eMachines ET1831-07 offers a great deal for its low price.
Windows Home Server ‘Vail’ beta now available for download, brings improved UI and streaming options
Posted in: download, Microsoft, now available, NowAvailable, operating system, OperatingSystem, os, sdk, Software, Today's Chili, videoIt’s been a long (long!) time since we’ve caught wind of a substantial Windows Home Server refresh, but for those waiting on pins and needles, we’re thrilled to say that the excruciating wait has finally ended. Sort of. Microsoft has revealed today its public beta of the next version of WHS, code named “Vail.” The primary upgrades / changes include the extension of media streaming outside of the home or office, improvements in multi-PC backup and restore, simplified setup and user experience as well as “significantly” expanded development and customization tools for partner. Beyond that, the company’s playing things pretty close to the chest, but you can feel free to grab a 64-bit copy of the beta starting today and dig in yourself. ‘Course, Microsoft recommends that you install the software on a secondary (read: not important to your livelihood) machine, and on the development front, it’s introducing a new SDK for those who wish to “create add-in applications using Vail’s new extensible programming model.” So, whatcha waiting for? That download is a-callin’, and a brief demo video is just beyond the break.
Update: And we’ve already got our first review — good for those too chicken (or busy, frankly) to completely wipe a second PC just to see how Vail stacks up.
Windows Home Server ‘Vail’ beta now available for download, brings improved UI and streaming options originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Apr 2010 14:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | The Windows Blog, Microsoft Connect [Download Link] | Email this | Comments
The annual Google developers conference is next month and Android fans are getting anxious. While many are expecting to see Adobe Flash 10.1 demonstrated, other features remain a mystery. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://www.cnet.com/8301-19736_1-10473683-251.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Android Atlas/a/p
The Magellan eXplorist GC sits at a price and feature sweet spot that makes it a great entry point into the world of geocaching for the urban outdoorsman.
The Engadget Show – 008: Dr. Dennis Hong, Ryan Block, Rick Karr, ATI Eyefinity, and more!
Posted in: ati, engadget show, EngadgetShow, iPhone, Microsoft, the engadget show, TheEngadgetShow, Today's Chili, videoGreetings humans! The Engadget Show is back in a big way with this latest episode! Josh sits down with the brilliant roboticist Dr. Dennis Hong to chat about his supremely cool yet surprisingly terrifying ‘bots, and then take a look at a few models which the professor brought along with him. Correspondent Rick Karr is back to give us the skinny on why the songwriting industry would like net neutrality to be a little less neutral, and Engadget editor emeritus and GDGT founder Ryan Block joins Josh, Paul, and Ross Miller on the roundtable to delve deep into all things newsworthy in tech. We also got to play with the ATI Eyefinity, one of the craziest gaming rigs you’ll ever see… and then give it away to one lucky audience member! All that, and music from Neil Voss and visuals from NO CARRIER. Okay that’s enough reading… time to watch!
Hosts: Joshua Topolsky, Paul Miller, Ross Miller
Special guests: Dr. Dennis Hong, Rick Karr, Ryan Block
Produced and Directed by: Chad Mumm
Executive Producer: Joshua Fruhlinger
Edited by: Michael Slavens
Music by: Neil Voss
Visuals by: NO CARRIER
Opening titles by: Julien Nantiec
Download the Show: The Engadget Show – 008 (HD) / The Engadget Show – 008 (iPod / iPhone / Zune formatted)
Subscribe to the Show:
[iTunes] Subscribe to the Show directly in iTunes (M4V).
[Zune] Subscribe to the Show directly in the Zune Marketplace (M4V).
[RSS M4V] Add the Engadget Show feed (M4V) to your RSS aggregator and have it delivered automatically.
The Engadget Show – 008: Dr. Dennis Hong, Ryan Block, Rick Karr, ATI Eyefinity, and more! originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Apr 2010 14:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | | Email this | Comments
5 Lessons for Google From Nexus One’s Sluggish Start
Posted in: Android, Google, HTC, nexus one, Phones, t-mobile, Today's Chili, verizonBarely four months after the launch of its first smartphone, the HTC-built Nexus One, Google’s commitment to the device seems to be on the wane.
Google is now pointing customers interested in buying a Verizon version of the Nexus One to the newly launched HTC Droid Incredible phone. The Incredible, which has garnered rave reviews, is on par with the Nexus One in terms of processing power and its vivid OLED display, but packs a more powerful camera.
Google has also said that it is no longer working on “further engineering improvements” to the 3G reception on its Nexus. Some people are taking that as a sign that the search company might not be in the handset business for the long haul.
In Silicon Valley, Nexus Ones are remarkably easy to get hold of, thanks to a generous developer program, liberal press review program and other handouts. Google is literally giving them away, which is never a sign of a hot product.
Indeed, Nexus One sales are barely a blip on the market-share charts. Google sold only 135,000 units in its first 74 days, compared to 1 million iPhones and 1.05 million Droids in those phones’ first 74 days.
