Keepin’ it real fake: next-gen iPhone has a bold, KIRF-y impertinence

With all the hype surrounding the next-gen iPhone, we can understand if your “iPhome 3G” feels a little, well, old hat. That’s why we were as excited as you must be to see this iPhone 4 KIRF. Featuring a relatively svelte form factor, stereo speakers, USB port, a removable battery, and dual SIM card slot, the only real let down is the 3.2-inch screen. That, and we’re sure that the UI will have a general, KIRFish nature that will appeal to very few of us. Get a closer look after the break!

[Thanks, Corey]

Continue reading Keepin’ it real fake: next-gen iPhone has a bold, KIRF-y impertinence

Keepin’ it real fake: next-gen iPhone has a bold, KIRF-y impertinence originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 May 2010 10:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon Palm Pre Plus drops to $30 on contract

Looks like Verizon is having a bit of a blowout on the Palm Pre Plus: it’s fallen to just $30 on a two-year contract. That’s the same price as Big Red’s Pixi Plus and a pretty substantial discount over Sprint and AT&T, both of which will charge you $149 — and man, AT&T hasn’t even started selling the thing yet, so someone’s going to look awful silly on launch day. No word on whether this cut-rate pricing will last or whether the Pixi Plus will fall to free, but if you’re looking for a cheap way to get in on the future of HP, well, now’s your chance.

Verizon Palm Pre Plus drops to $30 on contract originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 May 2010 10:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple iPad Hits One Million Sales

The Apple iPad hit another major milestone on Friday with the sale of the one millionth iPad, after a little less than a month of retail availability. It took 74 days for the first iPhone to hit that number. The company had celebrated the sale of the 500,000th iPad on April 14th.

Apple CEO Steve Jobs said about the milestone, “Demand continues to exceed supply and we’re working hard to get this magical product into the hands of even more customers.”

The iPad first went on sale on April 3rd. In its first 28 days, iPad users have downloaded more than 12 million apps and 1.5 million e-books. The 5,000th iPad app was recently introduced in the iTunes App Store. Including those apps designed for the iPhone, that’s a total of more than 200,000 apps that can run on the device.

The 3G version of the iPad was released on April 30th in the U.S.

Apple Facing Government Antitrust Inquiry?

Thumbnail image for Apple_iPhone_Pics.jpgApple may be the subject of either a Department of Justice or Federal Trade Commission inquiry focusing on its iPad/iPhone development practices, according to a report on Monday.

The New York Post reported that the two agencies are “locked in negotiations” over whether or not Apple barred competition by forcing its developers to use only Apple’s programming tools, and presumably, avoid using Adobe’s Flash technology.

As the Post noted, an inquiry does not mean a criminal investigation,
merely questions Apple will be obligated to answer.

It’s the latest chapter in the ongoing saga, which began with Apple’s iPhone OS 4 launch. Accompanying language in the software development kit said that developers “must not call any private APIs,” an oblique reference to Flash. Apple also noted that developers had to write their code directly in C, C++, or Objective-C. Weeks later, Adobe said it was halting Flash development for the iPhone OS platform, and an Adobe evangelist added an inflammatory memo.

Apple chief executive Steve Jobs then fired back, calling Flash a “closed system” in an open letter to Adobe and to the software industry at large. Jobs identified a number of objections to Flash including its reliability, security, and performance, and its ability to access what Jobs referred to as the “Open Web”.

But the real reason, Jobs wrote, was simply that Flash represented a bottleneck to third-party apps. Apple, Jobs wrote, “cannot be at the mercy of a
third party deciding if and when they will make our enhancements
available to our developers.” Adobe has no interest in writing the best
possible iPhone, iPod, and iPad apps, Jobs argued.

“It is their goal to
help developers write cross platform apps. And Adobe has been painfully
slow to adopt enhancements to Apple’s platforms,” Jobs wrote.

The FTC had not responded to a request for comment at press time. Apple was also unavailable before West Coast business hours.

