Pandigital’s Nova Android tablet hits Best Buy, explodes for $170

Pandigital has added a new star to its growing galaxy of e-readers, with the Nova Digital Reader — a seven-inch, Android 2.3-powered slate that looks awfully similar to that eight-inch Super Nova we recently spotted at the FCC. The tablet, which just popped up at Best Buy, is powered by an 800MHz processor, offers 4GB of internal storage, and features an ActiveTouch display with 800×600 resolution. Much like its forerunners, the Novel and the Planet, the Nova also connects directly to the Barnes and Noble bookstore, and sports a pair of front- and rear-facing cameras. Aside from that, you’ll find the usual 802.11 b/g/n wireless capabilities, a built-in microSD card slot, and a micro HDMI port, all packed within a frame that’s half-an-inch thick. Persuaded? Grab your ‘scope and zoom in on the source link to purchase.

[Thanks, Charlie]

Pandigital’s Nova Android tablet hits Best Buy, explodes for $170 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 05:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBest Buy  | Email this | Comments

Honeycomb beta update now available for Logitech Revue, only the intrepid need apply

Logitech Revue users are waking up to some exciting news today, because they can finally run Honeycomb on their TVs — if they’re brave enough to try. As expected, the folks over at GTVHacker have leaked their Android 3.1 beta update for the recently discounted set-top box, now available for download and flash without even requiring a root. You can find all the requisite details and downloads at the source link, though you’ll have to register with the site to do so. It’s also worth noting that the update is still in a buggy, beta phase of development, and that once you upgrade, you may not be able to go back. If you’re willing to dance with danger, let us know how you fare.

Honeycomb beta update now available for Logitech Revue, only the intrepid need apply originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 02:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Android Central  |  sourceGTVHacker  | Email this | Comments

Sonos Play:3 review

Sonos Play:3

Sonos may not inspire the sort of high-end audio lust that a company like Polk can, but it doesn’t draw the ire of serious audiophiles the way Bose does either. It straddles a fine line between respectability and gimmicky, and rightfully so — Sonos isn’t really an audio company in the purest sense of the term. Rather than loading up its components with vacuum tubes and gold-plated connectors, units like the recently launched Play:3 make their mark by incorporating wireless streaming — a feature that’s actually painless to setup. They’re for people who have embraced the digital music revolution, but don’t want to be stuck sitting in front of the computer or tethered to an iPod when the mood to groove strikes. The Play:3 also happens to be the first accelerometer-packing speaker we’ve ever tested that dynamically changes the EQ based on its orientation. As usual all the details — from connecting and controlling the player to whether or not it produces the sound quality to justify its somewhat lofty $299 price tag — are after the break.

Continue reading Sonos Play:3 review

Sonos Play:3 review originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Aug 2011 17:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Two-in-One Tablets Sport New Looks to Lure Customers

The Eee Pad Transformer is one of many Android tablets aiming to stand out among the crowd. (Photo courtesy Asus)

If you’ve seen one tablet, you’ve seen ‘em all: a flat slab with a glass front. A few hardware companies want to break that image with a different kind of slate: the hybrid.

It’s based on the idea that your tablet can be more than just an armchair device. Hook your pad up to a keyboard — sometimes provided, sometimes an optional accessory — and it’s an instant laptop solution, a relatively low-cost netbook for times when a touchscreen keyboards may not suffice.

“Hybrid tablets represent an attempt by manufacturers to fully explore the space of design possibilities,” Gartner research analyst Ray Valdes says. Hardware companies need to find a sweet spot with their tablet offerings, or “sustainable market niches” as Valdes puts it, in order to differentiate from what other companies are doing.

As new tablets hit the market every week, manufacturers are doing everything they can to stand out among the crowd. HTC was one of the first to experiment with the option of adding a stylus with its Flyer tablet, and Lenovo also plans to offer a tablet with an accompanying pen. Other companies have played with the idea of the form factor, sizing tablets anywhere from 7 to 10 inches in screen size. The tablet-laptop lookalike is the latest iteration of the theme.

“With hybrids, product designers are moving the needle in one direction and then back again,” Valdes said. “First strip out certain aspects of a netbook or laptop, such as the keyboard, and then reverse course by adding these pieces back in.”

The Asus Eee Pad Slider, for instance, is playing with the idea of the tablet-netbook hybrid. Essentially, Asus takes the concept of a smartphone slide-out keyboard and brings it to the tablet form, somewhat like a gigantic Motorola Droid phone. It’s an evolution of the company’s first big hybrid option, the Eee Pad Transformer.

The aptly named Eee Pad Slider includes an attached keyboard, which slides out from underneath the tablet screen. (Photo courtesy Asus)

Similarly, Lenovo plans to debut its ThinkPad tablet this fall, easily the most interesting of three tablet devices the company will release this year. Aimed at the business crowd that needs to respond to e-mails quickly, the ThinkPad comes with an optional folio-style case, complete with keyboard attachment. From what we’ve seen, it looks like a nice compromise between a carrying case and a functional peripheral input device. Keeping in line with the ThinkPad laptop heritage, the signature red-dot arrow controller appears smack in the middle of the keyboard.


University of Southern Mississippi hands out Galaxy Tabs to honors students (video)

Samsung and USM

Being an honors student at the University of Southern Mississippi just got a little more awesome. The college is hooking up its highest performers with brand new Galaxy Tab 10.1s, pre-loaded with software from the popular (and widely loathed) Blackboard educational portal. As you’d expect, syllabi, textbooks, and grades can all be easily pulled up by students in the Honors College, McNair Scholars, Southern Style, and Gulf Coast programs. With only a 1,000 going out now, the initiative stops shy of similar pushes by the Webb School and Seton Hill where everybody gets an iPad. And, while the educational value of tablets is still debatable, at least they’ll be able to read Engadget in style. Check out Sammy’s guitar-laden promo video after the break.

