Apple iPad Dock Connector to VGA Adapter not accomplishing the simplest of tasks

Look, there’s no arguing that Apple charges a boatload for its first-party adapters, and this isn’t the first time that one of those overpriced dongles has caused an uproar (Mini DisplayPort to Dual-Link DVI Adapter, anyone?). But when the company trots out an iPad Dock Connector to VGA Adapter and promises to enable users to “see their videos and slideshows on the big screen,” it should probably make a few clarifications. Instead, more than a handful of consumers are revolting over on Apple’s own webstore, noting that any video laced in any type of DRM (iTunes flicks and Netflix streams included) won’t output at all. Contrary to popular belief, this adapter doesn’t actually mirror the iPad’s display, which is fairly absurd in our eyes — teachers are even stating that Apple’s own Pages and Keynote apps won’t output via the dongle, making this effectively worthless for blowing up presentations for all to see. We (sort of) get the DRM thing, but not including support in your own presentation app? Unacceptable. A tipster has noted that Apple informed him that “it’s up to the app makers to enable the video out function,” so we suppose all that’s needed to solve a lot of controversy is for some switch to be flipped in some direction. Any other hang-ups with this thing that the world should know about? Drop ’em in comments below.

[Thanks, Tony]

Update: A few tipsters have noted that Keynote does in fact work here. Here’s a growing list of what does and doesn’t work with the adapter.

Apple iPad Dock Connector to VGA Adapter not accomplishing the simplest of tasks originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Apr 2010 16:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Scientists Steer Car With Their Eyes

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Scientists in Germany have developed computer software that lets them steer a car with their eyes, ScienceDaily reports.
eyeDriver, the prototype software application, was designed by computer scientists at Freie Universitat Berlin in collaboration with SensoMotoric Instruments, the report said. The program collects the driver’s eye movements using SMI’s HED4, an upgraded bicycle helmet, and then converts them into control signals for the steering wheel.
The helmet itself contains two cameras and an infrared LED, and hooks into a laptop computer. One camera points forward, while the other films the eye’s movements; the infrared light supports the eye camera, according to the report.
So far, the software only works with the steering; the car’s throttle and brakes aren’t yet controllable in this manner.

Neofonie’s WePad tablet shown to German journalists, seems legit

Though “Neofonie” is the most apt name for a vaporware company we’ve heard since “Phantom,” it’s looking like that very firm’s 11.6-inch WePad tablet is actually the real deal. Fed up with all the skepticism it has received of late, the German firm just held a press conference in Berlin to show off a pair of working devices and allay our fears. Netbooknews.de was on the scene, and they took a pair of high-res videos that prove the tablets do, in fact, have a working (though somewhat laggy) touchscreen, and that fancy-pants vertical UI is quite functional. Full screen YouTube videos were choppy, but they played, and the Atom N450 CPU loaded OpenOffice and flipped through browser windows without a hitch. But don’t take our word for it — watch the whole 25-minute demonstration after the break, plus a bonus video from AndroidPIT. Then, if you’d be so kind, tell us what the nice company reps are saying.

Continue reading Neofonie’s WePad tablet shown to German journalists, seems legit

Neofonie’s WePad tablet shown to German journalists, seems legit originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Apr 2010 16:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Car Review: Ford Fiesta Takes Sync to the Next Level

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Ford’s on a roll. The subcompact 2011 Ford Fiesta is a treat to drive. It gets 40 mpg on the highway. And it kicks off an enhanced version of Ford Sync that gives you more neat and free features including turn-by-turn navigation – rudimentary but still free.

Ford faces three related challenges: Convincing Americans to pay a premium ($14,000 base, approaching $20,000 nicely equipped) for a subcompact car; convincing Americans a Ford-branded car is as good as a Honda or Toyota; and convincing us this Fiesta is better than its namesakes of the 1980s-1990s.

Nokia N8’s full spec sheet leaks, nothing shocking spied within

Just one day after finding a pretty thorough review of the Nokia N8 on a Russian website, the full spec sheet seems to be floating about as well — also from a Russian source. Unwired View‘s published what it believes to be the full N8 spec sheet. So what do we find contained within? Well, no shockers, to be sure, but here’s what we know: the phone will boast a 3.5-inch capacitive touchscreen OLED, a 680MHz CPU, 256MB of RAM, swappable microSD capacity up to 32GB, and a 12 megapixel cam. Now, there are also a few rumored features floating around, which include a DRM-free Ovi music store, and LAN IEEE802.11 b/g — so we’ll let you know for sure when we do if those features are going to hit reality. Until then, hit up the source link to check out the full listing.

