Nokia E73 Mode review

Some two years after its release, there are still plenty of people who’ll swear up and down that the E71 is the finest phone Nokia has ever produced — and for good reason. As a platform, S60 was the product of a simpler time when the smartphone market was dominated not by touchscreens, but by numeric keypads, and the E71 was arguably the last of a string of bona fide successes that Nokia enjoyed in the platform’s heyday alongside pioneering handsets like the N82 and N95. Thing is, the E71 was different than those other models in a very important way: it was elegant. Historically, Nokias have typically favored function over form and saved the highest-quality materials for the Vertu line, but the E71 bucked that trend — it was slim, sexy, chock-full of metal, and curved in all the right places. In fact, to this day, it remains one of the best-looking, best-feeling smartphones ever made.

Customers (and reviewers) made their love for the E71 clear, and Nokia sought to recapture the glory with the introduction of the refined, upgraded E72. For Americans, of course, the biggest problem with the E72 was that you couldn’t buy it from a carrier — and unlike the E71, it never got much traction as an unlocked purchase. That’s where the E73 Mode comes into play, a mildly reworked version of the E72 with T-Mobile branding and, of course, support for 3G on T-Mobile’s AWS bands. Put bluntly, though, this is still just a warmed-over E71 — and in 2010, is there a market for that? Let’s have a look.

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Nokia E73 Mode review originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Jun 2010 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG Display and iriver enter joint venture to make e-book readers pretty, affordable

Well what do you know, turns out the LB4400 was a harbinger of things to come. LG Display and iriver just announced a $5M joint venture to manufacture e-book readers. The new China-based company, L&I Electronic Technology (Dongguan) Ltd, sees iriver doing the platform development and product design (thank gawd) while LG provides the EPD displays. It’s interesting to note that the company will act as an OEM/ODM to anyone looking to slap their brand on an e-book reader… after iriver — the company’s first customer — takes the pick of the litter.

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LG Display and iriver enter joint venture to make e-book readers pretty, affordable originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Jun 2010 08:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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USB Typewriter Turns iPad Into Paper

If you have $400 and a serious case of nostalgic yearning, may we then suggest you spend the money on a wonderful USBTypewriter? Described as a “groundbreaking innovation in the field of obsolescence,” the typewriter can hook up to any machine with a USB port and lets you clickety-clack your way through your latest novel, e-mail or even spreadsheet.

The Typewriter Dock, seen in the video above, is an even better version. It holds an iPad in its carriage whilst simultaneously inputting typed letters. All it needs is a Bluetooth component to replace the cable, and a writing app that can use the accelerometer to detect a carriage return and move you to a new line. Ding!

UPDATE: Creator Jack Zylkin emailed to say that the USBTypewriter can detect carriage returns all by itself using a magnetic sensor.

Inside there is a sensor strip under the keyboard which detects the key-presses that hit it, and this pulse of electricity is then passed on to an Arduino circuit-board, whereupon it is translated into a standard USB key-down event. All you need to do is plug it in and type.

$400 buys you a pre-modded typewriter, but Jack Zylkin, the man behind the USBTypewriter, will sell you the electronics to make your own for just $75, or you can send him your typewriter and have him fix it up for you. For true geeks, the design can be had for free under a Creative Commons license, and you can roll your own from scratch.

For those who really love typing on a typewriter, this seems to actually be better than paper: you no longer have to retype whole pages, and white-out will be a thing of the past. For everyone else, using one of these for a few minutes will be a reminder of just why books used to be so much shorter than the word-processed novels of today.

USBTypewriter product page
[USBTypewriter via Etsy]

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The Real Reason Macs are Secure Virus-Free?

This article was written on April 12, 2007 by CyberNet.

Mac Virus

I just got done reading a pretty interesting article that aims to bust the myth of Macs only being secure because of their lower market share. The article focuses on Mac OS X being built off of BSD Unix, which inherently makes the OS more secure. Here is a quote from the article:

The key is the foundation of the OS. If the OS is designed on a shaky foundation, everything on top will suffer. When Apple moved its customer based from Classic Mac OS 9 to Mac OS X, they did so consciously with the idea that they needed a firm foundation for the future. But that meant leaving every Classic app behind in the long term.

Microsoft has never been able to make that commitment and retained the backwards compatibility with Win32 apps. That has put a strain on their whole Windows OS.

