Wii price drop confirmed: $199 starting this weekend

The rumors were true, and Nintendo‘s knight in shining armor is finally about to see its first-ever price drop. For nearly three years now, the console has sold briskly at $249.99, but beginning on September 27th at Best Buy (and everywhere else, naturally), the happy-go-lucky machine will be offered for just $199.99. Interestingly, it appears that suits at BB expect Nintendo to make an official announcement on the drop this Friday, yet retail stores won’t begin selling at the discounted rate until Sunday. Something tells us that won’t go over well, but we guess we’ve but a few days left ’til we find out exactly how the Big N plans to play this.

[Thanks, Anonymous]

Wii price drop confirmed: $199 starting this weekend originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 23:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Peek manages to survive a whole year, promises more features for year two

We actually first caught wind of the Peek email-only handheld around 13 months ago, but today Peek is celebrating its first year as a company with a shipping product. During the past year, it has managed to ship two distinct devices and a good bit of functionality, but most importantly, it has managed to survive. Not sure if you’ve noticed, but the past dozen months have been twelve of the most tumultuous (financially, anyway) in American history, yet this startup is still going strong and looking forward to a second year full of “new features and services” and even a few international launches. Generally we don’t stop to wish companies a happy first birthday, but seriously — how many of you expected this firm to be around in late 2009?

Read – First Peek birthday
Read – Tales of survival

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Peek manages to survive a whole year, promises more features for year two originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 23:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands on preview: Adobe updates its Elements

Time again for Adobe’s annual update of its consumer photo- and video-editing applications, Photoshop Elements and Premiere Elements. We’re up to version 8 now, and while there’s no killer must-have new capability–unless you consider automatic sync across multiple computers–the two products still provide solid mass appeal for their respective markets.

As in the past, you can buy the pair together for $149.99, which is a far more attractive buy for video-editing shoppers than Photoshoppers, and in fact the combination makes quite a nice bundle for home videographers. Independently, they’re $99.99 each. Tack “Plus” to the name of the product for another $40 and you get an extra 20GB on the otherwise free Photoshop.com membership (along with ongoing new template and tutorial content), which will then cost you $50 annually to renew.

The latter becomes key if you plan to take advantage of one of the nicer new features, the ability to sync your videos, photos, music, projects, and PDF files across multiple systems using Photoshop.com as the hub. (In case you missed it, Photoshop.com rolled out video support last month in preparation for this release of Pre.) While Adobe doesn’t make a Plus membership a requirement for doing so, you’ll very quickly max out your free 2GB without it.

After allowing the product to languish for a while, with 8 Adobe brings the Mac version of Photoshop Elements up to parity with the Windows version and with the buzzy new features in iPhoto, including face recognition and geotagging/mapping. Unlike iPhoto, however, there’s no direct upload to Facebook, though it supports a broader number of services, including Kodak EasyShare Gallery and Smugmug. Annoyingly, those choices are buried as More Options on the Share pane (likely because the interface decision was based on the technology used–implemented via an API rather than core program code–rather than where the user will look for them).

Like most current facial recognition implementations, Adobe’s is only moderately accurate. For instance, in many photos it correctly identifies one person, but didn’t detect others and thought inanimate objects were faces. The batch detection and labeling where you confirm different faces in groups of selected images is better, but still a little clunky.

AMD’s new ATI Radeon HD 5800 3D cards first to market with DirectX 11 support

Update: Reviews from Anandtech, HardOCP, HotHardware, MaximumPC, and PC Perspective are all live. Nvidia’s dual-chip GeForce GTX 295 card outperforms the Radeon HD 5870 on most tests by a noticeable margin, so AMD can’t claim that the Radeon HD 5870 is the fastest single-card solution. The good news is that new Radeon does outperform Nvidia’s best single-chip card, the GeForce GTX 285. The dual-chip GTX 295 is also a $499 card with no DirectX 11 support. The Radeon HD 5870 goes for a more reasonable $379.

AMD introduced its ATI Radeon HD 5870 and Radeon HD 5850 desktop graphics cards Tuesday evening, beating rival Nvidia to the marketplace with the first DirectX 11-capable products. As DirectX 11 is the Windows 7 version of Microsoft’s code for linking up hardware with, among other things, 3D game software, winning the race to launch is a significant boon to AMD’s efforts to market its new cards. It also ensures that even if few games will actually use DirectX 11 at launch, Microsoft can claim that the graphics hardware is ready to support one of the major new features of its new OS.

Expect a whole family of Radeon HD 5000 series cards to come to market over the next few months, but for now we get two cards, the $399 Radeon HD 5870 and the $250 Radeon HD 5850. AMD says it plans to ship 500,000 chips in the fourth quarter, but it also anticipates high demand will strain retail supplies during the first few weeks after launch. On the system builder side, AMD said that one large OEM has claimed the majority of the first round of Radeon 5800s, so the cards will also be scarce from other system builders, at least early on.

AMD’s new ATI Radeon HD 5800 series graphics card.

(Credit: AMD)

Dropping its chip manufacturing process from 55 nanometers to 40 nanometers in the Radeon HD 5800 series has let AMD ramp up the speeds and feeds of its new chips impressively over those of the Radeon HD 4800 series. The transistor count in particular has jumped from 956 million on the old design to 2.15 billion in the new model. AMD also claims an uptick from 1.2 teraflops of processing power to between 2.09 and 2.72 in the each of the new cards.

