Vudu brings HDX 1080p streaming and downloadable movies to PCs

Vudu brings HDX 1080p streaming, downloadable movies to PCs

While HDX video has been a trademark for the Vudu service for years, when it launched streaming and Vudu-to-go downloads for PCs last year, they were limited to standard definition. That’s been corrected recently, as the service is now offering 1080p or 720p HDX video via the web. What you still won’t get on the PC unfortunately is higher quality sound as it’s still limited to stereo audio for now, and in our tests we weren’t able to access the Flash streams on a phone or tablet. Just log into the website and you should be able to try it out for yourself, however you will need adequate internet speed and an HDCP-compliant display — check out the details at the link below.

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Vudu brings HDX 1080p streaming and downloadable movies to PCs originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Nov 2012 22:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Most Grotesque Fanless CPU Cooler I’ve Ever Seen

Official description: “The Zalman CNPS FX100-Cube is fanless and noiseless CPU cooler, which does not draw dust or generate vibration due to its passive operation.” Unofficial description: LOOK AT THIS FREAKING MONSTER HEATSINK! More »

Dell Q3 2013 earnings show deep year-over-year dip

It’s time for Dell to let it be known what their fiscal results are for their third quarter of 2013, and it’s not looking very fantastic. With comparisons galore to the same period of time last year, Dell is anywhere in-between doing slightly worse and getting cut in half – and it all starts with a number that, if you didn’t know better, would look positively fantastic: $13.7 billion in revenue.

This number comes in with a net income for Dell dropping 47% year-over-year. Again that’s nearly half of what it was last year at this same report at the same time of year. The second quarter of the company’s fiscal 2013 had them showing $14.5 billion, while a year ago in Q3 the computer manufacturer reported a cool $15.5 billion. Net income for Dell this Q3 2013 was in at $475 million while back on year ago they brought in $893 million – that’s the 47% downturn.

The consumer devision for Dell reported a total loss of $65 million for this fiscal Q3 2013, with revenue dropping by 9 percent in the USA and well above 10 percent for Asia and across Europe. The Enterprise Solutions division of Dell had a continued revenue growth of three percent – that being year-over-year in this case. You’ll find that operating income (GAAP) here in this most recent reporting period went down 48% as well, while non-GAAP operating income went down just 31%, both of these numbers being year-over-year.

Brian Gladden, Dell CFO has made it clear that they’re feeling good about the enterprise business they’re growing in. “In a difficult global IT spending environment we saw solid proof points that demonstrate progress in our strategy,” he noted, “we’re also encouraged by early interest in our new Windows 8 touch portfolio and the opportunities it creates for our commercial and consumer businesses.”

Now we’ve got to see if Dell can pull out a win with a combination of Windows 8 and enterprise business across the board. With cash flow from operations this quarter racking up $1.3 billion and working with $14.2 billion in cash and investments, we won’t see the company going away for a very, very long time. Have a peek at our Dell tag portal for more on the big D.


Dell Q3 2013 earnings show deep year-over-year dip is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


HP PC chief: “Kludgey” Microsoft Surface is “hardly competition”

HP’s PC chief has dismissed Microsoft’s Surface tablet as “slow and a little kludgey” and blamed the tech press for over-hyping what he would “hardly call … competition” to HP’s own products. “Holistically, the press has made a bigger deal out of Surface than what the world has chosen to believe” Todd Bradley told CITEworld, going on to say that HP’s initial focus with Windows tablets is the enterprise, with consumer-centric models not expected until 2013.

“We’re not entering the consumer tablet fray any time soon. We’ll be doing something next year, but you won’t see a consumer tablet from HP before Christmas” Bradley confirmed. “You’ll see convertibles that are focused on how you use the device, keyboard, clamshell.”

Although specific OS and processor is undecided, Bradley is “not a big [Windows] RT fan either.” The company confirmed back in June that it had frozen plans to release its own ARM-based RT slate, though it denied that the decision had been prompted by Microsoft’s surprise announcement of its own Surface project.

