Quanta Tegra 2 prototype hands-on


Quanta, the company that produces plenty of the hardware you know, love and fantasize about today, is showing off a new tablet prototype at NVIDIA’s booth. The reason for its location is the Tegra 2 chip inside (you can see it in the nude over here), which can comfortably drive 1080p out via a HDMI cable and into your nearest HD display, while offering brain-melting battery life. Listening to music with the screen turned off can be done for 140 hours straight, and HD video playback can go on for up to ten hours — both figures that make current battery efficiency look kinda silly. With WiFi, 3G, and Android for an OS, this prototype could be quite a nice little device, but right now there are more things wrong than right about it. The display is shockingly unprotected from the back, and we saw ripples appearing on the screen from our fingers supporting the machine. Furthermore, the touchscreen missed plenty of our taps, leaving us with a sour taste from what looked like a tasty little morsel.

Quanta Tegra 2 prototype hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 17:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hanvon WISEreader e-book lineup hands-on

Another day, another company pimping a slew of e-readers here at CES. Up next is Hanvon, with its WISEreader lineup of 5-inch E-Ink display-based readers on display. They’re pretty basic in both the design and functionality departments, with support for text, images, and audio in the usual array of formats — including DRM’ed EPUBs. The N518 and N526 models both have touchscreens, though you’ll need to use a stylus for handwriting and note-taking. Other than that, there wasn’t really much of note, though we were told that there’s a capacitive version in the works but it wasn’t quite ready to bring out of their labs in Taiwan just yet. There’s always next year.

Hanvon WISEreader e-book lineup hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 17:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Studio XPS 16 OLED concept laptop hands-on

Beautiful viewing angle and legitimately wide viewing angle, the Studio XPS 16 OLED concept laptop was on hand and turning heads at Dell’s CES suite. It’s definitely a beaut, claiming a super-thin 2mm screen, a 0.004ms response time, and a contrast ratio “exceeding 10,000:1.” The big catch here, as you can see in some of the images below (the giant “Please Do Not Touch” sign deterred us from fixing ourselves) is that the ultra-glossy wrist panel is a beacon for dust. Feast your eyes below!

Studio XPS 16 OLED concept laptop hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 17:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Teleepoch’s Qualcomm-powered WMDP gesture phone in action

It might not look like much, but it really isn’t. The new handset prototype from Teleepoch is a flip phone with a miniscule display cut-out and nothing else of note. All functionality is controlled by tilting the phone up and down to scroll through menus and shaking the handset a particular direction to drill in and out of menu options. There’s voice control for inputting numbers and quick-dialing, and everything of note is powered by a new “wearable device” WMDP chip design from Qualcomm that integrates the phone radio, processor and accelerometer into a board about the size of a quarter. With this few elements (the only pure mechanical interaction with the phone is the hinge), the handset should be dirt cheap, but it’s difficult to say if anyone will actually want to use it when it’s released later this year. Check out a video of an early version after the break.

Continue reading Teleepoch’s Qualcomm-powered WMDP gesture phone in action

Teleepoch’s Qualcomm-powered WMDP gesture phone in action originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 17:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG’s GT540 mixes Android 2.0, pretty, and low-end

LG made the bold leap to Android 2.0 with the low-to midrange GT540 it’s showing this week, turning up the style dial a couple notches in a handful of colors (white, pink, dark gray, and black) with stylized wavy backs, chrome accents, and rounded edges. The UI’s very standard with only minor tweaks, including a few custom LG apps; we couldn’t get much information on it since it’s a Euro-only release and the booth’s being staffed primarily by the company’s US team, but we can see that it’s got a 3 megapixel cam, a 3.5mm jack, and a mix of touch-sensitive and physical buttons down below. We couldn’t verify what kind of processor this thing has on board, but the UI speed certainly didn’t blow us away — if we had to guess, it’s probably the same core that you’ll find in the GW620 Eve. Follow the break for a quick hands-on video.

Continue reading LG’s GT540 mixes Android 2.0, pretty, and low-end

LG’s GT540 mixes Android 2.0, pretty, and low-end originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 17:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sanyo Xacti VPC-CS1 hands-on: a full 1080p camcorder in your pocket

At first glance, the Sanyo Xacti VPC-CS1 is thin. Really thin. We got to play around with the tiny camcorder, and fell in love with the form factor. It’s much thinner than our older Xacti, and we had no problem slipping it into our pocket — though getting out the door of Sanyo’s meeting room with it was another matter altogether. Wait, did we mention it’s thin?

