How would you change Barnes & Noble’s Nook Color?

Now that you’ve had ample time to get through a few novellas, we’re keenly interested in finding out how you’d change Barnes & Noble’s Nook Color if given the opportunity. For an e-reader, it’s deliciously hackable, giving you a way to blow off steam after a hard day’s night… of soaking up information, that is. We found it to be amongst the top of its class when we reviewed it back in November, but this space is all about you. Would you overhaul the user interface? Ship it with a fancier build of Android? Boost the battery life? Go on and get opinionated in comments below — we promise we won’t judge.

How would you change Barnes & Noble’s Nook Color? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 22:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tablets, 4G and 3-D to Dominate Mobile World Congress

The entrance to La Fira, Barcelona, the venue of the Mobile World Congress

BARCELONA, Spain –- Europe’s biggest wireless industry trade show starts here on Monday. This year, it’s likely that cellphones will have to share the limelight with a relatively new product category: tablets.

At previous years’ Mobile World Congresses, we have seen the rise of Android, the takeover of multitouch and the push into 3G. But this year the show comes hard on the heels of the International Consumer Electronics Show (which saw the introduction of as many as 80 new tablets) and Google’s announcement of Honeycomb, the tablet-tailored version of its Android operating system.

“There will be a clear discussion on a ton of Android honeycomb tablets,” says Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at Gartner Research, “as well as stuff that will be instantly forgettable.” The challenge, for tablet makers, will be standing out from the crowd.

In other words, expect a lot of gimmicks.

So far, the only officially official Honeycomb tablet is Motorola’s Xoom, but we’re expecting to get some hands-on time with the LG G-Slate, a 7-incher with the dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2 mobile processor, a pair of cameras and — here’s the gimmick — 3-D. The rear-facing camera can capture 3-D and the screen can display it (although you’ll need glasses to see the 3-D effect). The G-Slate will also pack in a 4G radio, making it fully buzzword-compliant.

Also on show will be Honeycomb tablets from Asus. The Eee Pad is likely to exist only behind glass as a prototype, as it is not expected to ship until summer, Asus says.

With any luck, Hewlett-Packard will have the brand-new, webOS-based TouchPad on show, and we’d like to get some hands-on time with the BlackBerry Playbook, and especially to see what it can do when paired with a BlackBerry phone.

More models expected to arrive at the show are the successors to Samsung’s Galaxy S and Tab. A (probably genuine) leaked schedule shows that Samsung plans to introduce the Galaxy S 2 and Tab 2 at a preconference event on Sunday. Rumors say that this may be a 10-inch version of the existing 7-inch Tab, and it is almost certain to run Android 3 Honeycomb.

4G is also likely to be prominent at the show. For the handset makers, its pretty easy: you just make a phone with a different radio, and you can offer your customers faster data download speeds. The problem comes with the carriers, who can’t just switch up things on the production line but instead have to roll out new cell-tower infrastructure. And that takes time.

Expect some news on voice-over-LTE, or VoLTE, the 4G-based internet voice standard that Verizon announced support for recently, says Roger Entner, the founder of Recon Analytics, a market analysis and wireless strategy consulting company.

“The holdup on VoLTE is not device-driven, but network-driven,” says Entner. “We have devices ready to take advantage of it, but the networks are not.”

At first, we’re likely to see a lot of 4G mobile hotspots. These are an easy bet for early adopting nerds, as you get 4G speeds where there is coverage, but we still have a 3G cellphone or tablet to fall back on.

There should be some fun items, too. Sony Ericsson’s Xperia Play, a.k.a. the PlayStation phone, is likely to be ready for some hands-on time. The Android-based phone, shown off in a deeply creepy Superbowl ad this past Sunday, is essentially a Sony Ericsson landscape-slider with a PlayStation game pad in place of the QWERTY keyboard. And that’s really all it needs to be.

The Xperia Play will also be the first handset to get the PlayStation Suite, a software platform and store that will let users of pretty much any modern Android device play Sony’s games.

Finally, 3-D, which showed up strong at CES last year but failed to catch fire in the market in 2010. Nobody bought 3-D TV sets, so it seems that the next battleground will be our cellphones, an even less suitable place for spectacle-encumbered viewing than the TV.

Thankfully, LG will be showing off the LG Optimus 3D, a glasses-free, dual-core-processor packing Android phone. This large (likely 4.3-inch screen) handset is probably little more than a gimmick. It’s possible that its 3-D capabilities will kill battery life, and even if it doesn’t, my guess is that this will be the modern-day equivalent of the analog View-Master. It’ll be fun for a day or two and then the novelty will wear off.

One thing I really hope to see among all of these announcements is some actual prices for tablets. As they pile cameras and other hardware features into slim slate-like bodies, the Motorolas and Samsungs are finding it difficult to match the pricing of the iPad. Moto’s Xoom is pegged at $800 by many rumors, and a 10-inch Galaxy Tab would surely cost more than the already expensive 7-incher. I never thought I’d see the day, but it seems that Apple tablets are likely to remain the cheapest option for some time.


