Livio Announces NPR-Branded Internet Radio

Terry Gross and Ira Glass [editor’s mistake, corrected] fans, rejoice–now there’s an Internet radio just for you, and it’s an actual radio. Livio’s new device is an NPR-branded system, devoted specifically to National Public Radio programming. The radio lets users tune in to 1,000 local NPR streams and access more than 800 podcasts and archives from the media organization’s Web sites.

The radio also features a “my NPR” button, which offers easy access to users’ favorite NPR stations. Of course, the device offers more than just NPR broadcasts–there are a total of 16,000 Internet stations available through the device, via Reciva.

The NPR Radio by Livio, which ships in early November, will cost $199. Profits go to NPR stations and programming. Order through Livio’s site or at shop.npr.org.

The Engadget Show: Inside Ben Heck’s magic kingdom


If you’re a reader of Engadget (and let’s be honest — you’re reading this, right?) then you surely know Ben Heck’s work. The master modder has been the source of some of our favorite tweaks, hacks, and flat-out crazy gadget manipulations over the years. We recently had a chance to take a peek inside his workshop and hear straight from Ben about what drives him to create the madness we’ve see on our pages. It’s a phantasmagoric adventure you won’t likely forget — so sit back, crack a cold one, and enjoy the ride!

Note: Don’t forget, our next full length Engadget Show is happening this Thursday, and our guest is Steve Ballmer!

Update:
Video is now live! Sorry about that!

Host: Nilay Patel
Produced and Directed by: Chad Mumm
Edited by: Michael Slavens
Music by: Bit Shifter

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The Engadget Show: Inside Ben Heck’s magic kingdom originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Oct 2009 12:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile Announces Motorola CLIQ Pre-Sale

How soon we forget. On Friday everyone was talking about Motorola’s first Android handset, the CLIQ. Now, a few days later, everyone’s in a tizzy about the kind-of announced-but-not-yet-revealed Android handset for Verizon. Well, perhaps T-Mobile’s new press release will get the CLIQ back into the public consciousness–the phone that PCMag lavished praise upon and awarded its Editor’s Choice.

T-Mobile today announced that the CLIQ is currently available for pre-sale: Order one via the carrier’s site or by calling up T-Mobile. The handset is priced at $199 with a two-year contract. Those who preorder will also get a free car charger and will be entered to win a trip for five to one of five unlisted locations.

The phone officially goes on sale November 2nd.

LG BL40 New Chocolate review


You know the deal by now: we grab a slab of fresh new hardware, fiddle, play, and tinker with it until exhaustion or boredom is reached, then wax poetic about the whole experience, with a side serving of pictures and videos thrown in. Today’s candidate for a grilling is LG’s BL40, which is now available in Europe. You’ll be familiar with it already from our hands-on look last month, but do join us over at Engadget Mobile where we explore what’s under the glossy hood in more detail, and give you a definitive answer on just how useful that elongated screen really is.

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LG BL40 New Chocolate review originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Oct 2009 11:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gateway intros 15.6 and 11.6-inch EC Series laptops: EC58, EC54 and EC14

It’s quite possible that you’ve missed the memo, but Microsoft’s next major operating system launches this week. Along with pretty much every other PC maker on the planet, Gateway is also announcing new laptops that hum along on Windows 7. Starting things off is the 11.6-inch EC14, which gets going at $549.99 and includes a 1.3GHz Pentium Dual Core SU1400 CPU, 1,366 x 768 resolution LED-backlit panel, Intel’s GMA 4500MHD graphics, 4GB of DDR2 RAM, a built-in webcam and multicard reader, 320GB HDD, WiFi, gigabit Ethernet, a trio of USB 2.0 sockets, HDMI output, multi-gesture trackpad and a battery good for around “six to eight hours” of life. The EC58 and EC54 models are 15.6-inchers, with a base model starting at $649.99 and featuring most of the same specs in a larger enclosure. Naturally, the gang will ship on October 22nd, complete with bundles of “Wow!” in tow. Er, wait.

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Gateway intros 15.6 and 11.6-inch EC Series laptops: EC58, EC54 and EC14 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Oct 2009 11:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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SNES / Sega Genesis USB cartridge adapter now available for pre-order

Looks like our old friend, Matthias — the developer of the USB SNES cart reader — is back on the scene, and this time he’s going commercial. His newest project, Snega2USB, adds Sega Genesis, read and write for battery-backed SNES games, open source firmware, and up to four gamepads to the homebrew fave of classic gaming fanatics world o’er. This is a work-in-progress, but all the pieces are in place to have all orders met on the December, 2009 street date. Pre-orders will be taken until October 31 for $90 in the United States or €75 in Europe. Video after the break.

[Via Gadgetoid]

Continue reading SNES / Sega Genesis USB cartridge adapter now available for pre-order

