Bose Intros Two Easy Home Theater Systems

Lifestyle_V35_system.jpgAttention audiophiles, Bose has introduced two home theater systems that combine proprietary 5.1 surround sound with the new Bose Unify intelligent integration system. Intelligent integration is the company’s technology for cutting through the complexity in setting up home theater systems. It makes connecting speakers and adding remotes easier.

The new Lifestyle V-Class and T-Class systems were designed to evolve with the owners needs, and can accommodate up to six HD sources. The Lifestyle remote can operate with nearly any entertainment device. Setting up the systems should be especially easy, and all parts and instructions are in plain English.

“Many of today’s home entertainment systems are feature-rich, but if an owner can’t access those features, they don’t offer any real value,” said Doug Lankford, director of home theater product marketing for Bose. “The new Lifestyle systems deliver what’s been missing in the market — a truly simplified, high-quality home theater system.”

The V35 lists for $3,299.95 and the T20 for $1,999.95.

Magellan’s 2010 GPS lineup is a lifetime traffic free-for-all

Magellan gets in on the free lifetime traffic trend with its new 2010 line of GPS navigators. All eight of these new devices will feature the free traffic service, and text-to-speech. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13746_7-20005945-48.html” class=”origPostedBlog”The Car Tech blog/a/p

Cute Qbot aims to be Model T of robots

Qbot is a prototype home robot that can interact with its user and avoid obstacles. Developer Francisco Paz says it will be an open-source machine that will be cheap enough to garner many users.

Apparent Motorola Droid Shadow Discovered in Verizon Gym

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The story is a familiar one: an employee takes a phone prototype for a spin in the real world, misplaces the thing, and the company bricks it. In this case, however, the company in question seemingly didn’t realize the device was missing before an eagle-eyed bystander snapped some shots of the handset.

The device in question is reportedly the Motorola Droid Shadow, rumored to be the second Verizon Android handset from Motorola. The phone was discovered in a Verizon corporate gym in Washington state. The Shadow was apparently picked up by a gym employee who confirmed some key details about the device with the Verizon employee who was tasked with picking the phone up.

According to Gizmodo: “[I]t has 16GB of internal storage, runs on a Snapdragon processor, has a HDMI port, and yes, the 8MP camera and 4.3-inch screen all checked out too.”

Judging from the photo, the device is also really, really large.

Image courtesy of Gizmodo.

E-Ink Shocker! Amazon CEO says color Kindle is ‘still a long way out’

Well, if it isn’t a surprise to end all surprises. Amazon’s head honcho Jeff Bezos recently grabbed a mic at the outfit’s annual shareholder meeting in Seattle, and when speaking about the “millions” of Kindle e-readers that he’s sold, he pointed out the obvious when questioned about the possibility of a color version. In addressing concerns that LCD-based tablets may seem more attractive due to their ability to showcase color images and video, he noted that developing color electronic ink remains a challenge, and while he’s seen things “in the laboratory,” the prototypes are simply “not ready for prime-time production.” He also stated that these lust-worthy, mythical displays were “a long way out,” but that the Kindle would remain focused as a dedicated e-reader moving forward. Hear that, Mirasol? That’s the ear-piecing sound of a market opportunity waiting to be exploited.

E-Ink Shocker! Amazon CEO says color Kindle is ‘still a long way out’ originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 16:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Leaked Motorola Droid Shadow headed to Verizon this summer?

A recent spate of leaked information indicates Motorola’s next flagship phone might be nearing. Looking every bit as powerful as the HTC EVO 4G, the purported Droid Shadow could usher in the era of Froyo this summer. Might this be Verizon’s answer to the fourth-generation iPhone? pOriginally posted at a href=”http://www.cnet.com/8301-19736_1-20005942-251.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Android Atlas/a/p

Marvell shows off 10-inch Android tablet at Netbook Summit

Unfortunately, we don’t know much about this new Marvell powered tablet, but we couldn’t resist sharing our impressions of the very svelte 10-inch device. We only got a few minutes to play around with the slate at the Netbook Summit, but we can tell you that it has a brushed metal back and there’s an opening on the front for a camera. As for the internals, it’s based on Marvell’s Moby reference design, which uses its Snapdragon-class Armada 610 processor, and will run Android 2.1 Eclair. The rest will be up to whatever Marvell customer is bringing this bad boy to market — the Marvell executive that let us catch a glance at the device wouldn’t turn it on as he feared we may see the mystery customer’s logo. We told you we didn’t know much, but from what we saw today it sure looks promising. Now, if only we felt Android was ready Google would give us a tablet-ready version of Android…

