PSA: Got a Nook Color? Then you can get dual-booting Nook2Android

Here comes a public service announcement: Eat slower and you’ll feel fuller. Oh sorry, wrong one. We meant: Nook Color owners, you can now dual-boot your slate using the specially-created Nook2Android SD card. The card makes installing Android 2.3 a snap and it’s now shipping with a dual-boot file courtesy of XDA developers, which means you can choose to boot into the original Nook OS without having to remove the card. You’re looking at $35 for an 8GB card, rising to $90 for 32GB. Alternatively, if you’re happy to get a bit of oil on your hands, you can try the manual approach. Mmmm, Gingerbread, chew every mouthful.

PSA: Got a Nook Color? Then you can get dual-booting Nook2Android originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jul 2011 10:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Keepin’ it real fake: Xiaomi M1 melds iPhone and Galaxy S II with custom MIUI ROM (update: no, not really)

Granted, what you’re looking at is nothing more than a skillful render, but if Apple and Samsung ever made beautiful babies, this is what would be bestowed upon the world — pesky lawsuits notwithstanding, that is. The KIRF in question is the Xiaomi M1, a smartphone designed specifically for the MIUI custom Gingerbread ROM. It’s sporting a 1.2GHz dual-core Qualcomm CPU, along with a four-inch, 854 x 480 Super LCD capacitive touchscreen display, and the usual assortment of Bluetooth, GPS, and WiFi. Users will find quadband GSM among the mix, but 3G support remains a mystery — likewise for the RAM, internal storage, and battery capacity. Pricing is an unknown quantity too, although earlier reports suggest we’ll see something in the range of RMB 1,600 (approximately $250). This potential KIRF’ers paradise is expected to ship between mid-August and early September in a variety of colors, which will be eclipsed only by the sweet smell of its unboxing.

Update: As it turns out, the M1 looks nothing like the render we’d seen. Hence, our dreams of this epic KIRF have been dashed, and the purported “real” image of this curious project is now ‘splayed for all to see. Didn’t get a chance to see the original render? Just follow the break, where you’re able to dream of what could have been.

Continue reading Keepin’ it real fake: Xiaomi M1 melds iPhone and Galaxy S II with custom MIUI ROM (update: no, not really)

Keepin’ it real fake: Xiaomi M1 melds iPhone and Galaxy S II with custom MIUI ROM (update: no, not really) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jul 2011 10:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Android Community  |  sourceMIUI Android (1), (2), PC Online (Translated)  | Email this | Comments

Keepin’ it real fake: Xiaomi M1 melds iPhone and Galaxy S II with custom MIUI ROM

Granted, what you’re looking at is nothing more than a skillful render, but if Apple and Samsung ever made beautiful babies, this is what would be bestowed upon the world — pesky lawsuits notwithstanding, that is. The KIRF in question is the Xiaomi M1, a smartphone designed specifically for the MIUI custom Gingerbread ROM. It’s sporting a 1.2GHz dual-core Qualcomm CPU, along with a four-inch, 854 x 480 Super LCD capacitive touchscreen display, and the usual assortment of Bluetooth, GPS, and WiFi. Users will find quadband GSM among the mix, but 3G support remains a mystery — likewise for the RAM, internal storage, and battery capacity. Pricing is an unknown quantity too, although earlier reports suggest we’ll see something in the range of RMB 1,600 (approximately $250). This potential KIRF’ers paradise is expected to ship between mid-August and early September in a variety of colors, which will be eclipsed only by the sweet smell of its unboxing.

