Lenovo intros ThinkPad Edge, X100e ultraportable and other ThinkPad refreshes

It just wouldn’t be a CES without a gaggle of new introductions from Lenovo, and while we knew good and well that most everything here was on the way thanks to a slip-up at Lenovo’s site, it’s always nice to get the official word. Kicking things off is the altogether sexy ThinkPad Edge, which will ship in 13-, 14- and 15-inch versions in order to suit the small business users in the crowd. It’ll include a choice of AMD processors (Turion X2 or Athlon X2), optional 3G / 4G WWAN modules, a full suite of Lenovo’s own ThinkVantage technologies and preloaded Skype. This machine also marks the first ever ThinkPad to arrive with a choice of color — it’ll ship in matte black, glossy black and heat-wave red. Moving on, there’s the previously rumored X100e, which goes down as the company’s first “entry-level ultraportable.” Starting at under $500, the AMD-based (Athlon Neo or Turion) rig gets outfitted with Windows 7 Professional, an 11.6-inch display, full-size keyboard, multitouch trackpad, WiFi and optional Bluetooth / 3G. Rounding things off are four new introductions in the classic range: the T410s, T410, T510 and W510. The foursome will become the first in the ThinkPad family to offer the upcoming Intel dual-core CPUs and mobile Core i7, and if you’re thirsty for the full specs lists on the bunch (along with videos of the X100e and Edge), head on past the break and open wide.

Continue reading Lenovo intros ThinkPad Edge, X100e ultraportable and other ThinkPad refreshes

Lenovo intros ThinkPad Edge, X100e ultraportable and other ThinkPad refreshes originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 03 Jan 2010 18:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ProVision’s AXAR to wirelessly stream HD content to just about anything

The world needs another wireless HD system like it needs another thousand gallons of goop spinning in the middle of the Pacific, but regardless of the facts, ProVision is set to introduce one such system at CES this week. According to details scrounged up by Pocket-lint, the AXAR technology will function much like WHDI does currently. The difference? Increased range and a knack for distributing to more than just an HDTV. It’s expected that AXAR will find its way into TVs, set-top boxes and a range of network devices in time for Christmas 2010, where it will allow any AXAR-enabled device (a laptop, phone, PMP, HDTV, PC, etc.) to receive 1080p content from a media player, Blu-ray player or similar. Better still, it can also distribute those signals to WiFi-enabled products if your network can handle it. Currently, the tech can support two separate HD streams at the same time, and it can broadcast ’em to a living space that’s three times that of the Buckingham Palace. We’ll be sure to poke our nose around for more at CES, but in the meanwhile, feel free to catch a few first impressions down in the source link.

ProVision’s AXAR to wirelessly stream HD content to just about anything originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 03 Jan 2010 17:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lenovo leaks ThinkPad Edge, X100e, T410s, W510, T510 and more ahead of CES

Hey Lenovo, your cards are showing. Just weeks after the FCC tipped us off on a new pair of netbooks that are all but definitely slated for a CES unveiling, Lenovo has no one but its web administrator(s) to blame for this one. A “New product showcase” portal over on the outfit’s site has just revealed a half dozen new lappies that are slated to go on sale starting January 5th – 7th, with the ultra-sleek 13.3-inch ThinkPad Edge (pictured above) leading the way. Said rig boasts up to 7.8 hours of battery life, a dual-core CPU, Windows 7, Bluetooth and WiMAX options, integrated WWAN / GPS, WiFi, a spill-resistant keyboard, three USB ports, a 5-in-1 media card reader and an option for a red paint job. There’s also a sub-3 pound ThinkPad X100e ultraportable with an 11.6-inch display, AMD processor and an only-available-overseas Arctic White color option. The T410, T410s, T510 and W510 are bringing up the rear, with their (admittedly brief) specification lists spelled out in the source links below.

