Product portal, tweets suggest ‘Thrive’ moniker for Toshiba’s Honeycomb tablet

“What’s in a name?” We’d ask Toshiba, but the company hasn’t been able to give its upcoming 10.1-inch Honeycomb tablet one in five months — or has it? If you’ll recall, Toshiba registered the name Thrive for trademark and related domain names last month, and now evidence is mounting that all of that work wasn’t in vain. TabletCommunity learned days ago that a commercial for the device was in production via some chatty actors on Twitter; soon after, the site also uncovered a parking page for the slate on Toshiba’s website, albeit with little more than the aforesaid name categorized under “Tablets.” It’s a welcome update in light of the vapid titles “Antares” and “ANT300” that had also seemed possible, and once word spills of US pricing and availability, perhaps we can focus on more pressing matters… you know, like benchmarks.

[Thanks, Jakob]

Product portal, tweets suggest ‘Thrive’ moniker for Toshiba’s Honeycomb tablet originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 21 May 2011 04:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TabletCommunity  |  sourceToshiba, @DavidLyddon, @actorlulumiller , @bigashb (Twitter)  | Email this | Comments

Stream Hulu on your Nook Color, ditch Fitzgerald for Family Guy

In case you need still more distraction from using your Nook Color to, you know, read, now you can have Hulu‘s extensive video library at your fingertips, thanks to a simple 19-step process. Replacing the standard Adobe Flash Player with a modified version seems to work for the Nook and some other devices; users at Android Central have reported success on the Epic 4G, Thunderbolt, and Droid Incredible. When you’re ready to trade One Hundred Years of Solitude for 1000 Ways To Die or 16 and Pregnant, hit the source link for detailed instructions, and see the tutorial video after the break.

[Thanks, Alex]

Continue reading Stream Hulu on your Nook Color, ditch Fitzgerald for Family Guy

Stream Hulu on your Nook Color, ditch Fitzgerald for Family Guy originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 May 2011 06:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAndroid Central  | Email this | Comments

Motorola Droid X2 official at $200: launching online May 19th, in stores May 26th (update: in some stores on 19th)

Motorola and Verizon have finally stopped teasing us and have made the Droid X2 official. This is a 4.3-inch Android (2.2, to be upgraded to 2.3) smartphone with a qHD screen resolution and a dual-core 1GHz processor. An 8 megapixel camera with continuous autofocus and HD video recording graces the back. The X2 will cost the usual $200 on contract and will be available to buy online tomorrow, May 19th, before making its way out to stores a week later, on May 26th. Leap past the break for the full PR.

Interestingly, we’ve also spotted the close proximity of the USB and HDMI ports on the side of the new X2. That arrangement is reminiscent of the one on Motorola’s Atrix, where the two connectors served to hook that handset up to its laptop and multimedia docks. We don’t know whether the Droid X2 will fit into the accessories designed for the Atrix, but it looks sure to be strapping itself into a dock of some description in the near future.

Update: NVIDIA has confirmed that its Tegra 2 chip is the heretofore unnamed 1GHz dual-core chip inside the Droid X2, which just happens to be Verizon’s first dual-core smartphone.

Update 2: A little birdie tells us you may be able to pick up this bad boy in person in some stores as soon as tomorrow (May 19th). Your mileage may vary, but let us know in the comments if you manage to buy one.

Continue reading Motorola Droid X2 official at $200: launching online May 19th, in stores May 26th (update: in some stores on 19th)

Motorola Droid X2 official at $200: launching online May 19th, in stores May 26th (update: in some stores on 19th) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 May 2011 20:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Motorola Droid X2 official at $200: launching online May 19th, in stores May 26th

Motorola and Verizon have finally stopped teasing us and have made the Droid X2 official. This is a 4.3-inch Android (2.2, to be upgraded to 2.3) smartphone with a qHD screen resolution and a dual-core 1GHz processor. An 8 megapixel camera with continuous autofocus and HD video recording graces the back. The X2 will cost the usual $200 on contract and will be available to buy online tomorrow, May 19th, before making its way out to stores a week later, on May 26th. Leap past the break for the full PR.

Interestingly, we’ve also spotted the close proximity of the USB and HDMI ports on the side of the new X2. That arrangement is reminiscent of the one on Motorola’s Atrix, where the two connectors served to hook that handset up to its laptop and multimedia docks. We don’t know whether the Droid X2 will fit into the accessories designed for the Atrix, but it looks sure to be strapping itself into a dock of some description in the near future.

