Drool-worthy MID concept stops us in our tracks

We see plenty of semi-yawn-inducing MIDs around the office here, and concepts are certainly a dime a dozen in this racket, but Jan Rytir’s concept gave us pause. The hyper-hip look of the design makes it startling in a field not generally known for its sexiness, and the bottom rainbow colored tabs are just icing on that sexy, sexy cake. In this rendering, the whole package would measure 180 x 80 x 20mm, have a trackball on the right of the QWERTY slide out keyboard, and boast an Atom CPU, two USB ports and an SD card reader. Can somebody build this? Please? We promise: ravers everywhere will thank you. One more shot after the break

[Via Slashgear]

Continue reading Drool-worthy MID concept stops us in our tracks

Filed under: ,

Drool-worthy MID concept stops us in our tracks originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 30 Apr 2009 19:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Dear PC Industry: Please overclock responsibly

Dear PC Industry:

During the past two weeks we’ve tested three desktops with ambitiously overclocked Intel Core i7 920 chips. Two of those have failed Prime95, a publicly available benchmark designed to test CPU stability. One desktop last week blue-screened within two minutes of a Prime95 run. This afternoon, …

BMW 650i provokes an attitude change


The hardest part of reviewing the 2009 BMW 650i Convertible was looking at it. Well, that and using the horrid iDrive interface to cue up music, make phone calls, and set destinations on the navigation system. In fact, when it showed up in the garage, we …

Originally posted at The Car Tech blog

Routon previews its Android MIDs

Android on netbooks might be the fad du jour, but it sounds like Routon’s still working the MID angle — the company just dropped word of two devices in the pipeline. The P760 and P730 are said to be in the “research phase,” so we don’t know too much about ’em, but they certainly look nice, and they’re scheduled to hit sometime in the second half of the year. Honestly, though, we can’t help but wonder when and where we’re supposed to use these things — anyone craving a MID over a netbook or smartphone?

[Via Slashgear]

Filed under:

Routon previews its Android MIDs originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 30 Apr 2009 18:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Play Left 4 Dead 4 free 4 24 hours

(Credit: Steam)

Update: Left 4 Dead is currently discounted on Steam’s website at 40% off (from $39.99 to $23.99), but just for this weekend only.

If you haven’t tried playing Left 4 Dead yet because of the price, or aren’t sure about the game in …

Acer: Windows 7 coming October 23rd pre-loaded on Z5600 AIO

If all this talk of Windows 7 Release Candidate 1 has thoroughly piqued your interests, here’s something to tickle your fancy even more. Acer UK marketing director Bobby Waltkins has told Pocket-Init that the Z5600 all-in-one PC is due out October 23rd along with — and here’s the kicker — a genuine copy of Windows 7 pre-loaded on the device. That jibes with what Compal’s president said back in late February, but it’s hard to say for certain from the wording of his response whether he’s referring to the OS’s wide release or just his company’s 7-equipped desktop, although his talk of a 30-day upgrade free upgrade period might be suggesting the former. Until the boys in Redmond call it official, we’re just gonna mark our calendars very lightly with a pencil.

Filed under:

Acer: Windows 7 coming October 23rd pre-loaded on Z5600 AIO originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 30 Apr 2009 18:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Dolby Pro Logic IIz: Taking a second listen

CNET listening room

The CNET New York listening room, set up for the Dolby Pro Logic IIz.

(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)

Recently, Steve Guttenberg, our resident audio guru, took a listen to the first AV receiver to offer Dolby Pro Logic IIz. And he wasn’t impressed.

Pro Logic IIz is the latest surround format from Dolby Labs. This one utilizes “height speakers” placed above the left and right front-channel speakers. The configuration Guttenberg tested utilized a 7.1 configuration (a standard 5.1 setup, plus 2 height speakers), but Pro Logic IIz is designed to support 9.1 as well (7.1 plus 2). That will presumably be supported in future

According to Dolby’s Web site, the advantages of Pro Logic IIz are as follows:

With Dolby Pro Logic IIz, rain in a movie now seems to be actually falling on the listener’s roof, concert videos bring a more intense sense of being at the performance, and orchestral works deliver more palpable depth, power, and connection.

In games, the added dimension increases the realism and immerses players more deeply than ever in the action.

Because it processes only nondirectional sounds for the height channels, Dolby Pro Logic IIz maintains the integrity of the source mix and the effects are always appropriate to the material. The added dimension complements the sound from the rear-surround speakers, adding spaciousness while honoring the original intent of the content creator.

Alas, Guttenberg could barely hear a difference when Dolby Pro Logic IIz was engaged: “The height speakers didn’t make a discernible difference. I couldn’t hear them at all, so I increased the height speaker volume by 3 decibels. Still no difference.”

Needless to say, Dolby and Onkyo (the maker of the TX-SR607, which is the first IIz-compatible hardware) weren’t too happy with that evaluation. So, we told them we’d give it a second chance, with more ears in the room.

For Round Two, Steve Guttenberg (again), Executive Editor David Carnoy, Senior Associate Editor Matthew Moskovciak, and I crowded into the CNET audio room. …

Onkyo TX-SR607 has six HDMI inputs, stellar sound

When Onkyo announced the TX-SR607, the company made a big deal that it was the first AV receiver to include onboard Dolby Pro Logic IIz processing. Dolby’s new format relies on “height” speakers–two satellite speakers situated above the standard front right/left speakers–to create a more “airy” soundscape–or at …

Switched On: Windows 7, Non-Starter Edition

Ross Rubin (@rossrubin) contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

Microsoft is making many well-received improvements in Windows 7, but may be in for a black eye on its Starter Edition because of growing misconceptions that it has optimized and recommended the limited Starter Edition for netbooks. For instance, the ad copy for the Apple commercial jabbing Starter Edition almost writes itself.

“Hello, I’m a Mac.”
“And I’m a PC.”
PC is trying to juggle.
“Hey, PC. What’s with the juggling act?”
“It’s my new operating system. See, it only lets me run three programs at a time so I need to stop doing one thing when I want to do another. Really keeps me on my toes thinking about which three programs I should use. Of course, I could upgrade to a more expensive version that gives me the capabilities I should have had from the beginning.”
PC drops the balls.
“Hmm, really? Every Mac lets you run as many programs as you want out of the box.”
“Well, that would be nice. I’d sure like to send someone an e-mail about that.”
“That’s a good idea, PC. Why don’t you?”
“Because I had to quit my e-mail program to say that.”
PC starts trying to juggle again. Cut to iMac with “Mac” desktop

Continue reading Switched On: Windows 7, Non-Starter Edition

Filed under:

Switched On: Windows 7, Non-Starter Edition originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 30 Apr 2009 18:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Sexiest convertible tablet PC ever?

Moonlight laptop(Credit: Modo forum)

The Moonlight laptop isn’t just any boring convertible tablet PC. Though the concept model looks a little thick for our taste, the curvy body and dual LCD screens are enough to cause oodles of drool.

Both displays are touch screen, with the smaller LCD serving as a mouse. The secondary panel can even be used to run a separate operating system or as an extension to the main one. In recognition that a curved body is hardly a stable surface, a pair of flip legs prop up the machine for a more ergonomic position.

This concept was designed by Modo forum member minibraun, a student in Croatia, for a “Laptop of the future” contest (which minibraun didn’t win). Nonetheless, it’s a sexy machine that at least deserves the light of day, even if it never hits retail shelves. More pictures after the jump.