
Continue reading Aiptek PocketCinema V10 hands-on
Aiptek PocketCinema V10 hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Jan 2009 09:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Continue reading Aiptek PocketCinema V10 hands-on
Aiptek PocketCinema V10 hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Jan 2009 09:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Looks like Sony Insider caught some footage of those flexible OLED Walkmans in action during a CES promo video hidden away in the booth. Looks like a pretty sweet riff on the Cover Flow-esque interface that’s due to arrive on the NWZ-X1000, but there’s not much else to go on — let’s hope Sony’s spending more time getting the X1000 ready to leave that impenetrable glass housing than it is mocking up videos of fantasy tech. Video after the break!
Continue reading Sony shows off flexible OLED Walkman concepts on video
Filed under: Portable Audio, Portable Video
Sony shows off flexible OLED Walkman concepts on video originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Jan 2009 21:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Sleep? Sleep is for people who aren’t covering tech shows. For the better part of last week, the “sleep” concept didn’t even enter into the equation for us.
Instead, we of the PCMag blogs spent our week running around the Las Vegas Convention Center floor and jetting between meetings and keynotes at the Venetian and Sands hotels. Heck, we even managed to set aside a little time to check out the Adult Expo happening right next door at the Sands.
We have the blog posts to prove it. After the jump, check out the entire list of CES 2009 posts from Gearlog, Appscout, and GoodCleanTech. And for more video goodness, be sure to check out the official Gearlog YouTube page.
Now, if you don’t mind, it’s time for our well-deserved post-CES weeklong nap.
We’ll be honest: apart from the ridiculous custom cars and the Viliv S7, we pretty much avoided the car audio-oriented North Hall at CES this year — which means we sadly didn’t get any facetime with Blaupunkt’s miRoamer-powered TravelPilot New Jersey 600i internet car stereo. (Apparently double-DIN is big in the Jerz.) The prototype head unit connects to a cellphone over Bluetooth to access the internet, and uses the miRoamer service to stream “tens of thousands” of stations on the service — which the company estimates will consume about 2GB of data a month, so you’d better hope your data plan doesn’t cap you off or charge you for overages. The radio is expected to arrive in the second half of the year for $399, which isn’t bad, but doesn’t do much good for the squares like us who never swap out their car stereos — which is probably why miRoamer is targeting 2010 for placement in OEM head units. One more pic of the single-DIN sized “Hamburg” model after the break.
Continue reading Blaupunkt shows off miRoamer-powered internet car radios
Filed under: Portable Audio, Transportation
Blaupunkt shows off miRoamer-powered internet car radios originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Jan 2009 16:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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We swung by D-Link’s booth at CES to check out its upcoming SideStage USB-powered monitor, hoping to see the thing in action and get some more details ahead of its release. What we found was quite familiar looking, to say the least. D-Link was disappointingly just demoing a Nanovision, but was quick to point out this would not be the product destined for a full US release sometime this summer. That new display will still be produced by Nanovision, but will be modified to better suit our market, graced with a different logo, and cheaper, too. No firm price yet, but the company is targeting sub-$100, which sounds good to us.
More details on D-Link’s upcoming 7-inch SideStage USB monitor originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Jan 2009 14:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
We were really hoping to see some wild Android devices at CES, and while we did see one or two interesting applications, we sadly missed Compulab’s crazy exeda. Ostensibly designed for the enterprise market, the squared-off handheld features a 3.5-inch sun-readable VGA touchscreen, QWERTY keyboard, and a capacitive touchpad that acts as a mouse. Like other recent Asian Android handsets we’ve seen, the exeda can also boot Windows Mobile 6.1 on its 520MHz Marvell CPU and 128MB of RAM, and the radio setup is similarly flexible — resellers can pick from quadband GSM / GPRS, CDMA, and 3G UMTS. Craziest of all? The exeda has a 10/100Base-T Ethernet port in addition to WiFi. Yeah, we want one. No details on pricing, but hopefully we’ll find out more when it hits in March.
