FCC cracks open Sony’s Xperia X8, posts user’s manual and revealing photos

Sure, that Xperia X8 in the picture may look demure, but the FCC doesn’t mess around — mere seconds after we found this shot of the 3-inch, Android 1.6 handset, we stumbled across a PDF showing the phone in — ahem — various states of dress. Now, we try to run a clean site here, so you’ll have to hit our source link to find those salacious pics (and manual) yourself, but if you want some nice, tasteful shots of the device’s exterior and ports you’ll find them immediately below. No new specs here, by the way — it’s the same quad-band GSM HSPA handset with WiFi, Bluetooth 2.0, A-GPS and FM radio we’ve seen before.

FCC cracks open Sony’s Xperia X8, posts user’s manual and revealing photos originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 21:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google responds to Android DRM breach, promises how-to on obfuscating code

Well, that was snappy. Just 24 hours after Android Police published a piece describing how easy it was to circumvent Google’s new Android licensing server, the Big G is hitting back with a brief response that it promises to elaborate on in the future. In order to address any doubts that developers may have, Google has noted that its new service is still “very young,” and “the first release shipped with the simplest, most transparent imaginable sample implementation, which was written to be easy to understand and modify, rather than security-focused.” Interestingly, the outfit doesn’t hesitate to pass some of the blame, saying that some devs “are using the sample as-is, which makes their applications easier to attack.” For those who’d like to better obfuscate their code, Google will be publishing detailed instructions on how to do so in the near future. We also appreciate the honesty in this quote in particular: “100 percent piracy protection is never possible in any system that runs third-party code.” As stated, the bullet points listed in the source link should be fleshed out in due time, but at least you hard working developers can rest easy knowing that Google isn’t standing by and letting pirates run amok.

Google responds to Android DRM breach, promises how-to on obfuscating code originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 16:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kiwi Uses Your Smartphone to Keep Your Car Happy

Kiwi DevicesWhen the “Check Engine” light comes on in your car, it lets you know it’s time to take it to someone who knows what that light means, if you don’t already know. What you may not know is that most mechanics and dealerships see that light and immediately connect diagnostic device to the data port under your steering console to get the error code that your car’s internal computer is sending: the one that results in that light on your dashboard. With the Kiwi from PLX Devices, you can use your iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, or Android device to get that code yourself. Once you have it, one quick Web search will tell you what’s wrong with your car before you even take it to the shop to have it fixed.

The Kiwi comes in two flavors: the Wi-Fi model that plugs into your car and uses your home wireless network to communicate with your iOS device, and a Bluetooth model that pairs with Android phones. Both models are designed to communicate with your device and then send data to any one of a wide variety of supported car diagnostic utilities in the iTunes App Store and Android App Market that you can download to your phone. Depending on the app you choose, you can query the Kiwi for more than just error codes: you can run diagnostics, do horsepower and torque calculations, monitor your fuel efficiency between trips, and more. The Kiwi Wi-Fi is available now for $149.99 list, and the Bluetooth model is available for $99.99 list. 

Please Stop Making New Phones With Old Firmware [Qotd]

We’ve reached the point where buying a “new” Android phone could still mean you’re using firmware that’s 18 months old. There’s got to be a better way. More »

New AWS-equipped HTC in FCC — is it the T-Mobile G2, the Glacier, or something else?

So we’ve collected enough circumstantial evidence recently to safely say that T-Mobile’s getting at least two potentially ultra-awesome Android phones in the next few months: the G2 (aka Vision, aka Desire Z), and the multi-core Glacier. We don’t know which, but we’re thinking that one of those bad boys has just garnered FCC approval thanks to a filing today for a model code PC10100 that features support for AWS 3G — the frequency pair T-Mobile USA uses — along with 802.11n WiFi. Notably, the filing also points out that HSPA+ is in the cards, which is a feature T-Mobile has been quick to trumpet in its G2 advertising thus far. Given that the G2 seems closer to retail than the Glacier, we’ll go ahead and surmise this is almost certainly the G2 here — but then again, crazier things have happened.

New AWS-equipped HTC in FCC — is it the T-Mobile G2, the Glacier, or something else? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 15:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung to Launch 7-inch Tablet in September

Apple’s iPad will finally have some real competition. Samsung is set to introduce a tablet next month called ‘Galaxy Tab’ that will have a 7-inch touchscreen display.

