Walmart announces 100th solar installation in California

You only have to set foot in most Walmart stores to know that the company wants to be green. For instance, in my local store, there are hordes of skylights all around the building in the ceiling and lights in the store turn off and on depending on how much light is coming through those skylights from the outside. That means you to be walking around and suddenly some of the lights turn off making the interior darker. I assume most Walmart locations use similar systems.

As strange as that is, it clearly shows that Walmart designs stores with an eye toward using natural lighting and saving electricity. Walmart has announced that it has installed its 100th solar installation in the state of California. The 100th store to get a solar panel installation was Walmart location on College Avenue in San Diego. Walmart says that the solar panel installation is the latest step on its road to being supplied by 100% renewable energy in all locations.

According to Walmart, its green initiatives also generate significant jobs at each location with an average of 48 contract positions per site. Walmart also states that its focus on solar power has generated more than 3000 contract construction jobs in California alone. Walmart has a significant solar footprint in the state of California with its total combined solar effort generating up to 70 million kWh of clean renewable energy each year.

That is enough power for 5400 typical homes. Walmart is also eliminating 21,700 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions each year. That is equivalent to taking 4100 cars off the road. The solar installations are able to provide 10 to 30% of each facility’s total electricity needs.

“Walmart has demonstrated a real commitment to solar energy systems here in San Diego and throughout California, and hopefully other companies will make the move to do the same on their rooftops,” said Tony Young, San Diego City Council President. “This latest renewable energy effort is another step forward in San Diego’s clean-energy mission and will help make our city a better, more sustainable place for current residents and our next generation.”


Walmart announces 100th solar installation in California is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Wikipad specs get real: 10.1-inch 1,280 x 800 display, 1.4 GHz Tegra 3, Jelly Bean

Wikipad-specs-get-real

The Wikipad gaming tablet has been ticking off boxes on its way to becoming a real product, and after bedding down with Gaikai game streaming and settling in to a 10.1-inch form factor, the rest of the hardware is now set. The chunky handheld will brandish an IPS display with 1,280 x 800 resolution, NVIDIA Tegra 3 T30 quad-core 1.4GHz processor, 1GB of DDR2 RAM, at least 16GB storage and Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. Other notable items include 8-megapixel rear / 2-megapixel front cameras, six hours continuous gaming battery life and a 2D-only screen instead of the 3D originally touted — at least, for the first model. The controller remains the same with a pair of triggers, bumpers, joysticks and start/select buttons, and will cover the slate’s speakers and route sound out the front. The rest of the story is yet to come, namely exactly what that price will be and when you’ll actually be able to pew-pew with it, but the company has promised to ‘fess up soon. Meanwhile, though airy for a tablet at 560 grams (1.2 pounds), it’s not exactly PS Vita or Nintendo 3DS XL territory — but then a heavyweight contender could be exactly what handheld gaming needs.

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Wikipad specs get real: 10.1-inch 1,280 x 800 display, 1.4 GHz Tegra 3, Jelly Bean originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Jul 2012 06:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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William Shatner and Wil Wheaton narrate NASA Grand Entrance videos

NASA is plugging its Mars Curiosity Rover for all it’s worth using social media, video, and a slew of press releases to raise public knowledge and interest in the exploration of the surface of Mars. Curiosity is the largest rover we’ve ever put on the red planet, and it is nuclear powered. The goal of Curiosity is to explore a massive crater on the surface of Mars in hopes of determining whether Mars harbors life of some sort or ever had life in the past.

NASA has shown us its 7 minutes of Terror video in the past outlining the highly complicated and dangerous process that Curiosity will go through as it enters the Martian atmosphere and descends to the surface. NASA now has two new videos called Grand Entrance each narrated by famous Star Trek actors. William Shatner narrates one video, and Wil Wheaton narrates the other.

Both videos are identical with the only difference being brief shots of each actor overlaid on the video and the voice narrating. Each video has the same verbiage and goes over how Curiosity has 7 minutes to go from its 13,000 mph speed down to a speed low enough for safe, soft landing.

