HTC ‘PC70110’ slider tested by FCC with love of AT&T’s 3G, probably Android

Why hello there, Mr. Blue Hue QWERTY slider from HTC. Looks like you’ve found yourself clamped to a complementary orange FCC testing unit, and the related paperwork tells us you’re down with AT&T’s 3G bands. The home, menu, back and search keys up top suggest you’ve Android coursing through the circuitry, but without some official word from your company or a proper name — “PC70110” just doesn’t suit you, really — we’re left only to gaze upon a handful of snapshots. Oh, you tease.

HTC ‘PC70110’ slider tested by FCC with love of AT&T’s 3G, probably Android originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 23:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceFCC  | Email this | Comments

Nokia C2 render spins QWERTY right round

Render plus logo does not a new phone make, but that didn’t keep us from admiring the ridiculous form factor on this supposed Nokia C2. While the ‘C’ label puts the device squarely in dumbphone territory and the only specs available (320 x 240 display, 2 megapixel camera) don’t belabor that point, split-horizontal keyboards have a special place in our heart, and we eagerly await their return. That said, Nokia better get cracking if they want to beat the MOTOSPLIT — the way we see it, they’re one whole leaked, possibly fake render behind the competition.

Nokia C2 render spins QWERTY right round originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 22:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink PhoneArena  |  sourceCiaomondo.it  | Email this | Comments

Switched On: Revamps in Motion

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

Before the iPhone’s release, there were four major smartphone operating systems — Symbian, Palm OS, Windows Mobile, and BlackBerry OS. And after the iPhone’s release, their user interfaces all seemed dated in some way. Palm OS and Windows Mobile have essentially been replaced by new operating systems dubbed WebOS and Windows Phone 7. Symbian stakeholders, though, has decided that there is no need to throw out the past completely, and are instead looking toward a series of evolutionary upgrades to make the now open source operating system more competitive.

This week at RIM’s WES conference, the company is announcing a similar evolutionary path for the BlackBerry OS. Like Symbian, the BlackBerry OS has a reputation for being fast and efficient but has not kept up with many of the aesthetic and input amenities offered by more modern competitors. The challenge will be to preserve what users love about the platform while disrupting it in many ways. For example, while the new BlackBerry OS will be better optimized for touchscreens, reports are that it will not require one.

Continue reading Switched On: Revamps in Motion

Switched On: Revamps in Motion originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 21:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

IR-detecting OLED film could mean cheap night vision on everything

IR-detecting OLED film could mean cheap night vision on everything

Night vision, once the exclusive property of military special forces and dreadlock’d aliens, has over the past few years become far more accessible for the everyman — even everymen with small pockets. But, we could be on the verge of a green-screen revolution if research taking place at the University of Florida, led by Dr. Franky So, comes to fruition. He and his students are working on OLED film that is excited by infrared. Multiple layers of the stuff convert that light into a spectrum that we can see and, if all goes well, could be inexpensively layered onto anything from glasses to car windshields. So is indicating this film could start production in 18 months, but given the accuracy of original predictions regarding monstrously huge yet inexpensive OLED displays we won’t exactly be holding our collective breath over here.

IR-detecting OLED film could mean cheap night vision on everything originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 19:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink OLED-Display.net  |  sourceDiscovery  | Email this | Comments

Vizio’s VBR200W Blu-ray player has Wi-Fi, Netflix; costs less than $200

CNET reviews the Vizio VBR200W, finding it rough around the edges and a little slow, but it delivers a lot of bang for your buck.

Enso’s zenPad finds the funds to become reality

With only 500 units ordered and 30 scheduled to ship on May 8th, it’s clear the Enso zenPad won’t blow up the world, but it’s nice to see a startup make good on its promises. We’ve yet to receive one of the cheap Android tablets ourselves, but we do finally have proof they’re on the way: Enso CEO Alberto Armandi just sent us an official, signed receipt for the purchase of 500 MID-560A tablet computers from OEM SMiT, along with a bank document proving they have been bought and (mostly) paid for. What happens now is threefold: The 250 buyers who held out receive a rebranded SMiT tablet, the 250 who didn’t get their money back (anecdotal reports indicate refunds are underway), and the whole mess hopefully fades into obscurity, letting the three young entrepreneurs who brought us this niche Chinese device get on with their lives. See the slightly redacted proof Enso actually purchased these things, right after the break.

