New doubleTwist for Mac adds built-in Android Market functionality

The latest version of doubleTwist for the Mac (1.0b1b to be precise, available now) adds a whole new Android Market element to the application. Much akin to the iTunes Store for apps, doubleTwist lets you browse Android apps in a beautified, desktop interface, but the “twist” is that you can’t actually download and sync apps with your phone. Instead, the Android Market browser presents QR codes for scanning with your Android phone and directly downloading the apps on the handset like you do already. Sure, desktop app downloads, backup, and syncing would certainly be better, but this is a nice start at least. D-Twist (as we like to call it) is also getting audio playback on the Mac, as well as podcast search and playback, with podcast subscription and syncing coming next (it’s already on Windows). Meanwhile, Windows users will have to wait until the next major version for Android Market. Not to worry, you can do the exact same sort of app browsing at apps.doubletwist.com on any plain old browser. You can even check out the Engadget app right here.

Update: We’re trying to play around a bit with the app, but at the moment the search functionality is broken and most of the QR codes are handing us bad URLs for apps. Hang tight! Every once in a while we see a blip of non-brokenness, but we’re guessing there are some server hiccups at the moment holding us back from Android Market enlightenment.

New doubleTwist for Mac adds built-in Android Market functionality originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Mar 2010 11:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Zune HD gets lower prices, 64GB model

Microsoft announces a 64GB version of the Zune HD along with price drops for the other capacities. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-12519_7-20001493-49.html” class=”origPostedBlog”MP3 Insider/a/p

An Upgrade Sneak Peek for Zunatics

ZuneHDSmartDJ.jpgEarlier this year, Microsoft announced that it would introduce new features to the Zune HD with a firmware upgrade in the spring. No, it’s not ready yet, but Microsoft is back to tantalize with details.

Here’s what you can expect with the free download, which will be available in the next few weeks:

  • Smart DJ: This feature is already available on the Zune, and now it’s coming to the Zune HD. With it, you can create an instant playlist mix in seconds by selecting a song or artist from your collection or the Zune Marketplace and pressing the Smart DJ icon. The software will create a new mix based on your selection. If you have a Zune Pass music subscription, it will pull music both from your collection and the Zune Marketplace catalog.
  • Picks: Another music recommendation feature now coming the Zune HD, Picks analyzes what you listen to and compares that to millions of other Zune users to deliver personalized recommendations. You’ll be able to listen to these recommendations on your Zune HD or on your computer.
  • Zune Marketplace improvements: You’ll now be able to browse and stream music from the Zune Marketplace on your TV when using the Zune HD A/V dock. It sounds like a great way to add a soundtrack to any party.
  • Expanded Video Codec Support: The Zune HD will now play MPEG-4 Part 2 Advanced Simple Profile (ASP) videos, and includes Xvid and AVI support.

Flowchart: How You’ll Inevitably Shatter Your iPad [Broken]

The iPad has a 9.7-inch glass screen. As for when it will slip from your hand and slam face-first into the hard, unrelenting floor or sidewalk, such is only a matter of time. Flowcharts, you see, never lie. More »

Leica M9 hands-on; or, The Tao of Leica

For most amateur photographers, Leica’s legendary M System represents a virtually unobtainable holy grail, a line of cameras so unspeakably expensive, rare, and coveted that even having the opportunity to hold one — much less own one — is a somewhat unrealistic goal. Why is that, exactly? It’s a combination of things, really; sure, Leica’s brand cachet undoubtedly factors into it, but in reality, it’s much, much more than that. For our money, nothing demonstrates that better than a day or two with the M9, the company’s latest flagship rangefinder with an 18 megapixel CCD sensor sourced from Kodak.

And what, exactly, does it feel like to carry $11,695 worth of rangefinder body and lens around? Follow the break.

Continue reading Leica M9 hands-on; or, The Tao of Leica

Leica M9 hands-on; or, The Tao of Leica originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Mar 2010 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wake to the Light with the Verilux Rise Shine Natural Sleep System

RiseAndShine.jpg

Even among the many high-tech alarm clocks constantly coming out, the Verilux Rise & Shine Natural Sleep System stands out. It combines controlled lighting with a vast selection of sounds to let you fall asleep naturally and wake refreshed. The idea is to simulate dawn, and it’s targeted at people who need to wake before the sun comes up.

