Sony Ericsson XPERIA X10 catches FCC on a good day

Oh, to live the life of an FCC certification lab employee: setting up test benches, writing reports, playing with devices that won’t be released for months or years. Instead, we’re stuck enjoying their fun vicariously at an arm’s length through a little portal we know as the FCC Office of Engineering and Technology, where gems like the X10 occasionally pop up complete with pretty in-the-wild pictures, teardowns, and user manuals. What we’re looking at here are test results for EDGE 850 / 1900 plus WCDMA Band IV (that’d be T-Mobile’s and WIND’s spectrum, by the bye), WiFi, and Bluetooth, so even if T-Mobile ultimately chooses not to offer it on contract, you should be able to score it one way or another N900-style. The user’s manual is basically just 40 pages of good stuff plus a bunch of conformity statement mumbo jumbo, but it’s still a good read — so if you think this might be your phone of choice come 2010, have a look.

Sony Ericsson XPERIA X10 catches FCC on a good day originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 17:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Notion Ink smartpad comes with Tegra, aims to be first Pixel Qi device

Now here’s a way to excite all the tablet naysayers. Slap that ultra-efficient Tegra chipset inside a 10.1-inch touchscreen tablet, make the display a matte (yay!) Pixel Qi slice of glory and then stand back as all of geekdom rejoices. We’re still only looking at renders, but this device is all set to make waves at CES with an impressive spec sheet that also includes WiFi, Bluetooth, UMTS/HSDPA, and A-GPS on the wireless front and connectivity via USB, HDMI, and a 3.5mm headphone jack. The most important thing is still that display, though, whose efficiency leads to the unnamed device boasting 48 hours of battery standby juice, also good for 8 hours of HD video playback or 16 hours of WiFi-enabled Engadget reading. Driven by a default (for now) Android UI and supposedly capable of running three simultaneous 1080p streams with little frame loss, this should be one hot piece of kit come January. For now, we have another shot after the break as well as the full data sheet.

Continue reading Notion Ink smartpad comes with Tegra, aims to be first Pixel Qi device

Notion Ink smartpad comes with Tegra, aims to be first Pixel Qi device originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 05:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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OS X Surpasses Windows Market Share (On Phones)

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A new survey from Comscore shows that the iPhone has jumped ahead of the ailing Windows Mobile in the US. Comscore measured actual ownership instead of sales figures (as in “What phone do you use?”). RIM’s Blackberry still comes out on top, but in October  Apple jumped ahead of Microsoft, with almost nine million users to Windows’ 7 million.

And remember, Apple has just the three generations of the iPhone and the iPod Touch, while Windows Mobile has been shipping on a whole range of devices for several years. Interestingly, although Palm comes in ahead of Symbian and Google (Android), these figures discount the Pre WebOS as there just aren’t enough Pres out there to show on the charts.

With manufacturers like HTC, traditionally a big WinMo handset maker, defecting to Android (HTC makes the Nexus phone for Google), Microsoft had better watch out. As the mobile market grows and slowly pushes out the desktop and laptop computer, Windows’ stranglehold on the computer industry will continue to slip.

What were the top smartphone operating systems in October? [Fierce Developer via Cult of Mac]


Google’s Nexus One lacks multitouch

Our buddy Tnkgrl just had a sit down with Google and HTC’s lovedroid, the Nexus One. She “wasn’t allowed” to take pictures or video but she came away with plenty of detail. The biggest point of clarification might not be what’s included in the handset, but what’s missing: multitouch. She confirms, “no multitouch support in the browser or in Google Maps,” just like Verizon’s Droid (but available on its European Milestone brother). The unit she tested included a 4GB microSD card, 1400mAh battery, worked on T-Mobile’s 3G only (AT&T is limited to EDGE data), and was “super snappy! Faster than the Droid.” She also noted “gold contacts” along the bottom edge presumably for a docking port thus jibing with whispers of a Nexus One Car Dock accessory. Now hit the read link for all the details if you still have the strength.

P.S. We should probably clarify that while the Google Apps tested don’t respond to multitouch, the OS and hardware are presumably multitouch capable. See our previous exhaustive analysis of this topic if you’re wondering why.

Google’s Nexus One lacks multitouch originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 04:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint’s HTC Hero and Samsung Moment on track to get Android 2.1, not 2.0

So Sprint’s backtracking on its promise to deliver Android 2.0 to its Hero and Moment in the first half of next year, but it’s backtracking in an awesome way for a change of pace — they’ll actually be getting 2.1. That makes tons of sense considering that the leaked Hero builds have all been on 2.1 and 2.0 will be all but obsolete by the time HTC gets around to releasing anything — so yeah, we probably could’ve predicted this anyway, but now it’s official. Unfortunately that 1H 2010 window hasn’t been reigned in at all, but here’s hoping this is a case where they under-promise and over-deliver.

Sprint’s HTC Hero and Samsung Moment on track to get Android 2.1, not 2.0 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Dec 2009 20:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Hero, Samsung Moment Will Get Android 2.1 Updates

Hey Sprint Android phone owners – how about a nice slice of Flan? Sprint noted today on their official Twitter account:

“Slight clarification on Android OS updates for the HTC Hero & Samsung Moment. Will be updating straight to Android 2.1, not 2.0, in 1H2010.”
So you’re going to have to wait for your Android update, but at least it will be the most current form of pastry. This is probably what Sprint planned all along, but they probably couldn’t talk about Android 2.1 (aka Flan) before all the information about the Android 2.1-packing HTC Nexus One came out.
We don’t know all that much about Android 2.1’s features, but we expect to find out at the CES trade show the first week of January, when we’re pretty sure we’re going to see a Nexus One.
Enjoy your Flan.

Hands On: enTourages Slimmed-Down eDGe eBook Reader

eDGe Production 1

Last month, we had an opportunity to try out the eDGe eBook reader from enTourage–a dual-screen device with a 10.1-inch LCD alongside a traditional E INK display. To make things even more interesting, the $490 eDGe runs Android and offers far more features than any other eBook device on the market.

The working sample we saw and photographed last month was a bulky pre-production model, however, so enTourage returned to our office today with a much slimmer production sample. The eDGe will ship in February, with models ranging in price from $490 to $530, depending on color. enTourage is currently in talks with service provides to add 3G to the device.

More pictures after the jump.

HTC debuts widgets for Sense-equipped Android phones

HTC was already in the Android software game by virtue of the fact that it drops a fully-customized UI and widget suite on some of its models, but this is new: they’ve migrated over to the Market. Now, what’d be insanely awesome here is if you could, say, buy Sense for $9.99 and install it on any Android device, but yeah, not so much — what we’ve actually got here is a four-pack of free widgets that are compatible with the Hero and Droid Eris. Dice, Today in History, Tip Calculator, and Battery are each downloadable individually; none are particularly exciting or different than what’s already available in the Market, but they’ve all got that famous HTC high style and the exclusivity of knowing that Motorola, Acer, Samsung, and Huawei riffraff can’t use them. All four are available now.

HTC debuts widgets for Sense-equipped Android phones originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Dec 2009 13:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Economics of a Free Google Phone

We’ve all been a little breathless over the idea of The Google Phone, and that everything could change (some of us, anyway). But, wait, you say, Google can’t just give away a phone like that. Well, they could.

Let’s just start with the numbers. Google has a gigantic $22 billion pile of cash. Just sitting there. It had profits of $1.64 billion last quarter, on revenues of $5.94 billion. It has a lot of money.

Now let’s look at the Nexus One. There aren’t any good cost breakdowns of the closest phone to it, the Droid, but iSuppli’s teardown pegged the iPhone 3GS at a build cost of about $180 to build about six month ago, so it’s not a bad assumption that today, the Nexus One would run around $200, maybe a little more. Selling the Nexus One direct to consumers at cost—in other words, the exact same amount it costs Google to build them—by definition costs Google nothing. Even if Google were to take a massive $100 hit on every phone to sell them at $200 (or less) and wanted to push 5 million of them, it would cost Google $500 million. That’s a pretty tiny of chunk of $22 billion. I mean, Sergey Brin spends millions on companies without Eric Schmidt even noticing. Point being, Google, even in the most drastic scenario, doesn’t need a phone company to subsidize the Google Phone.

Now, let’s look at how Google makes all that money, considering all the crap they give away for free, like email, finding stuff for you, browsers, turn-by-turn navigation and, lately, operating systems. Advertising. $5.75 billion of its revenues—97 percent—came from advertising. Whenever you go on the internet, essentially, Google makes money. It’s why they give away all that stuff, because, they want you online a lot.

So, that doesn’t quite explain why Google would want people to have a Nexus one that badly. Until you look at stuff like Morgan Stanley’s 424-page tome, ‘The Mobile Internet Report,’ which says things. Things like mobile internet will be “at least 2x size of Desktop Internet” and that smartphones will beat out notebook and netbook shipments next year. And remember that by purchasing AdMob, Google became the biggest mobile advertiser on the planet (that’s with just 24 percent marketshare, meaning they have plenty of room to grow and conquer). It works out even better for Google if you’re using an Android phone, because it’s completely tethered to Google services, driving you to the internet that much more. (Both on your Android phone and your big computer.) Bottom line: More people using smartphones, especially theirs, going on the internet, makes Google money not just immediately, but long term, since you’re not going to go back to a dumbphone.

And that’s not even considering some of the more offbeat rumors or speculation, that’ll it be subsidized by ads built into the phone, or go full-blown VoIP (Google just bought a VoIP company called Gizmo5) instead of voice plan, on top of using a weird online rebate through Google.

We’re just saying, it’s totally reasonable Google can sell the Nexus One for cheap, without help from the carriers, and it’s not so crazy even, for Google to give it away, just like turn-by-turn navigation. That’s what might be worth getting a little breathless about.

Motorola Milestone firmware coaxed into Droid, multitouch ensues (video!)

If you thought it’d be easy to move code back and forth between two nearly-identical Motorolas running Android… well, you’d apparently be right. Unfortunately, taking clear video of the completed task proves, as ever, to be an insurmountable task. Of course, the Android hacking community has overcome pretty much every other roadblock it’s encountered so far, so it shouldn’t come as any surprise to learn that the Milestone’s firmware has been successfully ported today over to its big, loud American cousin, the Droid, thanks to the work of AllDroid’s Eugene and Barakinflorida who risked their own device for your gain. Our understanding is that the ROM’s cooked in some regard — it’s not bone stock, which makes sense if for no other reason than the fact that the Droid’s got a completely different radio — but fortunately, that all-important multitouch support carries over from the Euro side. We’re hearing direct from AllDroid‘s founder, Brent Fishman, that the ROM should drop in a couple of days. Until then, follow the break for a video of the build in action.

P.S. Don’t worry Droid owners, Google Navigation is still functional with this build.

Update: Better video added after the break! Man, these guys learn fast.

Continue reading Motorola Milestone firmware coaxed into Droid, multitouch ensues (video!)

Motorola Milestone firmware coaxed into Droid, multitouch ensues (video!) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Dec 2009 05:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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