Google details low-level Renderscript API for Honeycomb

There’s no question that Honeycomb tablets like the Xoom are powerful pieces of hardware, and it looks like Google will be doing its best to ensure that developers are able to exploit as much of that power as possible. A big piece of that puzzle is the company’s Renderscript API for the OS, which it’s just now starting to detail in full. The big advantage there is that it’s a low-level API designed especially for developers who are “comfortable working closer to the metal,” which will let applications built with it (including games) take full advantage of the high-end GPUs and dual-core processors found in Honeycomb tablets. What’s more, while the API is just now being made public, it’s already been put to use in Honeycomb by Google itself — both the YouTube and Books apps, and the live wallpapers shipping with the first Honeycomb tablets were created with the help of it. Head on past the break for another quick example — a brute force physics simulation that involves 900 particles titling with the tablet — and look for Google to provide some additional technical information and sample code sometime soon.

Continue reading Google details low-level Renderscript API for Honeycomb

Google details low-level Renderscript API for Honeycomb originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 16:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG Optimus 3D previewed in remarkably convincing teaser video

We just saw a brief teaser video for the LG Optimus 3D a few days ago, but another, longer one has now also surfaced that shows just how much the phone’s glasses-free 3D display can help you in everyday situations — like practicing yoga. As explained by LG, some things are simply too complicated to be conveyed by a two-dimensional medium like a big screen TV, and can only truly be grasped by holding a phone and looking at a 4.3-inch screen while standing on one leg. See for yourself after the break.

[Thanks, M.]

Continue reading LG Optimus 3D previewed in remarkably convincing teaser video

LG Optimus 3D previewed in remarkably convincing teaser video originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 13:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung preparing a 10.1-inch Galaxy Tab 2 with Honeycomb for this Sunday?

Samsung’s MWC 2011 presentation is this Sunday, at 6PM Central European Time (midday for those on the American east coast). We already know it will feature a dual-core evolution to the Galaxy S smartphone and we know for a fact there’ll be at least one new tablet on show. Pocket-lint is today filling in some details about said Tab successor by identifying it as a 10.1-inch Android 3.0 device. That means Samsung is stepping right up to Motorola, whose Xoom still looks likely to be the first Honeycomb tablet to ship, and saying it can do better. It might just be able to do it, too, as the new and unnamed Tab is said to be physically smaller than Apple’s iPad in spite of having a slightly larger display. Somewhat less believable is the mention of a dual-core Qualcomm processor as the thing to power Samsung’s new tablet — can you really see Samsung undermining the future success of its Orion / Exynos chip by using a competitor’s hardware? Then again, weirder things have happened.

Samsung preparing a 10.1-inch Galaxy Tab 2 with Honeycomb for this Sunday? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 10:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia’s Elop responds to Google’s ‘Two turkeys’ tweet

Like it or not, you have to hand it to Stephen Elop, Nokia’s new CEO. The man isn’t afraid to shake things up and clean house to meet his vision of the future. And now that he’s made Windows Phone 7 Nokia’s “primary smarphone platform” in what he sees as a three-way race between Microkia, Googloid, and Apple (sorry HP and RIM), the man’s free to unleash his mild-mannered Canadian fury upon Google’s Vic Gundotra (via proxy). As you’ll recall, Vic insulted the rumored partnership earlier in the week by tweeting, “two turkeys do not make an Eagle.” If you don’t understand Elop’s twitter-burn then we urge you to visit one of Dayton Ohio’s fine historical museums while eating a slice of Cassano’s pizza — we hear it’s delicious.

[Thanks, Jack]

Nokia’s Elop responds to Google’s ‘Two turkeys’ tweet originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 06:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IcedRobot Android fork to sidestep legal battle between Oracle, Google

We’d prepared ourselves for a drawn-out legal battle between Oracle and Google when we heard the former was suing the latter for Java-related copyright infringement, but fortunately for Android enthusiasts, not everyone was so resigned. A team of developers are working on an Android fork called IcedRobot (yep, that’s the logo) to separate the offending Dalvik Virtual Machine from the OS, hopefully circumventing this epic argument altogether. The project seeks to create a Java Virtual Machine (JVM) that is based on OpenJDK (an open-source implementation of Java), avoiding Oracle’s Apache Harmony, and to allow Android to run on just about any PC with the use of Hotspot, another device non-specific JVM using open-source Java. It’s a tall order, and the devilish little Android has already gained a healthy amount of tech industry skepticism, but we’re interested to see if these guys can make it work. Either way, we’re pretty sure we’ve still got years of legal volleying to go before Google and Oracle can play nice again — this ain’t no People’s Court, folks.

