Engadget’s recession antidote: win an Altec Lansing octiv Air!

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 an Altec Lansing octiv Air (a “wireless 80 watt wall of sound for your iPod”) on offer. 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 Altec Lansing 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) Altec Lansing octiv Air. Retail value approximately $399.
  • 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 Tuesday, June, 30th, at 11:59PM ET. Good luck!
  • Full rules can be found here.

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Engadget’s recession antidote: win an Altec Lansing octiv Air! originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Jun 2009 12:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The 404 373: Where we announce the worst movie of the summer

I’ll ruin the surprise for you right now: the worst movie of the summer (only four days in so far) is “Transformers 2: Rise of the Fallen.” On today’s show, we rip apart this atrocity even more, spoiler-free! Wilson also gives us his first impressions of his brand new Apple iPhone 3GS and discovers the weirdest camera issue ever. I love you, Wilson, but that came out of NOWHERE!

Controversial characters Skids and Mudflap

(Credit: Complex.com)

So I finally broke down and saw “Transformers 2: Rise of the Fallen” last night, and although I can’t give away too many plot details, suffice it to say that I’m throwing in my vote for it being the WORST movie of the summer. Sure, summer blockbusters are supposed to be silly and entertaining, but a truckload of physical humor and irritating little side-stories ruined what could have been an awesome action movie. Where are the Transformers fanboys on this one? This betrayal feels like that “Spiderman 3” abomination all over again! Apart from the movie being about an hour too long (2.5 hours total, say whaaatt?), the only parts worth watching are the epic fight scenes and Megan Fox jumping/running/screaming/rolling through explosions. We also address that whole racist robot plot point yet again–now that I’ve actually seen the movie, I wouldn’t say that characters are straight-up racist, but the gold tooth and excessive slang are definitely in poor taste and an unnecessarily stereotypical slight at hip-hop. Listen in for more details.

The next story is about gaming company Global Gaming Factory X resurrecting The Pirate Bay as a legal file-distro site. After a bit of confusion about how exactly that whole case ended, we’re still left wondering why companies keep trying to cannibalize on the success of dead P2P sites, relying on the name alone to tread water and maybe even gain a few new subscribers. The problem is that it never works! Napster, anyone? Who’s idea was that, anyway? “Hey guys, let’s buy this dead service that still exists only to bait people into RIAA lawsuits and relaunch the site with legit, paid content. It’s all about brand confidence, right?” Good luck with that, doods.

Finally, we’re announcing BIG changes on the show tomorrow including the triumphant debut of our new logo (based on Blake Stevenson’s winning design) and a few surprises to go along with it! We’re also excited to have Brendt Barbur of the Bicycle Film Festival as our guest on tomorrow’s show. Check it out LIVE tomorrow @ 11AM ET at CNET Live.



EPISODE 373





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Originally posted at the 404

300,000 Palm Pres Sold, Says Analyst

Palm Pre Palm is tightlipped about sales of the Palm Pre smartphone released earlier this month but one analyst claims the device is off to a great start.

About 300,00o Pres have been sold since the launch on June 6, says Edward Snyder, an analyst with Charter Equity Research. That’s the same number of phones sold in one month than Palm did in its entire previous quarter. Palm may have gathered about 70,000 Pre pre-orders in May, estimates Snyder.

An earlier estimate from analyst Mike Abramsky at RBC Capital Research pegged Pre sales at 150,000.

Palm is counting on the Pre to turn the tide for the company. Palm has been plagued by financial woes and in the fourth quarter, which ended before the launch of the Pre, Palm posted a net loss of $105 million, compared to $43.4 million the year before.

The company is now likely to capitalize on the success of the Pre, says Snyder in his report.  Palm is likely producing about 15,000 Pre phones a day and will ship one million phones to Sprint, its exclusive carrier partner,  in the first full quarter of production,  he says.

Still Palm has a long way to go before it can catch up with the Apple iPhone. The Pre has been often mentioned as one of the strongest rivals to the iPhone. Apple sold more than one million iPhone 3G S models in just three days after its release on June 19.

See Also:

Photo: Palm Pre (Patrick Moorhead/Flickr)


Firefox 3.5 arrives

After some rather impressive RC builds, Firefox 3.5 is all packaged up and ready for public consumption. Mozilla is saying its new browser is more than two times faster than Firefox 3, but what has us more excited is the support for plugin-free “open codec” video and audio playback using Ogg Vorbis and Ogg Theora– it’s still in its infancy, but the subtle glimpse we’ve seen so far of a world without Flash video reducing our CPU to jelly is rather compelling.

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Firefox 3.5 arrives originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Jun 2009 11:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Would you rather have a super smartphone or a new Netbook?

Just last week, we got a peek at Nvidia’s new line of HD-video-playing processors in downtown Manhattan. One, the Ion, is a GPU that pairs with an Atom processor to give Netbooks gaming and HD-video-playing muscle, coming soon in Netbooks from Lenovo and Samsung.

Tegra Netbooks in action.

