Qualcomm FLO TV handheld in the works?

According to gdgt, Qualcomm — which usually sticks to research, design, and the fabless chip game — is fixin’ to produce something called the Personal Television, for use with its FLO TV network. The handheld device is alleged to feature a capacitive touchscreen, a swipe and gesture-driven UI, 4GB of memory, built-in stereo speakers, and enough juice for five hours of video, fifteen hours of music, or three hundred stand-by hours. Currently, FLO TV is only available on a limited number of phones, from the likes of AT&T and Verizon in the States, although the company has said that they’re planning on bringing it to other phones (via add-on peripherals) including the iPhone and WinMo devices. Can we offer one word of advice? You might want to go with a name besides “Personal Television.” Really, it sounds so very 2006.

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Qualcomm FLO TV handheld in the works? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Aug 2009 11:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Car Review: EcoBoost Makes Ford Flex Powerful, Still Economical

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The EcoBoost engine in the Ford Flex crossover shows why V8 engines aren’t necessary for power. Ford grafts two turbochargers onto a 262-hp V6 engine and – presto! – you’ve got a 355-hp, seven-passenger vehicle that gets the same fuel economy as the base-engine Ford Flex. You’re talking less than half the fuel economy of a green car such as the Toyota Prius. But we also found the Flex big enough to carry all the belongings of a college student, four passengers in all, in extreme comfort. Three tons of car, passengers, and gear traveling more at less at the posted speed limit managed just a hair under the rated 22 mpg in mostly highway driving.

MSI: Intel Core i7 processors coming to laptops next month

One prolific manufacturer of computers has announced what we had already known for a while: Core i7 laptops are ready to hit soon. And by soon we mean September. MSI has confirmed a series of 15.4- and 17-inch mobile Core i7 laptops that will hit just before the launch …

PocketDock brings line-out, mini-USB to iPhone

The PocketDock adds line-out and mini-USB connectors to your iPhone or iPod.

(Credit: SendStation)

The SendStation PocketDock Line Out Mini USB solves two problems–both of which you can probably guess from the name. First, it adds a line-out jack to your iPhone (or nearly any iPod model).

What’s the …

Originally posted at iPhone Atlas

Mystery Android MID found out to be Rockchip-built concept, caught on video

We’ve been playing hide and seek with this peskily mysterious Android MID for a few weeks now, and it looks like at last some light has been shed on the situation. The device is actually just a concept built by Rockchip to display its new RK2808 chipset, which is capable of decoding 720p and apparently squeezing into incredibly attractive, Apple-aping form factors. There’s some action video which reveals that the hardware perhaps isn’t so capable of pumping a smooth web browsing experience to its 5-inch screen, but sometimes you can forgive a bit of clunky when faced with this much sexy. No word on plans to put the RK2808 into a real product, but it sure seems off to a nice, buzz-filled start. Video is after the jump, but you’d better be prepared to rock out.

[Via pocketables]

Continue reading Mystery Android MID found out to be Rockchip-built concept, caught on video

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Mystery Android MID found out to be Rockchip-built concept, caught on video originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Aug 2009 11:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why They Don’t Serve Snow in Restaurants (Yet)

People have been eating snow since the 4th-century BC, but nowadays the behavior is discouraged by parents the world over. People make ice creams, sorbets, gelatos, etc. every day. We wanted to make snow. In the kitchen. It’s hard.

Among the reasons a dinner at Alinea resonates on an emotional level with so many people is that Chef Achatz consciously tries to remind guests of their childhood. Nostalgia is a powerful emotion that gets a bad rap.

One of the most successful and beautiful dishes served at Alinea involved taking a twig of oak leaves that had turned red and orange in the fall, using the branch as a skewer for food, then lighting the leaves on fire just before bringing them to the dining room. Guests would smell burning oak leaves and—if they grew up in the northern US basically anytime before the 1990s—it would transport them back to an earlier time in their lives and evoke the feeling of fall: Cool crisp air, back-to-school, raking leaves and jumping in them. This didn’t just work once or twice—nearly every night people were overcome with emotion when this was brought to their table.

When it comes to the winter menu, hearty foods are obvious choices in the cold Chicago weather. And holiday references such as pine boughs, cinnamon aroma, and goose are emotional triggers. But there is one more basic than all of those: Snow.

What kid has not reached down, picked up a handful of (hopefully) fresh snow and eaten it? Or looked up to the sky, squinting their eyes, and tried to catch snowflakes as they fall down? The question was, how do you make the stuff in the kitchen?

When we were building Alinea we wanted to buy a cost effective thermal circulator to precisely control the temperature of sous vide baths. I found one on eBay, noticed that the company, PolyScience, was nearby in Skokie, Illinois, and gave them a call. I explained that we would be using the circulator for culinary purposes, and was handed over to the CEO… who happened to be a fan of Grant’s work at Trio and a die-hard foodie.

Thirty minutes later we were at PolyScience and Grant and Philip were talking about making a griddle that would freeze, not heat. From that first meeting, the Anti-Griddle was born, and a food-technology collaboration started.

When the snow idea came up, Grant approached Philip and asked him how they could make it in the Alinea kitchen. Shaving ice, even with a temperature-controlled precision blender like the PacoJet, did not produce snowflakes—it produced finely shaved ice. Grant wanted real snow that was puffy, crystalline and looked like the real thing. This is the kind of problem that Philip likes, so he said he would work on it.

About a week later he called us up. We headed over to his house—or more precisely his garage. It is not a typical garage—it is filled with hand-restored antique motorcycles and cars and tools of uncertain use and origin. There’s a second-floor studio for good measure.

