This is the Modem World: Hotels owe us free WiFi (and cotton swabs)

Each week Joshua Fruhlinger contributes This is the Modem World, a column dedicated to exploring the culture of consumer technology.

DNP This is the Modem World Hotels owe us free WiFi and cotton swabs

When I departed for my three-week honeymoon, I informed all my colleagues that I would be off the grid: unavailable, unreachable, without access, etc. In truth, I was in airplane mode scanning for WiFi networks several times a day, checking in on East Coast friends dealing with Hurricane Sandy.

Side note: I was doing so from poolside chairs while the new wife was asleep and not about to be annoyed by my digital addictions, so that made it OK, and stuff.

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This is the Modem World: Hotels owe us free WiFi (and cotton swabs) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Nov 2012 18:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Editorial: A conciliatory Apple would be real innovation

Editorial A conciliatory Apple would be real innovation

There are signs of a new attitude emanating from Cupertino, extending across Apple’s relationship management of customers and competitors.

One of the two most important things you can say in English is “I’m sorry.” (The other is “Thank you.”) Failure to get the apology right brands a person as arrogant. As with people, so with companies — to whatever extent they have personal relationships with their customers. In Apple’s case, its best customers definitely feel personally involved with the company’s ethos, products and leaders.

Apple’s main personifying force is its CEO. That individual manages both the connection with customers and the competitive relationship with other industry players. Now, following an unusual apology to users, Apple startlingly unplugs one of its Android lawsuits against a competitor, and a profound personality change seems to be in progress. Apple is not apologizing for its historical Android rage. But the brand’s official temperament might be changing at the core, with the company possibly becoming a more conciliatory actor in the field.

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Editorial: A conciliatory Apple would be real innovation originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Nov 2012 15:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Switched On: The time is right for Xbox Surface

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

DNP Switched On The time is right for Xbox Surface

Rumors have swirled that Microsoft is developing a high-powered 7-inch gaming tablet dubbed Xbox Surface, the Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup of Microsoft’s homegrown hardware brands. Such a move would change the landscape of Microsoft’s Xbox and portable game initiatives. It would mark a reversal for the company, which has stayed out of the increasingly challenging handheld space in favor of promoting Windows Phone as part of its ecosystem battle. However, it would be in keeping with Steve Ballmer’s promise (or is it OEM warning?) to expect more hardware from Microsoft. As the tablet was partly Apple’s answer to the netbook, it could also be Microsoft’s answer to the PlayStation Vita.

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Switched On: The time is right for Xbox Surface originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 11 Nov 2012 18:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Switched On: Missed app-ortunity

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology. This week marks Switched On’s eighth anniversary.

DNP Switched On Missed apportunity

It’s difficult to remember as jam-packed a week in terms of industry announcements from major OS providers as the recent seven-day stretch that included a bevy of hardware announcements from Apple, a new tablet and OS upgrade from Google, and two major operating system releases as well as an unprecedented hardware release from Microsoft. Of course, as would be expected from these dominant digital ecosystem stewards, all of the new products included elements of hardware, software and services, even if they were sometimes implicit. But each company could have done significantly more to highlight new third-party apps that were really taking advantage of that combination.

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Switched On: Missed app-ortunity originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 04 Nov 2012 17:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why November Is 2012’s Best Month for Gaming

Is anyone else excited about the month of November? From a technology industry perspective, it’s going to be huge, with launches of everything from the new iPad Mini to the Amazon Kindle Fire HD with LTE. Windows 8 will hit its stride with a host of products running that operating system. Even Google is getting into the swing of things with its Nexus line.

But perhaps companies like Amazon, Apple, and Google won’t dominate November. Instead, the month might be marked as the very best yet this year for gamers.

From a software perspective, it’s hard to not get excited. The latest installment in the wildly popular Call of Duty Franchise, Black Ops 2, is launching in just a few short days. In addition, Microsoft-owned 343 Industries will finally launch the long- awaited Halo 4. Add that to a new Medal of Honor game and a long list of Wii U titles led by New Super Mario Bros. U, and it’s clear why so many people are excited.

But it gets better. November will also mark the month that Nintendo launches what it’s calling, the first next-generation console, the Wii U. That device, which will come with a 6.2-inch LCD-equipped controller, will finally offer the HD graphics Nintendo fans have been expecting. And by delivering what it is effectively a dual-screen gaming experience, it might just prove to be an important addition to the gaming market.

It’s hard for me to say what I’m most excited about at this point. Although I’ve often railed against first-person shooters and their derivative gameplay, I do believe that Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 and Halo 4 will top my list of must-plays this time around.

And despite my concerns with Nintendo jumping into the next-generation console market so soon, the Wii U is at least a bit exciting. As I’ve noted on these pages many times before, I’m a sucker for new gaming hardware. And I’m at least a little intrigued on the way in which the Wii U’s GamePad will interact with titles. I think it has the potential to do some really neat things in the living room.

But with all of that excitement for November gaming comes some disappointment. It seems that the gaming industry has lately focused much of its time on delivering the best titles around the holiday-shopping season and largely ignoring the rest of the year. In far too many cases, months go by without a high-quality title hitting store shelves. For most game publishers, November is the month they care most about because it’s the time when they can capitalize most effectively on the holiday-shopping season.

