Visualized: when backpacks attack!

We spotted this giant backpack from Everki here at CES and couldn’t help but put it to the intern test. Sadly, Sam Sheffer decided to open the backpack and was never heard from again.

Visualized: when backpacks attack! originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 08 Jan 2011 18:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AVN: Pink Visual Delivers More-Than-FaceTime

facetimegirl.jpgSo what should we call this: WholeBodyTime? There are various other things I could put in front of “Time,” but you get the picture. At the AVN trade show here in Las Vegas, porn company Pink Visual showed off their altogether obvious application for Apple’s FaceTime video chat: getting 15 minutes to tell a pretty girl to do, well, whatever it is you want her to do.

Don’t worry, Pink Visual isn’t iPhone-specific. The company is considering working with Android video chat apps as well, Pink Visual CEO Allison Vivas said, although she didn’t sound convinced that Qik was currently up to the strain.
Pink Visual isn’t going to sell its live chat as a service. Since it requires one lady per person per conversation, it’s pretty expensive to run. (And obviously, you don’t have as big a potential pool of workers as you do with traditional chat lines, because they have to look like porn stars, too.) Instead, Pink will give away “chat with a porn star” as a prize for loyal subscribers to their mobile video services. The longer you’re a member (and thank goodness that sentence had an “a” in it, eh?), the more chances you’ll have to win.
All of this is one of Pink’s ways of countering piracy in the porn industry. By offering incentives for loyalty, Pink hopes to maintain a regular base of paying customers. When they get the system up and running, they’ll have 5-10 girls chatting at any given time, Vivas said.

Nox Audio Admiral Touch preview: the wireless noise-canceling surround headset with Android 2.1

Nox Audio’s brought a couple clever concepts to market before, but the Admiral Touch headset is something else — a set of stainless steel and cans with most every high-end feature we can think of, and one in particular that’s never been done before. Yes, that’s a 2.4-inch touchscreen color LCD embedded in the right earcup, running Android 2.1 on an ARM11 chip with 1GB flash storage and 256MB of RAM — on top of a set of noise-canceling, 7.1 virtual surround sound wireless headphones that connect via both 2.4GHz and Bluetooth simultaneously. There’s not much to do with the tiny Android at present, as its only launcher screen holds just four icons that change the headset’s mode, but we’re told it might be hackable later on (there is a microSD slot and a USB cord), and in the meantime it supports touchscreen gesture controls for volume and swapping tracks. Believe it or not, we’ve just started to describe the features, so hit the break for more.

Continue reading Nox Audio Admiral Touch preview: the wireless noise-canceling surround headset with Android 2.1

Nox Audio Admiral Touch preview: the wireless noise-canceling surround headset with Android 2.1 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 08 Jan 2011 18:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple AirPlay devices set to explode in 2011

Although DLNA may have had a significant head start, the streaming media standard available on more than 9,000 devices is about to be challenged in a very big way by Apple’s upstart AirPlay technology. At least it will be if Jordan Watters, BridgeCo‘s VP of Sales and Marketing, is to be believed. BridgeCo as you’ll recall, is the company that makes the silicon for AirPlay devices — currently an exclusive arrangement we’re told. While Apple may have thrust BridgeCo into the consumer spotlight, this ten year old company has a long history of quietly providing networked media processors and connectivity software to a who’s who of audio companies. Here at CES we’ve already seen two speakers from iHome, the Zeppelin Air from B&W, and a trio of speakers from the previously unannounced AirPlay partner Klipsch rolled out. And this is just the beginning.

According to Jordan Watters, AirPlay devices could ultimately dwarf “made for iPod” audio docks by 2x to 4x. Part of the reason for Jordan’s optimism is the fact that so many iOS devices have already been sold and that many audio devices already on the market using BridgeCo chips can add AirPlay functionality via a software update, including the nine receivers just announced from Denon and Marantz. “The ecosystem is already there,” he said smiling. And unlike iPod docks which are usually sold at a rate of one per iOS device, Watters sees consumers purchasing multiple AirPlay devices for every iOS device sold in order to enable whole-home distributed audio. In fact, growth could come as a “step function ramp sucking into the market,” Jordan enthused. In other words, he expects AirPlay growth to be explosive. We’d chalk up the hyperbolic talk to Jordan’s marketing role if it weren’t for the abundance of anecdotal evidence supporting his claims here at CES. To start with, the company’s modest meeting room was packed with interested manufacturers poking around BridgeCo’s AirPlay offering. Jordan’s also booked back-to-back-to-back with meetings until the show ends (and into the coming weeks we suspect). But what really convinced us was an all-in-one speaker prototype from a major consumer electronics company that was quickly whisked away before meeting the sensor beneath our D300’s lens. If they’re involved, well, we expect the rest will follow.

Apple AirPlay devices set to explode in 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 08 Jan 2011 18:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPhone, iPad, BlackBerry Users Like Different Porn

Users of the iPhone, iPad, Android phones and BlackBerries prefer different kinds of porn, Pink Visual CEO Allison Vivas said at the AVN trade show here in Las Vegas.

Pink Visual is a leader in mobile streaming of adult content, so they have a lot of analytics on who is watching what kind of dirty videos, when. And guess what? Details after the jump, because the details aren’t family friendly.