The light on the Rise & Shine progressively dims or brightens, while decreasing or increasing the selected sounds. Create a sleep schedule just for you.

Besides relying on the Rise & Shine’s own light, you can plug a lamp into the auxiliary lamp connector on the back for supplemental lighting. That extra lamp will also dim and brighten on your schedule. You can also plug an iPod, headphones, and an external antenna into the back.

The Rise & Shine is available now for $249.

ATI Radeon HD 5870 Eyefinity 6 Edition review roundup: novel, but not for everyone

We’ve been fortunate enough to spend a bit of time with an Eyefinity setup before, but up until now, it’s been somewhat of a hassle to get a fully functional six-screen setup into a consumer’s home. Today, AMD is taking the legwork out of the equation with the introduction of the Radeon HD 5870 Eyefinity 6 Edition, a standalone GPU with 2GB of GDDR5 memory and innate support for pushing a half-dozen panels at once. Outside of that, it’s essentially the same card that we saw last September, and based on the cadre of reviews that we rounded up, the doubled memory bank doesn’t do much to boost frame rates. What it does do, however, is enable six-screen gaming. Unfortunately (though understandably), this type of gaming scenario is only meant for a select segment of users, and many critics found the novelty wearing off exceptionally quick. In fact, it wasn’t long before NeoSeeker became fed up with the bezels ruining the experience, and just about everyone agreed that you needed to sit a good half-mile away to really enjoy it. Either way, we’d encourage you to hit up Hot Hardware‘s collection of videos before biting the bullet, buying up an extra five LCDs and then regretting it for the rest of your Earthly life.

Read – Hot Hardware
Read – AnandTech
Read – NeoSeeker
Read – Rage3D
Read – PC Perspective
Read – TweakTown
Read – FiringSquad
Read – Tom’s Hardware
Read – ExtremeTech
Read – Hexus

ATI Radeon HD 5870 Eyefinity 6 Edition review roundup: novel, but not for everyone originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Mar 2010 10:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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When will the second-gen iPad arrive?

A lot of people like the iPad–and want to buy one–but don’t like to buy first-generation products. So how long do we have to hold out for a second-generation model? pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-18438_7-20001473-82.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Fully Equipped/a/p

Canon Rebel T2i / 550D receives plaudit-heavy reviews

We’ve seen plenty of the headline 1080p / 30fps video mode on the Rebel T2i, but what’s been missing till now are the equally comprehensive reviews of this new 18 megapixel shooter‘s other talents. Starting off with image quality — still the bread and butter of any DSLR — Camera Labs informs us that “the EOS 550D / T2i delivered images which were essentially the same as those from the EOS 7D,” describing them as highly detailed and exhibiting no greater noise than can be found on Nikon’s 12 megapixel competitors. An impressive feat, you will agree. Further appreciation is meted out for the newly improved LCD screen on the back, whose 3:2 ratio matches the sensor’s dimensions, but there’s also warning that the 7D retains a significant advantage in terms of ergonomics, weatherproofing, continuous burst mode, and autofocus. Even so, both reviews were happy to pin their “highly recommended” badges on the T2i, and you can discover the more nuanced reasons for doing so at the source links below.

Canon Rebel T2i / 550D receives plaudit-heavy reviews originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Mar 2010 10:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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All Not Well in JooJoo Land

No one thought that taking on Apple’s iPad was going to be an easy task. Fusion Garage, the manufacturer behind the JooJoo (which, in a happier and less litigious time, was called the CrunchPad) has a rather steep uphill battle in its fight to get people to notice its new tablet.

Sure, there was some buzz around the device when the company showed it off late last year, thanks in part to the then-rumored Apple tablet and the company’s very public fight with TechCrunch editor, Michael Arrington, but from the look of things, none of that has actually translated into real sales.

According to documents filed on February 22nd (and subsequently obtained by Gizmodo), the JooJoo hasn’t exactly been selling like hotcakes. The documents only count 90 tablets purchased since pre-orders began in December. Fifteen of those have reportedly been cancelled.

According to a recent note from Fusion Garage, the pre-ordered tablets were set to begin arriving on March 29th. That date has since been pushed back to April 1st (or April 2nd). Perhaps the company can chalk it up to April Fools’?