(Credit:

Wii MotionPlus impressions: it works, but so far the games aren’t worth the fuss

At first glance it’s a little difficult to understand the necessity of another motion-sensing add-on. What could possibly be inside this particular block of white plastic that’s not inside those other countless slabs of white plastic that Nintendo has already slathered on the Wii? Sure, we know in theory that the gyroscopes that MotionPlus provides allows the controller to truly orient itself in 3D space, instead of just sensing acceleration in various directions, and breaks some of that reliance on the sensor bar, but do those theoretical advances result in a true leap in gameplay? We tested it out with EA’s new MotionPlus-enabled Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 and Grand Slam Tennis — the first such titles on the market while we wait for Nintendo to get its own Wii Sports Resort in order — and we’d say the results are pretty inconclusive so far. Check out our full impressions after the break, along with enthralling videos of both games in action.

Major thanks to The Golf Club at Chelsea Piers for letting us test this out at their facilities, and to golf pros Herb and Marj for letting us waste some of their valuable time.

Continue reading Wii MotionPlus impressions: it works, but so far the games aren’t worth the fuss

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Wii MotionPlus impressions: it works, but so far the games aren’t worth the fuss originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Jun 2009 11:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Study: Quarter of all online adults own gaming consoles

People who surf the Web also seem to love playing games. Among online adults, 27 percent own a gaming console, with another 10 percent planning to buy one over the next year, says a report released Tuesday by Nielsen Online.

Nintendo’s Wii was the top console in May, owned …

Originally posted at News – Gaming and Culture

Olympus’s compact E-P1: A breath of fresh air

The Olympus E-P1 with its small 17mm lens attached.

The Olympus E-P1 with its small 17mm lens attached.

(Credit: Olympus)

The Olympus E-P1 camera, a hybrid designed to combine advantages of both compact cameras and SLRs, is a welcome arrival in a digital camera market struggling to find new directions.

The small and light camera that debuted Tuesday features interchangeable lenses and relatively large sensor that endow SLRs with flexibility and higher image quality, but it’s also got a small body of a compact camera. It has the potential to appeal to SLR owners who want something smaller and to compact camera owners who want something better, if Olympus can convince people to surmount a significant obstacle, price.

Like most hybrids–gaming laptops, for example, or bicycles with aspects of both road bikes and mountain bikes–the E-P1 sacrifices specialization for versatility. But the digital camera market is saturated, and the E-P1 is a promising member of a newer camera breed.

There are a handful of competitors with similar aspirations. Canon’s G10, the newest in its G series of high-end compact cameras, is one example. Nikon’s GPS-enabled P6000 is another, though, like the G10, it doesn’t have an interchangeable lens. And Panasonic’s G1 and GH1, which employ the same Micro Four Thirds lens and sensor standard as the E-P1, are probably closest.

The biggest knock against these cameras is price. Their relatively large sensors–especially those in the Micro Four Thirds cameras–cost a lot to manufacture, and fast electronics and high complexity just make things worse. Few people are willing to spend more than $300 on a camera, much less the hybrid cameras.

Brace yourself for some sticker shock. …

Originally posted at Underexposed

Partnership

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This will be your highly effective opportunity to advertise your business and introduce your product/service to many marketing and business professionals from around the world at no additional cost. Reach your target audience – partner with us to give trial offers to our members!

If you are seeking instead to advertise your company/products via highly effective means, please check out the Advertising page instead.

Why partner with us and let our subscribers try out your product/service for free? Here are some reasons:

– Our weblog and newsletter have a large and rapidly growing audience of business professionals from around the world. Mind you, they’re not any Tom, Dick or Harry; we have a considerable number of entrepreneurs, senior managers, CEOs, executives, directors and consultants among our newsletter subscribers.

– Letting our readers and subscribers sample your product/service for free will certainly help reach out to the right target audience from around the world that you are keen to engage. Your partnership with us will be featured across many platform. We reach out to our audience in many ways: blog posts on CoolBusinessIdeas.com, updates to BIZNESS! newsletter subscribers, community engagement on our CBI Facebook group, tweet updates on Twitter, RSS updates to our subscribers, and more.

Sustained engagement: besides being sent to subscribers, our blog posts and newsletters are also viewable from our website, hence offering you additional exposure at no additional cost at all.

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It’s easy and hassle-free; drop us an email stating your business concept and trial offers of products/services you would like to make available to our readers!

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New HTC Hero ROM leaked, Flash 10 already chugging along on a few lucky G1s

Step aside, JAC Hero, there’s a new firmware in town. Fatal1ty (that Fatal1ty?) and nk02 have not only managed to obtain the HTC Hero‘s new (and almost final) Sense UI-infused firmware, but have spruced it up for consumption by HTC Magic / Dream users. There’s naturally a bit of glitchiness — apparently WiFi and Bluetooth don’t work at the moment, and the camera is all funkified, but the real treat here is the first implementation of Flash 10 on Android, even if it is a bit “laggy” on the RAM-starved G1. The widgets are also on display, and other than Flash the general experience is apparently pretty snappy. Naturally, the xda-dev folks won’t be leaving well enough alone, and we should be seeing refined versions of this and future Hero firmwares leading up to and after the release of the actual device.

[Via xda-developers forum; thanks Jeremy W., screenshot by johnnylicious]

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New HTC Hero ROM leaked, Flash 10 already chugging along on a few lucky G1s originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Jun 2009 10:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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