Sony HomeShare RMN-U1 universal remote hands-on

Trade shows obviously aren’t the best environment for evaluating a universal remote, but we couldn’t resist taking Sony’s RMN-U1 HomeShare IR / WiFi controller for a quick test drive here at the CES. Physically the device is surprisingly light and has a decent screen resolution. Clicking the home menu displays icons for every system component as well as an activities button for accessing online music services like Slacker, playing tracks from a networked Blu-ray player / iPhone / iPod, or even sending media files between DLNA-networked devices. If a BRAVIA TV is connected to the system, users can select the particular input they’d like to hear audio from or cue a movie. Once a track is playing, the screen will display the song’s album art and metadata along with playlists. Overall the RMN-U1 looks pretty capable at managing music — though it’s a bit menu heavy. It also seems fairly expensive considering what else is available at its $300 price point, but then again, we’re not aware of another IR universal remote that’s compatible with Sony’s WiFi HomeSharing. Check out our gallery below for more shots of the interface and you may even spy photos of the rest of the new HomeShare line too.

Sony HomeShare RMN-U1 universal remote hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 08 Jan 2011 18:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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VideoEFx box transforms your 2D content into 3D (hands-on)

3DTV is “cool and all,” but one of the biggest challenges to its adoption is a lack of substantial content. VideoEFx is a small company with a nondescript booth situated somewhere in the ginormous Las Vegas Convention Center, but what it’s showing off is quite remarkable. A small black box about the size of an iPhone, it can take any 2D content and convert it to 3D in real time. Our first impression was one of amazement, especially given the fact that we were watching ourselves in real time through a standard 2D video camera hooked up to the TVs in the booth. When we asked how such a thing could be possible, we got hints about some fairy magic creative engineering that employs similar visual cues that your eye processes when you look at anything. Apparently some broadcasting companies have expressed interest in using the tech to power their own 3D streams due to the simplicity (and cost effectiveness, we assume) over current 3D filming solutions. We know you can’t experience it from wherever you’re tuning in, but take our word that this is some seriously impressive stuff — even if other companies have achieved similar 2D to 3D conversion magic within TVs before. Still, not all sets offer this capability, and this even doubles as a three port HDMI switch. It’ll carry a $400 price tag when it lands in April.

VideoEFx box transforms your 2D content into 3D (hands-on) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 08 Jan 2011 17:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Editorial: Windows on ARM is a big deal, but it’s not enough to win at tablets

While “Windows runs on ARM now” is a really easy thing to say, it’s an extremely complicated subject, fraught with industry drama, technical accomplishment, and a hint of Microsoft’s vision for the future. Microsoft is saying loud and clear that x86 isn’t enough (sorry, Intel and AMD), that current Windows form factors aren’t sufficient (sorry, netbooks), and that it’s still a nimble enough company to respond to changes in the market and consumer frustrations (sorry, Clippy). But what does that actually mean, in the long run? Let’s talk things through, after the break.

Continue reading Editorial: Windows on ARM is a big deal, but it’s not enough to win at tablets

Editorial: Windows on ARM is a big deal, but it’s not enough to win at tablets originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 08 Jan 2011 17:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wireless Media Stick hands-on: stream your content to anything with a USB port

The Wireless Media Stick is an interesting little product that aims to bring media streaming to pretty much anything with a USB port. If the concept sounds familiar, that’s because it kind of is — we reviewed the Infinitec Infinite USB Memory Drive late last year. This USB stick has built-in WiFi, so you connect it to your network and can plug it into pretty much anything with a USB port that can read a mass storage device. We saw it demoed in a Blu-ray player as well as an iPod dock (both USB-equipped of course), and in the short time we spent with it the thing seemed to work as advertised. Under the hood it’s essentially a Samba client, so all you have to do is share a folder on your Mac or PC and it’ll show up in your Xbox, PS3, or whatever other box you’ve got it plugged into. We also saw an Android app that enables you to share all your content on your device straight to the stick, which should be hitting the Android Market January 30th. There are also BlackBerry and iOS versions in the works, but we weren’t told when to expect them. We watched a playback of a Green Hornet movie trailer streamed to the device and it didn’t seem to have much lag, but we’ll have to put one through the paces to make a final judgment call. If you want to pick one up, it’ll cost you a cool $120.

Wireless Media Stick hands-on: stream your content to anything with a USB port originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 08 Jan 2011 17:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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InfiniTV 4 USB CableCARD tuner hands-on

InfiniTV 4 USB CableCARD tuner
We ran into the Hammers from Ceton Corp at CES and they revealed their latest products to us; the InfiniTV 4 USB and the internal InfiniTV 6. The InfiniTV 6 is basically the six tuner version of the InfiniTV 4 that we like so much, what we don’t like is that there’s no mention of price or availability — we’d guess $500 or $600 and sometime during the middle of 2011. The more interesting revelation was that of the InfiniTV 4 USB, which you see pictured above. It also doesn’t have a price yet, but it does record four HD shows at once like its internal brother, has a real nice feel to it, and looks really, really cool. We were curious to know how many of the InifniTV 4’s have been sold to Windows Media Center users, and while exact figures weren’t forthcoming, we were told “thousands and thousands.” At this point Ceton is still focused on eliminating its four month order backlog and will turn its attention to brining new products to market after that.

InfiniTV 4 USB CableCARD tuner hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 08 Jan 2011 17:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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