LG’s 55-inch 3D Google TV eyes-on

LG's 55inch 3D Google TV eyeson

LG made tentative inroads into the Google TV space last year with only two available sets, but here at CES 2013, the company’s announced plans to expand the line to seven additional models. The sets, which range in size from 42 to 60 inches, feature LG’s Cinema Screen display at full 1080p resolution with 240Hz refresh rate and are also 3D capable. For input options, consumers will have ports for HDMI (4x) and USB 2.0 (2x) along with wired ethernet (WiFi is also supported). The company’s custom Magic Remote has also seen some improvements as the buttons for navigation have all been moved further up, allowing users a more comfortable one-thumb experience. And from the time we spent holding it, it seems that slight change does help enhance overall in-hand comfort. As for new additions to the remote’s layout, LG’s added in dedicated buttons for voice control and its Prime Time Quick Smart Guide which brings up an overlay of currently airing programs and remaining air time. There’s no pricing available at this time, but we do know these sets will hit the market in Q1 of this year.

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Panasonic 4K tablet prototype hands on (update: video)

Panasonic 4K tablet prototype hands on

The Panasonic liveblog was barely finished when we saw this beauty calling out to us from the show floor. This is Panasonic’s 20″ 4K tablet, running Windows 8. It’s a prototype design right now, but seemed to be pretty well put together, and not something quickly knocked up for the show. Given that it’s not a full release model, details on specifications are sparse, but we can tell you that as well as that truly jaw dropping display, there is a front facing camera (no details on resolution, but possibly 2-megapixel), and an Intel Core i5 running the show. Input / output wise there wasn’t a lot going on, but there was micro-USB, microSD and at least WiFi. If you’re thinking that that display is going to pretty much keep you tethered to a wall to keep it powered, then we were told that it will at least give you two hours of use on the go.

Panasonic also told us that Anoto digital writing technology features in the tablet, which makes sense given that — judging by the display section for this device — that the tablet is aimed at marketing professionals, architects, photographers and other such business users. Given the tablet’s size, it’s not the sort of thing you are likely to be slinging in a rucksack and taking out on the road. That said, in our time with it, picking it up and moving it about wasn’t terrible, and you can imagine swanky design houses and media companies lining the walls of their offices with these things. No word on price or availability, but Panasonic were confident that this would make it to production.

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Samsung refreshes its mid-range Series 5 Ultrabook with touch; arrives in February for $749+

Samsung refreshes its mid-range Series 5 Ultrabook with touch; arrives in February for $749+

Just about a year after Samsung first announced its mid-range Series 5 Ultrabooks, it’s refreshing them with a higher-end aluminum chassis, backlit keyboards and touchscreens. The laptop, which will be available with a 14-inch screen only, will be offerred in black, red and navy (same as the GS III). It will come standard with a touchscreen in the US, though the version on display here at CES wasn’t touch-enabled.

Perhaps the biggest difference — aside from the touch bit — is that the design has a considerably more upscale feel than the last-gen models. Here, you have a brushed aluminum lid that takes after the high-end Series 9 line. In fact, every surface here is made of metal, save for the bottom, which is plastic. The keyboard layout is more similar to the last year’s model, though, except that now it has backlighting.

As before, the chassis is thick enough to make room for a tray-loading optical drive. Other amenities include three USB ports (one of them 3.0), an Ethernet jack, HDMI-out, a headphone port, DisplayPort (swapped in for VGA) and a lock slot. A Samsung rep told us it will be sold in two configurations in the US: a $749 model with a Core i3 processor and a 4GB of RAM and an $899 model with Core i5 and eight gigs of memory. Both will have 1,366 x 768 resolution (a minor disappointment) and a 500GB hard drive paired with 24GB of ExpressCache for faster boot-ups and application launch times. In the US, at least, you’re looking at integrated graphics only, though in other countries it will be available with an AMD Radeon HD 8750 GPU. Look for these in February and for now, enjoy the hands-on shots below.

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Samsung announces ‘world’s first’ curved OLED, we go eyes-on

Samsung announces 'world's first' curved OLED, we go eyeson

Samsung’s massive booth here on the CES 2013 show floor has barely opened and already we’re getting a look at one of its latest TV innovations. Sitting pretty in a far roped-off corner and hailed as a “world’s first,” is the company’s Curved OLED TV. Not much has been divulged about the uniquely shaped set at this time, but official details should be forthcoming quite soon. In the meanwhile, check out our gallery below.

Brad Molen contributed to this post.

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Razer Edge vs. the competition: fight!

Razer Edge vs the competition fight!

Audacious claims are starting to become a standard component of Razer hardware announcements — following the Blade’s claim to the title of “world’s first true gaming laptop” is the Razer Edge: “a full feature PC and the most powerful tablet in the world.” It certainly has the full feature PC aspect down — with an Intel Core i5 (or i7 for Pro) processor at its heart, the Edge is more of a modular Ultrabook than your run-of-the-mill tablet. Then again, that seems to be the Windows 8 slate trend, doesn’t it? We pitted the Edge against some of the category’s recent stars, including two other tablets, a slider and a full featured convertible laptop. Read on to see how it stacks up.

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Hands-on with Razer’s Edge, a $999 gaming tablet / home console

Handson with Razer's Edge, a gaming tablet  PC  console hybrid

The PC ecosystem is no longer as simple as it once was — first there were desktops, then laptops, then tablets, then all-in-ones. Buying a PC now is more nebulous than it ever was. You could build your very own rig, piece-by-piece, or you could buy one of the many, many pre-fab options out there (or some mixture of the two, of course). And then there’s even more outside-of-the-box options, like Razer’s recently re-introduced Edge (aka “Project Fiona”), which occupies a space all its own. Part laptop, part tablet, part home console, and part portable console, the Razer Edge is the fruition of Razer CEO Min-Liang Tan’s dream to create a “true” portable PC gaming machine. And weighing in at just two pounds, the Edge is dramatically lighter than Razer’s other portable gaming machine, the Blade (which clocks in at a whopping 6.6 lbs.), making it the company’s first actually portable game console.

