Cardtorial Laser-Cut Wooden Postcards – Because Paper Isn’t Enough

I love getting mail. Not the electronic kind, but the old-fashioned postal and physical kind of mail. Sure, it might take longer to arrive, but compare the feeling you get when you receive an actual postcard in the mail versus an e-card in your inbox.

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Go up one more level and you’ve got the Cardtorial. Instead of plain cardboard, you can now send messages of love, friendship, and encouragement with laser-cut designs on certified American wood. Aside from saying how you feel through the adorable designs on the cards, you can add your own message using a marker to make it even more special.

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Its creator Yvonne Leung recently completed a successful campaign on Kickstarter to launch the cards and to fund crafting more Cardtorials for her Fall 2012 line. The campaign is closed (and all funded!) but you can still get the cards directly from her website for $10(USD) per card. For an extra $5 per card, you can also personalize them, but you’ll need to allow at least 10 extra business days for that service.

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Samsung Galaxy Note II (T-Mobile) Review

In the Samsung Galaxy Note II we’ve got an experience like no other – similar to the first Galaxy Note with its massive display and S-Pen action, but here with processing power and software just great enough to carve for itself a unique place in the smart device universe. The T-Mobile version of this device is so very similar to the rest of the carrier editions here in the USA that it’s almost foolish to review it more than once – the differences have been sliced down to the apps included inside, Samsung once again flexing their brand power to keep the device near-identical across all carrier borders. This device is to the Galaxy Note line what the Galaxy S III was to the Galaxy S line, continuing very much with Samsung’s coming-of-age – very wise indeed.

Hardware

We’ve already had a peek at this device in one other iteration in our Samsung Galaxy Note 2 (international edition) review – keep that in mind as you jump down the list here with this USA-bound device. In the end they’re extremely similar, this certainly a testament to Samsung’s newfound power to demand essentially the same device on any carrier it works with.

This device is what appears at first to be a super-sized version of the Samsung Galaxy S III, the smartphone you’ll also be able to pick up at each of the carriers this Note II is on. What you’re seeing is Samsung’s family brand integration taking hold, with the company hoping to ring in a true product with the best elements of both the original Note and the S III at once. The display is 5.5-inches rather than 5.3 as the original was with a smaller bezel and thinner body to boot – it’s really a nicer device to work with on the whole.

Samsung Galaxy Note II / Galaxy S III sharing abilities

Samsung took some time molding this 80.5 x 151.1 x 9.4 mm beast, making it feel smooth and round as the Galaxy S III, cashing in on the design language that they’ve successfully made the public understand with that one giant cross-carrier release. The Galaxy Note weighs in at aproximately 182.5g and sticks to this weight no matter which carrier its on, with a body that remains the same for case integration and a much more likely 3rd party accessory manufacturer success story.

Hands-on with T-Mobile Samsung Galaxy Note II features

This device comes with a T-Mobile back panel that’s the same glossy plastic as the Galaxy S III series, here with a lovely Black tone right off the bat instead of just Blue or White – though they’re coming out right away as well, if you like. The display has a subtle curve around the edges, there’s still the faux-chrome edges as the Galaxy S III has, and they’ve also both got the same sort of Samsung-made case/back cover replacement accessory that flips over the front and keeps your display safe in your pocket or purse or backpack.

The display has less pixels across it than the original Note, but also replaces the PenTile technology used there for a lovely HD Super AMOLED unit instead. What you’ve got here is indeed less pixels than before, even though you’ve got a larger display – but the trade-off (if you can call it that) is well worth the result: this display is 1280 x 720 pixels (rather than 1280 x 800) and is now compatible instantly with masses of 720p apps right out of the box. It’s both sharp as you could ever want it to be and brighter than your eyeballs should reasonably need.

The cameras on this device include a 1.9 megapixel front-facing unit ready for video chat and OK-looking photos and the back has a rather nice 8 megapixel camera with single LED flash. Both cameras have a fabulous backside-illuminated sensor and are capable of 1080p video. The headphone jack sits in the top left, the main speaker sits on the back under to tiny slits near the S-Pen slot, and the S-Pen slot is on the bottom with a whole new hole (and S-Pen, mind you) for much more intuitive action and use.

The back of this device is replaceable and sits on top of a massive 3,100 mAh replaceable battery. Also under the hood you’ll find a space for your microSIM card and a microSDHC card – this device can take up to a 64GB card, just like the Galaxy S III can. You’ve got the option of picking up a Galaxy Note II in one of three different internal storage sizes (depending on the carrier you’re aiming for), those being 16GB, 32GB, or 64GB.

Inside is also a collection of a who’s-who of top-tier connectivity options including Bluetooth 4.0 with aptX, NFC, WiFi a/b/g/n (2.4GHz/5GHz) with WiFi Direct, and USB 2.0 Host. The USB 2.0 Host works through your standard microUSB port, and you’ll need a converter of some sort to connect to your external storage devices. Accelerometer, digital compass, proximity sensor, gyroscope, A-GPS, Glonass positioning, and S-Pen technology that we must assume was developed by wizards.

Of course the S-Pen connection, outlined in its own fabulous section later in this review, is aided largely by the Samsung-made Exynos processor that powers this device. The Exynos 4 quad-core processor runs here at 1.6GHz per core, and that’s ARM Cortex-A9, mind you. Everyday use with this machine makes the case for the processor without a doubt, here utilizing essentially the same power that the significantly larger Galaxy Note 10.1 uses to roll with this 5.5-inch machine – it’s a monster, for certain (see our standard benchmarks below as well.)

S-Pen

With a new Note comes a new generation of S-Pen, and once again Samsung does not disappoint with improvements over the past release. Here the pen feels more like a standard No.2 pencil (a classic size, of course) and has a fine new collection of software enhancements to go with it. The pen also still sits inside the Note II snugly, able to be removed and replaced with ease yet staying firm when in transit.

The S-Pen is now another level ahead of the competition in its software implementation – where the S-Pen’s original iteration took Wacom technology to punch the capacitive “finger-dummy” styluses of the past right in the face, the new S-Pen gives it a double-wallop. The first and most apparent place you’ll see this second level is in its ability to appear as a floating nib – you can be about a half-centimeter above the display and you’ll have a sensor showing on the screen: this marker on the display has a collection of uses.

The S-Pen has a variety of new features throughout its software and hardware builds, but some of the most interesting bits come from the S-Pen hover feature we were told about some weeks ago. The S-Pen is now able to give you previews of many different items including emails (in your email app, not Gmail quite yet), S Planner calendar, and videos in your Samsung Videos app. Your standard gallery app too will allow you to preview the images inside a gallery folder, flipping through sets piece by piece.

With the Note II you’re able to set the device to detect when you’ve left your S-Pen behind. You can bring up a new home page that only exists when the S-Pen is out. You can take a screenshot with a tap and hold on your display, these shots then able to be written on and shared at will. This functionality makes us wish Google integrated such an ability into the basic version of Android, it’s so helpful on a daily basis.

The S-Pen also works now with Quick Command drawn-commands, with a question mark followed by “Weather” bringing you web search and an exclamation mark followed by a location bringing you to that location in Maps. Similarly you’re able to write out commands with S-Voice, though this is a bit less intuitive as wherever you’re going to be in a position to hear S-Voice speak, you’re probably going to be able to speak out loud yourself.

After the software integration with the S-Pen, there’s always the usability factor. The comfort with which we’re able to use the S-Pen has far increased over the previous generation Galaxy Note, reaching now for the same highly-tuned size of the pen included with the Galaxy Note 10.1. Here we’re using something much closer to a pencil where before it was just a teensy bit too thin.

Software

In addition to the S-Pen being the star of the show and having most of its features advertised surrounding this stylus, Samsung’s TouchWiz and Android 4.1 Jelly Bean have added some awesome enhancements that will bring your mobile experience to a new level. One of the oddities is the ability called “Page Buddy” to have a sort of “peekaboo” home screen that appears only when you plug in the right accessory. There’s one for your S-Pen (as mentioned earlier), one for docking mode, and one for your headphones as well. Rather helpful stuff for plug-and-play sorts of folks.

Android 4.1 Jelly Bean is your standard system here with Samsung’s TouchWiz integrated within, and a set of T-Mobile and Samsung apps added to the standard Google fare. Of course Samsung’s TouchWiz integration no longer sits around as the same execution for every single device as such additions did at the start of Android – now it’s unique for each device, allowing enhancements to take hold exactly as they should depending on the device’s abilities.

Galaxy Note II hands-on with custom vibration notifications

You’ve got such fabulous abilities as recording your own vibration combination for notifications, circling items with your S-Pen to take miniature screen-shots, and the calling forward of S-Note with a double-tap on your display with the S-Pen once again. This S-Note calling feature links in with other pop-up windows you can use, these first appearing way back on the TouchWiz UX software update to the original Galaxy Tab 10.1 – it’s come a long way since then, to say the least.

Benchmark Performance

The Samsung Galaxy Note II brings on a level of fluidity and instant-reaction taps that we’ve only otherwise seen on Android with the LG Optimus G. Both devices use quad-core processors, with the G using Qualcomm’s Snapdragon S4 Pro and the Galaxy Note II using Samsung’s own Exynos quad-core architecture – essentially the same as is used in the Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet. Have a peek here first at some Asphalt 7 gaming action to see how well the unit holds up in a racing situation.

Next have a peek at the benchmarks that show this machine to be acting right up in with the other warrior we just looked at, Qualcomm and Samsung here duking it out for supremacy. Have another look at our LG Optimus G review to see how closely these two new beasts get, keeping in mind that the LG device has a slightly smaller display with a similar amount of pixels in the end.

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Camera

The 8 megapixel camera on the back of the Samsung Galaxy Note II has never looked nicer in the Samsung family of devices. That’s a feat in an of itself, mind you, as the Galaxy S III brought on some fury of its own just a few months ago at its introduction to the world. Now we’re seeing no drop in quality and a lovely interface crafted for the Galaxy Note II so you can make photography, however odd it looks with a device of this size, your own high-quality experience.

Both up close and far away we’re doing well here, with Samsung certainly leaving this device out in the rain for quality on either the front or the back camera. You’ll find that 1080p video works well and 8 megapixel photos, be they HDR or standard – or an array of other odd filters – look rather nice. Have a peek below at a selection of examples from the Galaxy Note II and see how they compare with the Samsung Galaxy S III review – look similar to you?

Battery Performance

The battery on the Samsung Galaxy Note II has had a rather easy time getting through the day with its 3,100 mAh of juice, even with a hard day’s work behind it. That said, Samsung has provided us with a set of easy to manage power-saving abilities that everyone should be well aware of by now. The display is the most power-hungry of anything on this device, as is always true of a device with a display as potentially bright as this one – placing this on “auto” will do wonders for your battery life.

There’s also the rather fabulous Blocking mode which you’ll have to switch on from your Setting menu. This option brings on the ability to disable incoming calls, notifications, alarm and timer, and LED indicator at the tap of a button – it appears in your notifications menu near the rest of the switch off/on buttons. You can also set it up to switch on and off at certain times of the day every day if you wish – and you can block certain contacts with the feature, but that’s not about batteries unless you’ve got a stalker, of course.

Samsung also includes their general Power Saving mode which works wonders once again – use this, blocking mode, and auto brightness on your display will bring you more than enough power for more than a day at a time. You’ve got the ability to replace your battery on the go, also, so keep that in mind if you’re an insane constant-use sort of person.

Wrap-Up

The Samsung Galaxy Note II is a device that any Android and Samsung-loving fan will love, but outside the faction of normal citizens that have a need for such a massive beast of an in-betweener, this machine might just fall flat. It’s not that it’s not great – this device is made for awesome high-level mobile computing and it definitely does that well, but if you can’t fit the Galaxy Note II in your pocket, you’ll probably not want to use it on the regular.

If you’re a smartphone user and have enjoyed the Samsung Galaxy S III, you’re probably going to want to at least have a look at the Galaxy Note II. It’s an enticing prospect, seeing your best buddy Galaxy blown up to a 5.5-inch display-toting size with a magic want embedded in its side. I’ve found the Galaxy Note II to be entirely enjoyable to use each and every day I’ve used it – but complaints about the first iteration of this device hold true here as well.

If the size is a boon to you, you might as well not even try it. If you want to have the highest level of mobile computing on the market right now with the finest-tuned amalgamation of both software and hardware in one device, the Samsung Galaxy Note II is the one for you. Those that want an all-in-one Android that does essentially everything any Android-toting device on the market has been able to do thus far, thus is the one.

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Samsung Galaxy Note II (T-Mobile) Review is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Samsung TecTiles 3.0 update offers more options for NFC tagging, now available in Play Store

Samsung TecTiles 30 announced

Samsung’s NFC tagging app — known as TecTiles — made its official debut in June, but the company isn’t putting a halt to its progression anytime soon. This morning Sammy announced version 3.0 of the app, which includes various enhancements that allow for better customization. Among the new features, you can choose from a larger selection of settings that can be programmed into the tags, and you’ll also have the ability to send pre-written emails to a specified address, update your Google+ status, store a history of your profiles, customize preloaded profiles and create private tags that can only be read by your phone. The new refresh is ready to go in the Play Store, so head on over to download it for free — provided, of course, you’ve forked over $15 for a pack of five tags. The press release, along with a full list of supported devices, can be found past the break.

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Samsung TecTiles 3.0 update offers more options for NFC tagging, now available in Play Store originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Oct 2012 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy Note II for T-Mobile review

Samsung Galaxy Note II for TMobile review

The Samsung Galaxy Note II is coming to America, and unlike its predecessor, it’s not being as quiet about the move. In a completely unprecedented feat, the mammoth smartphone not only won over the hearts of four national American carriers and one regional network, it did so without having to make sacrifices in its design, specs or even its name. This is a considerable amount of progress when taking into account the fact that only two mobile operators adopted the original Galaxy Note — the inaugural phablet, if you will — and they did so months after its global launch. Heck, T-Mobile released its variant of the Note just three months ago, which likely will be a sour point to early adopters for a long time to come.

As you may have seen in our review of the global Note II, there’s a reason for all of the buzz circulating around this new flagship device; it’s good. It’s very good. Once you get used to the idea of a 5.5-inch smartphone with an included stylus S Pen, you’ll take heed of the incredibly fast quad-core processor, the latest version of Android, the high-end camera and the litany of other top-notch features that have helped the device become worthy of our praise.

This review, as you see it today, discusses our impressions of T-Mobile’s version of the Note II and how it sizes up against the global model (the N7100), but we’re changing things up this time around. Since there will be very few differences across the five different versions offered on US carriers, we’re simply going to add our reviews of each carrier-specific unit to this space as we go along. The idea is that this review will encompass every Galaxy Note II sold stateside. Enjoy the galleries below, and continue past the break as we dig into Samsung’s latest flagship… again.

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Samsung Galaxy Note II for T-Mobile review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Oct 2012 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lady Gaga Has an Entire Genus of Plants Named After Her

When scientists make a discovery, they often get first dibs on how it should be named or referred to. Usually they’ll—rather arrogantly—choose their own name, but not a team of researchers from Duke University: instead, they chose Lady Gaga’s. More »

Nuance Dragon Mobile Assistant brings Siri to Android

Nuance has taken on Google Now and Samsung’s S Voice with Dragon Mobile Assistant, a new Android app that attempts to bring Siri-style artificial intelligence to Google’s smartphone platform. A free release, Dragon Mobile Assistant allows users to make calls and text messages, set up calendar events or Facebook/Twitter updates, get navigation help, and more, all using their voice and natural spoken commands.

There’s also the ability to check the weather from a location simply by asking for it, to look up local businesses and landmarks, and to find places to eat and make reservations there. Dragon Mobile Assistant can also use the same website search tools as in Dragon Go!, querying information across more then 200 sites.

A “Driver Mode” adds complete hands-off control to the app; you can wake it by saying “Hi Dragon” and have voice prompts to guide you through the different levels of functionality. Text-to-speech also reads out incoming messages.

You’ll need an Android 4.0 device or above to use Dragon Mobile Assistant, and currently the app is only available in the US. Nuance says it will be broadening availability and adding functionality before the end of 2012.

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Nuance Dragon Mobile Assistant brings Siri to Android is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


The BeoSmart smartphone concept combines Bang & Olufsen and Leica’s expertise into a mobile device

When it comes to cameras, Leica is usually the brand name associated with high-end cameras that supposedly deliver amazing quality photographs. When it comes to audio, Bang & Olufsen could be thought of to be on the same level as Leica – high-end audio products that supposedly deliver superb sound quality. Both of course are subject to opinion and personal preference, but they are both undeniably the top of the range when it comes to their respective products. So what would it be like if both products merged together and became a luxury smartphone? That’s what Hugo André Costa Vieira Fernandes came up with in his concept, the BeoSmart.

It is a smartphone powered by Android and the front of the phone has been designed to look like B&O’s products, while the back of the phone is reminiscent of Leica’s cameras. According to the designer, the camera will be a 12MP Leica CMOS camera with Full HD video capture and feature a specially crafted lens. The audio will be powered by B&O’s technology and will even feature a 24k gold audio output! Now we’ve seen a couple of luxury smartphones in the past and as far as design is concerned, they have been pretty gaudy and the BeoSmart is no different, although in this case the audio and camera aspects might actually be pretty good if it was made a reality. Safe to say the BeoSmart would cost a small fortune if ever released, but what do you guys think?

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Leica X2 Edition Paul Smith camera is limited at 1,500 units, Leica’s Gorgeous New Rangefinder Cameras Are Impressive, Expensive,

Automotive dealers associations file suit against Tesla

Tesla is one of the most successful electric vehicle companies out there. It also happens to offer some of the most interesting electric vehicles on the market with its Model S and the Roadster. Tesla has been disruptive in the automotive industry because it sells directly to customers rather than exclusively through dealer networks.

Tesla Motors is now being sued by two different automotive dealers groups forcing the company to defend its model of selling directly to customers. Lawsuits have been brought against Tesla in New York and Massachusetts with dealers associations claiming that Tesla is violating franchise laws within the states.

Tesla argues that it is at a disadvantage under a normal dealer system of selling cars, and that it isn’t hurting Tesla franchisees by selling directly to consumers within the states. Tesla CEO Elon Musk claims that selling directly to customers within the states isn’t hurting the existing franchisees; he feels that people behind the suits have their own agendas in mind.

Musk says that one dealer involved in the suits is upset because he wasn’t granted a Tesla franchise and another dealer is selling a competing vehicle as a Fisker dealer. One of the suits is seeking to shut down a Tesla owned showroom in Boston. The same dealer associations have been successful in the past and preventing Ford and GM from opening factory owned stores in the states within the past 20 years.


Automotive dealers associations file suit against Tesla is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Borderlands Legends confirmed for iOS, arriving 31st October

The other day we reported that thanks to a leaked ad, Borderlands Legends for iOS was revealed. Well the good news is that if you were looking to play Borderlands on your iOS device, Gearbox has officially announced the game and it will be arriving in the iTunes App Store come 31st of October. However instead of the first person perspective that Borderlands gamers have been used to, Borderlands Legends for iOS will be a top-down action role-playing game instead. As the ad had revealed, gamers will be able to partake in randomized missions and play as some of Borderlands’ characters, such as Brick, Lilith, Mordecai and Roland, while encountering familiar enemies. Players will be able to level their characters as well as purchase guns and gear that will help you progress in the game. The game will be priced at $4.99 for the iPhone, and $6.99 for the iPad. So, who’s excited for Borderlands Legends?

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Borderlands Legends for iOS revealed in leaked ad, Rovio and McDonald’s China to launch location-based Angry Birds game,

Dutch court rules in Samsung’s favor in patent infringement case with Apple

While Apple’s initial victory over Samsung in the US which resulted in a possible award of $1 billion in damages could be thought of as significant, the Cupertino company appears to be having little luck in courts around the world. It seems that recently a Dutch court has ruled that Samsung did not infringe upon Apple’s patent regarding a multitouch feature, namely the feature that allows two fingers to be used on the touchscreen simultaneously, as well as the pinch-to-zoom feature. This is not the first time Apple has lost with this patent, as it they had lost previously to HTC in Britain, and Samsung and Motorola in Germany. Naturally Samsung was pleased with this ruling although Apple has yet to release a statement regarding the outcome. We guess we wouldn’t be surprised if Apple would appeal this decision, but for now we guess the victory goes to Samsung. It should also be noted that around the same time over in the US, the USPTO has tentatively rejected Apple’s claim of the “rubber banding” patent they claim Samsung infringed upon, and are re-examining the patent and have yet to make a final decision.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Apple loses patent case against Samsung in Japan, injunction request denied, Samsung report shows how it used the iPhone as a reference to improve the Galaxy S,