QuickerTek iPad charge monitor tests your USB port’s output potential

Oh, Apple. Just a few short months ago, a USB port was (largely) a USB port, charging pretty much any gizmo we could find without so much as a fuss. Now, loads of USB ports are throwing temper tantrums when faced with the energy-hungry iPad, with most simply refusing to charge the thing. Apple contends that a 10W USB port is needed to effectively rejuvenate its first tablet, though some sockets will do the trick so long as you have the display switched off. If you’re looking to quickly evaluate the strength of every USB port in your home or office, QuickerTek’s aptly-titled iPad Charge Monitor ain’t a half bad option. You simply plug this LED-infused dongle into a suspicious port, then connect the product you wish to charge to the other end; the device then glows to tell you how much power is flowing out, though there’s nothing included to deal with all-but-guaranteed bouts of frustration from seeing too few LEDs light up. It’s up for order right now at $29.95, and while you’re over there, you can pick up an iPad solar panel and an iPad external battery pack for $250 each. What a bargain.

[Thanks, Lan]

QuickerTek iPad charge monitor tests your USB port’s output potential originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 May 2010 14:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink EverythingUSB  |  sourceQuickerTek  | Email this | Comments

C-3PO backpack makes for obnoxious iPad case

The best moment of the “Star Wars” trilogy was when C-3PO was nearly destroyed. Now you can commemorate that moment with the a pleather backpack.

Real Gaming for Macs Is Finally Here With Steam [Steam]

Steam for Mac is officially available, along with a sizeable trove of games—including Portal, which is now free for everybody. More »

ASUS Eee PC 1005PR shipping to some customers with disabled Broadcom Crystal HD chip?

We’ve definitely had some hit-or-miss experiences with the Broadcom Crystal HD video accelerator chip in various Atom-powered netbooks, but it sounds like some Eee PC 1005PR buyers are having a different sort of bad day entirely, as ASUS is apparently shipping some systems without the chip disabled or otherwise not installed. That’s at least the word according to several reviews on Amazon, and ASUS is apparently directing people to return the machines for a refund or replacement. We’d recommend holding off for a tick if you were in the market, and if you’ve already thrown down the cash, well, now might be a good time to double-check that Device Manager.

Update: ASUS tells us it’s looking into the matter, and that company reps are actively contacting users with issues to sort things out. We’ll let you know if we hear anything else.

ASUS Eee PC 1005PR shipping to some customers with disabled Broadcom Crystal HD chip? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 May 2010 14:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Netbook Reviews  |  sourceAmazon  | Email this | Comments

For Cellphones, It’s Hip to Be Square

kin_one

For cellphones, square is the new black.

This season, big handset makers including Nokia, Microsoft and Motorola are betting you’ll want to flaunt cute, palm-shaped devices that look more like compact powder cases than brick-shaped mini-tablets.

Motorola is likely to introduce a new phone next month called Flipout that will have a 2.8-inch display, a 3.1-megapixel camera and a twist-out keyboard. We haven’t tested it yet, but on looks alone, it’s fabulous, darling.

Motorola’s square-shaped phone follows the release of Microsoft’s fresh-looking Kin One earlier this month. The Kin One has a 2.6-inch display, a slide-out keyboard, and looks like a rounded square when closed. In September, Nokia introduced the Twist on Verizon, a squarish phone with a 2.5-inch display.  Even LG has a square-shaped phone called the Lotus, which has been available on Sprint for more than a year, and though it’s not exactly been a big seller, its looks are hot, hot, hot.

“The small square design is very pocketable and feels particularly right for the younger audience and especially for women,” says Paul Bradley, executive creative director of Frog Design, a San Francisco-based innovation and design company. “It’s small, thin and you can just throw it into your pocket.”

Not surprisingly, ads and promotional spots for Microsoft’s Kin One phone are filled with teens and young people texting and uploading photos to Facebook.

Square-shaped phones also offer a way to stand out from the clutter of smartphones in the market and attract younger consumers who are looking for a splash of individuality.

“Industrial designers are looking at the square shape as the next opportunity in the handset marketplace,” says Bradley.”Unlike the candy bar design that has become synonymous with Apple’s iPhone, the square shape still doesn’t evoke the image of any one iconic device and it doesn’t feel like it’s imitating Apple.”


Smartphones are one of the fastest-growing devices in the consumer electronics business. Nearly 55 million smartphones were shipped in the first quarter of 2010, up nearly 56 percent from the same quarter a year ago, according to a recent IDC report. Attracting consumer attention in this market, though, has become a major challenge for mobile phone makers.

Motorola Flipout

Motorola Flipout

Most smartphones today have at least a 3.5-inch touchscreen display, camera, video-recording capability, Wi-Fi connectivity, quick access to social networking apps and easy ways to share photos and videos. So what’s a phone got to do to stand out?

Exploring new designs may be the answer, says Max Burton, also an executive creative director at Frog Design.

The rectangular shape of the cellphone stems from the phone’s history, he says. The earliest cellphones naturally fell into a rectangular shape because of the way the display, keypad, microphone, antenna and speaker had to be positioned.

“The first handheld phones were rectangular-shaped and that made sense,” says Burton. “But now as the components and circuitry have gotten more sophisticated, the need for the traditional form has all but disappeared.”

There are trade-offs. A smaller form factor leaves much less room for the screen, and the new square phones have screens that are at least an inch smaller in diagonal dimensions than their rectangular cousins. Forget about a wide, cinematic screen aspect: Any movies you watch on these things will basically be animated postage stamps. Keyboards are small, too, and are usually hidden underneath the screen in a slide-out bottom shell.

But square phones offer the perception of being more fun and flirty, which could make up for some of the shortcomings, say Bradley and Burton.

“It’s all about communication,” says Bradley. “The candy bar form factor supports web browsing very well but once that is not your primary goal then its time to look at other shapes.”

Younger users who are also more likely to give square phones a chance, say the duo. “The youth market is not caught up in history,” says Bradley. “They will adapt to new forms quickly.”

Top Photo: Keith Axline/Wired.com

See Also:


Symantec unveils cloud-based enterprise protection

Symantec offers a new approach to its enterprise protection service by moving it to the cloud.

HTC files patent complaint against Apple, asks for ban on iPhone, iPad, and iPod

We’d been wondering how and when HTC would respond to Apple’s patent lawsuit, and here we go: the Taiwanese phone manufacturer just filed a complaint with the International Trade Commission, asking for importation and sales of the iPhone, iPad, and iPod be halted due to alleged infringement of five patents. ITC complaints like this are pretty familiar territory — you’ll recall that Nokia and Apple have both asked for similar bans in their lawsuit against each other — but the interesting wrinkle here is that HTC apparently hasn’t filed a corresponding federal lawsuit. We’ll see if that’s the next step for HTC down the line — for now, we’re digging into what patents are involved in the ITC complaint, so stay tuned.

Update: Gizmodo says it has a list of the patents in question, but the actual complaint hasn’t hit the ITC database yet, so we can’t confirm anything, and we don’t know what’s being pled with any specificity. We’ll let you know when that happens.

Continue reading HTC files patent complaint against Apple, asks for ban on iPhone, iPad, and iPod

HTC files patent complaint against Apple, asks for ban on iPhone, iPad, and iPod originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 May 2010 13:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

AMD Vision spreads across desktops, laptops: Will you see a difference?

New processors and branding labels in laptops and desktops are part of AMD’s new attempt to compete with Intel.

OWC debuts uber-capacious 480GB 2.5-inch Mercury Extreme Pro SSD

Mmm, now we’re talking. For years now, 2.5-inch SSDs have largely been too tiny (in terms of storage space) and too pricey to take seriously — at least, for everyone except those willing to pay substantially more to ride the cutting edge. But Other World Computing just threw a monkey wrench into the norm, dishing out an incredibly roomy 480GB Mercury Extreme Pro solid state drive meant to supplant your aging laptop HDD. It’s one of four in the range (60GB, 120GB and 240GB models are also available), all of which are pegged to deliver up to 285MB/sec sustained data rates with “no speed degradation.” All four sizes are up for pre-order now for both PC and Mac platforms, with prices set at $219.99 (60GB), $379.99 (120GB), $699.99 (240GB) and $1,579.99 (480GB). What, you expected 480 gigabytes of sweet, succulent flash memory to come cheap? Puh-lease.

Continue reading OWC debuts uber-capacious 480GB 2.5-inch Mercury Extreme Pro SSD

OWC debuts uber-capacious 480GB 2.5-inch Mercury Extreme Pro SSD originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 May 2010 13:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Hot Hardware  |  sourceOWC  | Email this | Comments

Blingathon: Novero’s Victoria Bluetooth headsets

Novero, a company formed by ex-Nokia managers keen to express their stylish sides, on Wednesday showed off a range of Bluetooth gadgets that target the fashion-conscious who still want to yell into empty space.