BlackBerry Desktop Manager for Mac releasing October 2

BlackBerry Desktop Manager for Mac releasing October 2

A tiny little beta leak earlier this month let BlackBerry-toting Mac fans knew that something good was coming in the near future, and now we know it’s very near indeed (though a bit later than expected). On October 2 RIM will release BlackBerry Desktop Manager for Mac, specifically at 1:00pm EST. That means instead of wrapping up your busy work-week being productive you can instead spend the afternoon fighting long download queues and playing around getting this app configured — for purely work-related purposes of course, like syncing with iCal, Address Book, and automatically backing up contacts. Just don’t tell your boss you’ll also be able to sync your iTunes collection to your handset, including album art, something that should make Pre-owning Bob down the hall a little jealous. Again, the fun starts Friday afternoon at 1:00 EST. Clear your calendars accordingly.

Read – RIM Launches BlackBerry Desktop Manager for Mac Users
Read – Download here come Friday

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BlackBerry Desktop Manager for Mac releasing October 2 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Sep 2009 07:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPhone accessories can download iPhone apps to your iPhone memory

iPhone accessories can download iPhone apps to your iPhone memory

Among the many minor changes included in the 3.0 release of the iPhone OS was one that would enable those myriad of iPhone accessories to work more closely with software. That is to say, to make the plugging in of one result in in a prompting to download the other. The first such piece of hardware is the latest Griffin iTrip, which, when connected, raises the dialog shown above. You can of course say “No” if you don’t feel like playing along, but when it comes to accessories like the TomTom car kit we’re thinking you’ll probably be missing out if you don’t go along with the flow.

[Via AppleInsider]

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iPhone accessories can download iPhone apps to your iPhone memory originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Sep 2009 07:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows 7 logo program already 6,000-strong with products

The Windows Ecosystem Team has gone official with the new ‘Compatible with Windows 7’ sticker, which we sincerely hope won’t be as laughably misapplied as its Vista-related predecessor. Set to appear on hardware, software and peripherals, the label is intended to reassure customers that they’ll have the “optimal Windows 7 experience” thanks to “robust testing requirements” and a longer testing cycle. That’s good to hear, as is the fact that already over 6,000 products have been given a passing grade, meaning that — surprise, surprise — when you get your Windows 7 machine, it will most likely be compatible with everything you own or intend to buy. An intriguing tidbit is that one logo will cover all flavors, including 64-bit, meaning that you’ll have to wait for Intel’s Pineview chips to come around the turn of the year if you want to get a certified Atom-based Windows 7 netbook.

Update: Okay, so it looks like we were a little off the mark here. To be clear, this program is primarily intended for peripherals and accessories you purchase after you get a computer, which is why testing against 64-bit Windows 7 is a requirement. We’re sure we’ll see plenty of Atom netbooks running Windows 7 with a slightly different sticker on ’em just as soon as October 22 rolls around — you just won’t be able to buy an Atom-based mobo with this particular sticker on the box, because it won’t run 64-bit Windows 7. You know what else you can’t buy? A dragon.

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Windows 7 logo program already 6,000-strong with products originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Sep 2009 06:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sound2 Speakers Look Like Giant Desktop Earbuds

speakers2-lacie

Lacie’s new Sound2 Speakers are neat in two ways. First, they can hook up to a computer via USB as well as the usual line-in jack, and second, they look like a giant pair of earbuds.

The pedigree is also good, with the internals designed by high-end French speaker company Cabasse, and we like the loud-enough 30 Watt output and the fact that these are real, big speakers rather than the ubiquitous subwoofer and satellite setup normally targeted at computer users.

But what will sell these speakers is of course the looks, and those earbud-like cases will sit great on your desk next to a notebook. There’s even a hide-away external power supply to keep the desktop clear. We’ll have to hear them in person to make a choice, of course, but right now these are looking like a good candidate for the new speakers in Gadget Lab’s Spanish office (aka my bedroom). $100.

Product page [Lacie. Thanks, Kim!]


Dual-Processor Netbook Baffles Us Completely

swordfish_net

When confronted with the prospect of a dual-processor netbook, a tiny 10.2-inch computer featuring not one but two 1.6GHz Atom processors, I can only echo the prosaic and considered words of my editor Dylan Tweney, placed at the top of the e-mail containing the tip-off: “WTF?”

