Intel: Sandy Bridge CPUs will ship in early 2011 (update)

Digg We’re live from the 2010 Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, where we’ve got an interesting tidbit of news — those long-awaited and often leaked Sandy Bridge processors will “begin shipping in very high volume” early next year in both laptop and desktop PCs. Now called the “2nd Generation Intel Core processors,” the new chips will feature Intel’s new 32nm architecture for everything, including the integrated graphics processor and memory controller, which will hopefully reduce their power consumption even as the new hardware’s not terribly friendly to overclockers. PR after the break.

Update: Intel’s on stage explaining a bit more about how Sandy Bridge works — apparently the Turbo modes introduced in earlier Core chips (which dynamically clock individual processor cores based on how much thermal headroom they have) now works dynamically with the silicon’s integrated graphics as well. Intel says it can actually exceed the TDP thermal envelope of a chip now to further overclock multiple cores at once, or switch off between overclocking graphics or CPU cores for differing workloads. See a few example images in the gallery below.

Continue reading Intel: Sandy Bridge CPUs will ship in early 2011 (update)

Intel: Sandy Bridge CPUs will ship in early 2011 (update) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Sep 2010 13:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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PlayOn (and full Hulu service) finally hits iPad via HTML5 Web app

The official PlayOn app never did make it past the Apple gatekeepers, but MediaMall Technologies, PlayOn’s parent company, has been working on an HTML5-based “Web app” as a replacement.

Sony Pocket E-Reader Combines Touchscreen, E Ink

Sony 350 with Cover from Sony Style

Sony doesn’t get as much attention for its e-book readers as Amazon, Apple or Barnes & Noble, but it remains a serious competitor. Its newest and prettiest model will be available stateside this week, and is definitely worth a closer look.

Sony will release three new e-reader models this fall: the Pocket, Touch and Daily Edition, all featuring E Ink displays with optical touchscreens. According to Sony Style USA, the silver Pocket Reader is available for order now and will ship tomorrow (Sept. 14); the pink version can be preordered and should ship Thursday (Sept. 16).

When Gadget Lab looked at Sony’s models earlier this month, they discussed their strategy in the market. “The bottom line is we didn’t want to compete on price,” said Steve Haber, president of Sony’s digital reading business division. “We wanted to build quality and overall experience. We want to give consumers the feel of buying an e-reader, not a toy.”

The most attention-grabbing feature of the new Sony is the fact that its E Ink screen responds to touch input. The touch sensors aren’t actually in the screen, but are triggered by infrared sensors all around the screen’s edges. Invisible beams respond when your finger breaks the plane of the screen — just like security devices in a spy movie. You don’t even have to actually physically touch the screen for the sensors to respond, just get within the sensor’s threshold.

The Sony PRS-350 has the same Pearl high-contrast E Ink screen as the Kindle, but in a slightly smaller form factor (5 inches instead of 6 inches). According to iReader Review (and as you can see from the gallery after the jump below), this knocks the image and text quality of the old Sony Readers out of the park. And because the new Pocket Reader doesn’t have a hardware keyboard, the whole device is only 5 3/4 inches by 4 1/8 inches, and just a shade over 1/3-inch thick.

Like all Sony Readers, it supports both ePub and PDF with or without DRM. The body design is gorgeous, and the build quality is reportedly top-notch.

So we have a tiny, touchscreen E Ink reading machine that might even display images and tiny fonts better than the new Kindle. Did Sony just make the long-awaited “paperback e-reader” to move the whole show?

No, unfortunately, they didn’t. Here’s why.

The Sony Pocket reader has no internet capability at all. No Wi-Fi, no 3G. Nothing.

This means that while it’s terrific for reading books, you can’t use it to read anything else. No checking e-mail, no using Instapaper, no Google Reader.

Speaking of Instapaper and RSS readers — there’s also the specter of the Amazon App Store, which promises to add a lot more functionality to the Kindle. Functionality that’s likely to be dependent in no small part on web access. Even if Sony starts thinking seriously about casual gaming on their e-Readers — and frankly, I think moving in the other direction and putting e-Books on PSPs is a lot more likely — they’re still moving uphill.

In a follow-up review, iReader Review notes that actually loading books onto the Pocket Reader is a giant pain. “It’s not just that you can’t get books to Sony 350 wirelessly in 60 seconds. You can’t get books to it in 60 seconds period…. Sony proves that it’s a hardware company and not a software company.” He notes several other user-experience problems with the device, too, including an imagined vignette where Sony asks its software design team to take this magical device and completely screw up the UI.

Finally, it costs $179. That’s $10 less than the 3G Kindle (which gets you free 3G forever), and $40 more than the Wi-Fi-only Kindle ($30 more than the Wi-Fi Nook), both of which still get you Wi-Fi. A 20-25 percent markup is a lot to pay for a touchscreen.

