Nokia and Intel collaborating on new Linux-based phone OS called oFono

Between Android and the myriad of LiMo builds out there, we’re not sure the world needs another open-source phone operating system, but Nokia and Intel seem to think differently: the two behemoths have joined up to develop oFono, a Linux-based mobile OS for GSM handsets. We don’t know many details, but he project seems to be pulling people from both Intel’s Moblin initiative and Nokia’s Maemo project, and job postings from a “major handset company” searching for a GUI designer in either Dallas or San Jose have appeared, so it sounds like something big is in the works. We’ll see.

Read – oFono web site
Read – PhoneDog post about the job listing

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Nokia and Intel collaborating on new Linux-based phone OS called oFono originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 May 2009 13:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Blu-ray Is Killing Itself

I love a good high-def movie, and Blu-ray players are sweet. Only they’re so feature rich, the discs themselves are an afterthought—DOA or relegated to a niche format reserved for the finest films.

Oh, come on—you can’t tell me you don’t see where this is going. Even though the format has grown 72% in the last quarter, every Blu-ray player we choose to review has an abundance of features that have nothing to do with Blu-ray. In fact, they all have to do with delivering movies in a different way, with more instant gratification.

The joke is, when we were pushing for Blu-ray 2.0 with BD-Live a year ago, we didn’t realize that the ethernet port was really not about enhanced Blu-ray at all, but about video on demand. I own a few Blu-rays, like Wall-E, that have BD-Live components. Never even bothered with them. No point. But you’d be a ‘tard to buy a Blu-ray player without an ethernet port, and you’d be a ‘tard to buy a Blu-ray player without Netflix on demand, and at this point, another service for new-release movies, like Amazon VOD or CinemaNow.

Netflix gives me back seasons of 30 Rock and The Office in high-def. Pop quiz: Will I ever buy them on Blu-ray, or even DVD? No. I can even get stuff I’d have previously hunted down on disc, like The IT Crowd. I can get lots of the movies I previously owned on DVD instantly on demand for no cost other than the $10 monthly subscription. People don’t even bitch about DRM with Netflix, because it’s instant and always there, so even the copyright owners should be happy. Time Warner’s boss even said he’s thinking about offering a Netflix-like VOD distribution channel for HBO—nothing like all-you-can-eat Rome, Wire and Band of Brothers to kill DVD sales, and HBO still gets their mad money.

You want to talk video quality? Fine. I own The Dark Knight on Blu-ray. That movie is freakin’ awesome, and I am happy to watch it on a Blu-ray player, while I sit exactly 47 inches from a 50-inch 1080p plasma television. But what about Billy Madison? I love that movie too, but I first owned it on a VHS playing in 4:3 at what you might call 240i, and I can verify that the high-def version is no funnier. In fact, instead of fishing out the HD DVD of it I have, and hooking up the HD DVD drive to my Xbox, I’d probably sooner try to find it on Netflix, in whatever video quality they’re offering.

Besides, most people—most Giz readers, I’d wager—are watching “high def” movies on LCD TVs they bought at Costco for $899, so you can’t tell me that they can see a difference between so-called VOD high-def and real bonafide Blu-ray high-def, even though there definitely is one.

The Criterion Collection belongs on Blu-ray. But six films by Wes Anderson, Terry Gilliam and Akira Kurosawa do not an industry make. Like our discussion of audiophiles, there’s a need to preserve (and even appreciate) video at very high quality, but that need doesn’t trickle down to the masses, and especially doesn’t matter for every single film, or even the vast majority of middle-of-the-road movies and TV. DVDs were a hit because they were the smartest way to deliver most video in the years 1999 to 2007. Now, the smartest way to deliver most video is over broadband, not on high-density shiny discs.

Don’t get me wrong. You’ll buy a “Blu-ray player.” Stats show many of you already are. You may even buy some Blu-ray discs, or pay the extra $2 or $3 for Netflix Blu-ray rental. But the amount of time you’ll spend watching Blu-ray on it will continue to dwindle, until, maybe one day, the disc tray just refuses to open from lack of use.

