Boxee Box v1.1 update includes improved browser, playback controls and more

Early previews of a new update for the Boxee Box mentioned a couple of different version numbers, but now the company has settled on v1.1 for the software update (sorry, still nothing for PCs) it’s rolling out over the next few days with a slew of new features. VP of Marketing Andrew Kippen confirms the “huge browser update” he’d mentioned earlier is included with the following features: favorites, history, a better UI to show more of the picture and include more options, plus expanded HTML5 capabilities that should fix login problems for HBO Go. There’s no mention of iPad support, but the whole on screen display has been trimmed with a new seek bar for more precise FF/Rewind action, along with support for customized local metadata and NFO files, a new MLB.tv app and two new content partners including the worst TV channel ever and SnagFilms. One thing that’s been removed? Volume controls, which Boxee says “improves consistency” and makes it the same as any standard Blu-ray player. As usual, the update will be issued automatically, but if you just can’t wait you can force it manually, check the source links for details, more screenshots and a full changelog.

Boxee Box v1.1 update includes improved browser, playback controls and more originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 May 2011 09:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NPD: Don’t blame iPad for weak PC market

The PC market has been suffering, but the iPad may not be the real culprit, according to NPD, which has been digging into the cannibalization of Netbooks by Apple’s tablet.

Originally posted at News – Apple

Touch pad prototype works without movement, makes fingertips feel like they’re sliding (video)

This comes from the same touchy-feely Kajimoto lab in Japan that brought us the tactile kiss transmission device and we totally see where they’re going with it: maximum sensation, minimum effort. You only have to exert the gentlest of pressures on this prototype touch pad and it zaps your fingertip with little electrical signals, mimicking the feeling of sliding your finger over a surface. We imagine it’s a bit like the little red pointing stick in the middle of a Lenovo ThinkPad keyboard, for example, but with the addition of “position-dependent data input” to create the illusion that your finger is actually touching different areas of the screen. For now though, if you don’t mind stretching a finger to your old-stylee mouse or trackpad, then check out the video after the break.

Continue reading Touch pad prototype works without movement, makes fingertips feel like they’re sliding (video)

Touch pad prototype works without movement, makes fingertips feel like they’re sliding (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 May 2011 09:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Canon PowerShot A1200 camera review: Optical viewfinder, AA batteries, and good photos

For an entry-level camera, the Canon PowerShot A1200 offers a lot for little money.

Schizophrenic computer may help us understand similarly afflicted humans

Although we usually prefer our computers to be perfect, logical, and psychologically fit, sometimes there’s more to be learned from a schizophrenic one. A University of Texas experiment has doomed a computer with dementia praecox, saddling the silicon soul with symptoms that normally only afflict humans. By telling the machine’s neural network to treat everything it learned as extremely important, the team hopes to aid clinical research in understanding the schizophrenic brain — following a popular theory that suggests afflicted patients lose the ability to forget or ignore frivolous information, causing them to make illogical connections and paranoid jumps in reason. Sure enough, the machine lost it, and started spinning wild, delusional stories, eventually claiming responsibility for a terrorist attack. Yikes. We aren’t hastening the robot apocalypse if we’re programming machines to go mad intentionally, right?

Schizophrenic computer may help us understand similarly afflicted humans originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 May 2011 09:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lady Gaga visiting FarmVille to debut songs

Lady Gaga creates a special farm called GagaVille where she will debut new songs, starting next week. We’ve come a long way since radio broke music.

Originally posted at Technically Incorrect

Editorial: Android@Home is the best worst thing that could happen to home automation

As the resident Engadget home automation nerd, Google’s Android@Home announcement rocked my little low-powered RF world yesterday. Seeing a brand like Google get behind home automation is the stuff I’ve been dreaming about ever since Nokia dipped a toe into the tepid Z-Wave waters back in 2008. Unfortunately, Nokia abandoned its Home Control Center ambitions shortly thereafter, leaving the industry in the hands of such consumer powerhouses as Zensys, Sigma Designs, ExpressControls, AMX Corp, Control 4, Echelon, and Jung. Heard of them? No, no you haven’t, and that’s my point.

Home automation has long suffered from the lack of a consumer-centric approach. Consumer electronics companies have almost universally come around to the new mantra of user experience. Most companies have finally awoken from their deep eighties slumber to realize that a single product can no longer dominate an industry on its own — the age of the Walkman is over. For success, a product must encompass great software, great services, hardware that just works, and stellar support when it doesn’t. In short, the user experience is what sets the product apart. Home automators have yet to realize this but Google’s announcement could force the issue.

Continue reading Editorial: Android@Home is the best worst thing that could happen to home automation

Editorial: Android@Home is the best worst thing that could happen to home automation originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 May 2011 08:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Blu e-cigarettes help you make friends, light up when you’re near another Blu smoker

Oh, that old adage: smoke, be cool, make friends. Die. Well, e-cigarette manufacturer Blu is now trying to resurrect that image, albeit perhaps without so much of the death bit, by making its packaging more sociable. It’s new “smart packs” are equipped with radio sensors that detect when a fellow Blu smoker comes within 50 feet, causing your box to light up and vibrate. This is meant to encourage you to go over and make conversation, like “Hi, so, er… you also spent $80 on a pack of battery-powered smokes. Is that fur real?”

Blu e-cigarettes help you make friends, light up when you’re near another Blu smoker originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 May 2011 08:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Charlotte Motor Speedway, Panasonic flip the switch on the world’s largest HD screen

Charlotte Motor Speedway and Panasonic held an event yesterday to celebrate the completion of the new world’s largest HD screen, which measures at 16,000 square feet (200 feet wide and 80 feet tall). Of course, the only natural thing to do when face with a screen this size is to play videogames on it, and CMS got very meta by bringing out NASCAR driver and simulation racing fan Dale Earnhardt Jr. to turn a few laps on the track in iRacing on the brand new display. The 720p display, located on the backstretch, is big enough for fans seated along the front stretch of the track between turn four and turn one to have a clear view of replays, standings and stats all the way across the track. Its official debut will take place May 21st during the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race and will also take a turn as a massive HDTV airing clips of Top Gear USA during a History Channel sponsored race the week after. You can see the videogame rig, screen and ceremonial oversized remote above while video of them actually playing is available at the source link.

[Thanks, Jeffery]

Charlotte Motor Speedway, Panasonic flip the switch on the world’s largest HD screen originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 May 2011 08:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sand-swimming robot gets vertical manipulation via doorstop-shaped head (video)

So it looks like a half-stuffed sock — and it is, sort of — but this sandfish-inspired search and rescue robot has the potential to change the way machines maneuver through disaster zones. Playing off its previous endeavors, a team of Georgia Tech researchers has designed a wedge-shaped head to manipulate the vertical movement of its sand-swimming invention through “complex dirt and rubble environments.” By mimicking the pointy snout of the sandfish lizard, and attaching it to the body of its robot — which sports seven servo-powered segments stuffed in a latex sock and sheathed by a spandex “swimsuit” — the team found that subtle changes in the positioning of the robot’s head made for drastic differences in vertical movement. When it was placed flat on the horizontal plane, the robot descended; when it was inclined above seven degrees, it ascended. For now, the robotic sandfish has been relegated to swimming in a sea of tiny yellow balls, but it’s slated to dive into a pool of debris in the name of research soon. You can check out a rather dry description of the project in the video after the break.

Continue reading Sand-swimming robot gets vertical manipulation via doorstop-shaped head (video)

Sand-swimming robot gets vertical manipulation via doorstop-shaped head (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 May 2011 07:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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