Acer Iconia first hands-on! (update: video!)

Acer’s dual-screen Iconia laptop is bold, for sure — eschewing a physical keyboard for another display — but its LCD panels are also mighty glossy. If you’ve got a light in the vicinity above you, there’s gonna be glare — we saw it on stage, and we just saw it now in person. That said, the screen is clear and the touch functionality is pretty clever (five fingers open up a widget where you can scroll through other touch-friendly apps). The keyboard, on the other hand, is pretty hard to use — even the rep admitted there’s a learning curve. You can’t rest your fingers down without hitting something, of course. We managed to browse to Engadget, but it took several tries. Check out the photos below!

Update: Now with video! It’s after the break.

Continue reading Acer Iconia first hands-on! (update: video!)

Acer Iconia first hands-on! (update: video!) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Nov 2010 14:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Acer unveils 4.8-inch Android smartphone

In addition to a slew of tablets, Acer introduces a new Android smartphone, rocking a 4.8-inch touch screen.

Originally posted at Android Atlas

Acer’s Android tablets hands-on!

We wish we had better news about our hands-on success here at the Acer global press conference, but because all of the company’s Android tablets will run Honeycomb / 3.0 or Google’s “tablet OS” most of the units just weren’t functioning. The 10.1-inch, dual-core Tegra-powered version was the only unit that would power on, and though we did get to see it blaze through some HD video, for the most part it was very sluggish and clearly acting like a pre-production unit. As far as the hardware goes, the display was bright and surprisingly had decent viewing angles. Acer’s been notorious for using terrible LCDs, so this is quite a nice change! Oh, and as you already knew, it does have two cameras.

We eventually convinced a very nice Acer rep on hand to bring out the 4.8- and 7-inch devices for a hardware demo — both of them were also very early units, but they did look nice from afar with glossy black screens and brushed metal backs. The phonlet’s 4.8-inch, 1024 x 480-resolution screen (it has a 21:9 aspect ratio!) makes it much wider than a Streak, and reminded us a lot of the LG GW900 (may it rest in peace). We told you we didn’t have much in the way of impressions, but hit the gallery below for some more hands-on shots and the break for a quick video of the 10-incher in action. April can’t come soon enough, can it?

Continue reading Acer’s Android tablets hands-on!

Acer’s Android tablets hands-on! originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Nov 2010 14:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon’s Price Check Might Be Perfect Smartphone Shopping App

If you’re headed to the mall this weekend, Amazon’s new iPhone app might be an ideal companion for comparison-shopping and price checking.

As a bonus — for Amazon — the company has figured out a way to advertise its own products is everyone else’s stores, using a clever application that leverages the key features of smartphones — in particular, Apple’s latest iPhones.

Price Check for iPhone initially doesn’t seem very different from Amazon’s well-established, multiplatform “shopping cart” frontend, which has always allowed users to check prices and buy products on the go. The difference is the variety and speed of inputs you can use to find items in the store, which make the app particularly well-suited for using it while you’re standing in the aisle of a store, gazing at something you’re thinking of buying.

Here are the main ways you can use the Amazon app:

  • Say It brings up a picture of a microphone with an “I’m listening” message. Speak a product’s name into the smartphone mic, and Amazon will try to find it. The speech recognition is a little iffy, and obviously homophones give it some trouble (my search for “Kinect” brought up “Connect Four”), but it’s generally pretty good.
  • Snap It opens up your iPhone’s camera, along with a textual reminder that the service “works best in good light with a book, DVD, CD, or video game” — in short, media objects with well-established cover art that Amazon can try to match in its database (and Amazon says it’s steadily increasing the size and variety of this database). “Snap It” worked extraordinarily well with every book I tried in the decidedly poor light of my office.
  • Scan It is particularly powerful, since it can use a product’s barcode to find a unique copy: it won’t confuse hardbacks with paperbacks, or widescreen and fullscreen copies of a DVD. But it requires an autofocusing camera to get high-quality resolution on the barcode — which means iPhone 4 or 3GS. My iPhone 3G has the “Scan It” button grayed out; if I click it, I get a short, apologetic notice that my non-autofocusing camera can’t scan a barcode, at least up to the standards of Amazon’s new app.
  • Finally, you can also type in a product’s name in the “Type It” box at the top. Once you’ve found an item, you can browse specs and reviews, or share the price over email, Facebook or Twitter, or narrow the stores between Amazon and its partners (the “Prime” compatible button is quite nice.)

There’s also a handy list of “Recent Price Checks,” so you can keep track of products you’ve scanned, and a shopping cart, so you can buy products from Amazon directly. You can’t access your own wish list, which skews the app towards impulse buys or holiday shopping for other people.