IcedRobot Android fork to sidestep legal battle between Oracle, Google originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 06:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Linux for Devices  |  sourceMario Torre  | Email this | Comments

Nokia Q&A reveals more MeeGo details and tablet plans — says Android ‘risk of commodification was very high’

The Steve show just ended with both Elop and Ballmer hosting a very informative media Q&A following the reveal of Nokia’s plan to use Windows Phone 7 as its “primary smartphone platform.” Here are the highlights:

  • No specific announcement for when we’ll see the first Nokia Windows Phone. Ballmer mentioned that the engineering teams have spent a lot of time together already.
  • Elop also confirmed that Nokia is a Finnish company and always will be — they will not be moving to Silicon Valley or anywhere else.
  • Ballmer said that the partnership is “not exclusive” but some things that Microsoft is doing with Nokia are “unique” allowing Nokia to differentiate itself in the market. Elop added that it’s important for the Windows Phone 7 ecosystem to thrive, which means that multiple vendors must succeed.
  • Elop didn’t believe that Nokia could create a new ecosystem around MeeGo fast enough.
  • Nokia will “substantially reduce” R&D expenditures while increasing R&D productivity moving forward.
  • Nokia did talk with Google about adopting Android but decided that it “would have difficulty differentiating within that ecosystem” and the “commoditization risk was very high — prices, profits, everything being pushed down, value being moved out to Google which was concerning to us.” Microsoft presented the best option for Nokia to resume the fight in the high end smarpthone segment.
  • Elop clarified that MeeGo will ship this year but “not as part of another broad smarpthone platform strategy, but as an opportunity to learn.” Something that sounds very similar to position Nokia took with its so-called “experimental” Maemo-based N900 last year. After the first (and apparently, only) MeeGo device ships this year, the MeeGo team will then “change their focus into an exploration of future platforms, future devices, future user experiences.” Trying to determine the “next disruption” in smartphones.
  • Responding to “hope for a broad MeeGo-based ecosystem,” Elop said that Nokia simply wasn’t moving fast enough to effectively win and compete against Apple and Google. Windows Phone makes it a “three-horse race,” something that Elop says is pleasing to the carriers he’s been speaking with.
  • Nokia has different options for its tablet strategy including using something from Microsoft or something that Nokia has developed internally.

Nokia Q&A reveals more MeeGo details and tablet plans — says Android ‘risk of commodification was very high’ originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 06:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ViewSonic intros dual-SIM V350 smartphone, Windows 7 / Android dual-boot ViewPad 10Pro tablet

Mobile World Congress may not have its halls open quite yet, but that’s not stopping ViewSonic from giving the world a peek at what’s to come. First up is the V350 smartphone shown above, a dual-SIM creature with a 3.5-inch HVGA capacitive touchpanel, Android 2.2, five megapixel camera, a microSD card slot, WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1 and A-GPS to boot. By supporting a pair of SIMs, it allows jetsetters to carry two SIMs from two operators in order to take advantage of different plans and networks for voice / data in different countries.

Moving on, there’s a highly intriguing new tablet in the waiting — the ViewPad 10Pro. This 10-incher (shown after the break) is a “professional” slate with dual-boot functionality, enabling users to tap into Android 2.2 or Windows 7 Professional at their leisure. It’s also one of the first tablets to utilize Intel’s long-awaited Oak Trail platform, and it’ll ship with a 1024 x 600 LED-backlit capacitive multitouch screen, inbuilt 3G, WiFi, Bluetooth and a battery good for six or so hours of life. Finally, the ViewPad 10s — which was just unveiled at CES — is seeing a gentle update in Barcelona, with the ViewPad 10s 3G (predictably) gaining integrated 3G functionality. Mum’s the word on pricing and release, but as always, we’ll be prying for more once we touch down at BCN.

Continue reading ViewSonic intros dual-SIM V350 smartphone, Windows 7 / Android dual-boot ViewPad 10Pro tablet

ViewSonic intros dual-SIM V350 smartphone, Windows 7 / Android dual-boot ViewPad 10Pro tablet originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 02:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bloomberg: RIM working to let BlackBerry PlayBook run Android apps, but Dalvik’s not the way

We’d heard sweet, sweet rumors that RIM would include a Java virtual machine in the BlackBerry PlayBook and even bring Android apps on board — and lo and behold, Bloomberg‘s corroborating those claims with no fewer than three anonymous sources. Where the new rumor diverges is that the Dalvik virtual machine used in Google’s OS reportedly won’t be part of the formula; RIM considered it, these sources say, but decided it didn’t want to get involved in the Oracle / Google legal fracas. Apparently, the company’s working on this secret project in-house and targeting a possible release in the second half of the year. We have to say, the ready availability of roughly 200,000 Android programs could be quite the shot in the arm if WebWorks and AIR don’t produce killer apps right away.

Bloomberg: RIM working to let BlackBerry PlayBook run Android apps, but Dalvik’s not the way originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 01:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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