There in the studio, Philip had a tank of liquid CO2, a four-foot tall clear plastic tube, an air brush and compressor and a small vat of lemonade. The airbrush was mounted at the top pointing downward, the CO2 was piped in a few inches below that and a collection point sat at the bottom. Philip flipped on the CO2, turned on the compressor and started up the airbrush. Sure enough, a vortex of freezing lemonade ensued, a little tornado of freezing crystals. He shut down the rig and at the bottom there was, in fact, lemonade snow…of a sort.

As any skier knows, snow machines do not produce quite the same texture as the real thing. In order to produce the crystalline structure of snow, you need 10,000 feet—all of that falling time and the right mix of moisture and temperature. Philip had bought a book properly entitled Snow and explained the science of the problem to us. He got it, but despite his best effort, this initial foray into tabletop snow making yielded few actual snow flakes, and far more icy crystals that looked like hail.

Despite working for the next several months on variations of the rig, Philip never quite got a great powder snow. The best results were very good, but yielded enough snow for only one or two servings per night. Alas, our tabletop snow machine sits idle in Philip’s garage, used perhaps for a dinner party or two. I can certainly imagine Philip after a few too many glasses of wine saying, “I’m headed out to the garage to make snow for dessert…”

Top image: Philip Preston with his table-top snow making machine, and a picture of himself skiing in Jackson Hole, for inspiration

Nick Kokonas co-founded Alinea with Grant Achatz in 2005, and works with the chef on Alinea-related projects, recruiting innovators to challenge and improve every aspect of the cooking and eating experience. A finance guy and web-oriented angel investor by trade, Kokonas got his start back in his teen years writing business software on an Apple II. You can grab the gorgeous Alinea cookbook here, or just visit Alinea’s home page.

Taste Test is our weeklong tribute to the leaps that occur when technology meets cuisine, spanning everything from the historic breakthroughs that made food tastier and safer to the Earl-Grey-friendly replicators we impatiently await in the future.

IBM brings the ruckus — and new Power7 processor

IBM likes its servers and supercomputers. A lot. After giving the Power6 plenty of self-congratulatory publicity, Big Blue is ready to move on to the 7th generation of Power, which is set to be announced at the Hot Chips conference this evening. With eight cores and up to four SMT4 threads running on each, the 45nm Power7 can perform 32 simultaneous tasks per chip. The designers have slapped in a whopping 32MB of eDRAM in each chip for improved latency, dual DDR3 memory controllers for a sustained 100GB per second bandwidth, and even error correcting code and memory mirroring for redundancy. Sounds like a major boon for research into the brains of mice and the history of dirty words, but we don’t expect to hear much about this proc outside the server farm.

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IBM brings the ruckus — and new Power7 processor originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Aug 2009 10:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NASAs LCROSS Moon Mission Runs Into Trouble

NASA_LCROSS.jpgA $79 million portion of NASA’s mission to the moon has run into trouble, after a crisis Saturday caused the agency’s lunar impactor spacecraft to burn through over half of its remaining propellant, Spaceflight Now reports. The anomaly occurred when the craft wasn’t in view from Earth, so it continued unnoticed for some time before ground-based antenna picked it up again.

Dan Andrews, the project manager for the Lunar Carter Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) craft, said that the probe burned through 309 pounds of maneuvering fuel while attempting to maintain its orientation in space–leaving precious little margin of error for the remainder of the mission.

“Our estimates now are if we pretty much baseline the mission, meaning just accomplish the things that we have to (do) to get the job done with full mission success, we’re still in the black on propellant, but not by a lot,” Andrews said in the report. The group traced the fault to a sensor that measures LCROSS’s attitude, which kicked over to the main star tracking system for backup and then used up more fuel than anticipated in the process. (Image credit: NASA)

Keepin’ it real fake, part CCXXXIII: MacBook Air loses two inches, adds a Windows key

If we’ve learned one thing ’round here, it’s that the KIRFsters love taking on Apple. And you know, at first glance this KIRFacious take on the MacBook Air doesn’t seem half bad. Of course, check it out in profile and it looks a lot more like your average netbook than it does Cupertino’s ultraportable — but at least the shanzai manufacturer in question as thrown in a few things that were neglected in the original, including: two USB ports, a removable battery, and a PCIe slot for a 3G module. That said, they also went with an 11.1-inch display (as opposed to the Air’s 13-incher), which could be a good thing or not, depending on your POV. Of course, with a 1.6GH Atom processor and 1GB RAM, this thing isn’t exactly a workhorse, though it’s safe to assume that the price point will fall far below that of the “real deal.” But don’t take our word for it — check out a couple more views of the thing after the break.

Continue reading Keepin’ it real fake, part CCXXXIII: MacBook Air loses two inches, adds a Windows key

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Keepin’ it real fake, part CCXXXIII: MacBook Air loses two inches, adds a Windows key originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Aug 2009 10:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rumor: Plastic Macbooks Getting Refresh

When Apple began selling the unibody version of its Macbook, common wisdom held that the company was in the process of phasing out the older plastic version of the computer, selling remaining models for a discounted price. Word on the street, however, is that Apple is bringing back the plastic Macbook in a big way.

This is another one of those “anonymous sources” stories–but heck, that’s pretty much all Apple stories these days, right? There’s not a lot of details from said anonymous sources at this point, but the new plastic version are expected to retain aw low sticker price, using older components.

Tablet rumors aside, this may be the closest we get to Apple netbooks. The rumors actually make a bit of sense, all things considered. After all, in spite of the current economic climate, Apple has shifted its entire Macbook line (save for the aforementioned older plastic version and the also expensive Air) into the Pro line.