Shocker: Intels New Commercials Using Actors, Not Employees

Thumbnail image for Fake Bhatt maybe.JPG
In case you’re wondering whether engineers are indeed as sexy as Intel makes them out to be: sadly, we may never know. Intel’s latest series of ads use actors, not actual employees, at least in some cases.

Although I was unaware of this, Intel did disclose in a press release earlier this month, according to a spokesman:

“Several of the engineers we’re personifying confided that acting isn’t
within their comfort zone,” said Sandra Lopez, Intel’s global consumer
marketing manager. “We respect that and in the spirit of developing
tomorrow’s ‘normal’ we appreciate that their focus is on winning
patents, not Clios,” a reference by Lopez of the global advertising
awards competition.

The new subject: Ajay Bhatt, an Intel Fellow and its chief I/O architect, who apparently sashays through a roomful of swooning office drones acting, well, like a rock star. We’ve added Bhatt’s official photo to the right; you can draw your own conclusions as to who might better fit the bill.

Cube H200D PMP adds an HDMI output, a few color options

Cube already caught us off guard last month with a 1080i-capable PMP, and this month it’s outdoing itself once more. The H200D has yet to be fully detailed, but we do know that it’ll rock an expansive touchscreen, an HDMI output, RMVB support and arrive in red, blue or grey. Too bad it’ll take a flight to China to ever find one, but here’s hoping someone over on US soil takes a hint.

[Via iTechNews]

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Cube H200D PMP adds an HDMI output, a few color options originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 May 2009 12:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Logitech Harmony Adapter for PlayStation 3 now shipping

Just try to wrap your minds around this, Harmony / PS3 owners: this weekend is the last weekend that your otherwise awesome universal remote won’t be able to power on your otherwise awesome Blu-ray / media player. Wild, we know. Logitech’s heralded Harmony Adapter for PlayStation 3 — which converts the IR blasts coming from your Harmony-branded remote to Bluetooth signals that the console understands — is now shipping. You can pretty much take your pick of e-tailers, but the read link leads to a sweet 10 percent off promotion that’ll save you a few bones compared to buying from Amazon. Whatever the case, the MSRP is $59.99, so feel free to track down the best deal in all your free time.

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Logitech Harmony Adapter for PlayStation 3 now shipping originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 May 2009 12:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cheap Geek: Plasma HDTV, Microsoft LifeCam, SwissGear Backpack

SVA-ED4218P.jpg

If you sent out your wedding invitations by Twitter, you might be a cheap geek.

1. A sweet deal on a Plasma TV? Yes, you can believe your eyes. Buy.com is offering an SVA ED4218P 42-inch Plasma (through a company called Wholesale AV) for only $683.90–and the deal includes my favorite phrase: “free shipping.” This is a widescreen TV with a 16:9 aspect ratio and picture-in-picture and closed captioning support.

2. With video calling finally taking off, you need a better can than the one preinstalled in your notebook. Consider the Microsoft LifeCam NX-6000, a top-of-the-line webcam currently offered on Amazon for $29.75. This cam offers 2.0 megapixel HD video, 7.6 megapixel still photos, and a wide angle lens so you can get everyone in the family in the picture.

3. It must be spring cleaning for SwissGear: yesterday I brought you a great deal on a SwissGear rolling case and today I’ve got a deal on a SwissGear computer backpack. Amazon has it for $40.50. This backpack offers a mobile phone pocket, a padded computer compartment, and an airflow back system for comfort.

Steve Jobs, the iPhone, and WWDC: Whats Coming?

small-fake-steve.jpgThe revelation that Steve Jobs won’t be presenting the keynote at this year’s Apple Worldwide Developers’ Conference on June 8th has created a lot of speculation in the blogosphere, with random financial analysts claiming that this means Apple won’t release an iPhone at the show, and sharp-eyed observers like Jon Gruber disagreeing.

