Xbox 360 with 250GB HDD and Forza 3 spotted on Amazon Germany

Now that the Xbox 360 Elite has officially dropped in price and killed off the Pro, it was only a matter of time before there’d be a new rumor to pin on Microsoft’s console. Amazon Germany, who previously listed the PlayStation 3 Slim a good 20 days before the official debut (it still has the same Amazon Stock Identification Number as it did when leaked), has gone ahead and posted a new Xbox 360 model, ASIN in tow, with a 250GB HDD, two wireless controllers, and Forza Motorsport 3. Price is listed at 279 euros ($397), a good 30 euros over the current Elite price. No release date, but Forza 3 isn’t due out until at least October 23rd so we’d say you got awhile to wait and see if this pans out. Any chance we can get a built-in WiFi adapter along with that extra storage space?

[Thanks, skipper]

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Xbox 360 with 250GB HDD and Forza 3 spotted on Amazon Germany originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Aug 2009 19:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon announces next wave of Frustration-Free Packaging

Now, this one we can all probably get behind. Amazon — which announced its “Frustration-Free Packaging” initiative back in November of last year, promising to kill clamshell plastic casings and the like — is making good on its word and stepping up the effort again. Joining the ranks of partners Fisher-Price, Mattel, Microsoft and Transcend, Amazon’s announced that Kingston Technologies is throwing its weight behind the drive to end our sadness and frustration as well. David Sun, co-founder and chief operating officer of Kingston also pointed out the eco-friendliness of such measures — which surely won’t be lost upon any of us, either. Kudos!

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Amazon announces next wave of Frustration-Free Packaging originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Aug 2009 17:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wireless Ebook Readers: Which One’ll Burn Down the Bookstore?

With the Sony Reader Daily Edition, the 3G-enabled ebook reader battle is pitched. At the end of this year, it’ll fight Amazon’s Kindle 2 and DX and Plastic Logic‘s eReader to the death. Here’s how they all stack up now:



Aaaand we can’t not do a proper sizemodo, naturally:

Engadget’s Kindle design contest: we have winners!

The votes are in, dear readers, and you’ve spoken loud and clear: from our original 23 finalists, your votes have boiled it down to five well-deserved winners who’ve clearly put time, effort, thought, determination, and old-fashioned elbow grease into their designs for gracing the metal back of Amazon’s 6-inch Kindle.

So what happens next? We’ll be working with winners and coordinating with the good folks at Adafruit Industries to turn these designs into reality thanks to some insanely high-powered precision lasers — picture that scene in Goldfinger where the film’s namesake tries to cut 007 in half to get an idea of just how high-powered we’re talking about here — and rest assured, we’ll be posting plenty of pictures as they come out of the workshop! Follow the break for the lucky five (presented in order with the most votes first).

A huge word of thanks to Amazon, Adafruit Industries, everyone who submitted entries, and the voters who figured out where these Kindles belong!

Continue reading Engadget’s Kindle design contest: we have winners!

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Engadget’s Kindle design contest: we have winners! originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Aug 2009 15:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony’s E-Book Reader Adds Touchscreen, Wireless Downloads

sony-reader-daily1

After letting Kindle dominate the e-book reader market for two years, Sony has fired a huge salvo in return. The new Sony Reader Daily Edition adds wireless 3G connectivity from AT&T, a larger 7-inch screen, and a touchscreen. The company has also created a feature called Library Finder that will allow users to borrow e-books from their local libraries, for free.

The Reader Daily Edition will cost $400 and is expected to be in stores this December.

“Sony has given the market what everyone was waiting for in terms of a wireless device,” says Sarah Rotman Epps, a Forrester analyst who has been covering e-readers. “Not only that, they have gone one step further, and shown their latest product is no copycat of the Kindle.”

Since Amazon introduced the Kindle in 2007, e-readers have become a surprisingly hot consumer product category.  Though Sony was the first to launch an e-reader, the company has lagged behind its biggest rival. One key missing feature was wireless connectivity: Until now, Sony Reader users who wanted to purchase or download books had to connect their e-reader to a PC using the USB connection. By contrast, the Kindle has always offered free over-the-air wireless downloads of books through Sprint’s network. Amazon also aggressively pursued publishers, enabling the company to offer a wide selection of popular books for download.

Now Sony is fighting back on both the features and the content fronts. The Reader Daily Edition offers portrait and landscape orientation. In portrait mode, about 30-35 lines of text are visible, offering an experience similar to that of a printed paperback book, says the company. The device has enough internal memory to hold more than 1,000 standard e-books, says Sony, and it has expansion slots for memory cards.

The Reader Daily Edition is the third new e-book reader the company has introduced in the last few weeks. Earlier this month, the company launched a $200 5-inch screen device called the Sony Reader Pocket and a $300, 6-inch touchscreen model called the Sony Reader Touch. Amazon’s Kindle 2 e-reader with 6-inch display sells for $300 and the large 9.7-inch screen Kindle DX costs $490; neither of them has a touchscreen.

Sony Reader’s second big weakness compared to the Kindle has been access to content. Amazon’s position as a leading online retailer of books helped the company offer a wide selection of e-books to Kindle buyers that were competitively priced and easy to download.

To match that, Sony has partnered with OverDrive, a distributor of e-books to libraries, to offer its customers easy access to the local library’s collection of e-books.  Sony Reader customers can use the company’s Library Finder software and check out e-books with a valid library card. Users will have to download the books to a PC first and then transfer them to the Reader. The e-books will expire at the end of the 21-day lending period.

