Crave 02: While the Donald’s away…(podcast)

Jasmine picks up the slack on Donald’s sick day and gets fab producer Jason Howell and “huge” CNET Labs editor Eric Franklin to co-host the latest Crave podcast. We scoured Crave to bring you only the best gems, and this week, we came up with a luxurious $15K speaker from Bowers & Wilkes, some Twitter-friendly dairy cows, a gadget porn crackdown, and the latest Japanese auto innovation. Also, no Crave podcast would be complete without a little something gross to cap it off. Tune in to find out what.

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LG flexible display patent application includes fever-dreams of future devices

We’re still a ways out from real-world applications of flexible displays, but LG is preparing for the future: it’s just filed a patent application that details changing a flexible display’s touch sensitivity depending on the state of the display, and it’s included some intriguing drawings of potential devices with the application. Specifically, the patent application includes claims referencing cylindrical, prism, folding, “rolling,” “freestyle,” and “hybrid” body shapes, which all sound pretty intense — especially the hybrid body, which is a “combination of the folding body and rolling body.” Of course, patent applications don’t always turn into granted patents, let alone shipping products, but if you’re in the mood to stare wistfully at line art and dream about the future, the full PDF is at the source link.

LG flexible display patent application includes fever-dreams of future devices originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 19:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Unwired View  |  sourceLG Patent Application (PDF)  | Email this | Comments

Sony Handycam celebrates 25th birthday, can now film itself renting a car

Remember the Sony Video 8? No? Well, let’s recap: it was 1985, and the company releases the CCD-M8 camcorder, capturing life on 8-millimeter cassettes at just under 2.2 pounds. “Back in my day” references notwithstanding, Sony is now celebrating the 25th anniversary of its Handycam line, from that progenitor recorder all the way up to today’s SD card-equipped lineup. All the festivities and a pretty detailed trip down memory lane can be found via the source link, or if you’re looking for something infinitely more cornball, Sony’s produced a “commemorative movie” of sorts in honor of the anniversary — that’s after the break.

Continue reading Sony Handycam celebrates 25th birthday, can now film itself renting a car

Sony Handycam celebrates 25th birthday, can now film itself renting a car originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 18:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Chrome OS Not Ready for Primetime Yet

When Computex kicks off next week, don’t expect to see any devices running Chrome OS.

Computex, held every year in Taipei, Taiwan, is one of the largest trade shows for PC makers, and you’d think Google’s upcoming OS for netbooks would be a star attraction this year. But Google is still racing to finish the operating system, and consumers aren’t likely to see the first Chrome OS devices until late fall.

Chrome OS will also be seen only in netbooks, at least at first, since the company isn’t encouraging Chrome OS for tablets. Instead it is steering tablet makers toward Android, the first of which will be the Dell Streak that launches in the U.K. next month.

“For Chrome, we are targeting the netbook form factor,” a Google representative told Wired.com. “The timeline for the first products is towards the end of the year.”

Google introduced Chrome OS in November as a lightweight, browser-based operating system that would boot up in seven seconds or less. The company said at the time that the first Chrome OS netbooks would be available in the “second half of 2010.” 

Google is working with major netbook makers such as Acer, which is hoping to ship a million Chrome OS netbooks this year. Google CEO Eric Schmidt has said Chrome OS netbooks will cost between $300 and $400, coming in line with devices running Microsoft’s Windows operating system.

Earlier this month, a report suggested Acer could show its Chrome OS netbook as early as June, but Acer has denied it. ”We have no short-term plans for such as product at Computex,” said an Acer statement on the company’s website.

“Given Google’s emphasis on Android at its developer conference, it is unlikely that we are going to see much if any Chrome activity at Computex,” said Michael Gartenberg, partner at research and consulting firm The Altimeter Group. “Chrome is probably not ready for prime time.”

If Google doesn’t move forward fast enough, it may lose ground to Microsoft’s Windows operating system, particularly among tablets. While they haven’t abandoned their Android plans, MSI and Asus both recently announced Windows 7-powered tablets.

Chrome is visibly a work in progress. At its I/O developer conference last week, Google announced a web-based app store that will feature free and paid apps. The app store will be a big step forward to making Chrome an attractive OS, according to Michael Cherry, vice-president of research for operating systems at independent research firm Directions on Microsoft.

“The missing piece so far has been apps and with the web-app store announcement Google is a step closer to the finish line,” said Cherry.

Apps are important for Chrome because Google has pitched it as a Linux-based, open source operating system centered on Google’s Chrome browser. Applications will run exclusively inside the browser.

Having easy access to those apps will be the key to the success of Chrome. The newly announced Chrome web store would do just that. When Google Chrome users install a web application from the store, a shortcut to quickly access the program.

Meanwhile, Google has to do a fine balancing act between Chrome and Android.

Chrome OS has been largely designed for netbooks and larger clamshell devices, while Android is aimed at smartphones.

