Samsung outs N130 and N140 netbooks, incites groans of disappointment

It’s been a good year since Samsung unveiled its universally praised NC10, yet here we are — one successor and countless competing models later — looking at the exact same specs being offered up in the Korean company’s latest pair of netbooks. Why exactly a successful laptop of any kind would need three identikit successors isn’t something we can readily account for, but let’s look at what (little) is actually new, shall we? A lightweight version of MS Office is bundled (try and stifle your excitement, please), alongside a suite of new Samsung apps and automated backup to Microsoft’s free 25GB SkyDrive online vaults. The N140 gets a pair of skull-rattling 3W stereo speakers and a larger battery (up to 5,900 mAh) to differentiate it from the N130, and ergonomics are said to be improved, but we’re still left with the bitter taste of stagnating hardware in our mouth. Windows 7, please, save us.

[Via Engadget Spanish]

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Samsung outs N130 and N140 netbooks, incites groans of disappointment originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Sep 2009 08:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Hero Hits Sprint Oct. 11 With New Face, $180 Price Tag

That Sprint’s first Android phone’s going to be the HTC Hero is about as unsurprising as news gets, but you know what is surprising? They’ve given it some invasive plastic surgery, and priced it squarely below their own Palm Pre.

Sprint’s Hero is a bit blobbier than HTC’s original, but it also looks less chinny—an HTC design quirk that’s starting to get on some people’s nerves—and at any rate, there isn’t a whole lot of the Hero that isn’t the screen, so aside from the shuffled hard buttons, this redesign shouldn’t change too much in terms of usability.

Wisely, Sprint left the Hero’s guts—hardware and software—intact. That’s the same 3.2-inch multitouch capacitive screen, the same 5-megapixel camera, the same microSD slot (Sprint throws in a 2GB card for free), the same 3.5mm headphone jack, the same multitouch browser (no mention of Flash support though) and the same Sense UI, which converts Android into something unexpectedly beautiful, but tragically sluggish. And since this thing obviously supports EV-DO, we’ll finally get to play with it on proper 3G.

Whether or not they’ll be able to load HTC’s latest Sense update—the one that fixes basically every complaint we had with the original Hero, including slowdown—before the handsets ship is still up in the air, but in any case, it’s coming eventually.

The $180 price assumes a 2-year agreement at a minimum of $70 a month, and that you’ve got the initiative to mail in a rebate form, though just like with the Pre, there’s a good chance retailers like Best Buy’ll just take care of this for you. Like the Pre, the Hero is eligible for the $100 Everything plan, which is just about the best deal going for obnoxiously talky/texty types.

So, uh, Sprint’s kind of killing it these days, no? They’ve got their iron grip on the only two smartphone underdogs anyone really cares about: the first of which made all the other carriers’ Palm phones look pathetically lame; and the second of which looks like it’ll sucker-punch a complacent T-Mobile right off its Android throne—especially considering the fact that Sprint’s priced this thing a few bucks below T-Mo’s categorically less good MyTouch 3G. It may have taken a year, but this whole Android thing is finally getting interesting.

The best bits of press release below. [Sprint]

The Innovation and Openness of a True Mobile Internet Experience Coming Soon to America’s Most Dependable 3G Network from Sprint on HTC Hero with Google

Sprint’s first device with the Android™ platform available Oct. 11;
Pre-register for HTC Hero today at www.sprint.com/hero

OVERLAND PARK, Kan., and BELLEVUE, Wash. – Sept. 3, 2009 – Sprint (NYSE: S) and HTC Corporation today announced the upcoming arrival of the first wireless device offering the combination of the open and innovative Android platform with the high-speed connectivity of America’s most dependable 3G network1 (EVDO Rev. A), HTC Hero™ with Google™. Offering a rich mobile Internet experience, the much-anticipated HTC Hero offers synchronization for built-in Google mobile services, including Google Search™, Google Maps™, Gmail™, and YouTube™ as well as access to thousands of applications built on the Android platform.

Beginning on Oct. 11, customers will be able to purchase HTC Hero through all Sprint retail channels including Web (www.sprint.com), Telesales (1-800-SPRINT1) and our national retail partner Best Buy for $179.99 (excluding taxes) after a $50 instant savings and a $100 mail-in rebate with a two-year service agreement. Pre-registration begins today at www.sprint.com/hero.

Access to countless applications
As a charter member of the Open Handset Alliance™, Sprint is actively engaged with the Android community. Through Android Market™, HTC Hero users have access to more than 8,000 useful applications, widgets and fun games to download and install on their phone, with many more to come. Thousands of developers are working to introduce new Android applications every day.

Intuitive, user-focused and fun
HTC Hero is the first U.S. device to feature HTC Sense, an intuitive experience that was built with a guiding philosophy to put people at the center and allows the device to be completely customized to the wants and needs of the user. The device’s seven-panel wide home screen can be populated with customizable widgets that bring information to the surface.

