Sigma Motorworks developing EV based on Ford Mustang

With Tesla struggling to make ends meet — let alone become a thriving, profitable automaker during a time when all people want are non-gas-powered vehicles — we have to say that Sigma Motorworks has its work cut out for it here. According to head of operations Matias Gorfinkiel, the Sigma GTE is “a test bed for a commercial high performance sports model that [it] will bring to market by early 2010.” Autoblog reports that most of the vehicle is based on Ford’s storied Mustang, with its front and rear differentials coming directly from Ford and the GTE cockpit ripped straight from an older model Pony car. If all goes well (which isn’t likely, honestly), it’ll provide around 100 miles per charge and could hit upwards of 145 miles per hour; of course, finding the funding to put this thing together is another matter entirely, so don’t go placing a pre-order via some Nigerian-based sister site just yet.

[Image courtesy of AutoblogGreen]

Filed under:

Sigma Motorworks developing EV based on Ford Mustang originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Apr 2009 17:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

CTIA 2009: ATT Wireless OK With Skype, In The Future

AT&T is okay with VOIP over their wireless network. No, not their current wireless network – their future LTE network. Execs gave a picture of the network future at a Q&A session today that showed connections getting really fast, then going all data.

The nation’s number-two carrier is currently upgrading their network to HSDPA 7.2, which will up to double the speed of their current high-speed network HSDPA 3.6. Realistically, that means we’re looking at about 1.5 mbits/sec on average. After that, though, they’re going to 14.4 and even HSDPA Release 7, which offers maximum speeds of 20 Mbits/sec, AT&T Mobility CEO Ralph de la Vega said.

“We’ve got an all-out assault to increase the bandwidth on the radio access network as well as on the backhaul,” de la Vega said.

That’s just the opening act, though. Just like Verizon Wireless, AT&T is prepping a next-generation LTE network. With LTE, everything becomes data; there are no circuit-switched voice calls. And once everything’s data, AT&T will become much more comfortable with VOIP systems like Skype, de la Vega implied. Right now AT&T disapproves of running VOIP applications like Skype for iPhone on their cellular network.

“It will be an environment where people just buy the amount of data they need. What rides on the data could be voice, and it could be whatever you want,” he said.

Dell’s 21.5-inch SX2210 monitor now available to order

In Dell’s usual roundabout way of launching non-luxury products, this new SX2210 monitor first appeared on the company’s website with little fanfare last month, but it looks like it’s now actually available to order, and for the very reasonable of price of $279 (before the inevitable flood of discounts). That’ll get you 21.5 inches of screen real estate, along with a full 1920 x 1080 resolution, a fast 2-millisecond grey-to-grey response time, a 50,000:1 dynamic contrast ratio, both HDMI and DVI ports, four USB 2.0 ports, and even a built-in 2 megapixel webcam that supports facial recognition in Windows Vista. Sold? Then hit up the link below to get your order in.

[Thanks, ALCie]

Filed under:

Dell’s 21.5-inch SX2210 monitor now available to order originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Apr 2009 17:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Exclusive Pics: Hands-On With the Nintendo DSi

dsihandson2.jpg

Yep, we got the Nintendo DSi in early today and shot a quick video of our unboxing. What, did you think we were just going to stick the thing back in the box and forget about it? I took Nintendo’s new portable game console through its paces, checking out the image and music features and playing a little bit of the new DS title, Castlevania: Order of Ecclesia.

Check out a few select images of the new portable console, after the jump.

T-Mobile G1 gets Microsoft Office, Exchange support via DataViz

(Credit: DataViz)

DataViz announced on Thursday that it is now offering Documents to Go Standard Edition version 1.0 and a beta version of RoadSync through the Android Market. The two applications will give T-Mobile G1 and HTC Magic owners the capability, for the first time, to work with Microsoft …

Originally posted at CTIA show

SGI to sell itself for just $25m, throw huge sadness party

Man, the difference a few years decades makes. In the 90s, Silicon Graphics helped create silver screen mega-hits like Jurassic Park and Terminator 2, and in 1997, its fiscal year sales totaled $3.66 billion. Today, the company’s mired in its second bankruptcy, which has occurred just three years after the first. In order to just terminate the dream before it gets any more nightmarish, SGI has announced plans to sell itself to Fremont-based Rackable Systems for a mere $25 million — and some analysts are even concerned that the suitor here could be sinking its teeth into a sour deal. The agreement still has to be approved by a bankruptcy judge, and of course, there’s still a few more inches of red tape to cut through, but we’ll be sure to let you know when the fantasy ends and the wake begins.

