Editor’s Letter: A not-so simple choice

In each issue of Distro, editor-in-chief Tim Stevens publishes a wrap-up of the week in news.

DNP Editor's Letter A notso simple choice

At a rather vitriolic (and frequently profane) presentation given to a small group of frequently bemused journalists (myself included), T-Mobile CEO John Legere laid out the company’s reinvention. In the interest of keeping things PG I won’t repeat the colorful language, but Legere accused the other major carriers of being not only confusing, but also misleading — ignoring the fact that his own company has, for years, enacted the very same policies. No more. It’s time for the UnCarrier to step up.

But, it’s important to note that you’ll be paying full price, or near to it, for your smartphone.

First is a series of contract-free Simple Choice plans, which are similar to those the company offered before. It’s $50 for “unlimited talk + text + web” — though the data use is indeed limited to 500MB. Stepping up to truly unlimited everything is $20 more, which is a fair bit cheaper than the biggest plans from competing carriers. But, it’s important to note that you’ll be paying full price, or near to it, for your smartphone.

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Editors Letter: Who cares for the UNcarrier?

DNP Editors Letter Who cares for the UNcarrier

It seems like a year ago already, but it’s been only a few days since we wrapped up our inaugural Engadget Expand event. If you weren’t able to join us in person, you missed a seriously good time. Attendees got to take a ride in a Tesla Model S, perform surgery using a da Vinci robotic surgery system and cruise around the show floor on the San Francisco Special edition of the electric ZBoard, which made its debut at the show.

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Editor’s Letter: Expand gets expanded

In each issue of Distro, editor-in-chief Tim Stevens publishes a wrap-up of the week in news.

Editor's Letter BlackBerry takes over

Another week gone by and another week closer to the unveiling of the next Android superphone: the Samsung Galaxy S IV. We’re days away from the event where it will debut to the world and, somewhat predictably, we’re starting to see some leaks of bits and pieces about the phone’s functionality — though nothing as concrete as showing the thing itself just yet.

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Editors Letter: Sir Galaxy the Fourth

In each issue of Distro, editor-in-chief Tim Stevens publishes a wrap-up of the week in news.

Editor's Letter BlackBerry takes over

After watching some of the life get sucked out of many of our favorite consumer electronics shows with major companies choosing to do their own thing in boutique events in fabulous cities around the world, we had our concerns about the 2013 iteration of Mobile World Congress. The HTC One got a showy New York City launch the week before the event and we already knew that Samsung was holding the Galaxy S IV until later. What’s left to see in MWC, then? As it turns out, a heck of a lot.

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Editor’s Letter: PlayStation next

In each issue of Distro, editor-in-chief Tim Stevens publishes a wrap-up of the week in news.

Editor's Letter BlackBerry takes over

We’re not even through February yet, but already we’re looking at a time where there are three major product unveilings in a single week! If anyone was wondering whether 2013 would see the private event trend continue, rest assured that we’ll be jetting all over the damned place even more this year than we did the last. Not that we’re complaining, mind you, especially when the events are prefaced by the kind of excitement that Sony built up ahead of its PlayStation 4 unveiling in New York City on Wednesday night.

As an unapologetic console gaming fiend, I was certainly looking forward to what Sony had to show. While I can’t say that when the lights came up I was totally fulfilled — the event was something of a big tease — I did leave feeling generally enthused that Sony is actually making gaming a priority. I had serious concerns the PS4 would be more of a holistic media consumption device, gaming existing as just one of many, many facets. Indeed that may yet prove to be true, but for now the story was all about game developers and the cool stuff they’re doing with the system. For that I am thankful.

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Editor’s Letter: Welcome back, gentlemen

In each issue of Distro, editor-in-chief Tim Stevens publishes a wrap-up of the week in news.

Editor's Letter BlackBerry takes over

It’s been a very, very good week for Engadget. On Wednesday, Aol announced it had purchased gdgt and, while we generally don’t pay much heed to the acquisitional whims of our parent company, this one we’re very, very excited about — and you should be too. Gdgt is the creation of Engadget founder Peter Rojas and former editor-in-chief (and current editor emeritus) Ryan Block. They founded gdgt as a product-focused site in 2008 and, over the ensuing years, transformed it into a comprehensive database of the world’s gadgetry, all that backed by an active community of people brought together by an innate love for the hottest in tech.

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Editor’s Letter: When the rubber hits the road

In each issue of Distro, editor-in-chief Tim Stevens publishes a wrap-up of the week in news.

