Breaking: Casio Still Makes Calculators

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LAS VEGAS — Remember the Casio calculator? The humble digital
abacus that has been pimped in every possible form, including that geek
icon, the calculator watch?

With all the fuss over Casio’s rather splendid 1000fps Exilim FC100
here at CES 2009, it’s easy to forget the humble calculator, but here
they are at the show, proudly on display in the center of the Casio
booth.

The Casio booth girl approached me. "Would you like to know all
about Casio calculators?" she asked. I scoffed. What could you tell me,
a boy who was so pleased with the calculator (Casio) he received for
his tenth birthday that he actually took it to bed that night? And the
next night. The answer is, of course, an arrogant "nothing".

I just took the photos. And upon getting back to Wired’s CES HQ, a monolithic box that resembles the one in Kubrick masterwork 2001 (if Kubrick had made his monolith out of MDF and trestle tables), I took another look at the photo. Can you see it?

Yes. It has a "replay" button. Why? What is that there for? I want
to head back to the Casio booth to ask, but I’m embarrassed by my
earlier behavior. Really, though, it doesn’t really matter. The only
useful upgrade that Casio could make is to add a mode that
automatically spells out rude words when you turn the handset upside
down. Every schoolboy would buy one.

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Video: Samsung P3 PMP hands-on

We tried to get hands-on with the P3 PMP right after the Samsung event, but poor lighting and mass crowding prevented us from getting anything really usable. But fret not because we headed back to the company’s booth to seek out the 3-inch WQVGA player with haptic feedback among the nauseating amount of HDTVs. The walk-through we were given paid specific attention to the P3’s stereo Bluetooth capabilites as well as the touch-based interface. We came away pretty impressed with the polished UI and the smoothness of the user experience. Check out the the device in action after the break and our gallery of hands-on shots as well.

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Video: Samsung P3 PMP hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Jan 2009 19:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CES 2009: Doomed Analog TV Phones Are Fail Of The Day

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Does Marks Enterprise know something I don’t? Maybe they’ve got a mole in the Obama administration telling them this DTV transition thing is just hot air. At CES, Chinese company Marks was showing a huge array of analog TV phones – phones whose main selling point will go totally dead when the US turns off analog TV signals on Feb. 17 (or maybe later, it seems.


Otherwise, the Marks phone lineup has all the hallmarks of cool Chinese phones that will never be sold in the US. They’ve got dual SIM cards (so you can have two lines at once), for instance. But companies like Marks are never quite able to get their acts together to make coherent presentations to US carriers, so their phones never come to US shelves.

Samsung / Chumby prototype digiframe hands-on

The Samsung / Chumby digiframe was on hand at CES in a very, very early prototype form. In fact, the demo units didn’t even have a back plate covering up the innards. We were told that Samsung’s contribution is the processor within, and plans are to release it to market before the end of ’09. Our early impressions? The widgets were liquid smooth and lookin’ good; the video playback, however, was less than acceptable. Have a glance below for an early look.

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Samsung / Chumby prototype digiframe hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Jan 2009 19:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Polaroid PoGo Instant Digital Camera hands-on

Polaroid’s PoGo Instant Digital Camera isn’t for the hardcore geeks — it’s stuck with a 5 megapixel sensor, no optical zoom whatsoever and an LCD monitor that was fanciful in 1998. What it can do, however, is churn out photo stickers in around 60 seconds after a photo is taken without the need for an external printer. Have a look at the March-bound unit below, and look, your kids will love it. Promise.

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Polaroid PoGo Instant Digital Camera hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Jan 2009 19:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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VIA shows off Nano-powered Dr. Mobile Freestyle Mini

If you’ve been listening to the Engadget Podcast, you know that Taiwan’s Dr. Mobile is our new favorite fly-by-night Asian netbook vendor, and VIA’s showing off its Nano-powered Freestyle Mini here at CES in a darkened restaurant. (Seriously!) Internally, it’s basically a smaller version of the 11.6-inch Freestyle we played with a few days ago, but it’s in a more traditional netbook package with an 8.9-inch screen. We were pretty blunt in asking the VIA rep why the Nano’s basically been a no-show during 2008’s Atom explosion, and while we didn’t get a straight answer, it sounds like 2009 might be the year the battle for netbook platform dominance is finally joined — the Freestyle and the Freestyle Mini should be available in the next few months. Dr. Mobile, paging Dr. Mobile.

