Houston grandmother becomes host of first ‘super WiFi’ hotspot, proves you’re never too old for wireless

This ain’t your grandma’s WiFi — that is, unless your grandma is 48 year-old Leticia Aguirre. The Houston woman became the host of the very first “super WiFi” hotspot, earlier this week — the new network takes advantage of unused UHF TV channels to bring internet service to underserved communities. In collaboration with researchers at Rice University, a Houston-based non-profit fittingly referred to as Technology for All (TFA), facilitated the setup and is in the process of deploying more whitespace hotspots across the area. The FCC approved use of whitespace for the new “super WiFi” back in September of last year. Full PR after the break.

Continue reading Houston grandmother becomes host of first ‘super WiFi’ hotspot, proves you’re never too old for wireless

Houston grandmother becomes host of first ‘super WiFi’ hotspot, proves you’re never too old for wireless originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Apr 2011 18:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon to Provide Library Lending for Kindle

Amazon's Lending Library will let both Kindle owners and Kindle app users access e-book titles from their local library. Photo: Amazon.com

Sometimes you need a book, but you don’t necessarily want to buy it.

That’s what libraries were great for (remember those?). You could check out a book — say, if you needed it for a research paper, or weren’t sure if it was something you actually wanted to shell out money for — and then you return it.

Dealing with e-books has made the whole process much more simple (in general), but sometimes, you still don’t actually want to buy that e-book you’re only going to use once.

Solution: Amazon has announced that they’ll be launching a Lending Library so Kindle owners and Kindle app users can check out books from their local library.

In December, Amazon added two-week Kindle-to-Kindle lending for its users, but it required publisher approval for titles to be included in the lending program, and wouldn’t allow the e-book owner to access the title until the two-week trial was up. The Nook had a similar-style lending feature before that.

The Lending Library program will debut with over 11,000 library participants and will work with both Kindle devices and free Kindle apps. To help accomplish this, Amazon is working in partnership with a company called OverDrive, which provides access to digital content for school and public libraries.

One great feature about the program is that you’ll be able to take notes in the margins, like a real book. When your rental is up, the notes will disappear from the library’s copy because they’re stored privately. But if you check out the e-book out again, or decide to purchase it, your annotations will reappear along with any bookmarks you made.

Amazon’s Kindle Lending Library is set to launch “later this year.”

Kindle Library Lending [Amazon via RWW]


Thunderbolt to Beat Out USB 3.0?

 

Thumbnail image for Intel-Announced-the-Availability-of-Thunderbolt-technology-a-new-high-speed-PC-connection-technology-that-runs-at-10Gbps_.jpgAt last, Intel’s wish may come true. There are reports that the Thunderbolt technology might cut off the USB 3.0, before the USB update even takes off. Or at least that is what some people are guessing.

Despite that Intel has been mocked for the Thunderbolt, Intel has stood beside it. Unlike Apple who used FireWire in the past, which later flopped, it appears to have a strong fan base. More companies appear to be looking into adopting it, as we reported last week. No word on why some experts are claiming that the Thunderbolt will beat out the widely used USB’s next generation.

No study has been released, nor has the USB 3.0 officially been rolled out. However, one of Thunderbolts strong points is that it supports both USB, FireWire, and, many of the other common ports used today.

Via TG Daily

Awesome LED Table Can Be Whatever You Want

ledtable.jpg

A company called Nkcharms has begun taking orders for this super stylish table that incorporates 1700 LED lights to turn the display into anything you want.

One sample style is the tree seen above, but it could obviously be custom created for any design you want. So in case you were worried that you weren’t using enough electricity as it is, this may be the perfect solution for you.

The man who created the tree design, Dennis Veut, explained in a statement, “The tree becomes wood becomes light, a metaphor for the circle of life itself.” Deep stuff… We don’t really get it, though. But we do think the table is pretty darn cool.

Via Tom’s Guide

Virgin Media to test 1.5Gbps broadband on London’s Silicon Roundabout


Just last week we reported on Fujitsu’s plans to get in on the gigabit broadband game, and now Virgin Media is taking things a step further by announcing its intention to test internet speeds up to 1.5Gbps in east London. The trial, which plans to deliver upload speeds of 150Mbps, uses a similar fiber optic setup as the one employed by Fujitsu, and targets multimedia companies near the junction of the city’s Old Street and City Road, also referred to as the Silicon Roundabout. These tests have been made possible by a £13 billion investment from Virgin Media. If this thing pans out, it looks like Google might have some catching up to do. Full PR after the break.

Continue reading Virgin Media to test 1.5Gbps broadband on London’s Silicon Roundabout

Virgin Media to test 1.5Gbps broadband on London’s Silicon Roundabout originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Apr 2011 18:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel Aiming for Android Tablets This Year

Intel's low-power-consumption Atom series — meant for notebooks and mobile devices — debuted in May of last year. Photo courtesy of Intel

Intel’s x86 chipset is coming to Android tablets. Soon.

So says Intel CEO Paul Otellini. In the company’s first-quarter earnings report on Tuesday, Otellini announced that Intel had received the source code for Android version 3.0 (Honeycomb) for tablets from Google, and the company is working on porting the operating system over to the x86 architecture.

Intel “expects to be able to ramp those [Android tablet] machines over the course of this year for a number of customers,” Otellini said on a conference call with reporters. And in a separate interview with Forbes, Otellini said we may see those Intel-based tablets as early as May.

While Intel’s chips have dominated the desktop and notebook industry, the company has not had so much luck with mobile devices. Instead, ARM architecture predominates among smartphones and tablets, through ARM-based chips made by various companies including Qualcomm, Texas Instruments and, most recently, Nvidia.

