Best Buy to slash prices for old Xbox 360 special edition bundles tomorrow?

Let’s face it: despite the new Xbox 360 being joyously quieter and more efficient, the previous model still manages to seduce some of us with its sexy curves. Speaking of which — according to Joystiq’s source, Best Buy’s going to kick off August by lowering the prices for the Splinter Cell: Conviction and Final Fantasy XIII previous-gen Xbox 360 bundles. For just $299 — $50 off the current price point (and $100 off the launch price) — you still get a copy of the corresponding game title, a 250GB HDD, and two wireless controllers. So that’s gaming sorted for the summer; now put that $50 towards some cooling aid and you’re good to go.

Best Buy to slash prices for old Xbox 360 special edition bundles tomorrow? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jul 2010 23:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink SlashGear  |  sourceJoystiq  | Email this | Comments

Best Buy to slash prices for old Xbox 360 special edition bundles tomorrow? (Update: yes)

Let’s face it: despite the new Xbox 360 being joyously quieter and more efficient, the previous model still manages to seduce some of us with its sexy curves. Speaking of which — according to Joystiq’s source, Best Buy’s going to kick off August by lowering the prices for the Splinter Cell: Conviction and Final Fantasy XIII previous-gen Xbox 360 bundles. For just $299 — $50 off the current price point (and $100 off the launch price) — you still get a copy of the corresponding game title, a 250GB HDD, and two wireless controllers. So that’s gaming sorted for the summer; now put that $50 towards some cooling aid and you’re good to go.

Update: and the new prices are live. Grab them while they’re hot.

Best Buy to slash prices for old Xbox 360 special edition bundles tomorrow? (Update: yes) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jul 2010 23:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hacker intercepts phone calls with homebuilt $1,500 IMSI catcher, claims GSM is beyond repair

In 2009, Chris Paget showed the world the vulnerabilities of RFID by downloading the contents of US passports from the safety of his automobile. This year, he’s doing the same for mobile phones. Demonstrating at DefCon 2010, the white hat hacker fooled 17 nearby GSM phones into believing his $1,500 kit (including a laptop and two RF antennas) was a legitimate cell phone base station, and proceeded to intercept and record audience calls. “As far as your cell phones are concerned, I’m now indistinguishable from AT&T,” he told the crowd. The purpose of the demonstration was highlight a major flaw in the 2G GSM system, which directs phones to connect to the tower with the strongest signal regardless of origin — in this case, Paget’s phony tower.

The hacker did caveat that his system could only intercept outbound calls, and that caller ID could tip off the owner of a handset to what’s what, but he says professional IMSI catchers used by law enforcement don’t suffer from such flaws and amateur parity would only be a matter of time. “GSM is broken,” Paget said, “The primary solution is to turn it off altogether.” That’s a tall order for a world still very dependent on the technology for mobile connectivity, but we suppose AT&T and T-Mobile could show the way. Then again, we imagine much of that same world is still using WEP and WPA1 to “secure” their WiFi.

Hacker intercepts phone calls with homebuilt $1,500 IMSI catcher, claims GSM is beyond repair originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jul 2010 22:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceWired, AP, MobileBeat, Forbes, IDG  | Email this | Comments

THIRD Contest For 2 Windows Live Messenger Invites

This article was written on March 08, 2006 by CyberNet.

Congratulations to our winners: Ryan (not me) and aae55555!

We have 2 invites for you that will allow you to join the Windows Live Messenger Beta program. It seems like Microsoft has been a little scarce giving these away. Well, here is how this is going to go…All you have to do is make a comment here and I will randomly choose 2 out of the first 5 comments. I think those are pretty good odds!

The invitation can be sent to any email account, but you must supply us with your email address. The best way to do this is to fill in the email address field in the comments section. This is the best way because only I will see this address! That way you won’t get hit with spam!

THIRD Contest For 2 Windows Live Messenger Invites

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Switched On: The Galaxy S paradox

Most high-profile smartphones launch exclusively on one of the major carriers in the U.S. The Samsung Galaxy S, though, will come to market via all of them under different names, different industrial designs, and, in one case, with different input options. And yet, its screen’s quality and size – big but not too big – will certainly make it a contender at all of them.