Continue reading Motorola Droid X2 official at $200: launching online May 19th, in stores May 26th

Motorola Droid X2 official at $200: launching online May 19th, in stores May 26th originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 May 2011 08:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Second 4G Verizon Phone Debuts in Wake of Network Outages

Samsung’s Droid Charge debuts on Verizon on Saturday, May 14. Photo courtesy Verizon

The Verizon Wireless 4G network has been lauded as lightning-fast. Now, the company is launching a second phone that will work with its speeds.

The Samsung-built Droid Charge will launch on Verizon on Saturday, joining the Thunderbolt, HTC’s flagship device. In our tests, the Thunderbolt delivered some of the highest data-transfer speeds we’ve seen.

But Verizon’s 4G network recently went down across the country, which raises the question: Is the company ready for another 4G phone?

For a period of more than 30 hours from April 26 through 28, Verizon customers experienced nationwide downtime on the company’s 4G LTE network. Those using Thunderbolt smartphones were the first to spot the problem, as they were only able to receive 3G or even 2G connections. Since 4G only handles data transfer, voice and text messaging services were not affected.

The Droid Charge was originally slated for release the same weekend as the outage. Samsung’s addition to the Droid brand is only the second phone to run on Verizon’s 4G network, giving those that don’t want to buy the Thunderbolt a bit of choice.

Aside from the manufacturer, however, the phones differ little in hardware specs. Both have 4.3-inch displays, front- and back-facing cameras with the same resolutions (1.3 and 8 megapixels, respectively), and the ability to act as a 4G mobile hotspot. But as the 4G network was still down the morning of April 28, the phone’s release was pushed back.

Verizon acknowledged the downtime in a Twitter status update, claiming it was “working with engineers” to get 4G back up to speed. By the second day, Verizon restored 4G service in its areas of coverage.

Verizon has continually refused to explain the network outages. When Wired.com asked for specific reasons for why the network went down last month, a Verizon spokesperson declined to answer.

4G data-transfer capability and coverage are a relatively new phenomenon. Sprint launched the first 4G phone on its Wi-Max network in June 2010 with HTC’s Evo 4G. Verizon’s 4G network debuted in December of last year.

AT&T and T-Mobile both lay claim to the 4G moniker on their respective HSPA+ networks, though issues around what qualifies as “4G” still remain. As of early May, Verizon states 4G coverage is available in “45 markets” across the United States.

“Our philosophy has always been the same,” said Verizon spokesperson Brenda Raney in an interview. “When phones are ready to deliver customers an excellent experience, we’ll launch them.”

But it looks like the hardware has been ready to go for a while. Out of the 10 San Francisco Bay Area Verizon retailers Wired.com contacted, six said they already had Droid Charge handsets in stock for some time, but were not able to sell them until today. (Two stores did not answer, one hadn’t received phones, and one received its first shipment yesterday.) One store claims it received its shipment “about two weeks ago,” approximately the same time as Verizon’s 4G network outage.

It’s a similar case in other parts of the country as well. A store in the Boston suburban area also had phones in stock, but hasn’t been able to sell them, according to a report from Computerworld.

Two Verizon employees from separate Bay Area stores told Wired.com the delay had to do with “4G network problems.”

Speaking at a Sony Ericsson business forum in Palo Alto this week, executive director of LTE technologies Brian Higgins said the company had learned lessons from the experience, and that Verizon was going to “make some adjustments.” Higgins wouldn’t elaborate any further.

Whatever adjustments the company has to make, we’ll have to wait and see how Verizon’s 4G network handles the influx of new device activations.


Second-Ever 4G Verizon Phone Debuts in Wake of Network Outages

Samsung’s Droid Charge debuts on Verizon Saturday, May 14. Photo courtesy of Verizon

The Verizon Wireless 4G network has been lauded as lightning fast. Now, the company is launching a second phone that will work with its speeds.

The Samsung-built Droid Charge will launch on Verizon on Saturday, joining the Thunderbolt, HTC’s flagship device. In our tests, the Thunderbolt delivered some of the highest data transfer speeds we’ve seen.

