Microsoft Plans Xbox 360 Game of the Year Bundle

Xbox 360 GOTY edition.jpgMicrosoft will launch the Xbox 360 Game of the Year bundle sometime in May, the company said by way of its “Major Nelson” blog on Monday.

It’s a pretty simple deal: a Microsoft Xbox 360 Elite, bundled with Halo 3 and Fable II, all for $399. As Major Nelson points out, that’s the normal price of the Elite — meaning that the games are included for free.

Bad news for Europeans, however: the deal will be offered everywhere but there; there was no explanation given. There’s also the question of how many gamers out there want both an Xbox 360 Elite but don’t own either game.

“Major Nelson” is the blog name of Larry Hyrb, the Microsoft director of programming for Xbox Live.

Panasonic Camcorder Packs Two Lenses for Full HD in 3D

Most 3D recording systems require dual cameras mounted in close proximity, but Panasonic’s newest 3D camcorder combines these two systems into one.

The unnamed Panasonic “3D Full HD” camcorder features two lenses that record two separate video tracks onto Panasonic’s proprietary P2 flash memory system (it’s not explained how the internal imaging chips work, but we assume that there are at least two of those as well). The result is an easy-to-use 3D camcorder that will compliment Panasonic’s recent push into 3D plasmas.

There’s no word on price or availability, and the word “concept” is tossed around casually in the press release. (UPDATE: Panasonic clarified that it’s definitely just a concept as the company “starts development of a 3D Full HD Production System,” with no word on price or availability) But still, I didn’t expect to see this when I woke up this morning.

PANASONIC TO START DEVELOPMENT OF NEW PROFESSIONAL 3D PRODUCTION SYSTEM

Industry’s First System to Support Efficient Production of 3D Full HD Content

LAS VEGAS, NV (April 19, 2009) — Panasonic Corporation, a world leader in High Definition technology, today announced it will start developing a professional 3D Full HD production system. The system, which is expected to be the first of its kind in the industry, consists of a twin-lens P2 professional camera recorder and a 3D-compatible High Definition Plasma display. Panasonic will exhibit concept models of the 3D system at its booth (Central Hall #3712) at NAB 2009 to be held in Las Vegas, Nevada from April 20, 2009.

Panasonic is exhibiting a conceptual model of a 3D Full HD Camera Recorder at the 2009 NAB Show where it announced it would start development of a 3D Full HD Production System.

With Hollywood studios moving towards creation of more 3D entertainment content, Panasonic successfully debuted the world’s first 3D Full HD Plasma Home Theater System based on Plasma display and Blu-ray Disc technologies at the CEATEC trade show in Japan in September 2008. More recently, the company also established the Advanced Authoring Center within Panasonic Hollywood Laboratory in February 2009 to support Hollywood studios in developing 3D Full HD Blu-ray Disc titles.

Production of 3D movies requires a great deal of time and effort. With the new 3D production system, which can enable an easier and more efficient 3D production process and environment, Panasonic will contribute to accelerating the realization of easier high-quality 3D content production.

At present, 3D content producers have to hand-build their own 3D production systems by physically connecting multiple 2D production devices. Panasonic is now starting to work on developing a twin-lens, 3D camera system. Also, Panasonic’s Plasma displays have been used in many post-production facilities in Hollywood, thanks to their high-quality imaging performance, which has been endorsed by leading Hollywood professionals. Technologies and expertise obtained from their use in post-production has enabled Panasonic to further develop high-quality 3D viewing performance in its Plasma technologies. As a result of this process, Panasonic’s 3D Plasma display system will help 3D content producers to quickly and easily evaluate the image quality of 3D content.

Each component of Panasonic’s innovative 3D Full HD production system has unique features. The twin-lens P2 camera recorder enables the capturing of natural and high-quality live 3D images. Thanks to the non-mechanical solid-state construction of the P2 system, the camera recorder will be compact enough to allow more flexible 3D shooting, thereby maximizing the creativity of the filmmakers by eliminating the stress factor from the use of the equipment.

