White iPhone 4 delayed until spring

After two delays already, Apple now says the white iPhone 4 won’t arrive until spring 2011.

Originally posted at Circuit Breaker

MacBook Air review (late 2010)

The MacBook Air has never exactly been a simple product to review. Since the laptop’s launch back in the heady days of 2008, we’ve always considered it a niche, high-end product and much less a mainstream system. Originally, the wafer-thin (and somewhat underpowered) laptop sold for a painful starting price of $1,799, and had its fair share of problems. Well, we’ve come a long way from Apple’s original play, with two all-new models of the Air. The first is an update to the standard 13.3-inch model priced at a significantly cheaper $1,299, while the newest entrant to the MacBook family is a tiny 11.6-inch model that’s nearly the size of an iPad — and not wildly more expensive, starting at $999. Of course, over time the market for laptops of this type has gotten quite crowded, with a slew of ULV-based thin-and-lights that offer lots of options for lots of budgets. Do the new MacBook Airs have enough to take on a crowded market, or have they been bumped out of the game altogether? Read on for the full Engadget review to find out!

Continue reading MacBook Air review (late 2010)

MacBook Air review (late 2010) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Oct 2010 19:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple delays white iPhone 4 into spring 2011

Let’s just be honest, Apple: white stuff is impossible to manufacture. In fact, scientists have yet to prove that white even exists, so we’re not sure why you’re bothering to try to make a phone out of it! That’s right: after a missed availability date in July and another delay after that, Cupertino has once again pushed back the manufacture of the palest iPhone 4 — this time clear into spring of 2011. It won’t say why, but in all likelihood, they’re still dealing with the same manufacturing woes they’ve had from the start. By the time mid-2011 rolls around, it seems probable that the release will be butting up against news of the iPhone 4’s successor — or at the very least, a CDMA version of the phone — so it’ll be fascinating to see how this timeline unfolds. In the meantime, yeah… might want to give up the wait and go for black.

Apple delays white iPhone 4 into spring 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Oct 2010 19:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Crave 22: Smell my moon dust (podcast)

This week on Crave, a low-tech robot makes Donald excited…or sad. No, excited. No, sad. Either way, its bulbous hand is sure to provide minutes of entertainment. Also, we chime in on a high-fashion biking helmet from Sweden and find out what the moon smells like (Eric is disappointed it’s not cheese). Plus, an R2-D2 swimsuit falls flat on the sexiness scale, super shimmery batteries catch Jasmine’s eye, and a Hello Kitty Smart car brings the rave full circle–as does the iPhone soap that smells like sausage. Or maybe it’s the faux-nut from ThisIsWhyYou’reFat that does it. Either way, you’re in for a treat (and it might be a pizza pop).

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Episode 22

Coffee robot hand

Bicyclists get collar airbag

Scratch ‘n’ sniff moon

R2-D2 swimsuit

Glitter batteries

Hello Kitty Smart car

Grilled sausage iPhone soap

This is why you’re fat


Pizza lollipops

Just…ew


First take: Getting whiplash driving the Nissan Leaf

The only thing that will wow you about the 2010 Nissan Leaf is torque, but that’s a good thing. Other than the electric power train and 100-mile range, it’s just like any other commuter car.

Originally posted at The Car Tech blog

How to Spot Your Evil Twin [Book Excerpt]

Are you the good twin or evil twin? Sometimes just looking for the goatee isn’t enough (especially for the ladies). Luckily, Everything Explained Through Flowcharts has you covered! Determine your evilness in this week’s excerpt. More »

Windows 7 and Server 2008 R2 Service Pack 1 sees public beta release

We knew good and well it was coming, and here it is. Microsoft has today introduced the Release Candidate (RC) of Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 Service Pack 1 (SP1) to the public, and for those unaware of how these software rollouts “work,” the RC release generally signals that a final build is just about ready. As previously announced, the only new features added to the SP1 are the Windows Server 2008 R2-related virtualization technologies, Dynamic Memory and RemoteFX, and while Windows 7 SP1 will enable PCs to take advantage of these server-based features to provide a more scalable and richer VDI experience for end users, there are no additional new features specific to Windows 7. If that’s cool with you, there’s a source link (and a download) waiting for you just below.

[Thanks, Logan]

Windows 7 and Server 2008 R2 Service Pack 1 sees public beta release originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Oct 2010 18:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Top 5 things I love about Windows Phone 7

Senior Editor Bonnie Cha lists her Top 5 favorite features of Windows Phone 7.

Originally posted at Dialed In

Cochlear implant could help wearers find balance

Researchers at the University of Washington have successfully implanted a device they hope will cancel the symptoms of vertigo experienced by those with Meniere’s disease.

Originally posted at News – Health Tech

Barnes & Noble Aims to Bring Color to E-Books

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Photo: Tim Carmody/Wired.com.

