Motorola posts $26m Q2 profit, promises cheap Android thrills, does a little dance

See that image there on the right? Yeah, it’s a pretty drastic departure from the Sad Moto[TM] face that had become all too common when talking about the company’s financials. Just a quarter after posting a dreadful $291 million loss, the outfit responsible for creating the RAZR and then doing nothing for half a decade is finally showing a profit once more. The Q2 numbers show an “unexpected” $26 million profit on sales of $5.5 billion, $1.8 billion of which came from the handset division. Of course, that very division managed to lose $253 million and see its global market share slip to 5.5 percent, but with a big bang from Android reportedly just months away, CEO Sanjay Jha ain’t taking time to frown.

Just hours after the Verizon-branded Sholes smartphone surfaced, Mr. Jha was quoted as saying that two Android devices would be “in stores for the holiday season,” with launches occurring on “two major carriers in North America and multiple carriers outside the US.” He also noted that plans were in place to ship “several additional Android-based devices in the first quarter of 2010,” but details beyond that were vague. So, is this the beginning of a new, happier Moto? Our aged copy of Photoshop certainly hopes so.

Read – Motorola’s Q2 results
Read – Jha on future Android devices

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Motorola posts $26m Q2 profit, promises cheap Android thrills, does a little dance originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 31 Jul 2009 08:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Moobila turns your ideas into iPhone apps

Here’s an interesting solution for anyone who has a killer idea for an iPhone app but doesn’t know the first thing about software development: Moobila turns your idea into an app and markets it on the App Store.

Actually, the company specializes in turning existing corporate software into

Originally posted at iPhone Atlas

HP’s new 27-inch monitor skimps on features

HP's 2709m looks sleek, but it seems to lack a few features.

(Credit: HP)

When I first received the press release for the 27-inch HP 2709m on Thursday, I admit to being only mildly interested in the monitor. I’d just reviewed the HP w2558hc and figured, how …

Cowon teases keychain-esque iAudio E2 DAP

Typically, it’s iriver who does the teasing, but you won’t catch us griping about Cowon pulling a similar trick with its elusive new iAudio E2. The image above is all we have to go on for the moment, which shows a digital audio player that’s capable of doubling as both a USB storage device (maybe) and a keyring (definitely). Make of those funky icons what you will, but as we learned with Lost, you’re probably just wasting your time reading betwixt the lines.

[Via DAP Review]

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Cowon teases keychain-esque iAudio E2 DAP originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 31 Jul 2009 08:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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What about the Apple TV, Steve?

Can a product’s value be measured by how much its developers improve it over time? If so, that metric would not have positive implications for the Apple TV.

Apple quietly updated its Time Capsule storage device Thursday. The high-end model will now retail for $499 and allow up to 2TB of storage. The low-end model with 1TB of storage will now retail for $299.

Apple TV

The Apple TV is in desperate need of an update.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

It’s a nice upgrade. And it follows a list of several updates Apple has made in recent months to many of its products, including the iPhone, MacBook, and MacBook Pro. Apple is even preparing for its new operating system, Snow Leopard, which is slated for release in September.

But the company has yet to release a major upgrade to its Apple TV. Granted, Apple has updated the device’s software on multiple occasions, but where’s the new, major hardware update?

For almost a year now, we’ve been hearing about impending refreshes to the Apple TV.

In September, reports suggested that an Apple TV update featuring anything from a “Mac Mini/Apple TV” hybrid to something related to HDTVs was imminent. Nothing of the sort was ever announced.

In February, reporters found a survey that Apple conducted asking Apple TV owners how they were watching video on the device. It also asked them what they would change about the set-top box. That survey vanished from Apple’s Web site. And once again, no major updates were released.