[Thanks, Jake and Daniel]

Lenovo leaks ThinkPad Edge, X100e, T410s, W510, T510 and more ahead of CES originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 03 Jan 2010 11:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Liquid Image outs Summit Series Snow Camera goggles ahead of CES

Liquid Image has just announced new camera-equipped ski masks, swimming goggles and scuba masks, just in time for them to be unveiled at CES 2010. The Summit Series Snow Camera Goggle 335 boasts a 5MP still camera capable of shooting D1 720 x 480 resolution video at 30 frames per second with audio. It’s got 16MB of built-in flash memory, expandable to 16GB via its microSD / SDHC slot. Other features include large buttons on the side of the goggles which are easy to press while wearing gloves and a light inside the goggles which indicates when recording. The goggles are estimated to get about 2,200 still images or over 2 hours of video per charge on their lithium ion battery. Liquid Image expects to ship the Summit Series goggles in the summer of 2010, with a price of $149. Full press release is after the break

Continue reading Liquid Image outs Summit Series Snow Camera goggles ahead of CES

Liquid Image outs Summit Series Snow Camera goggles ahead of CES originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 02 Jan 2010 05:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Plethora of new HP laptops, desktops leak ahead of CES

Holy smokes! A ton of unannounced HP laptops and desktops just came across our desk, in addition to those Envy models we saw just a few days back. Ahead of what we presume will be their formal announcement next week right around CES, we’ve got some details on 14 new models — some more interesting than others. Now, before you get too excited, we don’t have full specs on any of these, but we do have pricing information, and here are some highlights: the 14-inch HP Pavilion dv4i, a Windows 7 laptop with a flush display and fingerprint reader that should run about $785. Up next is the 10-inch Mini 210 HD Edition, which will come in red, black, silver and blue, boast Intel’s brand new Pine Trail platform (a 1.66GHz N450 CPU), plus GMA 3150 graphics. Another goodie here is that this one is expected to ship with Broadcom’s Crystal HD video playback chip. The Mini 210 HD is expected to cost around $330. Logic Buy (the point of origin for all this info) is reporting that these models should ship on or around January 7th, though keep in mind that all of this information is extremely unofficial, so don’t blame us if it all changes. If you simply can’t get enough, hit the gallery for a look at a few of the systems, and check the rest of the story after the break.

Read – HP Pavilion dv4i
Read – Mini 210 HD
Read – Mini 210
Read – Compaq Mini CQ10
Read – HP Pavilion Elite HPE-110t
Read – HP Pavilion Elite HPE-150t
Read – HP Pavilion Elite HPE-170t
Read – HP Pavilion Elite HPE-180t

Continue reading Plethora of new HP laptops, desktops leak ahead of CES

Plethora of new HP laptops, desktops leak ahead of CES originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 02 Jan 2010 02:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Boxee Beta Is a Web Video Streamer’s Dream

Boxee beta

Boxee’s media player software app promises to free us all from stinky, trashy preprogrammed television by bringing web video’s hassle-free, on-demand, click-to-watch experience onto our HDTVs.

The somewhat clunky alpha release of Boxee’s software has been around since the beginning of the year, but the company took a big step forward with its public debut of the amped-up beta version in early December.

The Boxee beta, which is currently invitation-only but will be made available to all as a free download during the Consumer Electronics Show the first week of January, improves the stability and the usability of the alpha significantly.

The company will be offering a dedicated set-top box next spring, but the software — which runs on almost any computer — is almost fully cooked. I’ve been testing the new Boxee beta on an Intel Mac Mini hooked up to my HDTV for a little over a week. Windows and Linux versions are also available.

While I’m not ready to tell the cable guy to stuff it (as much as I’d love to), my evenings have been filled with hours of streaming video pulled down from literally scores of online sources. The quality ranges from watchable to spectacular.

Loads of HD options

Most importantly, the software has opened up a treasure chest of possibilities for my HDTV: cooking shows, travel shows, underwater documentaries, Ze Frank, Cool Hunting, Star Trek and all sorts of classic movies. Normally, I’d have to sit at my desk or prop open a laptop to take in this stuff. But Boxee lets me enjoy it on the big screen while sitting on my couch.

Yes, there are many methods for putting web video on your TV, but Boxee is the most elegant solution I’ve seen. For the beta release, the whole user experience has undergone a slick redesign.