“I’d hardly call Surface competition … One, very limited distribution. It tends to be slow and a little kludgey as you use it. I just don’t think it’s competitive. It’s expensive. Holistically, the press has made a bigger deal out of Surface than what the world has chosen to believe. If you want to go to any of the 30 Microsoft Stores in the United States to buy one, I think you should probably do that” Todd Bradley, executive vice president, Personal Systems Group, HP

Of course, it’s somewhat ironic that HP should dismiss Surface after the dire HP TouchPad launch, though Bradley says that the company’s own failures, if anything, give him better insight. “I’m saying that as somebody who understands the consumer market pretty clearly” he argued. “Obviously the decision by our board to shut down the WebOs business caused us to have a significant delay in our tablets. We’re catching up slowly, both with tablets and with convertible devices.”

Those convertible devices – and HP’s other Windows 8 hardware – may well attempt to bridge the traditional divide between enterprise and consumer hardware, and instead try to be all things to all users. Asked about what HP has planned for 2013, Bradley says we can expect to see “a lot of work with devices in the enterprise that are broadly ubiquitous, getting away from commercial and consumer and just having one set of IT products.”


HP PC chief: “Kludgey” Microsoft Surface is “hardly competition” is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


NEC outs cloud computing facial recognition service for merchants

NEC outs $880 facial recognition system, lets merchants track clients with only a PC and video camera

NEC has launched a $880 per month service in Japan that lets merchants profile customers using just a PC and video camera. The system uses facial recognition powered by the company’s cloud computing service to estimate the gender and age of clients, along with the frequency of their shopping expeditions across multiple locations. The firm developed the “NeoFace” tracking software in-house, claiming it was the highest ranked facial recognition system in NIST and that it plans to use it for other services like “intruder surveillance” in the future. NEC added that face data is encrypted so it can’t be “inadvertently disclosed,” and is strictly to help retailers fine-tune their marketing strategies. After watching the system pick off face after face in the video after the break, we just hope it doesn’t go rogue.

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NEC outs cloud computing facial recognition service for merchants originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Nov 2012 12:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 has YouTube livestreaming built-in on 360, PS3 and PC, not on Wii U

Call of Duty Black Ops 2 has YouTube livestreaming builtin on 360, PS3, and PC

Competitive multiplayer games, such as industry standard Call of Duty, are what make the world of e-sports a reality. And livestreaming of those games is the lifeblood of that community, primarily done through PCs and various online services (YouTube, Twitch.tv, etc.). Activision clearly knows this, as the next entry in its annual franchise, Black Ops 2, is adding YouTube livestreaming to its Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and PC versions — the game is also headed to Wii U, but won’t have the functionality built-in. “Wii U will not have this feature at this time, but it is being evaluated for a future update,” an Activision rep told us.

The streaming service works in concert with Call of Duty Elite, allowing viewers and gamers alike to delve into all the thrilling numbers behind each online game. The game launches this coming Tuesday on Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and PC, with the Wii U version launching soon after alongside Nintendo’s next console, sans streaming.

Continue reading Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 has YouTube livestreaming built-in on 360, PS3 and PC, not on Wii U

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Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 has YouTube livestreaming built-in on 360, PS3 and PC, not on Wii U originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Nov 2012 16:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TiVo TV Anywhere app, multi-room streaming launch for Virgin Media viewers

TiVo TV Anywhere app, multiroom streaming launch for Virgin Media viewers

British TiVo owners with Virgin Media have sometimes had to watch as their American counterparts get first crack at the latest extras, not the least of which have been the mobile apps. The UK has just caught up, and then some, now that Virgin has rolled out a finished TV Anywhere app for iOS, Macs and Windows PCs. While the software has the obligatory DVR queuing and remote controls, the “anywhere” portion comes through a selection of as many as 45 live TV channels accessible from most any broadband internet connection. Reinforcing that connected vibe is fresh multi-room streaming to share recorded shows with that TiVo in the basement. TV Anywhere and multi-room support are both gratis parts of a subscription, so Virgin customers have every excuse to liberate their TV viewing.

[Thanks, Stuart]

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TiVo TV Anywhere app, multi-room streaming launch for Virgin Media viewers originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Nov 2012 20:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T’s Samsung ATIV Smart PC drops November 9 for $800

AT&T has priced up Samsung’s ATIV Smart PC running Windows 8, and the docking tablet doesn’t come cheap: $799.99. The 11.6-inch tablet will come with 64GB of internal storage and a dual-core 1.5GHz Intel Atom processor when it drops on November 9, and run Windows 8 as standard with the option of a Windows 8 Pro upgrade. Buyers will be able to add the tablet to a Mobile Share plan, or take out a specific data plan for the slate.

There’s also a microSD card slot – good for up to another 32GB – and a special digital pen that, like the S Pen on the Galaxy Note 10.1, can be used for more accurate note-taking and sketching. Connectivity includes WiFi and Bluetooth, but from AT&T’s perspective it’s the 4G that’s most important.

Your $799.99 doesn’t also demand a two-year agreement, which is a boon, though you will of course need a smartphone first in order to sign up to an AT&T Mobile Share plan. However, nor does it include the docking keyboard Samsung showed off alongside the slate.

$800 strikes us as a lot for a tablet, and we’ve a suspicion that many would-be users will think the same. Microsoft is also yet to price up the Surface Pro, its full Windows 8 version of the Surface, and though the RT version is competitive with the iPad, the Pro iteration is likely to be considerably more. Even Samsung priced the WiFi-only model at $749 including keyboard dock when it announced it back in August.

AT&T will also offer the ATIV’s Stand Dock, which charges the tablet, and adds USB and ethernet connectivity, for $49, along with the VGA Adapter, for $40; each will go on sale in late November. There’s more on the ATIV Smart PC back in our hands-on from IFA.


AT&T’s Samsung ATIV Smart PC drops November 9 for $800 is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Doxie One portable scanner rolls in for $149, plays well alone and syncs with Mac, PC and iOS

DNP Doxie One portable scanner rolls in for $149, plays nice with Mac, PC or iOS

Doxie has added another portable scanner to its heart-logo’d lineup, the Doxie One, which can digitize documents and images to an included SD-card with nary a computer in sight. Doxie says that’ll let you travel light with the “paper-towel roll sized” device to scan and automatically generate Abbyy OCR-read PDFs, then sync up later with a Mac, PC, iPhone or iPad. From there, you can use the included app on a Mac or iDevice to transfer the scans to Dropbox, Evernote or iMessage. The device eschews the WiFi option of its recent Doxie Go sibling, but carries a lesser $149 sticker — check the PR for the full dope.

Continue reading Doxie One portable scanner rolls in for $149, plays well alone and syncs with Mac, PC and iOS

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Doxie One portable scanner rolls in for $149, plays well alone and syncs with Mac, PC and iOS originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 02 Nov 2012 08:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mad Catz Tritton Pro+ True 5.1 Surround Sound Headset now shipping for $200

Mad Catz Tritton Pro True 51 Surround Sound Headset now shipping for $200

If you spend more money on gaming than you do groceries each month, allow us to give you another reason to stock up on cases of ramen noodles: Mad Catz’ Tritton Pro+ True 5.1 Surround Sound Headset is now shipping. Priced at $200, the Tritton Pro+ is compatible with the PS3, Xbox 360 and PCs. Sporting a flexible lightweight design, this triple threat rocks individual subwoofers in each earcup and “true Dolby Digital 5.1 surround” through eight separate drivers (four per earcup). In addition to its potentially deafening output, the Pro+ features an in-line remote and Selectable Voice Monitoring, which gives users the option to hear their own voice through the headset’s speakers — in case you wanna play multiplayer with the other people in your head. Also, you might wanna see a doctor.

Continue reading Mad Catz Tritton Pro+ True 5.1 Surround Sound Headset now shipping for $200

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Mad Catz Tritton Pro+ True 5.1 Surround Sound Headset now shipping for $200 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Nov 2012 20:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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