Lifelike Craig is one of many apps that let you browse and search ads, create and post new listings, and even snap photos to go with them.
Originally posted at iPhone Atlas
Lifelike Craig is one of many apps that let you browse and search ads, create and post new listings, and even snap photos to go with them.
Originally posted at iPhone Atlas
About 100 robotic creations were added, spanning quite a long history. In fact, the oldest robot is at least 450 years old, running on rudimentary mechanical technology.
Robots now encompass an important part of everyone’s daily lives, from manufacturing processes to entertainment, to, of course, cleaning our floors and gutters. It is only appropriate that the Smithsonian should appreciate their place in American society.
Via Computerworld
Photographer Cary Norton made a charming 4×5 camera out of Lego bricks. He has plans for a pinhole too.
Dell’s Windows 7 Rosemount tablet may not make it to the beach with you this summer, but that doesn’t mean the company won’t have an Android alternative when it’s time to start applying sunblock. According to Forbes, the 10-inch Android-powered slate we got an oh-so-quick glimpse of at CES should be ready to hit the market somewhere around mid-June, just a little bit later than we’d previously heard. The publication also hints that the tablet heretofore referred to as the Streak 10 may not retain that moniker when it’s time to launch, but it will most definitely be running Honeycomb, though we’re not sure if it’ll keep the Stage UI. Either way, summer 2011 is shaping up to be the season of Honeycomb, and we’re excited to see just what each manufacturer will do to differentiate themselves in the increasingly-crowded space.
Dell Streak 10 to launch mid-June with Honeycomb, possible name change in the works originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 17:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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This summer, Netflix will add every episode of Mad Men to its Instant Watch collection. That will be swell! But the service’s streaming library is already vast, and there’s plenty of great stuff to watch right now. Or, better yet, this weekend, from 8:00am Saturday to 8:00am Sunday. So here, if you’re up for a challenge, is a perfect day of Netflix, celebrating the breadth of content it has to offer. More »
Grooveshark users can stream any of the 6 million songs in its catalog to their mobile devices — except for Android and iOS users. Photo courtesy Grooveshark.
Popular music-streaming service Grooveshark got yanked from Google’s Android Market over the weekend, and the company isn’t happy about it.
“Google notified us on Saturday that it had removed our app from the Market,” Grooveshark’s Ben Westermann-Clark told Wired.com in an interview, “but frankly, we’re baffled by this. We’re always compliant with DMCA regulations to make sure that we operate within the law and respect the wishes of content owners.”
Grooveshark wasn’t above taking a shot at Android’s relatively open app ecosystem, either. The company issued this statement:
Unlike Apple’s iPhone ecosystem, Android is an open platform, and Google is traditionally a supporter of DMCA-compliant services –- indeed, Google itself relies on the DMCA for the very same protection that Grooveshark does.
Google often champions its Android Market as open when speaking of the platform. Unlike Apple, Android has no vetting process for the apps that are submitted to the market. However, Google has removed apps from the market and even remotely deleted them from customers’ phones when it’s found apps that misrepresent themselves or that could be malicious.
Grooveshark remains in the dark as to exactly why it got ousted. All it knows is that the Recording Industry Association of America, a copyright watchdog and lobbying group, was involved.
“We haven’t received any specific information from Google about what in the developers’ terms of service, exactly, we need to address to be readmitted to the marketplace — only that Google received a letter of complaint from the RIAA,” the company said in a statement.
Wired.com’s request for comment from the RIAA was not returned.
Google isn’t going into specifics. “We remove apps from Android Market that violate our policies,” a Google spokesperson told Wired.com.
Google’s removal of the app comes several months after Apple’s expulsion of Grooveshark from its App Store for iPhones and iPads. “As an IP holder ourselves, we understand the importance of protecting intellectual property,” Apple spokeswoman Trudy Muller told Wired.com in August. “Due to objections by rights-holders, the Grooveshark app has been removed until resolution is reached by both parties.” The removal was prompted by Universal Music Group U.K.’s takedown request.
Grooveshark isn’t a stranger to litigation. EMI was engaged in a copyright-infringement lawsuit with Grooveshark in 2009, but the record company dropped the charges after agreeing to a licensing deal with the music service.
Much like Europe’s Spotify, the Gainsville, Florida-based Grooveshark is a “freemium” (free trial period with an eventual $9 monthly fee to continue) streaming-music service for mobile, It lets you play any tracks hosted in its catalog of over 6 million songs. The service is also accessible through its web interface for free.
Grooveshark differs from competing apps like Pandora or Rdio in that it’s user-sourced. In other words, it’s like a YouTube for music.
And, says Westermann-Clark, “like YouTube, Grooveshark pulls content when copyright owners come in and ask for it.”
Grooveshark remains available for download on RIM’s BlackBerry App World store and HP’s webOS store. The app can still be loaded onto your iOS device — if you jailbreak your phone.
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We’ve already seen it turn up on a few retail sites, but Samsung has now finally officially confirmed the launch details for its WiFi-only Galaxy Tab. It will be available online and at retail stores across the US on April 10th for $349.99. Specs otherwise remain the same as the 3G version, including a 7-inch 1024 x 600 display, 32GB of internal storage (with a microSD card slot for up to an additional 32GB), rear and front-facing cameras, and Android 2.2 with support for Flash 10.1 — from the looks of things, it’s also only available with a white back. Full press release is after the break.
Continue reading Samsung confirms WiFi-only Galaxy Tab availability: April 10th, $350
Samsung confirms WiFi-only Galaxy Tab availability: April 10th, $350 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 16:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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One innovative case maker has a solution for bibliophiles who want a little more book in their MacBooks.
Toshiba’s Satellite L Series continues its world tour, adds 2D-to-3D conversion originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 16:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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As something of an April Fools’ jape, an anchor on a local Fox station is persuaded that a new app lets you taste or smell whatever is on your iPhone screen.
Originally posted at Technically Incorrect