The machine is the “Swordfish Net 102 Dual Netbook Computer”, and we wonder why on earth anybody would make this thing. Is there any advantage to sinking two Atoms side-by-side into a netbook, other than to quicken the drain on the already weak three-cell battery? It gets odder. The netbook has a decent 2GB RAM, but only a 160GB hard drive. It has “Dual Bluetooth” for tethering to a smartphone, but also has a WCDMA 3G cellular radio built in. It also has (and this is a little unfair to point out, but we can’t help it) the rather wonderful sounding “Keyborad: 83 keyborad”.

The Swordfish does at least have one killer feature: price. At $450, you can afford to send it to the computer-shrink to have its dual personalities sorted out.

Product page [Haleron. Thanks, Kyle!]


Honda EV-N Concept tucks U3-X personal transporter inside door

Look, we admit it: Honda’s U3-X unicycle gave us a bit of a chuckle when we first peeped the video last week. Now look at this, just look at it! Not only does the Honda EV-N Concept steal all the best retro styling from the classic Fiat 500 (or Honda 600 closer to home), it also integrates the miniscule U3-X electric transporter directly into its passenger door frame — adding an additional 22-pounds, at least, in the process. Oh, and this little guy’s electric with a solar roof panel. The EV-N will makes its debut at the Tokyo Motor Show next month where we hope to give it a great big hug just for showing up. A few more pics after the break, fully gallery just beyond that read link.

Continue reading Honda EV-N Concept tucks U3-X personal transporter inside door

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Honda EV-N Concept tucks U3-X personal transporter inside door originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Sep 2009 06:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Eye Glasses Turns iPhone into Magnifier For Oldies

eye glasses

It’s such a shame that I didn’t know about Eye Glasses before today. Not real spectacles, of course – I’ve heard of those – but the application from Freeverse which turns the iPhone into a big, square, magnifying glass.

It’s a shame because just this past weekend my parents came to visit, and in between wresting the gin bottle from my mother’s hand and rescuing my train-spotting father from the evil, camera-fearing security guards at the local railway station, I could have distracted them both with this handy application.

Eye Glasses is for the hard-of-seeing, whether oldies with failing vision or plain short sighted, squinting spectacle-wearers. Hold the iPhone in front of some hard to read text and the app takes the camera’s feed and makes it bigger: up to eight times bigger, enough even for a bulge-eyed myopic with inch-thick lenses to make out a few words.

Of course, you could still use a real magnifying glass, or buy a dedicated electronic magnifier, but at just $3, this is probably cheaper than either. It works with any iPhone, but the close-focusing 3GS will give the best results.

Product page [iTunes]


Apple Tablet To Redefine Newspapers, Textbooks and Magazines

Steve Jobs said people don’t read any more. But Apple is in talks with several media companies rooted in print, negotiating content for a “new device.” And they’re not just going for e-books and mags. They’re aiming to redefine print.

Several years ago, a modified version of OS X was presented to Steve Jobs, running on a multitouch tablet. When the question “what would people do with this?” couldn’t be answered, they shelved it. Long having established music, movie and TV content, Apple is working hard to load up iTunes with print content from several major publishing houses across several media.

Two people related to the NYTimes have separately told me that in June, paper was approached by Apple to talk about putting the paper on a “new device.” The R&D labs have long worked on versions of the paper meant to be navigated without a keyboard or mouse, showing up on Windows tablets and on multiple formats using Adobe Air. The NYTimes, of course, also publishes via their iPhone application. Jobs has, during past keynotes, called the NYTimes the “best newspaper in the world.”

A person close to a VP in textbook publishing mentioned to me in July that McGraw Hill and Oberlin Press are working with Apple to move textbooks to iTunes. There was no mention of any more detail than that, but it does link back to a private Apple intern idea competition held on campus, in their Town Hall meeting area in 2008, where the winning presentation selected by executives was one focused on textbook distribution through iTunes. The logic here is that textbooks are sold new at a few hundred dollars, and resold by local stores without any kickbacks to publishers. A DRM’d one-time-use book would not only be attractive because publishers would earn more money, but electronic text books would be able to be sold for a fraction of the cost, cutting out book stores and creating a landslide marketshare shift by means of that huge price differential. (If that device were a tablet, the savings on books could pay for the device, and save students a lot of back pain.)

