US Army wants 2.3 gigapixel camera for aerial surveillance

DARPA may have already gone to the trouble of building a 1.8 gigapixel camera as part of its ARGUS-IS project (pictured above), but it looks like the US Army is setting its sights a little higher, and it’s now soliciting proposals for a 2.3 gigapixel camera that would be used for some super-wide aerial surveillance. While obviously still quite a ways from becoming reality, the Army hopes the system will be both smaller and lighter than previous systems, work in the infrared range to boot, and capture images at a rate of two frames per second. The key bit, however, is of course that 2.3 gigapixel sensor, which should let the camera provide continuous coverage of a range of about sixty-two square miles at a resolution of 0.3 meters, or just enough to make out the outline of your tinfoil hat.

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US Army wants 2.3 gigapixel camera for aerial surveillance originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 17:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG GD910 watch phone in U.K.: Cheaper, still ludicrously expensive

(Credit: Crave UK)

That LG Watch Phone–which has our mobile reviewer Flora in hot flushes–goes on sale in a week in the U.K. (it’s not for sale yet in the U.S.). The GD910 is on Orange, and we can confirm it will only be available on a pay-as-you-go basis, for a whopping 500 pounds (about $825). That might be eye-watering, but it’s half as much as we were expecting.

You’ll need to haul ass to the Orange shop in London’s Bond Street Station starting at 9 a.m. on Thursday, August 27, if you want one. Orange believes so many people will want to drop 500 squids on the gadget that it’s limiting sales to one per customer.

But fear not, rich gadget posers. If you can’t get to London, you’ll be able to buy online from the Orange Web site starting in mid-September. Though once again there’s a limited number available–Orange is being sensibly cautious over the unavoidable fact that it’s fundamentally an enormous watch costing half a grand.

Check out our previous coverage for more info on the watch itself, and don’t miss our hands-on video after the jump.

Liquidware announces modular, scalable Arm-based motherboards

If your idea of fun is developing software for obscure computing platforms, then you’re probably already down with Liquidware. It seems that Arduino-based projects like the GamePack and OpenBerry have become a little too easy for the gang, so they’ve decided to embark on a little project to revolutionize computers by “turning them inside out,” so to speak. The Illuminato X Machina is a 4-inch square upon which sits a 72MHz ARM-based microprocessor, a dedicated EEPROM chip for data storage, RAM, LEDs for output, and 14 I/O pins that line each of its four sides — in short, a fully functional computer. The true magic of the operation, however, lies in the fact that these things are designed to cluster together, with each cell operating in parallel. “Like living organisms,” it says at the group’s website, the cells are “social.” They autonomously communicate, distribute processing power and programming, and even isolate faulty neighbors — when one of the cells crashes, it won’t bring the whole cluster down with it. Believe us, we’ve only scratched the surface here — hit that read link order up some of these bad boys for yourself, but not before you check out the videos after the break.

[Via Wired, Thanks Justin]

Continue reading Liquidware announces modular, scalable Arm-based motherboards

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Liquidware announces modular, scalable Arm-based motherboards originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 17:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How to Disable the Dell 2100’s Wi-Fi ‘Narc Light’

dell2100_1Your mom was right: Nobody likes a tattletale. The telltale network light on the Dell Latitude 2100, a kid-friendly netbook, is one of the worst: It lights up whenever you’re connected to the internet.

Supposedly that’s so your teacher will know that you’re actually working on some low-res educational game and not, you know, actually learning something.

Fortunately, Wired.com’s Michael Calore figured out how to disable the Latitude 2100’s narc light. All you need is a guitar pick (to pry the case open) and a skinny screwdriver (to disconnect a ribbon cable). Oh, and a willingness to void the computer’s warranty. Squeeze the case back together and you can cruise the internet all you want, without the light going on.

Just remember, anyone behind you can still tell when you’re online just by looking at your screen. The browser window showing YouTube videos is a dead giveaway.

Disable the Dell Latitude 2100’s Wi-Fi Light [Wired How-to Wiki]

UPDATED 8/21: Added a note that, as noted in the How-to Wiki, this will void your computer’s warranty.


The Engadget Podcast, live at 4:30pm EST!

It worked out so well last week we’re doing it again — The Engadget Podcast, broadcasting live! Join Josh, Paul, and Nilay as they run down the week’s news, take your questions, and commit general acts of hijinkery, all at 4:30PM EST. We’ll embed the player and the chat below the break on this post, so get your headphones ready!

Update: Hey, we’re running just a tiny bit late, but the chat room is embedded below, so mingle amongst yourselves!

Update 2: As always, that was a crazy good time — if you missed it, the usual post will be up tomorrow!

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The Engadget Podcast, live at 4:30pm EST! originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 16:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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EA, Ubisoft execs applaud PS3 price cut, also like things that are good

Well, this one doesn’t exactly come out of left field, but it looks like gaming industry execs are starting to sing a decidedly different tune now that Sony has finally cut the price of the PS3. Speaking with GamesIndustry.biz, Ubisoft bigwig Yves Guillemot said that “it’s exceptional news, actually,” adding that “I think the machine is a great machine, with the Blu-ray.” EA Games president Frank Gibeau was also apparently more than happy to back up that praise, saying that, “I think it’s awesome,” and that “it’s an old line, but it still rings true for us: ‘We make the ammunition for the hardware wars.’ So the lowest priced hardware possible is a good thing for us.” Still noticeably mum on the matter, however, is Activision’s CEO, who once threatened to pick up his ball and go home if Sony didn’t drop its prices.

