Archos flashes 7c Android tablet, brags about its 1.2GHz clock speed

After taking a breather from cranking out new tablets, Archos is at it again, this time with the Archos 7c Home Tablet, a 7-inch number that ARMdevices.net caught on camera during a visit to the company’s Chinese outpost. This slate packs a Cortex A8 processor and RK2918 chipset, which the rep quaintly says is “faster than any chipset you can find” — you know, owing to its 1.2GHz clock speed and all. Alas, it runs Android Gingerbread (2.3) and not Honeycomb (3.0), so you’ll have to do some hacking to get your Android Market fix. Although the 7c has a capacitive display, the woman leading the demo appears to jab at browser links with her finger — a throwback to some less-than-responsive resistive screens we’ve tested. On the bright side, 1080p video plays smoothly — at least in the few seconds before the camera pans away. The 7c is headed to the US and Europe in June for an unknown price, but for now you can head past the break to see it in action.

Continue reading Archos flashes 7c Android tablet, brags about its 1.2GHz clock speed

Archos flashes 7c Android tablet, brags about its 1.2GHz clock speed originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Apr 2011 12:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Liliputing  |  sourceARMdevices.net  | Email this | Comments

Toshiba to launch self-erasing hard drives

Providing an extra level of security, Toshiba will soon roll out a series of hard drives that will automatically erase or prevent access to the data should the drive be connected to an unknown system.

Originally posted at News – Security

OmniVision’s new 12MP CMOS sensor shoots RAW pics and 1080/60p video, looks for smartphone home

So what if Apple looks set to abandon OmniVision in favor of Sony with its next round of portable device cameras? The company that currently provides the none-too-shabby 5 megapixel imager inside the iPhone 4 has just announced a new 12 megapixel sensor and it’s a bit of a beast. The OV12825 pairs the goodness of backside illumination with the ability to shoot RAW stills and 1080p video at a bodacious 60fps. Funnily enough, neither feature is a novelty for OmniVision, which has already given the world the option to shoot RAW and to crank Full HD video at 60fps, but nobody has yet been willing to maximize the previous sensors’ capabilities. Now that we’re finally seeing efficient dual-core solutions making it to smartphones, maybe the time has come? After all, there’s gotta be something else to look forward to after 1080/30p, right? OmniVision is offering samples to interested companies right now and expects volume production in the second quarter of the year. Full PR after the break.

Continue reading OmniVision’s new 12MP CMOS sensor shoots RAW pics and 1080/60p video, looks for smartphone home

OmniVision’s new 12MP CMOS sensor shoots RAW pics and 1080/60p video, looks for smartphone home originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Apr 2011 12:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Electronista  |  sourceOmnivision  | Email this | Comments

Madama Butterfly to flutter in 3D

RealD and London’s Royal Opera House will produce and film a production of “Madama Butterfly” for a 2012 release in RealD 3D-equipped theaters around the world.

Netflix for Xbox 360 updated with Kinect support, everybody wave!

The next time you hit the Netflix app on your Xbox 360 the update we heard about at CES will be waiting, bringing Kinect owners the ability to flick through their videos (like ESPN3 and Zune have since the peripheral launched) without digging a controller out of the couch cushions. After the 43Mb update downloads waving ones hand for the camera or saying Xbox will pull up the new menu seen above, which auto sorts selections for browsing by voice or gesture based on what it thinks you may want to watch next. Selecting “browse all” brings you right back to the standard menu and is probably the method most will want to stick with, however being able to pause the movie quickly during playback by simply saying Xbox, Pause (or FF, rewind, skip scene, etc.) is quite convenient. Not near your Xbox? Check out a brief video of it in action after the break.

[Thanks, George]

Continue reading Netflix for Xbox 360 updated with Kinect support, everybody wave!

Netflix for Xbox 360 updated with Kinect support, everybody wave! originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Apr 2011 11:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceMajor Nelson  | Email this | Comments

HTC working to bring parts of new Sense UI to older devices

The new HTC Sense 3.0 is pretty slick, but is it limited to just the new HTC smartphones? Maybe not.

Originally posted at Dialed In

Editorial: RIM, we’ve been here before

By now you’ve no doubt read or at least heard about the New York Times interview where RIM’s co-CEOs wound up asking most of the questions and challenged conventional wisdom about the company, or seen the BBC interview that Mike Lazaridis put an abrupt end to (see below, if you haven’t). Those both offer plenty of juicy morsels for folks like us to chew on, but they’re also indicative of a broader sense of frustration from the company that’s getting difficult to ignore. One that is strikingly similar to what we’ve recently seen from another company that grew to dominate on the world stage, became a figure of national pride in its home country, and is now struggling to reinvent itself in the face of stiff competition: Nokia.

Continue reading Editorial: RIM, we’ve been here before

Editorial: RIM, we’ve been here before originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Apr 2011 11:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Behind the Largest Counterfeit Audio Sting in History (Exclusive Photos) [Crime]

Think you got a good deal on those Beats by Dre? Might’ve. Or maybe you paid too much for a knockoff. Thanks to easily accessed suckers like you, business in the world of phony high-end audio has never been better. More »

Trexa’s EV platform comes out of its shell, reveals its true torque-tube nature

We liked what we saw when we first set eyes upon Trexa’s EV platform, but the company decided to ditch the skateboard façade for a slimmer, cylindrical form factor. After stripping away that somewhat chunky exterior, Trexa used a torque tube (where the center tube is the main load-bearing structure for the suspension and drivetrain) to create an egalitarian EV platform suitable for any road going application. The Entertube chassis’s both flexible (2WD or 4WD) and scalable — from a nine-inch diameter tube with seven kWh of juice in an eight-foot wheelbase to an 18-inch diameter tunnel with a massive 90kWh power pack crammed in a 180-inch wheelbase. That means there’s an EV for for every occasion, from small cars to semi-trucks and anything in between. What you see is a production prototype, but it’s being commercialized as we speak, so it won’t be too long until Enertube-powered EVs are ready for the open road. Until then, you’ll have to settle for the plethora of pics below and press release after the break.

Continue reading Trexa’s EV platform comes out of its shell, reveals its true torque-tube nature

Trexa’s EV platform comes out of its shell, reveals its true torque-tube nature originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Apr 2011 10:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Autoblog Green  |  sourceTrexa  | Email this | Comments

Verizon Guy gets let go, turns out that wasn’t his name anyway

Verizon Guy gets let go, turns out that wasn't his name anyway

You won’t be able to hear him for much longer, folks. Paul Marcarelli, aka “Verizon Guy,” is being let go. As it turns out that wasn’t even his character’s name, VZW settling on “Test Man” when scripting the early shots. Now that company is “taking its ads in a different direction,” a direction that apparently does not include Mr. Marcarelli. But, based on the tales he recounted to The Atlantic, that may be a good thing. Paul once heard someone say “Can you hear me now?” at his grandmother’s funeral — as her body was being lowered into the grave. Yup, it’s time for a role change.

Verizon Guy gets let go, turns out that wasn’t his name anyway originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Apr 2011 10:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink All Things Digital  |  sourceThe Atlantic  | Email this | Comments