Filed under:

SGI to sell itself for just $25m, throw huge sadness party originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Apr 2009 17:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

BlackBerry App World Tour and Impressions

Apple’s App Store concept has essentially colonized the idea of mobile app distribution, with every major smartphone platform rushing to open their own. RIM’s takeoff, BlackBerry App World, launched yesterday. How is it?

The Scope
In a single metaphor, if the iPhone App Store is Whole Foods, RIM’s App World is more like the food section of a Target—it does some of the things the App Store does decently enough, but it doesn’t match the breadth and depth or the polish that makes you feel good about having spent $8 on a bag of local handmade sustainably farmed artisan organic granola.

The grocery metaphor actually extends a bit further: While Whole Foods can be your exclusive grocery store, Target’s food section isn’t likely to be the only place you shop—similarly, the App Store is the exclusive (legal) place to get iPhone apps, while you’ve always been able to grab your BlackBerry apps from anywhere you want. So App World is more about creating a convenient centralized point to funnel the BlackBerry platform’s already vast developer community and software through—not to create a brand new ecosystem, like the App Store did. Still, increased interest and development will probably happen as a result. They’ve got a few hundred applications in the store to start, which isn’t too shabby.

The Shopping Experience
It takes the iPhone App Store and turns it into a very BlackBerry experience—lots of scrolling text lists, tapping the BlackBerry menu button to access shortcuts and secondary functions (like reviews), or to go to the top level App World menu. It works well with the trackball, even if it isn’t as fun to browse as the iPhone’s App Store. (I haven’t tested App World on a Storm, but if it’s exactly the same, the UI would suck on a touch phone.) Even though you’ll run into tons of progress bars as you move around the store, it does load fairly quickly, even over EDGE.

I wanted to avoid comparisons to the iPhone’s App Store, but RIM so clearly modeled theirs on it, it hurts. You even have basically the same set of icons on the botton as the App Store: Search, Top Downloads, Categories and My World (which lists your own apps). Instead of a “featured” button, featured apps take up most of the screen, with one app displayed at a time, dominated by an Apple-style app icon (Bloomberg’s especially). It’s nice, but not especially intuitive if you want to quickly glance at the list of featured apps.

Payment for paid apps is clumsier, as Walt Mossberg notes—you have to link it up to a PayPal account. Granted, BlackBerry doesn’t exactly have iTunes already sitting there for a simplified system, like Apple does. It would be very cool if it could be linked up to, say, an Amazon account, where I could seamlessly pay for apps along with music, movies, books and whatever else they’ll sell digitally.

Downloading and installing free apps is hitch-free, just click and boom, you’re downloading. Then you get the usual OK/Run confirmation when it finishes. Downloading and installing the Ticketmaster app over Wi-Fi with an average 5Mbps downstream according to Speedtest—a mere 171KB app—took about 45 seconds. The 1.2MB Google Talk took about a minute to download, and another 20 seconds to install. Over EDGE, I had more than timeout downloading a larger app like Facebook.

The app manager screen feels a lot like Firefox’s download manager, actually. Some apps tie up your phone while they’re installing (at least on our test Curve 8900), but usually, not for very long. Uninstalling apps—or installing a new version to replace an old version—however, is a pain. When I uninstalled the Facebook app, I had to restart the phone! And when I installed a new version of Google Talk, I had to restart again. What bizarro world is this, Windows 98?

Other Gripes
Some of the more prominent BlackBerry apps also appear to be missing from store—notably, TwitterBerry. Presumably, this will change over time as more apps pop up and App World becomes the definitive clearinghouse for BlackBerry apps.

The UI could use some fireworks stuffed in its stuffy pants—for the most part, I like the BlackBerry UI, but I feel like it needs a more dynamic style to make app shopping fun. You guys want me to spend money, right? (Making it literally easier to spend money would help with that as well.) Oh yes, a desktop version would be nice too—a gripe we had with Android as well.

Overall, it works well enough—it’s definitely easier than scouring far-flung corners of the internet to find the apps you’re looking for, provided they’re available in App World. But there’s definitely room for it become a more unique, smoother and sexier experience. [BlackBerry]

Apple, Stanford Teaching iPhone Development for Free

Iphonegen

Apple and Stanford University this week will begin offering free videos and course materials on iPhone application development.