One thing to understand about financial analysts is that they often don’t have any special knowledge – they’re just speculating, like you or I do. And Gruber makes the excellent point that if Apple wants to present new hardware APIs to iPhone developers, they’ll have to show the new iPhone first.

With Apple basically admitting that they aren’t going to launch Snow Leopard at the show (instead providing a “developer preview,”) the show could be extremely anticlimactic without some new hardware being announced.

Speculation that Steve will come back in a gala performance at the end of June also seems a little off-key to me. Apple previously said that Jobs will come back in June, but keynotes are intense, stressful, and very physical experiences. While it would be an amazing show of Steve’s fitness to throw a keynote in late June, his doctors and family might prefer him to ease back into work a little more gently.

I’ll be at WWDC providing live coverage of Schiller’s keynote, and whatever else appears. After all, Steve Jobs still might be the “one more thing” at the show.

Engadget’s recession antidote: win a Brando 55-in-1 Card Reader reader!

This whole global economic crisis, and its resulting massive loss of jobs got us thinking. We here at Engadget didn’t want to stand helplessly by, announcing every new round of misery without giving anything back — so we decided to take the opportunity to spread a little positivity. We’ll be handing out a new gadget every day (except for weekends) to lucky readers until we run out of stuff or companies stop sending things. Today we’ve got ten (yes, 10!) Brando 55 in 1 Card Readers to give away. Read the rules below (no skimming — we’re omniscient and can tell when you’ve skimmed) and get commenting! Hooray for free stuff!

Big thanks to Brando for providing the gear!

The rules:

  • Leave a comment below. Any comment will do, but if you want to share your proposal for “fixing” the world economy, that’d be sweet too.
  • You may only enter this specific giveaway once. If you enter this giveaway more than once you’ll be automatically disqualified, etc. (Yes, we have robots that thoroughly check to ensure fairness.)
  • If you enter more than once, only activate one comment. This is pretty self explanatory. Just be careful and you’ll be fine.
  • Contest is open to anyone in the 50 States, 18 or older! Sorry, we don’t make this rule (we hate excluding anyone), so be mad at our lawyers and contest laws if you have to be mad.
  • Winner will be chosen randomly. The winner will receive one (1) Brando 55 in 1 Card Reader. Ten (10) winners will be chosen.
  • If you are chosen, you will be notified by email. Winners must respond within three days of the end of the contest. If you do not respond within that period, another winner will be chosen.
  • Entries can be submitted until Friday, May, 15th, at 11:59PM ET. Good luck!
  • Full rules can be found here.

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Engadget’s recession antidote: win a Brando 55-in-1 Card Reader reader! originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 May 2009 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New Star Trek: Warp Speed, Phasers, and Plantronics Headsets

Plantronics CS70.jpg

The Plantronics CS70 headset is good….really good.  Right now, the headset is limited to just making simple calls, but it seems that in the 23rd century, it may well be used it as a voice/sight hybrid device–say, while transporting Spock and Kirk to and from a Vulcan ship.  If you’re planning on seeing the new “Star Trek” movie, be on the look out for it, it’s there–right on Scotty’s ear.

Maybe the new Plantronics Voyager Pro, our current Editor’s Choice Bluetooth headset will be in the inevitable sequel.

Albatron storms back with 10.2-inch ultrathin netbook

Nice timing, Albatron. With the whole world feeling that the time is right to enter the quaint and mysterious realm of “thin and light” netbooks, this just proves that you’re totally vibing with money-hungry suits the world over. Truth be told, there’s not much we know about the admittedly striking laptop above. It’s got a 10.2-inch panel, weighs around 2.2 pounds and packs at least an audio input and output. We’re promised that more images and even a video are on the horizon, so hold tight, vaquero.

[Via Slashgear]

Update: Hands-on videos are up! Check it after the break.

Continue reading Albatron storms back with 10.2-inch ultrathin netbook

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Albatron storms back with 10.2-inch ultrathin netbook originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 May 2009 11:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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