But Verizon’s 4G network recently went down across the country, which raises the question: Is the company ready for another 4G phone?

For a period of over 30 hours between April 26 through 28, Verizon customers experienced nationwide downtime on the company’s 4G LTE network. Those using Thunderbolt smartphones were the first to spot the problem, as they were only able to receive 3G or even 2G connections. Since 4G only handles data transfer, voice and text messaging services were not affected.

The Droid Charge was originally slated for release the same weekend as the outage. Samsung’s addition to the Droid brand is only the second phone to run on Verizon’s 4G network, giving those that don’t want to buy the Thunderbolt a bit of choice. Aside from the manufacturer, however, the phones differ little in hardware specs. Both have 4.3-inch displays, front and back-facing cameras with the same resolutions (1.3 and 8 megapixels, respectively), and the ability to act as a 4G mobile hotspot. But as the 4G network was still down the morning of the 28th, the phone’s release was pushed back.

Verizon acknowledged the downtime in a Twitter status update, claiming it was “working with engineers” to get 4G back up to speed. By the second day, Verizon restored 4G service in its areas of coverage.

Verizon has continually refused to explain the network’s outages. When Wired.com asked for specific reasoning on why the network went down last month, a Verizon spokesperson declined to answer.

4G data transfer capability and coverage is a relatively new phenomenon. Sprint launched the first 4G phone on its Wi-Max network in June of 2010 with HTC’s Evo 4G. Verizon’s 4G network debuted in December of last year. AT&T and T-Mobile both lay claim to the 4G moniker on each carrier’s respective HSPA+ networks, though issues around what constitutes as “4G” still remain. As of early May, Verizon states 4G coverage is available in “45 markets” across the United States.

“Our philosophy has always been the same,” said Verizon spokesperson Brenda Raney in an interview. “When phones are ready to deliver customers an excellent experience, we’ll launch them.”

But it looks like the hardware has been ready to go for awhile. Out of the ten San Francisco Bay Area Verizon retailers Wired.com contacted, six said they already had Droid Charge handsets in stock for some time, but were not able to sell them until today. (Two stores did not answer, one hadn’t received phones, and one received its first shipment yesterday.) One store claims it received its shipment “about two weeks ago,” approximately the same time as Verizon’s 4G network outage.

It’s a similar case in other parts of the country as well. A store in the Boston suburban area also had phones in stock, but hasn’t been able to sell them, according to a report from Computerworld.

Two Verizon employees from separate Bay Area stores told Wired.com the delay had to do with “4G network problems.”

Speaking at a Sony Ericsson business forum in Palo Alto this week, executive director of LTE technologies Brian Higgins said the company had learned lessons from the experience, and that Verizon was going to “make some adjustments.” Higgins wouldn’t elaborate any further.

Whatever adjustments the company has to make, we’ll have to wait and see how Verizon’s 4G network handles the influx of new device activations.


Droid Charge to finally light up on Verizon Wireless tomorrow (update: official!)

Our testing of the Droid Charge got off to a bit of a rough start thanks to Verizon’s wee tiny LTE outage that just so happened to hit at the same time as the phone. Thanks (at least in part) to that, the official launch of the device was delayed, and while we still don’t have confirmation of why or just how long the delay was supposed to be, we do have multiple tips from multiple lovely readers in multiple positions at Verizon telling us the phone will be properly hitting stores on the 14th. We’re working on official confirmation but, for now, it sure looks like tomorrow you’ll be able to mosey on over to your local VZW outlet and get yourself $299 worth of LTE and OLED.

Update: We just got official confirmation from Verizon that the phone will be available tomorrow in-store and online tonight! Details in the PR below.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading Droid Charge to finally light up on Verizon Wireless tomorrow (update: official!)

Droid Charge to finally light up on Verizon Wireless tomorrow (update: official!) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 May 2011 11:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Motorola Droid X2 ready for May 26 launch?

The skeptics in us are not ready to call this one confirmed yet, but we are beginning to see information trickle in about a possible launch date for the Droid X2. Droid-Life uncovered possible promo materials discussing the entrance strategy for the X2, in conjunction with several of the phone’s specs. These docs strongly indicate May 26 is the magic day for a full-scale assault, with early orders allowed as soon as May 19. We don’t see any major surprises in specs — there’s a dual-core Tegra 2 1GHz processor, 4.3-inch qHD screen, 8MP rear camera, and 1080p HDMI-out video, to list off the highlights — although we are excited to see Gingerbread may be in the mix here, indicated by the ever-so-subtle blue bar seen on the phone’s screen. We hope you can understand our hesitation, though, since an unproven spec sheet from Pocketnow suggests we should only expect Froyo. No way of knowing who will win this little argument, but you know which one we’re rooting for. Check out another leaked image after the break.