[Via Joystiq]

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EA, Ubisoft execs applaud PS3 price cut, also like things that are good originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 16:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Road test: TomTom U.S. Canada GPS iPhone app

TomTom has a very easy-to-use menu with large buttons.

(Credit: Screenshot by Dong Ngo/CNET)

TomTom U.S. & Canada is the third full-feature turn-by-turn flat-fee navigation app with built-in maps in the App Store that covers the entire U.S. and Canada.

Like the first two apps, Navigon and iGo My Way, the TomTom app will turn your iPhone 3G or 3GS into a decently dependable driving navigator. However, like the other two, it’s far from perfect.

The TomTom app takes about 6 seconds to load on my iPhone 3GS, which is very fast (the other two apps take about 15 seconds), and displays a very easy-to-use interface with big buttons. It also offers a quick and convenient way to enter an address or to find a point of interest (POI) from its very large database of POIs.

The map view of the TomTom is rather messy and much less beautiful- and clean-looking than that of the Navigon or the iGo My Way apps.

(Credit: Screenshot by Dong Ngo/CNET)

After almost a week of use, I found that both the map and POI database are slightly outdated. It once couldn’t find an address and twice showed me POIs that were no longer in business. During this recession, however, it’s not exactly the app that’s to blame.

Good news is, like the Navigon after its first update, you can tap on a POI to dial it up, and I would highly recommend doing this before you decide to go there, just to make sure that it’s still in business.

Similar to the Navigon, the TomTom can also pull addresses from the phone’s contacts, which is a very convenient feature. However, while the Navigon is very good at reading contacts’ addresses, the TomTom is very picky. It seems to only understand addresses that have a ZIP code. Take the ZIP code out and it will ask you to enter the address manually. This means more than 60 percent or so of the addresses in my contacts won’t work. This is sort of strange, as the app won’t require a ZIP code when you type in addresses manually.

The TomTom takes very little time (a few seconds) to pick up a GPS signal on my iPhone 3GS, and its navigation is accurate enough. Once in a while it would probably lead you to a location that’s slightly off from the actual address, but that happens with every GPS navigator I’ve used.

Of the three apps, the TomTom has the largest selection of voices, including many languages from English to Danish, Thai, and Chinese. With English alone, you’ll find 11 different accents, both male and female. Still, like the other two apps, it doesn’t have text-to-speech where it can read you the name of the street that you’re supposed to turn onto.

The TomTom’s map view, unfortunately, is not as good-looking as that of the Navigon or the iGo My Way. …

Googles Wi-Fi Network Still Alive and Kicking

google logo.jpgRemember metropolitan Wi-Fi? What was supposed to be the saving grace of metropolitan areas fizzled out quickly, in part because of 3G connectivity, and consequently, as a result of communities questioning the networks’ effectiveness.

One metropolitan Wi-Fi infrastructure continues to thrive, however: the one installed in Mountain View, Calif., the home of Google. Visit the Computer History Museum on Shoreline Blvd., for example, turn on Wi-Fi, and “GoogleWiFi” pops up, requiring only a free Gmail login to access the network. The network will celebrate its third anniversary this month.

In a recent press release from Tropos (which owns the routers on the network), the Google Wi-Fi network now covers 12 square miles, and serves 16,000 to 19,000 users at a time.  On a
daily basis, the network now transports close to 600 gigabytes of user
data — double the volume from just two years ago. Tom Ayers, Tropos’ chief executive, claims the network handles more data and users than any other comparable network in the world.

And, not surprisingly, more and more is from handhelds, Google said.

“We continue to
experience extremely high demand – both in terms of users and
bandwidth,” said Karl Garcia at Google, who leads the Google WiFi
project. “We’ve seen the iPhone and other Wi-Fi enabled handheld devices
as significant drivers of the high demand we see. Currently nearly a
quarter of all devices that connect to our network are handhelds,
compared to almost none when we launched the network.”

A 2006 compilation of metro Wi-Fi performance by Novarum is here, placing Google’s network second behind a St.Cloud, Flor. network operated by Cyberspot. That’s the same year PC Magazine did some wardriving to test it, which turned up some initial problems.

One planned municipal Wi-Fi project is definitely dead, however. Earthlink, which at one time planned to install a municipal system in San Francisco, is completely out of the muni Wi-Fi business, a company representative confirmed. Some analysts suspect that muni Wi-Fi may make a comeback, though, as more smartphones adopt the technology.

Cloud Telecomputers announces Android-based Glass platform for desk phones

It may not be the first to come up with the bright idea of putting Android on a desk phone-esque device, but upstart Could Telecomputers may well be the most ambitious, with it boasting that its new Glass platform “makes the desk phone relevant again,” and is “smarter and more powerful than your ‘smart cell phone.'” To that end, the company has basically paired a full-fledged, 8-inch Android-based MID with a plain old corded phone, which will let you do things like dial numbers directly from your Outlook address book, pair up a cellphone via Bluetooth and, of course, take advantage of a whole range of Android apps that should put most other internet-connected desk phones to shame. As you probably picked up, however, this is still a platform and not an actual product just yet, but Cloud Telecomputers does have some pretty heavy backers behind it, and it “anticipates” that the first phones should be available sometime in the first quarter of 2010 for between $599 and $699.

[Via PR Newswire]

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Cloud Telecomputers announces Android-based Glass platform for desk phones originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 16:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Real Deal 175: All-questions show

Rafe and Tom answer tech questions about getting Microsoft software for cheap, the security of bank apps and more.

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Originally posted at The Real Deal Podcast