When the app was first announced, I was confused; why was Amazon launching yet another shopping application for iOS? There’s the old standby Amazon.com, the Windowshop App for iPad and now PriceCheck? Did customers really need a whole page (or in iOS 4, a folder) devoted just to apps for Amazon?

Now I think I understand the strategy much better. Each Amazon application capitalizes on the unique hardware and anthropology of the device. Windowshop is a browsing catalog, suited to the full-sized screen and laid-back posture of the iPad. Even the name suggests voyeurism and fantasy. Price Check is mobile, pulling in camera, voice and autofocus to make something you can whip out of your pocket to make a snap decision while the Black Friday hordes crowd in around you.

Different devices, different scenarios, different shopping experiences — but all of them funneling you to just one store, up in the cloud. Smart. Now I wonder when and if other platforms (Android, Blackberry, etc.) will get their chance to play with similar new toys.

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Spanish Chemist Can Turn Tires Into Fuel

Tire-Fire.jpg

While the steady move towards electric vehicles is great for the environment, there’s still one part of a car that remains a big eco problem: the tires. They’re difficult to recycle and don’t have many options when it comes to being reused. But that may change thanks to a researcher in Spain who have discovered a way to turn tires into fuel.

By using the thermochemical decomposition process of pyrolysis, which is able to create heat without any oxygen, chemist María Felisa Laresgoiti has discovered a way to break down old tires into usable components. The process involves heating the tires at 500°C for 30 minutes. This process creates a liquid that’s similar to petroleum, so in theory could be used as a potential fuel source. In addition to the liquid produced, an additional 44 percent of the decomposed tire is turned into solid material. According to Laresgoiti, this leftover material could potentially be used to help reinforce new tires or as a way to add pigments to inks.

Via Gizmag

Acer launches Alive digital content platform and app store, plans to pre-load it onto future machines

Acer’s Global press event today focused primarily around its Clear.fi content sharing system and a slew of new hardware introductions, but there’s one tidbit of software news that seems too significant to ignore. Here shortly, Acer will begin pre-loading its newfangled Alive digital content platform onto its machines. Hard to say if that includes tablets and smartphones (update: Acer has confirmed that it’ll eventually hit “netbooks, laptops, smartphones and tablets), but the screens we’re seeing today lead us to believe this is a desktop-only affair for now. Acer’s playing this up as being “more than an app store,” but there’s no question that an app store lies at the heart. A cornucopia of partners (Intel, Zinio, Adobe, etc.) will be providing content, and newly pushed material can be easily viewed via Twitter or Acer’s own Channel concept. Five main sections will be present: Listen, Watch, Read, Play and Application. Both free and paid content will be supported, with users in the UK and Italy getting first access next month. Mum’s the word on how long it’ll take to spread elsewhere (a more thorough rollout will “begin” in Q1 2011), and there’s no mention at all about an SDK for developers. Something tells us this will end up as more of a collection of apps from various app stores than anything else, but at least we’ll know for sure in just a couple weeks.

Continue reading Acer launches Alive digital content platform and app store, plans to pre-load it onto future machines

Acer launches Alive digital content platform and app store, plans to pre-load it onto future machines originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Nov 2010 13:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Acer announces new phone, tablets, dual-screen laptop

Acer announces new touch-screen phone, laptop, tablets.

FCC to Proposing 911 Texting

When it comes to contacting emergency services, the more venues the better, really. The FCC is said to be looking into increasing the methods people can use to contact 911, including text messages–a technology than has begun to supplant traditional voice calling for many cell phone users.

According to the FCC’s numbers, some 70 percent of 911 calls are made using cell phones. Added text messaging to the acceptable methods of contacting emergency services could actually help victims in instances where speaking would put them at risk–something students attempted to do unsuccessfully during 2007’s shooting at the Virginia Tech campus.

FCC chairman Julius Genachowski is expected to propose the idea in a speech today. The department will open the issue up to public comments before voting on it.

Diary of a cable TV cord cutter: Week 1

A week after cutting the TV cord, CNET Editor David Katzmaier reports on what works, and what doesn’t, for his household.

Gigantic Solar Powered Boat Travelling Across The Globe

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We’ve seen a wind powered yacht, and now we present a solar powered boat. But not just any solar powered boat, it’s the world’s largest. And it’s set to take a trip around the world.

The boat, dubbed the TÛRANOR PlanetSolar, actually set sail last month where it began the journey in Monaco. It should be making additional stops in Miami and Cancún over the next month, with the plan being to travel around the globe without using any fossil fuels whatsoever.

The TÛRANOR is owned by German entrepreneur Immo Ströher, and measures in at a staggering 5,700 square feet. And most of that space is covered with solar panels, with all of the energy absorbed is stored on a lithium ion battery. The boat cost a total of $17.5 million to build.

Via USA Today