T-Mobile announces tiny new “embedded SIM” for connected devices

Sure, SIM cards are small, but they’re not tiny, and fitting the entire assembly into an embedded device requires a lot of space — so T-Mobile’s new embedded SIM system should make it possible to build even smaller connected devices like hospital monitors and smart energy meters that can report back to a server. The new SIMs are the size of a pinhead and made of silicon instead of plastic, which allows them to be coded at the factory and hard-mounted directly to a device, skipping the provisioning and installation steps that would come with regular SIMs. Devices with the new SIMs are expected to be out and sending data over T-Mo’s network in as little as six months — the first is an energy meter from Echelon that should hit soon.

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T-Mobile announces tiny new “embedded SIM” for connected devices originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Apr 2009 16:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple’s App Store serves its billionth app

(Credit: Apple)

This story has been updated. See below for details.

Just before 2 p.m. PDT Thursday, Apple delivered the 1 billionth App Store application, just nine months after the store launched.

The whole countdown process was a little arbitrary, but nonetheless represents a significant milestone for Apple. Although …

Originally posted at News – Apple

AMD Phenom II X4 955 and 945 benchmarked to high heaven

Just when you though you’d had your fill of insanely detailed benchmarks of processors you may or may not have ever heard of, AMD’s new Phenom II X4 955 and 945 hit the scene to get those overclockers all in a tizzy. The top of the line is the 955 “Black Edition” at 3.2GHz, while the 945 plays with a petty 3GHz. And the verdict? They’re clearly AMD’s fastest so far, but that might not be fast enough. AMD offers great value, but only really matches Intel’s Core 2 offerings on performance — Core i7 is still out in front. There is the fact that Phenom II offers a nice upgrade path for certain people who already do the AMD thing and are looking to upgrade, along with “enthusiasts” who are “enthused” by easy-access overclocking, but overall it looks like AMD is still playing catch-up with Intel.

Read – HotHardware
Read – Neoseeker
Read – PC Perspective
Read – Tech Report
Read – TechSpot
Read – EXTREME Overclocking

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AMD Phenom II X4 955 and 945 benchmarked to high heaven originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Apr 2009 16:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Philips shows off Lumiblade OLED lighting concepts

As promised, Philips has now taken the wraps off its first few Lumiblade OLED lighting concepts which, judging from Philips’ boasting, could well change your life and ours. Now on display at the Euroluce International Lighting Fair in Milan, the concepts are divided into consumer and professional groups, the former of which includes ceiling-mounted products like the one pictured above, as well as some slightly more straightforward desk lamps like the one pictured after the break. What’s more, each lighting device also boasts at least some degree of interactivity, including the ability to recognize hand gestures or, in the case of the professional lighting fixtures, react to passers-by. Interestingly, however, none of the products are actually full-on OLED lamps, with each also supplemented by some LUXEON Power LEDs to provide some more usable lighting.

Continue reading Philips shows off Lumiblade OLED lighting concepts

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Philips shows off Lumiblade OLED lighting concepts originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Apr 2009 15:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Husqvarna’s SMS-enabled Automower 260 ACX: ur lawnz mowed kk?

Good news for unmanned lawnmower enthusiasts (we know there are at least two of you out there). Husqvarna’s latest, the Automower 260 ACX, can be programmed to send you an SMS text message if something should interrupt the mow job — because sometimes looking outside to see if your robot is still tending to the lawn is just too much to ask. This bad boy gets an hour on a single charge — which should be plenty of time to take down about half an acre of lawn — and upon returning to its docking station, the battery is recharged in roughly forty minutes. Recommended retail price: €4,000 (that’s over $5,200). No word yet on a stateside release.

[Via News Market]

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Husqvarna’s SMS-enabled Automower 260 ACX: ur lawnz mowed kk? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Apr 2009 15:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Japan getting Wii video service May 1st, complete with DSi connectivity

We haven’t been hearing a whole lot about the planned video distribution service for the Wii as of late, but looks like folks in Japan will soon be able to try it out first hand, as the service is set to launch in the country on May 1st. Dubbed the “Wii no Ma Channel,” the service is rolling out with a little help from advertising firm Denstu, and includes both free and paid content, as well as some other various services and special offers from sponsors. Even more interesting, however, is word that a free DSi app will launch alongside the service, which will let you download video from the Wii to the DS, and even download coupons from advertisers, which can then be scanned directly from the screen. Head on past the break for a quick video overview — which, of course, doesn’t include any word of a launch ’round here.

Continue reading Japan getting Wii video service May 1st, complete with DSi connectivity

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Japan getting Wii video service May 1st, complete with DSi connectivity originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Apr 2009 15:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Scientist: Static Cling Makes Lunar Dust a Huge Problem

NASA_Astronaut.jpgStatic cling makes lunar dust stick to the instruments astronauts use to conduct experiments on the moon, according to a new survey of 40-year-old Apollo mission data. Brian O’Brien, a now-independent researcher in Floreat, Western Australia, and a former professor of space science at Rice University in Houston, determined that the angle of the sun in the lunar sky modulates the “clinginess” of lunar dust, Scientific American reports.

Since the moon has little atmosphere, solar radiation hits the lunar surface and gives it a clingy electrostatic charge, the report said. If O’Brien’s theory proves correct, this will be a larger problem for future manned missions than it was back in the Apollo days, when astronauts undertook them in the “morning” (roughly equivalent to a month here on earth, according to the article). The solution? You guessed it: a shed. “A sun-proof shed may provide dust-free working environments on the moon,” O’Brien said.

