Motorola CLIQ listed for free on contract at T-Mobile, $400 straight-up

We’ll caution you — this could all just be one big misunderstanding (or a case of the fat fingered admin), but Motorola’s newly launched CLIQ is currently listed for $0.00 on contract over at T-Mobile (and $399.99 with no strings attached). Available in both Winter White and Midnight Titanium, the outfit’s first-ever Android phone can’t actually be added to one’s cart (trust us, we tried… repeatedly), but if these figures are right, we can surely say that the barrier to entry on higher-end smartphones will soon be demolished. Giddy yet?

Update: Aw, seems like someone on the other end already caught wind of the slip-up and yanked it. So, can we take that as confirmation?

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Motorola CLIQ listed for free on contract at T-Mobile, $400 straight-up originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 18:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm responds to NaNplayer rejection: “We are happy for it to continue life as homebrew” until APIs are complete

Well, how about that — Palm Developer Community Manager Chuq Von Rospach has taken the time to respond to earlier reports of NaNplayer’s rejection from the App Catalog, and he’s surprisingly cool about it. As we’d heard, the underlying issue is that NaNplayer uses private APIs that will change in a future version of webOS, so Palm doesn’t want apps built on them. That’s understandable, but here’s where Palm’s doing it right: Chuq says that Palm is happy for NaNplayer “to continue life as a homebrew application until we get to the point where we can release public, supportable APIs for the functionality that it requires.” That’s the sort of hacker-friendly compromise we can get behind — anyone in Cupertino taking notes?

[Thanks, Joe]

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Palm responds to NaNplayer rejection: “We are happy for it to continue life as homebrew” until APIs are complete originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 18:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Screenshot Of Google Calendar

This article was written on March 07, 2006 by CyberNet.

Screenshot Of Google Calendar

Rumors of the Google Calendar have been on the web for about two-weeks but we have not see any solid information…until now. This is the first shot that we have had of the Google Calendar that we are all anxiously waiting to play with. It looks like they are going to keep it basic with just the adding of events and tasks along with multiple different views. I guess this will help Google on their journey to manage “100% of user’s information”.

We are not ruling out the possibility that this has been a Photoshop job, but it is just some hopeful thinking that this is real.

Full-Size Screenshot
News Source: Digg

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iPod nano unboxed, camera gets tested against the mean streets of Manhattan

We know you come here for the hard, gritty, “$2 slice” end of the gadget news spectrum, and we’ve got that in spades in our video hands-on of the new iPod nano. We start out shooting the iPod with our regular Sanyo Xacti rig, and then dive in to the nano’s shot — real movie magic at work. Granted, the nano’s camera isn’t that magical. Apple’s piled on a huge complement of effects to disguise this fact, and in truth, some of the Photo Booth-style filters and distortions really do make the video more interesting (cyborg and kaleidoscope were a couple of our favorites), but the basic video mode is much lower quality than the recent crop of cheap pocket video cameras, and a far cry from the iPhone 3GS’s quality. Motion is shaky, the video is pixelated and oversaturated, and the mic is horribly easy to distort, especially when you’re talking into the back while shooting. But really, we suppose we couldn’t expect much out of such an offering, and it certainly does spice up the traditional PMP formula. Video is after the break, with the second video offering up the few non-conformist videos that happened to be shot vertically (it’s a little difficult to tell how the video is recording, or even if it’s recording, since the indicator is pretty small). By the time they made it to Viddler they ended up stretched wide and inexplicably upside down. Magic, we tell you.

Continue reading iPod nano unboxed, camera gets tested against the mean streets of Manhattan

iPod nano unboxed, camera gets tested against the mean streets of Manhattan originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 17:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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WD unveils new My Books, My Passports for Windows and Mac

And we have storage for you! WD’s refreshing a number of its external HDD storage devices, a move that’s sure to put a smile on the face of many a young media hound. The new My Book Essential is available in 1TB ($149), 2TB ($229.99) 500GB ($99.99), while the My Book for Mac is available with 1TB for $149.99. My Passport Essential can be had in capacities of 500GB ($139) or 320GB ($99.99), while My Passport for Mac is going out there in 500GB ($149.99) and 320GB ($119.99) sizes. All these guys feature SmartWare software for data management, and all are available now in a wide range of earth-shattering, psychedelic colors (well, four — including black).