3D Full HD recording using Panasonic’s proprietary P2 system also enables recording of two channels of Full HD images on the P2 card. P2’s non-mechanical construction and compactness will also be incorporated into the company’s 3D image recording and editing equipment to make production in the field highly flexible and efficient.

Panasonic’s 3D Drive System enables the display of Full HD moving pictures for the left and the right eyes, so large screen 3D viewing will become possible. The excellent moving picture performance and accurate color reproduction characteristics achieved by Plasma’s self-illuminating technology enables the realization of high-quality 3D image evaluation capabilities required in the professional content production field

“Panasonic is continuing its efforts to enable consumers to enjoy 3D movies in the comfort of their own living rooms with its 3D Full HD Plasma Home Theater System, which incorporates a Plasma HDTV and a Blu-ray Disc player,” said Dr. Paul Liao, Chief Technology Officer of Panasonic Corporation of North America. “The professional 3D Full HD image production system we are going to develop will improve the 3D production environment and accelerate creation of 3D titles.”

Apple releases 4 new ‘Get a Mac’ ads

John Hodgman (left and center) and Justin Long reprise their roles as PC Guy and Mac Guy in four new Apple ads.

(Credit: Screenshot by Tom Krazit/CNET)

Apple released four new Get a Mac ads Monday, continuing its nearly 3-year-old campaign tweaking Windows PCs weeks after Microsoft began firing back at Apple.

The new ads are available on Apple’s Web site, and will no doubt flood the airwaves in due course. Apple is following its old playbook with the new spots, tweaking PC guy as played by John Hodgman as virus-prone (Conficker), unstable, and difficult to use.

Microsoft’s recent ads have focused on price comparisons with Macs, and Apple makes a brief reference to that line of thinking in the “Stacks” ad, in which Mac guy (Justin Long) responds to PC guy’s observation that the facial-recognition technology in the new iPhoto must be expensive by noting that it comes free with every new Mac.

But otherwise it’s the same old strategy of pushing the Mac as an easier-to-use and more reliable computer, with few references to price. One new twist is that a controversy has already sprung up over some of the claims in the “Legal Copy” ad.

Originally posted at News – Apple

Verizon Expands Remote DVR Programming to all FiOS Users

remote fios dvr.jpg
Forget to set your DVR for the big finale, latest reality-TV train wreck, or daytime TV confessional? FiOS TV DVR customers are in luck. Any Verizon FiOS TV customer will now be able to remotely program their DVRs from the Web, while Home Media DVR customers will also be able to do the same from any Internet-enabled cell phones.
Verizon introduced remote DVR programming in January for subscribers of Home Media DVR, which lets users watch shows they’ve taped on up to six TVs throughout the house. Those Home Media customers were also able to program their DVRs via using the Verizon Wireless LG EnV2, LG Chocolate 2, or LG Voyager handsets.
Verizon is now expanding Web-based DVR programming to all FiOS TV DVR customers, and allowing Home Media customers also program their machines from any cell phone with a data plan, not just Verizon-based handsets.
Web programming is available at http://www.verizon.com/fiostvcentral, and the 
wireless application for Home Media DVR subscribers is available at http://m.verizon.com/tv from phones with a data plan.

CompoBank’s prototype 3D digital camera and digiframe

Sure, it’s not the first 3D camera we’ve seen ’round these parts — and it sure ain’t the wackiest — but it looks like CompoBank of South Korea is diving headlong into three dimensional imaging with the release of both a camera and a 7-inch digiframe, sometime in late 2009 or thereafter. The company’s prototype 3D digital camera features a parallax barrier 3D display, which uses two pictures to assemble the image, and an anaglyph format option (for those who prefer the old school red/cyan glasses). Parallax 3D images can be viewed on the digiframe, which boasts an 800 x 480 screen resolution and a function to convert pictures and video files from 2D to 3D. The company plans on making its products compatible with Fujifilm’s 3D camera and display systems, which should also see the light of day sometime this year. There’s no word yet on a release date, except that it will be this fall “at the earliest.” Check out that fine camera after the break.