Keepin’ it real fake: Xiaomi M1 melds iPhone and Galaxy S II with custom MIUI ROM originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jul 2011 10:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Android Community  |  sourceMIUI Android (1), (2), PC Online (Translated)  | Email this | Comments

SwiftKey X virtual keyboard launches for Android tablets, we go hands-on (video)

We’re no strangers to SwiftKey here at Engadget HQ, and today TouchType is launching a major new version of everyone’s favorite Android virtual keyboard — SwiftKey Tablet X for devices running Honeycomb, and SwiftKey X for devices running Android 2.x. Both applications improve upon the original by using TouchType’s Fluency 2.0 artificial intelligence engine, a unique predictive phrase system which learns how you write. New features include cloud learning, which analyzes how you type in Gmail, Twitter, Facebook, and text messages to predict phrases in your style, plus keypress technology which continually monitors your typing precision and adapts the touch-sensitive area for each key to improve prediction accuracy. SwiftKey now supports 17 languages (with more coming soon) and is smart enough to interpret three languages at once. There’s also a handful of other enhancements, including support for themes which allow users to customize the look and feel of the keyboard. And that split keyboard option we first encountered at CES? It’s there of course, in the tablet version.

We’ve been testing SwiftKey Tablet X on the Galaxy Tab 10.1 for a few days now, alongside SwiftKey X on a handful of phones (including the Nexus S and the EVO 3D), and it’s probably the best virtual keyboard we’ve used on Android yet. In fact, it’s now replacing the stock keyboard on all our HTC Sense-equipped handsets. Prediction accuracy improves quickly after you start using the keyboard, and we liked having the option to turn off the spacebar-triggered auto-completion of words and phrases. Another useful feature is the ability to display arrow / cursor keys on the phone version. The supplied themes are attractive (especially Neon), and the layouts are intuitive — although we’d have preferred the numbers to be arranged in a row instead of mimicking a numpad. Both applications are available today only for $1.99 in the Android Market. Regular pricing is $4.99 for SwiftKey Tablet X, and $3.99 for SwiftKey X. Take a look at our screenshot galleries below, and hit the break for our hands-on videos and more.

Continue reading SwiftKey X virtual keyboard launches for Android tablets, we go hands-on (video)

SwiftKey X virtual keyboard launches for Android tablets, we go hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jul 2011 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon Tablet to Launch ‘By October’

Hopefully Amazon’s tablet will lose the stupid little keyboard. Photo illustration Charlie Sorrel

An Amazon tablet is pretty much inevitable but now, according to the Wall Street Journal, we have a launch date. Citing the ever-present “people familiar with the matter,” the WSJ reports that the Amazon tablet will launch by October. It is also planning to introduce a touch-screen Kindle alongside another regular Kindle.

Amazon’s tablet will have a “roughly nine-inch screen” and run Google’s Android OS. This is no surprise, given that Amazon’s App Store already sells Android apps. In fact, Amazon also sells movies, music and Kindle books, all of which put it in a great position to take on iOS and Apple’s App Store Juggernaut.

Interestingly, the first Amazon tablet won’t have a camera. This also makes sense. With the Kindle, Amazon got a basic but good product on the market and then iterated year by year, just like Apple does with the iPod iPhone and iPad. Keeping it simple will also mean that Amazon can keep prices competitive with the iPad.

Apparently, Amazon is still confused about how to market tablet, according to “a person familiar with Amazon’s thinking” (I know, right?). The company wonders if it can seel both a Kindle and a tablet to the same customers. I’d say just take a look at all of the people who already have both an iPad and a Kindle (like me — the iPad is hopeless on the beach) for the answer.

This is great news. Amazon, with its huge content library already hooked up to a single sign-in (and to your credit card details) is in a unique position to put the heat on Apple. And that’s good for everyone.

Amazon to Battle Apple iPad With Tablet [WSJ]

See Also:


Viewsonic ships 7-inch ViewBook VB730 tablet for $230, sticks with Android 2.2

Looking for something a bit different to replace your Galaxy Tab with? Can’t say for sure why such a yearning would be reasonable, but if we just rang your bell, Viewsonic’s got a newcomer that’s on sale now. Just a few months after passing through the FCC’s database, the ViewBook VB730 is now in stock over at Amazon, with $229.99 netting you a 7-inch slate with Bluetooth 2.1+EDR, WiFi, a 1GHz ARM Cortex-A8 processor, 512MB of RAM, 8GB of internal storage space, a microSD card slot and an 800 x 480 screen resolution. Unfortunately, there’s no Android 3.2 to be found here; instead, Froyo’s listed as the OS of choice, but it’s fair to expect a bit of corner-cutting given that shockingly low price point. Hit the source if you’re sold.

