The iRiver Wave Home is a Sleeker, Less-Huggable Chumby

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The iRiver Wave Home is a wireless gadget with a touchscreen that relies on a constant stream of web widgets that offer up tiny-bits of tasty, digestible media content.

Sound familiar?

It should, because it’s basically the exact same device as the Chumby, which came out last year to wide acclaim (and a healthy amount of hype). The only difference between them is that the Wave Home appears to be less cuddly and more prone to die from a fall in the kitchen. 

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Ok, fine, there are more differences. The Wave comes with a separate control that also serves as a wireless phone handset used for VoIP calls, though you can actually use the 7-inch (800 x 480 pixel) touch display as a virtual keypad. Also, the original Chumby (right) did not support certain codecs of video playback (the current versions uses Flash Lite 3 capabilities), but this one is supposed to be play pretty much everything.

Like the Chumby, it’s perforated with the usual SD, Ethernet, and USB ports, but this one comes with a 1.3-megapixel CMOS camera. The picture quality of the cam, however, will probably look dated by the end of the year.

When we reviewed the Chumby, we noted that the best part about it was the quality of the streams from internet radio and when music played from our iPod, and part of that was due to its quality speakers. The iRiver is also touting the Wave Home’s speakers as one its integral parts – if they doesn’t work just as good, expect a lot of disappointed ears in the G-Lab when it comes in for a review.

IRiver is not releasing the price yet, but the rumor is that it will come down to about $400. It will launch next month in Korea and in the U.S. by mid-year.

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Dell’s New Notebooks Take Design Seriously

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LAS VEGAS — Dell doesn’t have a booth here at CES, but the company staked out a floor at the trendy Palms casino to make several product announcements — and to try to win a few style points.

The stodgy PC maker from Round Rock, Texas has been known for years for its workhorse PCs and notebooks — functional, economical, generally reliable, and butt-ugly. But in the last year, the company has been working hard to change that perception. For instance, its compact Studio Hybrid PC has a sleek look and can be modded with replaceable outer sleeves, so you can color it (red, black, bamboo) to suit your decor. And its line of Studio laptops, which can be customized with any one of more than 100 different artistic designs, has been selling well.

This week, the company rolled out two new laptops, the Studio XPS 16 (shown above with Dell’s head design guy, Ed Boyd) and the Studio XPS 13, that continue the trend of wrapping computers in cutting-edge cases made out of interesting materials. And the company announced a mysterious "luxury brand" called Adamo, which so far seems to be little more than a slim black notebook (or the chassis of a notebook) in the hands of a supermodel.

The XPS 16 and XPS 13 are notebooks with, respectively, 16-inch and
13-inch screens. Both have distinctive multi-toned exteriors in
differing shades of black, gray, and charcoal gray, and both include
leather trim along the back (hinge) edge of the top lid. While tastes
may differ — and some may find the inclusion of animal skin a bit
abhorrent — these notebooks have a classy, refined look that’s a world
away from Dell’s earlier work.

Both laptops are available now, starting at $1,200.

As for Adamo, very little is known. Dell hired a model to show off
the notebook, but no one was allowed to touch it and Dell
representatives didn’t turn it on. They also did not release any
specifications. So for now, Adamo is little more than a pipe dream.

Read on for more pictures of Dell’s new products.

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Dell’s Studio XPS 13 notebook. Photo courtesy of Dell

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The 16-inch Studio XPS 16. Photo courtesy of Dell

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The Studio XPS 16 has a slim profile and a glowing power connector in the hinge that resembles those on some high-end, slim Sony Vaio notebooks. Photo courtesy of Dell

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Dell acknowledged its laptops’ homely past with this display, which showed the stylistic progression of laptops from 2005 to 2008. Photo: Dylan Tweney/Wired.com

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Dell’s suite at the Palm casino was bedecked with laptop art available for installation on current laptop models. Some of the artists commissioned to create art for Dell, including graffiti artists Mike Ming and Tristan Eaton, were in the suite, painting giant canvases and printing original designs on T-shirts. Photo: Dylan Tweney/Wired.com

Top photo: Dylan Tweney/Wired.com





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Palm Pre / webOS launch roundup

The dust has begun to settle around Palm’s event yesterday, and we’re still sorting through all the news. Palm certainly packed a lot of “New-ness” (yet weirdly, no actual “New-ness”) into its announcements yesterday, and it’s pretty easy to get lost among all the Palm Pre / webOS related news. Lucky for you, we’ve consolidated the goods below, so feel free to experience all the Palm-related bliss you can handle.

