Google I/O includes Google TV app development session; software speedup in the works

Take this for what it’s worth, but the schedule for Google’s 2011 I/O conference includes a little session called “Building Android Apps for Google TV,” as well as “Building Web Apps for Google TV.” That’s certainly interesting, as Google’s reportedly asked TV manufacturers to delay (or at least downplay) their smart TV products at CES until the core software is revamped, and we’re hearing that the relaunch will focus heavily on apps. We’re also told by a trusted source that there’s a big performance boost coming as things get more optimized, comparable to the jump from Android 1.6 to Android 2.3 on phones, and that future input devices will be more streamlined and simpler to use than the current Logitech and Sony affairs. That’s all good news, but, um, I/O isn’t until May, so we’re hoping all this stuff comes true much, much sooner than that.

[Thanks, D.]

Google I/O includes Google TV app development session; software speedup in the works originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Jan 2011 21:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon’s BlackBerry 9650 Bold and Curve 3G gets OS 6

BlackBerry 9650 Bold and Curve 3G from Verizon Wireless gets OS 6 update.

Originally posted at Dialed In

Soundfreaq’s SFQ-01R Sound Platform goes red and black for Valentine’s Day

Remember that SFQ-01 Bluetooth audio system you were swooning over late last year? If you twiddled your thumbs on buying one, here’s a shot at redemption: Soundfreaq has just pushed out a limited edition red and black version just in time for Valentine’s Day, and outside of the color change, everything else remains the same. It’s up for pre-order now at Amazon for a penny under $200, and trust us, your significant other will love it. Even if said SO is… you.

Continue reading Soundfreaq’s SFQ-01R Sound Platform goes red and black for Valentine’s Day

Soundfreaq’s SFQ-01R Sound Platform goes red and black for Valentine’s Day originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Jan 2011 20:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gold, Silver Vending Machines sell small fortunes

As if expensive fruit-filled vending machines weren’t enough, now I come across a report from Bloomberg that tells of Makishi Rokugawa and his schemes to install vending machines selling gold and silver.

Surely only in a nation so obsessed with vending machines — and relatively free of theft and crime — could this even be imagined! With growing consumer fears over deflation and lower salaries, Rokugawa believes people will be keen to get their hands on “something they can touch”.

gold-silver-vending-machine-tokyo[Gold bar image source]

The products on offer will be precious metal items like coins and ingots, from a gram up to a quarter of an once. Cost will vary according to the current market value and with price updates daily.

After putting one in the Tokyo office building, Rokugawa and his bizarrely-named company Space International Ltd. now plans to install a gold vendor in the capital’s Imperial Hotel. What next? Apparently taking the plans nationwide and even abroad to Hong Kong.

It might appear to be another example of “wacky Japan” but actually the Arabs and Germans got there first, with gold bar and coin vending machines installed in Frankfurt airport and the Emirates Palace Hotel last year.

japan-trend-shop-630x100

Add Google Calendar Events via Google Talk IM (Google Voice Required)

This article was written on January 25, 2011 by CyberNet.

One of my favorite features in Google Calendar is the “quick add” capability which lets you create new events using a more natural language rather than filling out a form. The number of formats it can handle are pretty extensive, and after you start using them you’ll probably find creating events any other way to be tedious.

What some people may not have realized is that you can add events to Google Calendar through SMS thanks to the quick add feature. If you have a Google Voice account you can do this for free by configuring the mobile section in your Google Calendar settings to use your Voice phone number. After you add your phone number a verification code will be sent as an SMS to your Voice account, which you’ll then enter in the required field:

google calendar voice.png

So now you can add events to Google Calendar using the free SMS through your Google Voice, but you can also take it one step further. About a month ago we covered a free online service called GVMax that will let you respond to an SMS message through Google Talk as if it was an IM conversation. You can also use this kind of configuration to add events to Google Calendar through an IM, which you can see in this example event I created on my calendar:

google calendar event add.png

If you decide to go this route I recommend setting up GVMax (if you haven’t done so already), and then hooking up your Google Calendar account to your Google Voice phone number. That way you’ll get the verification code as an instant message, and a Google Calendar contact will be added to your Google Talk contact list at that time. Otherwise you can always add your first event through the Google Voice interface, and it will automatically respond saying the event was created which accomplishes the same thing. Why do you need to receive a message from Google Calendar to get started? By doing that a special GVMax contact will be created in your contact list that you can use to add events on-demand in the future.

This isn’t the most elegant solution to adding events to your Google Calendar, but I must say that it’s proven to be incredibly useful for me since I keep Google Talk open most of the day.

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German robot hand takes a licking, apparently keeps on ticking (video)

Sadists at the German Aerospace Center’s (DLR) Institute of Robotics and Mechatronics are showing off their latest development in anthropomorphic appendages: a robotic hand that can take a beating from a baseball bat and still give you the middle finger (or a thumbs-up, we suppose). Researchers apparently designed the limb to function like only a human hand can, and it seems they’ve done a decent job: it’s got five independently functioning fingers, sports 19 degrees of freedom (one less than the real deal), and can even snap them phalanges — oh no they didn’t! It’s also got the ability to exert a force of 30 newtons from its fingertips. So what makes it so resilient? The robo-hand has a built-in web of 38 tendons, which allow it to adapt its stiffness under different circumstances: a step away, its creators say, from rigid appendages of the past. There’s a video of the hand taking a beating after the jump, but honestly, we’d prefer to see what happens when the hand fights back.

