ASUS Transformer Pad Infinity TF700KL coming to Germany, that’s L for LTE

ASUS Transformer Pad Infinity TF700KL coming to Germany, that's L for LTE

If you’ve ever had the pleasure of cruising on Germany’s Autobahns, you’ll know the locals like to go fast. This hold true for technology too, it seems. A recent press release from Vodafone has revealed that the LTE variant of the TF700 Transformer Pad will be joining its equally 4G-enabled sibling in the land of beer and wurst. No word on whether it’ll be showing up on other networks just yet, but if you want a slice of the action you’ll have to open up the throttle wallet to the tune of €820 (about $1,000 sans commitment,) or €170 ($210) is you’re willing to sign on the dotted line.

Continue reading ASUS Transformer Pad Infinity TF700KL coming to Germany, that’s L for LTE

Filed under:

ASUS Transformer Pad Infinity TF700KL coming to Germany, that’s L for LTE originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 25 Aug 2012 07:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Notebook Italia  |   | Email this | Comments

Gamescom 2012 wrap-up

Gamescom 2012 wrapup

Cologne, city of cathedrals, chocolate museums and — at least for the last week — a little bit of cosplay. While Gamescom largely concentrated on the latest titles coming in the next year, there was still plenty to see for gadget obsessives — especially when it came to PC mice and keyboards. Sony also had a few tricks up its sleeve at its press event before Gamescom had even begun in earnest. After the break, gorge on all the gaming hardware of note, in case you missed it on the first round. Tschüss!

Gallery: Gamescom 2012

Continue reading Gamescom 2012 wrap-up

Filed under: ,

Gamescom 2012 wrap-up originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Aug 2012 10:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

We’re live from Gamescom 2012, in Cologne, Germany!

DNP We're live from Gamescom 2012, in Cologne, Germany!

Europe’s premier gaming event starts today. In fact, Sony got the party started a little early, with its own press preview last night. The PlayStation maker is the only one of the Big Three to offer up a show here, but that shouldn’t mean there’s nothing else to see — this is the place for game devs and manufacturers to make an impression on Europe’s tastemakers and games journalists. If you’re in the area, the show even opens up to Joe Public later this week. But if the Rhine seems a little too far away, there’s nothing to worry about, we’ll be bringing all the notable hardware additions — just point your browser to our Gamescom 2012 tag. Our sister site, Joystiq, is also out in force im Deutschland, so check the More Coverage link for their take on what Gamescom’s got to offer.

Filed under:

We’re live from Gamescom 2012, in Cologne, Germany! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Aug 2012 05:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Doodle friday: End your week with a penalty shootout

Doodle friday: End your week with a penalty shootout

Relive the nail-biting insanity and inherent unfairness of soccer’s penalty shootout over at Google right now, as you try to match our first-attempt score of 18 points and two gold stars. (We’ll update this post as soon as an Engadget editor gets a result we can be proud of.) It’s a ballistic way to end a run of Doodles that has already involved canoeing, hoops, hurdles and all-round Olympic work avoidance. Post your scores here at your own risk.

Update: Did we say 18? We meant 81, but forgot to take a grab, so officially we’ll have to make do with a top score of 34.

Continue reading Doodle friday: End your week with a penalty shootout

Filed under:

Doodle friday: End your week with a penalty shootout originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Aug 2012 04:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGoogle  | Email this | Comments

Gartner reports Western Europe desktop shipments down, portable PCs up in Q2 2012

Gartner reports Western Europe desktop shipments down, portable PCs up in Q2 2012

When it comes to technology and the end of a financial quarter, you can bet your wage there’ll be an analyst report or two letting you what’s what. And according to Gartner’s latest estimates for Western Europe, PCs didn’t fare too well in Q2 of this year, with a 2.4 percent decrease in shipments compared with the same period in 2011. Consignments of mobile PCs (read: not tablets) grew by 4 percent, while desktops floundered, dropping 12.8 percent. Of this, a minor growth of 0.4 percent was recorded in consumer PCs, while the professional market decreased by 5.3 percent. Among the big hitters, HP remained at the top of the pile despite losing some market share, and Acer remained in second position with a mild increase in the same. ASUS put in a healthy performance, moving the company up to bronze medal position, while Dell dropped off the podium to fourth. The vendor statistics for the whole region were echoed in France in Germany, but during the quarter Apple managed to break into the top five in the UK market. Meike Escherich, principal analyst at Gartner, attributes the overall performance to economic uncertainty in the region, as well as lackluster demand in the wait for Windows 8 machines. We don’t want to spoil all the fun, so a comprehensive breakdown of the numbers awaits you at the source link.

Filed under: ,

Gartner reports Western Europe desktop shipments down, portable PCs up in Q2 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Aug 2012 14:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TechCrunch  |  sourceGartner  | Email this | Comments

ASUS Transformer Pad TF300TL coming to Germany and Austria with LTE in tow

ASUS Transformer Pad TF300TL

Our thoughts on the Transformer Pad TF300 were mostly positive when we reviewed it back in April. A lot has happened since then and, while its unlikely to still be at the top of our 10-inch heap, a helping of LTE will go a long way towards keeping it relevant. The TF300TL (as the 4G variant is called) sneaked through the FCC in late May, but we’re only now getting word about availability. According to a German press release snagged by TechFokus, the slate should be available in mid August for €629 ($776) with keyboard dock or €529 ($653) without. Sadly, there’s still no word on availability outside of German and Austria, but if you’re on O2 in one of those nations you should be able to pick up the tablet soon and enjoy its embarrassment of 4G riches.

Filed under:

ASUS Transformer Pad TF300TL coming to Germany and Austria with LTE in tow originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Aug 2012 09:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Verge  |  sourceTechFokus  | Email this | Comments

Akamai: peak internet speeds jumped 25 percent year-to-year in Q1, Germany tops the mobile world

Akamai peak internet speeds jumped 25 percent year-to-year in Q1, Germany tops the mobile world

If you thought world internet access speeds were facing a large-scale slowdown, you can stop fretting for now. Data from Akamai suggests that average speeds were just 2.6Mbps, but that was a healthy 14 percent improvement over the fall and a noticeable 25 percent better than early 2011. Average peak internet connection speeds surged just as much in the first quarter of this year: at 13.5Mbps, the average maximum was a 10 percent season-to-season boost and that same 25 percent versus a year before. The leaders remain Asian territories with that ideal mix of dense populations and high technology, culminating in Hong Kong’s blazing 49.3Mbps typical downlink. Akamai attributes much of the growth in peak speeds to an explosion in “high broadband” connections, where 10Mbps is the minimum — countries like Denmark, Finland, South Korea, Switzerland and the US roughly doubled their adoption of extra-fast access in the past year.

Before cheering too loudly, we’d point out that mobile speeds are still trudging along despite HSPA+ and LTE making their presences felt. The most consistent speed came from an unnamed German carrier, which neared 6Mbps; the best regular American rate was 2.5Mbps, which underscores how far even some of the most developed countries have to go. There’s also a clear gap in regular landline broadband quality if we go by the US’ own National Broadband Plan standards. Just 60 percent of US broadband is over the 4Mbps mark, putting the US at 14th in the global ranks. We’re hoping that projects like Google Fiber can raise expectations for everyone, but you can hit the source shortly to get Akamai’s full study.

Filed under: , ,

Akamai: peak internet speeds jumped 25 percent year-to-year in Q1, Germany tops the mobile world originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Aug 2012 00:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAkamai  | Email this | Comments

Microsoft vs. Motorola decision sees Droids banned in Germany over FAT patent (updated)

The latest development in our neverending saga of worldwide patent warfare is a decision by a Mannheim judge banning Motorola’s Android devices on the basis that they violate a FAT storage patent owned by Microsoft. FOSSPatents’ Florian Mueller tweets that it is the third victory by Microsoft over Motorola, and Microsoft has already issued a triumphant statement of victory which you can read after the break. There’s more details about patent EP0618540 on the site — it deals with common name space for long and short file names — including a note about an email from Linux creator Linus Torvalds being cited as prior art. Motorola has been swinging its own patents around as well, but most recently a case to ban the Xbox 360 was delayed. We haven’t heard from Motorola or Google on this ruling yet or what their response will be — entering into a licensing agreement or changing the storage system used on their phones are possible options. Microsoft will have to put up a 10 million euro bond to enforce an injunction if it chooses, we’ll check back once the other shoe drops.

Update: We’ve just received Motorola’s response — brief but to the point:We are in process of reviewing the ruling, and will explore our options including appeal. We don’t anticipate an impact on our operations at this time.”

Continue reading Microsoft vs. Motorola decision sees Droids banned in Germany over FAT patent (updated)

Filed under:

Microsoft vs. Motorola decision sees Droids banned in Germany over FAT patent (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Jul 2012 04:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  source@FOSSpatents (Twitter), FOSS Patents  | Email this | Comments

Apple denied Galaxy Nexus and Tab ban in Germany

Apple denied Galaxy Nexus and Tab ban in Germany

Samsung is having slightly better luck in Munich than it is here the US in its ongoing legal battle with Apple. The high court upheld a previous ruling that Cupertino’s patent relating to “list scrolling and document translation, scaling, and rotation on a touch-screen display” was invalid. The end result is that the Galaxy Tab 10.1N and Galaxy Nexus will stay on shelves in Germany, while Apple undoubtedly looks for a new avenue of attack against its primary competitor (one we presume will also be of the legal variety). The decision to deny an injunction against the 10.1N comes only two days after the same device passed a similar challenge in Dusseldorf, where the cosmetic design was the focus. Samsung was obviously pleased with the result, saying that it confirmed the company’s position that its Android products did not infringe on Apple’s IP. Cupertino, on the other hand, remained predictably silent. Of course, this war is far from over, and it’s only a matter of time before a new ruling hands one of the two manufacturers another small victory.

Filed under: ,

Apple denied Galaxy Nexus and Tab ban in Germany originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Jul 2012 17:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceMacWorld  | Email this | Comments

This Old Mill Hides a Beautiful Secret Stash of Alcohol [Video]

This old mill in Eigeltingen, Germany isn’t just a relic of an ancient past, it’s actually a fully functional distillery. Seriously. You might not believe it but behind those doors hides a beautiful stash of alcohol More »