PowerShot proliferation in pictures

The Canon PowerShot S90 is the little camera made for pros

(Credit: Joshua Goldman/CNET)

Yes, there was great disappointment that no new digital SLRs were announced by Canon on Wednesday–only PowerShots. However, I was not one of the disappointed as I love point-and-shoot cameras of all shapes, sizes, and capabilities. And Canon delivered exactly that.

Though the SX20 IS and SX120 IS are only minor upgrades to their predecessors, the G11, SD980 IS, and SD940 IS all have major tweaks separating them from their previous iterations.

What was probably supposed to be the big “oh wow” camera, however, was the reintroduction of the PowerShot S series in the form of the S90. Based off of the high-end functionality of the PowerShot G-series cameras, it has several cool features including a 28mm-equivalent wide-angle f/2.0 lens with a 3.8x optical zoom, a customizable control ring around the lens for easy access and operation of manual or other shooting settings, and RAW+JPEG capture–all in a body that can fit right in your pocket.

Read more about the cameras and check out some hands-on photos in the slide shows below.

Lastly, in case you’re more into camcorders than cameras, Canon announced one new HD model, the HF S11.

Asus Releases Disney-Branded Netbook

Asus on Wednesday released a Disney-branded netbook that will be available exclusively at Toys ‘R’ Us.

The Asus EeePC MK90 “Netpal” includes strict parental controls that allow parents to set limits on what Web sites are accessed, how much time they spend on the device, and what programs they add to the netbook.

The device was designed with kids in mind and include spill-proof keyboards. It comes in Princess Pink and Magic Blue, and includes customizable themes featuring popular Disney characters like Hannah Montana, the Jonas Brothers, Wall-E, and Club Penguin.

There is also Disney-branded software, including the Disney Mix music program, Disney Pix photo software, as well as games and widgets that launch from the Disney desktop.

It will retail for $349.99.

The MK90, which will be sold exclusively at Toys ‘R’ Us stores and online starting today, includes a 16GB solid-state drive and weighs 2.2 pounds. It also includes ShockShield data protection to safeguard against drops and falls.

Asus will also release another Disney-branded netbook that will not be exclusive to Toys ‘R’ Us.

Giz Explains: Why Quantum Computing Is the Future (But a Distant One)

Over 400 million transistors are packed on dual-core chips manufactured using Intel’s 45nm process. That’ll double soon, per Moore’s Law. And it’ll still be like computing with pebbles compared to quantum computing.

Quantum computing is a pretty complicated subject—uh, hello, quantum mechanics plus computers. I’m gonna keep it kinda basic, but recent breakthroughs like this one prove that you should definitely start paying attention to it. Some day, in the future, quantum computing will be cracking codes, powering web searches, and maybe, just maybe, lighting up our Star Trek-style holodecks.

Before we get to the quantum part, let’s start with just “computing.” It’s about bits. They’re the basic building block of computing information. They’ve got two states—0 or 1, on or off, true or false, you get the idea. But two defined states is key. When you add a bunch of bits together, usually 8 of ’em, you get a byte. As in kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes and so on. Your digital photos, music, documents, they’re all just long strings of 1s and 0s, segmented into 8-digit strands. Because of that binary setup, a classical computer operates by a certain kind of logic that makes it good at some kinds of computing—the general stuff you do everyday—but not so great at others, like finding ginormous prime factors (those things from math class), which are a big part of cracking codes.

Quantum computing operates by a different kind of logic—it actually uses the rules of quantum mechanics to compute. Quantum bits, called qubits, are different from regular bits, because they don’t just have two states. They can have multiple states, superpositions—they can be 0 or 1 or 0-1 or 0+1 or 0 and 1, all at the same time. It’s a lot deeper than a regular old bit. A qubit’s ability to exist in multiple states—the combo of all those being a superposition—opens up a big freakin’ door of possibility for computational powah, because it can factor numbers at much more insanely fast speeds than standard computers.

Entanglement—a quantum state that’s all about tight correlations between systems—is the key to that. It’s a pretty hard thing to describe, so I asked for some help from Boris Blinov, a professor at the University of Washington’s Trapped Ion Quantum Computing Group. He turned to a take on Schrödinger’s cat to explain it: Basically, if you have a cat in a closed box, and poisonous gas is released. The cat is either dead, 0, or alive, 1. Until I open the box to find out, it exists in both states—a superposition. That superposition is destroyed when I measure it. But suppose I have two cats in two boxes that are correlated, and you go through the same thing. If I open one box and the cat’s alive, it means the other cat is too, even if I never open the box. It’s a quantum phenomenon that’s a stronger correlation than you can get in classical physics, and because of that you can do something like this with quantum algorithms—change one part of the system, and the rest of it will respond accordingly, without changing the rest of the operation. That’s part of the reason it’s faster at certain kinds of calculations.

