Zoom Q3 ears-on: it’s like ‘Stop Making Sense’ saw your YouTube lip sync video and liked it

What’s this blue monstrosity? A YouTube-happy concert bootlegger’s new best friend. The Zoom Q3 (which is distributed by Samson in the States) pairs a decent stereo mic and some in-depth audio controls with a regular crappy pocket video camera sensor — along with an oversized screen to make room for audio level meters. There are obviously limited situations where this is really necessary (there are plenty of much better dedicated mics for when you don’t need the VGA video to go along with it), and all your cutesy Flip mino-toting friends are going to laugh at you, but at least you’ll be able to crank up your recording to lossless and capture their cackles with eardrum shattering clarity. Check out a video of the Zoom Q3 shot with another Zoom Q3 after the break and decide for yourself if it’s worth the slightly premium $249 pricetag.

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Zoom Q3 ears-on: it’s like ‘Stop Making Sense’ saw your YouTube lip sync video and liked it originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Sep 2009 19:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MSI X600 hands-on: 15.6-inches on a slim plastic platter

There’s not really much to say about MSI’s X600 that can’t be said about the X340: both laptops slightly improve upon the (rather shoddy) build quality of the X320, but the X600 is just bigger, and packs a numeric keypad. The keyboard is really the definition of mushy, though it’s at least got a bit of a backbone underneath now, and the machine overall feels like it could snap in half at the slightest bit of misapplied pressure. We’re sure that’s an overstatement, and it’s hard to find this much computer in this thin of a form factor at this low of price, but you might want to save a few dollars for a new pair of kid gloves if you’re thinking of making the plunge.

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MSI X600 hands-on: 15.6-inches on a slim plastic platter originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Sep 2009 15:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung WB5000: hands-on with a 24x zoom featherweight

When not concerned with the futility of existence we know what has your mind preoccupied: just how manly is Samsung’s WB5000? With a 24x optical zoom, full manual control option, ISO 6400 sensitivity, and RAW format support it’s just gotta be a heaving mass of elongating gadget hedonism, right? Well, no… at least not physically. Granted, our nerdceps are tuned to negate the shutter recoil of Nikon’s beastly D300 DSLR. But the WB5000 feels surprisingly light, hollow even. Now the weight of a super-zoom camera, in general, has nothing to do with image quality. But the size to weight ratio was surprising nonetheless, and a stark reminder that the WB5000 is nothing more than a massive 26mm Schneider-KREUZNACH lens with compact-camera quality components inside its chunky posterior. We’ll reserve judgment until we, or someone else, can grab a unit for a full review. ‘Till then, you know where to find more pics.

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Samsung WB5000: hands-on with a 24x zoom featherweight originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Sep 2009 15:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG HS200 ‘pocket projector’ hands-on reveals an FM transmitter and embedded DivX surprise

Small, bright, and wireless: a potent trifecta of win for an ultra-portable projector. LG’s new HS200 DLP projector is here at IFA sourcing DivX video off local USB media and throwing the audio over its embedded FM transmitter. And because it’s LED-based, it racks up numbers like 200 ANSI-Lumens and 30,000 hours of operation before burn-out — that’s 4 hours of operation per day for oh, say, 20 years. The 80-inch, 800×600 pixel moving image that we saw was reasonably bright in a demo-room where ambient lighting was on par with a daytime living room, curtains closed. The viewing and listening experience was more than passable, enjoyable even, and far superior to what you’ll get from a pico projector. Jacks include HDMI, RGB / component, and composite with an expected price of €499 when it lands in Europe this month (coming to the US a few months later). See it for yourselves in the video after the break.

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LG HS200 ‘pocket projector’ hands-on reveals an FM transmitter and embedded DivX surprise originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Sep 2009 14:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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UMEC’s Android videophone and MID prototypes stray from the beaten path

We’ve seen plenty of odd Android permutations, but UMEC seems to be striving to do something all its own. It’s showing two devices it currently has in the works, one is a videophone / hub / DECT phone / etc. unit (pictured), which might be at home on a countertop, while the other is a brightly hued MID, with similar internal specs but more portable aims. Both are running ARM Cortex A8 processors (like the iPhone 3GS), though there’s some significant OS optimization to be done: everything was incredibly sluggish on the videophone, and the MID was locked up at the time we dropped by. UMEC also doesn’t have the touchscreen drivers working for either device, though the good news is that they’re looking at both capacitive and resistive touchscreens, based on what the reseller that picks these up desires. Luckily, the videophone has USB plugs galore (along with plenty of Ethernet jacks) so we were able to get a quick demo of the device using a mouse and keyboard. The MID also has a full-size USB plug, and both devices sport HDMI out, so the end usage for both of these is really up in the air. Check ’em out on video after the break.

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UMEC’s Android videophone and MID prototypes stray from the beaten path originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Sep 2009 14:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung’s LED TV Couple packs a 7-inch tablet remote for streaming TV and so much more

Without much fanfare, Samsung has released a TV / tablet combo in Korea that seems to deliver on all the untapped promise in Toshiba’s JournE touch tablet. Dubbed the LED TV Couple, Samsung has paired a 55-inch LED baclkit LCD TV with a brand new 7-inch touchscreen tablet, which communicates with and controls a full home theater over 802.11n WiFi. The tablet offers a visual program guide, including video previews of TV shows, along with access to media stored on a PC — which can in turn be “tossed” up to the full TV — and even a few widgets. But the real money is in the pair’s ability to stream live TV and Blu-ray content from the home theater to the tablet, making that next trip to the kitchen for munchies so much less painful. No word on a US or Europe release, but we hope to see a lot more of this pair in the near future. Peep them in action after the break.

Continue reading Samsung’s LED TV Couple packs a 7-inch tablet remote for streaming TV and so much more

Samsung’s LED TV Couple packs a 7-inch tablet remote for streaming TV and so much more originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Sep 2009 11:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung’s NX camera due for late 2009 or early 2010, uses proprietary lens system

Samsung has teased us like this before, stuffing the NX body under glass at tradeshows, letting it sit there being all DSLR-ey, but more details are beginning to trickle out about the camera here at IFA. As reported by PhotographyBLOG and confirmed to us on the show floor by Samsung, the camera is due to be launched by the end of the year or early next year. Like has been said before, the camera has an interchangeable lens systems, but Samsung also informed us specifically that the lenses will not be interoperable with other camera systems. In a way it makes sense, because the camera is much larger than a micro four thirds camera, but different in build than a regular DSLR — though it houses a regular APS-C sensor. Still, it’s a hassle, and we’ll have to see if the blend of electronic viewfinder and regular-sized sensor offer a compelling enough alternative to embark upon a whole new lens system adventure.

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Samsung’s NX camera due for late 2009 or early 2010, uses proprietary lens system originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Sep 2009 09:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Fujitsu Esprimo Q1500: Core 2 Duo and Blu-ray in a laughably small form factor

My my, we’ve seen heatsinks bigger than this latest Esprimo Mini PC from Fujitsu. The Q1500 might look like your run-of-the-mill underpowered nettop, but its makers have successfully crammed a mobile Core 2 Duo CPU and a slot-loading Blu-ray drive inside to make one hell of an appealing little goer. 4GB of memory and a 320GB hard drive fill out the generous spec, and yes, there’s a HDMI out as well. Basically, you’re looking at a Timeline laptop adapted to the desktop, which would also suggest that the unknown Intel CPUs are of the CULV variety. Of course, all that grunt won’t come cheap and the base Core 2 Solo, DVD drive-packing option will start prices off at €699 ($998) when these hit Germany later this month.

[Via Slippery Brick]

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Fujitsu Esprimo Q1500: Core 2 Duo and Blu-ray in a laughably small form factor originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Sep 2009 01:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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FujiFilm Real 3D camera given a video hands-on by fake 3D journalists

The first thing you notice about FujiFilm’s €499 Real 3D W1 camera is its size. It’s big — big in the way that bloggers see main stream media journalists as big. And the industrial design is straight-up Cold War. Still, it delivers 3D without special glasses and does so with surprisingly realistic detail — it really does work. Yeah, you have to position yourself oh so carefully just in front of FujiFilm’s €349 FinePix 3D Viewer or printed photos courtesy of a FujiFilm web service, but the novelty might be worthwhile for those with money to burn. It begins shipping to Europe and likely beyond in late September. Check the video demonstration from IFA and let Germania wash over you.

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FujiFilm Real 3D camera given a video hands-on by fake 3D journalists originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 05 Sep 2009 15:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony hedges on plans for PS3 update to enable 3D gaming on old titles

It’s not a straight up rebuttal, but apparently Sony corporate is singing a different tune than what we heard from a Sony rep on the floor of IFA (multiple times) the other day: that all existing PS3 games would be playable in 3D after the software update next year. According to Sony, it’s “conducting a technological investigation” as to the possibility of this, but claims there’s “no plan for the market launch of this at this time.” It makes sense that many titles — especially ones designed with widely divergent game engines — would be incompatible with a simple software update, but details are slim on how Sony is adding this function to its own games in the first place, so we’ll have to wait to find out more. We do know the PS3 is going 3D in 2010, but as for available titles it looks like we’re going to be in the dark for the time being — though Ubisoft’s upcoming Avatar game, along with a couple of Sony racing titles, are already shoe-ins for 3D presentation of some form.

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Sony hedges on plans for PS3 update to enable 3D gaming on old titles originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 05 Sep 2009 14:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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