It’s too bad NASA didn’t hire Patrick Stewart rather than Wheaton. It’s not that I don’t like Wil Wheaton, but had Stewart narrated the other video; we could’ve had a straight-up NASA video Picard versus Kirk brawl. “Shatner and Wheaton are mavericks in inspiring film, TV and social media audiences about space,” said Bert Ulrich, NASA’s multimedia liaison for film and TV collaborations. “NASA is thrilled to have them explain a difficult landing sequence in accessible terms that can be understood by many. Thanks to their generous support, Mars exploration will reach Tweeters, Trekkies and beyond!”


William Shatner and Wil Wheaton narrate NASA Grand Entrance videos is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Unannounced HP tablet spotted in a commercial

As we’re sure that some of you guys are aware by now, HP’s attempt to challenge the iPad and Android tablets with their webOS TouchPad did not go very well. However this does not mean that they have given up completely on the idea of tablets since they have confirmed that they will be releasing an Intel-based tablet running on Windows 8. However apart from that announcement, it is unclear as to what that tablet could look like which we’re sure is on everyone’s minds. However those questions could be answered (or lead to more questions) thanks to a recent HP commercial dubbed, “Make It Matter”. In the video above if you skip to the 0:55 mark, you will spot a man holding a HP tablet in landscape mode. Some have speculated that the landscape mode could be an indication that this tablet is running on Windows 8 (since landscape mode was the way Microsoft intended for Windows 8 to be used). The placement of the HP logo further cements this fact. Not much can be seen in the video although based on the back, it does look pretty sleek. We’re guessing that details will be revealed further down the line, so be sure to check back with us then for more news!

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Intel: over 20 Windows 8 tablets in the works, HP and Dell launching Windows RT tablets end of this year?,

HTC removes patent in ITC case against Apple

Here’s a quick refresher on HTC’s legal battle against Apple: the company’s launch of the One X and EVO 4G LTE in the United States was stalled briefly thanks to an import ban handed down by the ITC after the handsets were found to infringe on one of Apple’s patents. Now, in a second case involving the ITC, HTC has had to remove a crucial patent, bringing its total claims down from 8 to 2.

FOSS Patents reports that HTC withdrew another patent from its ITC case against Apple on Monday, #7,765,414. The patent relates to a “circuit and operating method for integrated interface of PDA and wireless communication system[s].” HTC originally brought a complaint against Apple in August 2011, citing three patents at first, then adding five given to the company on loan from Google. The judge in the case threw those loaned patents out in June, however, leaving HTC with its original three.

The withdrawal of this latest patent means HTC is now only asserting two claims against Apple in its ITC complaint. Apple, meanwhile, is claiming that FRAND (fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory terms) is being blatantly abused, and is counterclaiming against HTC in US District Court over two other patents. Patent #7,765,414 was HTC’s only in-house patent, with its others borrowed from other companies such as Google and ADT. The trial in this particularly case is due to start within the next month.

It’s not the first time HTC has tangled with Apple and the ITC. Back in June, Apple secured an import ban against the HTC One X and EVO 4G LTE, as both handsets were found to infringe on one of Cupertino’s patents. HTC quickly issued a software fix to remove the offending functionality, relating to menu context items, allowing the phones back into the United States. Apple cried foul, however, and still asserts that multiple HTC phones still infringe on its patents.


HTC removes patent in ITC case against Apple is written by Ben Kersey & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


HTC withdraws a critical patent in their ITC complaint again Apple

HTC logoAs some of you guys are aware by now, the Apple and Samsung lawsuit has officially kicked off with jury selection, but there are still other legal battles going on, such as the one with HTC. However it has been reported that HTC has since withdrawn a critical patent from its ITC complaint against Apple, bringing down the number of claims to only 2 standard-essential patents. The patent that HTC has withdrawn has been described as, “circuit and operating method for integrated interface of PDA and wireless communication system.” It is unclear as to why HTC decided to drop this alleged critical patent, but with the trial expected to begin in one month’s time, we certainly hope that HTC knows what they’re doing! In the meantime be sure to check back with us regularly as we’ll keep you updated on the ongoing legal situation.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: HTC smartphones did not infringe Apple patents, U.K. Judge ruled, Nokia sues HTC, RIM and ViewSonic for allegedly infringing upon 45 of its patents,

