Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 Limited Edition review

It may be a bit difficult to pay attention to the spate of Honeycomb tablets that seem to be popping up left, right and center — you know, now that Ice Cream Sandwich has been officially promised — but what’s not easy to overlook is an 8.6mm slate. Checking in at a sliver of a pinch thinner than the illustrious iPad 2, Samsung’s rethought-out, redesigned and definitely-not-renamed Galaxy Tab 10.1 is the first Android tablet to date that seriously goes toe-to-toe with Apple in both specifications and design. Granted, the consumer models aren’t slated to ship out until June 8th, but given that Google handed us one last week during its annual I/O conference, we figured we’d spend the following weekend wisely. You know, photographing, benchmarking and testing this thing to the hilt. (Of note, the unit tested here was the Limited Edition model, devoid of TouchWiz, 3G and a microSD card slot, but is otherwise identical to shipping units aside from the design on the rear.)

The Tab 10.1 — not to be confused with the older, since-relabeled Tab 10.1v — weighs just 1.31 pounds (marginally besting the iPad 2’s 1.33 pound chassis), and if looks could kill, few people would’ve made it out of Moscone West with all organs functional. But as you well know, style only gets you in the door — it’s the guts, the software, and the marriage of it all that makes or breaks the tablet experience. Hop on past the jump to find out why we think Samsung truly delivered on the promise of a Google-powered tablet, and why you should all seriously consider socking away funds as early June approaches.

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 Limited Edition review originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 May 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nintendo, Best Buy team up on 3DS content

Nintendo 3DS owners will be able to access video content, gaming extras, and deals from their portable devices through wireless access in 1,000 Best Buy stores.

Originally posted at The Digital Home

ExoPlanetSat nanosatellite to begin search for alien worlds next year

SETI’s search for intelligent life in outer space may be on ice for the time being, but the search for alien planets that may possibly support life of some sort is now being bolstered by a number of new efforts. One of the latest is the so-called ExoPlanetSat nanosatellite developed by MIT and Draper Laboratory, which recently got the go-ahead from NASA’s Cubesat Launch Initiative and is now set to hitch a ride into space sometime in 2012. While not quite as “nano” as the SIM card-sized satellites that launched with the Shuttle Endeavor, the smaller-than-a-breadbox ExoPlanetSat is still pretty tiny by satellite standards, yet it packs all the necessary optics and technology required for what’s known as transit observation — that is, monitoring a star for decreases in brightness, which could indicate a planet passing in front of it. What’s more, while the launch of a single satellite is plenty to get excited about, the researchers hope that it lead the way for a whole fleet of similar nanosatellites that could greatly speed up the search for planets.

ExoPlanetSat nanosatellite to begin search for alien worlds next year originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 May 2011 11:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceTechnology Review, Draper Laboratory  | Email this | Comments

Sony Ericsson ST18i and CK15i blurrily leak their way onto message boards

The last time we saw Sony Ericsson’s Azusa, it was just a lonely blue line on a bar graph. Now it seems as if our little mystery handset might’ve actually become a real smartphone. There weren’t a ton of specs to go off from that original leak, though the ST18i’s 854 x 480 resolution does match up. Also on-board, according to this new info: Gingerbread, an 8MP camera, and an ARM Cortex-A8 1GHz Processor. The Esato message board also seems to have gotten its hands an ad featuring the CK15i, a keyboard-equipped slider phone with a 240 x 400 3.3-inch display. Add the recently leaked Cyber-Shot phone, and it’s shaping up to be a nice, blurry year for Sony Ericsson. Image of the CK15i after the break.

Continue reading Sony Ericsson ST18i and CK15i blurrily leak their way onto message boards

Sony Ericsson ST18i and CK15i blurrily leak their way onto message boards originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 May 2011 11:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Android Community  |  sourceEsato (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

Sony Ericsson Xperia Play coming to Verizon May 26

The long-awaited gaming smartphone from Sony Ericsson is coming to Verizon on May 26. Will you get the Xperia Play?