The other, explains Blinov, is that you can achieve true parallelism in computing—actually process a lot of information in parallel, “not like Windows” or even other types of classic computers that profess parallelism.

So what’s that good for? For example, a password that might take years to crack via brute force using today’s computers could take mere seconds with a quantum computer, so there’s plenty of crazy stuff that Uncle Sam might want to put it to use for in cryptography. And it might be useful to search engineers at Google, Microsoft and other companies, since you can search and index databases much, much faster. And let’s not forget scientific applications—no surprise, classic computers really suck at modeling quantum mechanics. The National Institute of Science and Technology’s Jonathan Home suggests that given the way cloud computing is going, if you need an insane calculation performed, you might rent time and farm it out to a quantum mainframe in Google’s backyard.

The reason we’re not all blasting on quantum computers now is that this quantum mojo is, at the moment, extremely fragile. And it always will be, since quantum states aren’t exactly robust. We’re talking about working with ions here—rather than electrons—and if you think heat is a problem with processors today, you’ve got no idea. In the breakthrough by Home’s team at NIST—completing a full set of quantum “transport” operations, moving information from one area of the “computer” to another—they worked with a single pair of atoms, using lasers to manipulate the states of beryllium ions, storing the data and performing an operation, before transferring that information to a different location in the processor. What allowed it to work, without busting up the party and losing all the data through heat, were magnesium ions cooling the beryllium ions as they were being manipulated. And those lasers can only do so much. If you want to manipulate more ions, you have to add more lasers.

Hell, quantum computing is so fragile and unwieldy that when we talked to Home, he said much of the effort goes into methods of correcting errors. In five years, he says, we’ll likely be working with a mere tens of qubits. The stage it’s at right now, says Blinov, is “the equivalent of building a reliable transistor” back in the day. But that’s not to say those of tens of qubits won’t be useful. While they won’t be cracking stuff for the NSA—you’ll need about 10,000 qubits for cracking high-level cryptography—that’s still enough quantum computing power to calculate properties for new materials that are hard to model with a classic computer. In other words, materials scientists could be developing the case for the iPhone 10G or the building blocks for your next run-of-the-mill Intel processor using quantum computers in the next decade. Just don’t expect a quantum computer on your desk in the next 10 years.

Special thanks to National Institute of Standards and Technology’s Jonathan Home and the University of Washington Professor Boris Blinov!

Still something you wanna know? Send questions about quantum computing, quantum leaps or undead cats to tips@gizmodo.com, with “Giz Explains” in the subject line.

T-Mobile churns out Samsung Gravity 2

Samsung Gravity 2

Samsung Gravity 2

(Credit: T-Mobile)

Samsung and T-Mobile have just announced the availability of the Samsung Gravity 2, which is the upgraded version of the Samsung Gravity from late last year.

It has a much thinner design and revamped navigation controls, and features a few notable improvements: 3G connectivity, A-GPS …

Are gamers really overweight and depressed?

Xbox 360

Does this make me look fat?

(Credit: Microsoft)

The average gamer isn’t that 9-year-old child fragging you online, according to a new study by researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Emory University, and Andrews University. The average gamer, they concluded, looks nothing like that kid.

According to “Health-Risk Correlates of Video-Game Playing
Among Adults
” (PDF), the result of a 2006 survey of 552 adults living in the Seattle area, the average gamer is 35 years old, overweight, and depressed.

The researchers chose the Seattle area because of its size, diversity, and reputation of having the highest Web usage in the United States.

James B. Weaver III of the CDC’s National Center for Health Marketing said the study shows that there are real differences between gamers and nongamers.

“Health risk factors differentiated adult video game players from nonplayers,” Weaver said in a statement. “Video game players also reported lower extroversion, consistent with research on adolescents that linked video game playing to a sedentary lifestyle and overweight status, and to mental-health concerns.”

The study also found that a gamer’s gender doesn’t matter when it comes to those issues. Female gamers surveyed had “lower health status” than women who chose not to play video games. Male gamers had a higher body mass index, or BMI, than nongamers, according to study results.

The paper also says women who play video games may be self-medicating.

Originally posted at The Digital Home

DirecTV, Cisco and Samsung have whole house DVR plans with RVU alliance

RVU alliance topology

One of our dreams is to have a true whole home DVR that allows us to watch any show we want, on any TV we want; but so far the perfect solution has eluded us. TiVo was really the first to try with its Multi-Room Viewing, but missed the mark by not giving us a single Now Playing list for the whole house or even any automatic conflict resolution between units. The FiOS HD DVR was the next disappointment because it limits us to two tuners and 160GB for the whole house — seriously is that enough for anyone? Currently Windows Media Center offers the best solution, but it’s expensive after you pay $300 a pop for a CableCARD tuner, not to mention it requires more maintenance because it is based on a PC. Needless to say we continue to look for the perfect solution, and we think that the RVU (R-vue) alliance might be just what we ordered. In addition to DirecTV, Cisco and Samsung, the chip maker Broadcom is also one of the founding members of the alliance, but it is their goals that get us excited. So excited, that we’d actually be shocked if they were actually achieved, but you’ll have to click through to learn why.

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DirecTV, Cisco and Samsung have whole house DVR plans with RVU alliance originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Aug 2009 12:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung InstinctQ for Sprint pictured: imagine a G1, but better

Going off mere clues, hypotheses and shreds of evidence, we’ve been trying to wrap our brains around the InstinctQ for a while now — and finally we’ve got a picture that firms everything up: it’s definitely an Android-powered landscape QWERTY slider for Sprint. We know the Hero’s in the pipeline, too, so between these two, Sprint could be poised to catch up to T-Mobile in a big, big way (as far as Android goes, anyhow) this fall. We think we’re digging the touch-sensitive Home, Menu, and Back buttons, and the expansive keyboard looks plenty usable. The screen isn’t looking quite as vibrant as its autobahn-driving European cousin, the Galaxy — but we’ll wait on passing final judgment until it’s in our hands, of course. Any chance that’s happening soon?

[Thanks, Justin]

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Samsung InstinctQ for Sprint pictured: imagine a G1, but better originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Aug 2009 12:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The 404 407: Where we pack Vienna Teng’s lunch into the PS3 Slim box

On today’s show, we’ve got Vienna Teng–singer, pianist, and former computer programmer. But before we get to her music, we have the PS3 Slim in the studio. Afterward, we talk to Vienna about her journey from software engineer at Cisco to touring musician.

(Credit: Vienna Teng)
(Credit: Sony)

At the top of the show, we do a little unboxing of the new PlayStation 3 Slim. While Vienna and Justin may not care too much about the game console, Jeff and Wilson don’t particularly like its new finish. In almost all respects, however, it functions just like the original 80GB model that it replaces, plus it comes with a 120GB hard drive. (No Linux for those homebrew fans out there.)

The star of the show is Vienna, a singer, songwriter, and pianist from the San Francisco Bay Area who graduated from Stanford University. Vienna later took up a job at Cisco as a computer programmer and made the leap to musician during her time there. We end the first half of the show with a track from her first album “Waking Hour,” called “Gravity.” The song is about the ups and downs of her roommate’s relationship.

On the second half of the show, we listen to her song “Radio” from her current album “Inland Territory.” And we talk about how now one in four songs sold in the United States is through iTunes. Finally, we end the show with her song “Augustine.” You can find her music on iTunes, Amazon, MySpace, Last.fm, and her own Web site. (Editor’s note: Last.fm is a part of CBS Interactive, which also publishes CNET.)



EPISODE 407


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Video coming soon, check back later today!


Originally posted at The 404

Nokia’s Maemo 5 tablet shows up again, ready to play

We’re calling it: this N900 / Rover / whatever it’s called is the best looking device yet in Nokia’s Internet Tablet line, which is an encouraging thing to be able to say considering we haven’t seen any ultra-polished PR shots yet. Granted, we might be influenced a little by the rumored HSPA support with voice, T-Mobile USA availability, and Maemo 5, but really, what’s wrong with that?

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Nokia’s Maemo 5 tablet shows up again, ready to play originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Aug 2009 12:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Skip the PS3 Slim and get one of these Blu-ray laptops

With all the buzz around the new “slim” version of Sony’s PlayStation 3, you’d think Sony had an exciting new product on its hands, rather than a slightly smaller, somewhat cheaper version of the existing PS3 (and without any significant new features, or even the return of PS2 …