Perhaps I’ve become cynical as I’ve gotten older or I just trust game publishers a bit less than I used to, but I think it’s time for a change in the gaming business. As nice as it is to have so many great titles available in one month, wouldn’t it be better for us all if they were spread throughout the year? Gamers would have more time to dedicate to a single game, and the publishers could spread out some of their revenue to make up for bad quarters.

But alas, publishers are unfortunately ignoring my pleas. The gaming industry is officially commercial. And there’s nothing we can do about it other than sit back and enjoy a November of downright awesome gaming.


Why November Is 2012’s Best Month for Gaming is written by Don Reisinger & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Editorial: Apple vs. everyone

Editorial Apple vs everyone

It’s a big storm, moving slowly. A gigantic span of ferocious swirl meets a front of chilly resistance. The effect of that collision is amplified by powerful tidal influence. Upheavals and surges swamp the landscape. Many people are displaced; countless others stay with the familiar.

Also, in the real world, some nasty weather is happening. But I’m talking about the tech industry of the last five business days, which has aligned and concentrated its forces in a crystal-clear demonstration, if one were needed, that mobile is where the bets are placed and futures will be won and lost.

Apple is at the eye of the storm, where its devoted legions expect it, but no longer as a pioneer. Defending its territory rather than breaking new ground, the post-Jobs company did something its late and fabled leader scorned, split hairs to justify it, engaged in implicit combat with four competitors, ticked off some of its best customers and was squeezed by inexorable pressure of a quickly evolving industry.

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Editorial: Apple vs. everyone originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Oct 2012 16:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Switched On: Tablets and tradeoffs

DNP Switched On Tablets and tradeoffs

This week saw the debut of two ARM-powered tablets by old rivals. One eschews traditional desktop input methods; the other embraces them. One occupies the high end of pricing in its class; the other is competitive with the market leader. One had the engineering goal of fitting in one hand; the other comes with a kickstand for being set on a desk or table. But perhaps the biggest contrast between the iPad mini and the Surface RT approaches is how well they take advantage of the hardware and software momentum of their predecessors.

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Switched On: Tablets and tradeoffs originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 28 Oct 2012 17:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Editorial: Turning point for the tortoise and the hare

Editorial Turning point for the tortoise and the hare

That meteor shower was a bust. I’ll never get back the five minutes I spent waiting to be awed. Anyone similarly impatient will be in gratification heaven for the next week, as the biggest cosmic bodies in the tech cosmos streak across the sky with announcements, device releases, price shifts and earnings reports.

Tossing astronomy aside for its failure to bedazzle, I turn to astrology to illuminate the upcoming eventful days. From a This Week in Astronomy blog: “A Venus-Pluto-Uranus T-square will be testing relationships and finances. The Sun enters Scorpio and aspects every slower planet except Pluto, and there’s an intense Mars-Jupiter opposition.” I don’t understand most of that, but I know about opposition. That fits. The energy of opposition crackles in the ecosystem warfare waged this week by Apple, Microsoft and Google.

Switching now from inscrutable astrology to fables (because next to cosmic messaging I like simple allegories to explain life), we can see that the slow-but-steady tortoise is placing the most audacious bet.

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Editorial: Turning point for the tortoise and the hare originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Oct 2012 16:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Switched On: Sell the hardware, attract the apps

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

DNP Switched On Sell the hardware, attract the apps

Microsoft has finally revealed details on the pricing for the all-singing, all-dancing Surface RT. True to Steve Ballmer’s word, the Windows RT device is priced competitively with the iPad. It is, in fact, the same price as the entry-level, now not-so “new iPad” and with double the flash memory, an advantage that may change by the time the Surface ships.

The commercial shows off the device’s signature hardware features — the kickstand and touch keyboard cover — and plays up the “click” they make when they attach to the Surface, which is of course similar to the “click” made when an Apple Smart Cover connects to an iPad. And in a bit of irony for a product that is more focused on tapping than the mouse clicks of the desktop mouse, its campaign slogan is “click in.” (It also raises the question as to why people would be constantly attaching the sold-separately touch keyboard when it doubles as a cover, but it is a commercial after all.) While expensive relative to the price of the device, Microsoft’s keyboard covers represent an extension of one of Apple’s best-conceived iPad accessories (the Smart Cover) and far exceed one of Apple’s worst (the original iPad keyboard dock).

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Switched On: Sell the hardware, attract the apps originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 21 Oct 2012 17:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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This is the Modem World: It’s my movie

Each week Joshua Fruhlinger contributes This is the Modem World, a column dedicated to exploring the culture of consumer technology.

DNP This is the Modem World It's My Movie

“No worries, we can watch this movie on my iPad on the plane,” I announced with confidence.

“Oh really? Cool. Let’s do that!” she replied, proud of her little nerdy man.

Yup. I was cool. I was going to rip a DVD that we just bought to watch on my iPad on a long flight to Korea. How amazed would she be when that movie so easily pops up on the Retina display as we ease into complimentary wine and processed air for a good 13 hours!

And then I tried to actually complete the task of getting a movie from a DVD to an iPad.

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This is the Modem World: It’s my movie originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Oct 2012 19:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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