Cowon J3 ships to America, we go hands-on

Nary two full months after we first caught wind of Cowon’s dainty (albeit super sexy) J3 portable media player, the award-winning device has both gone on sale and arrived on our doorstep (along with a few others, according to a few jovial tipsters). As of today, prospective consumers in the US can order one for $199.99 (8GB) or $239.99 (16GB), both of which have microSD slots for capacity expansion. Per usual, Cowon’s packaging here was nothing short of delightful, and the 3.3-inch AMOLED display struck us just as the S9 did oh-so-many months ago. Unlike the larger V5 we reviewed back in March, we greatly appreciated the capacitive nature of this touch panel, and finger presses were accurately and immediately recognized. The user interface was also far more streamlined, and whizzing about from area to area was no issue.

As with every other Cowon player we’ve ever laid ears on, the audio quality out of this one was second to none; if you’re a self-proclaimed audiophile, yet can’t exactly accommodate your Marantz KI Pearl on the subway, this is about as good as it gets. The video player was similarly impressive, loading up clips with minimal fuss, and showing no lag whatsoever during playback. Unfortunately, for all the things this gorgeous unit does right, the only spec that matters to some is wrong: pricing. We hate to point out the obvious, but an 8GB iPod touch is also just $199, and unlike the J3, Apple’s alternative can surf the web over WiFi and bring you face to face with 100,000 (or so) apps. From a value proposition standpoint, there’s simply no comparison. ‘Course, the J3 may still stand out if you’re all about audio quality (and nothing else), but we’ve yet to actually meet someone who didn’t care at least a smidgen about the extras. Vote with your wallet, as they say.

Cowon J3 ships to America, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 May 2010 16:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rumor: Will Apple make MobileMe free?

It’s an unconfirmed tip with little more than “an air of credibility,” but it’s still fun to think about. Why a free MobileMe would be good for you. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-19512_7-20004721-233.html” class=”origPostedBlog”iPhone Atlas/a/p

The Google Tablet Is Coming, Courtesy of Verizon [Android]

The first serious challenge to the Apple iPad is coming from the most obvious of teams: According to Verizon Chief Exec Lowell McAdam, the carrier is working with Google on “a tablet computer.” This should be fun. More »

LG Ally details leak ahead of press event

Pretty much everything you’ll want to know about the LG Ally has been leaked, courtesy of Boy Genius Report. In fact, the only thing we really have is an official price. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://www.cnet.com/8301-19736_1-20004690-251.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Android Atlas/a/p

Stay safe and green outdoors with Eton Scorpion

Eton introduces a new multipurpose product designed for outdoor activities that can be powered by the sun or a hand-crank.

HDHomeRun CableCARD will feature three tuners in time for the holidays

What you’re looking at here is a picture of the board that makes the new HDHomeRun CableCARD tuner work. You might notice the four squares on the right, those are the tuners, yes there are four — don’t get too excited — but one of ’em is for the out of band data and can’t actually be used to record HD. But that’s still one more usable tuner than initially announced at CES and the best news is that the price remains the same at $249. There isn’t a hard release data yet, but the goal is to release the beta details in the coming weeks, then submit it to CableLabs for certification and then finally have it in your HTPC in time for the holidays — when exactly do holidays start again? The actual case isn’t done yet, but there won’t be a hump like the classic HDHomeRun and as you can see the gigabit network tuner’s connections are all on the back including one coax, one USB, power, and a single CableCARD slot for all three tuners — the USB doesn’t do what you’re thinking, it’s for the Tuning Adapter. Contrary to some reports — a USB version isn’t on the table and we can’t say we’re surprised as that wouldn’t be Silicon Dust’s style. A picture of the connections on the prototype after the jump.

Continue reading HDHomeRun CableCARD will feature three tuners in time for the holidays

HDHomeRun CableCARD will feature three tuners in time for the holidays originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 May 2010 16:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cheers to the keyhole designed for drunk people

This new-age keyhole is designed with a large gap at the top that will help you funnel your key down to the keyhole. It’s a much more elegant solution than fumbling in the dark.

Samsung E60 and E61 e-readers heading to British digital bookworms in July

Good news, fellow Brits! Samsung has just announced that it’ll be shipping its two 6-inch, stylus-donning e-readers — the slide-out E60 and the QWERTY-packing E61 — to the UK in July, with the former to be priced at £299.99 ($443) and the latter’s to be confirmed. Sadly, no news on who’ll be delivering the ebooks over these devices’ WiFi, but we’re promised an announcement in a fortnight. For now, gorge yourselves on our latest hands-on photos.

Continue reading Samsung E60 and E61 e-readers heading to British digital bookworms in July

Samsung E60 and E61 e-readers heading to British digital bookworms in July originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 May 2010 15:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon’s HTC Droid Eris getting Android 2.1 any time now

We’d been hearing rumors lately that HTC’s Droid Eris — a phone that has never quite made it out from under the Droid’s shadow — is in the midst of being discontinued by Verizon, but the imminent launch of an Android 2.1 update might just buy it a new lease on life. In fact, the update makes this phone just about the first Hero variant anywhere in the world to be graced with an upgrade to Google’s latest and greatest stuff, beating Sprint’s version thanks to a string of delays that have pushed it out to some unidentified period in the second quarter. We’ve yet to see any reports of folks actually receiving the update notification on their devices, but Verizon’s official support Twitter account is tweeting about the upgrade — which should fix numerous bugs on top of the hotly-anticipated Eclair boost — so we’d expect it to start hitting the wild shortly. Keep us on top of your experiences in comments, won’t you?

[Thanks, Richard]

Update: Verizon has now posted the PDF changelog for your perusal while you wait. Thanks, Michael V.!

Verizon’s HTC Droid Eris getting Android 2.1 any time now originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 May 2010 15:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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A handcrafted Barbie, er, Baggins dream house

British woman creates a miniature version of Bilbo Baggins’ house from Tolkien’s classic stories. You might say the Hobbit hole is downright precious.