The device will run the Android 2.2 Froyo operating system, include video-calling capability and full web browsing—which likely means support for Flash, according to a teaser video that Samsung posted Tuesday morning. Samsung is expected to announce additional details on Sept. 2 at the IFA Berlin consumer electronics show.

Samsung’s video shows a tablet with a black bezel and four buttons that are similar to what we have seen in Android smartphones.

The Galaxy Tab will be the first tablet from a big consumer electronics maker since Apple’s iPad debuted in April. Earlier this month, Dell launched the Streak, a device with a 5-inch display that has been billed as a tablet but is priced and acts like a phone. Meanwhile, Apple is charging ahead with the iPad, with more than 3 million units sold. .

Other companies such as HP and BlackBerry maker Research In Motion are also working on tablets. HP has said its slate will use Palm’s WebOS operating system, but that tablet is unlikely to be released this year. RIM is hoping to get its tablet called ‘BlackPad’, a companion device to the BlackBerry phone out at the end of the year.

Samsung’s choice of a 7-inch screen is interesting. There have been rumors that Apple is working on a similar sized tablet.

So far, Samsung hasn’t revealed details around pricing or when the Galaxy Tab will be available to consumers.  But this is a major sign that the tablet market is heating up, and new devices that we have been hearing about for months are finally getting closer to market.

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Photo: Samsung website


Dell Aero available today for $100 with AT&T contract

We’d actually kind of assumed this thing had been deep-sixed as faster, better phones have passed it by all summer long, but nay: Dell’s Aero is finally in the land of the living. You can score the 3.5-inch 640 x 360 Android phone today with two-year AT&T contract for $99.99, though only through Dell’s interwebs — it’s still “coming soon” to AT&T’s site. Features include 2GB of onboard storage with microSD expansion, triband 3.6Mbps HSDPA and quadband EDGE, a 5 megapixel cam, and a 3.67-ounce claimed weight that makes it “one of the lightest” Android devices money can buy. Follow the break for the full press release.

Update: After checking with Dell, we’ve learned that the Aero is indeed still running Android 1.5, though the company is quick to note that it’s actually a “superset” with a “tremendous amount of customization” with features like handwriting recognition and Facebook baked into the platform. We’d argue Dell still has a bit to learn from HTC on how to iterate its customizations as quickly as Google can pump out Android versions — but maybe they’ll figure it out by the time the Thunder comes out.

Continue reading Dell Aero available today for $100 with AT&T contract

Dell Aero available today for $100 with AT&T contract originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 11:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Android ePad Tablet Reviewed. Verdict: Junk

Chinese gadgeteers Giz-China have tested out the $220 ePad, an Android tablet which is clearly “inspired” by the iPad. The verdict of the head-to-head test, it won’t surprise you to learn, is that the tablet is a piece of junk. This is despite the review’s author, Andi, curiously declaring the ePad the winner.

The ePad looks a lot like the iPad, but then the similarities end. The cheap tablet has a plastic back, good for letting through radio-waves and being lightweight, bad for stiffness and strength. Around the sides you see arrayed a laundry-list of ports “missing” from the iPad: microSD card-reader, a USB-port, HDMI port along with a front-facing camera. You also get Bluetooth and Wi-Fi.

Then we get to the screen. Here’s what Andi says: “Where as the iPad’s true touch screen offers crisp vibrant colours, the ePad looks dull and washed out […] The ePad has a terrible screen in comparison.” The ePad uses a resistive touch-screen, the kind you have to push hard to register a click. It is designed to work with a stylus but “Take away that stylus and you’ve got a very stubborn little tablet.”

Onto the OS. Andi declares this round a tie, despite admitting that “Each time I have used an Android device […] I’m always left underwhelmed,” and that iOS is “is very simple and quick to use/learn to use.” He even works in another dig at that awful screen.

What about the rest of the hardware, the 1GHz ARM A8 that powers the ePad? It managed to surf the web but after that it would “play choppy video clips and crash when we attempted to open a racing game that looked like it had come from a Commodore 64!! It then refused to do anything before it had had been given a complete hard reset!”