But the handset will encounter anything but a level playing field in its respective portfolios. The Galaxy S will provide a good lab in which to study how much motivation to push a high-end portfolio device counts versus the muscle of having the largest subscriber bases but stronger handset competition. With the Galaxy S’s lack of exclusivity already dampening some carrier enthusiasm for promoting it heavily, it appears as though the handset’s impact goes down as the number of carrier subscribers goes up. Let’s look at the universe of Galaxy S distribution.

Continue reading Switched On: The Galaxy S paradox

Switched On: The Galaxy S paradox originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jul 2010 21:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ford Fiesta is a new kind of small car

CNET Car Tech reviews the 2011 Ford Fiesta sedan. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13746_7-20012281-48.html” class=”origPostedBlog”The Car Tech blog/a/p

Dell Studio XPS 9100 arrives with six cores, little fanfare

AMD had its turn in the high-end Dell desktop spotlight, but it’s time for another Intel beast, as the company’s quietly upgraded its tower lineup to support Intel’s consumer-grade champion chip, the 3.33GHz Core i7-980X. While the new Studio XPS 9100 looks just the same as its predecessor on the outside and sports the same basic options and ports, internally there’s a 525W power supply with enough juice for a Radeon HD 5970 2GB graphics card (a $580 option) and slots for up to 24GB of DDR3 memory. You won’t be getting any of this pixel-pushing goodness on the $950 base model, of course, which has only a (respectable) quad-core 2.66GHz Core i7-920 and an Nvidia GeForce G310 512MB, but the machine looks like it could hold its own with low-end Alienware cousins if you get into $2,000+ territory. Call us crazy, but we think there’s a configurator session with your name on it.

Dell Studio XPS 9100 arrives with six cores, little fanfare originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jul 2010 19:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink LogicBuy  |  sourceDell  | Email this | Comments

Engadget Podcast 207 – 07.31.2010

The Engadget Podcasters are chattin’ re: magic, black magic, crack, GHB, Kmart, and Ashton.

Hosts:
Joshua Topolsky, Nilay Patel, Paul Miller
Producer: Trent Wolbe
Music: Sadnes – Wicked Game

00:01:29 – New Amazon Kindle announced: $139 WiFi-only version and $189 3G model available August 27th in the US and UK
00:07:33 – Amazon sees e-book sales surpassing paper versions, has Mirasol technology in the Kindle labs
00:13:30 – RIM takes control of blackpad.com, laughter takes control of our minds
00:13:53 – RIM’s 9.7-inch Blackpad rumored for November launch — yes, Blackpad
00:14:22 – RIM and AT&T event next Tuesday — BlackBerry slider and OS 6 en route?
00:24:32 – Apple iMac line gets speedbumped, low-end gets a Core i3
00:25:57 – Apple Mac Pro line overhauled with 12 processing cores, arriving in August for $4,999
00:26:17 – Apple Magic Trackpad official, shipping now for $69
00:26:30 – Magic Trackpad review
00:28:45 – Apple Battery Charger gets official: a battery charger, only you know, better (update: hands-on)
00:33:45 – Apple issues Magic Trackpad drivers for OS X and Windows, updates MacBooks with new gesture support
00:34:50 – Library of Congress adds DMCA exception for jailbreaking or rooting your phone
00:36:50 – Did the Fifth Circuit just make breaking DRM legal? Not quite.
00:51:28 – Augen’s $99 GenBook smartbook preview
00:54:30 – Augen’s $150 Android tablet hits Kmart circular, coming to stores later this week

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Engadget Podcast 207 – 07.31.2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jul 2010 18:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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‘The Shack’ downsizes, opens Bullseye Mobile kiosks in many Target stores

'The Shack' getting downsized, opening Bullseye Mobile kiosks in many Target stores

Radio Shack is at it again, expanding your perceptions of the place that once actually sold radio components. A year after that ill-received ‘The Shack’ marketing campaign the company is now making a rather more substantial move, securing an arrangement with Target stores to see the creation of so-called Bullseye Mobile kiosks. This has started with a 100-store pilot program but, throughout this year and into summer next, the expectation is to prop them up in 1,750 big box locations. Something tells us they won’t all be wired up for WiMAX, but we can hope.

[Thanks, Breon]

‘The Shack’ downsizes, opens Bullseye Mobile kiosks in many Target stores originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jul 2010 16:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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6 Takes On Apple’s Magic Trackpad [Magictrackpad]

We think Apple’s Magic Trackpad marks the beginning of the end for Mac OS X. Other reviewers of the Magic Trackpad touched on other subjects. Here are the highlights of what they said. More »