The new Boxee homepage delivers a global menu where you’ll find big icons for all the important stuff — Movies, TV Shows, Apps, Music, Photos and a local file-system browser (called simply “Files”). There are also direct links to your queue, Boxee’s settings and a “Now Playing” button that immediately takes you back to your full-screen video.

Boxee menu

Click on one of the content libraries for TV or movies in the global menu and you’ll see a huge improvement in the way Boxee organizes your available content.

The TV show library, for example, now aggregates all available shows from the web and from your local machine. Since each show is listed in the library regardless of its source, you no longer have to go into various independent apps — Comedy Central, CBS, Hulu feeds, etc. — to find the shows you want. You just get a huge list. Sort it or filter it how you’d like. I found it useful to filter out shows that require a paid subscription (like those from Netflix) so I would only see the free streams.

Boxee TV Library

Movies are handled the same way. Picks from Hulu are mixed in with documentaries from other sources and the local files on your hard drive.

Boxee’s homepage hub

The libraries are deep, but all roads lead back to the Boxee homepage. It’s your hub, and there’s always something fresh waiting for you there.

The global menu takes up the whole top of the homepage. Below it, a new three-column layout shows your personal queue, a feed of content recommended by your friends (”Feed”) and a stack of programming chosen by the Boxee staff (”Recommended”).

To get the most out of the Feed column, you have to follow some other users. As with Twitter, following is a one-way proposition. Boxee makes it easy to import your contacts from other services. I quickly added a bunch of friends, but since the Boxee user base is tiny, I didn’t get the flood of awesome suggestions I was expecting. The Boxee staff seeds the Feed daily with some cool viral videos, however, so even if you don’t “do” social networking (or if your friends are stooges), the Feed is still useful. Boxee says it will soon let you add suggestions from Twitter and Facebook friends to your Feed.

The Feed column contains mostly shorter clips from YouTube, but the picks in the Recommended column tend to be longer, feature-length videos or HD eye candy like slide shows from NASA and the Big Picture blog. By clicking around both columns, you can get a taste of what all the cool kids on the web are currently into.

The queue is the best part of the beta’s redesign. As you cruise around the various libraries within Boxee, you can add to your queue any bit of content that catches your eye. Then just fire it up and let the streams flow. After each video, you’re given the option to share it with your Boxee friends or move along to the next item in the queue. Click, click, click.

There isn’t much to say about the revamped Apps area other than that it’s been redesigned to make it easier to browse the available episodes within each channel. I actually spent less time browsing the content inside the Apps now that the TV library does such a good job aggregating videos from across the whole system.

Improved video playback

Video playback also has been improved. The expanded controls are easier to use, and the software is more responsive. You can use a regular handheld remote like the Apple remote to control playback, but it’s clunky. If you have an iPhone or an Android phone, get one of the free official or third-party Boxee remote apps, which are much more responsive.

The Windows version of Boxee has moved from OpenGL to DirectX, with full hardware graphics acceleration on Nvidia Ion chips. This makes it possible to play full 1080p HD videos on relatively inexpensive PC hardware. I did my tests by hooking my Intel Mac Mini (2007 model) to an Olevia 747i with a DVI-to-HDMI cable. So even if you have an older, slower machine and a big HDTV, you can run Boxee and get an excellent picture. It may not be true HD in all cases, but it still looks great.

Some of the full-HD streams (like Heroes and House) hiccupped while they played, but when I dialed down my resolution a step to 1280×768, the stuttering stopped. Getting surround sound from the Mini involved a painless hack.

Minor problems

One of the big problems I had with Boxee’s alpha release was stability: The menus would choke often, and the app would freeze a few times a day, requiring a reboot. The beta is much more stable. It still crashes, but far less frequently (and usually without requiring a reboot).

My installation of the Boxee beta had a hard time playing discs. I went through a stack of DVD-Rs filled with .avi files, and Boxee wouldn’t load any of them. Likewise with .avi and MP4 content streamed across my wireless network. I found it easier to drag the files onto the local hard drive, where they played flawlessly. Actual DVDs played OK most of the time, but the subtitles would sometimes switch on, and Boxee wouldn’t let me turn them off. In those cases, I would have to watch the DVD in Apple’s Front Row.

