HP Envy 15 FCC filing reveals magnesium casing, Linux options

Okay, so here’s a big way the HP’s new Envy 15 isn’t like the MacBook Pro: its case is made of magnesium, not aluminum. Take that, haters. Of course, there’s still the note-perfect reproduction of the MBP’s unibody looks, that buttonless glass multitouch trackpad, and the overall sense that HP’s designers did their homework in an Apple store to deal with, but hey, at least you’re getting a Core i7 processor when this thing launches on October 18th, right? Oh, and in case you’re not into Windows 7, you’re in luck — there are quite a few references to Linux scattered about, so we’d expect a penguin-friendly configuration to be announced at some point. [Warning: PDF read link]

[Via Wireless Goodness]

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HP Envy 15 FCC filing reveals magnesium casing, Linux options originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Sep 2009 18:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Scientist explains OLEDs by electrocuting a pickle

How do OLED TVs from Sony and LG work? MIT professor Vladimir Bulovic explains using a glowing pickle and an accent to die for. Essentially, electrons pass through the pickle (or any other active organic matter) and charge the substance. When positive and negative charges collide, they release a photon (…

iPhone App ‘Scarab’ Reinvents the Literary Journal

scarabTech-savvy English scholars and poetry lovers: We know you’re out there. (Heck, I majored in English and I work here.) There’s an iPhone app we think you’d love. It’s called Scarab, and its goal is to reinvent the literary journal.

Scarab is a literary magazine reader that does more than load works of fiction, poetry and non-fiction on your iPhone screen. Each literary piece is accompanied with an audio reading, dictated sometimes by the author (if he or she opted to provide it), whose mugshot appears next to the title. So you get the words, the voice and even the face behind each work.

“The best part about poetry or any literature really is going to a reading and getting to hear the author’s voice,” said Brian Wilkins, editor and co-creator of Scarab, in a phone interview. “It’s almost as much fun when those two come together in one place. The iPhone really made it possible for us.”

We had some hands-on time with the app, and we absolutely love the clean interface and the idea as a whole. Once you tap a literary piece, the app immediately downloads the audio recording, and soon enough you can hit play to hear the author’s reading. Each “issue” contains a collection of literary works submitted by various authors. (The October 2009 issue features 11 pieces, including a poem from the famous Charles Simic.) The app also includes transcripts of author interviews.

Wilkins, who has a master of fine arts in poetry, developed the app with his former college roommate Ian Terrell. They’re inviting creative writers of all calibers to submit their works of fiction, non-fiction and poetry for consideration. Starving artists even have an opportunity to earn a buck, too: Each issue of Scarab costs $3 as an in-app purchase; 20 percent of every issue sale is divided among the authors. Wilkins promises the submission guidelines are open-ended, although he prefers that works stay under 2,500 words.

Here’s what bugged us: You must buy the Scarab app for $1 and then pay $3 for an issue. That means when you first buy the app, you have no content. That doesn’t seem quite right. (Update: Terrell points out in the comments below that Apple requires apps to be paid apps if they incorporate in-app purchasing.) We think it’d be a wiser idea for the creators to include at least one free promotional issue with a purchase of Scarab to entice users to purchase future issues for $3 each. That way, iPhone owners would be able to try the app before committing to spending more on content.

Still, we’re not complaining about paying for additional content. We appreciate these artists, and we know literary journals aren’t exactly moneymaking machines. We’re interested in seeing how in-app purchasing works out for Scarab, because thus far it’s not raking in much dough for some iPhone developers. But with some smart execution, we think Scarab has an opportunity to become tremendously popular among creative writers and literature enthusiasts.

Product Page [Scarab]

Download Link [iTunes]


Apple Genius Bar: iPhones’ 30% Call Drop Is “Normal” in New York

How utterly shitty is the iPhone on AT&T in the New York area? The average iPhone drops 30 percent of all calls. And that’s considered acceptable by Apple.

Giz reader Manoj took his iPhone to the Genius Bar to have it looked at because it was dropping calls left and right, and AT&T swore stuff was totally kosher on their end, so he thought something was wrong with his phone. After doing a stat dump, the Genius showed Manoj that his iPhone had actually dropped 22 percent of calls.