But that doesn’t mean the Nexus One is a failure: Far from it. In fact, it’s a sort of inspired experiment, a laboratory for Google to get a taste of the mobile-handset business, up close and personal. For instance, who could have realized the extent to which the lack of a telephone support line would make Google-loving customers unhappy?
The Nexus One gives Google direct-sales experience and customer contact that they don’t get as the developer of the Android OS, which is used on many phones from other manufacturers.
Indeed, competing with those manufacturers may be the last thing Google wants.
“It wasn’t about Google becoming a phone company,” wrote telecom analyst Jack Gold in a recent e-mail newsletter. “It was about Google getting a significant number of devices out there to form a big ‘reference platform’ testing/pilot environment where they could model, test and tune their ecosystem based on the real-life use of the early adopters who would buy NexusOne.”
When we asked Google for a comment, a company spokesperson said, “We’ve said from the beginning that Nexus One is the first of many Google-branded Android handsets. Today’s announcement (steering Nexus One customers to the HTC Incredible on Verizon) doesn’t mean any change on that front.”
Google may not be saying much, but here’s our takeaway on the lessons Google has learned — or should have learned — from the Nexus One.
1) You can’t sell phones like computers.
At first, Google’s strategy to offer a phone just through its website, bypassing traditional wireless-carrier stores, may have seemed innovative and clever. After all, consumers buy almost all their major electronics products online, including computers, storage devices, digital media players and even TVs.
But when it comes to cellphones, users want to touch and play with the product. And they want in-store customer support for these devices.
“Fundamentally, Google’s contention that mobile phones will increasingly be purchased more like other consumer electronics — online and without subsidy — has so far been proven wrong, or at least premature,” said Charles Golvin, an analyst with Forrester Research.
“Very few U.S. consumers will spend $500 for a phone, and even fewer will do so without at least the opportunity to paw the hardware, even if they eventually buy online,” said Colvin.
Even those who purchased the device through Google’s online store faced problems. Nexus One was plagued by consumer complaints, including spotty 3G connectivity, a high early termination fee and poor customer support from Google. Weeks after the device’s launch, Google finally introduced a phone support line. Until then, customers with problems could only e-mail Google and had to wait for hours for a response.
“Google’s technical support for the device has been derided both online and in the media, deservedly,” said Golvin.” In the intensely competitive world of mobile handsets, that just doesn’t cut it.
2) Marketing matters.
All those iPhone and Droid commercials on TV may seem like ego trips for the Apple and Motorola. But marketing plays a big role in phone sales. Smartphones are not just for gadget-heads, so if handset makers want to reach an audience beyond the early adopters, they have to advertise and sell their product through traditional media channels.
Google didn’t capitalize on the initial buzz around the first “Googlephone.” The company never ran a focused marketing campaign that would try to impress on potential customers why the Nexus One was worth considering.
The result has been that few potential customers have had a chance to hear why the phone may be special.
Google also limited itself by offering the device only on T-Mobile. Last month, it extended it to AT&T, but AT&T customers will not get a subsidy on the device and will have to pay the full price — $530 — for the unlocked version of the phone.
3) In mobile phones, Google is a startup.
The search giant’s web products draw in millions of users, which means even half-baked ideas like Google Wave get a full workout from people eager to try the company’s latest new thing.
But in the world of consumer electronics, Google is a rookie, and the company will have to fight hard for its place. It has to build the retail relationships that companies such as Research In Motion and Motorola have created over the years.
While Apple can use its own retail stores to let customers play with the iPhone, Motorola’s Droid is available at Best Buy. When it comes to selling mobile handsets, Google needs to find the right spot for its devices.
Google also has to build relationships with cellphone carriers. In the mobile world, carriers are extremely powerful, and for good reason: Without a good cellular data network, using even the most high-end phone becomes an exercise in frustration. A typical consumer’s choice between a Nexus One and a Droid may come down to which carrier offers it. Google needs to craft its retail strategy with that in mind.
4) The mobile phone ecosystem is complex.
With Android, Google is trying to do with mobile phones what Microsoft did with Windows on PCs. Instead of having a proprietary operating system tied to hardware made by the same company, Google wants to separate the two.
Handset makers such as Motorola and HTC are buying into the strategy. But to help them give up their older operating systems and use Android, Google needs to understand how phones are designed, developed, priced and sold.
It also needs to understand how customers use these products and the challenges they face. Listening to its hardware partners talk about this with PowerPoint presentations is one way. Getting your hands dirty to do it yourself, is another, and that’s what Google did with Nexus One.
“At 200K to 300K or so devices deployed, think of all the feedback they can get on real world operations and user requirements,” said Gold. “It’s a massive number of test subjects.”
With Nexus One customers, Google not only gets to test and tune the device’s OS, but also the app store and delivery ecosystem, he said.
It gives Google the kind of insight that the company could use to create the next versions of the Android OS.
“If you call this type of an advanced ability to garner real-world customer data and hone your ecosystem a flop, then so be it,” said Gold. “I see it as a pretty positive effort on Google’s part. If Google never makes a dime in the hardware market with its own Android-based products, it will still be a success.”
