Netflix Now Shipping Wii Instant Streaming Discs To All Users

netflix wii.jpg

Netflix on Monday started shipping Wii instant streaming discs to all members who have requested them. If you have not yet reserved a Nintendo Wii disc, you can sign up for one on the Netflix Wii site.

“All you need is a Netflix unlimited plan starting at $8.99 a month, a Wii console, and a broadband Internet connection,” Jessie Becker, a marketing executive with Netflix, wrote in a blog post. “What is the first movie you are going to instantly watch via Wii?”

Netflix started shipping the discs to a limited number of subscribers in late March, and is now expanding that to all members who request one. When it arrives, insert the disc into your Wii console, and you will be able to stream all of Netflix’s Watch Instantly content to your TV through the gaming console.

Biodegradable 3D glasses coming to theaters?

What appear to be the first biodegradable 3D glasses are expected to be ready to hit theaters this summer.

HTC EVO 4G shows up in Sprint inventory, shots of the accessories surface

Need something to wash that Kin marketing out of your mouth? How about some new tidbits on the superphone to end all superphones? For whatever reason, the HTC EVO 4G has showed up in Sprint’s inventory, a couple months early by all accounts. It’s carrying a completely reasonable $5,555 pricetag, and the appropriate HTC A9292 model number. If that doesn’t quite satiate your EVO 4G thirst, LeakDroid has managed to get shots of those EVO 4G accessories we’ve been hearing about, including a home dock, extended battery case, colored silicon sleeves, and a car dock. Hit up the source link for the shots.

[Thanks to an anonymous tipster for the inventory screen]

HTC EVO 4G shows up in Sprint inventory, shots of the accessories surface originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Apr 2010 15:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceLeakDroid  | Email this | Comments

264 Stupendous Spring Wallpapers [Photography]

In this week’s Shooting Challenge, 264 photos submitted by our readers capture everything wonderful about spring. Take your time to check them all out—it’s a real treat. This is the absolute best group of entries yet. More »

Microsoft Kin One and Kin Two first hands-on!

We’ve just spent some time handling Microsoft’s just-announced Kin One and Kin Two, and we’re not sure what to think; the keyboards have surprisingly good feel, particularly the One (think Palm Pre levels of usability on the One, for example — we wouldn’t be surprised if it was their benchmark) and the phones generally feel pretty solid. In fact, we’d go so far to say that this is a marked improvement in hardware quality for Sharp than any of its Sidekicks ever offered. Problem is, we just can’t get over the fact that the software is extremely limited in its scope — yes, we understand that it’s by design, but does this so-called “upload generation” of socially-connected teens and twentysomethings really want a phone that they can’t download games to? That’s the million-dollar question that Verizon will be answering over the next few months, it seems.

We know that the One is positioned as the slightly lower-end device on account of its 5 megapixel cam (the Two has 8) and half the internal storage, but we actually came away liking it more — it’s the only one of the two that looks truly unique, because the Two just looks like any old landscape slider smartphone (not to say that’s necessarily a bad thing). The front of both devices is graced with a single metallic button to offset an otherwise clean glossy black bezel — this button functions as Back, not Home, so if you’re multiple levels deep into the UI you’ll only be taken back one. You can still hold the button down to get back to the home screen, fortunately, and both the One and Two have dedicated camera buttons — Microsoft’s making no secret of the fact that image and video capture are a huge push for these devices.

Follow the break for more thoughts, shots, and video!

Continue reading Microsoft Kin One and Kin Two first hands-on!

Microsoft Kin One and Kin Two first hands-on! originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Apr 2010 15:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Bloodhound SSC car faster than a speeding bullet

Watch Crave UK’s interview with a member of the team working on Britain’s latest attempt to break the world land speed record.

Microsoft’s Kin: What it is–and isn’t

As CNET predicted, Microsoft is ready to go with two Verizon phones aimed at always-connected “lifecasters.” Here’s a look at what we learned Monday. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://news.cnet.com/8301-13860_3-20002281-56.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Beyond Binary/a/p

Microsoft Kin UI walkthrough

If you’ve managed to pull your eyes away from our no-holds-barred liveblog of Microsoft’s Kin announcement, you might’ve noticed that there are videos up on the official Kin site depicting the UI in all its hipster-lite, storytelling glory. Still, in case you’re not a 20 something living in Brooklyn on your parents’ money while pursuing a career in the arts, we’ve turned those motion video picture things into regular stills for your staid perusal. We even added little descriptors below the galleries, which due to your acute lack of ADD you might even find time to read. We upped the videos after the break as well, just in case you wanted to try your hand at the young-and-hip life.

Gallery: Kin Spot

Kin Spot is a little hot spot at the bottom of the screen almost akin the virtual “binding” in Courier. You can drag pictures, addresses, web pages, and other media into it, and then drag the faces of friends who you want to send the stack of stuff to. Once you tap the spot you can preview your message, add some text, and choose from MMS or email to send it out.

Haven’t had enough? Check out our hands-on and the official announce post! Videos and the rest of the features are after the break.

Continue reading Microsoft Kin UI walkthrough

Microsoft Kin UI walkthrough originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Apr 2010 14:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceKIN.com  | Email this | Comments

Report: iPad to Get Time Magazine Subscriptions

Time_Magazine.jpg

Time Inc, the publisher behind Time and People magazines, is planning to unveil a digital subscription service for the iPad within the next three months, Bloomberg reports.
“It’ll probably be June before we’re able to get it up and running for subscriptions,” Ann S. Moore, chairman and chief executive officer of the Time Warner Inc. division, said in the article. “The iPad doesn’t allow me to do that right now; it’s only a newsstand.”
Right now, Time is charging $4.99 per digital issue on the iPad, which strikes most of us as ridiculously expensive, as it’s four cents more than what the print version costs. Subscription pricing would be a big advance; so would, say, lowering the price of each standalone issue to something lower than what the print edition costs.
(Not a whole lot, necessarily; most of the cost of each issue has to do with things other than printing them and distributing them, though obviously that’s a significant portion).
The report said Time plans to add about one title per month to the iPad app store, and that pricing for the standalone issues will remain the same until the subscription versions launch.

Report: End of the Road for Original iPhone OS Updates

Apple_iPhone_Messaging.jpg

This could be bad news for owners of the original iPhone: Steve Jobs told an inquiring customer over e-mail that the first-gen iPhone (the EDGE-only model with the aluminum back) will not be compatible with iPhone OS 4, Engadget reports.
There’s no official comment from Apple on this yet. If true, that means this will be the first time since the launch of the original iPhone in 2007 that a coming OS update won’t be compatible with earlier hardware. Three years sounds a bit short to dead-end a product when considered in isolation.
But then again, given that you can buy a brand new phone right this moment that can’t get an update to the next version of the OS, that has already been announced, it’s not so bad.