Droid 3 sadly shipping with locked bootloader

Droid 3

Well, we hate to be the bearers of bad news but, looks like the Droid 3 will not be shipping with the unlocked bootloader Motorola promised us. According to a Motorola support forum manager the latest, landscape QWERTY slider from the company is not sporting the new unlockable firmware found on the Xoom. Now, before everyone gets up in arms, lets remember that Moto said it wouldn’t be offering the new bootloader till “late 2011,” and it’s entirely possible the Droid 3 could shed those shackles with a future software update. So, we understand you’re a little disappointed but, patience is a virtue friends.

Droid 3 sadly shipping with locked bootloader originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jul 2011 13:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink PocketNow  |  sourceMotorola Owners’ Forum  | Email this | Comments

AT&T announces Pantech Pursuit II

Pantech and AT&T announce the Pantech Pursuit II, a new messaging feature phone with a 2.8-inch touch screen and a vertical sliding keyboard.

Originally posted at Dialed In

Audi RS returns in a blaze of small

Audi announces pricing for the TT RS, an Audi performance line that has been in hiatus from the U.S. for three years.

Originally posted at The Car Tech blog

Smartphones Ward Off Mosquitoes

Mosquito bites are perhaps the one thing that are worse than the heat in Japan during the summer. Not only do they itch the entire day, these pesky little blood-suckers annoy the general population with their loud buzzing and constant flying in circles. Sea’s Garden, a smart phone gaming and utility app maker, offers a solution to the terror that mosquitoes bring to man, without harming the environment.

mosquito-bite

The Mosquito Buster is an Android app (soon to be released for the iPhone as well) that acts as a mosquito coil, but instead of burning off insect killing smoke, it releases a high-frequency sound from your smart phone speakers which these insects detest.

mosquito-buster

The app is extremely simple to operate: users choose between 3 modes, each with corresponding frequencies. The first is obviously to avoid mosquitos, and the second, rodents. The third was what caught our attention and seemed particularly amusing. The third mode is titled “Avoid Children”, as it releases a frequency only detectable to children, as adult ears cannot hear the high pitched sound. It would be useful for parents who need a little bit of peace and quiet from their screaming, energetic toddlers. It’s nice to see useful utility apps like these that offer clever ways of solving consumer problems in an eco-friendly manner. Looks like I’m going to finally get a good nights sleep tonight without having to worry about pesky insects (or children for that matter) that bring a world of itchiness to my feet .

Related Posts:
Japan Mobile Marketing Round-Up: Part 4
Summer brings itchy groins, fun commercials
Cooling Beverage Menthol Shock from JT

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2D Glasses kick 3D to the curb

Not everyone is in love with the 3D phenomenon. Sensitive viewers can slap on a set of special 2D Glasses and convert those pesky 3D movies back into 2D.

Poor 3-D TV Sales? Panasonic Blames Hollywood

Despite a plethora of 3-D films and television options, consumers aren't buying many 3-D TVs. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Despite Hollywood’s continued onslaught of 3-D films hitting the big screen, not many people are buying 3-D TVs.

Whose fault is that? Panasonic’s marketing director Andrew Denham blames Hollywood for making such bad 3-D movies.

“Hollywood damaged 3-D by rushing so many badly converted films out in Avatar’s wake,” Denham said at the recent Intellect Consumer Electronics 2011 show. “What we need now is the next level, the next Avatar. And that’s a big ask, I think.”

But according to an April report from NPD Group, a market research firm, prices of 3-D TVs and the need to wear glasses top consumers’ complaints about owning sets in the home. A June SNL Kagan report also pegged 3-D sets’ higher price points, as well as lack of content, the need for eyewear and issues about universal standards, as reasons for 3-D TVs’ failure to populate consumer’s homes in 2011.

In 2010, 3-D TVs were billed as the breakthrough technology of the year at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. But consumers only purchased 1.1 million units that year, and the Consumer Electronics Association projected sales of just under 2 million this year.

Unfortunately, eye strain, nausea and fatigue (not to mention the need to wear glasses just to watch TV) have historically made consumers weary of bringing a 3-D TV into their home.

Despite a growing number of offerings at reduced prices (dropping from $900 more than a comparable HDTV in 2010 to only $400 more in 2011), and more attractive 3-D eyewear offerings, the popularity of 3-D in the home continues to lag.

And it looks like — for now — Hollywood is at least partly to blame.

“3-D is right smack in the middle of its terrible twos,” said Dreamworks animation chief Jeffrey Katzenberg, in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter. “We have disappointed our audience multiple times now, and because of that I think there is genuine distrust — whereas a year and a half ago, there was genuine excitement, enthusiasm and reward for the first group of 3-D films that actually delivered a quality experience.”

Of course, Katzenberg is primarily talking about box office sales, but a box office flop (particularly a 3-D blockbuster flop) is pretty unlikely to score big when it finally makes it to Blu-ray.

Both manufacturers Sony and Panasonic hope that increased broadcast television content will also spur interest in the technology. 3-D sports offerings, such as ESPN 3D, which is now in its second year, may be 3-D’s best hope.

But of the 2,000 respondents who were interested in 3-D TVs in the NPD survey, most were potentially interested in watching films. Approximately 68 percent cited Blu-ray movies as the type of content they would want to view on the displays.

Although the general outlook is cloudy, not everyone is down on consumer 3-D adoption. Market research firm iSuppli projects sales will expand 5.5 percent this year, and top nearly 160 million units by 2015 since “brands are marketing 3-D not as a must-have technology but as a desirable feature, similar to the approach they have taken with internet connectivity.”

Regardless, nobody’s going to buy a TV if there’s nothing good to watch on it.


Apple seeks to spruce up the real world with interactive augmented reality, has the patent apps to prove it

When we go somewhere new, we wish we could spend more time taking in the sights and less time looking at our phone for directions and info about our surroundings. Apple’s well aware of this conundrum, and has filed a couple of patent applications to let you ogle your environment while telling you where to go and what you’re seeing. One app is a method for combining augmented reality (AR) information and real time video while allowing users to interact with the images on screen — so you can shoot a vid of a city skyline with your iPhone, touch a building where you want to go, and let it show you the way there. The second patent application is for a device with an LCD display capable of creating a transparent window, where the opacity of the screen’s pixels is changed by varying the voltage levels driving them. Such a display could overlay interactive info about what you see through the window, so you can actually look at the Mona Lisa while reading up on her mysterious grin. Of course, these are just patent applications, so we probably won’t be seeing any AR-optimized iDevices anytime soon (if ever), but we can dream, right?

Apple seeks to spruce up the real world with interactive augmented reality, has the patent apps to prove it originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jul 2011 12:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Apple Insider  |  sourceUSPTO (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

Compression is killing your music

Dynamic range compression is ruining music.

PlayStation Move Tiger Woods ‘Masters’ bundle arrives for $99.99

Starting the week of July 11, Sony’s serving up a limited edition PlayStation Move Tiger Woods PGA Tour 12: Masters Bundle for $99.99 that comes with the PlayStation Eye and one Move controller.

NASA puts the pee in potable water

Astronauts on the shuttle Atlantis will be testing something called the Forward Osmosis Bag, which aims to sweeten the notion of drinking your own urine.