HTC Hero users can easily create and switch between Scenes to reflect different moments or roles in their lives, such as work, social, travel and play. For example, a work Scene can be easily set up to include stock updates, work email and calendar, a play Scene could have music, weather, and a Twitter feed or a travel Scene could offer instant access to the local time, weather and maps.

Industry-leading features
HTC Hero features an integrated 5.0 MP camera and camcorder. It also offers easy access to personal and business e-mail, instant messaging and text messaging through POP, IMAP, and Exchange Active Sync accounts.

HTC Hero is a full-featured smartphone with Wi-Fi capability, a 3.2-inch capacitive touchscreen with pinch-to-zoom capability and a fingerprint resistant coating, integrated GPS navigation, and trackball navigation. Additional features include:
Stereo Bluetooth® 2.0 Wireless technology
accelerometer, light sensor and home screen widgets for improved usability
multimedia capable with microSD slot (32GB capable, 2GB included)
Sprint TV® with live and on-demand programming
NFL Mobile Live and NASCAR Sprint Cup MobileSM
easy access to social networking sites, including Facebook®, Flickr® and Twitter
visual voice mail for quick and easy access to specific voice mail messages

HTC Hero requires activation on a pricing plan offering unlimited data. Sprint’s Simply EverythingSM plan provides unlimited nationwide calling, texting, e-mail, social networking, Web browsing, GPS navigation, Sprint TV, streaming music, NFL Mobile Live, NASCAR Sprint Cup Mobile and much more for only $99.99 per month. That’s a savings of $1,200 over two years vs. a comparable AT&T iPhone® plan2. Sprint Everything Data plans with unlimited messaging and data start at just $69.99 for 450 minutes with unlimited night and weekend calling starting at 7 p.m. (All price plans exclude Sprint surcharges and taxes.)

Mitsubishi follows LG with Vudu integration on some new TVs

Mitsubishi Unisen Diamond LT-249

Mitsubishi's soon-to-be-released Unisen Diamond LT-249 LCD TVs will now feature Vudu's streaming video-on-demand service.

(Credit: Mitsubishi)

Mitsubishi’s upcoming line of Unisen LT-249 LCD TVs were already notable for being the first flat-panel TVs with built-in soundbar speakers. But now the 46-inch and 52-inch models have …

TomTom unveils GO 950, GO 750 and GO 550 with IQ Routes at IFA

Here lately, all of the buzz surrounding TomTom has been focused intently on the outfit’s iPhone app and accompanying car kit. But over in Berlin, the company seems entirely more interested in showcasing some new wares that fall into its core product category. Making its debut at IFA, the GO x50 lineup is comprised of the GO 950, GO 750 and GO 550, all of which tout the company’s IQ Routes technology to get you from point A to point B in the very least amount of time. The trio promises to calculate routes faster than ever before, and they also include the planet’s largest collection of historical speed profiles. Once you’re on your way, the units can tap into RDS-TMC services in order to take current road conditions into account and get you from point A to point B in the least amount of time. Also of note, these three now feature voice command and control, and each ships with an active dock with integrated RDS-TMC information. The x50 lineup is scheduled to ship this autumn for undisclosed amounts, with the GO 950 packing maps for the US, Canada and 45 European nations and the GO 750 / GO 550 offering maps in select regions of Europe only.

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TomTom unveils GO 950, GO 750 and GO 550 with IQ Routes at IFA originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Sep 2009 07:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Philips 56-inch 21:9 3D TV’s future is so bright we had to wear shades

If you haven’t noticed, 3D is going to be big in 2010. Not at Philips though, at least not yet. Instead of charging in to the market like Sony, Philips is willing to hedge its bets and wait on consumer demand. Consumers, of course, are waiting for content. And hey, maybe everybody’s wrong and quad-HD will be the next big thing to drive TV sales. Regardless, Philips wants everyone to know that its technology is ready when you are so its got a 3D prototype Blu-ray player and stunning 3D version of its 56-inch Cinema 21:9 TV here at IFA in Berlin. While the idea of watching movies in 3D sounds like a novelty, the idea of gaming in 3D is downright compelling — awkward passive polarized glasses be damned!

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Philips 56-inch 21:9 3D TV’s future is so bright we had to wear shades originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Sep 2009 07:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Nokia’s N900, N97 mini, X3, X6 and Booklet 3G hands-on roundup

Just in case you missed it, you should probably be informed that Nokia had quite the morning yesterday as Nokia World 2009 kicked off in Stuttgart. Not only was the N97 mini made official, but the company’s Booklet 3G was fully detailed and the first two handsets in the newfangled X series were also unveiled. Naturally, a slew of cameras descended upon the new gear just as soon as the suits left the stage, and we’ve rounded up the best of the best below for your perusal and enjoyment. If you’re looking for the actual news on these very devices, have a look right here, and feel free to hop on past the break for a few videos from the show floor.

