Friday Poll: Scariest tech happening of 2010?

Sure, blood-drenched Halloween zombies can be spooky. But not as scary as some of the more frightening tech moments this year to date.

AOC goes ultraslim with new sixpack of LED-backlit monitors

Tired of looking at the same, aged, lifeless pixels day-in and day-out? Now you’ve a way to change it. AOC has just unveiled its latest range of LCD monitors, and the whole lot is seductively thin. Measuring just 12.9 millimeters on the depth chart, this sixpack ranges from 18.5- to 23-inches and offers up a 16:9 widescreen viewing angle. Unfortunately, screen resolutions are being kept secret (we’re crossing our fingers for 1080p across the board), but we are told to expect VGA / DVI inputs, a flexible base, five millisecond response times and a laughable dynamic contrast ration of 50,000,000:1. Mum’s also the word on pricing, but look, at least you’ve got a lovely selection of high resolution images to gawk at below.

Continue reading AOC goes ultraslim with new sixpack of LED-backlit monitors

AOC goes ultraslim with new sixpack of LED-backlit monitors originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Oct 2010 08:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cowon’s capacious X7 media player gets the hands-on treatment, longs for WiFi

Cowon’s X7 still hasn’t made its stateside debut, but apparently it’s out and about on the streets of France. This 4.3-inch, HDD-packin’ portable media player was recently caught in the wild by Le Journal du Geek, with early impressions noting that the UI is pleasant to use, the weight a bit heavy and the build quality something to admire. For those who’ve forgotten, it manages a 480 x 272 screen resolution, Bluetooth, TV-out, an inbuilt microphone and compatibility with nearly every file format ever conceived. Still, the omission of WiFi is a touch troubling in today’s world of converge-or-go-home, but it’s tough to argue with 120GB (€299; $414) or 160GB (€329; $455) of storage space. Hit that source link for lots more eye candy.

Cowon’s capacious X7 media player gets the hands-on treatment, longs for WiFi originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Oct 2010 08:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ten sexy nerd Halloween costumes that fail

While sexy costumes seem to be the rage, some things should never, ever be made sexy–like Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Optimus Prime, or Ghostbusters.

WiFi-only Galaxy Tab stops by the FCC for tea

WiFi-only Galaxy Tab stops by the FCC for tea

$599 is a bit pricey for a seven-inch tablet, and while you can get $200 off that at some places by signing your life away to a data contract, that really isn’t any fun either. Thankfully Samsung appears to have another option with what looks to be the $499, WiFi-only model that showed up in a Best Buy flier earlier this week. That version has now been cleared by the FCC, indeed with only tests for 802.11 and Bluetooth wireless. The absence of 3G looks like it will save you $100 and obviously make the device a little less flexible than its bar-bearing brethren, but whether that modified cost:inconvenience ratio works out in your favor depends largely on the value of your income:restlessness factor.

WiFi-only Galaxy Tab stops by the FCC for tea originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Oct 2010 07:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Driverless electric van cruises 8,000 miles from Italy to China without stopping for directions

Driverless electric van cruises 8,000 miles from Italy to China without stopping to ask directions

They made it. The team from Visilab, which left way back in July, has arrived in China and will now take its place among the various other random things going on at the Shanghai World Expo. As you may or may not recall, a gaggle of autonomous orange EVs left Italy three months ago on a trip that would take them through cities like Moscow and wastelands like the Gobi Desert, all thanks to an array of laser scanners, cameras, and of course GPS. It was a 13,000km journey (8,078 miles) that was made with minimal driver intervention and, thanks to the EV-nature of the vehicles, without stopping once for gasoline — though they were limited to about four hours of travel each day before having to recharge. Now, remember when you were impressed that Google’s autonomous car managed about 1,000 miles on its own?

Driverless electric van cruises 8,000 miles from Italy to China without stopping for directions originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Oct 2010 07:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gateway’s low-priced (we think) 23-inch monitor

A look at the Gateway FHD2303L.

Crave giveaway: Kisai Wasted watch

For this week’s giveaway, we’re serving up an LED Kisai Wasted watch from Tokyoflash.

Nikon’s 3D Android-Powered Picture-Frame is Just Plain Weird

Is this a Nikon Android tablet? Well, not quite, but it’s pretty damn close. The NF-300i is a 3D, 7.2-inch digital photo frame that runs the Android 2.1 OS. If it had a touch-screen, then it would be a tablet.

Nikon’s frame, available only in Japan, is as full of gimmicks as you could wish for. Aside from the glasses-free 3D, the “photo-frame” also packs a calendar, a clock and weather screens, and you can even browse the web, although with neither keyboard nor touch-screen, this could be a painful procedure (it does at least come with a remote).

But back to the 3D. The NF-300i uses the same lenticular technology as the Nintendo 3DS. It doubles the horizontal resolution and covers the pixels with tiny cylindrical lenses. These lenses split the stereoscopic picture, sending one part to each eye, while obscuring the other.

So how do you get your pictures onto this device? Buy one, along with some fancy new Nikon 3D camera and you’re done? Oh, no. Nothing so simple. First, you sign up with Nikon for the new My Picturetown 3D service, which costs ¥19,950 per year ($247) or ¥1,995 per month ($25). You then upload any 2D photos to the cloud service where you can choose to have them converted to 3D, via an unspecified method that requires no special effort from you. Then Nikon loans you the display with which you can download and view the photos.

Weird, right? It gets worse. These hefty prices include just three conversions per month. If you want more, you’ll have to pay another ¥300 ($3.70) per image, with a minimum order of four images.

Specs-wise, the frame is pedestrian (not to mention that it is styled after CRT monitors from the 1990s). It has a resolution of 800 x 600 in a 4:3 ratio, 4GB of storage, Ethernet and b/g Wi-Fi and support audio and video (H.264) along with the JPEG and MPO (3D) image files.

It seems doomed, but then I’m taking a western point of view. Even given the famous neophilic attitude the Japanese have towards gadgets, though, this seems like a hard sell. In fact, the best feature might be that Nikon demands the unit’s return when you cancel your subscription, hopefully keeping it out of the landfill. Available December.

NF-300i product page [Nikon via DP Review]

My Picturetown 3D [Nikon]


Acer Liquid Metal gets official in the UK with Android 2.2 and Breeze UI

After seeing quite a few leaks, Acer just made its Liquid Metal handset official. The 3.6-inch slate runs Android 2.2 Froyo atop an 800MHz Qualcomm MSM7230 processor. Inside all that molten metal you’ll find 802.11n WiFi, support for 14.4Mbps HSDPA, DLNA/UPnP streaming support, Dolby Surround technology, and an image stabilized 5 megapixel autofocus camera with LED flash capable of recording video at 720p (30fps). Acer’s new handset also features a new Breeze UI and SocialJogger app that aggregates Twitter and Facebook feeds. Look for it to land in brown in the UK starting mid November for £299. A silver version should arrive in early December. Still no word on that AT&T compatible jobbie that passed through the FCC. One more image and the full press release after the break.

Continue reading Acer Liquid Metal gets official in the UK with Android 2.2 and Breeze UI

Acer Liquid Metal gets official in the UK with Android 2.2 and Breeze UI originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Oct 2010 06:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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