The jawdropper: The Genius told Manoj that’s actually excellent compared to most people in the New York area, where a 30 percent dropped call rate is the average. There was nothing Apple could do for Manoj. His phone was totally fine. Which means there’s nothing Apple can do for rest of us.

Ridiculous, and downright insulting. But, uh, if you pay $150 for this box it’ll be all better. Excuse me while I go and puke. I’ll call somebody and complain, but it probably wouldn’t get through. [Thanks, and sorry, Manoj!]

Video: Hands-On With the Slick-Sliding PSPgo

Got an unscratchable itch to lay your hands on Sony’s new PSPgo? Before you drop two hundred and fifty smackers on this pretty piece of hardware, you should know a few things. First off, forget about playing UMD discs. If you want to enjoy a game, you’ll have to download it at the Playstation website first. Own accessories for your old PSP? Might as well hawk them on eBay. None of them are compatible with the Go.

There’s more you should know. Scope out the video above for our full disclosure on the differences between the PSPgo and its predecessor, the PSP 3000.

See Also:

This video was produced by Annaliza Savage with camerawork and editing by Michael Lennon.


Switched On: A keyboard PC seeks to Eee-peat success

Ross Rubin (@rossrubin) contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

The original Asus Eee PC took on the challenging North American market for a small notebook PC and was so successful that it created a new wave of product that’s turned the PC business upside down. And although Asus has since released over a dozen permutations of its original Eee PC notebook as well as several desktop models both with and without integrated monitors, its next big test will be a keyboard.

A top-slice reincarnation of the pioneering Commodore 64, the Eee Keyboard has a full complement of ports and can run Windows, but its two standout features are a 5″ LCD that replaces the numeric keyboard and wireless high-definition output to a television. Much like the original Eee PC, it is unlikely that the Eee Keyboard would be anyone’s primary PC. In fact, Asus’s keyboard-footprint computer will have to overcome a number the same problems PCs and other information products like WebTV have had in the living room. But Asus may be hitting the market at a critical inflection point — for a few reasons.

Continue reading Switched On: A keyboard PC seeks to Eee-peat success

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Switched On: A keyboard PC seeks to Eee-peat success originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Sep 2009 17:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Androids Dance, Slide and Fight at Robo-One Competition

roboone

Gladiatorial matches between bipedal humanoid robots is just one of the reasons to get excited about Robo-One, an event last weekend in Toyama City, Japan.

This year’s event showed some interesting new robots such as a thought-controlled robot, a robot that can flip its head back so you can ride it, and a mini-Gundam robot.

Check out these videos of these robots that kicked up a storm at Robo-One. Got any other great videos or photos from Robo-One? Let us know in the comments.

The Omni Zero 9

Takeshi Maeda is known to robot lovers as the man who designed the red, bi-pedal Omni Zero robots. Maeda showed the latest version, the Omni Zero 9, at Robot-One. It’s an eerily humanoid robot that can autonomously walk a few steps. Among the stunning features of this robot is it ability to lie flat on the ground and roll up a ramp using the two wheels that make up its shoulders, kind of like a slow, mechanical Jean-Yves Blondeau. It’s a sight worth watching!

The Omni Zero 9 also competed at the Robo-One Championship, as shown in the following video:

The robot’s head also flips back so if you are small enough and brave enough to sit in the gap, you can actually ride the robot. If you are wondering how big the robot is, then here are the stats: The Omni Zero 9 is just about 3.4 feet tall and weighs 55 lbs. The robot won one of the three prizes at the championship.

Thought-controlled robot

Brain interfaces are becoming popular among videogamers who use electrodes hooked up to their skulls to control the movement of characters on the screen.

Taku Ichikawa, a fourth-year student at the University of Electro-Communications in Tokyo, is trying to do something similar with a robot. Ichikawa uses 12 electrodes to measure his neural activity, which in turn issues commands via a wireless connection to a robot that is about 20 inches tall and weighs 4.4 lbs.

