Lenovo LePhone K860 gets Samsung Exynos quad-core chip and Android 4.0

According to Japanese blog “Blog of Mobile“, the Lenovo LePhone K860 has been approved by China’s ministry of Industry and Information Technology (the equivalent of our FCC, we assume). From a site linked to the Chinese government (login required for the good stuff), some interesting information can be dug out.

If we believe the reports, the Lenovo LePhone K860 uses a quad-core Samsung Exynos 4412 chip at 1.4GHz, and comes with Android 4.0x. The display is said to be a huge 5″ one with a 720p (1280×720) resolution, although there is no mention of what “type” of display this would be. Cameras are 2 Megapixel for the front, and 8 Megapixel for the rear – which also comes with a dual-LED flash.

The phone seems fairly large and heavy with dimensions of 143.6 × 74.5 × 9.6mm for 185g (!). This is no small handset. In theory the handset will be released In August.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Apple Hits 68% of Tablet Market; Kindle Fire Plummets, Samsung officially announces the 1.4 GHz Exynos 4 quad-core processor for the GS3,

Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner: Health Care Lives! Long Live Health Care!

The Supreme Court ruling today had me doing a happy dance of relief. And I’m not alone. At MomsRising, we’ve heard from thousands of moms across the country about how the Affordable Care Act has already made a critical difference in their lives.
Read More…


Do You Actually Use Voice Commands on Your Smartphone? [Chatroom]

If the last month has made anything evident, it’s that tech companies are not treating voice recognition as a gimmick, and in fact, are increasingly paying more attention to it. But like our friend Matt Buchanan points out, it’s sort of de-humanizing. Is this something you actually use? How do you use it? Do you feel comfortable talking to your phone in public? [Twitter] More »

Valve Source Filmmaker makes a movie out of any Source game, now you’re directing with Portals (video)

Valve Source Filmmaker makes a movie out of any Source game, now you're directing with Portals video

Creating machinima with a video game engine usually requires accepting one of two truths: either that it will require a lot of fudging or that it will have all the sophistication of playing with action figures. Valve Software isn’t very happy with that dichotomy, which is why it’s posting its very own movie-making tool, Source Filmmaker, as a public beta. Any game that runs on the Source engine, whether it’s Left 4 Dead 2, Portal 2 or another in the family, can have gameplay run-throughs edited and dissected right down to custom facial expressions. As Valve expounds in the video after the break, throwing a gaming-grade PC at the task gives directors the advantage of seeing exactly how any changes will look in the final scene; there’s no rough wireframes or pre-rendering here. Budding Francis Ford Coppolas can sign up for an invitation to the Filmmaker beta at the project page. If you’d just like to see how far someone can go with the end results, we’ve also included the latest Team Fortress 2 character profile video, Meet the Pyro, after the jump.

Continue reading Valve Source Filmmaker makes a movie out of any Source game, now you’re directing with Portals (video)

Valve Source Filmmaker makes a movie out of any Source game, now you’re directing with Portals (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jun 2012 18:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon Kindle Next reportedly enters the arms race with a quad-core tablet

Amazon Kindle Fire Review

This is the 7" Kindle Fire

As you may have seen, the launch of the Google Nexus 7 has basically turned the 7″ Kindle Fire into a “toy” which purchase is really hard to justify because its hardware is so weak, the software is so locked, and the added simplicity is so little. The arrival of the $200 Tegra-3/Android 4.1 powered Nexus 7 will change the landscape in what used to be called “low-end” Android tablets, and this is great.

For too long, tablet makers thought that providing “good enough” would be… good enough. For one, things like the Kindle Fire turned out to be *not* good enough, and secondly, users want more, better, and they can now find it elsewhere. The time for tepid hardware is over – at least for the next year or so. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Amazon rumored to launch a physical retail store, Amazon Kindle Fire: estimated 6 million sold,

Google’s TV Strategy Is Doomed

th_Doomed

I feel like we’re watching Google TV roll by and off into a nearby ditch. The company doesn’t have much dedication to the platform and, like Apple TV, GTV is failing to gain traction.

As Ryan notes, outside of a few I/O sessions, Google said very little about the Google TV project this year and I’m almost certain it means they’ve scrapped the project but don’t want to tell their partners. They are running seminars on the platform at I/O, but until they’ve officially announced the closure they have to maintain appearances.

To be clear, I’ve been a fairly accepting user of GTV for a while – it was once my go-to smart TV solution, after the Boxee Box – but it’s clear that Google can gain no foothold in the treacherous world of set-top boxes. Here are a few reasons why.

First, television broadcasters don’t want to work with anyone who aims to make money off their content. Sure they’ll sell a program here or there, but unless the set-top in your home is streaming out the unadulterated streams coming out of their satellites, they don’t want any part of it. By co-opting search and discovery, Google looks to the broadcasters like a parasitic organism rather than a money maker. TiVo (barely) survives because it acts as a smart VCR. Apple TV and GTV are slow to spread because they are, at best, glorified media players and they will never be anything more without real broadcaster buy-in.

Second, no one is sure what a smart TV is supposed to be, but GTV isn’t it. No one can quite put their finger on what they want a TV to do. Is it supposed to stream home content? Allow you to watch YouTube on the big screen? Offer ways to tweet from your couch? All those things happen more quickly and more efficiently on laptops and tablets. Why co-opt the biggest screen in the house?

GTV is sort of an overlay on the TV world just as Google Glass is supposed to be an overlay on the real world. Unfortunately, this sort of overlay rarely works in practice as it distracts from the program at hand. TV watchers aren’t an active lot. All of this talk about a second screen offering streaming stats is cool for about one minute when you’re trying to figure out who starred in Flight Plan. Once you realize the stewardess is Erika Christensen who was also in Swimfan, you’re pretty much done with the second screen. Nobody wants to check into programs or search for related videos or tweet from their TV. Nobody.

I could be wrong. Maybe Google has a real zinger coming up for us in the GTV space. But the set-top box will soon be eclipsed by more powerful DVRs or game consoles that offer real value versus perceived value. I’d far prefer, say, my Xbox to provide unfettered access to TV content than have the GTV sit there between me and a Dish subscription. DVRs already perfected the best things about television. Anything else is just a distraction.


Just Mobile Gum Battery Pack

Just Mobile Gum Battery Pack

The Just Mobile Gum is the ultra-compact battery pack for your power-hungry gadgets. It has a 2,200mAh Li-Ion battery with 1A output, which is perfect for Apple’s iPhone or Blackberry smartphone. The Just Mobile Gum can be recharged via a micro USB port from your computer. This battery pack features 3 micro-LED capacity indicators, an included travel pouch, a micro USB cable and iPhone/iPod charging cable. The Just Mobile Gum battery pack retails for $49.95. [Just Mobile]

This One-Piece Rain Suit Lets you Pedal Through the Most Torrential Rains [Video]

Who decided babies should have all the fun when it comes to onesies? Certainly not Smart Products. Its one-piece Bikesuit offers head to toe rain protection in the form of waterproof, breathable polyester. Come at me, Poseidon! More »

Apple Senior VP of Hardware Engineering Bob Mansfield to retire, be replaced by Dan Riccio

Apple Senior VP of Hardware Engineering Bob Mansfield to retire, be replaced by Dan RiccioApple has announced that its Senior VP of Hardware Engineering, Bob Mansfield, will retire and over the course of the next few months transfer his role to Dan Riccio. Mansfield is credited with leading the Mac engineering team since 2005 and took on a more visible role as an exec during the reshuffling in 2008. He’s also mentioned as leading iPhone and iPod engineering since 2010 (when he took over the role from Mark Papermaster in a move curiously timed around those antenna troubles) and the iPad since it began. He’d been with Apple since 1999 when it acquired his previous employer, Raycer Graphics, and most recently popped up on our radar earlier this year while integrating another acquisition, flash memory maker Anobit. If you’d like to get familiar with his replacement, Dan Riccio is currently vice president of iPad hardware engineering. Check the press release after the break for a few more details on both individuals, there’s no word on Mansfield’s post-retirement plans.

Continue reading Apple Senior VP of Hardware Engineering Bob Mansfield to retire, be replaced by Dan Riccio

Apple Senior VP of Hardware Engineering Bob Mansfield to retire, be replaced by Dan Riccio originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jun 2012 18:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Power of Zeus, In The Hands Of The U.S Military

Picatinny Arsenal, an armament company specialized in both conventional and smart weapons is working on something that goes beyond kinetic-energy weapons, which is a fancy terms to describe “throwing stuff at the adversary”. In their own words, they seek to “harness the power of lightning” – quite ambitious if you ask me.

The end-game they say, is to be able to target anything that conducts electricity. To create lighting out of thin air, the company uses a very intense laser beam. Unlike “normal” weaponized lasers, the beam itself is not the weapon here. Instead the beam is so powerful and so focused that it can “rip electrons off of air molecules” says Picatinny. The mean then serves as a guiding mechanism for the energy to the target. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: US special operations troops to use KIBOSH non-lethal sticky bombs, A sound absorption wall panel that will also be able to emit LED lights,