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VIA shows off Nano-powered Dr. Mobile Freestyle Mini originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Jan 2009 18:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CES 2009: RCA Intros Thin Small Wonder EZ209HD

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It seems like everywhere I turn around at this trade show, I see yet another pocket camcorder. RCA, who has been operating in the field for a while now, used the occasion to launch its latest version of the Small Wonder, the EZ209HD.

I had the opportunity to play around with a prototype of the camera, and I have to say, it’s easily the best looking (and slimmest) model the company has produced in the space–in fact, in the looks department, this thing rival’s Kodak’s newly introduced ZX1.

The camera shoots in HD and features a 2-inch LCD and an SD card slot. The unit also has a built-in rechargeable lithium ion battery and an HDMI port. It’ll street for $119.99.

LG’s new X120 netbook with Splashtop-powered instant on

We just bumped into LG’s X120, a barely-differentiated followup to the X110 that’s floating around the show floor. There’s still a 1.6GHz Atom processor, 1GB of RAM, 160GB hard drive, Windows XP and a 10-inch WSVGA screen, but what’s new is the Splashtop-powered “LG Smart On” OS, which does the quick boot thing we’ve come to know and love on many ASUS products, the Voodoo Envy 133 and elsewhere. The effect, as always, is pretty stunning, and the OS should be helpful for a quick look at the web or to hop on IM over the laptop’s WiFi connectivity. The netbook itself seems to have been tweaked a tad on aesthetics, but it’s still a bit thicker than we’d like at this point for the netbook market. We’re short on further details, but since the X110 did 3G, there’s a good chance that’ll be in play as well — we’re still waiting on PR from LG. In the meantime, you can check out a video of the startup after the break.

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LG’s new X120 netbook with Splashtop-powered instant on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Jan 2009 18:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CES 2009: Areawares Strida Folding Bike

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It can be kind of a pain in the butt, owning a bike in a big city like New York. For starters, there’s never any room to park the thing in your cramped apartment, but if you have any sense at all, you’re not going to leave the thing chained up outside all night. Also, if you’ve ever attempted to transport the bike in a crowded subway car, you know all about the dirty looks folks tend to give you.

So, what’s the answer? Design company Areaware has developed a pretty cool little folding bike, the Strida, which it claims is the “lightest, cleanest, [and] most user-friendly folding bike on the market.” The bike comes in five size varieties and a number of colors. The company also offers a number of accessories like a travel bag and kickstand.

Check out a quick video of the bike in all of its folding glory, after the jump.

In a Nutshell: Palm Pre vs. iPhone vs. G1

CES 2009 brought us a new player in the smartphone upper-echelon. Let’s drill down and see how the Palm Pre compares with the iPhone and Android’s G1.

1. Multitouch touchscreen/gesture control: All three are capacitive, only the Pre and iPhone have multitouch. The Pre’s glowy little “gesture area” has dropped the touchable real estate all the way down tto the bottom of the phone, which is great for being able to navigate with one hand and not interfere with the screen at all. The wavey dock you bring up from the bottom looks awesome, but can you use it out of the box without a second thought or page through the manual? That’s my question. Advantage: iPhone/Pre tossup.

2. Multitasking: One of the beefiest of our beefs with the iPhone SDK is its insistence on Apps running one at a time. The G1’s notifications drawer was definitely a step in the right direction, but the Pre’s interface is the first smartphone OS that was built with multitasking as a core design element. Resembling the Xbox’s old Blades, or a less-jarring OS X Expose even, the Pre’s “Cards” interface always places you in the context of every app running for fast switching, and notifications from other apps don’t pull you away completely from the task at hand. Multitasking is hugely important on a phone, and it’s a good sign that Palm recognizes. Advantage: Pre

3. Hardware: Adrian says:

While the hardware is definitely high quality, I’m not entirely blown away by the design. It looks really nice, and original, but it’s a little too cutesy in shape and kind of reminds me of an oversized pebble. A slightly larger screen could have definitely been put to good use, and I really don’t like the black space on the sides of the screen.

