Shanzai shocker! VIA processors in $100 Android tablets later this year

Brace for a storm of craptablets: this week, Taiwanese semiconductor firm VIA said its processors will appear in a new slate of cheap Android tablets destined for the US in the second half of this year. Speaking to Bloomberg, VIA marketing head Richard Brown said the company’s Chinese customers will ship around five tablets, that they’ll appear at $100 to $150 price points, and that “the tablet market has been legitimized by Apple” — that last likely in an attempt to make Bloomberg utter the words “VIA” and “iPad” in the same breath. (It worked.) Mind you, the iPad certainly isn’t the be-all, end-all of tablet computing, but we wouldn’t expect to get a legitimate iPad killer for $100, either. We think we said it best in April: you get what you pay for.

Shanzai shocker! VIA processors in $100 Android tablets later this year originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 May 2010 11:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy S will hit Asia in June, get Froyo later

Samsung has just let the cat out of the bag regarding its top of the line Galaxy S, which is set to make its global debut in Asian markets this June. Unsubsidized, this 4-inch beastie will cost you S$1,098 (or around $775), which might be a little on the steep side, but then this is one of only a pair of Super AMOLED handsets on the market and Samsung makes the other one. And in case you want an alternative closer to home, Amazon’s German portal is now listing the Galaxy S for pre-order at €649, which works out to about the same price. The best news from today, however, is probably Samsung’s official confirmation that the phone will be getting an Android 2.2 upgrade at some point in its future. No specifics are given as yet, but we’ll take our Froyo whenever and wherever we can get it.

[Thanks, Rob]

Samsung Galaxy S will hit Asia in June, get Froyo later originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 May 2010 07:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nexus One starting to show up in third party retail channels, commands big money

If you want to know what Google meant by “more retail availability” for the Nexus One when it talked about spiking its first-party phone store, take a good, hard look at our brave new world here. Independent retailer i Wireless has started offering a number of Android devices in the past few days, including the Nexus One — a product that’s still extraordinarily difficult to find outside of Google’s own site, especially since none of the American Big Four carriers intend to offer it directly. It turns out that i Wireless is an authorized T-Mobile affiliate, so they’re selling the phone for $299.95 on contract after rebate — a good bit more than the $179 Google charges, but in return, it looks like you can select just about any plan T-Mobile offers (Google restricts you to the Even More 500 plan to get the subsidy). We think we already miss the old way of getting these things.

Continue reading Nexus One starting to show up in third party retail channels, commands big money

Nexus One starting to show up in third party retail channels, commands big money originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 19:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Chrome OS Not Ready for Primetime Yet

When Computex kicks off next week, don’t expect to see any devices running Chrome OS.

Computex, held every year in Taipei, Taiwan, is one of the largest trade shows for PC makers, and you’d think Google’s upcoming OS for netbooks would be a star attraction this year. But Google is still racing to finish the operating system, and consumers aren’t likely to see the first Chrome OS devices until late fall.

Chrome OS will also be seen only in netbooks, at least at first, since the company isn’t encouraging Chrome OS for tablets. Instead it is steering tablet makers toward Android, the first of which will be the Dell Streak that launches in the U.K. next month.

“For Chrome, we are targeting the netbook form factor,” a Google representative told Wired.com. “The timeline for the first products is towards the end of the year.”

Google introduced Chrome OS in November as a lightweight, browser-based operating system that would boot up in seven seconds or less. The company said at the time that the first Chrome OS netbooks would be available in the “second half of 2010.” 

Google is working with major netbook makers such as Acer, which is hoping to ship a million Chrome OS netbooks this year. Google CEO Eric Schmidt has said Chrome OS netbooks will cost between $300 and $400, coming in line with devices running Microsoft’s Windows operating system.

Earlier this month, a report suggested Acer could show its Chrome OS netbook as early as June, but Acer has denied it. ”We have no short-term plans for such as product at Computex,” said an Acer statement on the company’s website.

“Given Google’s emphasis on Android at its developer conference, it is unlikely that we are going to see much if any Chrome activity at Computex,” said Michael Gartenberg, partner at research and consulting firm The Altimeter Group. “Chrome is probably not ready for prime time.”

If Google doesn’t move forward fast enough, it may lose ground to Microsoft’s Windows operating system, particularly among tablets. While they haven’t abandoned their Android plans, MSI and Asus both recently announced Windows 7-powered tablets.

Chrome is visibly a work in progress. At its I/O developer conference last week, Google announced a web-based app store that will feature free and paid apps. The app store will be a big step forward to making Chrome an attractive OS, according to Michael Cherry, vice-president of research for operating systems at independent research firm Directions on Microsoft.

“The missing piece so far has been apps and with the web-app store announcement Google is a step closer to the finish line,” said Cherry.

Apps are important for Chrome because Google has pitched it as a Linux-based, open source operating system centered on Google’s Chrome browser. Applications will run exclusively inside the browser.

Having easy access to those apps will be the key to the success of Chrome. The newly announced Chrome web store would do just that. When Google Chrome users install a web application from the store, a shortcut to quickly access the program.

Meanwhile, Google has to do a fine balancing act between Chrome and Android.

Chrome OS has been largely designed for netbooks and larger clamshell devices, while Android is aimed at smartphones.

Tablets fall somewhere in the middle, potentially causing confusion about which OS is best suited to the form factor. For its part, Google has been telling partners to adopt the fast-growing Android for mobile devices and reserve Chrome for netbooks and laptops: machines that can actually deliver on the thin client promise.

“Chrome is an open source project so anyone can take the code on any sort of device without telling us,” says the Google spokesman. “But we think Chrome and Android are two different approaches.”

Google wouldn’t comment on if it will ever merge Chrome and Android.

For now, Android is racing ahead, says Gartenberg.