Tablets fall somewhere in the middle, potentially causing confusion about which OS is best suited to the form factor. For its part, Google has been telling partners to adopt the fast-growing Android for mobile devices and reserve Chrome for netbooks and laptops: machines that can actually deliver on the thin client promise.

“Chrome is an open source project so anyone can take the code on any sort of device without telling us,” says the Google spokesman. “But we think Chrome and Android are two different approaches.”

Google wouldn’t comment on if it will ever merge Chrome and Android.

For now, Android is racing ahead, says Gartenberg.

“Android has the resources and momentum, and it is run by Andy Rubin and his team,” Gartenberg says. “Chrome appears to have fewer resources and no clear leader, at least from the outsider’s perception. In the near term, Google’s efforts are going to be Android-based.”

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Photo: (Travelin’ Librarian/Flickr)


World spends 4.82 million hours playing Google Pac-Man on launch day

World spends 4.82 million hours playing Google Pac-Man on launch day originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 18:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceThe Rescue Time Blog, Google Pac-Man  | Email this | Comments

Sony Adds Option to Buy HBO TV Shows on PlayStation 3

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Sony on Tuesday added content from HBO to its PlayStation Network.

Users with the PlayStation 3 can now purchase episodes of HBO TV shows via the PlayStation Store. Featured TV shows include “True Blood,” “Big Love,” “Entourage,” “Eastbound and Down,” “The Sopranos”, “Sex and the City,” “The Wire”, “Rome,” “Da Ali G Show,” “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” and “Flight of the Conchords.”

Additionals seasons and episodes will be added every week, Sony said.

On your PS3, the shows are available on TV Shows>Networks>HBO. Sony did not provide pricing information, but a quick search of the Store showed the season two premiere of “True Blood” for $1.99. The PlayStation network provides the option to rent content, but the “True Blood” episode was listed as buy only.

Bezos: Kindle Color Display Not Coming Soon

Jeff Bezos.jpgHolding out for a full-color Amazon Kindle? Don’t hold your breath. In spite of competitive pressure from the Apple iPad and Pandigital’s recently announced Novel eReader, Amazon’s founder and CEO Jeff Bezos admitted to a meeting of shareholders that color Kindles are “still a long way out.”

According to Bezos, Amazon is indeed looking into a color screen update. The company has prototypes “in the laboratory that are ‘not ready for prime-time production.'” Bezos chalks up the dependence on black and white to the limitations of electronic ink, a technology that Amazon is seemingly not ready to abandon any time soon.

The Apple iPad, of course, relies on an LCD display. While the company has managed to give the iPad an estimated 10 hours of battery life (which, admittedly is nowhere near the several days the Kindle can get on a single charge), the iPad’s display makes for poor reading in natural lighting.

Concrete USB drives are worth their weight in gigabytes

Sure, a USB drive made of concrete might be a good enough idea on its own, but designer Shu-Chun Hsiao apparently doesn’t settle for merely “good ideas,” hence this so-called Memory Weights concept. Yes, it is indeed a USB drive made of concrete, but Shu-Chun takes things one step further by actually having the weight of the drive indicate its capacity — 128g equals 128GB, and so on. Unfortunately, it is still just a concept, but reality is just a concrete mold away. Remember that, kids.

Concrete USB drives are worth their weight in gigabytes originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 17:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Hard OCP  |  sourceYanko Design  | Email this | Comments

Four more major laptop manufacturers will use NVIDIA Optimus by the fall

It’s no secret that we’ve been big fans of NVIDIA’s automatic graphics switching Optimus technology, but we’ve had one major complaint — there’s just not enough systems with it on the market. While ASUS has been employing the technology in most of its new systems, others, like Lenovo and HP, have been quite tight-lipped on the GPU tech. But apparently that’s about to change. When we crossed paths with NVIDIA’s Vice President of Worldwide Sales Rene Haas at the Netbook Summit, he revealed that at least four more major manufacturers will be using Optimus by the end of the summer. He wouldn’t share any details on brands, but he did say that there should be a total of 50 Optimus lappies on the market by the fall. Of course, we don’t know how many of those will be made by ASUS or will be Ion 2 netbooks, but it surely looks like the momentum is growing, and we’re hoping to learn more at Computex next week. Fingers crossed that we can count the Alienware M11x among them.

Four more major laptop manufacturers will use NVIDIA Optimus by the fall originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 17:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Elgato Debuts EyeTV HD

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Why wait for Google TV, when you can get the Elgato EyeTV HD today? It’s a great gadget for Mac owners, as it offers a DVR solution with full access to premium cable or satellite TV content. Use it to watch, record, and even edit cable and satellite HD content, including all premium channels. With its dual-format capture mode, you can save video for the iPhone or iPad at the same time. When paired with the optional EyeTV app, it lets you stream live and recorded TV to your iPhone or iPad.

If this sounds tricky to set up, know that you simply connect the EyeTV HD to your cable or satellite receiver with the included component cables, then to your computer with a USB cable. After software configuration, you’ll be ready to go. It sells for $199.95 from Elgato’s online store.