Part of what has kept Intel’s processors from making gains in the mobile market may be the same thing that makes it so strong in the desktop and server areas.

“The big issue is power consumption,” Richard Fichera, a semiconductor analyst from Forrester Research, told Wired.com in an interview. “ARM was designed from the beginning to be low-power consumption, while Intel’s x86 came from a whole different design perspective.”

Intel, however, has taken strides in reducing power consumption with its Atom series of processors: the 2009 Atom debut found power reduced by 20 percent from the previous generation of processors.

“Intel has radically improved their performance per watt on their server and desktop chips,” Fichera said, “but this is a threshold they need to break past to move this architecture into mobile devices.”

Last week, Intel debuted its “Oak Trail” series of Atom processors — the latest in the company’s series of low-consumption chips — though some say they don’t measure up to ARM offerings.

“Intel’s core strengths are building advanced manufacturing processes and optimizing processor architectures,” wrote Romit Shah, an analyst with Nomura Equity Research. “That said, we believe the x86 architecture is not competitive versus ARM in low power applications such as mobile handsets and tablets.”

Intel’s low-consumption Atom chips are currently implemented in notebooks, not smartphones or tablets.

Otellini also signaled Intel’s move into the smartphone space should be expected in the future. “I would be very disappointed if we didn’t see Intel-based phones for sale 12 months from now,” he said.

Some of these mobile moves has been hinted at before by Intel, with little to show for it. Last July, Intel CTO Justin Rattner told Wired.com that January of 2011 “would clearly be the window of opportunity” for the company to bring its processors to mobile devices. January’s Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas — the premier annual event for electronics industry debuts — came and went, with no sign of Intel’s processors in smartphones or tablets premiered at the show. Many of the devices introduced are using Qualcomm’s Snapdragon processor, which is based on the ARM version seven instruction set.

“We’re not a strong player in phones yet, but we will be,” Otellini told Forbes. “We were able to bring volume economics and technology to [PC markets], and you’ll see us do the same here…drive the power down, drive performance up, drive costs down, in typical Intel fashion—boom, boom, boom.”


Slit-Scan Camera for iPhone [Video]

Maybe you’ve heard about slit-scan photography, a process in which an image is developed one thin ‘slit’ at a time. Probably you haven’t! But if Photo Booth has taught us anything, it’s that the joy of taking wacky warped pictures is universal. And the Slit-Scan Camera iPhone app is like Photo Booth on acid. More »

Rumor: Apple to Ship iPhone 5 in September

Apple's iPhone 4 was released summer of 2010. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

The usual blabbermouths in Asia — component suppliers — claim that Apple’s next iPhone will begin shipping in September.

Multiple sources “with direct knowledge of the company’s supply chain” told Reuters that the iPhone 5 will look very similar to the iPhone 4, which suggests most changes will be internal.

Likely “under-the-hood” changes include the faster A5 processor currently powering the iPad 2, as well as an 8-megapixel camera sensor designed by Sony.

Sony CEO Howard Stringer previously mentioned in a report that its best sensor technology is built in a Japanese factory affected by a tsunami, and as a result, getting image sensors to Apple will be delayed.

A September launch would make sense, because that timing would coincide with Apple’s annual iPod event held that month. Apple could easily fold an iPhone introduction into that event.

Apple has traditionally launched new iPhones at the Worldwide Developer Conference held each summer, but an earlier report claimed that the iPhone 5 would not be announced this June.

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Nissan Leaf Nismo RC all-electric race car eyes-on

Nissan Leaf Nismo RC all-electric race car eyes-on

When Nissan announced the Leaf RC we, naturally, were expecting a little radio controlled version of the battery-electric sedan that’s making its way to driveways now — slowly. We certainly didn’t expect a race version of the thing, but that’s what Nissan created, and now here it is at the New York International Auto Show, sitting on a turntable and spinning away. In fact you could envision that spinning stretching it out. It’s rather… longer than the stock Leaf. In fact, it really looks nothing at all like the stock car, but if it did it’d be all the more strange on the track than this long, low, spread-out, carbon fiber wedge. They are at least both pure electrics and both painted blue, though under the cerulean lights here just about everything is looking decidedly cool. Okay, so 107HP, a top speed of 93MPH, and a maximum duration of just 20 minutes on the track will hardly see this winning any WTCC races, but with a weight of just 2,068 pounds (some 700 less than a Tesla Roadster) we’d certainly take one for a spin — even if it were a short one.

Nissan Leaf Nismo RC all-electric race car eyes-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Apr 2011 17:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Download Windows XP SP3 (RC1) from Microsoft

This article was written on December 11, 2007 by CyberNet.

I’m not sure how long this is going to be available, but it looks as though Windows XP users can download the first Release Candidate of Service Pack 3 (SP3) straight from Microsoft. One member over at the WinMatrix forum posted the download link, which directly points to XP SP3 executable installer located on the Windows Update server.

The download is 336MB so make sure you have some time set aside for it to finish, but I have downloaded and verified that it is the real deal. Here are a few things you should know before downloading XP SP3:

  • SP3 is cumulative, so users can install SP3 on top of Windows XP SP1 or SP2.
  • SP3 is able to update any version of XP, including XP Media Center.
  • SP3 will not upgrade Internet Explorer to version 7. The Service Pack does include updates for both versions of Internet Explorer, but the main version of IE that you’re running will remain untouched.

The installation process took me about 15 minutes to complete, which I would say is good because I was expecting it to take much worse. Here is a screenshot gallery from my journey:

(Click to Enlarge)
XP SP3 - 1 XP SP3 - 2 XP SP3 - 3 XP SP3 - 4

Download Windows XP SP3 (RC1) from Microsoft

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