Engadget Giveaway: win an Amped Wireless WiFi router, range extender and adapter!

Engadget Giveaway win an Amped Wireless WiFi router, range extender and adapter!

You want range? Amped Wireless has range. More than 10,000 square feet of it, in fact; last week the company announced the REA20, its latest and greatest range extender, and wants to give one away to a lucky reader. Of course, what’s a range extender without a router and adapter to go along with it? Amped’s got you covered with an RTA15, which comes with the same 802.11ac standard as well as four gigabit Ethernet ports and USB 2.0 slot, as well as an adapter to go along with it. Head to the widget below to enter, and good luck!

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Apple TV update brings apps for Disney, the Smithsonian, Vevo and The Weather Channel

Apple TV update brings Disney, Smithsonian, Vevo and Weather channel apps

Rumors that Apple was about to expand the Apple TV’s channel selection have just come true — the company has quietly rolled out apps for the Disney Channel, Disney XD, the Smithsonian, Vevo and The Weather Channel. The new portals deliver the on-demand video you’d expect from their respective services. There are live components, however: Vevo fans get non-stop music videos through Vevo TV, while The Weather Channel jumps to live broadcasts during major storms. Any locally supported channels should appear the next time you use your Apple TV, although you’ll need to be a qualifying cable or satellite subscriber to run the Disney apps.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: 9to5 Mac

Samsung’s 55-inch curved OLED hits Europe this week for 7999 euros

DNP Samsung's curved 55inch OLED hits Europe this week for 7999 euros

We guessed Samsung wouldn’t be far behind LG in terms of its curved OLED’s European debut, and we were right. Starting this Wednesday, if you’re in Germany, France, Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium or Italy you’ll be able to bring home a “flawless” screen for a mere €7,999 (around $10,697) — a full grand less than LG’s similarly-sized not-flat display. We’ve been wondering when we’d see the tech giants sparring again; thanks for not making us wait very long, Samsung.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: Samsung Tomorrow, Samsung (Korean)

Enblink turns any Google TV device into a home automation control center

Enblink turns any Google TV device into a home automation control center

Meet Enblink: a dongle that plugs into any Google TV device and turns it into a home automation control hub. Enblink works with any Z-Wave enabled gadget, from door locks and lamps to security sensors and video cameras. The dongle itself will serve as a Z-Wave radio (once it’s passed through the Z-Wave certification process) when plugged into your GTV device of choice. From there, its software runs atop GTV’s Android underpinnings and leverages the device’s CPU to control the locks and lights in your abode. A companion app for Android turns your phone into a remote control and monitor for appliances hooked into the Enblink system, plus there’s an iOS app currently in development. Input from mobile devices goes through Amazon Web Services, which relays commands to the dongle to execute your bidding from afar.

It’s up for pre-order right now for $85, with the price rising to $99 when it officially goes on sale sometime in the next month or two. Of course, if you’re streaming video to your mobile device, there’s an ongoing fee (of undetermined cost) for the privilege once you’ve used up your free allotment of 30 seconds of streaming per day. Regardless, by leveraging existing GTV hardware and AWS to do the lifting on the backend, Enblink is a fraction of the cost of many purpose-built home automation base stations. So if you’re a home automation geek that counts yourself among those very few with a Google TV and a slew of Z-Wave toasters, locks and light bulbs, your ship has, at long last, come in.

Update: We snagged some rendered screenshots of the TV and mobile UI, check ’em out after the break.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: Enblink

Sony reveals blue 250GB PS3 for $250, exclusive to GameStop

DNP Sony announces GameStopexclusive blue 250GB PS3 for $250, preorders open tomorrow

Sony is hoping that by now you either don’t already own a PlayStation 3, or direly need a game console to match your primary colored living room decor before November 15th. To that end, the tech giant is releasing the previously Japan-only “azurite blue” PS3 Superslim exclusively to GameStop. The console sports a 250GB hard drive, one matching DualShock 3 controller and a $249.99 price tag — kinda makes that $200 12GB model look a bit silly now, doesn’t it? Pre-orders open up tomorrow and you’ll be able to pick one up from your favorite GameStop or Canadian EB Games starting October 8th.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Via: Joystiq

Must See HDTV (August 26th – September 1st)

Must See HDTV August 26th  September 1st

As the NFL prepares for its debut in a couple of weeks, the college football season kicks off Thursday night with a number of interesting matchups planned. Syfy is dropping a pilot for another time travel show tonight called Rewind, while BBC America brings another Doctor Who-related special Saturday. Madden NFL 25 leads the videogame pack, while Blu-ray releases include The Walking Dead season three, Sons of Anarchy season five and Baz Luhrmann’s The Great Gatsby. Look after the break for our weekly listing of what to look out for in TV, Blu-ray and videogames.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Chromecast update breaks local media streaming in third-party apps (updated)

Meditate on Chromecast

We hope you aren’t depending on your Chromecast for local media playback. If you are, the device has just become a paperweight — temporarily, at least. Google’s most recent Chromecast update disables playback from external video sources, breaking third-party apps like AllCast and Fling that use the code for local-only streaming. Developer Leon Nicholls is hopeful that functionality will return when the official Cast SDK is ready for public apps, although we wouldn’t count on it. As Android Central notes, Google isn’t promising local media support on the Chromecast; for now, it’s focused on the cloud.

Update: In a statement mentioned by dnengel84 in the comments and posted by The Verge, Google says that it’s willing to support local content; these are “early days” for the SDK, and the feature set is likely to change. Read the full statement after the break.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Via: GigaOM

Source: Koushik Dutta (Google+), Leon Nicholls (Google+)

Gamescom 2013: a recap of the week’s news

It’s true — we already gave Gamescom 2013 a quick wrap up, but now that the sun has finally set on the show’s public days, it’s time to look back on the past week and sift through the madness. Upon closing the Koelnmesse’s doors, Gamescom announced the show’s final numbers: over the course of five days 340,000 visitors from from 88 countries marched across 140,000 square meters of exhibition space. That’s a 23 percent leap in attendance over the previous year, and it’s hardly a surprise: the event was host to over 400 world premier announcements and gave many attendees their first look at Microsoft and Sony’s next generation consoles. Combined with the more humble announcements that came out of GDC Europe, it turned out to be a pretty fantastic week for gaming. Read on for a breakdown of our time in Cologne, a look at the Gamescom 2013 show floor and a group chat between Joystiq and Engadget editors on the show’s biggest announcements.

Filed under: , , , , ,

Comments

Call of Duty: Ghosts head Mark Rubin on creating six different versions of the same game (video)

Call of Duty Ghosts head Mark Rubin on creating six different version of the same game

Call of Duty: Ghosts executive producer Mark Rubin has a lot on his plate. In just two months, he’s heading up the launch of one of the (if not the) biggest titles on two next-gen game consoles, not to mention the four other platforms it’s landing on. He’s got his team at Infinity Ward to manage, as well as the teams at several other studios that are assisting in the development process. And on top of all that, the two big next-gen versions of Call of Duty: Ghosts are headed to hardware that “literally just started showing up” at his company’s offices. Rubin explained as much to Engadget in an interview this past week at Gamescom 2013.

“Trying to design for something that you theoretically know about but don’t physically have is an amazing challenge,” he said. Beyond the stress and manpower required to produce so many versions of a single game, it’s expensive. “It’s required us to bring in a lot more resources than we had planned on in the beginning,” Rubin added. And that’s money that Infinity Ward’s parent company, Activision, won’t make up until the next year’s Call of Duty game, when the “transition” period between console generations crests and enough gamers move to new game systems.

Head past the break for the full extent of what that means for Ghosts and the Call of Duty franchise moving forward, and why Rubin’s “hopeful” for the rarely spoken about Wii U version.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

LG’s 55-inch curved OLED TV hits Germany for 8,999 euros this week

Following its availability at several Best Buy locations across the US, LG’s 55-inch curved OLED TV is finally making its way to Europe. The company today announced that it’ll arrive in Germany this week for 8,999 euros (roughly $12,000), with wider availability and pricing set to be announced in Q4. LG notes that it stands as the first to offer this type of kit in both the US and the EU, though, we’re sure Samsung won’t lag too far behind as usual. Full press release after the break.

Filed under: ,

Comments