Nintendo’s 3DS Ambassador Program line-up revealed, games available September 1st

Early 3DS adopters, your smorgasbord of throwback make-goods is now only a day away. Nintendo recently announced via its Twitter account the full line-up of ten Famicom / NES virtual console games headed for the company’s Ambassador Program. Owners of the 3D handheld in Japan and North America can look forward to re-acquainting themselves with such 8-bit classics like Metroid, Super Mario Bros., Ice Climber, The Legend of Zelda, Zelda II : The Adventure of Link, Balloon Fight, Donkey Kong Jr., NES Open Tournament Golf, Wrecking Crew and Yoshi. Those golden games of yore will be available to download from the eShop tomorrow, but gamers looking for the GBA goods will have to wait until later this year.

Update: Turns out the games are available to download now.

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Nintendo’s 3DS Ambassador Program line-up revealed, games available September 1st originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Aug 2011 17:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Loses Another iPhone Prototype at a Bar, Says Report

A mock-up of what some believe the iPhone 5 to look like, based on case-design leaks.  Image source: MacRumors

You’d think Apple employees would be a little more careful with their precious prototypes after last year.

Apparently a next-gen iPhone prototype has gone missing, this time from San Francisco bar Cava 22, according to CNET. The device was reportedly lost in late July, and Apple scrambled to recover it over the following days. Instead of being bought by Gawker for five grand, this one sold on Craigslist for $200.

An eerily similar incident occurred with the iPhone 4 in April 2010. Redwood City, California, resident Brian J. Hogan found one at a local bar and sold it to Gawker-owned gadget site Gizmodo. Gizmodo staff involved were recently cleared of criminal wrongdoing, but Hogan was charged with two misdemeanors: misappropriation of lost property and possession of stolen property.

A few days after the latest device was initially lost, Apple representatives contacted San Francisco police, according to CNET. They claimed that the lost device was priceless and that they desperately hoped for its safe return back to 1 Infinite Loop.

There are no details as to what the missing phone looked like or what OS it was running, but Apple was able to trace its location back to a home in a nearby San Francisco neighborhood. The residents of the home, including a 22-year-old man who says he was at Cava 22 that night, denied knowledge of the device (even after being offered a cash reward from Apple). They gave permission for the police to search the house, but nothing was found.

Apple did not immediately return a phone call or e-mail request for comment from Wired.com.


Tiny oxygen generators improve cancer treatments

Researchers at Purdue are implanting miniature devices in tumors to generate oxygen and boost the effects of both radiation and chemotherapy.

Originally posted at News – Health Tech

Madden NFL 12 goes long for Android and iOS

It may not break any new ground for the franchise, but it’s still the best football game you can get for your phone or tablet.

Originally posted at iPhone Atlas

Skype now works with any home phone

Adapter allows you to sneak VoIP into the home of any Luddite–provided they have broadband. Landlines just got a boost.

HTC pushes a Windows Phone through FCC, Mango launch close at hand?

Phones approved by the FCC are seldom so upfront about the OS they run on, but HTC decided to go against the status quo in its latest filing to the government agency. A quick perusal of the FCC filings show a handset tested for 850 / 1900 GSM — standard 2G bands for AT&T and T-Mobile — and no WCDMA frequencies in the US. There’s one detail in the docs, however, that stands out like a sore thumb: this device, the HTC PI39110, is listed as a Windows Phone. What’s more, the paperwork also mentions the inclusion of a “WiFi hotspot,” which likely is the mobile hotspot feature confirmed to be supported by Mango. HTC hasn’t announced any devices that run on the updated OS yet, but this particular gem could very well be the long-rumored Eternity. While it probably won’t make its way to the US, this is at least a solid indicator that Windows Phone 7.5 is coming soon to more parts of the globe.

HTC pushes a Windows Phone through FCC, Mango launch close at hand? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Aug 2011 16:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile Users Rejoice at Justice Dept. Blocking AT&T Merger

“I’m so happy that I don’t have to be an AT&T customer.”

