Zoom’s high-fidelity Q3 pocket camcorder ships to America

Hailed as the first and only handheld video recorder to record HD audio, Zoom’s Q3 Handy Video recorder is definitely a unique offering amongst the legions of me-toos. After being announced in July and tickling our senses right around a month ago, the Q3 has finally begun to ship en masse to eager consumers. Just in case you’ve forgotten, this bugger records 24-bit/48 kHz audio via a pair of condenser microphones, gets powered by two AA cells and captures video at 640 x 480 (30fps). There’s also a 2.4-inch 320 x 240 LCD and an SDHC card slot, though you’ll have to shell out $249 in order to get this kind of technology into your own pocket. Order up, kids!

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Zoom’s high-fidelity Q3 pocket camcorder ships to America originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Oct 2009 05:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sanyo Camcorders Use Apple’s New iFrame Movie Format

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Apple is aiming to make camcorders more friendly to the user. Or at least, it wants to make importing and editing video easier. To this end, it has revealed a brand-new video format called iFrame, and it is included in the latest iMovie update. This would be useless on its own, but Apple has persuaded Sanyo to have its cameras default to iFrame, and two models have already been announced.

Why bother? Because many video cameras shoot in formats that cannot be directly edited. When you hook up a camera to iMovie (or another program) and it says it is “importing”, it is converting the file to a format which can be edited. IFrame, on the other hand, can be edited directly as it comes from the camera.

The format uses H.264 as its video codec, and AAC for audio, capturing at 960×540 and 30fps. It’s interesting that whilst many people complain about Apple’s solutions being proprietary, it is usually not the case. the Mac and iPhone have an OS built on Unix, Safari uses the open-source webkit and both H.264 and AAC are championed by Apple, but not owned by it.

The size is an odd one, though, especially as both Sanyo’s cameras shoot 1080p at 60fps. We imagine that the iFrame mode will be a little like shooting jpegs on a RAW-capable camera — easy and quick to use straight from the camera but also of lower quality. Still, it’s helpful when buying a camera to know it will work with the software you have, and as the boxes have a big iMove logo on the side (something you’d never see on an Apple box) you’ll know right away.

iMovie ‘09: About the iFrame Video format [Apple]
Product page [Sanyo VPC-FH1ABK]
Product page [Sanyo VPC-HD2000ABK]


Microsoft recovers ‘most, if not all’ Sidekick customer data

Steve Ballmer must have busted out his secret stash of magic dust, as Microsoft has just come out with the announcement that it has recovered “most, if not all, customer data” that was lost during the recent Sidekick debacle. Following the wildly embarassing fiasco attributed to a “system failure that created data loss in the core database and the back-up,” T-Mobile and Redmond have “rebuilt the system component by component” and now promise to restore data to affected users in the most expedient fashion possible. Guess that means you won’t be getting $100 from T-Mobile for losing your Tetris high scores after all.

[Thanks, Abe G.]

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Microsoft recovers ‘most, if not all’ Sidekick customer data originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Oct 2009 04:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Vodafone puts BlackBerry Storm2 up for 26 October preorder

And it’s out. The BlackBerry Storm2 just made its first official carrier appearance with Vodafone. The promising followup to the much maligned BlackBerry Storm will be free on pay-monthly contracts from £35 on up. Specs include a 3.25-inch 360 x 480 pixel capacitive SurePress (new and improved) touchscreen display, 802.11b/g WiFi and 2100MHz UMTS/HSPA data, 256MB of flash memory (double that of the original Storm), 2GB of onboard memory with microSDHC expansion, 3.5-mm standard headset jack, 3.2 megapixel camera with video recording, built-in GPS, Bluetooth 2.1, and 1400mAh battery giving about 6 hours of 3G talk. BlackBerry OS 5 too, of course, when it lands on October 15th in the UK, Ireland, Germany, The Netherlands, and Spain — France, Italy, and South Africa in time for Christmas.

Update: Now on official RIM page too with a detailed comparison against the original Storm.

[Thanks, James]

Read — Press Release
Read — Pre-order

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Vodafone puts BlackBerry Storm2 up for 26 October preorder originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Oct 2009 04:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola to introduce eight OPhones on China Mobile next year, celebrate intensely

Motorola may be pinning its comeback hopes on the CLIQ here in America, but it obviously has some rather large plans for the world’s largest carrier, too. An admittedly perplexing report has surfaced purporting that the creator of the iconic i776, er, RAZR, is fixing to distribute not one, not two, but eight OPhones to China Mobile next year. For those unaware, OPhone is an Android-based OS tailor made to operate on the aforesaid carrier and cater to its customers, and to date, quite a few other manufacturers have jumped on board over there. Sadly, no actual details about the eight Moto handsets were given, so it looks like it’s just you, a cup of joe and your hyperactive imagination for the time being.

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Motorola to introduce eight OPhones on China Mobile next year, celebrate intensely originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Oct 2009 03:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Third Spaces in Japan: Karaoke

This is the second in a series of examples of “third spaces” in Japan, locations that act as living/relaxation/work areas that are not usually possible in typical Japanese homes. They are a response to multiple aspects of modern Japan, from small living quarters to a need for privacy from multi-generational family living arrangements. We’ll be looking at a wide variety of third spaces from internet cafes to business centers away from work.

