3D Blu-ray on the PS3: it works! (video)

3D Blu-ray on the PS3: it works! (video)

We’ve been waiting for 3D Blu-ray support to hit the PS3 for a good long while now, and Sony‘s been promising it would happen for, well, exactly that same amount of time. Yesterday the company confirmed that the 3D-enabling 3.50 firmware update is less than a week away, dropping on September 21, and here’s proof that it works: a demonstration unit up and running at TGS. Fully animated evidence after the break.

Continue reading 3D Blu-ray on the PS3: it works! (video)

3D Blu-ray on the PS3: it works! (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Sep 2010 09:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Friday Poll: Are you ready for the coming of streaming TV?

When, if at all, do you plan to cut the cord on your cable provider with choices for watching on-demand video content on the rise?

Is the Notebook Dying? [Chart]

Yes. You can scream all you want, but yes, the notebook is dying. More »

Best Buy Chief: iPad Cuts Laptop Sales in Half

According to Best Buy Chief Executive Brian Dunn, the iPad has replaced as much as half of all laptop sales. Further, the little tablet is also slowing TV sales, despite the manufacturers’ desperate push to shift 3-D sets.

Speaking to the Wall Street Journal, Dunn said that sales are slowing in general on bigger gadgets, and that the hot products are the iPad, e-readers like the Kindle, and digital cameras. Instead of upgrading televisions, many people are sticking with the ones they own and spending the cash on iPads and other things they don’t already have.

But the biggest surprise is that 50% figure. It’s an internal, Best Buy estimate, but proves what we at Gadget Lab thought all along: that Mom and Pop would switch from cheap, unreliable and hard-to-use laptops and buy the iPad instead, an intuitive device which covers 90% of their computing needs. When the iPad gets a FaceTime camera (and hopefully a video-capable version of Skype) then the only people buying laptops will be those who need the horsepower for work.

Over on Fortune.com, Philip Elmer-DeWitt cites unrelated figures from Morgan Stanley showing that notebook sale growth has been steadily slowing. The bank’s analyst takes a more cautious conclusion, stating that “tablet cannibalization” is at least partially responsible for the decline. Since Apple has been the only significant tablet maker on the market for most of the past five months, that really means “iPad cannibalization.”

These crazy iPad sales are taking their bite out of Windows market-share, too, not the Mac’s. Mac sales, which are mostly notebook sales anyway, continue to grow every quarter. This means that people are dropping Windows for the iPad. With the lack of any viable Windows-based iPad competitor, Microsoft should be getting very worried indeed: after all, the bulk of its business comes from bundling its OS with commodity hardware — the exact hardware that Best Buy has seen drop in sales by half.

Retailers Turn to Gadgets [WSJ]

Photo: Yutaka Tsutano/Flickr

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Greensound’s glass speakers: stunning visually and aurally, far from kid-friendly

Yeah, we’ve seen our fair share of glass speakers in the past, but it looks as if Greensound has hopped on the bandwagon at just the right time. In the past, these kinds of music makers were largely looked at as gimmicks, but the Floe series looks to offer a serious advantage over equally expensive conventional drivers. Put simply, audio is created at the base of each speaker, and it’s distributed up (and around) the pane with the lows coming from the bottom, the mids from the middle and the highs from the top. We’re pretending to ignore the fact that these things will probably be far outside the budget of every sect save for the affluent, but you can tease yourself by pressing play just after the break.

Continue reading Greensound’s glass speakers: stunning visually and aurally, far from kid-friendly

Greensound’s glass speakers: stunning visually and aurally, far from kid-friendly originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Sep 2010 08:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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PlayStation Move on sale now at Amazon

While the PlayStation Move isn’t supposed to go on sale until September 19th, that hasn’t stopped a few local brick-n-mortar shops from breaking the street date. Now Amazon’s jumped the gun and put the PlayStation Move $99.99 Starter Bundle up for sale a few days early. And with local express delivery, you can even get it shipped today if you qualify. Worse case, use one-day shipping and you’ll still get it before the Joneses.

Update: Oh, and we just found the $399.99 PlayStation 3 320GB with Move Bundle, $49.99 Move Controller, and $29.96 Move Navigation Controller ready for purchase too. Full press release detailing all the items after the break.

Continue reading PlayStation Move on sale now at Amazon

PlayStation Move on sale now at Amazon originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Sep 2010 08:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple TV Runs iOS; Apps, Jailbreaking Possible

Apple TV image from Apple.com

There have been two mysteries about the new Apple TV. 1) Was it still running the old Apple TV’s “Back Row” version of OS X? 2) Just how small is its new pared-down hard drive? Mystery #1 has been solved: just like the iPhone and iPad, Apple TV is now running iOS 4.

This is important for two reasons:

  1. Right now, there are no apps (and no app marketplace) for Apple TV. Now we know there could be — and not on some imagined next-generation device, but this one, in the not-too-distant future.
  2. The new Apple TV could be amenable to the same jailbreaking techniques that have worked on the iPhone and iPad — so even if Apple doesn’t start a TV app store, someone could start their own if they’re willing to live on the wild side.

