Keepin’ it real fake, part CCXLVIII: Xderia X2 packs 2X the KIRF

Sony Ericsson’s Xperia X2 may have been delayed until next month, but official delays have never held back the inevitable KIRF hordes, as exemplified by this intriguing “Xderia X2.” Not content with simply approximating SE’s stylish QWERTY slider, this one goes the extra mile with a KIRF edition of Windows Mobile, not to mention some impressive specs like a 12.1 megapixel camera, dual SIM card slots, and a built-in FM radio — which may or may not match the phone’s actual specs. No word on a price just yet, but we’re guessing you’ll be able to buy anywhere from four to fourteen of these for the price of an actual X2.

Keepin’ it real fake, part CCXLVIII: Xderia X2 packs 2X the KIRF originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 Dec 2009 16:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ex-Mac Cloner Psystar Opens T-Shirt Business

picture-14Florida startup Psystar has switched its business model from selling ugly Mac clones to selling ugly t-shirts.

Psystar, which recently lost its year-and-a-half-long legal battle with Apple, is selling t-shirts on its website instead of generic PCs hacked to run the Mac operating system. The company is accepting donations, too.

In a blog post, Psystar said it plans to ask the court to clarify legality surrounding Rebel EFI, a downloadable piece of software that enables users to create their own Hackintoshes. Apple in mid-December won a permanent injunction effectively banning Psystar from selling clones and tools that assist consumers in creating Hackintoshes. But alas, Rebel EFI was not explicitly brought up in the case, and Psystar is seeking clarity.

Psystar’s attorney K.A.D Camara told Wired.com that the startup also plans to appeal the summary judgment and proceed with an anti-trust suit filed against Apple in October 2008.

Psystar agreed in a settlement to pay Apple $2.7 million in damages, but it won’t have to give a dime until the appeals process is complete. That means Psystar better hope to sell about 200,000 t-shirts, which cost $15 apiece.

Psystar’s t-shirts read “I sued Psystar…and all I got was a lousy injunction,” meaning their direct audience is Apple staff. And unfortunately Apple only has about 35,000 employees. Somewhat of an oversight, but one you would expect from a company that sold fewer than 1,000 Hackintosh computers after promising investors it would ship millions of units by 2011.

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Online iPhone sales back on in New York City

We may never know exactly why AT&T suspended online sales of the iPhone to residents of New York last night, but it doesn’t matter anymore — the site’s been updated and online sales are back… online. In other news, previously spiking sales of pants in the New York area have suddenly flatlined.

Online iPhone sales back on in New York City originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 Dec 2009 16:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MetroPCS adds Kyocera Laylo, Domino

The Domino and Laylo phones offer simple designs and basic features. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://www.cnet.com/8301-17918_1-10422380-85.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Dialed In/a/p

My Second iMac Is Busted, Too

My first iMac arrived with a jaundiced screen, so Apple sent me a replacement. After unpacking, it took only moments for me to diagnose the system as being flawed in the exact same manner. Yes friends, I’m two for two!

Just like my first 27-inch iMac, the screen is inflicted with the yellow screen issue, a color reproduction failure that moves from cool on top to warm on the bottom. Receiving two faulty products in a row is making it hard to believe that this issue isn’t every bit as common as the Apple message boards would make it seem.
I’ll admit, this iMac’s screen isn’t nearly as bad as my first’s. The warm color gradient is subtler and more localized to the center. But the naked eye can see it, especially on a big, white webpage. And there’s absolutely no reason that a consumer should be paying $2000+ ($2200 in my case) on any product that’s anything but perfect.

Personally speaking, this setback means I’ll have gone a month after dropping a few grand from my bank account without anything to show for it. A normal person might settle with product flaw, worn down by packing, shipping and customer service. The most sane would probably just file for a return.

I have a lot of respect for this “most sane” category.

Me? I basically mail back review products for a living, and the joy of this new toy has long been spoiled. So I’m going to do my damndest to bankrupt Apple with return shipping. I will send back these iMacs as many times as it takes for them to build one correctly. And every single time that they screw it up, I’m going to air their dirty laundry here. Feel free to read it or don’t. It’s my opinion that Apple’s cyclical production issues can’t be swept under the rug any longer.

You see, I received a lot of email after my initial problem post. About 80% of it was thanking me for bringing the issue to light. But about 20% suggested that this was somehow MY fault, you know, for not waiting for Apple to work out the kinks in a new line before purchasing it. As an educated consumer, I should have known that the first X% of Apple purchasers always get screwed by manufacturing problems, and my bad fortune was the result of a sort of consumer Darwinism.

I was simply unfit to buy the “ultimate iMac” with “the ultimate display.”

Because that makes sense—Apple’s lack of QA is my fault. Their inability to supply a functional screen—the centerpiece of this whole freaking product—is something I should have anticipated. Seriously, can you imagine if they built anything more crucial? Airbags? Plane engines? Condoms? The world would never turn a blind eye.

Apple, it’s this simple: Get your shit together.

1. Openly acknowledge the issue.
2. Apologize (mock sincerity is fine if the public doesn’t notice).
3. Fix the problem, which I’m betting is the LCD itself.
4. If you can’t fix the problem, then just test for it at the factory. (It takes about 2 seconds.)
5. If the computer has a yellow screen, don’t ship it out.

In fact, I don’t even expect steps 1 or 2. If you just did 3-5, nobody would have even cared in the first place.