[Thanks, Staska]

Nokia N8’s full spec sheet leaks, nothing shocking spied within originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Apr 2010 16:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Comb-shaped business card plays the Stones

MODhair, a rock ‘n’ roll-themed hair salon in Rome, gets a groovy, music business card that plays rock when you run your nail across the teeth.

NVIDIA Verde to sync up desktop and laptop GPU driver releases, generate smiles galore

Good news, mobile gamers — NVIDIA‘s looking out for you and yours, and if you’re tired of lobbying to Congress about the inequities between driver releases for desktop GPUs and driver releases for mobile GPUs, you can finally move on to some other just cause. NVIDIA’s Verde driver program has been a relative success over the years, but it’s about to become a lot more gnarly when the company outs its 256 Series drivers in a few months. At that time, NVIDIA plans to “completely unify its GPU drivers, so mobile and desktop users will be able to get the latest releases simultaneously.” Users won’t find the desktop and laptop drivers in the same package, but we’re sure each one will be clearly marked on the download page. It’s worth noting, however, that these unified releases will only work with laptops featuring discrete GPUs, hybrid solutions utilizing NVIDIA-branded IGPs and Optimus-enabled machines; rigs with multi-vendor solutions (like the Alienware M11x, which uses an integrated set from Intel) won’t be allowed to join the party.

In related news, the upcoming release of the 197.16 driver for laptops will bring along support for external displays with 3D Vision, enabling 3D Vision-ready laptops to pipe 3D content to 3D Vision-ready LCDs with ease. Good news all around, but you’ll have to give those links below a visit if you’re hungry for more.

NVIDIA Verde to sync up desktop and laptop GPU driver releases, generate smiles galore originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Apr 2010 15:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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FCC launches Spectrum Task Force, unused frequencies become wanted criminals

It’s no secret that Julius Genachowski and his posse up in Washington are taking spectrum reallocation very, very seriously in an effort to nip any danger of a wireless broadband crunch in the bud, and the FCC’s taken another small step in that process today with the creation of the “Spectrum Task Force.” It sounds like the Task Force’s main job is to get the entire agency on the same page with regards to its long-term spectrum planning, ultimately playing “a critical role in the execution of the spectrum recommendations in the National Broadband Plan.” In other words, the critical topic of spectrum reallocation isn’t going away — and while Genachowski continues to emphasize his intention to make license sales by TV broadcasters fully voluntary, we could see things starting to get hostile if the broadcast industry’s mood doesn’t change. Unfortunately, we’re not aware of any plans for these guys to actually dress up in SWAT uniforms and ride around on Segways should the need arise. Follow the break for the FCC’s full statement.

Continue reading FCC launches Spectrum Task Force, unused frequencies become wanted criminals

FCC launches Spectrum Task Force, unused frequencies become wanted criminals originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Apr 2010 15:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Fooling face recognition systems with makeup

NYU Graduate student Adam Harvey has discovered that strange makeup patterns can fool face recognition systems. But you’ll have to be OK looking like David Bowie.

BlackBerry Bold 9650 video hands-on

We’ll be very honest with you: unless you’re a Tour user amped to upgrade to something that directly addresses your specific complaints, this video might be of little interest. That said, we were able to browse a little site called Engadget (using the same old non-WebKit browser, of course) over the Bold 9650’s newfound WiFi support, and while it wasn’t about to set any speed records, it’ll take some more comprehensive analysis to understand how much blame the WiFi radio, the hotspot, and the browser’s rendering engine should take, respectively. We totally dig the optical pad over the old trackball (pardon our stupidity in the video where we attempt to keep scrolling beyond the end of the page — it wasn’t the Bold’s fault, honest), and the keyboard is every bit as good as it is on the Tour of old. Check the full, mind-bending experience on video after the break.

Continue reading BlackBerry Bold 9650 video hands-on

BlackBerry Bold 9650 video hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Apr 2010 15:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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