D-Link ships new ShareCenter dual-bay NAS servers

D-Link announces the availability of its ShareCenter dual-Bay Network Storage devices, the DNS-320 and DNS-325.

Elderly Georgian lady disconnects Armenian internet for half a day… by accident

A 75-year old lady from Georgia (the country, not the state) has perpetrated an impressive feat of international sabotage in what seems to have been an accident of extremely bad luck. While foraging for copper wire near her home in the village of Ksani, the unnamed septuagenarian managed to come across a critical fiber optic cable, one responsible for serving internet connectivity to “90 percent of private and corporate internet users in Armenia” and some in her own country as well. Her swift strike at the heart of said bit-transferring pipeline resulted in all those folks being thrown offline for a solid 12 hours, while the Georgian Railway Telecom worked to find and correct the fault. In spite of her relatively benign motivations, the lady now faces three years in prison for the damage she caused. We’d say all’s well that ends well, but this doesn’t actually seem like a very happy ending at all.

Elderly Georgian lady disconnects Armenian internet for half a day… by accident originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 15:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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In case you run into a Gorn, here’s what to do

A quick how-to guide to build your very own “Superman hand cannon” using tennis balls and bits and pieces found in any basement.

The Engadget Podcast returns… tomorrow at 5PM ET!

The Engadget Podcast. What is it? Is it a living, breathing thing? Is it something that has to be seen to be believed? Is it more than just an hour-long stream of aural intensity, finely hewn and focused on the world of consumer electronics? It’s a mystery that even The Most Interesting Man in the World is having trouble solving, but we’re going to assume things will get a lot clearer when it returns to your regularly scheduled programming block tomorrow evening. Newly appointed Editor-in-Chief Tim Stevens and the perpetually lost Darren Murph will be your guides to somewhere, tomorrow joined by two special guests from the Engadget Mobile podcast team: international man of mystery Vlad Savov and mobile debutante Myriam Joire. It’s a foursome that’ll almost definitely make your workday woes vanish into thin air. Tomorrow. Here. 5PM ET… ish.

The Engadget Podcast returns… tomorrow at 5PM ET! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 15:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Singing the South American ‘CDMA blues’

I hope Verizon doesn’t read this. It’s been so good to me the past six months, but now that I’m heading to Latin America again, all I can think about is AT&T.

Dell to trial mushroom-based packaging on servers, hugs IT hippies

We’ve already seen Dell embracing the bamboo woods to package its products, so what’s next for Round Rock’s green fingers? Mushrooms, apparently. Unveiled at the Fortune Brainstorm Green conference yesterday is a biodegradable cushioning tray, which is grown — yes, grown — out of a mold stuffed with old cotton hulls, mushroom spawn, and nutritious agricultural waste. While it does take about five to ten days for the mycelium (aka mushroom root) to form the desired shape, the merit of such process is that all the energy required for the manufacture is provided by the recycled waste, thus reducing other energy dependencies. What’s more, this fungal packaging has already passed Dell’s extensive lab tests “like a champ,” and it’ll soon be trialed on Multipack packaging shipments for the PowerEdge R710 servers. If you want to thank Michael, he’ll be in his usual tree house.

Dell to trial mushroom-based packaging on servers, hugs IT hippies originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 14:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Fortune Tech, Electronista  |  sourceDell  | Email this | Comments

Motorola Xoom, Atrix Too Pricey for the Public

Motorola's Xoom remains the Android tablet to beat, but the high price may be scaring off the public. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Motorola’s 2011 Android lineup looked like it would give Apple a run for its money. But high prices and second-place product reviews may be defeating Motorola while its feet are barely out of the blocks.

Sales trends for Motorola’s Xoom tablet and its Atrix smartphone have been “disappointing,” according to James Faucette, analyst for research firm Pacific Crest. Faucette doesn’t provide any specific numbers, and Motorola hasn’t released sales figures, but analysts from Deutsche Bank are estimating the sales of the Xoom at 100,000 units sold within the tablet’s first month-and-a-half of availability, according to a Dow Jones wire report. Compare that to the 300,000 iPads sold on Day One of the tablet’s release a year ago.

Price is a big problem for Motorola. Consumer Reports ranked Motorola’s $800 3G, 32-GB version of the Xoom as equivalent to the 3G, 32-GB version of Apple’s first generation iPad, which goes for $580. Apple’s recently debuted iPad 2 topped Consumer Reports’ list of the 10 most-promising tablets.

