RIM shows off BlackBerry 6 on video

While RIM’s WES 2010 keynote is still ongoing, the company’s YouTube channel has kindly released the first teaser video for the incoming BlackBerry 6 operating system. There’s a lot of movement on screen — so much, in fact, that it’s almost like RIM really doesn’t want you to see the OS at all. We did catch sight of a Cover Flow-aping music organizer, an onscreen keyboard engaging in some threaded messaging, Facebook and Twitter clients, and even the briefest of glimpses at that famed WebKit-based browser. Interaction in the video is done via touch, but you’ll naturally be able to utilize the new interface on more conventional, touch-less devices as well. Skip past the break for the moving pictures.

Continue reading RIM shows off BlackBerry 6 on video

RIM shows off BlackBerry 6 on video originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 09:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Facebook’s Privacy Changes Get Scary [Humor]

Facebook’s long had some privacy issues, and now that they’re broadening their reach on the web, who knows what’ll happen next? Oh, right. We do: More »

iPhone OS 4 reveals its social side: Facebook integration?

Users of webOS and HTC Sense can skip ahead, you’re already familiar with tight social networking integration on your handsets. Now Apple appears ready to join the social, so to speak. New evidence of low-level Facebook event and contacts integration has been revealed in iPhone OS 4 hinting at the possibility of unified Calendar and Contacts apps from Apple when the OS launches this summer on, um, this device. Web site Website Gunning for Safety says that Apple appears to have created a “separate type of contact” just for Facebook. On its own, the claim is suspect if only because the site’s focus is related to nail gun safety. But we’ve grabbed copies of the associated .plist files from a jailbroken iPhone running OS 4 that seemingly back the claim. There’s even mention of a generic “SocialKitInternal.framework” opening the door for integration with services like Twitter — though we found no evidence for that. All this aligns nicely with a “Linked Contacts” feature discovered by AppleInsider last week. According to AI, multiple Linked Contacts can be associated to a single entry in the new iPhone OS 4 Contacts app. See some of the .plist evidence in the gallery below.

iPhone OS 4 reveals its social side: Facebook integration? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Apr 2010 08:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony PlayTV getting Facebook, still no love for stateside PS3 owners

Sony PlayTV, the digital TV tuner / DVR for PS3 that is still painfully unavailable in the United States, is getting “great new features,” according to the PlayStation Blog. What does that mean for you? Well, if you’re in England (as well as the rest of the UK, wiseguy), Australia, Ireland, New Zealand, or the UAE, it means Facebook integration! What else does it mean? “Other great enhancements,” the likes of which the company refuses to divulge at this point. That said, it looks like we’ll know “later this year,” at least according to James Thorpe, PlayStation Network Product Manager. We’ll keep you posted.

Sony PlayTV getting Facebook, still no love for stateside PS3 owners originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Apr 2010 10:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPad apps: Twitter and social networking essentials

As you might’ve notice, either here on the site or likely elsewhere on the internet, we at Engadget have somewhat of an affinity to social networking. With a new screen sitting here saving us some screen real estate, we decided to give a number of Twitter and other pro-social apps a go for perennially staying connected to our online friends — so long as there’s a decent WiFi connection nearby. Here’s the highlights from what we’ve toyed with, and stay tuned for even more roundups on the horizon.

Twitterific for iPad (free; $4.99 for Pro account) – Definitely the best Twitter app on the iPad so far (pictured above). It works great in portrait and landscape, contextual links conveniently pop out and photos even get special format treatment. No option to upload photos when tweeting, but we’re guessing with a lack of a camera, it didn’t seem as necessary an addition — we like to show off our screen captures and saved browsing images, but hey, that’s just us. The only deterrent for power users is that you can only view one column at a time, but with lists, saved searches, and all other thread options easily accessible from the leftmost column, we didn’t find it too inconvenient whatsoever. [See in iTunes]

Continue reading iPad apps: Twitter and social networking essentials

iPad apps: Twitter and social networking essentials originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 04 Apr 2010 22:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba Intros Line of Connected LED TVs

Toshiba55UX600U.jpg

Ditch that clunky box connected to your set and get your streaming media directly through the TV itself. Toshiba has introduced the UX600 series of LED TVs, which all offer Wi-Fi connections. The line includes 40-, 46-, and 55-inch sizes ($1,399, $1,699, and $2,499 respectively).

Built-in applications include Vudu, Pandora, Facebook, and Twitter. You can also access Flickr, YouTube, and Picasa and stay informed with New York Times, AP, National Weather, and other news sources. The TVs let you create a customizable ticker on the bottom of your screen to stay current with Twitter, news, weather, or stocks no matter what you’re watching. That’s a great list, but it would sound a lot better if Netflix was on it. What exactly has kept the Toshiba execs to busy that they didn’t notice the most successful movie streaming service around? Add it, Toshiba, and throw in Slacker while you’re at it.

The UX600 TVs offer 3M:1 dynamic contrast, a CrystalCoat high contrast screen coating, and AutoView to create the optimal picture in any lighting condition. All three models will be available this month.

Memory [Forever] [Memory Forever]

You have more of your memories stored online than all of your ancestors ever left behind. The future of memory is already here.

When I take picture of a really delicious chocolate bread pudding that I’m about to eat, I might upload it to share with tens, or thousands, of people. That photo, the memory of that pudding, exists in my brain, on my phone, on my computer (and its backup), on servers owned by Flickr, Facebook, Twitter, Google, Tumblr and Apple. And inside of the minds of everybody cursing me for showing them that, until they forget. We don’t just have more (and more vivid) digital scraps of memory, they’re scattered all over the world like nuclear fallout, where they’re able to experienced by more people than ever. I didn’t go to your party, but I saw 156 pictures of it on Facebook.