Originally posted at Android Atlas

AT&T bringing red HTC Inspire 4G to Radio Shack, purple Evo Shift to follow?

Why, yes, that is a red HTC Inspire 4G you’re looking at. A friendly tipster provided us with these dummy unit images, adding that AT&T is planning to launch the jazzy model at Radio Shack. No word yet on when that’ll actually happen, nor do we know how much they’ll cost when it does. Our same source claims that a purple Evo Shift is also making its way to the Shack, so you know where to go to get your flashy phone fix this summer.

[Thanks, Dave]

AT&T bringing red HTC Inspire 4G to Radio Shack, purple Evo Shift to follow? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 May 2011 10:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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3D TV shipments to soar 500 percent in 2011

Televisions with 3D capability will keep increasing in popularity, In-Stat predicts, with 300 million households worldwide owning 3D TVs in 2015.

Originally posted at The Digital Home

Sony Ericsson Xperia Play hits Verizon for $200 on-contract, in stores May 26th

It may not have been the first in the world to get it, but Verizon can now at least claim to be the first US carrier to offer the long fabled, oft-leaked PlayStation Phone, otherwise known as the Sony Ericsson Xperia Play. It will be available for pre-order on the carrier’s website starting May 19th, and be available in stores on May 26th for the usual $199.99 on a two-year contract. That, of course, gets you the first PlayStation Certified handset with console-style controls — a real D-pad and PlayStation face and shoulder buttons, plus a pair of miniature touchpads for dual-analog gameplay on the go. You’ll also get seven games pre-loaded on the device (including Madden NFL 11 and The Sims 3) but, as we saw in our recent hands-on with the Verizon version of the phone, you won’t get Sony Ericsson’s custom skin — the carrier has instead opted for a mostly stock UI with only some SE wallpapers and widgets. As Verizon also notes, those opting for the phone will have to sign up for both a Nationwide Talk plan and a smartphone data package as well, the former of which start at $39.99 a month, while an unlimited data plan will run you $29.99. Head on past the break for the full press release.

Continue reading Sony Ericsson Xperia Play hits Verizon for $200 on-contract, in stores May 26th

Sony Ericsson Xperia Play hits Verizon for $200 on-contract, in stores May 26th originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 May 2011 10:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSony Ericsson  | Email this | Comments

Sony Ericsson Xperia Play hits Verizon for $200 on-contract

It may not have been the first in the world to get it, but Verizon can now at least claim to be the first US carrier to offer the long fabled, oft-leaked PlayStation Phone, otherwise known as the Sony Ericsson Xperia Play. It will be available for pre-order on the carrier’s website starting May 19th, and be available in stores on May 26th for the usual $199.99 on a two-year contract. That, of course, gets you the first PlayStation Certified handset with console-style controls — a real D-pad and PlayStation face and shoulder buttons, plus a pair of miniature touchpads for dual-analog gameplay on the go. You’ll also get six games pre-loaded on the device (including Madden NFL 11 and The Sims 3) but, as we saw in our recent hands-on with the Verizon version of the phone, you won’t get Sony Ericsson’s custom skin — the carrier has instead opted for a mostly stock UI with only some SE wallpapers and widgets. As Verizon also notes, those opting for the phone will have to sign up for both a Nationwide Talk plan and a smartphone data package as well, the former of which start at $39.99 a month, while an unlimited data plan will run you $29.99. Head on past the break for the full press release.

Continue reading Sony Ericsson Xperia Play hits Verizon for $200 on-contract

Sony Ericsson Xperia Play hits Verizon for $200 on-contract originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 May 2011 10:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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99% of Android devices vulnerable to authentication attack

By this point, just about everyone knows how risky connecting to an unsecured wireless access point can be. Unfortunately, many public Wi-Fi hotspots forego security in exchange for convenience, and that ultimately leaves users exposed to attacks. Based on new research from the University of Ulm in Germany, Android users appear to be in even […]