Hanshin Icreon HUWB-3000Kit connects your PC to TV sans wires

Not that we haven’t seen UWB-based options before that connect your PC to TV without any cabling in between, but we’ve yet to actually come across one that we can love wholeheartedly. Hanshin just might have the first, as its Icreon HUWB-3000Kit supports both video and audio transmissions. Setup is rather simple: simply plug the USB dongle into your laptop or desktop, and connect the transceiver box via HDMI to your HDTV. Utilizing an ultra-wideband connection, it’ll pipe audio and video wirelessly to your set, with support for 1080p resolutions to boot. There’s no Mac support just yet, and a price has yet to be disclosed — but hey, it’s coming, and that’s good enough. Er… we’ll just keep telling ourselves that.

Hanshin Icreon HUWB-3000Kit connects your PC to TV sans wires originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Apr 2010 09:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceWireless USB Blog  | Email this | Comments

SweetSpotter keeps your music coming at the right angle, regardless of flailing

For years now, home theater and / or entertainment rigs have been built so that your sofa, recliner or aged bar stool was right in the sweet spot when it came to audio distribution. In short, you built your system around your seating arrangement. With the introduction of Nintendo’s Wii, Sony’s PlayStation Move and Microsoft’s Project Natal, folks aren’t staying put in the same place as often, and that — friends — has created a problem in search of a solution. The fine gurus over at TU Dresden believe that they have the answer, and even if it fails miserably (highly doubtful, mind you), who could really harsh on a product called the SweetSpotter? The software is designed to work in conjunction with your webcam (or console camera, in theory), and as the sensor tracks your movement in real time, the code “adaptively adjusts the sweet spot of your stereo play back system to your current listening position.” In short, it results in “correct stereo phantom source localization independent of your listening position,” and frankly, it just might change your life. The code itself can be downloaded for free down in the source link (it’s open source, so pass it along while you’re at it), and if you end up creating a plug-in to use this in your favorite gaming scenario, be sure to drop us a line about it.

SweetSpotter keeps your music coming at the right angle, regardless of flailing originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 26 Mar 2010 00:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSweetSpotter  | Email this | Comments

Wal-Mart buying Vudu streaming movie service? (update: yes!)

Wal-Mart often finds itself on these pages not only for its deals but for the fair amount of comedy its stores provide us, but this next item could be big. According to The New York Times, the company has indeed agreed to purchase Vudu — giving it a leg up on digital distribution and helping to brace against a declining market for DVDs. Details are scarce, but apparently the two companies have been informing Hollywood studios and TV manufacturers about the plan all day — so an official announcement can’t be too far off. Let’s just hope this goes a little better than the Wal-Mart MP3 sales have, eh?

Update: It’s official, and the full press release is after the break. Walmart will be acquiring Vudu, and the deal is expected to close “within the next few weeks.” We are told that Vudu will “continue developing entertainment and information delivery solutions such as Vudu Apps,” but outside of that, few details (including a purchase price) are being made available.

Continue reading Wal-Mart buying Vudu streaming movie service? (update: yes!)

Wal-Mart buying Vudu streaming movie service? (update: yes!) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Feb 2010 17:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceThe New York Times  | Email this | Comments

Case Turns iPhone Into Universal Remote While Charging It

remote

You would think that turning the iPhone into a universal remote control would be easy, but it turns out it’s not: We’ve seen a couple of unimpressive attempts from developers. FastMac and Umee’s solution looks like it might work though.

Dubbed iV Plus, the gadget consists of an iPhone case with an integrated battery and a built-in infrared transmitter, which communicates with an app to control your home entertainment products. The idea is such: After a long day of work, you can plop down in front of the couch, pop your iPhone in the case and charge the handset while using it as a remote to control your TV, your stereo or whatever else is in your living room. And if you’re OK with carrying your iPhone around in a chunky case, there’s a bonus: It actually includes a LED flash for snapping photos.

Even more interesting is Umee’s design of the app. You can select remote control codes based on manufacturer and types of devices in your living room. From there on, you can actually customize the remote control buttons, adding or removing whatever ones you wish. So say for instance you only use five buttons on your Comcast cable box remote: the power, select, guide, page-up and page-down buttons, for example. You can delete all the junk and keep those buttons you actually use.

The iV Plus sounds promising, because past universal remote apps we’ve seen have failed to create an intuitive user interface to comfortably control your living room gadgets, rendering the product impractical.

We tried a demo of the iV Plus at Macworld Expo last week, and it was only working with television sets at the time. We’re looking forward to trying the iV Plus when a full version is available. Due for release in the second quarter of 2010, the case will cost $130 and the app will be free.

Compage page [FastMac]

See Also:

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com



Video: Ex-Presidents Spring To Life And Talk Tech With Us

Hear ye hear ye hear ye. George Washington and Abraham Lincoln have sprung from the pages of history, crossing time and space and the great beyond to talk to us about…gadgets?

Yes gadgets! For Presidents Day 2010 The Father of Our Country and the Great Emancipator tag team to discuss tech that would have made their lives easier in the 18th and 19th century.

Chopping down a cherry tree? Agony with a piddly hatchet but short work for G.W. and his Stihl MS 230 CE chainsaw. When Abe was looking for a non-messy way to succeed his beard from his face, he grabbed a Norelco Turbo Vacuum Beard Trimmer to suck up his errant clippings. Mary Todd was so pleased.

And speaking of domestic quarrels don’t get Martha Washington started on George’s poor oral hygiene. That’s why he’s reaching for the Sonicare FlexCare toothbrush. In addition to removing tooth rotting bacteria from your mouth, it also features a UV disinfectant system for the brush heads. And on the note of preserving one’s head, Mr. Lincoln is no longer taking chances when he visits the theater. His new tactical helmet sends a clear message to would be assassins. We’re looking at you John Wilkes “Better Luck Next Time.”

Wired videos are produced by Annaliza Savage with camerawork by Michael Lennon, editing by Fernando Cardoso, and animation courtesy of Simon Lutrin.

See Also:


IR Dongle Turns iPhone into Universal Remote

l5-iphone-remote-xl

There are a gazillion apps to turn your iPhone into a remote control, and let you operate your computer, your Sonos home music system or even your DirecTV DVR. The problem is, they work over Wi-Fi, whereas your TV, stereo and DVD-players all swallow up infra-red light in order to follow your distant commands.

That changes with the little $50 L5 iPhone Remote, a dongle that plugs into the dock connector and allows you iPhone to become a proper universal remote, spitting invisible light at all manner of home electronics. It comes with a free companion application that lets you program and assign the frequencies, and you can drag and drop the button icons around the screen until you’re happy with them.

The first version, which should be shipping soon, has a significant drawback in that you need to teach it the correct signals by pointing your remote, but downloadable, pre-programmed codes will be coming in the future. On this point, the FAQ entry is pretty funny:

In testing, users designed their UI and learned the signals in about 3.5 minutes. In the same amount of time, database users were still trying to read the model numbers off the backs of their A/V devices.

The other problem is cosmetic. The remote app is ugly. That may not worry you, as this will cheaply replace all your remotes with one single device, and it will apparently also work with the iPad. And the iPhone is much less likely to be lost down the back of the sofa.

L5 iPhone Remote [L5 via Uncrate]


Intel’s CE 3100 finally gets a shipping partner in Yuixx media player

Intel’s CE 3100 multimedia processor has been hanging out at trade floor shows for months upon months now, but at long last the slab has a partner product that’ll be shipping to general consumers. Conceptronics’ Yuixx HD media player has just reached the point in its life where shipment is imminent, and in speaking with the firm, we learned that’ll hit the streets of Amsterdam at the end of this month. The rest of Europe is expected to see it in February, while Americans will have to wait until it hits the FCC in March before getting any closer. Unlike some other set-top boxes on the market now, this one relies heavily on its own Widget Channel to bring web-based content to televisions, and pumping out 1080p material ain’t no thang for it. Head on past the break for the full release and a promo video, and look for a little hands-on action as the CES show floor opens.

Continue reading Intel’s CE 3100 finally gets a shipping partner in Yuixx media player

Intel’s CE 3100 finally gets a shipping partner in Yuixx media player originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Jan 2010 16:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Trade show shocker: Sling to out some new gear at CES

Okay, you’re not surprised that some companies are going to have new gear at CES, are you? Well, we”re hearing that Sling — a company that’s not had much news this year beyond the release of its iPhone app — will definitely unleash some new stuff in Las Vegas, including “WiFi television, ultra-slim Slingboxes, and a next-generation touch screen device.” Now, we don’t want to get everyone overly excited this early in the day, but those all definitely sound like upgrades to us. We really don’t know if Sling will let slip any more specific info between now and CES, but as you know, we’ll be In Vegas when it all goes down, so sit back and be patient. It won’t be long, now.

Trade show shocker: Sling to out some new gear at CES originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 21:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceZatz not Funny  | Email this | Comments

Why It’s Finally Time To Get a Home Theater PC

I hear a lot about those damned netbooks as hot buys this season, but Prof. Dealzmodo suggests getting something that’s actually, you know…useful. HTPCs baby. There has never been a better time:

I say that because HTPCs have never been smaller, cheaper or more powerful. A little over two years ago, we were talking about how purchasing an HD-capable PC would leave you with an empty bank account. Take this Sony Vaio TP1 for example. The wheel of cheese design was considered compact and “living room friendly” at the time, but it is still probably twice as big as current nettop models. The specs are lacking even by 2007 standards and it started at $1600. Today I can easily go out and find a more powerful, feature rich nettop for less than $400. And it would be small enough to tuck behind your HDTV due, in part, to cheap, compact, graphics-friendly chipsets like Nvidia Ion.

Today’s Most Affordable HTPCs

Seriously…HTPCs for less than $400. Sure, you could spend a lot of cash on something more elaborate, and will have to if you want to access your own digital cable stream, or if you want to go with Blu-ray as your high-def source of choice, but if you simply want a compact 1080p device that competently opens up the entire internet to your HDTV, here is a good place to start:

Dell Zino HD: The cheapest of the bunch at a base price of $230, the Dell Zino HD offers a range of AMD Athlon processor options, up to a 1TB HDD, up to 8GB of RAM and a choice between integrated graphics and an ATI Radeon HD 4330 512MB card. Plus you get HDMI, four USB ports, and two eSATA for easy expansion. Even with a few bells and whistles like a dual-core processor, a bump in RAM to 4GB or a boost in the HDD capacity, you can keep the Zino under $400. Adding a Blu-ray drive bumps the price up an additional $100. [Dell]

Acer AspireRevo R6310: Features include a dual-core 1.6GHz Atom 330 processor, Nvidia Ion graphics, 2GB RAM, 160GB HDD, HDMI, eSATA, VGA, 6 USB ports, card reader and wireless-N in a $330 package. They even throw in a wireless keyboard and mouse for good measure. I have spent some time with the AspireRevo, and I can say that it is a very capable HTPC for the money. Power web surfing can be sluggish at times, as is Flash playback—but Adobe has promised support for NVIDIA graphics acceleration in Flash 10.1 that should remedy that situation. All-in-all though, it handles video quite well. It does not include optical drive option, meaning you will have to purchase a Blu-ray player seperately. [Acer]

Asus EeeBox EB1012: A release date and price have not officially been confirmed, but the EeeBox EB1012 offers basically the exact same feature set as the AspireRevo—minus a USB port or two. Hopefully, when it is released, the price point will be even more aggressive than Acer’s. It does not include optical drive option, meaning you will have to purchase a Blu-ray player separately. [Asus]

As a side note, if you are interested in using a CableCard tuner to turn your PC into a cable DVR, that has become a lot easier for the average Joe. However, programs like Comcast’s upcoming Xfinity (formerly known as TV Everywhere) might easily bridge this gap by putting your current cable subscription online. Check out my article on living without cable or satellite to learn more about what programming and software is available to you online.

Remotes

None of the HTPCs mentioned above come with a remote control out of the box, but this can be easily and cheaply remedied. Most infrared remotes require only that you have a free USB port for the included adapter, so just about any PC with Windows Media Center can be converted to work with a remote.

If you are just looking for something basic, a remote like the MCE PC will do the job just fine—and it costs under $20. If you have an iPhone, you can also download apps like AirMouse (iTunes link) and MediaMote (iTunes link) to handle these tasks. Gmote is also available for those of you with Android phones.

Networking

Keep in mind that if your modem is far from your computer, and you’ll be relying on Wi-Fi to connect to the internet and move files between computers, you are probably going to want something capable of handling wireless-N (802.11n). Fortunately, all of the PCs mentioned above can do that right out of the box—although the Dell Zino requires a $45 upgrade for that option.

If you want to upgrade an older PC to handle wireless-N, all you need is a compatible router and a USB adapter. Decent wireless-N routers will run you about $60 on the lower end, and compatible USB adapters can be had for an additional $30 or $40 bucks. If you just plan on connecting to the internet and you live in a smaller home or apartment, you should be fine with 802.11g.

Networked Storage

Although not an essential component to owning an HTPC, at some point you are probably going to want a networked storage solution so you can dump all of your files in one place. Traditionally, setting up a home server to centrally store files from multiple computers (and multiple platforms, potentially) required another major investment, but things have definitely improved in this area. For example, HP’s LX195 Windows Home Server with a 640GB drive can be had for $250, and it performs quite well for the price. The same can be said for the Iomega Ix2-200 NAS. It runs on Iomega’s proprietary software as opposed to Windows Home Server, but for the money, it has a killer feature set that makes it a pretty awesome deal. Capacity runs up to 4TB, but the base delivers 1TB at $270 and it is user-expandable.

Even if you want to bake your own NAS server there is open-source software like FreeNAS that can help to keep the costs down. Maximum PC has provided a great guide to building a NAS server using these free open source tools. If you have the hardware lying around, it’s not going to cost a penny. Either way, building from scratch can be fairly inexpensive depending on how much storage space you need.

Avoid Expensive Set-Top Boxes

Amusingly enough, as I was writing this article, my father called to ask me about the Roku player his IT guy was raving about. Yes, Roku’s three models are priced between $80 and $130, a figure even the cheapest HTPCs can’t match, but the fact that they are still limited to Netflix and Amazon On Demand makes them less valuable. Would you say that Netflix and Amazon VOD are worth $130 of the AspireRevo’s $330 price tag? I should hope not.

There are certainly good reasons to pick up a $100 HD media streamer, like the Asus O!Play, if you’re aware of the limitations, but what’s the excuse for Apple TV and others like it? Apple’s set-top box costs $229. I have iTunes on my HTPC…so where is the value? Throw an HDMI port on a Mac Mini and then we’ll talk. The $300 Popcorn Hour player may play a ton of file formats and have an integrated BitTorrent client, but you have to pay extra to add a hard drive, and by the time you do, you’re squarely in HTPC territory.

To me, spending a little more actually saves money, because I don’t need to buy so many competing boxes. It’s like going to the grocery store and choosing between the regular-sized bag of coffee and the jumbo bag of coffee. The smaller bag costs lest money, but buying in bulk is cheaper pound for pound—and you know I will be drinking all of that coffee.

HTPCs Are Resilient

Forget about netbooks and elaborate set-top media boxes this holiday season. If your budget is anywhere over $300, go with an HTPC. Set-top boxes will always hold you to whatever content deals their makers can set in place (or whatever you can go through the trouble of hacking or modding in, yourself). And I’m not interested in netbooks until they handle HD well enough to be used as a portable HTPC.

It’s only a matter of time before everyone watches TV through the internet, so you had better get on the bandwagon while cable companies are still scrambling to figure out how best to screw you. No matter how weird it gets, at least with a PC you know you’ll be able to roll with it.

Dell’s Zino HD is a Candy-Colored Mac Mini Killer

inspiron-zino-hd-design1

Dell’s new Zino HD mini-computers look good enough to eat. And, even more important if you are the sole geek of the the house, good enough to put in the living room.

The Zino HD wants to sit by your TV, and is a full-on entertainment PC. As ever, it’s hard to get a handle on precisely what a Dell machine will actually do, as the configuration options are almost endless. Here instead, is a list of the options.

All of the 8” x 8” boxes run on some kind of AMD Athlon Dual-Core processor and offer a choice of Windows Vista, Windows 7 or Ubuntu Linux. You can stuff in up to a terabyte of hard drive space, 8GB RAM and opt for a rewritable DVD drive or Blu-ray.

But then the entertainment begins. The HD part comes from the HDMI-out port (we told you this wanted to live by your TV), there are two eSATA connectors for hooking up yet more storage and even a memory card reader for sucking up your photos without an unsightly adapter. And along with the usual computer ports (Ethernet jack, line-out and VGA) you get a full four USB ports, two of which are at the front for easy access.

If you cheap out on everything (and choose the black one), the Zino HD will cost just $230. Maxing out the hardware and OS takes you up to $808. Somewhere in the middle of that lies a computer that is arguably better suited to the living room than the previous champion, the Mac Mini. I’ll take mine in strawberry flavor.

Product page [Dell]

Store page [Dell]