The liveblog

Live from Palm’s CES press conference

Impressions / hands-on coverage

Palm Pre first hands-on with live updates!
Palm Pre in-depth impressions, video, and huge hands-on gallery
Palm Pre interface tour

Product announcements

The Palm Pre
Palm announces webOS platform
Palm Pre’s wireless charger, the Touchstone

In depth / details

There will be a GSM-friendly 3G Palm Pre
Palm stock on a rocket to recovery
Palm’s Pre gets its own spot on Sprint’s website
Palm Pre website now live with official images, video
Palm’s the master of its own domain, the king of its own Castle
Palm’s Pre boxed
Palm Pre’s “New-ness” event video now viewable
Palm Pre ads appear on Engadget

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Palm Pre / webOS launch roundup originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Jan 2009 20:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CES 2009: So…Much…Hello…Kitty

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You know something? It wouldn’t be an international tech show without Hello Kitty. A whole lotta Hello Kitty, and, for better or worse, there was plenty to choose from at CES 2009.

We spotted alarm clocks, CD players, lava lamp, toaster ovens, karaoke machines, waffle makes, popcorn makers–even gummi multivitamins.

After the jump, check out a video for some of the show’s Hello Kitty highlights.

Vintage Radio Case Mod Painstakingly Assembled by Hand

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Jeffrey Stephenson, the sole proprietor of Slippery Skip, showed us his Ingraham Nano Case Mod — a replica of the 1946 Stromberg Carlson radio, but with a few minor modifications to the front panel including the gas cap from a vintage Harley Davidson motorcycle. It was a tricky project due to the exacting nature of some vintage radio buffs.

"You have to be careful with vintage radio collectors," said Stephenson, "because they’ll hunt you down if you don’t get it right." To that end, he spent around 300 hours building every aspect of the Ingraham by hand, with no power tools.

The $5,000 Ingraham is the first case mod to feature a 1.66 GHz VIA Nano processor, according to Stephenson, but that’s not really the point. "I see it more as art than technology," he added, and he’s right. The above photo just doesn’t do justice to its sumptuous wood finish.





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CES 2009: Empty Blackberry Storm Booth

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LAS VEGAS — This is the lonely vision awaiting those who visit Blackberry’s Storm booth at CES 2009: The only thing missing is tumbleweed and an eerie, whistling wind.

The "iPhone killer" click’n’touch smartphone has so roundly underwhelmed the public that this is possibly the only spot at CES where one can get some peace and quiet. There’s nothing to see here. Move along.

See Also:





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CES 2009: Hands-On With The Logic Bolt

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The Logic Bolt projector-phone is one of the great underdog stories of CES, and a little peek into the dirty business of building cell phones. The crew behind it is basically a bunch of college kids, funding their business on credit cards and loans from their parents, learning as they go along.


I spent some time with them today and they made it clear that the Bolt, the first projector phone to come to the US, is a project in flux. Sure, it uses a Chinese LCoS projector module right now. But could it use TI DLP in the future, like the Samsung Show? Sure. And it’s running a low-power MTK chipset. But Broadcom wants to cut them a deal for a more powerful processor. And their Web site? It went live today.


Even the phone’s UI is a work in progress. The original Chinese model that Logic Wireless bought had a UI which was a mishmash of intellectual property violations, so they’ve cleared that off and made their own menu system. I’m happy to say the phone is clunky, sure (and it has a battery that feels as thick as a deck of cards), but it works. In some ways, it works hilariously physically: you focus the projector by sliding the lens back and forth using a little lever.


Otherwise, the Bolt has a somewhat clunky kitchen-sink of features, like many Chinese feature-phones. Touch screen and dial pad? Check. File browser, video games, sound recorder? Check. Really, the takeaway is that yes, it’s a projector and a phone, it will project pictures, video or Powerpoint, and it works.