Neolux badges bring e-ink technology to trade show vendors, sweaty rock dudes

Ah, the backstage pass — as much a part of the rock’n’roll lifestyle as sleeping with a roadie to get to the lead singer. Now, thanks to Neolux (an e-ink developer best known in these parts for its rather bland e-reader) the things have gotten that much harder to counterfeit. What does an e-ink badge do, exactly? Well, it does what a regular badge does — with the added expense of color e-ink technology. How’s that for progress? See for yourself after the break.

Update: …and by “color e-ink” we meant “regular old e-ink with a red overlay.” Oldest trick in the book, really. Thanks to those of you who pointed it out!

[Via E-ink Info]

Continue reading Neolux badges bring e-ink technology to trade show vendors, sweaty rock dudes

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Neolux badges bring e-ink technology to trade show vendors, sweaty rock dudes originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 22:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Digeo purchased by Arris, promises continued Moxi development, sales and support

After a post-CES “streamlining” resulted in layoffs and left highly anticipated products like the Multi-Room HD DMR to never see the light of day the future of Moxi DVR builder Digeo has remained in doubt, but that’s all behind us as it has been acquired by ARRIS. Promising not only continued support for current Moxi customers but also plans to continue to develop and market the line of products, it appears the communications company sees this as a way to expand its own networking expertise. The cost to snap up Digeo’s IP, 75 employees and other assets? A mere $20 million cash – we expect to find out more details via conference call tomorrow, any questions you want answered about the future of Moxi? Let us know in the comments, whether this means the UI will get a makeover is already on our list.

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Digeo purchased by Arris, promises continued Moxi development, sales and support originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 21:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple, Palm hear privately from USB-IF on iTunes spat, involvement unlikely (update: the Forum’s not pleased)

The very public fight between Palm and Apple to allow the Pre to sync directly to iTunes (without just… you know, doing it the same way as everyone else) is showing no signs of slowing down, with Palm continuing to pursue every angle it can to rile up Cupertino — most recently taking the battle up to the USB Implementers’ Forum in an effort to stop Apple from restricting iTunes usage by the hardware’s Vendor ID. Hard to say what ended up going down behind closed doors, but on an official level, the USB-IF is issuing a terse statement that it “communicated its position on the matter to both companies” and won’t be speaking further on the issue “at this time.” We’ll see if anything ends up changing on the software side from the conversation, but separately, the Forum has mentioned to us that it considers this a member-to-member concern — so in all likelihood, they’re taking a hands-off approach.

Update: Digital Daily has come away with a very, very different story from the actual leaked communication, and it turns out that the USB-IF has actually sided against Palm on two different fronts. First, the Forum has told Palm that it doesn’t see how blocking Palm’s Vendor ID from accessing iTunes violates its policies; and second — this might be the big one — Palm’s actually riled up the Forum by saying that it’ll be using Apple’s Vendor ID on the Pre going forward. It wants a clarification of Palm’s “intent” within a week, saying such a move would be contrary to the rules and regs set out for the proper use of USB. At this point the question becomes, how many companies and industry bodies is Palm willing to piss off to keep iTunes working exactly the way it wants?

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Apple, Palm hear privately from USB-IF on iTunes spat, involvement unlikely (update: the Forum’s not pleased) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 21:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BUGbase WiFi finally overcomes, ships in the US and Europe

It’s hard to believe that BUG Labs has been helping tinkerers thinker for two whole years now, particularly when you realize that its BUGbase has been operating sans WiFi all along. At long last, after a painful battle with the licensing overlords connected to WiFi and Bluetooth, BUG has finally received approval to ship the BUGbase WiFi (which does BT as well) both here in the States as well as in Europe. Aside from those two huge additions, BUG also upgraded the device with a friction-fit docking connector and improved power management, not to mention a few subtle “under the hood” tweaks designed to make everyone’s lives a little easier. Oh, and for existing BUGbase owners? A special BUGWiFi module will be shipping in a few weeks, and yes, all of BUG’s other modules will be compatible with either base. Once you’re done hopping around like a jovial schoolgirl, feel free to order your own BUGbase WiFi now for $449.

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BUGbase WiFi finally overcomes, ships in the US and Europe originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 21:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry 9700 reviewed extra early

What is it with BlackBerries and seemingly premature reviews? After the Onyx got manhandled ahead of schedule, it’s the turn of its close relative, the trackpad-equipped 9700, which has been annointed as successor to the Bold. Boy Genius Report spared few superlatives in their examination of the hardware, which praises the 9700 as “the most gorgeous BlackBerry on the planet” and involves a size and feel comparison against the Tour. Their conclusion was that the new handset draws all the positives from RIM’s recent portfolio of phones and ties them together into a very compelling little package. We couldn’t spot any downsides, so either this is the best phone ever or somebody got a little carried away — read up and decide for yourself.

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BlackBerry 9700 reviewed extra early originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 21:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Xbox 360 rumored to be getting new holiday bundle, marginally cheaper WiFi adapter

Not interested in the hassle of a $50 mail-in rebate on the Xbox 360 Elite? Then it looks like you may soon have another option that sweetens the deal over the basic $299 console, at least if Ars Technica‘s usually reliable “mole” is to be believed. As rumor has it, Microsoft will rolling out another of its usual holiday bundles around the middle of October (after the rebate deadline, naturally), this time packing Pure and Lego Batman in with the Xbox 360 Elite (no word on a new Arcade bundle). In other, more disappointing news, the mole has also apparently “confirmed” that Microsoft will indeed be dropping the price of its 802.11g network adapter once the new 802.11n model rolls out, but it’ll unfortunately still cost $79.99 — or just $20 less than it costs today (and only twenty bucks cheaper than the 802.11n adapter).

[Via Joystiq]

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Xbox 360 rumored to be getting new holiday bundle, marginally cheaper WiFi adapter originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 20:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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