The first hard disk drive for personal computers was the ST-506, by Seagate. A 5.25-inch disk, it held 5 megabytes of data and cost $1500 in 1980. Today, a 2-terabyte 3.5-inch Seagate Barracuda hard drive costs $180. That’s roughly 400,000x the storage for 1/8th the price. Although the brain and drives store data totally differently, some experts say the human brain holds between 10 and 100 terabytes. Think about it: We’re now using the same unit of measurement to talk about how much data a hard drive can store that we use for our brains.

The quantity and the quality of data, our digital memories, is exploding: A RAW photo from a Canon 5D Mark II digital SLR consumes roughly 20 megabytes, or 4x the data that the original Seagate drive could hold. It’s nearly 7x the size of the 2.7-megapixel photos taken by Nikon’s D1—introduced in 1999, it was the first digital camera that really started replacing film cameras at newspapers. Cellphones shoot photos 4x that large, and record high definition video now. Wilson has 40,000 photos, divided evenly between his cats and his child, in his iPhoto library. Giz’s Adam Frucci has 120 gigabytes of music, half of which you’ve never heard of, on his computer. And the memories we record today, using millions of pixels, billions of bits, will seem just as grainy as the black-and-white photos our grandparents took when they were my age, compared to what’s next.

My leaky brain will probably forget all about seeing your girlfriend spewing all over your sofa, watching a stray roman candle fireball shoot past my friend’s head after ricocheting off a log, and my yummy chocolate bread pudding, until I see them again, years later, the bits perfectly intact. Well, if they survive, anyway, and my computer’s still able to decode the format they’re stored in, rendering them into pictures and videos. A dead format, a defunct service, takes any memories it encodes with it. And if it’s still around, it’ll just be one drop in a pool of a million. Oh, and what happens to all of that when I die and my brain becomes worm poop?

We live in a world where a memory, encoded in bits, flowing in a million directions, can live forever. Maybe that means we’ll live forever. That’s what we want to consider this week. Also, in a sea of 1,000,000 other photos, how am I going to find my chocolate bread pudding again?

Memory [Forever] is our week-long consideration of what it really means when our memories, encoded in bits, flow in a million directions, and might truly live forever.

InstantAction streams full games to any web browser, gives indie developers a business model (video)

Look out, OnLive — you’ve got company. InstantAction is having their coming out party at GDC, and we stopped by for a lengthy chat about the technology, its future and the hopes / dreams of the company. Put simply (or as simply as possible), IA has developed a browser-based plug-in that allows full games to be played on any web browser so long as said browser is on a machine capable of handling the game. In other words, you’ll still need a beast of a machine to play games like Crysis, but the fact that you can play them on a web browser opens up a new world of possibilities for casual gamers and independent developers. You’ll also be notified before your download starts if your machine and / or OS can handle things, with recommendations given on what it would take to make your system capable.

Oh, and speaking of operating systems — games will only be played back if they’re supported on a given OS, so you won’t be able to play a Windows only title within a browser on OS X or Linux. Rather than taking the typical streaming approach, these guys are highlighting “chunking.” In essence, a fraction of the game’s total file size has to be downloaded locally onto your machine, and once that occurs, you can begin playing. As an example, we were playing The Secret of Monkey Island: Special Edition — which is the sole title announced for the platform so far, though Assassin’s Creed was demoed — within minutes, and since you’re curious, that’s a 2.5GB game, and we were on a connection that wasn’t much faster than a typical broadband line.

More after the break…

Continue reading InstantAction streams full games to any web browser, gives indie developers a business model (video)

InstantAction streams full games to any web browser, gives indie developers a business model (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Mar 2010 07:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Facebook for webOS gets a much-needed, and much-appreciated, 1.1.0 update

After a disappointing initial effort, Palm has unleashed version 1.1.0 of its webOS Facebook app. Currently only available via the update function but not the standard App Catalog, users will find new and improved access to their inbox, all their friends’ photo albums, profiles, direct photo uploading, friend search and a list view for upcoming events and birthdays. The first thing we noticed was the initial news feed now matches the notification preferences set on the standard webpage stopping the inevitable flood of Farmville updates we blocked so long ago. Features still missing include chat, video and the ability to respond to friend requests but with a distinctly faster and tighter experience, it’s certainly surpassed the mobile webpage as the best way to access Facebook on the Pre. Can’t reach the update button right now? Check our gallery for a few more images or this video demo from PreCentral embedded after the break.

[Thanks, @Isaac]

Continue reading Facebook for webOS gets a much-needed, and much-appreciated, 1.1.0 update

Facebook for webOS gets a much-needed, and much-appreciated, 1.1.0 update originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Mar 2010 21:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Facebook app now available for Zune HD (update: it’s also broken)

You’ve been up nights, we know, and now Microsoft has finally ended your torment: the long-promised Facebook application is now available for download to the Zune HD. Go wild, but not too wild, alright everybody?

Update: So we just got a chance to download and play with the app a little — and just like the Twitter app, things don’t seem to be quite fully baked at launch. We couldn’t get anything of the tabs to load apart from our personal photos, and there wasn’t any confirmation when we sent in a Zune music status update — although it did show up on Facebook, so it obviously worked. The photo viewer lets you leave comments, but you can’t pinch-to-zoom — or zoom at all, actually. We’re sure Zune HD owners will be happy — it’s free, after all — but we’re going to assume Microsoft and Facebook have something far better planned for Windows Phone 7 Series.

Update 2: It’s not just us — the official Zune Twitter account confirms that the Facebook app is “experiencing some issues accessing data.” We’ll let you kow if we hear anything else.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Facebook app now available for Zune HD (update: it’s also broken) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Mar 2010 22:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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