5) Earning developer goodwill is the key.
The success of Apple’s app store has spurred rivals to launch their own versions. But with the exception of Android, few other app stores — including the BlackBerry World and the Palm app store — have come close to becoming a viable competitor to iPhone’s App Store.
One reason is that Google has been generous with seeding the developer community with the Nexus One. A significant portion of the Nexus One sales went to programmers, and that’s not by accident. Google has also been handing them out.
“Google got these devices into the hands of early adopters who are generally unlikely to be silent about any issues they may uncover,” said Gold. “These are the kinds of debuggers you want working with your device in the early stages and giving you lots of feedback.”
Having its own Android device helped Google take control of this feedback without having to rely on the HTCs and the Motorolas of the world to do it.
For Google the handset experiment isn’t over. Andy Rubin, Google’s vice president of engineering and Android czar, has said that the company plans to come out with a series of Google phones.
Make no mistake, there will be another Google handset. But it will not likely repeat the mistakes of the Nexus One, and future Googlephones phones will get better.
Just don’t expect a stunning blockbuster phone from Google, because Google understands it’s not in the business of just selling a phone.
Dylan Tweney contributed to the reporting on this story.
See Also:
- Google Nexus One Leaves Customers Sour
- Review: Google Nexus One
- Google Nexus One Sales Off to Slow Start
- How Google Could Have Changed the World With Nexus One — and Still Can
Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com
Today’s episode of The 404 Podcast resurrects our love for action figures and other toys from the late 1980s and early 1990s. Jeff’s a little older than Wilson and me, but we can still bond over our mutual love for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles action figures and our mutual hatred for picking up all those foam Nerd darts.
There’s also a lot to learn about each other based on our toys. For example, Wilson’s mom used to yell at him for unscrewing and tinkering with all his figures, which explains why he eventually grew up building his own computers.
Unfortunately, we’re too old to play with children’s toys now so we’ve all graduated to big-boy toys, and it’s with great sadness that we have to announce the death of the floppy disk. After three decades of production, Sony announced Friday that it would end all floppy-disk sales before the end of March 2011.
Many are unaware that Sony actually pioneered the first 3.5-inch floppy disk in 1981, although the 1.44MB disks were quickly rendered obsolete by other types of removable media like Zip disks, USB flash drives, and of course rewriteable CDs and DVDs. Stay tuned as we deliver a heartfelt “eugoogly” to the floppy disk–a close friend that saved kilobytes of data and served as the basis for way too many nerdy pickup lines.
It’s no surprise that Internet privacy is a thing of the past, but a few Blippy users
are still finding that out the hard way. If you’ve never heard of the site before, Blippy is a new company that lets you share your online purchases with everyone on a social network. The service gleans financial data, including what you bought and where you got it, and lets you compare your purchases with others at a granular level, all with the hopes of saving you a few bucks on future purchases.
Unfortunately, five Blippy users found their credit card information published in Google’s search engine cache over the weekend. A rep from the company claims that a breach in two banks’ security systems caused the problem and they’ve asked Google to reindex the entire site to fix it, but none of us really understand the appeal of Blippy- feel free to chime in if you’re a user and let us know if you’ve stopped using the service after hearing about this breach in security.
EPISODE 567
Listen now:
Download today’s podcast
Subscribe in iTunes audio | Suscribe to iTunes (video) | Subscribe in RSS Audio | Subscribe in RSS Video
…
Originally posted at The 404 Podcast
BlackBerry 6 coming in third quarter of this year
Posted in: BlackBerry, breaking news, BreakingNews, RIM, Today's Chili
RIM’s co-CEO Mike Lazaridis just announced in an analyst call today that the company’s next platform — coined BlackBerry 6 — will be available “in the next calendar quarter,” which we take to mean the third quarter of 2010. We weren’t able to see a video preview of the platform that was shown to analysts attending the event, but the demo apparently showed a touchscreen interface; a follow-up question from the audience confirmed that it’ll be available for both touch and non-touch devices, though. Interestingly, Lazaridis said that the company’s all-new WebKit-based browser is part and parcel with 6, pointing out that the rendering engine will have implications throughout the platform and the apps that run on it, not just on the browser alone; in other words, we wouldn’t expect a release of a WebKit browser from these guys for OS 5.0-based devices. Speaking of OS 5.0, the intention is that every device in RIM’s portfolio will eventually run 6, but not everything in the market today will necessarily be upgradeable — Lazaridis says that they’ll “do [their] best,” but he’s not making any guarantees. More on this as we get it.
BlackBerry 6 coming in third quarter of this year originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Apr 2010 14:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | | Email this | Comments
Who would have thought the iPad could ever be used as a pedometer? One developer did, and there’s an app to prove it. How well does it work? Read on to find out. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://news.cnet.com/8301-27076_3-20003433-248.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Web Crawler/a/p
RIM announces the next version of its virtual desk phone service for enterprise-backed BlackBerry phones.