[Thanks, James R.]
Filed under: Cellphones, Handhelds
Compulab unveils the exeda Android / WinMo handheld originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Jan 2009 13:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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While the Eee Top may get a lot of zombie-hand loving, it’s not the only game in town when it comes to cheapo all-in-one PCs. Shuttle announced its X50 desktop at CES as well, a system with more than just a few similarities to the competition, namely its CPU, base RAM, display size and resolution, chipset, GPU, and OS. In case you don’t know those by heart: 1.6GHz Intel Atom 330, 1GB of RAM, 15.6-inch,1366 x 768 resistive touchscreen display, 945GC mainboard, GMA 950 graphics, and Windows XP. The real difference is the hard drive — the Eee Top sports a 160GB, the X50 just 80GB — and the price point, with the Shuttle clocking in at $499 ($100 cheaper). Our take? We’re starting to see the emergence of what amounts to the netbook desktop — a one piece, low power system meant for the kids’ room, the kitchen, or grandma’s rest home suite. The Shuttle wins in the looks department, but don’t make any fast decisions — come its March launch, you’ll be seeing plenty of these.
[Via Fudzilla]
Filed under: Desktops
Shuttle’s X50 all-in-one desktop pulls up alongside the Eee Top originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Jan 2009 08:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Ever have a cable you wanted to strangle? Well you’re not alone, apparently. A company called E-Filliate issued a new series of USB, HDMI, Cat5, S-Video, and composite cables called Flexicord at CES this year which will bend — and stay — in any position you please, thus eliminating that frustration you must feel every time you plug in your camera or hook up your high fidelity sound system. The cables act like pipe cleaner or Gumby, so you can twist and shape them as you please, though apparently Pokey had to be killed and dissected so the technology could be obtained. Enjoy your new cable, murderers.
[Via Everything USB]
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Flexicord cables get bent… and stay that way originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Jan 2009 06:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Although CES 2009 was undoubtedly smaller and perhaps a little more subdued than last year’s HDTV-dominated extravaganza, the products we did see were a lot more interesting — and of course, Palm stole the show with its blockbuster Pre announcement. We’ve rounded up the highlights below, make sure you didn’t miss anything!
Palm Pre news:
Palm’s app store christened App Catalog, games not a priority
Palm Pre Touchstone eyes-on
Palm Pre / webOS launch roundup
Computing:
VAIO P, now with more Windows 7
Video: Intel’s convertible Classmate PC hands-on
Video: ASUS AIRO laptop with amazing sliding keyboard
VAIO P in-depth impressions
Dell Mini 10 hands-on
SuperSpeed USB 3.0 in action
Dell Studio XPS 13 and 16 hands-on
White Dell Adamo pictures leak out
Dell Adamo hands-on! (Update: now with video!)
HP dv2 and dv3 hands-on
HP Firebird with Voodoo DNA hands-on
Microsoft announces availability of Windows 7 Beta and Windows Live
ASUS’ Eee Keyboard revealed
Continue reading CES 2009: all the stuff (and more)
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
CES 2009: all the stuff (and more) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Jan 2009 22:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
We’ve been hearing an awful lot about NVIDIA’s Ion platform, but up until now, we haven’t seen an awful lot. HotHardware and PC Perspective were both able to swing by NVIDIA’s booth at CES and get an up close look at the diminutive system. On hand was a half-liter PC that utilized a 1.6GHz Atom 330 CPU and NVIDIA’s GeForce 9400M GPU, and it was reportedly being used to push some pretty stellar video on the monitors behind it. Have a look past the break for a couple demonstration vids — if this is the kind of graphical prowess we can expect from nettops of tomorrow, you can color us interested.
Read – HotHardware
Read – PC Perspective
Continue reading NVIDIA Ion platform gets demonstrated at CES
Filed under: Laptops
NVIDIA Ion platform gets demonstrated at CES originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Jan 2009 21:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.