SandForce makes SSDs cheaper, faster, more reliable — just how IBM likes it

SandForce makes SSDs cheaper, faster, more reliable -- just how IBM likes itWe’ve been covering the progression of SandForce for over a year now, creator of smart SSD processors that extend the life of flash storage by better spreading writes across them, boosting performance and reliability along the way. This, according to the company, makes them reliable enough for enterprise use, and IBM has added its vote of support, configuring a 9189 Power 780 server with 56 177GB SSDs (10.5TB in all) sitting behind SandForce’s SF-1500 processor. That combination, when running the TPC-C benchmark, delivered a performance of 150,000 transactions per minute per CPU core. That’s 50 percent higher (per-core) than other entries in the TPC-C benchmark — and considerably cheaper, too. IBM’s configuration is set to be available around October of this year, perhaps ushering in a new era of the platter-free enterprise.

SandForce makes SSDs cheaper, faster, more reliable — just how IBM likes it originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 May 2010 09:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink StorageReview.com, The Wall Street Journal  |  sourceTPC-C Result Highlights  | Email this | Comments

iPad 3G’s non-WiFi video playback restrictions detailed

iPad 3G's non-WiFi video playback restrictions detailed

We could hear the echoing howls of discontent over the weekend as thousands finally received their very own iPad 3G and learned they couldn’t watch Dancing With the Stars whilst on the go. Now we have the details on why, exactly, and the repercussions. As it turns out, it’s simply a carry-over of an iPhone OS HTTP Live Streaming rule that states quite clearly:

You must include a low quality stream of no more than 64 Kbps for your app to resort to when network conditions demand it, along with the higher quality streams you want to deliver to your customers when the network can support it.

It seems the ABC Player devs chose to skip that option, so when you lose WiFi you also lose Tom Bergeron’s charm and wit. Other apps, like Netflix and YouTube, do provide a lower bitrate fallback, but that of course results in nasty compression artifacts when on the go. In other words: there’s a very good chance that 3G streaming will come in a future ABC Player release, but when it does it ain’t gonna be pretty.

iPad 3G’s non-WiFi video playback restrictions detailed originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 May 2010 09:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple: One Million iPads Sold in 28 Days

Apple has sold one million iPads just four weeks. Writing in an Apple press release, Steve Jobs compares this to the “74 days it took to achieve this milestone with iPhone.” Whichever way you look at it, the iPad is a huge success. That number equates to almost 36,000 units sold every day.

The press release mentions a couple other show-off figures: in the same time frame, 12 million apps have been downloaded by iPad users, and 1.5 million books have been checked out of the iBooks store. A lot of those will be free, but it sure shows that iPad users are download-happy.

Back in January, when the iPad was announced, I Tweeted that the tech press would hate it, and that Apple would sell a zillion anyway. Almost four months later and the press continues to hate on the iPad, with daily screeds about the evil, closed app store and Apple’s victimization of poor Adobe and its execrable Flash plugin.

Meanwhile, the rest of the world (well, the rest of the US right now – the press release says that demand still outstrips supply) is full of happy customer. Sick and tired of being forced to tend to the fickle, unfathomable whims of “real” computers for decades, they are rushing to give Apple their cash in return for a machine that is easy and fun to use. Say what you like, command-line freaks: The iPad is huge, an its only going to get bigger. Sure, it’s full of problems, but that won’t make a bit of difference to the general public. Remember the iPod?

To see the business angle on this announcement, head over to our sister blog, Epicenter, and read “Apple iPad Reaches ‘One Million Sold’ Twice as Fast as iPhone” by Wired.com’s Eliot van Buskirk.

Apple Sells One Million iPads [Apple]

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

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Sony’s 35-inch atracTable to be ‘industrialized’ in June, show Microsoft how it’s done (video)

Swiss company Atracsys swims in the same waters as Microsoft’s mythical Surface beast — namely, multitouch horizontal displays — but where it might differ from its more lauded competitor is in actually bringing its hardware to wider markets. Having sold the tech knowhow to Sony, the company is today informing the world that its atracTable is ready for mass production and commercialization this June. We’ve been told that prototype designs are now “finished,” leaving only the marketing, pricing and distribution details to be worked out. A high-contrast, Full HD screen is promised, which will be able to communicate with your mobile devices (naturally) or respond to motion input picked up by a pair of Sony’s camcorders which come built in. Skip past the break for a couple of video demos from last year.