Face it — two months ago, the Sony Pocket Reader would have been a cannonball in the world of e-readers. It would have been cheaper and more capable than nearly anything on the market. But the Kindle 3, with its improved screen and WebKit browser, is actually turning into something more than a repository for e-books.

Sony’s made a gorgeous one, and I think it will appeal to many, many people. Seriously — it’s appealing to me. But it doesn’t look like the future.

P.S. Whatever you do, don’t try to find this e-reader by searching for “Sony 350.” Sony makes a kajillion products from cameras to DVD players that all have “350″ somewhere in their official handle. It’s a nightmare. Why they don’t just call the thing “Pocket Reader” is completely beyond me.

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All images courtesy of iReader Review.

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Motorola Defy coming to T-Mobile

T-Mobile’s newest Android device, the Motorola Defy, is set to make its debut on the Oprah Winfrey Show. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://www.cnet.com/8301-19736_1-20016223-251.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Android Atlas/a/p

UC Berkeley researchers craft ultra-sensitive artificial skin, robots dream of holding eggs

Researchers and engineers have been toiling on synthetic skins for years now, but most of ’em have run into one major problem: the fact that organic materials are poor semiconductors. In other words, older skins have required high levels of power to operate, and those using inorganic materials have traditionally been too fragile for use on prosthetics. Thanks to a team of researchers at UC Berkeley, though, we’re looking at a new “pressure-sensitive electronic material from semiconductor nanowires.” The new ‘e-skin’ is supposedly the first material made out of inorganic single crystalline semiconductors, and at least in theory, it could be widely used in at least two applications. First off, robots could use this skin to accurately determine how much force should be applied (or not applied, as the case may be) to hold a given object. Secondly, this skin could give touch back to those with artificial hands and limbs, though that would first require “significant advances in the integration of electronic sensors with the human nervous system. Dollars to donuts this gets tested on the gridiron when UCLA and / or Stanford comes to town.

UC Berkeley researchers craft ultra-sensitive artificial skin, robots dream of holding eggs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Sep 2010 12:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola Defy hitting T-Mobile this holiday season, details to come… on Oprah

Remember that Defy that Motorola outed at the front end of this month? Turns out the Europeans won’t be the only ones seeing it this Christmas, as Moto has just revealed that it’ll be hitting US airwaves exclusively on T-Mobile “in time for the holidays.” You already know the details — a 3.7-inch WVGA scratch-resistant touchpanel, plenty of rigidity, Android 2.1, the ability to withstand dust and water, a five megapixel camera (with flash and auto focus), DLNA support and the outfit’s own Blur interface (despite Jha’s claims that it would fade from view) — but it looks as if you’ll have to wait a tick to find out anything about pricing. How long? Tune into today’s farewell season premiere of “The Oprah Winfrey Show” to find out. Yeah… strange. But true!

Continue reading Motorola Defy hitting T-Mobile this holiday season, details to come… on Oprah

Motorola Defy hitting T-Mobile this holiday season, details to come… on Oprah originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Sep 2010 12:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Super Mario Bros. reaches ripe old age of 25

The title first hit store shelves in Japan in September 1985 and eventually became one of the most respected franchises in the gaming industry. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://news.cnet.com/8301-13506_3-20016209-17.html” class=”origPostedBlog”The Digital Home/a/p

Garmin considers exiting smartphone business

With lower than expected sales of its GPS-smartphone hybrids, Garmin may pull the plug on its smartphone division. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://www.cnet.com/8301-17918_1-20016212-85.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Dialed In/a/p

Manta ray mugs cameraman

A YouTube video shows a manta ray swooping in, grabbing, and taking off with thousands of dollars worth of underwater video gear.

Chattanooga becomes home to 1Gbps internet service, just $350 per month

It pales in comparison to Sigbritt Löthberg’s home internet connection, but it sure makes Comcast’s Extreme 105Mbps broadband package look downright sluggish. EPB Fiber Optics (Chattanooga’s municipally-owned fiber-to-the-premises network) and Alcatel-Lucent have teamed up to offer America’s “fastest” home broadband service — a service that brings 1Gbps (or 1000Mbps, if that strikes you better) directly to your PC. Best of all, the service is actually on sale starting today, and every single home and business within EPB’s 600 square-mile, nine-county service area will be able to access the network. Oh, and in case you’re wondering, this actually isn’t affiliated in any way with Google’s own proposed 1Gbps service, which likely means that this record will only sit in southeast Tennessee for a few months. Still, we hear this place is some kind of beautiful in the fall, but make sure you’re cool with a $350 monthly charge before pulling the trigger on a relocation.

Update: Tipster Jens notes that he can get a 1Gbps connection for 900 SEK per month in Stockholm, or around $126. Baby steps, we Americans are taking.

Continue reading Chattanooga becomes home to 1Gbps internet service, just $350 per month

Chattanooga becomes home to 1Gbps internet service, just $350 per month originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Sep 2010 11:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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