HTC Hero firmware update peps up the Sense Experience to something usable

Good news for HTC Hero early adopters: HTC has a new firmware update out now for the device, and it considerably speeds up the interface if the multitude of reports to be found on the internet can be believed. Seeing as this was the number one gripe with the overall excellent UI, we’re incredibly glad HTC has gotten work on this, and we’ll be spending some more time with the device to return our newly tinted impressions. There’s a video after the break demonstrating changes, and most actions seems quite a bit quicker and smoother, all the way down to opening and closing the apps menu, and sliding between home screens. The update doesn’t really include much else in the way of features, but since it’s addressing the main pain point of the phone, we sure don’t mind — and neither will Sprint users, who we suppose will be getting this newly improved interface right out of the gate.

[Via Gizmodo]

Continue reading HTC Hero firmware update peps up the Sense Experience to something usable

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HTC Hero firmware update peps up the Sense Experience to something usable originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 15:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NASA Rocket to Create Clouds Tomorrow

Night_Clouds_Space.com.jpg

It’s not exactly controlling the weather, but it’s surprisingly close: NASA is set to launch a rocket tomorrow, called the Charged Aerosol Release Experiment (CARE), that will create artificial clouds at the outermost layers of Earth’s atmosphere, according to Space.com.

The idea is to create clouds around the rocket’s exhaust particles, in an effort to simulate the natural formation of noctilucent clouds high in the atmosphere. The real clouds are made of ice crystals and usually sit about 50 to 55 miles above Earth; to create the artificial clouds, the rocket will release dust particles a little higher so they can settle down to the right altitude naturally, according to the report.

The launch will occur NASA’s Wallops Flight Factility in Virginia, and is scheduled for Tuesday between 7:30 and 7:57 pm EDT. (Image credit: Space.com/Veres Viktor)

Most popular products: September

Time once again to check in on the most popular, and the trend away from cell phone domination continues this month! Hooray for Netbooks and TVs! Maybe it’s the fall shopping season …

Originally posted at CNET TV

Bowers & Wilkins downsizes with Zeppelin Mini iPod speaker

It’s been well over two years since high-end audio outfit Bowers & Wilkins introduced the iPod-lovin’ Zeppelin, and evidently it’s time for a downsizing. Today, the good folks over at B&W slung out the Zeppelin Mini, which promises the same dirigible-inspired sound but in a form factor that fits in a wider assortment of areas. To be honest, this version seems toned down quite a bit on the design side, with the key differentiating features being an updated docking arm and the addition of USB connectivity. Said socket enables direct PC / Mac streaming if your iPod gets lost, and it also enables your ‘Pod to sync with your computer whilst playing back tunes. As for specs, you’ll find a pair of 3-inch full-range drivers, 36 total watts of power, a 3.5 millimeter auxiliary jack and a bundled remote. It’s expected to hit next month for £299 ($495), but you can get acquainted right now by jumping past the break and mashing play.

[Via Macworld]

Continue reading Bowers & Wilkins downsizes with Zeppelin Mini iPod speaker

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Bowers & Wilkins downsizes with Zeppelin Mini iPod speaker originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 15:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Reader Touch and Pocket Review: Too Many Compromises

I have spent the last two weeks reading a book on Sony’s two newest Readers, the Touch and the Pocket editions—one is overloaded with tricks but killed by glare, the other is simplified past the point of goodness.

What is an ebook reader? It is your relaxation companion, the screen you will stare at when the laptop is closed and the TV is off. In that sense, the ability to provide tranquility must always trump the latest trick. Pack in touch screens, pack in SD card readers, search, dictionary, library-book borrowing. You can pack it all in, but never, ever at the cost of that primary role. With the $300 6″ resistive-touchscreen Touch Edition, Sony fails to heed this simple agenda. With the super-simple $200 5″ Pocket, Sony seems to be flaunting it.

Mind you, neither are Kindle killers, but they never were supposed to be. They are cheaper than Kindle, in a niche all by themselves. They represent Sony’s third try at elusive ebook reader success, using its own bookstore and the necessary computer connection instead of pairing with a retail giant and a 3G wireless provider. Speaking of that, Sony takes on the now $300 Kindle with its $400 3G-capable Daily edition, which we hope to review in the coming months.