I do think that Microsoft really needs to revolutionize the way Windows is built, and as the author mentioned, this will probably require that they scrap what they currently have and start from scratch. I realize that Microsoft wants to keep applications and hardware backwards compatible, but they will probably need to break something in order to make bigger advancements.

I originally saw this article on Digg and I began reading through the comments posted there. Here are a few of the comments that really stood out to me:

miles01110:
The unsinkable Titanic sank overnight. The thousand year Reich lasted a dozen.

 

tizz66:
OSX isn’t, however, immune to user stupidity. If you write a program that deletes important files and ask a stupid user to run it, it’ll do the same damage on OSX as it would on Windows. It’s the stuff that bypasses users completely that OSX is better protected against, compared to Windows.

I couldn’t give two hoots why there’s fewer virii for Mac. Tiny market share? More secure? Steve Jobs is a god? Doesn’t matter to me. All I care is that there ARE fewer. The reasons for it being so mean nothing. If my Mac is attacked less because it’s part of a small market, that’s great.

The first thing that popped into my mind was whether market share really does play a role in this. I still believe it does because if I was a hacker looking to get some user’s personal information, I would design my attack to work on Windows. After all, I would be more confident that my attack would work on someone if I knew I was hitting 90% of the market that Windows holds, as opposed to the 5% that Mac has (those are the latest market share numbers that I remember hearing).

I’ll admit that I haven’t done much with Macs before so maybe my theory is a little bit off, but I just thought that Mac security may have at least a tiny bit to do with their smaller market share. What does everyone else think…if the market shares were reversed and Mac had 90% would Apple be dealing more security woes?

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Nokia N8 preview

Strap yourselves in, pilgrims. Nokia’s next great handset has resurfaced in London today, and this time we were even allowed to turn it on. There’s pretty much no way you could be unaware of the N8 by now — Nokia’s done the viral video thing, the teaser demo thing, the feature walkthrough thing, we’ve covered it to near-exhaustion. But we’ve never seen it, you know, doing stuff. You can now consider that omission corrected, as we’ve finally powered up the 3.5-inch OLED screen, entered the overhauled Symbian^3 wonderland, and come back to tell the tale. In-depth impressions and video after the break.

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Nokia N8 preview originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Jun 2010 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ugly Bluetooth Headset Transforms into Even Uglier Wristwatch

The 2-in-1 Bluetooth Handsfree Wristwatch Headset takes a humdrum, utilitarian Bluetooth earpiece and turns it into an even less appealing wristwatch. So cheaply made is it that even the product shot, usually a gadget’s greatest hour beauty-wise, is all ragged and plasticky at the edges.

But it has one great feature which makes me love it: no more will I have to pity the fools who keep a Bluetooth dongle in their ear at all times, those self important morons who use this piece of gadgetry to signal their social standing (note to those people: you’re not giving off the signals you think you are). Now, those people can instead pull the blocky plastic earphone from their waxy orifice and squelch it into a wristband. Once installed in the wristwatch position, it can still be used, Dick Tracey-style (although without the video, of course), to control and talk to their phone.

The li-ion battery will last for 200 hours in standby and give eight hours of A2DP-listening, voice-dialing, caller ID-displaying, blue-backlit screen-glowing fun. The price for this ugly chunk of electronics? $68.

2-in-1 Bluetooth Handsfree Wristwatch Headset [Light in the Box via Oh Gizmo!]


Microsoft’s new lens tracks your face, steers 3D images to your eyes (video)

Glasses-free 3D has taken several forms, but most have a critical flaw — viewers have to stand in predefined locations to get the effect. That just won’t do, so Microsoft’s prototyped a new approach, and it’s one of the wildest we’ve seen. Taking a cue from Project N… we mean Kinect, cameras track the face while a special wedge-shaped lens traps bouncing light, and after the beams have reached a “critical angle,” it exits towards the viewers eyes, aimed by programmable LEDs at the bottom of the screen. Since the system can beam a pair of simultaneous images to two different places, the obvious use is stereoscopic 3D, but researchers found they could also send different images to different viewers, as a sort of privacy screen. If that sounds far fetched, you’re not alone — but you’ll find a video proof-of-concept at the more coverage link.

Microsoft’s new lens tracks your face, steers 3D images to your eyes (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Jun 2010 07:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Startup Builds Power-Efficient Servers With Netbook Chips

Atom chips are the underpowered CPUs inside most netbooks. But one company has found a way to stitch 512 of them together to create a single powerful server.

SeaMicro has used 1.6-GHz Intel Atom processors to create a system that consumes just a fourth of the power and space as a traditional server, while aiming to deliver comparable computing performance.