Continue reading German robot hand takes a licking, apparently keeps on ticking (video)

German robot hand takes a licking, apparently keeps on ticking (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Jan 2011 19:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Crave 31: Depression in a box (podcast)

This week, Donald and Jasmine bask in the glory of an Eric Franklin-less Crave, ogling a glimpse of the future in the form of new holographic technology. Also on our radar at the moment: a new type of mood lighting for your teeth, some bus-stop distractions for our fellow San Franciscans, and superdangerous flaming gloves that no meth head should ever possess. And, of course, no show would be complete without some excitement over beer, in this case a speedy bottom-filling beer-dispensing system. Finally, we stuff our faces–both real and ceramic–with cookies, pizza, and a spectacular-looking torta.

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Episode 31

Man-size holocube

MIT Leia demo hacks Kinect for hologram capture

Bottoms-up beer cup

Japanese LED fashion teeth

Flame gloves

Bus stop multiplayer games

Face mug

This is why you’re fat

Frozen pizza and cookies

Food pron: Chorizo torta

Macworld Expo 2011 Spotlights Sinbad, iOS Accessories

2011 marks the second year that the annual Apple-centric trade show Macworld must go on without Apple.

The conference, which starts Wednesday, is smaller than it once was — and its biggest celebrity speaker is C-list comedian Sinbad — but it’s still alive and kicking. For app vendors, makers of iPhone and iPad accessories, and OS X software vendors, it’s still a good way to get in front of a crowd of eager Mac addicts.

After Apple announced that 2009 would be its final Macworld, 2010’s trade show saw major shrinkage. The exhibitor show floor was reduced from two halls into one at San Francisco’s Moscone Center. About 400 vendors exhibited in 2009, and that number dropped to about 250 in 2010. Major stalwarts from previous years, such as Adobe and Canon, will not be found on the show floor this year.

However, this year’s Macworld has seen growth of about 10 percent more exhibitors than last year, and the number of registered attendees is up as well, according to Paul Kent, general manager of Macworld.

“We’re happy we’re able to report growth in exhibitors and total attendees,” Kent said. “Growth is good.”

It was a tradition for several years for Apple to kick off Macworld Expo with a “Stevenote,” where the turtleneck-attired Apple CEO would introduce new products. On the show floor, attendees could try the newest Apple gear or gaze through glass at the latest Ives-designed fetish objects.

But Apple said in late 2008 that it was pulling out of Macworld because of increased traffic at its 250 retail stores worldwide, which made it unnecessary to do trade shows.

“Apple is reaching more people in more ways than ever before, so like many companies, trade shows have become a very minor part of how Apple reaches its customers,” Apple said in a statement that year.

Macworld Expo was first held January 1985 in San Francisco, and was subsequently hosted twice a year on the East and West coasts. Apple pulled out of the East Coast show in 2003, which struggled on for a few more years before it died. Apple cited the same reasons for bowing out then: Growing traffic at retail stores.

2011’s Macworld show largely focuses on Apple’s hottest sellers: the iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad. The majority of exhibitors at the show are showing off mobile accessories or apps.

“Macworld kind of mirrors Apple’s profit mix,” Kent said. “This year the show’s one-third Mac OS products and two-thirds of pad, pod and phone products.”

Macworld is also featuring a handful of keynote speakers, including comedian Sinbad (pictured), tech musician Zoe Keating and gadget-repair expert Kyle Wiens of iFixit.

“Sinbad fits the bill for our feature presenters, because he’s a celebrity who relies on technology to express inspiration,” Kent said. “It’ll be entertaining and info-taining and thought-provoking.”

Wiens said Apple geeks should attend his talk to take a peek at the insides of Apple gear and competing products such as Samsung’s Galaxy Tab to learn about trends in industrial design.

“Macworld last year went great, so I don’t see any reason why it wouldn’t be better this year,” Wiens said. “I think last year was the big question mark — is it still going to be sustainable [without Apple]? And I think it clearly was.”

Wiens noted, however, that large companies, such as Adobe and Canon, weren’t on the exhibitor list this year, even though they’ve shown up at Macworld in years past.

“All those big companies need to come back, he said. “I’m optimistic long-term, and I hope that they do.”

The Macworld conference, where attendees can take Apple-related workshops, kicks off Wednesday. The Macworld Expo show floor, where attendees can check out exhibitors’ gadgets and accessories, opens Thursday.

Disclosure: I previously worked for Macworld magazine, whose parent company owns the Macworld trade show.

Top photo: Laughing Squid/Flickr
Sinbad photo: jcrawford3505/Flickr

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preGame 38: Nintendo 3DS impressions, Astro A40 Wireless System

After getting some healthy hands-on time with the Nintendo 3DS last week, Jeff brings his impressions to today’s episode of preGame. We’ll also discuss some of the recently leaked details regarding Sony’s PSP2, though we’re anticipating more information on the yet-to-be-announced portable later in the week.

While we don’t have a game to demo this week, we do have some show and tell in the form of the Astro A40 Wireless System headphones specifically designed for gaming. They may be a bit pricey, but Jeff will tell us why they’re among the best-sounding gaming headphones he’s ever tested!

All this plus a brand-new trailer for L.A. Noire on this week’s preGame!

Want to be a part of our live taping? Make sure you head to http://cnet.com/live/pregame every Tuesday at 4 p.m. ET.

Got an idea for preGame? E-mail us! pregame [at] cnet [dot] com.

Be sure to subscribe to the show: RSS (video) | iTunes (video)

Why you should avoid proprietary Wi-Fi dongles

Proprietary Wi-Fi dongles are generally a bad buy, since they’re too expensive and there are alternatives, like power-line adapters.