Touch Edition Up Close

The Touch, which I’ve been using primarily, has a lot of flaws but battery life isn’t one of them: I charged it 11 days ago, and it’s only now starting to die. The touch interface provides a relatively organic way to turn pages, though I always flick in the wrong direction. (You push your finger towards the next page, rather than flicking the current page back.) Update: You can set the turn motion to go either way. Thanks Weatherman!

When you tap words—with a fingernail or the included stylus—you get an instant dictionary definition, and a quick way to search an entire tome. The interface isn’t going to win any awards, and the dictionary doesn’t know a lot of words that it should, mainly past participles (“overheated”) or gerunds (“deteriorating”). But if those were the only issues, I’d say jump in—it’s a nice enough player priced well under the Kindle.

But the screen, oh God, the screen. Sony’s problem with glare continues unabated, and because the soon-to-be-launched 3G-connected flagship Daily edition also has a touchscreen, the glare problem is likely to sink that as well.

Blinded By The Light

What do I mean by glare? I mean that, lying in bed, with just my reading light on, I can see the perfect out line of my face. Sure, I am handsome, but when I read a book, I expect to be staring only at words on the page, not my own lovely mug. In a well-lit room, the glare from all sides is positively frustrating, and it shifts with every minor adjustment of my hand.

More and more LCD screens on laptops come with glossy finishes, and that can be a pain when you’re surrounded by natural light. However, LCD is back-lit. The light coming from within the screen combats the light bombarding it from outside, so you can still see a lot, and you can always jack up the brightness when you can’t. E-Ink isn’t backlit—that is its benefit. When done right, it looks like paper, with zero eye strain. But if you put a shiny membrane over that E-Ink, as Sony has done here, you get undefeatable glare—and eye strain galore.

Gimmicks Test Well

When I brought up this problem with Sony, they told me that touch was a huge selling point for focus groups. I can appreciate that, and can see how Sony thought this product “tested well,” perhaps in a setting where people are not reading for hours (or days or weeks), but are just messing around with the neat-o gadget. Also, anyone who only has the experience of the Touch edition may not realize there’s a whole world of glare-free ebook readers, from the Kindle to iRex’s Digital Reader, which actually has a touchscreen. It’s too bad Sony couldn’t figure out (or buy) iRex’s secret.

The people in the Touch focus groups should have been given a Pocket Reader too, as I was.

Pocket Edition Up Close

Literally pocketable and way cheaper, the Pocket is far more capable of delivering hours of peaceful reading. As you can see in the images, side by side, the screens couldn’t be more different. It’s not just relatively glare free, it has better contrast for even easier reading. The Pocket’s problem is that it is barebones to an almost insulting degree: No search, no dictionary, no card reader, no nothin’.

I could actually live without all of those features save one: Search. Keyword searching is to future readers what leafing around is to current ones. Don’t remember where you last saw the mysterious man in black? Do a quick search. The Pocket has bookmarks, so you can dog-ear the pages you want to remember, but search is about not having to remember—it’s about hindsight, not foresight.

Reward for Patience

In the end, I can’t recommend either device wholeheartedly, but I can tell you that if you plow through books fast and dirty, without jumping around a lot, you could do worse than drop $200 on the Pocket. It’s simple, it’s easy on the eyes, and for the time being, it’s the cheapest ebook reader out there. Add to that this lending-library feature that hopefully launches soon, and you could get the first reasonably budget reader.

The pricing situation will change dramatically within 12 months, but maybe not by Christmas. The iRex and Plastic Logic news we hope to hear by then is all about 3G Kindle competitors, probably in the $300-$500 range. There’s also this little thing about an Apple tablet that I can’t seem to forget about. One thing is for sure, no matter who the competition is, Sony is going to have a rough holiday season if that Daily’s screen is anything like the one on the Touch. [Touch Product Page; Pocket Product Page; Sony eBook Store]

Sony Touch Reader

Lots of features including one-tap dictionary, super-simple search, SD and MS card readers


$300 price too high for a device with no 3G


Glare glare glare glare glare… and did I mention the glare issue?

