Nokia Lumia 920 will be exclusive to AT&T for six months

Earlier in the month, we heard that the Nokia Lumia 920 will be exclusive to AT&T, but today we’re learning that this affair may not last forever. The folks at WPCentral have uncovered a number of AT&T Lumia 920 training videos, and in one of them, it tells us that the Lumia 920 will be exclusive to the carrier for six months. After that, presumably, is when the Lumia 920 will see a broader release on more carriers.


Still, these videos do confirm that the Lumia 920 will only be available at AT&T when it launches, which is a bummer considering that there appears to be a lot of interest surrounding Nokia’s new flagship device. In any case, the videos are pretty interesting, and if you’re thinking of picking up a Lumia 920, they do a good job at running though all the neat things you can do with the phone. The videos are meant to get AT&T employees familiar with the 920 ahead of its launch so they can talk up the handset’s finer points when customers come into the store.

One video just gives a general overview of the 920′s features, running through things like the phone’s technical specs, PureView, and of course, the Windows Phone 8 operating system. Another video highlights the Lumia 920′s wireless charging abilities and gives a quick rundown of the accessories that will undoubtedly be pushed to no end on the show floor, including the charging plate, the charging stand, and the JBL PowerUp wireless speaker. Finally, the third video in the series shows off Nokia CityView, which allows users to get a little more familiar with their surroundings.

The big takeaway from all of this, though, is that the Lumia 920 will be an AT&T exclusive for the first six months after release. We’re not entirely sure why Nokia went this route, considering that it would be best for both the Lumia 920 and Windows Phone 8 to get as much exposure as possible once the new mobile OS has been unleashed on the world, but that’s business for you. Would you switch to AT&T to get your hands on the Lumia 920?


Nokia Lumia 920 will be exclusive to AT&T for six months is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


BULLETT: Your Cultural Bible of Cool Goes iPad [App Of The Day]

If you’ve never picked up a copy of BULLETT magazine, you’re doing something wrong. The quarterly is exquisitely designed and always features the really interesting, current content. And now it’s on the iPad. More »

NSFW: A Giant List of People Crying on Webcams and One Is Naked [Internet]

Oh, so your life is rough? Your stepmom won’t buy you an iPhone? What are you going to do, sit at your computer, topless, and cry? And then someone will collect them all into a really unsettling Tumblr? OK, cool. More »

Google NC data center gets Street View treatment

If you were wondering where the internet is housed, you’re asking the wrong question – but if you want to know where Google’s corner of the internet lives, you’re in luck. This week Google has released not just a high-definition set of photos from several of their data centers, they’ve got a lovely Street View look at one in particular. Google’s Lenoir, NC data center has the greatest little look-around you could hope for this afternoon.

This exploration begins at “Google Data Center, Lynhaven Drive, Lenoir, NC” in Google Maps, this leading you to [this exterior look link] and a very wide-open look at the building from out in the open. They’ve also jumped in the [front door] of the building and allow you the freedom to get down to the [data center floor] as well. You can get around quick, that’s for sure! Be on the lookout for Stormtroopers.

Above and in the Where The Internet Lives site you’ll also see several more data centers that make your internet what it is today – if you use Google on the regular, that is. There’s “The Tech,” “The People,” and “The Places” for you to look forward to in Google’s large gallery, with what we expect to be more on the way. Note that with this exploration comes a visually expansive look at a collection of places normally not connected to aesthetically stimulating ideas – when you think about where your data is stored, it looks like a big black hole, right?

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Of course there’s always the idea that it’s all like TRON. Here we’re given the real lowdown: Google’s data centers are expansive halls of perfectly situated masses of technology. Boards and storage, metal, stone, and atmosphere cooled to keep it all safe. This is where your Gmail is, this is where your Androids live, here is where Google’s business exists in the virtual universe.


Google NC data center gets Street View treatment is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Show Us Your Phone’s Home Screen [Chatroom]

Your home screen is the starting point for countless tasks you perform every day. It’s like a desk in your hand. While some folks keep the launchpad meticulously organized, others let chaos reign. I bet there’s at least one reader out there who still has those original Apple apps straight in a line right where Papa Forstall left them for you. Is your home screen messy? Perfect? Show us in the discussion below. More »

The Surface’s OS will take up a lot of space

We got our first look at Microsoft’s new hero device the Surface tablet yesterday, and some engineers from Microsoft took to Reddit to do an AMA today. There wasn’t too much that we didn’t already know, but the engineers did drop some interesting tidbits. For instance, the price of the Surface looks good when you take storage space into account–the $500 model of the Surface comes with 32GB of storage, whereas the iPad only has 16GB at that price. However, you may not get to use that whole 32GB. A vague answer given by Richard Lopez during the AMA led many to believe that the preinstalled Microsoft software would take up gigabytes and gigabytes of space: (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Microsoft Surface tablet rides as a skateboard, Microsoft Surface RT 32GB models sold out, back order pushed to 3 weeks,

Why do we care about the iPad mini?

Not as big as the new iPad; not as small as the iPhone 5 or iPod touch; it’s Apple’s own “tweener” and by all rights and intents the iPad mini should be nothing more than a gap filler. Yet anticipation is high for the presumed 7.85-inch iOS tablet, and while spirits always tend to get, well, spirited in advance of an Apple event, sometimes the justification seems more inexplicable than others. Arguably, in the context of the tablet market – and post-PC computing as a whole – Microsoft’s Surface is far, far more important than the iPad mini.

Windows 8 is the centerpiece of Microsoft’s next-gen OS strategy – the hub of desktop and mobile computing, as well as pulling together Windows Phone 8 and Xbox gaming – and the company’s future as an industry heavyweight is dependent on it getting that right. That also means showing how Windows RT – as on the first Surface model – fits into that equation, something so far we’re yet to see summed up in a consistent, easily communicated message.

As Microsoft’s Surface chiefs pointed out, though, their tablet project approaches slates from a different direction to others already in the market. Windows RT may be a pared-back version of Windows 8, but it’s still Windows-from-the-desktop boiled down into tablet form. In contrast, iOS on the iPad and Android on tablets running Google’s OS both take their cue from phones scaled up. What will be really interesting – and deserves attention – is seeing how full apps translate to finger-use and whether the detachable keyboard accessories Microsoft is so proud of turn out to be essential rather than just eye-catching.

With some calculated timing, though, Apple knocked Surface from the top of the headline pile: the preorder news had its few minutes of attention, only to be swallowed up by the invite for Apple’s event next week. Yet in comparison with Surface – which, for Microsoft is pivotal – an iPad mini would simply be filling in a line-up gap for Apple. So why all the attention?

“It’s iconic founder Steve Jobs who has to be disproved”

In no small part, it’s because the biggest challenge Apple has to overcome with the iPad mini is… Apple itself. More accurately, it’s iconic founder Steve Jobs who has to be disproved, after he so vocally and memorably blasted smaller-than-iPad models back in 2010. Tablets that size, Jobs pointed out, don’t just offer a slightly reduced display area of 9.7-inch iPad, but a considerably smaller touchscreen to play with. Vendors would need to supply sandpaper, he joked, so that users could file down their fingers in order to tap on-screen graphics with any degree of accuracy.

Jobs was undoubtedly a master of misdirection – telling you today that Apple had no intention of entering a segment, then launching a product to do just that tomorrow – but with his near-deification since his passing last year, and his comments on tablets still getting broadly circulated, all eyes will be on how Apple itself has addressed those complaints. If the iPad mini really is just a smaller iPad (which you may recall is, according to some, just a larger iPhone) then there’s a legitimate question of whether Jobs was actually talking codswallop back in 2010. Just as the iPod nano does its touchscreen interface differently to the iPod touch, taking into account the smaller display size, so Apple needs to demonstrate that there really was a challenge to overcome, and prove that it alone has addressed it.

Looking more broadly, though, all eyes are on the iPad mini because of doubts in the small tablet segment as a whole. When Steve Jobs roundly dismissed 7-inch “tweeners” as unnecessary and useless in the market, that’s because at the time they were pretty much pointless. 7-inch as a form-factor has, so far failed, unless it’s been cheap as chips like Google’s Nexus 7. That, with the heft of Google branding and a strongly competitive price – two Android tablets for the price of one iPad – has made the Nexus 7 the exception not the rule so far.

“Apple may have to compromise to make iPad mini a success”

Apple may have to compromise to make the iPad mini a success, and compromise is not something the company does all too often. Too ambitious, too whizz-bang, and the smaller iPad won’t be able to hit a competitive price point. Too humble, or built to too strict a budget, and it will lack the premium cachet the brand is known for. The smaller devices are, often the more complex they are to piece together – gathering the right blend of components for a tiny phone is more of a challenge than for a 10-inch tablet, where they may be a little extra wiggle room to play with.

The iPad mini lacks that room to wiggle, and the excitement around the product launch isn’t simply because lots of people want a smaller tablet (though some undoubtedly do) but because we want to see whether a firm with a track-record of convincing consumers it has solved the equation can do the same under arguably tougher constraints. The world may not need a “tweener” iPad, but if Apple decides that it range does, then it needs to demonstrate it can do it with more than just a bloated iPod touch or a shrunken new iPad.

SlashGear will be liveblogging the whole iPad mini event at live.slashgear.com from 10am PT on Tuesday, October 23; for more on Microsoft Surface, check out our behind-the-scenes tour with the Surface team.


Why do we care about the iPad mini? is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


White House: Huawei Wasn’t Spying for China [China]

Reuters has inside Government sources telling them that Huawei hasn’t been spying on China’s behalf, but it’s still wary of the rapidly growing Chinese telecom. More »

Toshiba kicks off pre-orders for Windows 8 PCs, all due to ship October 26th

Toshiba kicks off preorders for its Windows 8 PCs, all due to ship October 26th

Not to be outdone by Korean rival Samsung, Toshiba has become the latest manufacturer to announce it’s now accepting pre-orders for its loaded repertoire of Windows 8 PCs. Naturally, this contains an array of options for all different types of budgets and preferences, including the Japanese company’s Satellite S, P and L laptops or the U series of Ultrabooks, the Qosmio X875 for gamers and, for those who enjoy a more desktop-friendly setup, the LX815 and LX835 all-in-ones are also there for the taking. As expected, Toshiba will be shipping online pre-orders on October 26th, while folks who decide to go the brick-and-mortar route should be able to physically pick one up on that very same day. There’s still a lot more where this came from, but you’ll have to head over to Toshiba’s site to see what else the outfit has to offer — link to the store is just down below.

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Wi-Fi MicroSD Adapter Lets You Swap In As Much Storage As You Need [Storage]

Unlike the Eye-Fi wireless SD cards which lock you into a set amount of storage, PQI’s Air Card uses a microSD slot so that as the tiny cards get bigger and bigger, you can easily upgrade the adapter’s capacity. More »