Keeping those Blade comparisons rolling, the base level Edge at $999 features a slight step down from the Blade’s Core i7 Ivy Bridge processor to a 1.7GHz Intel’s Core i5 (the Edge Pro at $1299 boosts that CPU to a 1.9GHz Ivy Bridge i7, more closely matching the far costlier Blade). Thankfully, the Edge’s GPU is not only discreet, but also powerful and (thankfully) not fragmented between the two models: an NVIDIA GT640M LE powers the graphics on both, while 4GB or 8GB (respectively) of DDR3 RAM keeps it all running smoothly. The base model Edge holds 64GB of content in a speedy solid state drive (128GB in the Pro model, upgradeable to 256GB). But let’s be honest — you already know most of these specs, right? What matters is how all this stuff pans out, and we’ve just gotten our first chance to find out. Head past the break to see how Razer’s Edge fared.

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Project Fiona becomes Razer Edge, starts at $999, sans controller

Project Fiona becomes Razer Edge, starts at $999, sans controller

Razer CEO Min-Liang Tan has been dreaming about building a true PC gaming portable for years. He’s cooked up prototype clamshells, controller-toting tablets, and built two top of the line gaming laptops along the way — but now his dream is almost ready: the Razer Edge. Look familiar? It should. It’s been handled, teased and even redesigned at the behest of Razer’s social legions. It’s Project Fiona evolved. Hoping to keep pace with community feedback, Razer is kitting out the Edge with a 3rd gen Intel Core processor, a 10.1-inch 1,366 x 768 display, an NVIDIA GT640M LE GPU, 4 to 8GB of DDR3 RAM, USB 3.0 and a 64, 128 or 256GB SSD, depending on the SKU. Min translated the slate’s build into some digestible framerates: 59 fps in Dishonored, he told us, and 41 fps in DiRT Showdown. Sound intriguing? It gets better — the baseline 1.7Ghz Core i5 variant of the Edge will sell for $999 and the beefed up 1.9GHz Core i7 Pro model will run for $1299, keeping the device well below the community’s $1,300 to $1,500 price expectations. Even better, the whole shebang is going to be available in the first quarter of this year.

Razer had to change more than Project Fiona’s name to stay under budget, of course — the prototype’s handlebar controllers have migrated to an optional gamepad dock. It’s a win and a loss — fans in Razer’s social media campaign demanded detachable controllers, but their absence makes obtaining the complete “Edge experience” a bit more of a chore — one that will cost $249 on top of the price of the slate itself. Even so, the move to modular is a good thing, and allowed Razer to develop other accessories: a keyboard dock, life-giving 40Wh battery packs ($69) and a $99 docking station, replete with three USB 2.0 ports, plus stereo and HDMI output for a “home console” experience. Razer says the Edge has specific “modes” based around these accessories — the tablet alone features the obvious multi-touch tricks of Windows 8, and the keyboard dock gives PC gamers access to the familiar WASD controls they’re used to. The launcher we saw at CES 2012 is still there too, giving the docking station a pseudo-console interface befitting of your television (and Steam Big Picture Mode, of course). As we said, collecting the whole set is a tall order, but Razer is hoping to make the task a little easier for gamers after the Pro model — offering the i7 tablet and controller dock for a bundled price of $1499 ($50 less than if purchased separately). Completionists will need to wait until Q3 to pick up the keyboard dock though, as its form and price still aren’t finalized.

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Live from the Engadget CES Stage: an interview with Qualcomm’s Raj Talluri

Live from the Engadget CES Stage an interview with Qualcomm's Raj Talluri

Own a smartphone? There’s a pretty good chance you’re carrying around a Qualcomm chip, as well. SVP of product management, Raj Talluri, will be joining us on stage to demo some of the The Snapdragon-maker’s latest and most exciting technologies. Following along live by clicking through after the break.

January 8, 2013 1:30 PM EST

Check out our full CES 2013 stage schedule here!

Update: video embedded

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Alpine introduces INE-W927-HD AV and navigation system, Pandora, Sirius and more on a 7-inch touchscreen

Alpine introduces INEW927HD AV and navigation system, Pandora, Sirius and more on a 7inch touchscreen

Got car, need entertainment. Enter Alpine’s INE-W927HD mouthful of a new audio, video and navigation system. The device comes with a 7-inch touchscreen, built-in HD Radio receiver plus Bluetooth. There’s also access to the popular Pandora and SiriusXM services, as well as playlist support for iOS and Android audio streaming. Alpine’s heritage in this space comes through in the form of an “iPersonalize” system that tunes the sound up based on various factors including vehicle type, number of speakers and even upholstery material. How much for such options? that’s $1,200 when it launches sometime this month.

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gTar opens for pre-orders this week, shipping the week after

Here’s a fun bit of news we’re hoping doesn’t get lost in the CES deluge: Kickstarter success story Incident is finally ready to start moving on its rock ‘n roll iPhone dock, the gTar. The smartphone-friendly educational instrument is opening up for pre-orders this week, at $399 a pop. Josh from the company tells us that the first units have arrived at Incident headquarters and will start shipping next week, once all the requisite QAing is done. The iPhone 5 will also work with the device, if you’ve got the Apple adapter. A native gTar adapter, meanwhile, is coming later this year, “when Lightning connector components are made available to third-party suppliers.” Those docks can be swapped in at home by users.

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Source: Incident gTar