MetaWatch’s Strata is a smartwatch you might want to take a look at

Smartwatches are starting to become the trend these days, but as to whether they’ll become a standard or end up being a novelty remains to be seen. That being said, the folks at MetaWatch have recently launched a Kickstarter project for a smartwatch dubbed the Strata (pictured above). We have to admit that based on the design, it does look pretty good and is somewhat reminiscent of the digital watches back in the day with their monochromatic displays. As expected, the Strata will rely on Bluetooth 4.0 technology to pair with smartphones and is expected to play nice with both iOS and Android devices. The watch will allow users to check a variety of notifications, such as messages, who’s calling, weather forecasts, stock quotes, Facebook and Twitter notifications, and will come with integrated running and cycling apps. It will also allow users to control their music from the watch itself. The good news is that the Strata is an open-source watch, which means that developers/hackers will be able to come up with their own apps to help enhance the watch’s functions further. The Strata has long surpassed its goal of $100,000 and a pledge of $159 will net you the watch once it has been put into production.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Code School launches Kickstarter project to teach iOS programming, Pebble smartwatch to miss its September shipping date,

First GHz Edition Radeon HD 7970 hits shelves, throws $699 wrench into AMD’s pricing strategy

First GHz Edition Radeon HD 7970 hits shelves, throws $699 spanner into AMD's pricing strategy

The GHz Edition was supposed to deliver a significant mid-cycle performance bump to AMD’s flagship 7970, without any attendant rise in cost. Instead, according to AnandTech, it looks like third-party vendors are looking to exploit the GE has a chance to max out every other spec in addition to the updated silicon and then charge a premium. Sapphire’s new Toxic card is a case in point — a 6GB double-helping of VRAM and a “Lethal” BIOS mode that takes base clock up to 1150MHz and memory clock to 6.4GHz (compared to 6GHz on the stock card). Those who can splutter up $699 will surely love it, but it’s no substitute for the $499 upgrade that AMD originally intended.

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First GHz Edition Radeon HD 7970 hits shelves, throws $699 wrench into AMD’s pricing strategy originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Jul 2012 05:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Wallet gets hacked onto a Samsung Galaxy S3

If you believe that the NFC standard of paying is indeed the future, services such as Google Wallet is one that is probably familiar to you. Unfortunately Google Wallet has yet to be made universal for all Android devices, which means that unless you’re using a specific Android phone such as Sprint’s Nexus S, you might be out of luck if you wanted Google Wallet functionality. Kind of makes you wonder why higher end Android devices such as the One X or the recently launched Galaxy S3 have been left out of the fun, right? Well the good news is that if you’re using a Galaxy S3, a developer has managed to hack Google Wallet onto the device. It will require that you have some knowledge of flashing and will also require a rooted Galaxy S3, so if you’re not too sure what both of those things are, perhaps you might be better of waiting for an official release (if it is ever made). However for the more tech savvy, or for the more adventurous, the download and instructions can be found at the XDA forums, so pop on over for the details.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Google confirms no Google Wallet for Galaxy Nexus, Isis adds LG, Motorola, Samsung, RIM and Sony Ericsson to their supporters,

T-Mobile’s Sidekick 4G has been officially retired

T-Mobile’s Sidekick handset is a pretty iconic one that has been used in many television shows, movies and music videos in the past due to its rather unique way of sliding open. That being said, if you were planning on getting your hands on the Sidekick 4G from T-Mobile, you might be out of luck as T-Mobile has reportedly confirmed to the folks at PhoneScoop that the phone has been retired. Now if you were a bit bummed by that and are wondering if this could be the end of the Sidekick series of mobile phones, you can breathe a sigh of relief as the T-Mobile rep who shared the news was quoted as saying, “it doesn’t mean we are discontinuing the T-Mobile Sidekick line.” While it was not specifically mentioned, you could take the chance and pop on over to a local T-Mobile store to try your luck and see if they have any remaining units available that you could buy.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: T-Mobile releases Sidekick 4G OTA update – no, it’s not Gingerbread, T-Mobile Sidekick 4G will have limited supplies at launch,