Motion Computing’s Oak Trail-powered CL900 is one tough Win 7 tablet

Boy, have we seen a bunch of Windows 7 slates in our day — most with delicate capacitive displays, sluggish software layers, and older Intel Atom processors — but Motion Computing’s new CL900 seems to be a totally different beast. Aimed at enterprise and vertical markets, the 10.1-inch tablet runs Windows 7 Professional and is powered by Intel’s forthcoming Oak Trail Atom processor. We don’t know much about that silicon performance yet, but the company’s promising up to eight hours of battery life as well as 1080p playback over HDMI. However, the CL900’s real appeal comes in its rugged case and screen. The 2.1-pound tablet (though, it feels a bit heavier than that in hand) has met the MIL-STD-810G spec, so it can survive a four foot drop and its Corning Gorilla Glass display should be able to withstand, oh you know, a pen stab. As for the actual 1366×768-resolution touchscreen, it has a capacitive layer, but also can be configured with an active digitizer for a really solid inking experience. We got a chance to put stylus to screen on an early model Motion was showing off and the digital writing experience seemed quite smooth and responsive. As you can see in the gallery below, the tablet is also home to two cameras, a USB port, and microSD card and SIM card slot. We told you it was spec’d to kill, but with the company promising an MSRP of less than $1,000 it could be priced to kill as well. Hit the break for the full press release and don’t forget to peruse the images below.

Updated: You’ll notice that in this picture the CL900 is running ExoPC’s UI layer. Motion Computing told us that it is currently experimenting with the Windows layer, but it doesn’t have any formal plans to ship with it preloaded.

Continue reading Motion Computing’s Oak Trail-powered CL900 is one tough Win 7 tablet

Motion Computing’s Oak Trail-powered CL900 is one tough Win 7 tablet originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Jan 2011 20:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Joby Ori and Yogi iPad cases hands-on

Joby is here at CES Unveiled, and this year they’re introducing two new interesting cases for a certain tablet you may have heard about. The “Yogi” for iPad draws on Joby’s roots, essentially pairing its successful Gorillapod stand tech with a hard plastic iPad case that you can dock in either portrait or landscape. The folks at the booth envision usage scenarios on uneven surfaces, or even for wrapping the gorilla legs around a car headrest for easy on-the-go use. More interesting, however, is the “Ori” case, which puts a new spin on convertible cases for the iPad. Made out of strong, lightweight aluminum, this case has a continuous hinge, folds into multiple positions, and has a swivel so you can tilt your ‘pad in nearly any direction you wish. Check out the crazy origami-action in the video after the break, and glamour shots of this beauty in nearly every contortion imaginable in our gallery below.

Continue reading Joby Ori and Yogi iPad cases hands-on

Joby Ori and Yogi iPad cases hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Jan 2011 20:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG booth preview reveals LG Revolution, Optimus

A sneak peek at the LG booth reveals several new LG smartphones at CES 2011.

Originally posted at CES 2011

VIA Nano X2 low power, dual-core chip gets official

VIA has officially announced its Nano X2 low power dual-core chip. The chip comprises two of VIA‘s 64-bit Isaiah architecture cores, found in previous single-core Nano CPUs. The processors come with native 64-bit software support, VIA’s PadLock hardware security features, and VT CPU virtualization technology. The new Nano X2 chips are compatible with VIA’s previous processors, including the Nano, C7, C7-M, and Eden, facilitating easy upgrades. The VIA Nano X2 processors are already currently available for OEMs, with systems featuring the chips expected in the first quarter of this year. Full press release is after the break

Continue reading VIA Nano X2 low power, dual-core chip gets official

VIA Nano X2 low power, dual-core chip gets official originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Jan 2011 20:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Withings fittingly debuts iPhone-connected blood pressure monitor at CES

Trust us — no one on the Engadget staff wants to know what their blood pressure is right about now. For those trapped in the hurricane that is CES, there’s probably no better product to have laying around than this… but only if you’re looking to confirm your suspicions about being in a high-stress career. Withings, the company best known for its connected scales, has just revealed the planet’s first iPhone-connected blood pressure monitor, with an aim to make measuring vitals as easy as pie for iOS users. The idea is fairly simple: just plug the arm band into your iPad, iPod touch or iPhone, dial up the gratis app and start the process. All of the data is logged on the user’s secure online space, and there’s even a secure sharing feature that’ll beam your abnormally high rates right to your frightened physician. It’ll go on sale tomorrow around the globe, with the asking price set at $129 / €129.

Continue reading Withings fittingly debuts iPhone-connected blood pressure monitor at CES

Withings fittingly debuts iPhone-connected blood pressure monitor at CES originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Jan 2011 20:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DriveNTalk BHF-2000 lets you drive while your smartphone talks, we go hands-on

Sadly, no, we still haven’t seen a gadget that lets your smartphone drive. Maybe next year, but this year it’s the BHF-2000 letting your smartphone talk while you drive. It’s the latest TalkNDrive, a lineup that specializes in advanced hands-free kits, and the BHF-2000 is the furthest ahead of the bunch. Like the others it uses Bluetooth to connect to your phone and then voice-to-text to read e-mails or SMS messages to you and accepts simple voice commands, but this one also accepts simple hand gestures, so you can silence playback by making the classic “talk to the hand” gesture, and it has a solar panel so that it can try to stay charged while clipped to your visor. Naturally it will let you take calls, just like the lesser-expensive 700 and 800 also on display — but they’ll just ignore your hand waving. Finally there’s the KlaT 7, a little wireless remote control that can clip on your dash, if you still need buttons.

Gallery: TalkNDrive

DriveNTalk BHF-2000 lets you drive while your smartphone talks, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Jan 2011 19:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AHX Launches iTablet (It’s a Tablet)

itablet_ces2011.jpg

Sick of tablets yet? Might want to sit the rest of the week out. After announcements from Lenovo and ASUS today to that effect, here’s a welcome change: a tablet from a company you likely haven’t heard of. iTablet, from a company called AHX Global is Windows 7-based. It features a 10.1 touchscreen with 32GB of memory on-board.

There’s 802.11b/g/n built-in and a 2MP Webcam–it can also run Flash, unlike, ahem, some other tablets. The thing is running an Intel Atom 1.6GHz processor and has 2GB of RAM, standard. The system comes loaded with a trial version of Office 2010, which you can use with the on-screen virtual keyboard–or, if you so choose, a keyboard plugged in via one of the device’s two USB ports.

The company’s CEO calls it “is the hardest working tablet computer,” for whatever that’s worth.

Keepin’ it real fake: ‘iPad phone’ is the answer to a question no one asked (video)

The D-Pad and E-Pad are two pint-sized cellphones that are reminiscent of the iPad, except they are telephones, they are much smaller, and they are totally different. Featuring a 3.5-inch resistive touchscreen, 2.5mm headphone jack, 0.3 megapixel front-facing camera and 2 megapixel rear camera with LED flash, you don’t even have to get to the dual SIMs, telescoping antenna, or the CMMB mobile TV tuner before you realize this is all Shenzhen, and very little Cupertino. Available now in either pink or white for 550 Chinese yuan (about $70). Get a closer look — and some video to boot — after the break.

Continue reading Keepin’ it real fake: ‘iPad phone’ is the answer to a question no one asked (video)

Keepin’ it real fake: ‘iPad phone’ is the answer to a question no one asked (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Jan 2011 19:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Griffin gets an iPhone all up in your car’s OBD-II port with the CarTrip Bluetooth adapter

Garmin gets an iPhone all up in your car's ODBII port with the CarTrip Bluetooth adapter

If you’re not a car person there’s a good chance you don’t know much about the OBD-II lurking mysteriously beneath your dash. It’s there — if your car was built since the first Bush administration, anyway. Usually its needs go unfulfilled until your check-engine light pops on and some mechanic with greasy paws clumsily stuffs a code checker in there, but more and more tools are coming out to change that. The Autobot Mavia is one, and now Griffin is doing similar with the CarTrip. It’s an OBD-II adapter that connects wirelessly to an iOS device or writes directly to SD card, storing information on information related to car mileage, even giving you a real-time efficiency readout on your display with the CleanDrive app. And, yes, it’ll even pull warning codes and the like if things aren’t quite running how they should. All that for $89.99, a fair bit less than the Mavia will potentially be and available sooner — sometime before the first quarter is through.

Griffin gets an iPhone all up in your car’s OBD-II port with the CarTrip Bluetooth adapter originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Jan 2011 19:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint’s HTC Evo Shift Hits the Shelves on January 9th

LAS VEGAS — After weeks of leaked promo materials and screen shots, Sprint has introduced the EVO Shift, HTC’s latest carrier-exclusive 4G smartphone.

The phone is scheduled to be widely available to consumers on the last day of CES, January 9th.

As Sprint’s press release states, the EVO Shift follows in the speedy 4G footsteps of its mammoth-sized EVO predecessor, but comes in a smaller, tighter package. Highlights include a 3.6 inch capacitive-touch screen display, a slide out QWERTY keyboard, 5-megapixel back-facing camera, 720p HD camcorder and microSD slot for upgradable storage up to 32GB.The phone can also serve as a mobile hotspot, tethering up to eight wireless devices.

CES 2011For the crowd that wants more power and more features from their phone, however, the EVO Shift may be lacking. The phone ships with Android 2.2. (Froyo, not the most recent version, Android 2.3, aka Gingerbread). It lacks a front facing camera, which means no video chatting either. The 5-megapixel back facing cameras is downgraded from the EVO’s 8 megapixels. The EVO has a 1GHz Snapdragon processor, while the Shift clocks in at 800 Mhz. Those that want larger screens like the former EVO (4.3 inches) may not be satisfied with the EVO Shift’s 3.6 inches.

Comparing the EVO Shift to the older, bigger EVO, the question comes down to this: Are you willing to sacrifice screen size, processor speed and other niceties for a slide out keyboard and easier pocketability?

The EVO Shift retails at $150 after a $100 mail-in rebate (with a two-year service contract).

Photo courtesy Sprint