
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
Engadget HD puts the new Samsung LED edge-lit LCD TV to the test originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jul 2009 20:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
Engadget HD puts the new Samsung LED edge-lit LCD TV to the test originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jul 2009 20:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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The WRX STI Spec C is lighter and has more torque than the standard STI.
(Credit: Subaru)
When we tested the 2008 Subaru WRX STI last year, it seemed as if Subaru poured everything it could into this halo car. The STI is Subaru’s signature rally car, competing with …
Originally posted at The Car Tech blog
Filed under: Desktops, Handhelds, Home Entertainment, Laptops, Media PCs
Viewsonic goes all out with new nettops, netbooks, media PCs and media players originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jul 2009 19:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Got a few grand to spare for a $3,000 phone? Yeah, we didn’t think so. Nobody does — and that’s a problem for the makers of luxury phones, such as Motorola, Bang & Olufson, LG and Vertu.
After years of chasing the ultra-wealthy with exclusive devices that carry designer logos and promise craftsmanship from materials such as sapphire and stainless steel, luxury phone makers are now pulling back.
“The culture has shifted away from conspicuous consumption, so if you are going to have a super expensive product this may not be the time for it,” says Avi Greengart, research director for consumer devices at Current Analysis.
Motorola has already gotten the memo. Earlier this week, the company reportedly canceled the Ivory E18, a device tentatively priced around $3,000. The phone had met with lack of interest from telecom carriers. Motorola declined to comment.
If that sounds like an obvious outcome, perhaps it shouldn’t. In the last few years, luxury phones had turned into an attractive new business, as designer houses rushed to get a foothold in the tech sector. Prada collaborated with LG to launch two LG Prada phones in Europe and Asia. Last September, Samsung launched the M75500 Night Effect phone, which carried the Emporio Armani insignia. A month later, Motorola offered a $2,000 phone, called the Aura, which was fashioned out of stainless steel and sported a 62-carat sapphire crystal lens. And then there’s Vertu, a company that makes true luxury phones, the cheapest of which costs about $6,000.
The recession put a spoke in those plans. And it’s not just the 401Ks of middle-class Americans that have been in peril. In Russia, many newly-minted billionaires saw their fortunes slip away with falling oil prices. By the first quarter this year, the U.S. economy had shrunk 5.5 percent. Even 50 Cent has complained about losing more than a few Benjamins on the stock market.
And just like that, the crystal dominoes started to fall. Last October, Bang & Olufsen, whose phones retailed in Europe for more than $1500, shuttered its cellphone business as it decided to trim its costs and get out of non-profitable ventures. Motorola is the latest to pull back its luxury line.
Luxury phones have never been a big phenomenon in North America, says Greengart. Their manufacturers have had better luck in emerging markets. But now even in those countries, where once 8 percent GDP growth seemed conservative, wealthy consumers are feeling the pinch.
“Super expensive, bling bling phones are big in markets where conspicuous consumption is a way to tell your countrymen you have arrived,” says Greengart. “But now, it’s a very different economy for everyone.”
Many of the troubles that the uber-expensive phones face are because they are created by companies whose main expertise is in targeting a mass market, says Frank Nuovo, former chief of design for Nokia and current head of Vertu.
“I didn’t start this business to soak the phones in diamonds and jewels,” says Nuovo. “The concept is same as a fine watch or a fabulous car. To be a true luxury product, you have to look at making something that doesn’t have an 18-month shelf life.”
True luxury, as Nuovo defines it, doesn’t apply to a mere $2,000 phone: A Vertu device, soaked in platinum, can run up to $70,000. The company’s one-off phones, designed in collaboration with luxury jewels house Boucheron, cost even more.
Nuovo may have inadvertently hit on the real problem with luxury phones: Phones are still a very feature-driven products. They are products where the rapid advances in technology can rend older models obsolete very quickly.
“Phones aren’t like a handbag where the fundamental utility remains the same and the design changes all the time,” says Greengart.
But Nuovo isn’t convinced. “Take watches and cars,” he says. “They all run the same but everyone has a unique way of delivering them stylistically. We can do the same with phones.”
Despite the bumps on the road now, Nuovo says the luxury phones will bounce back and find an audience. “It is no different than a fine watch or a car,” he says. “If you take people who value something that is made extraordinarily well there will always be a group interested in it.”
Vertu is determined to prove that. It will launch its latest handset the Carbon Fibre Ascent Ti in August. The phone is made of high-gloss carbon fiber and has a sandblasted titanium surface. The price tag? $9,800.
See Also:
Photo: Vertu
Joe Wilcox of BetaNews reports that Apple now dominates the market of $1,000-plus PCs, commanding about 90 percent of the market for U.S. retail, as measured by NPD. The message? Apple might be slipping in market share, but it’s selling premium PCs. And that, in turn, is driving Apple’s revenues to new heights.
“For all Windows PCs, ASP was $515 in June. For Macs: $1,400. Desktop
Windows PC ASP: $489. Mac desktops: $1,398. Windows notebook ASP was
$520, or $569 when removing all those nasty, margin-sucking netbooks.
Mac laptops: $1,400,” Wilcox wrote.
For all of the appeal of low-cost netbooks, it’s better to sell a premium product with the profits those premium products can generate. Microsoft’s “Laptop Hunter” ads have taken aim at Apple’s premium pricing, but so far Apple is itself winning.
Here are a few things we’ve noticed after playing with the update for a little bit:
Anything else you guys are seeing? Tell us in comments! Also, PreCentral has an extensive list of undocumented features.
Filed under: Cellphones
Palm webOS 1.1 now available, fixes iTunes 8.2.1 syncing originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jul 2009 19:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Oh, snap! Things just got a little more heated between Palm and Apple. On Thursday, Palm released WebOS 1.1 for the Palm Pre, which, among other things, brings back iTunes syncing even with version 8.2.1, which disabled the feature. The news …
Apple clocked one and half billion apps downloaded from its iTunes store this month, and a good number of those were designed for drivers. You can find a variety of automotive apps on the iTunes store that do everything from help you remember where you parked your car to point …
Originally posted at The Car Tech blog
In case you ever of the mindset that e-cigarettes were somehow toxin free, at least compared to the more traditional smokes, along comes the FDA to shatter your illusions. A report this week from the government agency calls out the product with a safety warning, charging that the cartridges they examined contained “carcinogens and toxic chemicals such as diethylene glycol, an ingredient used in antifreeze.” The FDA says it can’t confirm the extent of the health issues, as it’s only done limited testing and it hasn’t been formally submitted for review, but it doesn’t look quite as risk-free as previously touted. Don’t say the WHO never warned ya. So remind us again, what’s the point in smoking one of these over an old school cigarette?
[Via Switched; thanks, flatlander85]
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
E-cigarettes contain carcinogens and toxins after all, FDA warns originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jul 2009 18:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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I am currently writing this on my second MacBook Pro. I’m also waiting for a call on my third iPhone while watching “Star Trek” on my second HDTV from my third Xbox 360. Technology today seems to fizzle out or become redundant quickly. But it wasn’t always like …