Refresh Roundup: week of August 12th, 2013

Your smartphone and / or tablet is just begging for an update. From time to time, these mobile devices are blessed with maintenance refreshes, bug fixes, custom ROMs and anything in between, and so many of them are floating around that it’s easy for a sizable chunk to get lost in the mix. To make sure they don’t escape without notice, we’ve gathered every possible update, hack, and other miscellaneous tomfoolery we could find during the last week and crammed them into one convenient roundup. If you find something available for your device, please give us a shout at tips at engadget dawt com and let us know. Enjoy!

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NVIDIA Shield now has open source software support

NVIDIA Shield now has open source software support

We loved NVIDIA Shield‘s bone stock Jelly Bean OS in our review, but if you’re not a huge fan, NVIDIA’s now offering a way to dig in and customize your Shield’s OS even more. NVIDIA’s made the Shield’s software open source as of today, making the OS all the easier to customize. You’ll of course have to root your device and, ya know, have an idea of what you’re doing in the guts of a computer. NVIDIA warns new owners as much, saying, “To be sure, this is double-diamond stuff. If you’re not a coder or already set up with an Android development environment you should skip downloading these tools.”

The company’s blog post also notes that rooting your Shield or adding a bootloader will potentially void your device’s warranty, so hacker beware! Should the associated tasks and NVIDIA’s warnings not scare you off, the software is available right here. Our review video of the Shield is just below, in case you missed it last week.

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Source: NVIDIA

Weekly Roundup: Moto X preview, Nexus 7 review, Chromecast review, and more!

The Weekly Roundup for 12032012

You might say the week is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workweek, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Weekly Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past seven days — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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Editor’s Letter: Made in the USA… sort of

DNP Editor's Letter Made in the USA Sort of

Motorola has been doing its best to build some buzz around the Moto X, which launched this week. As a smartphone, the X is decidedly middle-of-the-road. It boasts specs and a design similar to the Droid models Motorola announced last week. Available later this month at $199 on-contract from most major US carriers, the X’s biggest claim to fame — other than swappable backplates, including one made of wood — is the fact that it’s assembled in the US, in a 500,000-square-foot factory in Fort Worth, Texas. Yes, that’s “assembled.” Despite widespread reports that the X is being made in the US, most of its components, from its display to those backplates, are produced in factories around the world, and workers in Texas will assemble the phones.

Does it really matter where your smartphone is made? If your main concern is domestic job creation, it might. A 2012 survey by Boston Consulting Group found that over 80 percent of Americans are willing to pay more for products that are made in the US instead of China, mainly because they want to keep jobs in the country. Interestingly, the same survey found that 60 percent of Chinese consumers would pay a premium for US-made products, apparently based on the belief that the US produces higher-quality products. When it comes to smartphones, that’s an idea that’s difficult to put to the test; there are none currently manufactured in the United States, and that’s not about to change with the launch of the X.

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NVIDIA Shield teardown dives deep inside the massive handheld

NVIDIA Shield teardown dives deep inside the massive handheld

The folks at iFixit are braver souls than us, taking on NVIDIA’s tank-like new gaming handheld, the Shield, in a teardown. Shield’s cavernous shell houses a mess of multicolored parts, and hilariously reveals its Batman mask-esque properties when freed of said parts. Though it certainly doesn’t look like an easy process, the repair site offers a six out of 10 rating; it specifically cites the battery and screen as being tricky to replace.

NVIDIA’s Shield was a big surprise at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show — CEO Jen-Hsun Huang showed up with the device on-stage during his company’s press briefing, where he used it to demonstrate the just unveiled Tegra 4 processor. We finally got our hands on the final retail version earlier this month and you can find the full review right here. Consumers can also finally purchase the $300 handheld as of yesterday.

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Source: iFixit

Nvidia Shield Teardown: A Lot’s Crammed Into This Strange Device

Nvidia Shield Teardown: A Lot's Crammed Into This Strange Device

Nvidia’s slightly crazy Shield gaming device-cum-tablet is now in the wild, and iFixit has done what it does best and torn the sucker apart.

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The Daily Roundup for 07.31.2013

DNP The Daily RoundUp

You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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NVIDIA Shield review (update: video!)

DNP NVIDIA Shield review it's almost like NVIDIA thinks it's Razer or something TKTK

NVIDIA Shield is a truly strange device. It combines an eight-button console-size gamepad with dual analog sticks, and a 5-inch “multi-touch, retinal” screen. It runs stock Android 4.2.1. It touts wireless PC game streaming as its main selling point. It plays Android games, it plays PC games, it does the Twitter and the Gmail, et cetera. With Shield, NVIDIA is aiming to be the Swiss Army Knife of handheld game consoles. It slices! It dices! ShamWOW!

It also costs $300, weighs nearly 1.5 pounds and takes up quite a bit of bag space. Its main selling point — PC game streaming — is dependent on the user already owning a PC with a relatively fancy ($140) NVIDIA GeForce GTX 650 GPU or better. Let’s be honest, though: you already know this stuff, right? If you’re reading this review, you either already own all the necessary gear and wanna know if this is a worthwhile peripheral for your PC, or you’re morbidly curious about NVIDIA’s (admittedly bizarre) console experiment. Let’s all head below and try to find satisfaction.

Update: We’ve added our full review video below — please excuse the lateness! We ran into some technical glitches on our end, but the tribbles have all been eradicated.

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Nvidia’s Shield just got a liiiittle cheaper.

Nvidia’s Shield just got a liiiittle cheaper. Instead of the original $350, it’s now $300 thanks to popular demand. It’ll be officially available on June 27th, if that price drop got you interested.

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NVIDIA’s Shield now $300, arrives on June 27th (video)

Even before hitting store shelves, NVIDIA’s Shield is shedding $50 from its original $350 asking price — the little Android portable gaming console will cost $300 when it arrives at retail on June 27th. NVIDIA revealed both the new, lower price and release date today in a blog post which cited gamers asking for a lower price as the reason for the change. “We’ve heard from thousands of gamers that if the price was $299, we’d have a home run,” the post reads. As such, the company’s aiming for “a home run” with the new price point — despite $300 being $50 more than a new PlayStation Vita, and just $100 short of a new PlayStation 4.

Folks who pre-ordered aren’t out of luck, they’ll just be charged $300 when their unit ships rather than $350. As for where you can pick a Shield up outside of NVIDIA’s official website … well, we’re waiting on word from the company on supported retailers. We’ve dropped the video of our hands-on with the final Shield just below, should you wish to relive those memories with us.

Update: NVIDIA tells us that Newegg, GameStop, Micro Center and Canada Computers will all have Shield on the 27th.

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Source: NVIDIA