“Android has the resources and momentum, and it is run by Andy Rubin and his team,” Gartenberg says. “Chrome appears to have fewer resources and no clear leader, at least from the outsider’s perception. In the near term, Google’s efforts are going to be Android-based.”

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Photo: (Travelin’ Librarian/Flickr)


Marvell shows off 10-inch Android tablet at Netbook Summit

Unfortunately, we don’t know much about this new Marvell powered tablet, but we couldn’t resist sharing our impressions of the very svelte 10-inch device. We only got a few minutes to play around with the slate at the Netbook Summit, but we can tell you that it has a brushed metal back and there’s an opening on the front for a camera. As for the internals, it’s based on Marvell’s Moby reference design, which uses its Snapdragon-class Armada 610 processor, and will run Android 2.1 Eclair. The rest will be up to whatever Marvell customer is bringing this bad boy to market — the Marvell executive that let us catch a glance at the device wouldn’t turn it on as he feared we may see the mystery customer’s logo. We told you we didn’t know much, but from what we saw today it sure looks promising. Now, if only we felt Android was ready Google would give us a tablet-ready version of Android…

Marvell shows off 10-inch Android tablet at Netbook Summit originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 16:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Shadow is the Likely Successor to Motorola Droid

Motorola’s Droid phone has been a big hit for the company — and if you are wondering what’s next, say hello to Shadow, the codename for the successor to the Droid.

The Shadow phone may be another device exclusive to Verizon and will be packed with features that could put it among the best in the market.

The phone will have a 1 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor. It will sport a 8-megapixel camera that can shoot 720p video, have a 4.3-inch display, an HDMI port and 16 GB of internal storage, says Gizmodo. That sounds a lot like the HTC EVO 4G phone on Sprint, minus the blazing-fast 4G data connection.

Shadow is also likely to run Android FroYo or Android 2.2, the latest version of the operating system that allows tethering and the ability to turn the phone into a wireless hotspot. There’s no word though on whether Adobe’s Flash Player 10.1 will run on the Shadow.

And in keeping the precedent set by Apple of losing prototype phones, the latest Shadow prototype was reportedly found left behind in a corporate Verizon gym. The phone was remotely locked, says the guy who found it. But at least this time around, it looks like no one paid money to get a peek at the device.

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Photo: Motorola Shadow/Gizmodo


Jobs and Schmidt Bury the Hatchet in 29 Adorable Ways [PhotoshopContest]

For this week’s Photoshop Contest, I asked you to show Steve Jobs and Eric Schmidt making nice. After all, life is too short for bitter personal relationships. And you responded with some really hilarious images. More »

Acer ‘Liquid Stream’ S110 scores FCC approval: Android, 720p video recording

So a new Android-powered handset from Acer popped up at IO last week — the so-called “Liquid Stream,” which would presumably succeed the Liquid and Liquid e in Acer’s lineup. AndroidGuys is reporting that the phone is currently running Android 2.1 (which we’d hope would morph into 2.2 by release) paired with a Snapdragon core and a 5 megapixel camera capable of 720p video capture, so it’s the “5.0 Megapixel HD 720p” inscription on the back of the diagram in this FCC filing for a phone called the Acer S110 (along with the obvious similarity in shape) that’s allowing us to deduce that these two bad boys are one and the same. Android France has it pegged for October — and it’s got 850 / 1900MHz HSPA, so we could theoretically see a few land in North America by the time this all shakes out. Who’s interested?

Acer ‘Liquid Stream’ S110 scores FCC approval: Android, 720p video recording originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 13:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dell Streak Tablet Official, Crippled by Android 1.6

streak_front

Dell’s little five-inch tablet, the Streak, has gotten official, and it will launch in the UK “early next month”. The Snapdragon 1-GHz-equipped Android slate has been Dell’s worst-kept secret for a while, but now at last it has made it (almost) into the light and revealed a rather dirty little secret: it will run the ancient Android 1.6 OS.

The Streak will be available on the O2 network and sold through O2 or Carphone Warehouse, whose press release says that “Dell [has] confirmed an over-the-air Android upgrade for Streak, complete with full flash 10 support, which will be available a bit later on in the year.” Given the tardiness with which carriers apply these updates and we won’t be holding our breath for Froyo to appear on the Streak.

The tablet, which unlike the iPad can actually make phone calls (if you’re willing to hold such a monster up to your ear), has a 5MP camera (with LED “flash”), a 5-inch WVGA touch screen, GPS along with 3G, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi and ships with a 16GB microSD card. Despite the imminent launch, O2 has still not set a price.

It’ll be very interesting to see how this does. On one hand, it is a rather large but very functional cellphone. On the other, it is a more portable alternative to the iPad that will also replace your phone. The price will be key, so stay tuned. More official pictures below.

Dell Streak to launch exclusively on O2 [O2]

Dell Streak: our very first tablet [Carphone Warehouse]

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Motorola’s 4.3-inch Droid Shadow found in a unicorn gym?

Color us highly skeptical of the backstory, but Gizmodo claims to have received a picture of Motorola’s rumored 4.3-inch Droid Shadow. The device above was supposedly left behind at a Verizon corporate gym in Washington. As the story is told, a gym employee managed to snap the photo above and identify an HDMI jack, 8 megapixel camera, Snapdragon processor, and 16GB of storage before the handset was remotely locked and the owner returned to claim it. Suspiciously, there’s only one photo of the device shown at precisely the same angle as the supposedly leaked “getting started” image seen three days ago — right, just enough time to cobble together a Photoshop. The refined Motoblur UI seems to align though so who knows… really, who knows?

[Thanks, Aaron]

Motorola’s 4.3-inch Droid Shadow found in a unicorn gym? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 May 2010 06:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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