We previously looked at a train-themed cafe in Akihabara but now we turn our gaze to that ubiquitous icon of Japanese modern living – karaoke.

Karaoke (literally 空, or から, meaning “empty”, and オケ, “oke”, an abbreviated form of “orchestra”), is so synonymous with Japan that it has become a cliche. Karaoke is one of the most exported aspects of the culture; you can sing along to your favorite tunes in Korea, London, America, South Africa…you name it. Only, it’s not the karaoke the Japanese know and love.

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In the west karaoke is resigned to special bars or to events. It is popular with students due to the necessity to drink a lot beforehand, and with bars and pubs that can hire out the equipment and hold a “karaoke night” to attract a crowd.

In Japan there are two basic types of karaoke venue.

Number one, and this is closest to its western counterpart, is the karaoke bar. Here you sit in the, usually tiny, counter, and belt out your song surrounded by friends and locals, under the watchful gaze of the mama-san. This type of karaoke experience is smoky, intimate and social. You mix with new people; the alcohol and the cramped quarters cause you to loose inhibitions. But they can also cause you to loose other things too, namely the coins in your wallet. These bars are often, but not always, essentially “snack bars”, especially if you are given nuts or finger food and served by a woman. And all this will come with a hefty table charge. This kind of karaoke is basically like going to a special bar; it is a bar experience distinctly Japanese, but it is a bar experience.

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The second kind of karaoke space is closer to the “third spaces” that this series is all about. This the karaoke box. These tall, often narrow buildings can be seen in major commercial centers, in quieter residential areas, and even in the countryside. They ain’t pretty but contain a plethora of mini cubicle rooms for you and your friends to enjoy a private party. The convenience and price are big factors behind the popularity of karaoke towers, and that they allow the shyer singers the chance to croon in privacy. They are popular with youngsters, couples on dates and even families.

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And the privacy also lends the karaoke room a slightly seedier face as well. After all, what goes on behind closed doors is a matter just for the occupants. The music may be playing but not everyone is singing. Don’t bat an eyelid if you see an old geezer with a high school-age lass, that’s just enjo kosai. Anyone who has wandered the anonymous corridors of numbered doorways in a karaoke box will see the resemblance to that other archetypal Japanese “third space”, the love hotel.

For those of you who wish to try karaoke at home, the Japan Trend Shop stocks the Noiseless USB Karaoke Microphone. Karaoke box interior images are from Karaoke Utahiroba, one of the many chain karaoke outlets in Japan.

Giant Android eclair delivered to Google by even bigger nerds (video)


By now you should be familiar with Google’s confectionary codenames for its Google Android OS: version 1.5 (Cupcake), 1.6 (Donut), 2.0 (Eclair) and version x.x (Flan). What you probably didn’t know is that Google honors each release by dropping a steaming hot foam facsimile onto its front lawn. Historically, the arrival of the giant Donut at the GooglePlex was followed by the 1.6 developer release of Android just a few days later. Don’t get too excited though, last we heard Eclair wouldn’t arrive until Q2 of 2010 for consumers. Video and another view of the nerds “gone wild” just after the break.

[Via TechCrunch]

Continue reading Giant Android eclair delivered to Google by even bigger nerds (video)

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Giant Android eclair delivered to Google by even bigger nerds (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Oct 2009 01:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Acer debuts stylish, multitouch-enabled Aspire Z5610 all-in-one PC

We had heard that Acer had some touch-enabled Windows 7 devices in the works, and it looks like the company is now finally starting to deliver on that promise, and then some, with its new Aspire Z5610 all-in-one PC. Boasting a 24-inch HD touchscreen with full multitouch support, this one rounds things out with some decent if unremarkable specs, including a Pentium Dual Core E5300 processor, ATI Mobility Radeon HD4570 graphics, 4GB of RAM, and a 320GB hard drive, among other standard fare. It’s the design of the desktop that’s sure to turn the most heads, however, and while Acer’s claim of it being a “timeless piece” might be a bit of a stretch, there are certainly plenty of touches that are a cut above the rest — we’re especially curious to see how the illuminated strip between the LCD and soundbar works (it’s designed to light up the keyboard in the dark). Best of all, this one packs an MSRP of just $899, and should be available sometime this holiday season.

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Acer debuts stylish, multitouch-enabled Aspire Z5610 all-in-one PC originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Oct 2009 01:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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With the Cliq, Moto does Android proud

Just a few weeks after its splashy debut, Moto graced us with a review model of its first Google Android phone, the Motorola Cliq. Though our first impressions were mixed, we can report …

Originally posted at Android Atlas

RIM BlackBerry Storm 2 previewed

Let’s be honest. Research In Motion’s first foray in the world of the touch-screen smartphones wasn’t exactly a smashing success. The RIM BlackBerry Storm was riddled with bugs and performance …

Originally posted at Dialed In Podcast