The concept eschews the use of specialized, high-performance server chips in favor of the Atom processor, which was been designed for netbooks and other mobile devices. Atom is a low-power chip that is designed for tasks such as surfing webpages and checking e-mail among other things.

“We are trying to to build a single big server out of a lot of little chips,” says Andrew Feldman, CEO of SeaMicro. “”We can have 2,048 Atom-based processors on a rack delivering the highest density of CPUs in the market.” SeaMicro’s Atom-based server will be available starting July.

Traditionally most servers use Intel’s Xeon or Itanium processors, or AMD’s Opteron chips. These processors deliver high computing strength but also suck power, making utility bills one of the most expensive costs for a data center. Based on its measurements, an Atom chip can deliver half the performance of a Xeon processor for a sixth of the power, says SeaMicro.

“For a server of this nature, this is the first time we have seen Atom chips used,” says Cal Braunstein, chief research officer for research firm Robert Frances Group.

SeaMicro’s server module uses just three components: Intel’s Atom chip, memory and an ASIC designed by the company.

The Atom-based servers target a few specific tasks performed by data centers. In the past, servers were largely used to solve a small number of complex data-based problems, says Feldman. But the internet changed this. In the internet-focused data center, the challenge is to handle millions of small tasks such as searching, mapping and viewing pages quickly, and to do this in a way that can handle unpredictable bursts of traffic.

SeaMicro is going after this market, says Braunstein.

“They are going after boxes in the data center that are really not doing a lot of high-performance computing or database computing,” he says. “By addressing that niche and tightly packaging everything, they can offer a low power processor for a very specific use.”

SeaMicro says it has shrunk the server unit — which it defines as a processor plus memory unit — to the size of a credit card and removed 90 percent of the components that lie on a traditional server. Eight of these credit card-sized servers rest on a 5 inch by 11 inch board. Sixty four of these boards go into a SeaMicro system that’s about 17.5 inches tall and 30 inches deep — approximately 10 rack units in a data center.

Just changing the CPU to a low-power chip, though, isn’t enough says SeaMicro. The trick lies in creating a new architecture that can pull all the chips together and manage their power requirements.

“If you just replace the chips in a traditional server with Atom processors, the power consumption actually goes up,” says Feldman.

Integrating features such as storage, networking and server management into a single ASIC (application specific integrated circuit) helps manage power better, says the company. It has also virtualized the CPU input-output so those modules that would have otherwise occupied space on a board and consumed power don’t anymore.

Though SeaMicro has used Atom processors for its chipset, the company says it has designed its architecture to be flexible and support any CPU. So any low-power chip included that from ARM, which runs on most smartphones today, can become a part of SeaMicro’s system.

But Atom remains the best choice for now, says Feldman. ARM processors used in cellphones consume much lower power than an Atom chip but they also cannot deliver the same kind of computing performance, he claims.

SeaMicro’s Atom servers, though, are not for everyone. They are geared for a very specific kind of server operation — one that involves throwing out a lot of web content, says Braunstein.

That should be good enough for internet giants like Google, Facebook and Yahoo to replace some of their servers in their gigantic data center, hopes SeaMicro.

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Photo: SeaMicro Atom server/SeaMicro


EVO 4G receives a Palm Pre inductive charging transplant (video)

Oh yes, an HTC EVO has been modded with the inductive charging coil ripped from the still beating heart of a Palm Pre. The 30 minute soldering project does have the side effect of rendering compass apps useless while creating a slight bulge in the battery cover. Other than that, it just works — or so says the creator. See the modded EVO get busy with a Palm Touchstone and do what yours can’t in the video after the break.

[Thanks, Brody White]

Continue reading EVO 4G receives a Palm Pre inductive charging transplant (video)

EVO 4G receives a Palm Pre inductive charging transplant (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Jun 2010 06:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Giant LCD digital signage by Sharp

One of the most visually stunning of the exhibits at the recent Interop Tokyo 2010, Sharp’s huge 410-inch liquid crystal digital screen dazzled visitors by displaying morphing images all over the wall and floor.

sharp-digital-signage-1

The giant signage was made from connecting dozens of individual PN-V601 screen panels: 30 on the wall and a further 24 on the floor. Each of the screens is a mere 6.5mm thick, the thinnest in the world according to Sharp.

With sales expected to begin from August, you might just start to see more screens like this in airports, malls and stations in the near future.

sharp-digital-signage-2