Continue reading Motorola Droid X2 ready for May 26 launch?

Motorola Droid X2 ready for May 26 launch? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 May 2011 22:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDroid-Life  | Email this | Comments

Engadget Podcast 238 – 05.06.2011

We’ll tell you what: if you even blink these days, you’re gonna miss a special guest on the Engadget Podcast. This week we’ve got Joystiq‘s Chris Grant in the house to shoot the shizzle on Sony’s network hurt and the Wii 3D IMAX rumors bubbling up all around us. And we lure Richard Lawler to step out on his old lady, the Engadget HD Podcast, for a romp on the possibly slightly wilder side of the tracks. Let’s do it: let’s talk tech.

Host: Tim Stevens
Guests: Chris Grant, Brian Heater, Richard Lawler
Producer: Trent Wolbe
Music: You Shook Me All Night Long

02:15 – Apple iMac hands-on, with dual 30-inch displays! (video)
03:00 – Apple iMac refresh official: Thunderbolt and next gen quad-core processors
03:45 – AT&T officially announces HP Veer 4G, available May 15th for $100 (update)
04:55 – Star Wars Blu-ray set ships Sept. 12th/16th (world/NA), has 40 hours of special features
06:35 – Dish Network, EchoStar will pay TiVo $500 million to settle DVR lawsuit
07:55 – Latest Windows 8 leaks reveal cloud-based settings, more app store evidence
09:35 – Droid Charge review
11:16 – Verizon document suggests LG Revolution will have Netflix pre-installed
13:47 – Sony promises ‘phased restoration’ of PlayStation Network and Qriocity starting this week
20:22 – Sony woes continue as SOE confirms data breach (update: 24.6 million accounts affected)
31:03 – Sony responds to Congress: all 77 million PSN accounts compromised, finger pointed at Anonymous
33:52 – BlackBerry Bold 9900 hands-on (update: video)
34:30 – BlackBerry Bold 9900 and 9930 (Bold Touch) official
34:45 – BlackBerry Bold Touch makes brief appearance on RIM’s website
35:05 – Android apps on PlayBook eyes-on (video)
35:48 – RIM announces BlackBerry 7 OS with better browser and BlackBerry Balance, but no legacy support
38:10 – Nintendo drops Wii price to $150 from May 15th, throws in a free Wii Wheel and copy of Mario Kart
48:05 – Nielsen estimates show first drop in TV ownership in 20 years, Mayans nod approvingly
50:40 – We won some Webby Awards, and now you can win a BlackBerry PlayBook!
51:44 – Listener questions

Hear the podcast

Subscribe to the podcast

[iTunes] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in iTunes (enhanced AAC).
[RSS MP3] Add the Engadget Podcast feed (in MP3) to your RSS aggregator and have the show delivered automatically.
[RSS AAC] Add the Engadget Podcast feed (in enhanced AAC) to your RSS aggregator.
[Zune] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in the Zune Marketplace

Download the podcast

LISTEN (MP3)
LISTEN (AAC)
LISTEN (OGG)

Contact the podcast

Send your questions to @tim_stevens.

Twitter: @tim_stevens @bheater @chrisgrant @rjcc

Filed under:

Engadget Podcast 238 – 05.06.2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 May 2011 12:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Droid Charge review

We’re still shaking our heads and sighing longingly at the performance of Samsung’s Galaxy S II, a phone that wowed us in Europe but likely won’t be coming to American shores for some time — and who knows what it’ll look like when it does. But don’t get too down, dear reader, because here comes another slice of Samsung and this slab has that same 4.3-inch Super AMOLED Plus display tucked in there. It’s a little less slim, a little less classy, and a little less quick than Sammy’s latest world-conquering wunderphone, but the LTE-equipped Charge is a proper contender in its own right. Read on to see why.

Continue reading Droid Charge review

Droid Charge review originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 May 2011 13:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments