Nokia teases ‘everyone connect,’ keep your hands to yourselves until then

No idea what this is but the Twitterverse has an inkling that we’ll see Ovi Maps integrated with Nokia Messaging. Jury’s still out on hardware like, say, the N8-00 — though as the rumored flagship S^3 device we’d expect its reveal to be a bit more formal than a countdown.

Nokia teases ‘everyone connect,’ keep your hands to yourselves until then originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Apr 2010 07:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Brownie Points for Updated Box-Camera

kodak_brownie

These cute, brightly colored plastic cameras are modern-day versions of the Kodak Box Brownie, the camera that brought photography to the masses. The concept design is set to commemorate the upcoming 2012 Olympics.

George Eastman’s design has been shrunken slightly, and jazzed up with some candy-colors, but otherwise the design remains mostly intact. The biggest change is the inclusion of an electronic pop-out flash, easy to do thanks to all the spare space left in the box after removing the film-shooting parts.

The new Brownie, designed by James Coleman, will give you an idea of how primitive and mysterious cameras once were. First, there is no screen, either for shooting or for playback, so you have the same delayed gratification that comes with film. To see what you’re trying to shoot, you peer through one of two holes on adjoining sides of the box. These can be used in portrait or landscape modes, and show a reflected image from the two smaller lenses at the front.

These flank the main lens, a fixed aperture design which is focus-free. In fact, the only user-operated control is the big ol’ shutter release, which sits low, down by your thumb as you hold it and stare into the hole on top. You can also flip up a pair of square frames to form a straight-on sports finder, although with the optical finders it is not particularly useful.

The only thing I don’t like is the face on the front, which makes this look more like a Happy Meal gift than a toy for adults. Still, it does look like a lot of fun, and I’d certainly try it out if it were indeed the price of a box of McNuggets.

Kodak Brownie Revived For The 2012 Olympics [Yanko. Thanks, Radhika!]


Windows 95 on iPad completes the Bill Gates vision (video)


Ok, ok, it’s just Windows 95 running in an x86 emulator according to its creator. But even with such clumsy performance you know you love seeing it. Party like its 1995 without the Aqua Net after the break.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading Windows 95 on iPad completes the Bill Gates vision (video)

Windows 95 on iPad completes the Bill Gates vision (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Apr 2010 07:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Preparing iPad Rival [Apple Vs Google]

Confirming the rumors, and after dismissing the iPad as nothing more than a large phone, Google is getting ready its own tablet computer. At least, that was what Google CEO—and Steve Jobs’ own personal Judas—Eric Schmidt is saying. More »

Panasonic Announces Micro Four Thirds Camcorder

ag-af100_illust-new

Panasonic is dead serious about Micro Four Thirds, the big-sensor format that it has up until now been stuffing into small, mirrorless stills cameras. Yesterday it announced a M4/3 camcorder, a video camera which can use the whole range of M4/3 lenses.

The M4/3 sensor is a lot bigger than those in both digicams and many consumer camcorders. This means you get some sweet, shallow depth-of-field for Hollywood-like out-of-focus backgrounds. Panasonic is calling the new AG-AF100 camera “professional”, but it is more like a high-end prosumer model in features.

The recording format is AVCHD/H.264, an efficient and high-quality codec. The camera shoots 1080p at 24p (the frame-rate of film-based movie-cameras) and stores it on two SDHC cards. You also get a choice of other sizes and speeds. As for sound, there is a built-in stereo microphone along with a pair of XLR-inputs, and the camera supports Dolby-AC3. In short, it ticks all the boxes it needs to.

But the best part is the fact that the camera uses the M4/3 lens-mount. This means that, with cheap adapters, you can use pretty much any 35mm-format lens out there. And because movie-makers tend to prefer manual focus and exposure, there really is no penalty to using ancient Nikon or Canon lenses. As an extra bonus, fast, second-hand prime lenses are a fraction of the cost of new movie lenses.

The camera will be available by the end of the year, for a still-undecided price. Hopefully it will also look a little more real than the CGI-rendering above.

Press release [DP Review]

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Intel, Motorola, Samsung and more join forces to support WiMAX 2

You probably have yet to experience its original incarnation, but with mere months left before the IEEE finally decides on the standard for the improved 802.16m version of WiMAX, a group of companies has finally stepped forward to support the new protocol, and solidify that nice, marketable “WiMAX 2” name while they’re at it. Dubbed the WiMAX 2 Collaboration Initiative (or WCI for short), Alvarion, Beceem, GCT Semiconductor, Intel, Motorola, Samsung, Sequans, XRONet, ZTE and ITRI intend to, well, collaborate to make sure the new protocol can compete with LTE, while our old friends Sprint and Clearwire — who are keeping their options open in the 4G wars — simply cheer them on. Hit the source link for invigorating quotes from each company involved.

Intel, Motorola, Samsung and more join forces to support WiMAX 2 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Apr 2010 07:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony announces second-gen W-Series Walkman

Sony to release an update to the fitness-friendly W-Series Walkman. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-12519_7-20002159-49.html” class=”origPostedBlog”MP3 Insider/a/p

Seagate ships portable drive with movies

Seagate, in collaboration with Paramount Pictures, ships its new FreeAgent Go Portable Drive with 21 movies preloaded.

Microsoft One and Two Project Pink phones appear in Verizon database? (updated)

What’s this? Two devices apparently of Microsoft origin in Verizon’s database prefixed by MSONE and MSTWO on the eve of Microsoft’s big presser — an event widely thought (and even announced) to be the unveiling of Project Pink. We’re also seeing Sharp, the Sidekick manufacturer named on the Turtle and Pure looking handsets that passed through the FCC. Really though, “One” and “Two?” Surely those words are just placeholders awaiting today’s event before getting properly named, right? Who knows… when you’re believed to be launching a competing platform against your own Windows Phone 7 OS while simultaneously keeping the WinMo 6.x dreams alive for businesses, hell, anything goes.

Update: 9 to 5 Mac is suggesting that the actual retail names of the devices will be Kin. As in next of, as in family. Since the company has an event in just a few hours, we’ll obviously know for certain very soon, but it does look likely given the use of Kin in the listing above.

Microsoft One and Two Project Pink phones appear in Verizon database? (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Apr 2010 06:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The $5 iPad Dock

e4-ipad-dock

For €4 (just over $5, or the price of a cup of expensive Seattle chain-store coffee), you could have yourself this rough but functional iPad dock. It comes from David Rudolph Bakker, Martijn Aslander and Simon Blazer, last seen in the pages of Gadget Lab with their ingenious binder-clip cable keeper.

Or, with an old block of wood, a saw, a chisel and a half-hour of your time, you could make your own free wooden dock. It is simply a chunk of ild tree with a channel cut out to hold the iPad at an angle, and a further section hacked out so you can get to the home button. It is limited: you can’t charge the iPad if you’re using it in portrait mode. Likewise, the speaker could get a little muffled by the wood.

But given that the iPad’s battery runs out just this side of forever, and that wood is both light and non-scratching, and this could be a great travel-stand. The €4 version, from Holland (it is inspired by the country’s national shoe, the clog), will be available soon, and by then David assures us it will be more polished (literally). Until then, get cutting.

€4 iPad Dock [Lifehacking. Thanks, David!]