Originally posted at The Digital Home

AAXA ups the ante with SVGA P2 pico projector

While it’s probably safe to say that the rush of pico projectors has slowed to a trickle, that’s not stopping a few of the early entrants from dishing out new and improved models as the second wave builds. AAXA, the outfit responsible for serving up the pint-sized P1 back in February, is demonstrating exactly what a hasty refresh cycle looks like by dishing out the higher-res P2 just a few months later. The LCoS-based pico projector packs an SVGA (800 x 600) resolution, a 33 lumen LED light source, 1GB of onboard memory, a microSD card reader and even a built-in battery good for around 35 minutes of beaming (or in other terms, nearly two full episodes of Entourage). The device checks in at just 4.3- x 2.3- x 1-inches and sports a VGA input, 3.5mm headphone output and a mini USB socket to boot. Feel free to pre-order yours now for $349 — or, you know, wait for a 720p model.

[Via PicoProjector-Info]

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AAXA ups the ante with SVGA P2 pico projector originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 31 Jul 2009 07:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Street Urinal Makes Public Peeing Practical

axixa

This is the Axixa, and here in Barcelona, we need it. The ceramic, water-stain shaped device is a public urinal. It even comes in pee-yellow.

Public urination is a big problem in my hometown: hordes of drunken tourists, all filled up with nowhere to go. Bars won’t let you use the restrooms unless you are a customer, there are almost no public toilets (a few porta-potties at the beach is about the size of it), and because the locals have some taste, there aren’t even many branches of McDonald’s, the default public bathroom for much of the world.

The Axixa is a design by Mexican Miguel Melgarejo, and could be deployed cheaply and easily on any city wall. Inside there is a traditional U-bend water trap leading to a drainage pipe. The outside could actually be any shape, but a yellow streak of piss seems appropriate enough. But would people use them? If you are desperate enough to pee in the street anyway, we doubt you’d be too embarrassed to use the Axixa instead. I just hope that the local government sees this and turns the design from concept into reality.

Axixa, a hygienic way of peeing on the walls [The Design Blog]


Acer’s Aspire Predator gaming rig gets even faster, stays just as orange

Acer's Aspire Predator gaming rig gets even faster, stays just as orange

Just a few weeks too late for a Transformers 2 tie-in, Acer has announced a new revision of its Aspire G desktop, a.k.a. Predator. It shares the same case with the earlier edition that hit the US of A late last year, but naturally has some better specs this time ’round. The CPU is now one of Intel’s new Core i7 950‘s running at 3.06GHz, up to 12GB of DDR3 RAM is on offer, while more permanent storage is offered by a 1TB HDD and a Blu-ray reader. A pair of NVIDIA GeForce GTS 250 graphics cards keep the pixels flowing over four DVI-D ports, and dual Gigabit Ethernet is on offer for those about to rock shotgun network connections. All that clad in a brilliant orange case that looks like it rolled off the Lamborghini production line, though at ¥259,800 ($2,700ish) it’s a lot cheaper than the Murciélago LP 670-4 Superveloce you’ve been drooling over. No word on American availability, but since the last one took about four months to make it this way perhaps we’ll see this one by year’s end.

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Acer’s Aspire Predator gaming rig gets even faster, stays just as orange originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 31 Jul 2009 07:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Crave giveaway of the week: Roku Digital Media Player

(Credit: Roku)

For this week’s installment of the weekly Crave giveaway, we’ve got a nifty little black box: The Roku Digital Media Player, which streams video from Netflix and Amazon.

I reviewed the thing and here’s the bottom line on it:

“The one-two punch of Amazon and …

Video: Vortex Cannon Smashes Walls With Thin Air

“I’ll huff, and I’ll puff, and I’ll blow your house in!” So said the rather nasty wolf to the Three Little Pigs, right before eating two of the poor little porkers. These foolish creatures chose to build their houses from sticks and from straw. The idiots. But could a puff of air really topple a house, even one made of old hay? Jem Stansfield, last seen using a vacuum cleaner to scale a building, decided to find out.

The video shows a Vortex Cannon, which fires out a pulse of spinning air at 200mph. When slowed down with a high-speed camera, you can see a ring hurtling towards the hastily constructed houses. This ring is in fact a 200mph cloud, formed from moisture condensed from the air itself.

So, how did the piggies’ homes fare? Poorly, I’m afraid. The cannon even manages to blow the brick house in, wiping the smug look off that last little pig’s pink face and resulting in an unexpected third course for the wolf.

Vortex Cannon! – Bang Goes the Theory Preview [YouTube/BBC via Geekologie]