Skype group video calling sheds beta as paid Skype Premium service

A new version of Skype for Windows just launched with a few notable features. To start with, stability has been improved as has quality. Unfortunately, the group video calling feature is no longer free now that the version 5.1 software is out of beta. A day pass costs $4.99 / €3.49 / £2.99 for impromptu sessions while a monthly subscription can be had for $8.99 / €5.99 / £4.99 with a 33 percent discount available to anyone signing up for 3 or 12 month subscriptions over the next 30 days. Two-way video calling is still free. Maybe the emotive, slow-motion video posted after the break will convince you or your business to unload a few sheckles for the the privilege of group video.

Continue reading Skype group video calling sheds beta as paid Skype Premium service

Skype group video calling sheds beta as paid Skype Premium service originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 09:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Razer Chimaera emerges at CES 2011, starts shipping to consumers

Talk about a long wait. Razer’s Chimaera — which first popped onto our radar in prototype form here in Vegas a year ago — is finally shipping to end users. That’s according to staff at the company’s booth today at CES, who seemed quite pleased that they could change their answer when asked about it from eager (read: impatient) customers. The website still hasn’t been updated, but the 5.1 channel surround sound headset ($199.99) should be more widely available to purchase soon. Also, a 2.1 version will be on sale for $129.99, rocking a fairly similar design and charging station. For those needing a refresher, this is a wireless Xbox 360 headset, complete with an equalizer, audio out jacks (on the station) and a flip-down microphone. Have a peek at the gallery below, and feel free to start checking your doorstep at an unhealthy clip.

Razer Chimaera emerges at CES 2011, starts shipping to consumers originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 09:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bluetooth Dock and Phone Handset Worthy of Mad Men

LAS VEGAS — CES isn’t just about new tablets, 3D TVs and one gazillion new Android phones. Sometimes its about the weird and the wonderful from unknown companies, and this iPhone Bluetooth handset from Hong Kong-based Native Union is plenty weird. And yes, I said handset, not headset.

CES 2011
The Moshi Moshi MM03i turns your iPhone into a landline phone, aesthetically at least. The weighted base has a slot for the iPhone, and you can leave it there happily charging and syncing. When you want to make a call, grab the receiver and you can make like 1995, back when you actually had a landline in your house.

To answer an incoming call, just pick it up and chat for up to six hours on a charge. You can also pair the handset with your computer for making Skype calls, and there are pick-up and hang-up buttons on the handset, along with volume controls. There’s even a 3.5mm jack in the base for hooking up to speakers.

For the tin-foil-hatters, you get the comfort of knowing that you aren’t frying your brains will evil cell-radiation every time you make a call. For everyone else, you can pretend you’re Don Draper. Pass me the whisky, now!

Available now, $150, in black or white.

Moshi Moshi product page [Native Union]

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WiFi Direct helps you kill space chickens without an access point (hands-on)

The urge to kill a chicken is surprisingly strong when operating in the dead space between sleep deprivation and a caffeinated buzz of hyper alertness. The fact that the beast is giant and in space makes it downright compulsive especially when given the opportunity to team up in combat with Max Planck over an 802.11n WiFi Direct connection… without an access point and without any lag. This isn’t your father’s Bluetooth connection, son. See the carnage go down after the break.

Continue reading WiFi Direct helps you kill space chickens without an access point (hands-on)

WiFi Direct helps you kill space chickens without an access point (hands-on) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 08:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Crave giveaway: Nook Color

For this week’s giveaway, we’re serving up Barnes & Noble’s popular Nook Color e-reader.

Retro Chrome USB Mic Works with iPad

LAS VEGAS — Samson is proudly showing off its new Meteor Mic at CES. And rightly so: the thing looks stunning, with chrome-plated retro-styling and cool, fold out tripod legs.

CES 2011The USB microphone is designed for podcasting, and features a 25mm diaphragm, a cardioid pickup pattern and a stereo one-eighth-inch headphone jack for monitoring. It’s also driverless, showing up natively as a USB audio device. That means you can plug it onto an iPad via Apple’s camera connection kit and it will just work.

I actually have a different Samson mic, and while I don’t use it much, it sounds great – a hell of a lot better than the iPad’s built-in mic. If the Meteor Mic sounds as good as that one, it could prove to be very popular for budget podcast setups, especially at a price of $100. Available April.

Meteor Mic [Samson. Thanks, Mark!]

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‘IPhone 5′ Video and Photos Leaked?

Cellphone parts supplier Global Direct Parts has gotten its hands on, well, something. A video posted to YouTube shows what the company calls the iPhone 5, in five minutes of mind-numbing detail.