Viewsonic ships 7-inch ViewBook VB730 tablet for $230, sticks with Android 2.2 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jul 2011 03:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Twitter for Android gets push notifications, multiple account support

Having a hard time juggling your full-cast reproduction of Harry Potter masquerade Twitter accounts? No worries, the firm just sent out an update to its Android app that will let you switch between multiple accounts with ease. It’s almost magical. Not saddled with the burden of weaving a complex narrative across multiple online identities? That’s okay, there’s something here for everyone; this update includes push notification, updated home screen widgets, and assorted bug fixes. Version 2.1.0 is live today, assuming you’re rocking Android 2.1 or higher.

Twitter for Android gets push notifications, multiple account support originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jul 2011 02:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Twitter (Finally) Updates Its Android App With Key Features

Twitter’s Android phone update lets you receive notifications from the app whether you’re using it or not. Photo courtesy of Twitter

Twitter updated its app for Android smartphones on Wednesday, bringing two key features to Google’s mobile platform.

The microblogging service now offers both push notifications and multiple account sign-in for Android phones. A push notification sends you an automatic update whether you’re actively using the Twitter app or not, while the latter feature allows you to switch between your multiple Twitter accounts without signing out and signing back in (an annoying enough task on a smartphone).

After downloading the update, select “automatic refresh” in your user settings menu. From there, you can get updates whenever someone sends you a direct message, drops your name in a tweet (with an @mention), or even when more tweets appear in your timeline. Twitter detailed the list of changes further — including a minor refresh to its user interface, as well as a number of minor bug fixes — in a blog post Wednesday afternoon.

While the updates are more than welcome news to the tweet-obsessed Android community, it’s still a bittersweet arrival for enthusiasts of Google’s platform. Ever the passed-over sibling of iOS, Android receives the updated features after months of their availability on Apple’s iPhone, iPod and iPad devices. Despite Android currently being the clear leader in marketshare at the moment, Apple and its App Store remains the industry darling.

Head over to the Android Market to download Twitter’s update.


Hulu Plus Android app is now playing on Evo 4G, Thunderbolt, myTouch 4G and G2

Last month Hulu Plus finally arrived on Android however support was unfortunately limited to just six devices, but tonight the official blog has announced the count has reached double digits. Four HTC phones are on the list — the Evo 4G, Thunderbolt, myTouch 4G and G2 — bringing the total to ten models supported, featuring a mix of first and second gen Snapdragon chips clocked at varying speeds. Given shared architecture with some phones already on the list it’s not clear why these had to wait, but Senior Product Manager Lonn Lee is quick to point out that the streaming video site isn’t done yet. Even as it’s on the auction block, there’s at least some chance to pick up disgruntled Netflix subscribers and adding a few underserved handsets is as good a way as any to reach out.

Hulu Plus Android app is now playing on Evo 4G, Thunderbolt, myTouch 4G and G2 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jul 2011 01:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Evolio’s Neura making a foolio of other Android tablets (video)

Have you heard of Evolio? Neither have we, but it might be time we all start paying attention to this Romanian start-up if its grandiose claims of tech stardom prove true. Heralding it as the “most powerful Android tablet” — and the one ring to rule them all — the Neura is a 1GHz dual core Tegra 2 processor-packing, 9.7-inch full HD displaying, Flash-capable slab of Eastern European engineering. Since its been (self-)declared king of the little green robot OS hill, the company’s aiming this market entry squarely at Apple’s iPad 2 — hoping its powers of 1080p and expandable memory can best that category titan. Unfortunately, the company’s proud boast only covers its hardware specs, leaving Froyo to underpower what could be a truly premium experience. A September update to Honeycomb is loosely mentioned, but with 3.2 already rolling out to Xooms, this baby’s starting to look dated. If owning an exotic tablet strikes your cooler-than-thou fancy, get your credit card set to import mode on July 25th. Informational video and its excellent Romanian-electro intro after the break.

Continue reading Evolio’s Neura making a foolio of other Android tablets (video)

Evolio’s Neura making a foolio of other Android tablets (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Jul 2011 23:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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