However, the Xoom still remains the most viable competitor to the iPad 2, says Consumer Reports. Both tablets boast 10-inch screens, 3G and Wi-Fi capability, but the magazine concedes that the Xoom offers a few features the iPad 2 doesn’t — e.g., a built-in memory-card reader and Flash support.

The Xoom will also be upgradable for use on Verizon’s 4G network for free in the future, whereas Apple has no immediate plans to utilize any of the current 4G networks with its devices.

Each of the tablets on CR’s list was evaluated on 17 criteria, including ease of use, touchscreen responsiveness, versatility and screen glare. Tablets from Dell, Archos, Samsung and Viewsonic were also among those tested.

“So far Apple is leading the tablet market in both quality and price,” Paul Reynolds, electronics editor at Consumer Reports, said in a statement. “However, it’s likely we’ll see more competitive pricing in tablets as other models begin to hit the market.”

In Wired.com’s reviews, we ranked the iPad 2 at the top, scoring a 9 out of 10, while the Xoom came in at a 6.

As for the Atrix, the recent price drop of two competitive phones to $50 — Apple’s iPhone 3GS and HTC’s Inspire 4G with an Amazon deal — may account for Atrix sales coming in “well below forecast,” according to Faucette.

The Atrix has also taken flak for the high prices of its heavily hyped peripheral products. The laptop dock, which allows the phone to be converted into a portable notebook-like device, costs a cool $500. And the HD multimedia device that lets you attach the phone to an external HD monitor, essentially turning the Atrix into a PC, costs another $190. While the bells and whistles of the two accompanying devices made the Atrix stand out from competing smartphone debuts, the price points brought less-flattering attention.

However, as a phone, the Atrix is superb, Wired.com’s reviewer found.

While Motorola may have priced the Atrix’s accessories out of reach, it may be doing the right thing by thinking outside the mobile-market box.

“As the devices become more and more alike, manufacturers will do anything they can to differentiate themselves,” Gartner analyst Ken Dulaney told Wired.com in an interview.

That may include hardware peripherals like those found with the Atrix, or it could include tweaks in the Android user interface — as evidenced in Motorola’s Motoblur UI, or HTC’s Sense — though not all users prefer the UIs (or skins) created by the manufacturers.

With the release of multiple, relatively lower-cost tablets to come later in 2011, we’ll see if Motorola’s plans will change.

See Also:


Force-Sensing Tech Adds Third Dimension to Touchscreens

A force-sensitive touch screen could provide another level of interaction for tablets like the iPad 2. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

The idea of a 3-D tablet or touchscreen is great, except that current hardware limits us to exploring that three-dimensional world in two dimensions.

Peratech’s QTC (“Quantum Tunnelling Composite”) Clear is a force-sensitive touchscreen that would change that. Philip Taysom, Peratech’s Joint CEO, says that the third dimension of pressure will let users “more easily manipulate and control information on the screen.”

That means artists could better create digital masterpieces on touchscreens, musicians could play their iPad tunes with greater finesse, and gamers could have additional actions and controls in their favorite titles. Applying varied levels of force could determine how deep you penetrate through a 3-D user interface.

QTC Clear (sandwiched between glass plates) could entirely replace a resistive touchscreen, or be used to enhance a capacitive one. It’s 6-8 microns thick, and can sense multitouch gestures and pressure changes of only a few microns.

Almost no current is drawn by the screen when it’s not in use, making it less of a battery-hog than the capacitive touchscreens we’re using in devices now.

Previously, QTC technology was opaque, so its applications were limited. But QTC Clear, which, like its name suggests, is transparent, already has its footing in the industry: It’s already been licensed to an undisclosed “leading touch screen manufacturer.” I can see the iPad 3 rumors lining up now.

QTC Clear [Peratech via Slashgear]


Unconfirmed report says HTC will unveil dual-core Sensation next week

Sources close to tech blog Pocket-lint indicate the handset maker will announce a European variant of the Pyramid.

Originally posted at Android Atlas

Apple snags patent for USB 3.0, Thunderbolt dock connector

Apple has been granted a patent for a dock connector that would combine powerful new connectivity technology like USB 3.0 and Thunderbolt with its proprietary 30-pin connector for mobile devices like iPads, iPhones, and iPods.

Originally posted at iPad Atlas