Ichikawa’s robot can perform three types of movement: walking forward, rotating right and using its single arm for stabbing attacks, says Japanese newspaper Mainichi Daily News. The thought-to-action process is not instantaneous though. It takes a total of about 1.5 seconds for the robot to begin doing what Ichikawa is thinking.


Verizon Hub is no more

Verizon Hub has been discontinued.

Verizon Hub has been discontinued.

(Credit: Verizon)

Earlier this year, Verizon stepped into the Voice over IP business with the Verizon Hub, which had far loftier ambitions than simply replacing your landline. With weather and time widgets, a calendar system, traffic information, a family bulletin board, and even support for …

Originally posted at Dialed In Podcast

Sixty-foot Gigantor bot towers over Japan

Workers in Japan have built a 60-foot statue of famous cartoon robot Gigantor in the city of Kobe. The statue is an actual-size replica of the hulking robot depicted in numerous manga and anime. It’s known as Tetsujin 28 in Japan.

Towering over Kobe’s Wakamatsu Park, the statue weighs 50 tons and cost some 135 million yen ($1.5 million) to build. It took about six weeks to erect.

The body parts were made earlier this summer. Here’s a neat video showing manufacturing at a factory in Kishiwada City, Osaka.

Gigantor follows the construction of another 60-foot robot statue in Japan. An incredibly detailed, life-size replica of the fictional Gundam robot was built in a park in Tokyo in June, and it could shoot light from its body.

Designed as a permanent tourist attraction, the Gigantor monument was organized under the NPO Kobe Tetsujin Project to honor the work of the late cartoonist Mitsuteru Yokoyama, a Kobe native and the genius behind such manga classics as Sally the Witch and Giant Robo.

Gigantor is also a symbol of the rebirth of Kobe after it was devastated by the 1995 earthquake that killed more than 6,000 people. January 2010 marks the 15th anniversary of the tragedy.

Maemo 5 reviewed in breathtakingly granular detail

It’s one thing to read a product preview here and there, but if you really want the Maemo 5 experience before you’re even able to set foot in a store and buy an N900, look no further than mobile-review‘s characteristically exhaustive look at the platform. From the endless array of screenshots, you quickly get the impression that this is an attractive shell — evolutionary and familiar for owners of the 770, N800, or N810, yes, but significantly freshened nonetheless. Here are a few big takeaways from the War & Peace-esque compendium:

  • There’s apparently an N920 in the works that lacks a QWERTY keyboard. We’ve heard rumors in the past that the N900 will remain Nokia’s sole Maemo 5 phone for at least a few months, so we might look to see this in 2010.
  • Process management invokes a curiously webOS-like card view which looks great. Helps when you have a beefy OMAP3 in there, doesn’t it?
  • The call log effortlessly aggregates GSM and VoIP calls — a neat trick, and a tip of the hat to Maemo’s roots as a VoIP-friendly platform.
  • MMS isn’t supported, strangely, though the platform’s SMS support handles both threaded and traditional views.
  • While chatting up Maemo’s calendar services, Eldar specifically says that he “Palm’s WebOS-powered organizer much more enticing and promising.” Lack of Google Calendar synchronization sucks, but we’re not sure what that’s all about — Maemo does support Exchange ActiveSync, after all.
  • Eldar his the nail on the head regarding Maemo’s Mozilla-based browser: it’s always been good, just way too slow. The N900 cures those ails on better hardware, though “it hasn’t caught up with the rest of the pack yet.” Flash support seems wonky and performance isn’t always great — it depends on how many apps are running.
  • The music player is pretty bare-bones (typical Nokia), though anyone happy with the N97’s sound quality will feel right at home here — it’s the same hardware.
  • The integrated Maps app apparently lags way behind the bar that Ovi Maps has set over on S60 — super slow and “resource-hungry.”

Of course, the beauty of Maemo is its wide-open philosophy, so many of the niggles here that aren’t corrected by Nokia proper will hopefully be handled by the community at large — and the good news is that by the time you get done reading this review, the N900 should be on store shelves for you to try yourself.

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Maemo 5 reviewed in breathtakingly granular detail originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Sep 2009 17:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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