Logic isn’t making many of their first model, focusing instead (so to speak) on their second unit. They’ll sell several thousand projector-phones at $600 each, they hope, to fund their sleeker late-2009 model – one that, it seems, will be built with the help of many companies at CES who’ve expressed interest in these crazy kids.

Pegatron and Freescale team for low-power, ultra-cheap netbooks and nettops

Pegatron has been pretty quiet ever since it split off from ASUS to do ODM stuff all by its lonesome — which is sort of the idea, since Pegatron’s mainly doing the behind-the-scenes manufacturing. We’re glad, however, that the company peeked out of its shell to show off these new Freescale-based netbooks. The Linux-running laptops boast 8.9-inch screens, 8 hour battery life, 8GB of storage and projected retail prices around $199, while the nettop holds similar power in a pico-style form factor. Under the hood is Freescale’s brand new ARM i.MX515 processor, which is a 1GHz chip that’s described as basically being three times faster than the iPhone. The win here is that the chip draws very little power and generates very little heat, allowing Pegatron to squeeze impressive battery life out of a very thin form factor. Freescale is working with Ubuntu to prep an ARM-Linux distro, which will hit in May, and Adobe will have an ARM happy version of Flash 10 sometime this year. Supplementing the processor are chips for DSP, 2D, 3D and 720p acceleration, which switch on and off as needed — we saw the computer in action playing 720p video smoothly while drawing a mere 0.5 watts and not even feeling warm to the touch. The limitation here is obviously straight-up processing power — it’s not very impressive, and certainly slower than Intel’s Atom — but for running an optimized Linux build and surfing the web or watching a vid, Pegatron and Freescale might’ve just found a new portability sweetspot. They’re hoping to have an OEM pick these up around May or June sometime.

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Pegatron and Freescale team for low-power, ultra-cheap netbooks and nettops originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Jan 2009 20:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Canon’s Low End Digicams Raise Standard

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LAS VEGAS — It’s not only the HD video cameras that are getting big fat storage — Canon’s line of new standard def camcorders has just been announced at CES 2009, and the top of the line FS 200 has been well endowed with 32GB of flash memory and also a slot to add in an SDHC memory card.

The range carries Canon’s current DIGIC DV II procesor instead of the DV III found in the new Hi-Def cams, but by in return you get to choose from a range of pretty colors. At the Canon booth, while I was shooting some product shots, one of the Canon girls came up to the counter and started pretending to be a dumb CES showgoer:

Does this come in pink? I’ve seen a pink camera before and it was awesome. You guys should make a pink camera.

And:

Can you tell me the difference between SD and HD?

Other than that, there isn’t much — the SD cams are aimed at the bottom end of the market but, although lightweight, they don’t feel plasticky. Pricing: the FS200, which records only to SD media, will go for $350. The FS21 and FS22, which have internal memory as well as SD card slots, will be $500 and $600, respectively.

Product page [Canon]





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Nvidia Launches 3D Kit For Gaming

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LAS VEGAS — 3D technology is coming to the video gaming industry for real with Nvidia’s launch of a new accessory kit that will automatically transform more than 300 existing games into 3D experiences for users with PCs that have the company’s graphic cards.

Nvidia’s kit includes a pair of black 3D glasses, an infra-red emitter cables that will retail together for $200.

The kit doesn’t work with all HDTVs. It is compatible currently with the new Samsung and ViewSonic 120 Hz LCD monitors, Mitsubishi DLP HDTVs and DepthQ HD 3D projector by Lightspeed.

Nvidia’s 3D glasses still have the dorky feel to them though the company says they are modeled after modern sunglasses. The glasses are not tethered and offer up to 20 feet of wireless video viewing.

The USB-based emitter transmits data directly to the shutter glasses
and has a 3D adjustment dial so users can adjust the depth in the game.

3D Technology is all the rage at CES this year. Panasonic is showing
a full-HD 3D Plasma TV home theater system, while Samsung and Sony are
offering concept 3D TV sets.

Nvidia’s 3D gaming accessory kit is the closest thing to reality
that consumers can get right away– though it works only with the
company’s GeForce graphic cards.

Game manufacturers don’t have to do anything specifically to make
their games compatible with the 3D kit. The processing for 3D is
done by the GeForce graphics cards, says a company executive. 





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