Read – My Book Essential

Read – My Book for Mac
Read – My Passport Essential
Read – My Passport for Mac

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WD unveils new My Books, My Passports for Windows and Mac originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 17:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hauppauge to Sell CableCard Tuners by End of 2009

CableCard PCI Card.jpgOne thing no one’s ever said about CableCard: how easy it is to install the darn thing. In fact, only a tiny fraction of the millions of CableCards currently in use are plugged into computers. That’s because CableCards can only be used in “cable-ready PCs,” meaning a certain class of new systems sold by manufacturers and blessed by Cable Labs. Enthusiasts couldn’t build their own, nor could they add the tuners to existing computers. At least, not until yesterday, when Microsoft announced that the regulators of CableCard will decrease the severity of digital rights management from the television tuner and widen the pool of PCs that can take advantage of them.

Great news, but how will you, an enthusiast, ever get your hands on the darn things? According to Ken Plotkin, CEO of leading tuner manufacturer Hauppauge Computer Works, his company will sell a TV tuner at retail by the end of the year. This probably means that other manufacturers will be quick to join; watch for CableCard tuners from AVerMedia and DViCo, and the crazy multichannel CableCard from Ceton Corp, which Engadget recently spent some quality hands-on time with.

Until then, keep in mind that you can always install one of the OEM units yourself, provided you can track one down on eBay.
Image © Ben Drawbaugh/Engadget.

The Engadget Podcast will be live… tomorrow

Hey everyone, just a quick note to say that the podcast will be slightly delayed this week — not only are we swamped with news, but Nilay’s traveling to NYC for The Engadget Show. Fear not, though — we’ll be live tomorrow at 4PM EST, and the regular podcast will go up on Saturday. See you then!

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The Engadget Podcast will be live… tomorrow originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AMD announces ‘VISION’ guide to buying PCs

Well, Intel may have been on a bit of a processor rebranding kick as of late, but it looks like AMD is now trying to one-up ’em in fairly big way with its new “VISION” branding strategy, which promises to do nothing short of change the way people buy PCs — or so AMD hopes. The short of it is that AMD is looking to take the focus off the processor and instead connect “the needs of the consumer to the PC,” which, of course, calls for some new logos. As you can see above, new AMD-based PCs (starting with laptops and extending to desktops early next year) will be now branded primarily as either Vision, Vision Premium, or Vision Ultimate, with the processor and other specs apparently tucked away for folks that want to go looking for them. Not ones to keep things too simple, AMD will also later be introducing a Vision Black edition for “high-end, top of the line systems” which, ironically, are aimed mostly at folks primarily concerned with specs.

[Via Technologizer]

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AMD announces ‘VISION’ guide to buying PCs originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 16:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows 7 to get a better version of Netflix than Vista

No the Windows 7 version of the Netflix Watch Instantly still isn’t going to work on Extenders for Media Center, but it will include a more seamless experience than the Vista version does, like the movie info image above. Microsoft really wasn’t ready to share any more details with us, but we suspect the search is improved. The fact that they were so tight lipped leads us to believe that Microsoft is still holding back on some Windows 7 details — at least in regards to internet content and Windows 7. At this point it appears we might have to wait until the official release of Windows 7 to truly figure out if all that work to bring internet content to Windows 7 pays off.

Windows 7 to get a better version of Netflix than Vista originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 16:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Whats Up With Verizons Pathetic Smartphone Lineup?

motorolacliq.jpg

Okay, this is getting ridiculous. Let me start with a Tweet:
“T-Mobile heart Android. Sprint heart WebOS. AT&T heart OS X. Verizon heart cellular base stations.”
Motorola’s launch of the Cliq today with T-Mobile (shown at left) stymied various tech pundits who were expecting to see an Android phone for Verizon Wireless, and officially pushed Verizon’s smartphone lineup over the edge into “absurdly pathetic.”
The nation’s number-one carrier, Verizon isn’t complaining. They’re gaining customers, making money and winning awards based on their top-notch network, which has only gotten better with their recent purchase of Alltel. Verizon has also been bringing some interesting, exclusive feature-phones to market, including the LG EnV Touch, Samsung Alias 2, and the new Nokia Twist and Samsung Rogue.
But as Sprint solidifies their WebOS dominance with the Palm Pixi, T-Mobile crushes on Android with the Motorola Cliq and two HTC phones, and AT&T keeps riding high with the iPhone, Verizon’s lineup of actual smartphones looks pathetic. Their hottest new handsets are the workaday BlackBerry Tour and HTC Touch Pro2, which aren’t awful, but neither are they exclusive; the Tour is available on Sprint and the Touch Pro2 arrived first on two other carriers.
So what’s behind Verizon’s weak showing in the smartphone arena? I’ve got some possibilities; give me your own.