But Boxee’s goal isn’t to replace your DVD player — it’s to bring a wealth of streaming web video content to your couch. And in that role, it truly excels.

Sign up to download the free beta at Boxee.tv, and expect to see it released in early 2010.


Mophie iPhone credit card reader coming to a CES near you

iPhone accessory maker and recession antidote regular Mophie is about to make the most buzzworthy move of its short history by offering a credit card reader and accompanying transaction app for the Apple handset. Positioned as a direct competitor to Jack Dorsey’s Square iPhone Payment System, Mophie’s solution looks to be integrated into an iPhone case — making it possible to keep the reader on permanently, albeit at a slight cost to your device’s aesthetics. The decidedly cube-shaped Square system has a less ergonomic design, but we suspect that the winner (if either of these two succeeds) will be primarily determined by the usability of the app and affordability of the service. Look out for more info to emerge at some point during the maelstrom that will be CES 2010.

Mophie iPhone credit card reader coming to a CES near you originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Dec 2009 04:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Paradigm Shift intros 5- and 7-inch readers with color (LCD) displays

It looks as if we’re still waiting patiently for color e-ink to become a reality (at least in a mass produced shipping product), but if you’re kosher with low-energy consumption LCDs, Paradigm Shift has the ticket. Similar to Sungale’s Cyberus ID700WTA, the outfit’s 5-inch EER-051 and 7-inch EER-071WF are both e-readers with color, but neither boast e-ink displays. The former includes 1GB of built-in memory, an SD expansion slot, an integrated MP3 player and support for just about any kind of ebook file (non-encrypted EPUB included). The latter steps up to 2GB of memory, and thanks to the Windows CE operating system, it’ll also handle Office files and the like when it’s not flipping text. Both devices are expected to ship in February through Delstar here in the States, with the 5-incher available in a rainbow’s worth of hues for $149.95 and the big boy in black or white for $50 more. The full release is after the break.

Continue reading Paradigm Shift intros 5- and 7-inch readers with color (LCD) displays

Paradigm Shift intros 5- and 7-inch readers with color (LCD) displays originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Dec 2009 00:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget: The Official Blog Partner of CES 2010!

Just like last year, Engadget has once again been chosen as the Official Blog Partner of CES! As you probably already know, CES is one of the craziest and best times of the year for Engadget, and while we typically shy away from industry partnerships, this combo is a rare distinction we wholeheartedly embrace.

Of course, for you (and us) nothing much changes when it comes time to hit the floor at CES 2010: we don’t accept any hookups or editorial privileges from the CEA. Don’t get all worried that we’ve “sold out” or let “the man” take control of us, and don’t fret that we’re not “keeping it real” or “coming correct.” Just as usual, Engadget will be hammering away at CES coverage with the kind of unchecked ferocity you’re used to experiencing. Our crack team of gadget geniuses will — in fact — be storming the floor, bringing you the first and best product news, and generally wreaking havoc on the gadget-loving public just like the CESs of years past.

One more note — as you may have heard, we were voted Blog of the Decade in Adweek’s “Best of the 2000s” poll. We wanted to take a minute and thank the voters, as well as all of our readers (voters or not); without you guys, we couldn’t do what we do, and we’ll be working hard to make sure the next decade is even better!

Engadget: The Official Blog Partner of CES 2010! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pocket Radar promises to be world’s smallest speed radar

We’ve seen plenty of pocket-sized speed radar detectors, but it looks like this new so-called Pocket Radar may just be the first actual speed radar that will fit in your pocket. While you might expect that means quite a few trade-offs, the company behind it actually promises that it “forges a new standard in speed radar performance,” and that it’s able to track speed of everything from a fastball to race car within one mile per hour. Still no word on a price, unfortunately, but it should be available sometime this Spring — and, of course, be on display at CES next week.

Pocket Radar promises to be world’s smallest speed radar originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 14:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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