Sanyo Xacti VPC-CS1 hands-on: a full 1080p camcorder in your pocket originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 17:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iriver’s 3.5-inch K1 PMP gets outed at CES

Amazingly enough, the PMP news here at CES has been essentially nil. We’ve got e-readers, whiffs of tablets and more 3D than two eyes can comprehend, but we’re in desperate need of some fresh portable media players. Thanks to iriver, we won’t be going home completely empty handed, with the K1 “Smart HD” being ushered out onto the public scene in Las Vegas. Specs include a 3.5-inch display, a 480 x 320 resolution, support for a slew of file formats, WiFi, some sort of web browser and a DMB TV tuner. It’s slated to be released in South Korea for an undisclosed amount later this month, but alas, there’s no immediate word on when this will hit the States.

iriver’s 3.5-inch K1 PMP gets outed at CES originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 16:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Horizon MiniPak personal fuel cell charger hands-on (video)

Our dreams of a personal fuel cell that can charge our gadgets on the go are coming closer to fruition, and if the people at Horizon Fuel Cell Technologies continue what they’re doing, our dreams might come true sooner rather than later. A handheld box a bit larger than an iPhone, the MiniPak handheld fuel cell charger uses Hydrostik cartridges filled with solid hydrogen particles to keep your gadgets juiced. It comes with one Hydrostik, which can be refilled with the companion product, the HydroFILL. The HydroFILL gets filled up with water, and when connected to a power source, it breaks the water down to hydrogen and oxygen, filling up the cartridges. We’ll admit that we’re not exactly up on our molecular chemistry, so check out the video after the break to see a Horizon rep explaining it more clearly.

Continue reading Horizon MiniPak personal fuel cell charger hands-on (video)

Horizon MiniPak personal fuel cell charger hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 16:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Blazingly Fast Wireless HD Hits the Mainstream

HDTV

LAS VEGAS — Slim screens with thin black bezels can make HDTVs look like digital artwork. But hang one on the wall, and a problem quickly presents itself: What to do about the ugly black cords snaking out towards your set-top box, home theater PC or other TV appliances?

Wireless HD, a new wireless interface standard, could get rid of the wires connecting your TV to accessories such as Blu-ray players and portable music players. This week, several TV manufacturers, including Panasonic, LG and Vizio, announced plans to deliver Wireless HD-enabled sets in 2010.

In addition to eliminating cable clutter, Wireless HD can offer fast data transfers, enabling high-definition audio and video streaming at a rate of more than 10 Gigabits per second.

CES 2010

“It is becoming important to consumers to have a way to stream HD video content wirelessly,” says John Marshall, chairman of the Wireless HD consortium. “We can do that with Wireless HD and we can do it really fast.”

Panasonic’s and LG’s support lend the standard new credibility. And Vizio, which sells more HDTVs in the United States than any other manufacturer, will give Wireless HD a further push, as the company is expected to include it as a key feature in its products by the end of the year.

Today, connecting HDTVs to set-top boxes or Blu-ray players means consumers have to buy HDMI cables. You could try connecting TV devices via Wi-Fi, but 802.11n only offers 600 Mbps — not enough bandwidth to transfer HD video in an uncompressed format.

“An HDMI cable transfers content about 30 to 40 times faster than Wi-Fi,” says John Lemoncheck, CEO of SiBeam, a chipmaker that is supporting the Wireless HD standard in its products.

Even competing standards such as WHDI can only offer video data rates of up to 3 Gbps.

Wireless HD gives consumers flexibility, says Randy Lawson, an analyst with research firm iSuppli.

“A lot of people get ripped off by very expensive HDMI cables for their TVs,” he says. “Those $50 HDMI Monster cables, you don’t need that anymore if you get Wireless HD-ready TVs.”

And as HDTVs get thinner and thinner, the Wireless HD standard can set them free, he says.

“With those very thin TVs, you might want to hang it on a different wall than where you have the shelves with the Blu-ray player,” says Lawson. “You can’t do that with 4-foot-long cable.”

The Wireless HD consortium was formed in 2006 with support from all the major TV manufacturers. A year later the consortium released the first version of the wireless HD specification.  The idea was to offer a way to transfer audio and video wirelessly at low cost, with high reliability and little change in the viewing experience.

The latest generation of the standard supports 3-D TVs, 4K resolution (which is four times the current maximum HD resolution of 1080p), and data transfer speeds of about 1 Gbps for portable devices such as digital music players connected to HDTVs.

“The first generation was really about one consumer company, Sony, adopting it,” says Lawson. “But with generation two, we are seeing every TV company has it.”

The Wireless HD standard still has some challenges that could slow it down. Wireless HD is a point-to-point technology, which means it can offer a range of only about 32 feet. Compare that to the slower WHDI standard, which has a range of 100 feet, meaning TVs in multiple rooms can be networked together.

“If you want to create a video network for your entire house, you can’t do that now with Wireless HD,”  says Lawson.

Photo: Priya Ganapati


The iDiscover keyboard turns your iPhone into a piano and more

Sure, there are nifty apps that allow you to simulate a keyboard on your iPhone, but Ion Audio has gone ahead and created a physical one to match the newly announced iType. The iDiscover keyboard, along with the companion iDiscover Keyboard app, has 25 keys and effectively turns your iPhone into a music studio complete with synth-action keys, and pitch and modulation wheels. Better yet, it doubles as a controller for MIDI software on either Mac or PC.

The iDiscover keyboard turns your iPhone into a piano and more originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 16:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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