Oh dear. It seems that throwing a tablet together isn’t quite as easy as it might seem. Like a million tiny netbooks before it, the ePad might seem like a cheap bargain on paper, but when you use one, you find you have just wasted a few hundred dollars.

Exclusive: Hands On With The ePad Android Tablet [Giz-China]

Photos: Giz-China

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Dell Streak procures a hacked-up mini USB adapter, gets friendly with your dusty cables

Even if you can look beyond the SIM lock and the aging Android 1.6 OS on the Dell Streak, there’s still one irksome problem: the lack of a mini or micro-USB port (Dell clearly missed the USB party last summer). Dissatisfied with this state of affairs, John from Linux Slate decided to build an adapter for his tabletphone’s dock connector, which he confirmed to be PDMI instead of a proprietary design. The procedure was simple: John cut up his Streak’s cable plug, soldered a mini USB socket onto the board, and housed the new assembly within the Streak’s cable clip. Voilà! Until third-party USB-to-PDMI cables start to show up in the stores, it’s either this mod or cough up $20 for a spare cable from Dell. See the adapter in action after the break.

Continue reading Dell Streak procures a hacked-up mini USB adapter, gets friendly with your dusty cables

Dell Streak procures a hacked-up mini USB adapter, gets friendly with your dusty cables originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 09:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands-On: Simplenote 3 Stays Simple, Gets Powerful

Simplenote, our favorite note-taking application for iPhone, iPad, Android, the web and PC or Mac, has just seen a rather important update. Simplenote version 3 adds a treasure trove of new features, but don’t worry about that: If you don’t want them, you won’t even notice them.

Simplenote’s strength is its, well, simplicity. It launches instantly, you type in your note, and it syncs to the web. Searching throughout notes is instantaneous, just like iTunes searching used to be, and the synchronization is rock-solid. Better, there are a range of applications which tie into Simplenote’s open APIs so you can sync with your desktop.

So what’s new? Here’s a quick rundown of new features, in order of how excited I am by them.

Tags. Tags act like Gmail’s labels, letting you file a note in multiple “folders” at once. Tags are assigned by tapping the pale-gray tag field at the top of the note (found by pulling down the screen on the iPhone version), and browsed by navigating up to a new master-level in the pop-over list of notes. Best of all, it is almost invisible if you don’t intend to use it.

Sharing. You can now choose to share a note. Do this and you are prompted to send its address by e-mail. Once the other Simplenote users click on the link included, they can share and edit the note, allowing for simple collaboration. You can also share a note on the web using the same mechanism, except that the mailed link leads to a read-only web-page. Once shared, the note gets a little RSS-like symbol on it to remind you, and it turns blue when somebody else has updated the note.

Versioning. This one is big. Simplenote now tracks the changes you make to a note and remembers its history. You can slide a button to go back in time and restore previous version of notes.

Word Count Hit the “i” button up in the toolbar, and Simplenote will tell you how many words and characters you have typed. Also in this box is the switch to pin a note.

Pins. You can now “pin” any number of notes to the top of the list, yet keep sorting all other notes by date created, date modified or in alphabetical order. Another addition is sorting in reverse, using any of these criteria.

This is more useful than it might seem. You could keep your flight details afloat temporarily, or permanently pin a note to the top, to use as scratchpad.

Trash. Along with versioning, you also get a trashcan that stores deleted notes. You can restore notes with one button, making this one more safety feature.

Full-screen mode. This one is iPhone-only, as the iPad’s screen is already big enough. Hit the button and all window-chrome disappears, showing just the words and a light-gray button for returning to normal.

On top of this is a lot of polish to the user interface, support for iOS4 and a brand-new web interface.

There are a few glitches, some possibly due to server stress caused by the new launch. Tags aren’t syncing properly for me yet, although notes are fine.

One real oddity is the positioning of the new Sign-Out button, which does just what it says. The button is top-left in the main settings pane, in the exact same place as the Back button when navigating other parts of the settings. It is way to easy to hit by mistake (I did it almost straight away during testing).

Despite these couple of quibbles, the new Simplenote is great, managing to keep its speed and simplicity while at the same getting a whole lot more powerful (but only if you want it to). It is also free, supported by ads. Or you can go pro, which costs $12 per year and lets you drop the ads, add notes by e-mail and get them out with RSS.

Go download it now.

Simplenote [iTunes]

Simplenote [Simplenote]

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