Marvell shows off 10-inch Android tablet at Netbook Summit originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 16:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Watch the Space Shuttle Atlantis Come Home—Online

Atlantis-returns-home.jpg

After wrapping up its work at the International Space Station (ISS), the Space Shuttle Atlantis has undocked from the ISS and is preparing to head home for a planned landing at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Wednesday morning to complete its final scheduled mission (STS-132). (The NASA image above shows Atlantis landing after mission STS-110 on April 19, 2002.)

The first opportunity for landing will be at 8:48 a.m. Eastern time, with a second shot at 10:22 a.m. if conditions prove unfavorable, as may well be the case. There’s a chance of rain showers at KSC on Wednesday, with NASA estimating only about a 50-50 probability of a Wednesday landing. On Thursday the times for possible landings at KSC are 9:13 a.m. and 10:48 a.m. The Florida weather improves on Friday, and the alternative landing site at Edwards Air Force Base in California is available if need be.

Fortunately, there are many places you can tune in to watch Atlantis return home from this historic flight.

Robbie Bach: Project Natal a ‘midlife kicker’ for Xbox 360, ‘absolutely confident’ Courier innovations will appear elsewhere

Now that the proverbial cat’s out of the bag, Tech Flash has caught up with Robbie Bach about his impending retirement from Microsoft. In a far-reach interview, the former President of Entertainment & Devices Division says he made his ultimate decision just last Thursday, and that while he and also-gone J Allard “had been talking [Allard’s] situation for awhile,” the conversation never went both ways and the timing of the departures is “pure coincidence… serendipity.” Bach further claims that it was his choice and was not asked to leave, and as for pundits who might’ve thought he was in line for one day taking the reins from CEO Steve Ballmer, Bach downplays that possibility and says he never had interest and such discussions never took place.

But enough business talk, what about some of the projects Bach oversaw? There were a couple choice quotes we noted from the report. First up is Natal, a motion-sensing project that he views as a “midlife kicker for the [Xbox] 360.” For those watching a calendar, that would give the console an approximately nine-year perceived lifespan on the corporate side — from November 2005 to 2014. Of course, we could be reading too much into that, but we could certainly believe it. On the subject of Courier, Microsoft’s now-cancelled internal tablet project, Bach is “absolutely confident… a bunch of that innovation will show up in Microsoft products.” It’s a stronger wording that what we originally read, and given just how excited we were watching that leaked video, we can only hope his prophecy is foretold. Do yourself a favor and take 15 minutes to read through the interview — hey, you’re welcome.

Robbie Bach: Project Natal a ‘midlife kicker’ for Xbox 360, ‘absolutely confident’ Courier innovations will appear elsewhere originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 16:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel kills Larrabee discrete GPU, will focus on integrated graphics

Intel’s been promising to blow up the graphics market with its Larrabee GPU for over three years now with virtually nothing to show for it, and it looks like the company has finally decided to can the entire project after downsizing it to a “software platform” last year. A new Intel blog post on the matter says the company won’t bring a discrete graphics chip to market, and will instead focus on integrated graphics for everyday computing and highly-parallel multicore processors for high-performance computing. Now, Intel’s obviously still in the graphics game, and it’s already made a strong move towards integrated graphics by building GPUs right into the Atom N470 and much of the Core 2010 line, but on a much broader level the decision to drop Larrabee means that Intel is now essentially pursuing the same strategies as its competitors: AMD is famously behind schedule with its Fusion project but plans to ship ATI-powered hybrid CPU / GPUs next year, and NVIDIA has been pushing its multicore GPU-based Tesla high-performance computing platform for a while now.

We’re also curious about how Intel intends to address the gaming market in the future — its own integrated graphics obviously aren’t up to the task, and it’s still fighting with NVIDIA over a Core 2010 chipset license, so that’s a big question mark going forward as more and more focus is placed on low-power and integrated solutions. We’ll see what happens — it’s not too often the death of a vaporware product has the potential to shake up the entire industry.

Intel kills Larrabee discrete GPU, will focus on integrated graphics originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 15:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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