Energizer AP1201 case for iPhone 4 charges while it protects

You know what we always say: never enough battery life. Energizer‘s new AP1201 case for the iPhone 4 should come as a welcome addition to your Apple gadget family. As a slim, protective case of silicone rubber it’s not completely offensive looking (if fact, it’s pretty attractive), and it charges your phone while it’s wearing it. It’s got two charging options — a high speed charging mode which charges the phone first, then the case, while the other option provides simultaneous pass-through charging. The case promises to about double the life of your iPhone, and it’s available now for $69.99.

Energizer AP1201 case for iPhone 4 charges while it protects originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 09 Oct 2010 01:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How would you change HP’s Envy 14?


The gaming laptop of 2010? Maybe so, but it’s unquestionably one of the most hyped and most highly anticipated. HP’s 14-inch Envy hits a sweet spot in the size department, and during our time with it, it also managed to hit a slew of other high notes. Of course, it wasn’t without its flaws, but that’s not what this section is about. We’re anxious to hear how you folks feel about your newly (or not-so-newly) acquired Envy 14. Any qualms with the trackpad? Loathing the lack of a VGA output? Still uninstalling bloatware? Frustrated by the lack of a Radiance display option at the present time? Go on and tell us what you really think in comments below, particularly how you’d change things if you and Rahul Sood (or similar) switched shoes for a day.

How would you change HP’s Envy 14? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 22:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Remember the Milk gets some Google Gears Love

This article was written on June 06, 2007 by CyberNet.

Remember the Milk GearsIt’s only been a week since Google launched their open-source Gears project that can take online services into the offline world. They setup Google Reader to work with Gears, and it appears that it is starting to inspire other developers to do the same thing.

Remember the Milk (our review), an awesome task management site, decided to integrate with Google Gears so that users could manage their tasks whether they were online or offline. So what can you do with Remember the Milk (RTM) when it is offline?

Not only can you access your lists, but you can add new tasks and notes, edit existing tasks (complete, postpone, prioritize, tag, and change due dates to your heart’s content), use your own personal tasks search engine, create new Smart Lists, and more.

Of course, the joy of using Google Gears is that everything will immediately sync back up once you get back online. I’m getting really excited to see other sites pick up on the usefulness that Gears provides, but I just wish that it was a little simpler to get your stuff offline.

Remember the Milk GearsIf a lot of services start to use Google Gears, there needs to be some way to easily take all of your stuff offline at the same time. Maybe a System Tray icon, or something along those lines, that I can click on to take every service that I’m subscribed to in an offline state. After all, if I’m getting ready to take a long flight I wouldn’t want to sit there visiting 20 websites to take each of them offline, and then when I’m connected again I have to put all of them back online. That would be a huge chore.

I guess Google Gears is still in the development stage, so hopefully something like this will be implemented in the near future. An even better solution would be to constantly synchronize the online and offline content so that the services are always ready to go offline. That way you wouldn’t even need to worry about switching into an offline mode!

Source: Remember the Milk Blog [via Lifehacker]

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Sync to-do lists and blow away terrorists: iPhone apps of the week

This week’s apps include a cloud-synced to-do list manager and an excellent sequel to one of the best first person shooters on the iPhone. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://download.cnet.com/8301-2007_4-20019119-12.html” class=”origPostedBlog”The Download Blog/a/p

Google’s Andy Rubin on Windows Phone 7: ‘the world doesn’t need another platform’

Shootin’ straight, are we Andy? For those unaware, Andy Rubin is the vice president of engineering at Google, and he’s had his fingers in Android before the mobile OS was taken mainstream by El Goog. He recently sat down to talk mobile with PCMag, and he left the world with a wealth of quotes to ponder. For starters, he practically calls out OEMs who aren’t keeping up with Android’s releases, noting that “there’s no advantage to the OEM of using an older version, and I’d say there’s a consumer disadvantage.” Clearly, he’s not a fan of all of this fragmentation, either. Moving onto Windows Phone 7, he really came out swinging. When asked what he thought about WP7 as a competitor, here’s what came flowing out:

“I think the screen shots I’ve seen are interesting, but look, the world doesn’t need another platform. Android is free and open; I think the only reason you create another platform is for political reasons.”

We’ll obviously need to wait for Windows Phone 7 to launch (and see a few quarters of sales numbers) to see if he’s just blowing hot air, but it’s interesting fodder at least. Hit the source link for much, much more where this came from — and keep it sensible in comments, okay? It’s just code, after all.

Google’s Andy Rubin on Windows Phone 7: ‘the world doesn’t need another platform’ originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 19:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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A Humbled Microsoft Prepares to Boot Up Windows Phone 7


Joe Belfiore, Microsoft’s man in charge of mobile, has a favorite word when he talks about Windows Phone 7: “holistic.” The company’s mobile infrastructure underwent a sea change to make an operating system based on what users want, which required retooling its entire phone manufacturing and design strategy.

It even involved building robots, like the one pictured above, to make sure handsets work like you expect them to.

Joe Belfiore, Microsoft's corporate vice president of Windows Phone Program Management. Photo: Mike Kane/Wired.com

“We’re taking responsibility holistically for the product,” Belfiore said. “It’s a very human-centric way of thinking about it. A real person is going to pick up a phone in their hand, choose one, buy it, leave the store, configure it and live with it for two years. That’s determined by the hardware, software, application and services. We’re trying to think about all those parts such that the human experience is great.”