Continue reading University of Southern Mississippi hands out Galaxy Tabs to honors students (video)

University of Southern Mississippi hands out Galaxy Tabs to honors students (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Mobile Burn  |  sourceSouthern Miss Now  | Email this | Comments

University of Mississippi hands out Galaxy Tabs to honors students (video)

Samsung and USM

Being an honors student at the University of Southern Mississippi just got a little more awesome. The college is hooking up its highest performers with brand new Galaxy Tab 10.1s, pre-loaded with software from the popular (and widely loathed) Blackboard educational portal. As you’d expect, syllabi, textbooks, and grades can all be easily pulled up by students in the Honors College, McNair Scholars, Southern Style, and Gulf Coast programs. With only a 1,000 going out now, the initiative stops shy of similar pushes by the Webb School and Seton Hill where everybody gets an iPad. And, while the educational value of tablets is still debatable, at least they’ll be able to read Engadget in style. Check out Sammy’s guitar-laden promo video after the break.

Continue reading University of Mississippi hands out Galaxy Tabs to honors students (video)

University of Mississippi hands out Galaxy Tabs to honors students (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Mobile Burn  |  sourceSouthern Miss Now  | Email this | Comments

PhoneGap 1.0 lets devs write apps for seven platforms (video)

Until now, mobile app developers have followed a pretty predictable MO: develop for iOS first, Android second, and everyone else after that. Since last year, many of you code monkeys out there have been tapping into Nitobi’s PhoneGap, a project that makes it easier to churn out apps for almost every OS, all at once. It’s been picking up steam, with about 40,000 downloads per month, 600,000 in total, and a steady stream of donations. That all culminated this weekend with the release of PhoneGap 1.0, which lets devs use HTML, CSS, and JavaScript to write and deploy apps for iOS, Android, BlackBerry, webOS, Bada, and Symbian. That’s a long list indeed, but we see one glaring omission: Windows Phone 7. Hit the source link to download it for free and check out the promo video below for an oh-so quick overview.

Update: Oops! Looks like WP7 is included! Our apologies, and feel free to celebrate accordingly.

Continue reading PhoneGap 1.0 lets devs write apps for seven platforms (video)

PhoneGap 1.0 lets devs write apps for seven platforms (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Aug 2011 11:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TheNextWeb  |  sourcePhoneGap  | Email this | Comments

Sony Ericsson’s tiny Xperia Mini and Mini Pro on sale now in Taiwan and Hong Kong

Sony Ericsson Xperia Mini and Mini Pro

They’ve been announced, manhandled (by us and the FCC), and now they’re finally on sale… in Taiwan and Hong Kong. That’s right, some of the first folks to put Sony Ericsson’s latest Android phones in their pockets will be the citizens around HTC’s very own turf. According to VR-Zone and our brethren over at Engadget Chinese, both the Xperia Mini and Xperia Mini Pro are on shelves now for NT$7990 / HK$2,098 (about US$270) and NT$8990 (US$310) / HK$2,198 (US$280) respectively. It probably won’t be much longer now till these pair of itty-bitty, 3-inch Gingerbread phones hit the states but, if you’re impatient, those two cities are only about a 13-hour flight away.

Sony Ericsson’s tiny Xperia Mini and Mini Pro on sale now in Taiwan and Hong Kong originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Aug 2011 10:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceVR-Zone, Engadget Chinese  | Email this | Comments

Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite HDD invites Android users to its media streaming party

When we took a look at Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite back in May, we recommended that non-iOS buyers hold off until the company rolled out an app for different operating systems. Android users take note, the storage company today took the wraps off of an app that lets users wirelessly stream content like HD videos from the external hard drive to devices running their favorite dessert-themed mobile OS. No internet connection is required to stream, you just need to be in range of the drive. The 500GB GoFlex Satellite has a built-in battery that can stream video for up to five hours. The drive will run you $200, but the Android app is decidedly more free. Check the relevant press info below.

Continue reading Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite HDD invites Android users to its media streaming party

Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite HDD invites Android users to its media streaming party originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Aug 2011 10:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Vinci tablet for babies goes up for pre-order, prepares to be hurled across the playroom

When some of us were tots, there was one family computer, and we were lucky if we got our sticky little fingers on it while we were still in diapers. Times have changed, though, and for some parents, sharing the ‘ol iPad or 10.1 with curious babies just won’t do. Enter Rullingnet’s Vinci tablet, that ruggedized tablet for toddlers we played with back in January. It’s up for pre-order now, and though it’s not exactly the modded Galaxy Tab we saw demoed, it’s a very similar piece of hardware with a 7-inch (800 x 480) display, rugged casing, a 3 megapixel camera and Froyo on board. If you’ll recall, it’s missing any wireless radios (you know, to keep littles ones from being exposed to radiation), but parents can update apps via microUSB. Aside from the kid-proof caging, though, the hook here is that the tab comes pre-loaded with educational content such as 3D games, music videos, and animated storybooks — a package overseen by the company’s founder, herself a mother to young kids. With a starting price of $389, it’s slightly less expensive than other Android tablets, though there’s also a version with a more grown-up $479 price tag that doubles the battery life to six hours and comes loaded with more educational goodies. Hit the source links to pre-order, and remember that the tab’s intended for kids ages three and under, so if yours is already forming sentences, well, your investment should be good for at least a year.

Vinci tablet for babies goes up for pre-order, prepares to be hurled across the playroom originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Aug 2011 09:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink NetbookNews  |  sourceVinci, Amazon (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments