The 411: Activating unlocked phones

Welcome to the 411, my Q&A column answering all your questions about cell phones and cell phone accessories. I receive plenty of questions about these subjects via e-mail, so I figured many of you might have the same questions, too. At times, I might solicit answers from readers if I’m stumped. Send your questions and comments to me at nicole.lee@cnet.com. If you prefer to remain anonymous, let me know in the e-mail.

I really don’t like having to sign any cell phone contract. If I buy an unlocked GSM phone, can I just pop in a SIM card and it’ll work automatically?–Siri, via e-mail

Technically, yes, but it depends on the phone. If you really want to ensure that you can use the phone anywhere in the world, you should make sure it is a quad-band phone that is compatible with all four GSM bands (850, 900, 1,800, and 1,900MHz). Also note that even though you can make calls with it, most phones require you to activate a data or messaging plan with your carrier before you can use features such as MMS or e-mail. Kent German, a CNET senior editor, recently posted a quick how-to on activating MMS on unlocked phones, and you can ask your carrier if your phone requires more detailed settings. For the BlackBerry, for example, you need to know the APN or Access Point Name for your particular carrier to access the Internet. Here is a handy guide on how to enable full Internet access on the BlackBerry along with APNs of some of the more popular cellular providers. If our readers have any more tips on other platforms, please let tell us in the comments.

Originally posted at Dialed In Podcast

JVC’s latest AVCHD flash camcorder

In some ways, the JVC HD Everio GZ-HM400 is an object lesson in the corners manufacturers have to cut for size. Essentially a larger version of the GZ-X900, the HM400 uses the same large (1/2.33-inch), but overly high-resolution 10.3-megapixel CMOS sensor and low-resolution 2.8-inch LCD, but …

Palm Pixi processor, chipset specs get detailed at last

Palm may have divulged most of the details about its new Pixi phone when it got official with it last week (and let us get our hands on it), but it was unfortunately staying mum about a few key specs, including the mystery processor at the heart of the device. Thankfully, Qualcomm has now come out and clarified that situation so Palm doesn’t have to, and detailed the complete specs for the MSM7627 chipset that powers the Pixi. The big news there is that the chipset packs two ARM cores on a single chip, including one dedicated 600MHz applications processor, and a separate 400MHz modem processor to offload some of the heavy lifting. Otherwise, the phone is said to pack a 200MHz, OpenGL 2.0-supporting GPU for some decent gaming capabilities, and a 320MHz application DSP to handle multimedia on the device, including full 30 fps WVGA video encoding and decoding. Hit up the link below for the complete rundown.

[Thanks, Fernando]

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Palm Pixi processor, chipset specs get detailed at last originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 18:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Just Add Power introduces Projector Connector HDMI-over-IP solution

It looks like the gang over at Just Add Power have cooked up a device that will let you manage multiple HDMI sources without the limits of traditional HDMI switches (and no, it isn’t an HDMI Balun). The Projector Connector consists of an encoder unit that converts your HDMI source signal to IP packets and a networked receiver that decodes the signal at the display end. Add a managed switch and you can keep adding sources and display devices to your heart’s content (up to 200 displays). Controlled by a PC over HTTP, this is definitely a product that will see more use in large organizations than it will in home theater setups. But still, what HD aficionado wouldn’t love to get his hands on something this powerful and (relatively) inexpensive? The encoder (VBS-HDMI-308A) sells for $299, while the decoder (VBS-HDMI0108A) will run $250 — you’ll have to buy your own switch. Supports 1080p, HDCP, and up to 5.1 digital audio. Hit the read link to pick one up for yourself.

[Via CE Pro]

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Just Add Power introduces Projector Connector HDMI-over-IP solution originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 17:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Takes Pixi to NY Fashion Week

palmsmall.jpgFollowing their ill-timed introduction of the cute Palm Pixi smartphone, Palm decided to bring their new little WebOS phone and its five California-designed “artist backs” to New York Fashion Week at Bryant Park.

Palm’s presence at Fashion Week is a marvelously-designed little booth that looks like the inside of one of the “artist backs,” with five Pixis (Pixies?) on display and two Palm folks walking around doing demos. When I hung out there for a little while, the place wasn’t empty, but it wasn’t as busy as the McCafe next door where they were giving away free coffee.

The overlap between Pixi and Fashion Week is more than just the artist backs; people in the fashion industry tend to be both messaging-obsessed and UI-focused, and the Pixi shares both of those obsessions. Bringing the Pixi to the giant tent at Bryant Park is Palm’s attempt to pry an industry free of their BlackBerries and iPhones.

I did get to see one Pixi feature I hadn’t played with before – a simple, addictive air hockey game. WebOS is desperately short on games, and I’m hoping we’ll see many more soon.

MovieWedge beanbag keeps your iPhone upright, costs ten bucks

You know, 2009 is turning into a banner year for pillow-assisted gadgetry. Not only has Philips introduced the CushionSpeaker, but we’ve just been hepped to a similar idea for the portable media set, an iPhone / Zune / etcetera stand called the MovieWedge. If you’ve ever wanted to spend $9.95 on a bean bag, now’s your chance, kids — this guy’s shaped like a pyramid, constructed out of micro-suede (perfect for wiping your display free of fingerprints) and who knows? It may free you from the tyranny of having to hold your iPhone upright on long plane rides. But one thing it won’t free you from? The shame of spending ten bucks on a beanbag. Peep ‘er in the gallery below.

[Via PhoneMag]

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MovieWedge beanbag keeps your iPhone upright, costs ten bucks originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 17:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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A note about last week’s Engadget Podcast

A lot of our faithful listeners have inquired as to the status of last week’s podcast. We regret to inform everyone that we lost the audio just after we were done recording. To be more exact, the Mac Pro at AOL’s studio which was recording our rare (and magical) in-person podcast decided to upchuck the boogie and destroy our precious tracks. What that means is we will be skipping that show (it is already the following week) — though in the next few days we’ll bring you the first-ever Engadget Show as well as a proper podcast. Sorry everyone, and thanks for understanding!