Ten years of BlackBerry

The year is 1999. Bill Clinton is the President of the United States, gas is 94 cents a gallon, Bondi Blue iMacs are a staple in dorm rooms across the country, and Microsoft is trying to bring the desktop Windows experience to the pocket, pushing its Palm-size PC concept (after Palm had quashed the original “Palm PC” branding) on a world still feeling jilted by the failures of the Apple Newton. 3Com subsidiary Palm and its heavyweight licensee Handspring have figured out something interesting about the still-nascent PDA market, though: people like simplicity. If an electronic organizer does what it says it’s going to do, keeps your information in sync with your PC, runs for forever and a day on a single set of batteries, and does it all with a minimum of fuss, people will buy. It’s an exciting, challenging, and rapidly-changing era in the mobile business.

Continue reading Ten years of BlackBerry

Ten years of BlackBerry originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 Dec 2009 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Bought iSlate.com — Perhaps for a Tablet?

tablet_5a1Clever online sleuthing over the weekend led to the discovery of iSlate.com, a domain Apple purchased in 2007. Could the company’s rumored tablet device be called the iSlate?

Wired’s friend Arnold Kim of MacRumors sniffed out the domain-name registrant history, which revealed Apple as the owner of iSlate.com as of 2007. The website is currently inactive, but Kim speculates Apple could be reserving the domain for a tablet product, which is rumored for a January 2010 announcement.

The “Whois” record of iSlate.com provides solid evidence that Apple bought the domain in 2007 and subsequently transferred the address to MarkMonitor.com, a registrar that handles domain registrations for several companies, including Apple. The purpose of the move is presumably to help obscure products prior to release.

That said, it’s still inconclusive that iSlate will be the name of an Apple touchscreen tablet. (It is, after all, still inconclusive that an Apple tablet even exists.) It’s possible iSlate is one of many candidates for a product name — Apple could have chosen several others and purchased domains for those, as well.

But the iSlate mystery only gets more interesting. Further investigation by TechCrunch revealed iSlate was filed as a trademark in 2006 by an unknown Delaware-based company called Slate Computing. No such company appears with a quick web search. The theory is Slate Computing is a dummy corporation set up to conceal Apple as the true owner of the trademark. Apple employed a similar trick with the iPhone trademark, originally filed by Ocean Telecom Services, another anonymous Delaware-based company.

Finally, the iSlate trademark application reveals the signatory of Regina Porter, who, according to her LinkedIn profile, is Apple’s senior trademark specialist. It seems safe to conclude that the owner of the iSlate trademark is Apple.

Comes off as awfully protective, doesn’t it? However, it’s difficult to tell whether secretly registering trademarks and domains so far in advance is a standard procedure for Apple when deciding on product names. We’re in the process of contacting lawyers to get their perspective on Apple’s moves. We’ll keep you posted.

Long story short, Apple at least considered iSlate as the name for a product and took measures to stealthily reserve it. Whether Apple delivers an iSlate next month, this is a marvelous example of internet-detective work.

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Photo illustration of a fake Apple tablet courtesy of Sergio Cabral


Robot gymnast starts training for 2050 Olympics

Well, it looks like robot gymnast training is just like anything else. Two steps forward, one step back.

Continue reading Robot gymnast starts training for 2050 Olympics

Robot gymnast starts training for 2050 Olympics originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 Dec 2009 14:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Chrome OS Netbook Specs Leaked?

gchrome

Last month, Google unveiled Chrome OS, a lightweight browser-based operating system for netbooks. But the company didn’t offer any details on what kind of device could run the OS.

Now specs for a netbook with Chrome OS have leaked and it looks pretty.

The Google netbook will reportedly have a 10.1-inch high definition multi-touch display, a 64 GB solid state drive, 2 GB RAM and connectivity features such as Wi-Fi, 3G, Bluetooth and Ethernet port, says British publication IBTimes.

The netbook is also likely to have an Nvidia’s Tegra system-on-a-chip that can boost audio and video capabilities of the device significantly and be powered by an ARM CPU. It’s not clear whether these are just minimum requirements for a Chrome OS netbook or if all Chrome OS netbooks will adhere exactly to it.

Google announced the creation of Chrome OS at an event on the company’s Mountain View, California-campus in November. The Linux-based Chrome OS promises blazing fast boot times, at around seven seconds.

Chrome OS will only be available on specific hardware from companies Google has partnered with. Last month, Google said it is talking to hardware manufacturers to create the netbook in line with its specifications and design.The company has also said it plans to have Chrome OS ready for the holiday season of 2010.

Netbooks running the OS could be available for less than $300, say reports, thanks to either subsidies from Google or from telecom carriers such as AT&T that are likely to offer it with a two-year data contract.

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Photo illustration: Charlie Sorrel/Wired.com; Original photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Pedal Brain iPhone kit smartens up your bicycle

Cyclists already have a range of dedicated devices to choose from that will help them with their training, and it looks like they’ll soon have an iPhone app / accessory kit to call their own as well. While the folks behind it are apparently still working on the finishing touches, they’ve nonetheless decided to get official with their so-called Pedal Brain kit, which more or less promises to be a Nike+ alternative for cyclists. That means it comes with an accessory (a case) that relies on the ANT+ wireless protocol to relay all the necessary information form your bike, which in turn is processed and analyzed by the Pedal Brain app (all of which will also work with an iPod touch). Pedal Brain also goes one step further with a coaching component, which will actually let you make your own training plans and sell them through the app (you’ll also be able to determine the price, but Pedal Brain will apparently take a $4 a month cut). No word on an exact price or launch date for the kit itself just yet, but it will apparently sell for somewhere between $130 and $200 (or more if you want the spiffy carbon fiber case).

Pedal Brain iPhone kit smartens up your bicycle originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 Dec 2009 14:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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