Editor's Letter BlackBerry takes over

The time for talk and for analysis has come to a close. The BlackBerry company’s first phone hit the market in earnest and now we wait and see how the market reacts. According to BlackBerry itself, initial indications are just fine. While the company followed in the footsteps of Amazon and Microsoft and refused to give solid numbers (probably wisely), it did say that sales for the Canadian release were 50 percent stronger than any of the company’s previous launches there. In the UK things looked even better, with sales 300 percent greater than any previous BlackBerry release.

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Editor’s Letter: BlackBerry takes over

In each issue of Distro, editor-in-chief Tim Stevens publishes a wrap-up of the week in news.

Editor's Letter BlackBerry takes over

A new drinking game was invented this week by our editor Mark Hearn: every time you say “RIM” instead of “BlackBerry” you take a shot. As I don’t drink myself, I’ll take a pass on this particular pastime, but there were certainly plenty of opportunities to get tipsy this week, with the former Research in Motion finally rebranding itself as a corporate entity to BlackBerry. That was just one of the many announcements CEO Thorsten Heins made this week — and just one of the announcements I wish the company had made years ago.

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Editor’s Letter: Winners and losers

In each issue of Distro, editor-in-chief Tim Stevens publishes a wrap-up of the week in news.

Editor's Letter Winding Down

Earnings season comes but four times a year — give or take — and it’s upon us again. It’s in these mid-season times that we look back on three month’s worth of corporate performance and see whose executive strategies are up to snuff and whose, perhaps, need a little retooling.

In the former, happy list we can include Google, whose Q4 2012 earnings added up to $14.42 billion in revenues — excluding Motorola Home, which would have added another $800 million to the tally. Total profit is a healthy $2.89 billion. We can also happily throw Netflix in the winners group, with its Q4 earnings showing 2 million new US subscribers (for a global total of 33 million) and $8 million profit on $945 million in revenue.

On the losing side we have AMD, which is struggling to keep up with the transition to a post-PC era. Revenues were $1.16 billion, down almost a third from the year before, and resulting in a net loss of $473 million. Logitech too gets added to the losing pile, with revenues down 14 percent to $615 million and a $195 million net loss.

And then we have Apple. The company posted record revenues of $54.5 billion, resulting in a record profit of $13.08 billion, mostly thanks to shuffling an amazing 47.8 million iPhones and 22.9 million iPads into the hands of customers. That all sounds incomprehensibly good, but Mac sales were down nearly a quarter, hurt due in large part to the rather late refresh of the iMac. All in all, Apple failed to live up to analyst expectations and its stock price has been taking a beating — but that’s liable to change by the time you read this.

But, the biggest loser of all is Atari, which filed for bankruptcy protection this week. The brand itself has been sold and re-sold many times since the ’80s so it hardly packs the prestige it once did, but still it’s sad to see the name struggling on and having to sell off the rights to games like Pong and Tempest to survive.

But enough of that financial stuff, let’s talk gadgets.

But enough of that financial stuff, let’s talk gadgets. Microsoft confirmed sales of the Surface Pro will begin on February 9th, with a starting price of $899. This is the x86 version of the Surface tablet running full Windows 8 and starting with 64GB of storage. But, given how much of that will likely be consumed by the OS itself, you’ll probably want to spring for the $999 128GB model.

Sony’s Xperia Tablet Z got official, a 10.1-inch, 1,920 x 1,200 device powered by a 1.5GHz, quad-core Qualcomm processor paired with 2GB of RAM and 32GB of storage. Despite being only 6.9mm thick, it still offers microSD expansion. It weighs only 495g, making it the thinnest and lightest 10-incher on the market. Or, at least, it will be when it actually hits the market, whenever that is.

Nintendo President Satoru Iwata took to the internets to deliver an encouraging batch of news directly to fans, starting with a promised update to overall system speed of the Wii U, a welcome improvement to all those gamers who are short on patience — which, really, is all of them. The Wii U social network, Miiverse, is also getting a big enhancement, allowing for the creation of more granular groups on there, while also allowing far broader access thanks to a browser interface that will launch this year. Nintendo is also promising that a mobile app will launch sometime this year, which means you can get your fix of obscene stylus drawings wherever you may be.

Finally, we got what may be our first hint at how the next-generation PlayStation home console is coming together, courtesy of a leaked developer document handed to Kotaku. The console is reportedly codenamed “Orbis” and will offer an eight-core CPU and R10XX GPU, both from AMD. If these specs pan out, that’s an interesting development, as AMD also powers the Wii U and is rumored to be powering the next Xbox as well.

