to have received confirmation that the player will go on sale in a number of countries outside the US, including Australia, China, and parts of Europe.

Perhaps the device will be a bigger hit overseas than in the US, where it’s largely been unable to break the iPod’s stranglehold on the DAP market.