Apple also recently had several executives from one of the largest magazine groups at their Cupertino’s campus, where they were asked to present their ideas on the future of publishing. Several mockups of magazines were present in interactive form. It is presumed that more talks took place after the introduction and investigatory meeting. Some magazine company is also considering Adobe Air as a competing option for digital magazines, but without a revenue/distribution system that iTunes has, it seems unlikely.

I haven’t heard anything about traditional book publishers being approached yet, but given the scope of the rest of the publishing industry’s involvement, it’s not hard to imagine they’re on board as well. (If you know something, please drop me a line.) Update: Reader Tom reminds me of this Andy Ihnatko rumor, from several sources, that Apple is receiving truckloads of books at its HQ. It’s a thin line to draw, but its something.

Another source corroborates that the January announce date others have reported is correct within the month, with this information heard from a high level.

Some I’ve talked to believe the initial content will be mere translations of text to tablet form. But while the idea of print on the Tablet is enticing, it’s nothing the Kindle or any E-Ink device couldn’t do. The eventual goal is to have publishers create hybridized content that draws from audio, video and interactive graphics in books, magazines and newspapers, where paper layouts would be static. And with release dates for Microsoft’s Courier set to be quite far away and Kindle stuck with relatively static E-Ink, it appears that Apple is moving towards a pole position in distribution of this next-generation print content. First, it’ll get its feet wet with more basic repurposing of the stuff found on dead trees today.

Video: LG GD510 touchscreen ‘Pop’ is heavy on hype, light on specs

Gotta hand it to LG, it pulled out the big hitting hyperbole with the launch of its otherwise simplistic GD510 touchscreen phone. LG begins with a reminder that it launched “the world’s first full touchscreen phone” — the Prada — back in January 2007. A claim that Ericsson, Nokia, and others would rightfully dispute. LG then calls the brushed-aluminum GD510, or “Pop,” the “most compact 3-inch full touchscreen phone ever made,” while boasting of its simplicity. That latter claim is achieved by removing “unnecessary features” that apparently include burdensome WiFi and 3G radios since modern consumers want to browse the internet over GPRS/EDGE. Spec-wise, you get a WQVGA (note the “Q”) display, 3 megapixel camera, 8GB of internal memory, and a single home key that glows green to call or red to hang-up / cancel. They’ve also ditched the S-Class UI in favor of something that’s presumably less convoluted. There’s even an optional solar-panel battery cover which we hear is the number one requested feature on touchscreen phones… right. It does look pretty though, which is saying a lot for a phone packing a solar panel. Hitting Europe in mid October and the US at the end of October if the Bluetooth SIG entry is to be believed. Video promo after the break.

Read — Bluetooth SIG
Read — LG press release

Continue reading Video: LG GD510 touchscreen ‘Pop’ is heavy on hype, light on specs

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Video: LG GD510 touchscreen ‘Pop’ is heavy on hype, light on specs originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Sep 2009 05:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Includes PSP Movies on Blu-ray Disks

Sony is very excited that it has worked out how to add PlayStation Portable compatible movie files to its Blu-ray titles. Too excited, in fact, as the main benefit is for Sony itself, as it no longer has to include a separate DVD-ROM disk in the box.

The “new technology” lets the subset of people who own both a PSP and a PlayStation 3 hook the two together and send the movie direct to the handheld console. It’s called “Digital Copy”, and the extra files will only work on a PSP, not on another computer and certainly not on any other console.

The first titles, Godzilla and The Ugly Truth, are both from Sony’s movie wing, and it’s likely that all future Digital Copy-compatible disks will be, too. After all, why would, say, Disney want to package up a disk with extras that benefit so few people, and in doing so effectively support a competitor? There’s hardly a huge, untapped market of PSP/PS3 owners out there, craving for dual-format movie synergy, is there?

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Photo credit: Jim Merithew / Wired.com