Continue reading CompoBank’s prototype 3D digital camera and digiframe

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CompoBank’s prototype 3D digital camera and digiframe originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Apr 2009 14:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DIY Soda

sodamaker.jpg

ProductDose: Here it is, the make your own soda machine. This thing is simple to use right out of the box, allowing you to make your own sodas such as cola, root beer, lemon-lime, etc. Not only do you know what you’re putting into the beverage you also save on bottles and cans.

Sodastream [ProductDose]

Plantronics Voyager PRO gets purchased, unboxed early

Plantronics isn’t planning to share intimate details about its Voyager PRO Bluetooth headset until April 23rd, but evidently its supply chain executives didn’t exactly touch base with marketing before sending out stock to Best Buy. Jeff and John both managed to procure the $119.99 Bluetooth headset over the weekend, and we’ve got the shots to prove it. Based on the teaser site down in the read link, this here headset should be it’s most advanced yet, but for a buck twenty, it better answer and respond to our calls without us having to intervene.

[Thanks, Jeff and John]

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Plantronics Voyager PRO gets purchased, unboxed early originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Apr 2009 13:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Iriver P7 review: Pretty, boring

Iriver’s latest portable video player, the P7, has plenty going for it: big screen, low price, and a stylish design. From the moment we pried its aluminum frame from the package, we were certain this thing was going to be a slam dunk. We were wrong.

Photo of the Iriver P7 video player.

The Iriver P7

iWood 3B leads charge in smartphone devolution

iWood 3B outgrains the competition.

(Credit: iWood 3B)

Forget what I told you before about disguising your iPhone; there are alternatives to feeling embarrassed by your mobile phone. Why not buy one that you can be proud of, maybe even one forged from the ashes of Miss Mother Nature herself? Set yourself up with an iWood 3B smartphone and you’ll never again miss “all the times you wood rather stab someone in the eye than talk about 3G anything.”

iWood 3B features an intuitive touch screen.

(Credit: iWood 3B)

The iWood 3B is the perfect complement for the on-the-go professional who knows when it’s time to work, when it’s time to play, and when it’s time to tap on a 3-inch by 4-1/2 half inch piece of Bamboo Plywood. Amazingly, the entire device is crafted from a single block of wood, and it’s contoured at a precise 90-degree angle to fit ergonomically in your hand.

Like its current competition, it has all the internal components you now expect out of a full-time device: accelerometer, proximity/light/infrared sensor, and even its own sensor for sensing sensors around your sector. Best of all, the iWood 3B draws all of its power from a rechargeable gyroscopic battery that should last for approximately infinity hours with just one twitch.

What all-in-one (AIO) would be prepared for the masses without its own set of unique applications? Aside from the standard to-do list, calendar, MP3 player, and Web, the iWood also offers its own line of real-world apps that run autonomously off the OS.

Nokia heads deeper down CDMA path with FCC-outed dual slider

For better or worse, dual sliders are quickly becoming one of Nokia’s trademark form factors — but one thing we’d never really expected out of Espoo was a dual slider equipped with EV-DO Rev. A. Sure enough, FCC documentation has revealed a diminutive black dumbphone that packs CDMA800 / 1900 with 3G and slides two ways: one to reveal a numeric keypad, the other to offer up music controls. Historically, Nokia has “co-ODM’d” its CDMA devices with an unnamed Asian partner, and we suspect this device is no different — but we’ve got to give them credit for crafting a genuinely Nokia-esque device here. The draft user’s manual doesn’t reveal a retail name or model number, but we do see references to UIMs (the CDMA equivalent of SIMs) and British spellings of “organiser,” which leads us to believe North America might not be on the VIP list for this one. Would be a shame, wouldn’t it?

[Via Phone Scoop]

Update: Commenter Kunal points out that this looks an awful lot like the China-bound 8208, which makes us wonder — why the FCC approval? Did that bad boy pique the interest of Verizon or Sprint?

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Nokia heads deeper down CDMA path with FCC-outed dual slider originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Apr 2009 13:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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