Barnes & Noble brings pinch-to-zoom browsing, improved WiFi connectivity in Nook Color update

Got yourself a Nook Color, did you? If you’re not the type to wait for OTA updates to hit you upside the head, Barnes & Noble has just let loose a software update that’s free to download. Version 1.1.0 promises to improve the Nook Color’s WiFi connectivity, improve Home and Shop performance and to “enhance the reading experience for magazines and children’s books.” Frankly, the latter is quite a curious promise, but we suppose we’d rather have it than not. In other news, the update is adding pinch-to-zoom capabilities in the browser, and B&N also swears that other miscellaneous bugs were squashed in the making of v1.1.0. Hit the source link to get those bytes a-streaming, or just wait for it to be delivered over-the-air in the coming days. On second thought, just download it.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Barnes & Noble brings pinch-to-zoom browsing, improved WiFi connectivity in Nook Color update originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Jan 2011 14:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBarnes & Noble  | Email this | Comments

Exclusive: Barnes & Noble phasing out the Nook 3G

Barnes & Noble may be selling millions of Nook products, but it’s sounding like the 3G variant hasn’t really done its part to help those figures. We’ve received hard evidence from within B&N that the Nook is being discontinued, with sales to seemingly continue until stock is exhausted. The outfit is encouraging retail partners to not send out any bulk orders for the Nook 3G, as there simply won’t be sufficient quantities to fulfill those orders. Of course, we’re told that the company never actually received a huge amount of Nook 3G bulk orders to begin with, so maybe WiFi really is everywhere these days. At any rate, grab yourself a Nook 3G post-haste if you’ve been thinking it over — once they’re gone, they’re gone for good. Or, you could wait for a next-gen version with a Pearl display. Just sayin’.

Update: We received clarification that the discontinuation isn’t due to the lack of bulk sales, they’re just the first casualty of a dwindling supply.

Exclusive: Barnes & Noble phasing out the Nook 3G originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Jan 2011 17:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Nook Color gets overclocked, further blurs the line between tablet and e-reader

First, they ported Ubuntu to the Nook Color, and now the intrepid hackers at the XDA Developers Forum have overclocked its stock 800MHz processor to run at speeds up to 1GHz. The mod allows users to have their cake and eat it too, as the custom kernel ups the speed of the CPU while running it at a lower voltage, which means longer battery life — though we don’t know exactly how much longer. Apparently, the developer who wrote the code found that the system became unstable at the 1GHz level, but there were no such problems at 950MHz and below. Hit the source link to download the kernel and see for yourself what a supercharged Nook Color can do.

Nook Color gets overclocked, further blurs the line between tablet and e-reader originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 Jan 2011 19:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TG Daily  |  sourcexda-developers  | Email this | Comments

Nook Color Bluetooth chip shows signs of life — if you’ve already hacked it, of course

You Nook owners just aren’t ever satisfied, are you? First, reading wasn’t enough so you went ahead and rooted to get your Angry Birds on. That was all fine and well, until that Froyo hack came along and (maybe?) nuked your device. If your confidence hasn’t yet been shattered, strap on your seatbelt for the latest chapter in the life of the Nook Color after e-reading. Apparently user occip over at the always-hacking xda-developers found a way to enable the currently dormant Bluetooth radio tucked away in some undisclosed cranny of B&N’s colorful Nook. This one’s not for the faint of heart just yet — you have to be on Froyo already, and that’s a feat in and of itself. Still, it paves the way for things like Bluetooth GPS dongles as well as headsets for apps like Skype. We’ll see what happens when B&N releases 2.2 officially, which should be pretty much any day now…

Nook Color Bluetooth chip shows signs of life — if you’ve already hacked it, of course originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Jan 2011 14:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Review Horizon  |  sourcexda-developers  | Email this | Comments

Pandigital’s Multimedia Novel gets AT&T 3G, still cheap

Here are some facts we know about this subject:

  • This is a tablet called the Multimedia Novel, built by Pandigital.
  • It’s very much like another Multimedia Novel tablet Pandigital sells at CVS for $214, except now it’s $280 because there’s a 3G radio inside.
  • We really disliked the 7-inch version.
  • It’s on AT&T but it’s contract free — you pay as you go.
  • The 9-inch screen is resistive, which sucks even if there’s contract free AT&T on it. That’s just our opinion, though.
  • Android 2.0 is the OS.
  • Barnes & Noble’s Nookbook Store is pre-loaded.
  • You can’t access the Android Market by default.
  • There’s an unspecified 800MHz ARM11 processor running everything. It’s probably slow.
  • The 800 x 480 resolution will probably make your eyes bleed at this size.
  • But hey, it’s cheap.

Continue reading Pandigital’s Multimedia Novel gets AT&T 3G, still cheap

Pandigital’s Multimedia Novel gets AT&T 3G, still cheap originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Jan 2011 08:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Nook lineup sells millions, Barnes & Noble’s best-selling product of all-time

You didn’t think Barnes & Noble was just going to let Amazon rest on its “vague sales milestones” laurels, did you? The veteran bookseller just announced that the Nook lineup — 3G, WiFi, and the new Nook Color combined — has become “the company’s biggest bestseller ever in its nearly 40-year history.” That’s bigger than Barnes & Noble’s sales (note: not global sales) of DaVinci Code or any of the Harry Potter novels. Unfortunately, we can’t say exactly just how many that is, as the press release only announces “millions” being sold. A B&N rep we spoke with told us they likely wouldn’t specify any further, nor would there likely be a breakdown of sales by individual model.

Other notable factoids include Nook Color’s reign as the company’s “number one selling gift of the holiday season” and nearly one million “Nook books” downloaded on Christmas Day. In fact, the company now sells more digital books than it does physical books over BN.com (i.e. not including books sold in brick-and-mortar stores). Wish we had some hard figures, but hey, if any company is going to mince words in a sales announcement, it might as well be a book company, right? Press release after the break.

Continue reading Nook lineup sells millions, Barnes & Noble’s best-selling product of all-time

Nook lineup sells millions, Barnes & Noble’s best-selling product of all-time originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 30 Dec 2010 13:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Barnes & Noble Nook trademark applications offer speculation fodder aplenty

So you’re Barnes & Noble and you have a successful product like the Nook — what do you do? Trademark the heck out of the name, of course. As PocketNow has noted, the company’s filed a number of Nook-related trademark applications over the past few months, which may offer some hints of future Nook hardware, software, or both. That unsurprisingly includes an application for “Nook2,” which was first filed back in June, as well one for the name “Nook Smart” (possibly related to the existing Nook Study education platform?), and one for the impossibly catchy “Nook Cook.” Unfortunately, it’s not clear which (if any) of those might actually be the name of a new Nook device — there’s also a trademark application for “Nook Kids” with a description similar to “Nook2,” for instance, but it may well just be for the company’s Nook Kids store and iPad app. The most recent of all the filings is one for “Nooksellers,” which appears to be for a combination in-store kiosk and online service that would offer personalized recommendations and various social networking tie-ins. Of course, there’s nothing more than the trademark applications to go on at the moment, but it does certainly seem clear that the Nook name is here to stay.

Barnes & Noble Nook trademark applications offer speculation fodder aplenty originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Dec 2010 16:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePocketNow  | Email this | Comments

Josh talks holiday gadgets on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (video)

Couldn’t stay up till 12:37AM? We’ll forgive you… in time. Thankfully, the wonders of the internet are enabling you to travel back to catch our own Josh Topolsky’s holiday jam party with Late Night’s Jimmy Fallon. The duo ran through a gauntlet of gadgets, including B&N’s Nook Color, Samsung’s Galaxy Tab, D-Link’s Boxee Box, Apple’s MacBook Air, Dell’s Venue Pro and the Gingerbread-equipped Nexus S. Also appearing: teenage jokes, visions of a lunar eclipse, legally / illegally downloaded content and the Nexus X. Yeah, the X. See what we mean in the pair of videos just past the break.

Continue reading Josh talks holiday gadgets on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (video)

Josh talks holiday gadgets on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Dec 2010 12:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceLate Night with Jimmy Fallon (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

Nook Color getting Android 2.2 and Market in January, current hacks could make it blow up? (update)

Nook Color getting Android 2.2 in January, current FroYo and Market hacks could make it blow up

You had to know the hacking community was going to have a field day with the Nook Color — a $249 Android Tablet hiding behind with a thin e-reader coating. Indeed it didn’t take long to get rooted nor for Android 2.2 to get installed on there, but that particular hack comes with an interesting potential side-effect: small-scale thermonuclear explosions. Enabling FroYo requires disabling the device’s battery monitoring process, the very one that would be responsible for shutting down the device before the cells start overheating and, ultimately, going critical. Yeah it’s unlikely, but it could happen. Meanwhile, another hack has enabled the Android Market, but those instructions begin with a very daunting warning: “Very smart people have failed at this. If the following instructions confuse you, you might want to wait until an easier method has been developed.”

And, thankfully, there might be a much easier way coming, with Barnes & Noble reportedly telling Smartphone Mag that Android 2.2 will be officially coming to the Nook Color in January. Yes, Android 2.3 is what’s happening, but this is still an exciting upgrade as it will finally also allow access to a traditional Android home screen and even enable the Android Market.

Update: Okay, cancel that order for an asbestos carrying case. One of the developers of the Nook Color root wrote in to let us know that there is a secondary temperature monitor which should keep things below the ignition point. Hack away — or just wait a month.

Update 2: Barnes & Noble PR just got back to us to reiterate that Nook Color’s own shop will begin adding apps in early 2011 and that there are currently no plans to enable Android Market. Move along, nothing to see here, folks.

[Thanks, Ryan]

Nook Color getting Android 2.2 and Market in January, current hacks could make it blow up? (update) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Dec 2010 10:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSmartphone Magazine, nookDevs, PC World  | Email this | Comments

Nook Color gets an SDK, documentation aplenty

Barnes & Noble may still be calling it an e-reader first and foremost, but the Nook Color has now taken one more step into full-fledged tablet territory with the release of an official SDK add-on for the Android SDK. That comes complete with an Android Virtual Device emulator, Android Debug Bridge (or ADB) configuration settings, sample code and, of course, plenty of documentation to get you started. Of particular note, that finally includes a complete specifications list, which confirms once more that the device runs on an 800MHz TI OMAP 3621 processor, and is backed up by a POWERVR SGX530 GPU. Hit up the source link below for all the details.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Nook Color gets an SDK, documentation aplenty originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Dec 2010 15:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceNook Developer  | Email this | Comments