Continue reading Enso’s zenPad finds the funds to become reality

Enso’s zenPad finds the funds to become reality originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 18:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Windows 7 hits 100 million licenses mark, becomes Microsoft’s fastest-selling OS

It’s hardly been a secret that Windows 7 was on track to become Microsoft’s fastest-selling operating system, but the company has just now finally made that designation official, and also revealed that the OS has crossed the magical 100 million licenses sold mark in the process. In other words, that translates to Windows 7 being installed on one in ten of the world’s PCs just six months after it launched, which is pretty darn impressive any way you slice it — or punch it, as the case may be.

Windows 7 hits 100 million licenses mark, becomes Microsoft’s fastest-selling OS originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 17:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink ZDNet  |  sourceSilicon.com  | Email this | Comments

Three new Zune HD apps trickle into the wild

Microsoft releases three new apps for the Zune HD, including Solitaire, Labyrinth, and Stopwatch.

Helpful Tip: Gmail RSS Feeds for Labels

This article was written on March 12, 2008 by CyberNet.

gmail rss feed Gmail has offered an extremely handy feature for quite awhile that lets you subscribe to an RSS feed for your Inbox. The feed URL that you would need to use is http://mail.google.com/mail/feed/atom, but your feed reader will need to support authentication for it to work. For example, Google Reader will not work when subscribing to that feed because it doesn’t let you input your username and password. I believe most desktop clients support this (I know FeedDemon does), and some online ones do as well (Netvibes does).

One thing that I didn’t know, and I have Google OS to thank, was that you can also subscribe to a feed for any Gmail label that you’ve created. All you have to do is throw the label name onto the end of the feed URL like this:

http://mail.google.com/mail/feed/atom/LABELNAME/

Tip: I’ve noticed that you should replace spaces with hypens in label names. Or you can just leave the space in the URL, but don’t try to delete the space because it won’t work.

All you have to do is replace LABELNAME with the name of the label you want to subscribe to. This is useful for me because I have one particular label that reports on the status of my backups that are performed every night. I have these skip the Inbox by default because I don’t want to wake up to fifteen different notifications sitting in my Inbox every morning, but now I can subscribe to a feed so that I don’t forget to check whether everything went through okay.

Copyright © 2010 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

Related Posts:


Nokia says leaked N8 has early software, shouldn’t be reviewed

It looks like Nokia isn’t too happy that its big N8 / Symbian^3 reveal this morning was tarnished by Eldar Murtazin’s harsh preview of the device and OS a few days ago: in a new Conversations blog post, the company says that Eldar’s “salacious headlines” masked the fact that he was looking at a “very early, pre-production prototype with dated software that is not yet ready,” and that it only ships products that are “refined, tested, re-tested, evaluated, [and] tested again.” Now, Eldar says the devices he examined had the very latest hardware and software, so it’s a bit of a he-said-she-said at this point, but there’s no denying that Nokia’s definitely shipped some not-quite-ready-for-prime-time devices lately — the N900 and Maemo 5 shipped in pretty roughed-out form, and the company itself has said the N97 was a “tremendous disappointment.” How that recent history reflects on Symbian^3 and the N8 remains to be seen, but it’s clear that Nokia’s feeling pretty defensive about things; Eldar’s been scooping Espoo’s gear for years now and the company’s never made a peep about it. Either that, or someone at Nokia is just trying to cash in on all this iPhone 4 drama by saying things like “we want our prototype back” and “we are not the Secret Police, and we want to maintain our culture of openness,” but come on — that would be a pretty crass publicity stunt, right? We want to believe.

Nokia says leaked N8 has early software, shouldn’t be reviewed originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 17:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceNokia Conversations, Eldar’s LiveJournal  | Email this | Comments