Windows Phone 7 is Microsoft’s complete do-over of a mobile operating system after the earlier Windows Mobile plummeted in market share and popularity in the wake of Apple’s consumer-savvy iPhone and Google’s prolific Android devices.

Referred to as “7″ by the engineers developing the OS, the project has been in the works since December 2008, when Microsoft decided to scrap all of its efforts on Windows Mobile 7, which would have been an iteration of the older operating system largely focused on business customers.

At a New York press conference on Monday, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer will announce hardware and carrier partners who will be supporting the operating system when the first Windows Phone 7 smartphones finally ship November. AT&T will be speaking at the event as well, suggesting that the telecom company will be among the initial carriers offering the OS.

In exclusive interviews with Wired.com, Microsoft staff spoke about the radical transformation in mobile strategy that was necessary to make Windows Phone 7 possible. The company had to purchase brand new lab facilities, hire and shuffle around top managers and reorganize its entire design department to rethink mobile.

Belfiore explained that years ago with Windows Mobile, the process was such that a mobile carrier and manufacturer would determine the features they wanted on a phone, and then they’d issue a list of specific instructions to OS makers such as Microsoft. This M.O. led to the creation of Windows Mobile, which has been knocked by critics (and even some of Microsoft’s own designers) for being overloaded with features and unfriendly to users.

“It was trying to put too much functionality in front of the user at one time as it could, and it resulted in an experience that was a little cluttered and overwhelming for taste for a lot of people today,” said Bill Flora, a design director at Microsoft. “It felt computerey.”

However, after Apple introduced the iPhone in 2007, Steve Jobs rewrote the rules of the wireless game. He slyly negotiated an arrangement with AT&T to carry the iPhone without even showing the carrier the phone. As a result, Apple was able to tightly control the design of the iPhone’s OS and hardware to deliver a mobile experience tailored for the customer to enjoy rather than the carrier.

In the aftermath of the iPhone, manufacturers have been racing to deliver competitive smartphones tailored to quality consumer experiences. And Microsoft acknowledges that Windows Phone 7 is benefiting from this paradigm shift.

“The success of the iPhone certainly had an impact on the industry and an impact on us,” Belfiore said. “And we said there were a lot of things we could do to deliver a solution that’s different from the iPhone but have some of its benefits.”


3M Shoot ‘n Share camcorder projector gets reviewed, does what it says on the box

You should know by now that the 3M Shoot ‘n Share is aptly named: it shoots 720p video and stills, and it shares with a 640 x 480 built-in pico projector. Simple, yes? What you might not know is how well the thing actually works, and for that we have a helpful review from PicoProjector-info. It basically confirms any fears you might’ve had about the combination: it’s not the best pocket camcorder, and it’s not the best pico projector (even 3M’s own similarly-specced MPro-150 model bests it). The good news is that it absolutely works, and is certainly passable in both of its stated aims, along with being fairly easy to operate. Not too bad for $300.

3M Shoot ‘n Share camcorder projector gets reviewed, does what it says on the box originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 18:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google TV or a Nettop?

How does a Google TV-based device like the Logitech Revue compare with a similarly priced Windows 7 Nettop?

New York Comic Con 2010: The Weird World of Geek Culture

nycc10_hulk.jpg

I just got back from New York Comic Con at the Javits Center in Midtown Manhattan. It’s only Friday, but boy howdy is the place a madhouse–there are lines, crowds, and costumes everywhere, and if past years are any indication, it’s only going to get more crazy on Saturday and Sunday.

The show is a bit different from past years in a number of ways. First, there’s construction happening at the Javits Center, so the “Artists’ Alley” section is a bit more segregated. Second, the show seems to be making great strides to become more like San Diego–when you walk through the front entrance, it’s all video game companies within eyeshot.

I did, however, manage to see some comic book-related booths before I left. All that and more, after the jump.

Gadget Lab Podcast: Windows Phone 7 and the Madness of Sony and Cisco

First things first: In this episode, Brian X. Chen and I show off the Star Trek Enterprise pizza cutter from ThinkGeek. If you know a Trek fan who enjoys eating pizza — and what Trek fan doesn’t? — this could be a fine gift. It’s weighty, shiny silver, and looks just like the starship piloted by Captain James T. Kirk. It’s not the most solidly built cutter, though, Brian points out — as he holds it dangerously close to my neck.

In more substantive tech news, we discuss the upcoming launch of Windows Phone 7, planned for Monday, Oct. 11. Microsoft will be taking the stage with AT&T at this press conference, which pretty much confirms that AT&T will be one of the carriers offering Microsoft’s next mobile operating system.

In other news, Cisco unveiled its Umi videophone, a $600 piece of kit that turns your HDTV into a videoconferencing system. You’ve also got to pay a monthly fee to support the Umi service. Are these guys crazy? Have they never heard of Google Chat?

Brian reviews Instagram, a hot new photo-editing and photo-sharing app for iPhones.

And we talk briefly about Sony’s risibly ugly Google TV remote, images of which popped up online earlier this week. If this is what the future of television looks like, I want to change the channel.

Like the show? You can also get the Gadget Lab video podcast on iTunes, or if you don’t want to be distracted by our unholy on-camera talent, check out the Gadget Lab audio podcast. Prefer RSS? You can subscribe to the Gadget Lab video or audio podcast feeds

Or listen to the audio here:

Gadget Lab audio podcast #91

http://downloads.wired.com/podcasts/assets/gadgetlabaudio/GadgetLabAudio0091.mp3