Posted to a T-Mobile message board this morning, one user’s feelings nail the sentiment among consumers following Wednesday’s announcement that the Justice Department is suing to block AT&T’s proposed acquisition of the Deutsche-Telekom–owned wireless network.

T-Mobile users generally responded positively to the news that they wouldn’t be seeing the AT&T death star on their cellphone bills anytime soon. Riffing on the oft-bemoaned shortcomings of both networks, one Wired.com reader proposed an unfortunate merger scenario: ”AT&T’s zero-bars reception merged with T-Mobile’s customer service. I think the result might just collapse into a black hole of suck.”

AT&T has long championed its proposed merger of T-Mobile as being beneficial to the wireless customers of both networks. The company claims it will improve wireless service for AT&T and T-Mobile customers, expand 4G coverage to more of the country and, most recently, add a significant number of jobs to the U.S. workforce.

But in the Justice Department’s eyes — and anecdotally those of T-Mobile’s customer base as well — the costs of the merger may outweigh the benefits. “The combination of AT&T and T-Mobile would result in tens of millions of consumers all across the United States facing higher prices, fewer choices and lower quality products for mobile wireless services,” said deputy attorney general James M. Cole in the Justice filing.

Not to mention some of the concessions existing T-Mobile customers would have to make if the merger were to go through. AT&T has repeatedly stated it planned to use T-Mobile’s 1700-MHz spectrum for its eventual 4G LTE deployment. That would ultimately make T-Mobile customers buy new phones that could function on AT&T’s network — unless, that is, you’re okay with EDGE network service.

Those least happy about the Justice Department’s actions are, of course, AT&T and T-Mobile. In the past year, T-Mobile has seen a steady decline in profits as T-Mobile customer contracts have been reduced by nearly a million subscribers. If Deutsche Telekom were able to sell off T-Mobile to AT&T for $39 billion, the German firm could then use that money to invest in its European business.

Not to mention a successful blocking of the merger would prevent AT&T’s dreams of becoming the largest wireless telecommunications network in the United States, surpassing Verizon as the reigning champ and leaving Sprint in the dust.

Of course, if the lawsuit fails to block the merger, today’s customer rejoicing could lend itself to tomorrow’s mass customer departures: “If AT&Terrible is able to acquire them,” wrote one T-Mobile subscriber, “then I am outta here so fast they won’t even know I existed.”


Ghost stealth boat moves on gas layer around hull

Juliet Marine’s Ghost stealth boat produces a gas layer around its hull to move it through water with 900 times less friction.

Toyota smashes EV record on Nurburgring, speed rivals gas-powered cars (video)

Last week, Toyota’s racing team set out to break the current EV record on the Nordschleife track, part of Germany’s infamous Nürburgring — and they’ve done it, clocking a swift 7:47.79 seconds with the P001 electric racing car. The Peugeot EX1 EV’s previous 9:01.338 record seems like a distant memory as the new contender shaved more than a minute off the time, giving even gasoline-powered vehicles a run for their money. Toyota’s car is no slouch as it can reach 260km/h (174mph), with a track time that rivals the Radical SR8 LM’s record breaking time of 6:48. Beating its predicted goal of eight minutes, Toyota hopes the victory will bring new awareness to electric racing and perhaps to help sell custom race cars in the future — yes, you too might be able to cop a car with the same guts (albeit different body and chassis) as a Radical Sportscar some day. Check out the full PR after the jump.

Continue reading Toyota smashes EV record on Nurburgring, speed rivals gas-powered cars (video)

Toyota smashes EV record on Nurburgring, speed rivals gas-powered cars (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Aug 2011 16:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Entertainment Network unifies online services

The electronics giant is unifiying online services under the Sony brand name and using them to stitch together its vast array of products.

Originally posted at Deep Tech