Sony has also said it will adopt the open EPub format in a move that allows consumers to purchase or download books from the Sony store and read them on any EPub-compatible device. In contrast, Amazon uses a proprietary file format that only allows users to read books they’ve bought using the Kindle, or Amazon-sanctioned Kindle software.

“From the beginning, we have said that an open format means more choice for consumers,” says Steve Haber, president of Sony’s Digital Reading Business Division. “Now, readers can shop around for what interests them rather than be locked into one store.”

Still, it won’t be easy to beat Amazon, says Epps.

“Sony is number two in the market and though they are in a strong position to close the gap with Amazon over the holiday season, I expect Amazon to still be the market leader in early 2010,” she says.

“Amazon has built a very strong relationship with e-book buying consumers that were the first wave of adopters of electronic readers,” says Epps.

Sony’s Daily Edition e-reader will also have to contend with newer rivals vying for a piece of this fast growing segment. IRex, a Dutch company, said Monday it will launch a 8.1-inch touchscreen e-reader in the United States later this year. IRex has partnered with Barnes & Noble to use the latter’s e-books store to power its device. Meanwhile, another company, Plastic Logic, has been working to introduce its notepad-sized 8.5-inch reader targeted at business users.

“Consumers are now split between the small pocket-sized devices with 5-inch or 6-inch screens and the larger screen 8-inch to 10-inch screen readers,” says Epps. “But it is not over yet. The market is still evolving.”

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Photo: Sony Reader Daily Edition/Sony


Barnes Noble Teams Up With Dutch eBook Maker

Brick and mortar book mega-retailer Barnes & Noble has its sights set firmly on Amazon’s Kindle. The company has already teamed up with Plastic Logic to sell a new ebook reader, and now iRex Technologies has joined the fight. The Dutch company is currently working on its own e-reader set for a release this fall.

Not that iRex is keeping this relationship exclusive, or anything. “We will change the dynamics of the consumer market,” said the company’s North American CEO, Kevin Hamilton, “users want to easily purchase content from a variety of sources and we allow them to read it on an IREX eReader as well as other devices.”

iRex has been in the ebook space for a while now, having already brought a device called the iLiad to market.

As if We Didn’t Know the Wii Was Selling Well…

This article was written on December 27, 2007 by CyberNet.

Wii Money If you tried to hunt down a Wii this holiday season there is a good chance that you walked away empty handed and with a pounding migraine. The Wii is essentially a money printing machine for both retailers and Nintendo, but a nightmare for consumers who were trying to find one for their kids.

Amazon just published a press release outlining some of the stats from the holiday season. The busiest day was on December 10th where 5.4 million items were ordered…that’s 62.5 items per second! And guess what, when they had Wii’s in stock those were flying off the shelves at an amazing 17 units per second. If you tried to call up one of your friends to let them know that Amazon had Wii’s in stock, about 250 of them would have been sold by the time you dialed and your friend answered. Every 5 minutes that they had Wii’s in stock equates to over 5,000 units. And you wonder why they were so darn hard to find!

Amazon posted a lot of other stats as well, but many of them were not all that interesting. One that did catch my attention was that they shipped 160,000 packages to APO/FPO addresses, which are army/military addresses.

Congrats to you if somehow you managed to snag a Wii this holiday season!

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PS3 Slim shipping on August 26th, says Amazon

It looks like there might be a trend brewing among products with nondescript September release windows coming out in August instead — first with Apple, and now with Sony. Supply shortages or no, Amazon’s telling those who pre-ordered the PlayStation 3 Slim the first day it was announced should expect to have their consoles in-hand on Wednesday, August 26th, almost a whole week before the new month begins. Delivery estimates are subject to change, of course, but Amazon’s not one to typically screw around with shipping confirmations. Any other early adopters received confirmations lately?

[Thanks, Devin!]

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PS3 Slim shipping on August 26th, says Amazon originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Aug 2009 19:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon says PS3 Slim already facing supply shortages, Sony disagrees

Been holding off on that PS3 Slim pre-order, waiting for Sony to tell you that this whole PS2 backwards compatibility issue was just a big misunderstanding, and of course Sony will keep trying its best to reintroduce PS2 compatibility into the PS3? Well, you might want to rethink that strategy, cowboy, because Amazon is warning of “shortages of this product across the US.” It’s already limiting Slim sales to one per person, and has a more lax five-Slims-per-person strategy in the UK. Meanwhile, Sony in Europe is saying not to worry, since it has “trucks and trailers” of the new console already on the road . We just don’t know who to believe these days, but if you’re not prepared to wait past September 1st for a crack at the Slim, you’ve got some deciding to do.

Read – GamesIndustry.biz
Read – MVZ

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Amazon says PS3 Slim already facing supply shortages, Sony disagrees originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Aug 2009 10:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon, Microsoft and Yahoo unite against Google Books

Microsoft, its new pet dog Yahoo, and Amazon have decided to join together in the soon to be formed Open Book Alliance. You might expect this to be a revolutionary new collaborative effort at delivering the written word in a way that makes Google Books pale into insignificance, but you would, of course, be wrong. Far from trying to compete with Google, The OBA is set to act as the collective mouthpiece for all those opposed to Google’s recent $125 million settlement deal with book publishers and authors. With the US Department of Justice already investigating antitrust concerns relating to the case, the other big dogs just couldn’t restrain themselves from pitching in together for a united whinge. Should the settlement be cleared, it will permit Google non-exclusive rights to orphan works (those without an established writer) and will give it a 30 per cent cut of books sold via Google Books, both things that authors have agreed to. So what’s there to moan about, fellas — we all trust Google to do the right thing, right?

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Amazon, Microsoft and Yahoo unite against Google Books originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Aug 2009 08:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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