Read – Booklet 3G hands-on photos (more angles)
Read – Booklet 3G hands-on video (another take)
Read – Nokia X3 and X6 hands-on video
Read – Nokia N900 hands-on video
Read – N97 mini hands-on video

Continue reading Video: Nokia’s N900, N97 mini, X3, X6 and Booklet 3G hands-on roundup

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Video: Nokia’s N900, N97 mini, X3, X6 and Booklet 3G hands-on roundup originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Sep 2009 07:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Logitech Announces Squeezebox Wi-Fi Music Devices

Logitech-Squeezebox-Radio.jpg

Logitech today announced two new devices that can help move digital
music from your PC to your ears. The Squeezebox Radio (above, $199.99
list) is a Wi-Fi player that streams music from your home network–from
the Web, your subscription services, and your own collection of tunes.
Its color screen shows album art, track info, station info, and so on.

The
snazzy black Radio is only 5.12 by 8.66 inches, so its quite portable.
It features 6 preset buttons, a line-in jack, and even a built-in alarm
clock. Logitech claims the built-in speaker is of high-enough quality
to deliver music with very little distortion. You’ll be able to buy an
accessory pack with a rechargeable battery and IR remote for $49.99 in
November.

The Squeezebox Touch Wi-Fi player ($299.99) serves as
an interface between your digital music and your existing music system.
Logitech says it will support high-quality sampling rates of up to 24
bits at 96 kHz. The Touch offers a 4.3-inch color touch screen as well
as a USB port and SD slot, for additional music sources.Look for this
to ship in December. (Check out a photo after the jump.)

Both
devices will require 256MB of RAM, 100MB hard drive space, and an
802.11b/g/n network. And for those who just can’t get enough social
networking otherwise, both will offer Facebook and Flickr integration.

Samsung introduces X3 ultrathin notebook at IFA 2009

Samsung X3 notebook

Samsung X3

(Credit: Erica Ogg/CNET)

BERLIN–Most companies find one press conference sufficient at gadget shows. Not Samsung. We’re here at the second Samsung announcement of the day, this time for its mobile computing division.

We’ll update the post as we go. Seongwoo Nam, senior vice president of …

Eyes-on Panasonic’s Full HD 3D plasma and Blu-ray combo

We just got a real eyeful of 3D, courtesy of Panasonic’s upcoming 1080p plasma and Blu-ray 3D setup. The system uses synced shutters, and was easily some of the best “consumer” 3D we’ve seen — almost on par with a theater experience, other than the fact that the screen was a whole lot smaller, at 103-inches. Unfortunately, while Panasonic is heavily touting 3D at IFA this year, just as Sony did at its own presser, there isn’t much hard news to show for it. The plasma and Blu-ray combo was actually announced a full year ago, and the only word we have on release at the moment is “next year.” Obviously, readily available 3D content plays a big part in this, and we get the impression that Avatar is syncing up nicely to be available on some sort of 3D home video format by the time it’s ready for a disc release — we’ve certainly seen enough teaser clips and trailers of it by now, anyway. To be honest, the 3D setup was seamless enough in our demo room that sometimes it hardly felt 3D. Avatar was especially “shallow” on the 3D scale (no pictures were allowed of the presentation, not that they would help), and we’ve yet to see anything mindblowing on that end. If anything, Panasonic’s presentation was more an opportunity to be “blown away” by the company’s awesome PowerPoint skills, if anything, so feel free to follow along in the gallery below.

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Eyes-on Panasonic’s Full HD 3D plasma and Blu-ray combo originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Sep 2009 06:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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YikeBike: Cute Electric Penny-Farthing

The YikeBike could more appropriately be called the YikesBike. The small front wheel, upright position and hands-behind stance all say one thing: pothole-faceplant.

The little electric penny-farthing (or P-Far, as the Bike Snob would call it) is on display at the Eurobike show right now, and looks like a lot of fun. It has a 1kW motor driving a 20-inch front wheel, and the carbon-fiber body means that it weighs just under 10kg (22 pounds) — good for acceleration and also good when you carry it, for the YikeBike is a folder which ends up not much bigger than the wheel. One charge takes around a half hour and juices you for a 7-8km (5 mile) run at up to 20 kph (12 mph).

Downsides? For something designed as a traffic jam beating runaround, it looks a little top-heavy. All your weight is above the wheel, raising the center of gravity. It looks easy to jump off in and emergency, though. Also, once the battery dies, you’re carrying it. At least an electric bike can be ridden home when the power runs out.

We dig it, though, and we can’t wait to see Woz on one, playing YikeBike Polo. There’s one more thing that might make you say “Yikes!” The price, when it ships next year, will be €3,500-€3,900, or $5000-$5570.

Product page [YikeBike]