Video
recordings of Stanford’s 10-week computer science class, taught by two Apple employees,
will be freely downloadable through Apple’s iTunes U educational
channel. The course’s syllabus and
slides will be freely available on iTunes as well.

This move toward open, free information is particularly
surprising coming from Apple. The tight-lipped corporation is especially peculiar
about guarding its secrets, and its products are designed under a
restricted, closed platform. However, as Apple continues to expand its product line and partnerships, the corporation has recently been forced to open up — just a peep.

"Stanford is very interested in not just creating knowledge but in
sharing that knowledge with anyone who seeks it," said Brent Izutsu,
product manager of Stanford’s iTunes U program. "I think there
definitely is a little modification at Apple, at least within the
education realm, to open up a little bit."

Apple did indeed modify its modus operandi for its iPhone 2.0
software development kit  — under the pressure of widespread scrutiny.
Previously, Apple imposed a non-disclosure agreement on iPhone
developers, which prohibited them from making public any information on
coding software for the iPhone.

Most notably, the NDA barred programmers from
exchanging tips with one another on iPhone coding — and critics said
this was antithetical to how a scientific community works. The NDA
also blocked publishers from releasing books on iPhone software
development.

Finally in October, Apple lifted its NDA, agreeing that it was only stifling the iPhone’s potential.

"We put the NDA in place because the iPhone OS
includes many Apple inventions and innovations that we would like to
protect," Apple wrote in a letter
published on its developer site. "However, the NDA has created too much of a
burden
on developers, authors and others interested in helping further the
iPhone’s success, so we are dropping it for released software."

The removal of the NDA led to the launch of Apple’s iPhone University program,
giving instructors and students all the software needed to code for the
iPhone for free. This program made Stanford’s iPhone development course
possible
, and other universities have plans to offer iPhone classes as
well.

Universities could teach courses on competing mobile
platforms as well. But the unique, attractive factor about the iPhone is its phenomenally successful
App Store, which made some independent developers
rich. For example, independent developer Steve Demeter announced earning $250,000 in just two months with his game Trism. And Ethan Nicholas, developer of the iPhone game iShoot, raked in $600,000 in a single month with sales of his app.

"We
really wanted to highlight the iPhone course because currently there’s
a ton of interest around it," Izutsu said. "We thought it was the
perfect opportunity to ride that wave of interest."

Stanford is posting its first video of this quarter’s iPhone development course Friday at iTunes U.

Apple did not return phone calls for comment.

Photo: shapeshift/Flickr

Intel turns Moblin over to the Linux Foundation

Alpha version of Intel's Moblin OS released for brave netbookers

If you love something, set it free — and if it truly loves you back, it will return as the market’s dominant MID and netbook OS. We’re pretty certain that’s what our mom said to us when we were kids — it’s a fairly hazy memory — and it sounds like Intel’s heeding that advice with Moblin, turning over “stewardship” of the fledgling OS to the Linux Foundation. It’s an interesting move that seems to be more about politics more than anything else — Intel still employs all the lead developers, so it’ll basically be in charge of things, but companies that want to use Moblin can do so secure in the knowledge that it’s formally controlled by a neutral body. Very clever. So — now that that’s out of the way, can everyone get back to work on that insane concept MID we’ve been drooling over for two years? Thanks.

[Thanks, Chris]

Filed under: , ,

Intel turns Moblin over to the Linux Foundation originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Apr 2009 16:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

MSI X-Slim X340 photographed, benchmarked in mysterious hotel room

We’ve seen plenty of photos of MSI’s X-Slim X340 floating around as of late — but these ones — which were taken in a Las Vegas hotel room at CTIA, are pretty interesting, artistically speaking. More interesting, however, is the fact that the lucky chap from Laptop Magazine also did a little preliminary benchmarking of the laptop as well. He found the display to be quite satisfactory for viewing videos from any angle, though the speakers (housed on the bottom of the system) produced disappointingly weak sound, and that performance-wise, the CULV CPU is speedy enough to run Windows Vista without any hitches. Applications also loaded quickly, and things like multiple browser tabs didn’t strain the system either. They’re planning on running the full battery of benchmarks at a later date, but hit up the read link for further impressions. Also, there’s one more snap after the break.

[Via Slashgear]

Continue reading MSI X-Slim X340 photographed, benchmarked in mysterious hotel room

Filed under:

MSI X-Slim X340 photographed, benchmarked in mysterious hotel room originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Apr 2009 16:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments