Adobe Makes Flash-To-HTML5 Conversion Easy

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While Adobe isn’t a big fan of the fact that the iPad doesn’t support its ubiquitous Flash video standard, the company still wants to play a part in getting content on Apple’s iOS platform. So it has just released a new online tool that makes converting Flash into the iPad-friendly HTML5 format a piece of cake.

Content creators can still create videos in Flash for the millions of Web viewers who can actually view it, and then plug it into the Adobe tool, Wallaby, when they’re ready to bring the same content over to the iPad.

Streaming sound, embedded text, and ActionScript, as well as some 3D effects, cannot be converted to HTML5 with the tool. However, all the basic features like layers, font embedding, scenes, images, and FrameSets are all easily converted from one format to the other.

Adobe recommends using Wallaby with iOS version 4.2 or later to prevent stability issues.

Via Eweek

Samsung To Release Galaxy Pro For Professionals

 

galaxy-pro.jpgSamsung will release a new smartphone called Galaxy Pro for professionals who want more than just a smartphone.

The Galaxy Pro features a 2.8 in touchscreen, 3MP camera, 800MHz CPU, QWERTY keyboard, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, and 512 MB storage along with a SD slot. The Galaxy Pro is set for release in the second quarter of this year in Europe and Asia. No price has been announced.

Hot Hot Hardware

Microsoft to Pay Nokia $1 Bil in Windows Phone Deal – Report

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How much is a Nokia deal worth to the future of Microsoft’s mobile business? Leave it to Redmond to put a very round price tag on the deal. The software giant is reportedly shelling out $1 billion for Nokia to develop and promote handsets based around its slightly stagnant Windows Phone platform.

So, what does Microsoft get out of the deal? Besides the obvious advantages of having the world’s largest handset manufacturer promoting your mobile operating system, you mean? Well, Nokia will also be offsetting the costs by paying Microsoft a fee for each phone that uses a Microsoft OS (not an entirely uncommon practice for third-party hardware developers).
Not everyone’s psyched about the deal between the companies, however. As Bloomberg points out, Nokia shares have actually plummeted 26 percent since the partnership was officially announced.

iPhone 5 Antenna Gets a Redesign – Rumor

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With Antennagate in the not-so-distant past, even a company so stubborn as Apple would be remiss were it not to consider a massive overhaul of the phone for the next generation. With that in mind, this isn’t exactly an earth shattering revelation, but with the iPad 2 behind us, we’ll take what we can get, I guess.

According to a new round of rumors from a “a Chinese source,” the upcoming iPhone 5 (due out this summer, most likely) will swap its predecessor’s glass back for an aluminum one similar to the the one on the current generation iPod touch. The phone will also dump the much hated exposed antenna for an internal one located behind on the Apple symbol on the device’s rear.
According to the source, the iPhone 5 will also be packing the new A5 processor that debuted in the iPad 2 last week. 

Android Malware Pull List Totals Nearly 60

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Last week we caught news of the removal of some 21 apps from the Android Market over malware concerns. That was apparently just the tip of the malicious iceberg. According to more recent numbers, the app total is closer to 60–apps that were downloaded by somewhere in the neighborhood of 200,000 users. 

The apps in question took advantage of a known vulnerability to collect data from the user and install malicious code on the device. Google adds, somewhat reassuringly, that phones with Android 2.2.2 or higher weren’t affected (yet another reminder of why fragmentation is so bad).
After the apps were discovered, the company suspended developer accounts and contacted the authorities. Google will also be issuing a security update and flipping the kill switch, to remotely remove the software from affected devices. No word on when any of this takes effect. 

Cell Phones Diagnose The Cancer They Might Give You

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The verdict is still out on whether or not cell phone can cause cancer, but thanks to researchers at Harvard’s medical school, they can play a role in detecting it. A new, handheld device that interfaces with smartphones can tell if a patient has cancer with a 96 percent accuracy rate. The detector contains a very small needle that takes a sample of the patients tissue, then suspends it in magnetic fields looking for potential tumor markers. The whole process only takes about half an hour, and can be used at doctors’ offices instead of requiring a costly trip to a hospital.

Usually, doctors use larger nuclear magnetic resonance machines to perform this type of detection, but because the handheld version uses simplified measurement techniques and the tissue sample taken is so much smaller, it can be miniaturized using a much less powerful magnet.

This type of detection could be used to judge how effective cancer treatment has been without requiring a core-needle biopsy, making it much easier for cancer patients to get updates on their recovery.

“If a patient is already getting chemotherapy, the doctor could quickly tell whether a treatment is working,” said Hakho Lee, a professor at Harvard who designed the device.

It’s not quite bug free though. The technique used to detect cancer is extremely sensitive, but might lead to some false positives. And don’t expect to be able to pick this up at your nearest Apple store either; researchers are still working out the kinks before the device is available commercially.

[via IEEE Spectrum]

Windows Phone 7 Update Reportedly Still Causing Problems for Samsung Owners

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On the bright side, the Windows Phone 7 update isn’t bricking Samsung phones anymore, but it is still causing headaches – enough that some users are being forced to factory reset their devices. 
Last week, Samsung and Microsoft pulled the plug on the update altogether, acknowledging that the firmware update – one that’s supposed to set the stage for a larger WP7 feature update later this month – was rendering some devices useless. 
Yesterday, we reported that Samsung and Microsoft had resolved the issue and Samsung owners would start seeing the update when their devices were eligible to receive it. Today, after that update has started to make its way to users again, many Samsung users are reporting mysterious error codes when trying to apply it. If the user tries to restore from backup to resolve the problem, the process fails – which leaves the phone owner no recourse but to do a factory reset. Ouch. 
Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 Support feed on Twitter has acknowledged the problem to several users, and promises that the team is working on a resolution. They stop short, however, of stopping the updates or suggesting workarounds. If you have a Samsung phone running Windows Phone 7, you may want to hold off on that firmware update until this is all worked out. 

SteelSeries Unveils Siberia v2 Headsets for Gaming and Mobile Devices

SteelSeries Siberia v2 Headset

At CeBit this week, SteelSeries took the wraps off of the Siberia v2 Gaming Headset for the PS3, which is compatible with the PSN chat service, but also works with the XBox 360, Mac OS, and Windows. 
The all-black headset features completely closed earphones for immersive sound and passive noise reduction, a retractable microphone that extends out from the bottom of the left earcup, and a suspended headband that allows you to adjust the shape of the headset to fit your head. It also comes with in-line volume and mix controls so you can quickly mute your microphone, adjust the volume, boost the bass, or tweak your audio settings. 
The new Siberia v2 for PS3 compliments SteelSeries’ release of the Siberia v2 Headset for iPod, iPhone, and iPad – an all-white model with many of the same features, but features microphone support through a single 3.5mm jack instead of the separate cables used on the console and PC version. This version of the Siberia v2 works with any mobile device, not just iOS gadgets – and also features in-line volume and mute controls so you can listen to music on your mobile device or take calls with the retractable microphone. 
The console version of the Siberia v2 headset will be available in Q3 of 2011 for $119.99 retail price. The mobile version will hit store shelves around the same time, and retail for $99.99.

Elfoid Phone is Creepiest Thing You’ve Seen This Week

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What’s the creepiest thing you’ve ever held up to your ear? I’d wager it couldn’t creepily hold a creepy candle up to this creepy creepiness. The Elfoid is a weird rubbery half-human/half-tadpole cell phone thing. Personally, I’d have gone with “Ellphone,” but that’s me. 

Elfoid “tickles” you when it rings, according to Engadget. It also moves around as the person on the other end speaks to you, in an apparently attempt to trick you into thinking that you’re not alone (you still are, of course, you sad, sad person).

Video of Elfoid after the jump, if you’re not so keen on sleeping tonight. 

Google Employees Use Android Phone to Launch Trebuchet

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I recently had a debate with some friends. After some back and forth, we finally came to an agreement–the trebuchet is, in fact, the greatest medieval siege weapon. That important bit of nerd minutia out of the way, we move on to the next question: how to possibly improve on the engineering marvel that is the trebuchet? The answer should be simple, of course: Google Android.

A team of Google data center employees finally managed to combine the two, using an Android computer and Bluetooth receiver to trigger the device during the “Storm the Citadel Trebuchet Competition,” which occurred in Charleston, South Carolina, last weekend.
If all of the talk of engineering know how isn’t enough to win you over, how about this quote from data center employee, Eric Wages: “we’re playing real-life Angry Birds.” Of course, no one had the audacity to point out to Wages the difference between a trebuchet and a catapult. That’s for the best, really. If we begin squabbling amongst ourselves, the egg-stealing green pigs have already won.