Victorinox Swiss Army debuts Slim, Slim Duo and Secure SSD USB drives, we go hands-on
Posted in: hands-on, Today's ChiliGallery: Victornix Swiss Army press photos
Victorinox Swiss Army debuts Slim, Slim Duo and Secure SSD USB drives, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 12:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Xtrememac’s dual USB wall charger gets it right, car charger and battery pack ain’t bad either
Posted in: Apple, charger, charging, iPhone, ipod, Today's ChiliCES is most definitely in full swing, which means the wave of accessories is coming hot and heavy. Xtrememac has just revealed a trifecta of USB chargers, all of which seem to boast subtle changes from the norm that piqued our interest. First off, the universal dual USB wall charger has not one, but two USB charging ports, delivering a full ten watts of power (read: enough for the iPad) to a pair of your favorite gizmos. Moving on, there’s the universal USB car charger, which sadly doesn’t sport two USB ports. The universal USB battery pack and wall charger looks mighty similar to the PowerPak XT, doubling as a USB wall charger as well as a portable battery pack when it’s unplugged. As for pricing? Try $14.99, $24.99 and $59.99 in order of mention, with the whole lot being available now directly from the company.
Xtrememac’s dual USB wall charger gets it right, car charger and battery pack ain’t bad either originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Skype video calling coming to Android, demoed on the Droid Bionic
Posted in: breaking news, BreakingNews, droid, hands-on, motorola, skype, Today's Chili, video
You know that front facing camera on Motorola’s LTE Droid Bionic? Well, it looks like you will be able to use it to make Skype video calls very soon. We were hanging around the Motorola booth early this morning and while playing around with the new 4.3-inch phone we noticed a “Skype demo” application. One click on the application revealed that the video calling capability, which just became available for the iPhone, will be heading to Android soon. There wasn’t a working app, but the video demo clearly showed how easy it will be to log into Skype, pull up your contact list, and make a video call over Verizon’s next generation network. We’ve got a few pictures below and a short video is on the way. Now we just need Skype to make this official at its press conference in just a few hours…
Skype video calling coming to Android, demoed on the Droid Bionic originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 11:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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PS3 custom firmware lets you ‘Install Package Files,’ piracy not allowed
Posted in: hack, hacked, Hacks, playstation 3, Playstation3, sony, Today's ChiliWell, that didn’t take long! Just one week after hacking collective (and chr0nic misspellers) fail0verflow revealed a hack that delivered the PS3’s private cryptography key on a platter, another hacker going by the MoNiKeR “KaKaRoToKS” has taken the next step, delivering tools that will convert your plain ol’ vanilla PS3 firmware (yup, even the latest security-minded 3.55 patch) into a fancy new custom firmware. One capable of running signed and encrypted executable .PKG files … not unlike the ones that Sony itself uses to distribute PSN games. But this custom firmware isn’t all about piracy. KaKaRoToKS writes, “Since the kernel is left unmodified, this means that this custom firmware is really meant for future homebrew installation, and it will not allow piracy. I plan on keeping it that way.” We suspect that myriad other, less scrupulous hackers don’t share that sentiment. If you want an “Install Package Files” option the Game section of your XMB, PS3-hacks.com has a guide just for you. Peep a video of a custom firmware installation after the break.
Continue reading PS3 custom firmware lets you ‘Install Package Files,’ piracy not allowed
PS3 custom firmware lets you ‘Install Package Files,’ piracy not allowed originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 11:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Is this the Samsung SCH-i520 headed to Verizon? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 11:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Mac App Store Launches With Thousand Apps, Big Discounts
Posted in: Apple, apps, Mac, os x, Software and Operating Systems, Today's ChiliThe Mac App Store has launched, freshly stocked with more than 1,000 OS X applications. The store comes as part of an OS X update, version 10.6.6, and is a standalone application rather than being yet another add-on to the already-creaking-and-bloated iTunes.
The store works a lot like the iOS App Store we know already: You sign in with your Apple ID, and then you can shop. Buy a Mac app, and the payment is charged to your registered credit card account. The app downloads automatically and is placed in the applications folder, with a convenient shortcut placed in the dock. (The icon actually leaps from the store window and lands in the dock — neat.)
This is clearly aimed at novice users who may never have actually downloaded and installed third-party software before, and the interface will be instantly familiar to anyone who has used the App Store in iTunes or on an iPad.
That said, there is plenty for power users, too. Apple’s flagship photo-editing software, Aperture, is in the store for just $80. You can still buy it from the conventional Apple Store, but it’ll cost the usual $200. That’s quite a saving.
The iWork office suite is in there, too, although it remains at the ‘09 version, not the new ‘11 update many were hoping for. The three iWork apps — Pages, Numbers and Keynote — cost $20 apiece, which is less than the usual $80 bundle price. If you already have these installed on your Mac, the App Store detects this and shows them as “installed,” just like on the iPad.
There are also free apps — the slick new Twitter, for example, which is the long awaited v2.0 of Tweetie for Mac -– as well as some old favorites: Angry Birds is quite something on a 27-inch iMac screen.
There are no trials in the Mac App Store, and submissions are subject to strict rules, just like the iOS store. It appears that some of these can be waived, though. Twitter is clearly using custom, nonstandard user-interface elements, and it is featured on the front page.
Apple is playing by its own rules here, too. No trial versions are allowed in the store, so developers have to host them on their own sites. Apple’s own trial for the iWork suite is on the main Apple site.
I predict that the store is going to be huge. It has the same kid-in-a-candy-store addictive qualities of the iPhone and iPad stores, along with a few features missing from the mobile versions. On the Mac, for example, all your purchases are listed under a tab in the top toolbar.
Finally, here’s a tip: Up in the Apple menu, on the top left of your screen, you may see a new entry called “App Store.” This replaces the old “Mac OS X Software” which has quietly been retired.
Mac App Store [Apple]
Apple’s Mac App Store Opens for Business [Apple]
See Also:
- Mac App Store to Launch Jan. 6
- Mac App Store Provokes Developer Interest, Concern
- Topic Page for Apple App Store
Sanyo: we’ve shipped more than 150 million Eneloop rechargeable batteries
Posted in: charging, Today's ChiliSanyo has announced that as of the end of 2010, it had officially shipped more than 150 million rechargeable Eneloop batteries. The company now ships the batteries — which can be recharged up to 1,500 times — to more than 60 countries. We reviewed Sanyo’s rechargeable offering alongside another battery a few months back, which you can check out if you’d like. Other than that: the full press release is after the break.
Continue reading Sanyo: we’ve shipped more than 150 million Eneloop rechargeable batteries
Sanyo: we’ve shipped more than 150 million Eneloop rechargeable batteries originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 11:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Mac App Store hands-on
Posted in: Apple, AppStore, hands-on, ios, Today's ChiliYou may have heard that admist the craziness of CES, Apple decided to launch its Mac App Store on this fine January morning. We’ve gone ahead and updated our machines to 10.6.6, so we’re officially App Store ready. Read on past the break for a walkthrough of the basics, as well as a smattering of some early apps featured front and center.
Continue reading Mac App Store hands-on
Mac App Store hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 11:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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