Both of these consequences, though, are still a teensy bit dependent on the answer to that other mystery. Until we get a teardown, nobody’s sure exactly how much storage the new Apple TV is packing. There might not be room enough to store a whole bunch of apps, even if you could sideload them through that teensy micro-USB port.

I’ll let Chris Foresman at Ars Technica explain how we know Apple TV is running iOS:

Apple stores configuration information about how various iOS devices can communicate with other devices over its dock connector in a file called USBDeviceConfiguration.plist. Entries in this file have revealed early evidence of new iPhone and iPod models, and an entry labelled “iProd” later turned out to be the first iPad.

An entry in iOS 3.2 was referred to as iProd2,1, and we suspected that it was likely an early prototype of a next-gen iPad. However, an updated configuration file in iOS 4.2b1 reveals the same numeric product ID is attached to an entry for AppleTV2,1, referring to the second major hardware revision of the Apple TV. This presents solid evidence that the new Apple TV is running iOS proper, instead of the other customized version of Mac OS X used for the previous one—that should save Apple from duplicated development effort.

So if Apple TV is running iOS now, why not announce it and invite people to start making apps for it? Wouldn’t that get everyone more excited about the relaunch of Apple TV? I could think of two reasons why they wouldn’t:

  1. There’s no natural interface to run existing iOS apps on Apple TV: no touchscreens TVs, definitely no multitouch, no accelerometers, no camera, etc. Until one or more of those things change, or somebody writes some nifty code to make a remote control do the same thing, you can’t port apps over. If that changes, it’s off to the races.
  2. The App Store is already fragmented; not all apps work on every device, or even the same device running different versions of iOS. Throwing Apple TV in the mix, with a bunch of TV-specific applications that might or might not work terribly well on the iPad or iPhone, just makes the store more confusing. And Apple’s trying to make its TV products, especially, as simple as possible.

Confirmed: ‘iProd 2′ is the new Apple TV (TUAW)

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LG’s FB614M micro stereo plays DVDs, streams tunes, fits nicely in your pal’s spaceship

We’ve seen our fair share of funky micro stereos over the years, but LG’s latest just might be the most bodacious yet. Curvaceous and compact, the FB614M all-in-one system is ready for every DVD and CD you could toss at it, and streaming jams from your phone or PMP won’t be an issue so long as your device is equipped with a little-known protocol by the name of Bluetooth. Naturally, there’s an iDevice dock up top as well as a touch sensitive control dial, and the inbuilt USB ensures that most every other player is well taken care of, too. Your guess is as good as ours when it comes to wattage and sound quality, but South Koreans can find out themselves later this week for ₩299,000 ($257).

LG’s FB614M micro stereo plays DVDs, streams tunes, fits nicely in your pal’s spaceship originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Sep 2010 08:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Engadget Korea, Akihabara News  |  sourceHankyung  | Email this | Comments

Smart Shower-Dongle Mixes Soap with Water

Just this morning I was taking a shower and thinking just how old fashioned it is. You have to reach down, grab the shower-gel, squeeze some into your hand and lather. Then you rinse and repeat, over and over until the whole of your once-filthy body is clean. So boring. “What if”, I thought to myself, “there were a better way to shower?”

So you can imagine my delight when I got an email today pitching a product that “changes the way you shower”. The product is the awkwardly-named Bödysöf, and it dispenses with annoying manual soap-application forever.

The Bödysöf sticks (via suction cups or screws) onto the wall beside your shower. It has a spring-loaded lever and a chamber for bodywash or moisturizer. Fill it, pull the lever and as that lever returns to its start position, it slowly pumps the soap into the shower-tube where it mixes with the water and arrives frothily at your skin. The soap actually enters the water through a small adapter that sits between the faucet and the tube.

It is truly ingenious, and aside from further pandering to my almost limitless laziness, it does something a regular shower can’t do that a bath can: moisturize your skin properly. The Bödysöf comes in two models. The chrome version is $140 and the white plastic one is $80.

Bödysöf product page [Bödysöf. Thanks, Dan!]

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PhotoFast’s PowerDrive-LSI PCIe SSD screams past the competition at 1400MB a second

Usually we find overwrought product names, ostentatious paintjobs, and flame decals tacky, but all’s forgiven with this PCI Express 2.0 SSD. CompactFlash stalwart PhotoFast has unveiled its all-new PowerDrive, which claims it can read your mind data at 1.4GBps and write it at an even faster 1.5GBps. That’s the rough equivalent of reading two full CDs’ content every second! Need we say more? The PowerDrive’s speed puts the stinking fast Fusion-io ioXtreme to shame, humbles PhotoFast’s own 1GBps G-Monster, and matches OCZ’s otherworldly Z-Drive. The supported OS list includes a nice selection of Linux flavors as well, and sizes stretch from 240GB up to 960GB. Pricing? One word: unaffordable.

PhotoFast’s PowerDrive-LSI PCIe SSD screams past the competition at 1400MB a second originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Sep 2010 07:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Akihabara News  |  sourcePhotoFast  | Email this | Comments