A phone with a built-in QWERTY still hasn’t touched the iPhone in terms of sleekness and pure sex. And it might still be a while. Advantage: iPhone

4. Development platform: The Pre’s “Web OS” sure sounds nice—all developers need to know is JavaScript, HTML and CSS? Sounds good in theory, but building a mobile app will never be as easy as cranking out a new theme for your Tumblr. Palm’s stressing ease of development, though, so it will be interesting to see how it stacks up against Apple’s solid, familiar-to-devs OS X-based SDK and Android’s fully open source approach. Advantage: Pre? If it’s straight-up JavaScript, that’s a lot of programmers ready to go. Note: we had iPhone here before, but we’ve switched with a qualification. Developer community still goes to iPhone for volume.

5. Web Integration: The Pre subtly integrates the internet into the phone at every opportunity, and it’s awesome. Contacts get pulled in from Facebook, Gmail, IM and and scanned for dupes; the messaging app shows your last several emails, IMs and SMS with that contact in a single window. Really, really smart stuff. Advantage: Pre

6. App Store/developer community: A smartphone is only as good as the software it runs. On the Pre, Palm is still keeping application delivery details like pricing behind the curtain, but they did say the app delivery will be entirely handled by the phone (without a desktop app), which is a shame. They’re saying that they’re not going to duplicate Apple’s Hobbesian app approval black box mistake, which Android has also hasn’t fallen for, but there will be an approval process based on “security and stability.” But as we know with Android, a dev community needs enough devices in the hands of consumers to reach critical mass, which the Pre will have to match. Advantage: iPhone, even with the black box, but Android and Pre’s more open stances are reassuring.

7. Wireless charger: We’ve seen wireless charger tech for years at CES, but it’s taken this long for a major consumer gadget to come bundled with its own wireless charger in the box. Whoops, it’s not in the box, sold separately for unknown $$. But still: Bravo. Advantage: Pre

8. The Network: Dan Hesse, Sprint’s CEO, gave our coast-to-coast 3G test a shout out in his press conference. Of course he did: Sprint won (in download speeds). Sprint was the only major carrier without a powerful, hype-catching smartphone choice, and now they have one. The Pre is a data-centric phone with a network we’ve proven to be strong in a large swatch of the country—that’s a good combo. But would you switch to Sprint for the Pre? Ugh. Advantage: Not cut and dry for everyone, but we stand by our numbers: Sprint is the best 3G network in our tests.

9. Physical keyboard: It’s preference, but one held by a large swathe of the gadget buying public: physical QWERTY keypads are still the mainstream input of choice. Touch is getting better all the time, but a lot of people still want physical keyboards. But better yet is the ability to choose; unfortunately, the Pre doesn’t have a soft onscreen keyboard, and its slide-out is the same meh QWERTY from the Treo Pro. Advantage: It’s preference, but on me, the iPhone’s soft keyboard can’t be beat.

10. Camera: The Pre has an LED Flash for its 3MP camera, something both the iPhone and G1 lack. Flash cellphone photos are ugly, but for a lot of people, they’re good enough. So credit for throwing it in. Advantage: Pre

11. Battery: Apple’s still an outlier with their non-removable battery; like the G1’s, the Pre’s comes out for a spare swap too. We’ve heard Apple’s reasons for this a million times, we know the drill, but removable batteries will never stop being handy. Advantage: Pre

12. Copy & Paste: Yep, Pre’s got it. iPhone still doesn’t. Advantage: Pre/G1

13. Browser: All three use a browser based on WebKit, which has become the standard for the mobile web. We couldn’t put it through our Mobile Browser Battlemodo ringer obviously, but what we saw looked great, and it’s the only other mobile browser besides the iPhone that supports multitouch zooming. Advantage: iPhone/Pre

So there you have it. We’re excited. Are you?