Sony Pocket Reader

Great compact size (actually fits in many pockets)


Its screen—unadulterated E-Ink—is as good as Kindle’s


Currently the best list price for an ebook reader


No touch interface, which may bother feature hounds


No helpful search function, no dictionary, no SD card reader

The book I was reading is The Magicians by Lev Grossman. Lev happens to be an old friend of mine, but I’d recommend the book regardless, an R-rated post-Potter tale of a teenager’s induction into a magical university, fast paced and full of great insider references not just to Rowling but Tolkien and CS Lewis as well.

PCMag After Hours: Kyles Final Episode

PCMag After Hours Puppet Promo 4: All By Myself from pcmagafterhours on Vimeo.

I’m sad to announce (though plenty of you know already) that Kyle Monson, my co-host, is leaving PCMag–and, more important PCMag After Hours–this week. We’ll be recording Kyle’s final episode with the program tomorrow. Prepare to laugh, cry, and generally cycle through a gamut of emotions–in fact, just call your therapist and cancel this week’s appointment. You won’t be needing it.

We’re going to be recording/live-streaming the episode tomorrow at 3 PM ET, and we’d love to get as many folks in on it as possible–you can watch the show over at UStream. Of course the podcast will live on at iTunes, the Zune Marketplace, et al., so you can relive the magic time and again.

If you’ve got goodbye messages for Kyle or suggestions for the show moving forward, please drop us a line at: afterhours@pcmag.com. We love email. We’re also looking for your lists of the top six consumer tech products of the past six years.

TechCrunch50: Remote-Controlled Xboxes, Cableless Cables

Spawn Labs.JPG

Because of a scheduling snafu, we missed the first segment of the TechCrunch50 conference on Monday. But we were in time for the “New Frontiers” segment, which included a couple of interesting hardware products.

Spawn Labs
has developed a so-called HD-720 platform that allows a PC user to log in to a game
console, such as a Microsoft Xbox 360, from a network-connected PC. As of now, Spawn only works with the Xbox 360.

To set up products, you’ll need the Spawn HD-720 applicance, which connects to
a game console. A game cline tis needed for the PC. With a username and
password, the PC and the applicance connects, and the game can be
played in 720p resolutions. If bandwidth is limited, the video
resolution will degrade to maintain the frame rate.

The problem is latency: on a network it’s 100 ms. The company knows
ways to get to 70 ms,  playing across the Internet can add up to 50 ms.

TriviaBurst brings competitive trivia to iPhone

Calling all trivia buffs: if you’re looking for one of those cool multiplayer trivia games like they have in bars, where you get to square off against other players (and even other bars) in real-time competition, well, TriviaBurst isn’t it.

Though the game promises “group challenges” and Facebook …

Originally posted at iPhone Atlas

Steenstra Styletto all-electric vehicle gives Tesla a run for its money

Looks like the kids at Tesla have a little competition in the battery-powered sports car stakes. The brainchild of an auto industry consultant and designer named Cornelis Steenstra, the Styletto is apparently the first 200-mph-plus super sports car to be built in California. Sure, sure it is… perhaps a certain Steenstra GCM would like to lend us one so we can see for ourselves? No? In that case, it looks like we’ll be waiting until its formal introduction at the 2010 Pebble Beach Concourse d’ Elegance. (That’s OK — we were planning on being there anyways.) The company hopes to have ’em available for purchase in 2013, but in the meantime, do yourself a favor and hit the read link, where AutoBlog has all the PR and gallery action your heart craves.

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Steenstra Styletto all-electric vehicle gives Tesla a run for its money originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 14:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Joe Kane projector by Samsung reviewed, lauded

The Samsung SP-A900B delivers the most accurate picture of any projector we've tested.

(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)

Samsung, with the help of video guru Joe Kane, again delivers outstanding performance in the high-end front-projection DLP category with the flagship SP-A900B. This 1080p resolution, one-chip DLP projector sports the …