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NEW YORK — Barnes & Noble’s Nook Color is real. For $250, it may even be spectacular. Readers will find out for themselves sometime around Nov. 19.

“Our customers snack on content of all kinds all day,” Barnes & Noble CEO William Lynch said in a press conference announcing the device. He called the new Nook Color “the first reader’s tablet.”

The bookseller’s second-generation e-reader takes aim at both Amazon and entry-level Android tablets. Like its predecessor, the Nook Color is powered by Android. But this e-reader gives Google’s OS a bit more of a workout, ditching the low-power, monochrome E Ink display and the two-screen interface of the original Nook.

Instead, it’s got a 7-inch color LCD touchscreen made by LG. The screen technology is called “VividView” and incorporates an anti-glare coating, but is otherwise far closer to a tablet display than an e-book reader like the Kindle.

In related e-book reader news, Amazon announced Tuesday that the Kindle would be gaining a strictly limited e-book lending feature similar to what the B&N Nook has. That’s a remarkable about-face for Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.

This graduates the Nook from dedicated e-reader to personal media player, if not quite a full tablet computer. In addition to Barnes & Noble’s current library of EPUB-derived black-and-white e-books, the Nook Color will be able to display color books, photos and games, multimedia-enhanced e-books, a good chunk of the web and even video.

Opportunities to test out the new Nook Color were very limited. Barnes & Noble did not give reporters unfettered access to the device. Most of the press conference centered on giant mockups on the screen.

The first showpieces for Nook Color will be magazines and newspapers. Barnes & Noble has partnered with Condé Nast (parent company of Wired magazine and Wired.com) and Hearst to offer magazines as both single issues and as subscriptions. (Apple lets publishers sell tablet magazines for its iPad, but hasn’t sorted out subscriptions just yet.)

B&N is also inviting other developers to create interactive color reading content specifically for Nook Color. The company is starting a program for developers to create Android applications specifically for the new device, to be offered in the Nook store. At launch, the Applications section will offer Pandora for streaming music, a handful of games like chess and sudoku, and a gallery application for viewing photos and video.

You’ll also be able to upload media by mounting the Nook Color as a hard drive on your PC’s desktop (using a USB cable) and doing a drag-and-drop. It will support MP3 and AAC audio and MP4 video.

When you also consider the recently announced Nook Kids store for children’s books, Barnes & Noble’s strategy is clear: Flank Amazon, Apple and other Android devices by offering formats and genres at the seams, which the other devices’ hardware and marketplace models have difficulty handling. While Apple’s hardware offers vivid color and interactivity, and Amazon’s store is flush with books and periodicals, Nook Color will have both.

Nook Color will also leverage its Wi-Fi connection to integrate reading with popular social networks. Readers will be able to share comments and excerpts from books, newspapers or magazines by e-mail, Facebook or Twitter, by opening up a submenu while viewing a document.

The interface will be familiar to existing Nook readers. In its default view, the library scrolls along the bottom quarter of the screen (where the old LCD touchscreen used to be), although you can also navigate in full screen.

Barnes & Noble was able to keep the device fairly lightweight: The Yves Béhar design weighs less than a pound and comes in at just one-half-inch thick. It will have 8 GB of internal storage and a microSD port for additional memory.

The battery life predictably suffers from supporting an LCD color screen, but Barnes & Noble claims it will still get around 8 hours of reading time.

There are some things the Nook Color won’t do. There’s no 3G option, which saves you some money and Barnes & Noble a lot, but does limit your ability to buy a book on a whim at an airport or hotel. It won’t have access to the Android Market or have the ability to run applications originally designed for other Android devices. You’ll be stuck with the apps Barnes & Noble’s picks, unless you opt to root/jailbreak your device.

Barnes & Noble’s Nook has been available for less than a year, but it’s quickly established itself as a solid competitor to the Kindle, capturing 20 percent of the e-book retail market, a worthy Pepsi to Amazon’s Coke.

The company has leveraged its in-store presence and customer base, building Nook boutiques in stores, and offering free Wi-Fi and book browsing there. It’s also branched out from its own stores, selling its reader online, and at other retailers like Wal-Mart and Best Buy. The company plans to continue that wide retail availability with Nook Color.

Barnes & Noble plans to continue selling the original Nook as an entry-level black-and-white E Ink reader for $150 and $200, and it promises to continue to support and enhance the original device.

It’s clear, though, that Barnes & Noble is thinking of E Ink readers as a “segment of the e-reading market,” to borrow a phrase its executives used over and over again. Its bet is on interactive color as the e-reading standard of the future.

When asked whether Nook Color would cannibalize Barnes & Noble’s sales of print books, Lynch pointed to data suggesting that current Nook owners were actually buying more print books from Barnes & Noble.

“We plan to cannibalize other people’s physical book sales more than our own,” he added.

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