Pentax teases a new K-series cam for May 21


Looks like those ultra-blurry photos of a new Pentax cam weren’t just a Sunday morning fever dream — the company’s now teasing the release of a new K-series DSLR on May 21. Obviously official details on what’s alleged to be the K7D are incredibly light, but there are already some rumored specs floating around — a square sensor with a 1.3 crop factor that may or may not be related to the one in the K20D, 1.0x viewfinder, new AF system, 3-inch screen, and 720p video are the highlights, but honestly, it’s all conjecture at this point. We’ll keep our ears to the ground — and our fingers crossed that this thing comes in white. Check a non-blurry pic of… something we were sent on Sunday after the break.

[Via Electronista]

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Pentax teases a new K-series cam for May 21 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Apr 2009 14:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Astronomers Discover Mystery Blob Near Beginning of Time

Space_Himiko_Masami_Ouchi.jpgAstronomers have discovered a primordial “mystery blob,” dubbed Himiko, that could be one of the oldest objects ever observed–12.9 billion years old, to be exact. That would place the gas cloud roughly 800 million years after the dawn of the universe, and signal the earliest stages of galaxy formation, according to Space.com.

“I have never heard about any [similar] objects that could be resolved at this distance,” said Masami Ouchi, a researcher at the Carnegie Institution in Pasadena, Calif., in the article. “It’s kind of record-breaking.”


The report said that Himiko holds more than 10 times as much mass as
the next largest object found in the early universe. They estimate that
its mass is approximately the same as 40 billion suns, while it spans
55,000 light-years across (about half the size of our entire Milky Way
Galaxy). It could be either a gaseous halo around a super-massive black
hole, or a cooling gas cloud from an early galaxy, the report said.

Why Apple’s MobileMe Doesn’t Work As a $100 Service

There’s nothing majorly wrong with Apple’s MobileMe service. All of its subsidiary pieces and parts—the email, the syncable calendar and contacts, the photo gallery, the online storage—do fine. So why doesn’t it make sense?

Apple has every right to be proud of the fact that it got its act together, and everything that was all herky jerky back in July 2008, when the $99-per-year MobileMe launched, is now working as billed. The push email shows up immediately, if you use your me.com account. Ditto for the push contacts and the push calendar, though you can’t use web cals like Google’s or Yahoo’s if you want to be super synced. The gallery works great; as a dad I upload tons of pictures and videos to the MobileMe gallery right from iPhoto, but with iPhoto ’09, I can upload them to my free accounts at Facebook and Flickr too. There’s even iDisk, a smoothly integrated 20GB cloud storage service, which now has a public drop box for file sharing, just like YouSendIt. And if you have a time capsule NAS/wireless access point, you can remotely access your disk using mobile me, as well as use back to my mac remote desktop control. (The service tracks the dynamic IPs of all your machines, so each machine can always keep track of the others.)

Maybe you’re catching on to the real problem here. It’s not just that you “free” junkies who read Gizmodo wouldn’t be caught dead paying $100 for anything but a 50″ flat-panel TV. It’s that the service itself is made up of many pieces you already have. This presents a complicated economic argument: If you already have an online photo gallery and a free or company-given email account that you like and use, why would you pay to have those things twice, just to get contact syncing for your phone and a decent online storage system. Wouldn’t you go find a less elegant online storage system for a lot less money, and content yourself with syncing your phone to your computer’s address book every couple of days?

I said that the service worked as billed, and it does. My favorite component is the contact syncing, because anytime I add anything on my phone or my computer, the two are instantly in sync. But I’d achieve the same result, with less magic, if I remembered to sync my iPhone every so often.

I did have one problem with contact syncing, but I bring it up mainly to tell how easy it was to fix: I had imported a bunch of contacts from email accounts online, and some contacts got corrupted along the way. I had 18 contacts, out of 250 or so, that wouldn’t sync from Mac to iPhone or MobileMe web portal. The fix was easy: Go in and change something about the entry, like adding the person’s company name or a fax line, even their kid’s name. As soon as you tweak the entry, boom, it gets uploaded.

Most other exchanges in MobileMe have been without incident, even exporting my Google Cals in a big bunch, then manually importing them into iCal from time to time. But the very fact that I use MobileMe for some services and free web apps for others, and the fact that I am in many cases the one making sure everything talks to everything else, underscores the point I’m making, that MobileMe is a confederacy of programs that have nothing to do with each other.

In the end, even after it’s working well, it’s difficult to recommend for two reasons: The money, which I’ve sufficiently covered above—a hefty sum when contrasted to free web-based simulacra—and the compatibility, not with your device “ecosystem” but with everybody else. Who uses iCal or Me.com mail? Google wins those battles for sure. Even though I swear by MobileMe Gallery, most people I know prefer Flickr, or just Facebook.

There’s a solution. Apple could offer some things for free, and some things cheap. Just bought iLife ’09 or a new Mac? Guess what, you get to upload your photos to a MobileMe Gallery. Buying an iPhone? Syncing your contacts and calendar is a $2/month add-on. I think iDisk could easily be a success at $25/year, all by itself, as long capacity goes up each year automatically based on capability. It’s not like these component parts have anything to do with one another anyway.

My mother-in-law recently switched to a Mac after eons on a PC. I looked over her shoulder as she was placing the order, and when we came to the part where she could get MobileMe at the low introductory price of $70, she asked me if she should. I thought for a second, and realized the answer was no. I may keep her grandkid’s pics on MobileMe Gallery, but she’s perfectly happy with Picasa, and there’s a beta version of that for the Mac out now. For free. [MobileMe]