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SNES / Sega Genesis USB cartridge adapter now available for pre-order originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Oct 2009 11:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MetroPCS Launches First 1700 Mhz Smartphone, With $50 Plan

sch-i220.jpg

MetroPCS today launched the Samsung Code SCH-i220, the carrier’s first Windows Mobile smartphone and the first smartphone available to the many MetroPCS customers in major markets like New York City, Philadelphia and Boston.
The Code is the world’s first smartphone with CDMA on 1700 Mhz, the frequency band that Metro and Cricket use in many of their newer cities. It’s a 3G phone, too, running at EVDO Rev 0 speeds. Because 1700 Mhz is a relatively rare band, smartphone manufacturers haven’t been flocking to build phones for that technology. 
Metro’s previous smartphone, the BlackBerry Curve 8330, didn’t have 1700 Mhz and so simply didn’t work in some Metro cities.
T-Mobile also uses 1700 Mhz for their 3G network, and they’ve had more luck getting smartphones on their network for various reasons – they’re bigger, they use the globally-standard UMTS technology, they’re part of a much larger multinational carrier, and their business isn’t as price-oriented as MetroPCS’s is.
The Code is a pretty basic Windows Mobile 6.1 Standard phone with a QWERTY keyboard, 2-megapixel camera, and a 2.4″ 320×240, non-touch screen. Samsung’s “WizPro” interface enhances Windows Mobile by running an icon bar of popular functions across the bottom of the screen, giving you easy access to contacts, settings and multimedia. 
The phone costs $299. Its major selling point, of course, is Metro’s inexpensive $50 unlimited talk, text and data plan, which is much cheaper than competing smartphone plans.
Since there’s no official Microsoft app store for Windows Mobile 6.1 yet, Metro is preloading the Code with their own app store, which is a rebranding of part of Handmark’s Windows Mobile app store. It contains a few hundred apps, with a mix of well-known titles like Zuma and Sim City Metropolis, and Metro-exclusive apps like their MetroNavigator GPS solution. The phone can, of course, download third party apps from other locations as well.

Google Voice voicemails appearing in public search results

We’re not exactly sure what’s going on here, but it certainly seems like at least some Google Voice voicemails are being indexed and made publicly available somehow. If you punch in “site:https://www.google.com/voice/fm/*” as a search string you get a few pages of what appear to be test messages, with a couple eye-opening obvious non-tests scattered in there as well. Dates on these messages range from a couple months ago all the way until yesterday, so this is clearly an ongoing issue — hopefully Google patches this up awful fast.

P.S. – Google Voice transcription accuracy really falls off a cliff when it’s listening to muffled audio, doesn’t it?

Update: Google says it’s changed how shared messages are indexed and made available to public searches, so we’re hoping this was just a one-time thing.

[Via Boy Genius Report]

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Google Voice voicemails appearing in public search results originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Oct 2009 10:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Facebook, Twitter, Zune and Last.Fm on Xbox Live Hands On: Hrm, That’s Interesting

Twitter and Facebook, on your Xbox. It’s weird, like people who put ketchup on their eggs.

Tweet Tweet

Twitter actually makes the most natural jump to the Xbox. It’s a really basic app, with your timeline, search, and trending topics, but it works, largely because the vertical stream is preserved, even if you can only see four (very legible) tweets at a time, so you won’t be power-browsing, TweetDeck style, by any means. It’s slow, and typing’s reeeeeeeally frustrating, like having your eyeballs poked out one pinprick at a time, if you don’t have the chatpad (part of thinks this entire update is all a giant conspiracy to sell more Xbox 360 chatpads). Updates can sometimes take forever to hit your Twitter stream, too. Still, it’s pretty, and works the best of the new apps.

Facebookin’

Facebook uses the standard Xbox tile UI instead of rolling its interface, like Twitter did. Which is disorienting (and disappointing), since you’re browsing through a stream horizontally, one choppily-animated tile at a time. Why is the tile-sliding animation so terrible on a monster console like the Xbox 360? We don’t know. Like Twitter, it’s basic—focused on Newsfeeds. Your groups are ported over, so you can browse their newsfeeds individually, but you literally have to browse one post at a time, which is agonizing, making you far less inclined to comment on updates.

The interface works much better, and feels way more natural, with photo albums. What’s interesting is that, at least in the preview, your friends have to link their Xbox Live and Facebook accounts together themselves in order to show up in the “Xbox Live Friends on Facebook” (and vice versa) pages—you can’t manually go in and link Jason Chen’s accounts so you’ll see them together in your app. That might change though, with the final rollout. (Here’s some video of it, from Kotaku.)

Last.fm

This would be would be waaaaaay better if it could play in the background. It can’t. Meaning once you link your accounts and all of you stations are nicely and automatically ported over, to listen to Last.fm, you just have to sit there and leave it running, with band pictures floating up to your screen every once in a while. Lame. (You can see it in action on Kotaku.)

Zune Video Marketplace

Not a whole lot to write home about yet besides 1080p streams—it’s a video store on Xbox, with movies for rent or purchase, TV shows, trailers—but Zune Video is here and it, um, works. You browse through the standard Xbox interface, like Netflix. We didn’t get a chance to use the possible killer feature—Party mode, where you can watch stuff with your friends—yet, but if anything makes the Zune video store really stand out, that could be it. Previews, alas, didn’t come in at 1080p, even over FiOS, which clearly has the bandwidth to deliver.

All in all, the new apps, they’re interesting, they add something, but with the exception of Zune Video Marketplace, aren’t critical. At least for now.

Original BlackBerry Storm to get flick scrolling, better browsing through firmware update?

Despite Verizon’s best efforts to ignore the obvious, RIM’s BlackBerry Storm2 is not only official, it’s (un)officially destined for Big Red’s airwaves. If you’re one of those slightly disgruntled Storm 9530 owners, however, you could be looking at a rather nice firmware update coming your way in the near future. According to phoneArena, the Storm and Storm2 will eventually be “practically identical” in terms of software, with a forthcoming update to add flick scrolling, tabbed browsing and threaded texting to the original. Of course, we should probably wait for VZW to confirm the existence of the Storm2 before expecting any formal word on this, but feel free to go about your day with cautious optimism.

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Original BlackBerry Storm to get flick scrolling, better browsing through firmware update? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Oct 2009 10:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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