Continue reading Sony’s 35-inch atracTable to be ‘industrialized’ in June, show Microsoft how it’s done (video)

Sony’s 35-inch atracTable to be ‘industrialized’ in June, show Microsoft how it’s done (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 May 2010 09:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wii to bundle Sports Resort, MotionPlus

Starting May 9, Nintendo’s console package will add the Sports Resort title and MotionPlus controller with no price increase. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://news.cnet.com/8301-10797_3-20003955-235.html” class=”origPostedBlog”News – Gaming and Culture/a/p

Hands-On With the Dual iPod Touch GPS-Kit

gpd-dual-2

The Dual GPS Navigation and Battery Cradle is an accessory which adds proper GPS navigation to the iPod Touch. You slide in the iPod and it gets full navigational functionality, just like the iPhone. For the past few weeks, I have been testing it.

The iPod Touch is often thought of as a phone-less iPhone, and although that’s true, it’s only half the story. Aside from the lack of phone functionality, the Touch misses out on a camera, always-on internet, a compass and a GPS chip. The Dual cradle adds this last back in, letting you use the iPod as a GPS tracker for geo-tagging photos and as an in-car, turn-by-turn satnav system.

The Dual comes with a lot of accessories. First, the cradle, which plugs into both the dock connector and the headphone socket. It more than doubles the thickness of the iPod, but also adds a beefy battery pack which powers the GPS or recharges the iPod. A three-way switch on the back lets you choose between GPS or battery, or to switch it off. There is a mini-USB port in the bottom which will let you charge and sync the iPod while in the case, but you need to slide the switch to “Battery” to make it work. There is also a speaker (with volume switches) and a pass-through headphone jack.

Also in the box is a windshield-mounting kit: another cradle which attaches to the glass with a suction cup. This hooks up to the car stereo via 3.5mm jack and to the cigarette-lighter socket via included cable.

I don’t have a car, so I used my bike, and my good friend Francesc modded the bracket to fit my handlebars. I also ignored the free NavAtlas GPS application that is made by the same company for use with the unit: it is USA and Canada-only, and therefore useless outside those countries. Fortunately, an iPod in the cradle just passes the GPS info direct to any GPS-aware app. You can use anything that works on an iPhone.

Out on the sunny Barcelona streets, I fired the cradle up. It can take a while to get a fix, and you’ll need a very clear view of the sky to get one. I had to wait for a few minutes each time, and found that moving slowly along on the bike seemed to speed things up. One the unit is locked on, it stays locked on, though. In fact, once it gets going, the GPS tracking appears to be flawless, holding on even in brief jaunts through tunnels or indoors.

On the bike, the audio is loud enough to hear, as long as you aren’t on a busy road (and the speaker is quite a bit louder than the iPad’s own, making this a good way to listen to podcasts while cooking).

The battery is long-lasting, with a 1,100mAH-rating. Dual claims ten hours when used in GPS mode. I didn’t get anywhere near this time in my testing, but the four-LED battery indicator never came off full even after a couple hours. This is good: The iPod battery itself drains scarily fast when tracking with the screen switched on, so you will want to use the cradle’s battery for a top-up at journey’s end. Many apps will let you track with the iPod display switched off, however.

In use, there isn’t much to fault with the Dual cradle. It does what it says it does, and build quality is fine. The trouble comes with the size and the price. The kit costs $200, double that of rival TomTom’s car-kit. For that price, you could buy a standalone GPS and never have to worry about your iPod’s battery life.

That choice is up to you, though. If the price and features of this cradle seem good to you, then go ahead and buy it. It works great, and does it without fuss.

Dual XGPS300 [Dual]

Photo: Charlie Sorrel

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