The “iPhone 5″ looks very similar to the current model, with the only external changes being a redesigned antenna band. This band now has an extra separation line between sections of the antenna. Internally, things have been rejigged, with redesigned connectors and a change in the layout of some parts.

Is this the iPhone 5? It could be. After all, the external changes between the iPhones 3G and 3GS were minimal. It could also be a new universal iPhone, made to work on both Verizon’s CDMA network as well as GSM networks (the micro-SIM slot is still there). That might explain the antenna redesign, and the reworked internals.

It could also be a fake, but the fact that the original video has been removed from YouTube at Apple’s request lends it some credence. You can still find the video, of course. I won’t bother with a link, as the one I found will surely be gone very quickly, but if you search YouTube for “GlobalDirectParts iPhone 5″ then you”ll get it.”

Next generation iPhone casing, innards revealed on video [BGR]

iPhone 5 or Verizon Wireless iPhone Photos Leaked! [Smartphone Medic]

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Splashtop Remote Desktop adds Android compatibility, opens another avenue for Windows remote access

We aren’t quite sure we’re on the same page as Splashtop‘s CEO, who is seemingly on a mission to “build the Bridge to Anywhere,” but we’re all for a remote access client for Google’s mobile OS. Shortly after bringing your Windows PC to the iPhone, iPod and iPad, the aforementioned company has now issued an Android client. As you’d probably guess, it allows anyone with an Android-based smartphone or tablet to tap into their networked Windows PC, with content and applications both accessible. According to the company, it’ll allow Android users to “listen to music, access all of their files and applications, and play PC and Flash games remotely.” We’re a little hesitent to believe all that will be doable on some of the lower-end handsets, but at least it’s out there to try (if you’re willing to part ways with $4.99).

Continue reading Splashtop Remote Desktop adds Android compatibility, opens another avenue for Windows remote access

Splashtop Remote Desktop adds Android compatibility, opens another avenue for Windows remote access originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 07:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Haier launches WiFi equipped Net Connect LED HDTVs, takes Yahoo Connected TV along for the ride

In an effort to obviate the best efforts of Boxee, Logitech, Roku, and Apple, the new line of HDTVs from Haier aims to bring internet content and streaming video to your living room without such excess hardware. Rather than having another black box fighting for space in your entertainment center, Haier’s Net Connect LED displays have WiFi capabilities and Yahoo’s Connected TV baked in to deliver content. In addition to Yahoo’s apps, the TVs will also provide viewers with access to Hulu Plus, Blockbuster on Demand, Film Fresh, and Netflix. Unfortunately, we don’t have specs, prices, or a release date for the sets, but we do know that they’ll have remotes with a dedicated Netflix button, which is sure to please the impatient movie watcher in us all.

Continue reading Haier launches WiFi equipped Net Connect LED HDTVs, takes Yahoo Connected TV along for the ride

Haier launches WiFi equipped Net Connect LED HDTVs, takes Yahoo Connected TV along for the ride originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 06:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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PixelQi demos its 7-inch displays, working on a 9.7-inch version

We had a hunch that PixelQi was going to bring its 7-inch displays to Vegas, and lo and behold we caught a glimpse of the unique transreflective displays today. (For those that have been living under a rock and aren’t familiar with PixelQi — the high contrast 3Qi screens allow for the backlight to be turned off; not only does it save energy, but it’s easy to read in natural light.) The smaller, 1024 x 600-resolution displays are, well, smaller than the previous 10.1-inch version. Most of them, however, were just hooked up to demonstration boards. There was one put into a Viliv X70, but again, this was just a PixelQi mod.

The bigger story at the PixelQi booth, however, came from its founder Mary Lou Jepsen, who not only promises that production is ramping quite well on both the 7- and 10.1-inch tablets, but that the company is working on a higher resolution 1280 x 800-resolution 10.1-inch display and a 9.7-inch display for a partner. We’re not going to read into that too much, but she maintains that they are continuing to work with major companies. She also explained what we have heard before — that much of the tight supply issues were attributed to the recession and that many companies changed their course after the iPad was introduced to make tablets. Obviously, the current 10.1-inch screen is starting to ship in the Notion Ink Adam, but we’re still waiting to finally see the game changing technology in a tablet or laptop from a major manufacturer. With that, we leave you with a bunch of pictures of tablets and netbooks with PixelQi displays that you really can’t buy right now but that will certainly make you drool.

PixelQi demos its 7-inch displays, working on a 9.7-inch version originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 05:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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