In this week’s Distro, we’re exploring the history of human-powered flight, from old-timey bits of bamboo and paper optimistically strapped onto the arms of a hopeful/foolish man, to the modern Sikorsky prize. Sarah Silbert reviews HP’s Envy x2 convertible while Brad Molen reviews the $50 Pantech Discover smartphone. Joshua Fruhlinger remembers the early days of instant delivery in Modem World, Ross Rubin tells us why Lenovo’s IdeaCentre Horizon is what Microsoft’s PixelSense (née Surface) should have been and Adafruit’s Limor Fried is gracious enough to sit down for Q&A. Now, thank you for being gracious enough to sit down and partake in this week’s Distro. I hope you enjoy.


Tim Stevens is Editor-in-chief of Engadget and Editorial Director for AOL Tech. You can find him on Twitter at @tim_stevens.

This piece originally appeared in Distro #75.

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Editor’s Letter: When graphing gets friendly

In each issue of Distro, editor-in-chief Tim Stevens publishes a wrap-up of the week in news.

Editor's Letter Winding Down

We’ve escaped Las Vegas. While a few of us were stricken by the CES Death Flu, and poor Danny Mak was rather more literally struck by a car whilst crossing Paradise Road, we got out of Sin City not much the worse for wear. Tired, sure, but alive — and that’s good, because we had to jump right into the fray again with big news out of the Zuckerberg camp this week.

At a private event in San Francisco, Mark Z himself introduced the world to something new from Facebook. No, it isn’t the dedicated Facebook Phone people have been talking about since long before HTC inserted a little blue button with an ‘f’ on it into the Status. Instead, we got the new Facebook Graph Search, something those with profiles on the service probably didn’t know they wanted — and, frankly, may not actually want.

Put simply, Graph Search is a way for users to query information about their connections on Facebook, but it goes deeper than that, letting you discover relations and behaviors shared between your friends — and presumably strangers too, if their privacy settings are suitably lenient. The key example given by project lead Lars Rasmussen was of moving to a new town and needing to find a dentist. By querying Graph Search, he can see which of his friends live in a given area and can go further by seeing which have mentioned liking (or hating) a dentist.

While it’s very limited at the moment, the concept could be extended into every aspect of your activities on the social network, including querying which of your friends have a birthday in June, which of your friends drive Subarus and which of your friends listened to Katy Perry last week. And, if there’s something you search for that Facebook can’t find internally, it’ll hand the query over to Bing.

The early phases of testing Graph Search will only be open to maybe a few thousand individuals — but a drop among the millions willfully shoveling the details of their lives to fuel Facebook’s furnace.

Disconcerting? Maybe a little, but we were assured at the event that all will be able to be fully controlled by privacy settings when the feature rolls out. That’ll take a while. The early phases of testing Graph Search will only be open to maybe a few thousand individuals — but a drop among the millions willfully shoveling the details of their lives to fuel Facebook’s furnace. When it’s your turn, make sure to get those privacy settings right, lest it be your secret craving for pop rock that’s discovered.

As we get closer to the January 30th launch of BlackBerry 10 we’ve been seeing more and more of the operating system and hardware it’ll be running upon. Over the past week we saw a very detailed video walkthrough of the Z10 handset, got pictures of a white version of that phone, confirmed Twitter and Google Talk integration and thumbed our way through a sales training document that indicates a massive 70,000 apps will be ready for download at launch. Mind, that’s about 10 percent of the number of apps available in the Play Store or iOS App Store by last count, but it’s a healthy start.

Google announced it’s going to start letting developers get time with Project Glass at the end of the month. At developer events ranging from January 28th to February 2nd, those who pre-registered at Google I/O last year (and who were willing to pay the $1,500 fee for early access) can sit in on two-day training courses on how to write apps that use the specs. We now know it’s a REST API for controlling the things, a simple interface that should make app development easy — but might also be a confining limitation for those who were hoping to take full control of all Project Glass has to offer.

We’ll be taking you briefly back to CES in this week’s Distro, taking a look at the battle for control of the second screen that is really coming to a head. We also have our Best in Show awards for the things that really stood out to us from the floor, plus a detailed explanation of just what Ultra HD is, and whether you need to start saving up for a new flat-panel TV. Ross Rubin talks about compromising for the greater good in Switched On, Joshua Fruhlinger politely requests that social networks stop trying to figure him out in Modem World and we’re going to show you what a wall of 3D printers looks like. Now, put your feet up and enjoy this week’s issue of Distro — and please excuse us while we try to catch up on some sleep.


Tim Stevens is Editor-in-chief of Engadget and Editorial Director for AOL Tech. You can find him on Twitter at @tim_stevens.

This piece originally appeared in Distro #74.

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