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A note about last week’s Engadget Podcast originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 17:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wii getting $50 price drop this month? One Toys R Us ad seems to think so

Of all the fakeables in consumer electronics, the weekly newspaper ad has to be one of the easiest marks. Still, this one looks pretty legit, and if it’s real it means either we’re getting a much overdue Wii price cut on September 27th, or someone on the Toys R Us ad team has been severely misinformed. If it’s not true and we have to wait another holiday season for the Wii to break the $200 mark, we’re not getting Nintendo that Snuggie we promised it for Christmas — everybody knows only good little boys, girls and multinational game companies get presents.

[Via Joystiq]

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Wii getting $50 price drop this month? One Toys R Us ad seems to think so originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 16:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Visual Voltage clock turns electricity monitoring into art

Sure you can monitor your home energy use with any number of “useful” and “easily readable” gauges and gadgets, but why settle for straightforwardness when you can have something verging on art? That’s the thinking behind the so-called Visual Voltage exhibition created by a group of Swedish designers, anyway, which features this eye-catching clock-like device front and center. As with other energy monitors, it promises to do nothing more than monitor your daily electricity use and let you know when you’re using more than you should. Instead of spewing out a series of digits and blinkin’ lights, however, this one creates a nifty visualization of your homes daily energy rhythms to attract a bit more attention — or it will if it ever turns into an actual product, that is. The designers aren’t stopping there with the whole “visual voltage” idea tough, and are also showing off a power cord that lights up when in use, and a concept for a set of solar-powered blinds that can absorb energy during the day and provide ambient light at night (check it out after the break).

[Via Engadget German]

Continue reading Visual Voltage clock turns electricity monitoring into art

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Visual Voltage clock turns electricity monitoring into art originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 16:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why Apple TV Must Evolve to Avoid Extinction

Without making an announcement, Apple slashed the price of its larger-capacity Apple TV set-top box on Monday and discontinued a lesser model. Even with the price cut, the product is unlikely to survive if it does not adapt to consumer demands in the entertainment market, analysts agree.

The price reduction brings the 160-GB Apple TV from $330 down to $230 — the price of the previous 40-GB model, which is no longer for sale.

“In its current form, the Apple TV is not a product that has very much life in it,” said James McQuivey, a Forrester analyst. “I think that’s reinforced now that they’ve cut one of the [models] and they’ve reduced the price.”

Apple executives, including Steve Jobs, have repeatedly referred to Apple TV — a digital media box that plays content from a user’s iTunes library on a television — as a “hobby.” In earnings calls, the company has carefully avoided revealing sales numbers of the product.

When speaking about his skepticism in Amazon’s Kindle e-book reader, Jobs has said that avoiding disclosure of product sales is a sign of weakness, because “Usually, if they sell a lot of something, you want to tell everybody.” Clearly, Apple does not have much to brag about with the Apple TV.

Apple won’t even have an Apple TV to talk about in the near future if the company does not make major revisions to the product and its business model, McQuivey said.

Apple has dismissed the idea of an Apple TV featuring a TiVo-like digital video recorder, but McQuivey speculates that a hybrid device would be compelling. He suggests, for example, a device capable of recording HDTV programs while providing the additional option to subscribe to receive a fixed number of movie downloads each month via iTunes.

“It’s a product they need to morph into something bigger or take it out completely,” McQuivey said. “It doesn’t have a market-shaping role, and Apple is a market shaper.”

It’s unlikely the underwhelming performance of the Apple TV is Apple’s fault, said John Barrett, an analyst and director of research at Parks Associates. That’s because the set-top–box segment of the market is a particularly tough environment, packed with various options for consumers to purchase and watch video.

Other than the obvious competitors such as the Netflix Roku set-top box, which streams movies from Netflix.com, Apple is competing with several other players that serve video to consumers in different ways. Cable providers offer movies for purchase through video-on-demand services on their digital cable boxes. Many cable boxes even include a DVR for recording TV programs.

Apple even has to worry about videogame consoles: Sony offers an online movie rental and purchase system through its PlayStation 3, and Microsoft’s Xbox 360 features a Netflix streaming application.

And then there are the do-it-yourself workarounds to account for: Consumers install entertainment software such as Boxee onto their computers and connect them to their TVs. And of course, digital pirates sail the internet seas.

On top of this, the entire set-top–box category (which Barrett calls “media adapters”) might not survive the next three to five years. Set-top–box revenues declined 2 percent in the second quarter of 2009, according to Del O’ro Group, a market research firm. The cost of internet-enabled TVs are dropping “like a rock,” Barrett said, and once they become widely adopted and technologically refined, they’ll be able to stream and download media without the help of a companion device, rendering the set-top box irrelevant.

“You’re in a tough market that by nature is kind of temporary,” Barrett said.

The shift to widespread consumer adoption of internet-connected TVs will take some time since the replacement cycle for TVs is longer than most other electronics, Barrett said.

“It’s going to take time,” he said. “But it’s probably going to be a year when people realize, ‘I can get this connected TV, and I can get whatever kind of content I want on it.’”

Perhaps rather than killing its set-top box, Apple will morph its Apple TV into an actual TV, McQuivey speculated.

“Apple has always said they don’t want DVR in the Apple TV,” McQuivey said. “Does that mean they won’t, in the future, take the guts of the Apple TV and put it in a television made from Apple? Add some DVR or put in a Blu-ray player? That’d be a new animal.”

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Photo: niallkennedy/Flickr