Windows 7 E coming to Europe without Internet Explorer

Likely being mindful of the ever-watchful eye of the European Union, Microsoft’s announced its Euro version of Windows 7, affectionately and officially dubbed Windows 7 E, will not come packaged with Internet Explorer, or any other browser for that matter. Of course that’s not the whole story, as OEMs will be provided free copies of IE8 to bundle themselves alongside / instead of other browser options, and consumers can pick up their own copies via CD, FTP, or retail channels. This is undoubtedly in response to the antitrust cases the EU keeps throwing Microsoft’s way, and while we wouldn’t be surprised to see it end up on almost every European computer sold, we do wonder if this will at all speed up IE’s already rapidly diminishing share in the war of web browsers.

Filed under: ,

Windows 7 E coming to Europe without Internet Explorer originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Jun 2009 22:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

New Toshiba Satellite laptops land in Europe

Toshiba’s added a couple new Satellite laptops into the mix, with options for both the road warrior and the stay-at-home multimedia user. First, the A500: this guy sports a 16-inch, 16:9 format display (1366 x 768), a TV-tuner for both analog and digital DVB-T programming, Harman Kardon speakers and HDMI ports with REGZA LINK technology. Under the hood, this guy packs an Intel Core 2 Duo, 8GB memory, an ATI Mobility Radeon HD GPU (up to 1GB DDR3 VRAM), and either a 500GB HDD or 64GB SSD. For those of you on the ultra-portable tip, the U500 is a 13.3-inch (16:10 format, 1280 x 800) ultraportable that weighs in at just under 4.5 pounds. With an Intel Core 2 Duo processor, 8 GB memory, a hard disk capacity of up to 500GB, and an ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570 GPU, this bad boy is available in Brown Luxe, with either chrome or silver accents. Claimed battery life is over 3.5 hours. Both lappies feature a DVD Super Multi drive, wide format HD webcam, multi-touch trackpad, and the usual host of connectivity options (WLAN, Bluetooth 2.1, 5-in-1 media card slot). Both will be available in Europe sometime this July for €699 (approx. $975).

Read – Toshiba Satellite U500 with ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570
Read – Toshiba Satellite A500 by 16 inches

Filed under:

New Toshiba Satellite laptops land in Europe originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Jun 2009 14:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Investigators demonstrate Nokia 1100’s criminal potential

In case you weren’t already convinced of a certain model of Nokia 1100’s hackability by the exponential surge in its aftermarket value, fraud investigation firm Ultrascan has successfully recreated a virtual bank heist by reprogramming one of the devices to receive another phone number’s text messages. Using this trick, shady characters in fancy suits can get your mobile transaction authentication number — provided you live in a country like Germany or Holland that use mTANs — and use it to get into your bank account and transfer funds. They’d also need your account name and password, mind you, but obtaining that data isn’t nearly as complex when there’s plenty of people clicking on the wrong emails and signing into fake website with all those deets and the associated digits. It all sounds a bit like the stuff of crime novels, doesn’t it? And before you go running to eBay with that 1100 you stashed away in a drawer years ago, please note that it only works if the candybar was produced at a very specific plant in Bochum, Germany.

Filed under:

Investigators demonstrate Nokia 1100’s criminal potential originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 May 2009 03:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Panasonic’s Class 10 SDHC cards make the wait for SDXC easier

A full 15 months after Panasonic dropped jaws with its 32GB Class 6 SDHC card, the company is hitting us up with another world’s first. Announced today over in Europe, the outfit has revealed a new line of SDHC memory cards that boast a Class 10 speed rating. Said spec was recently given the green light as part of the SD Card Specification v3.0, and as you could likely surmise, the increase in transfer rates should enable the cards to better handle all that HD video your DSLR seems to be capturing these days. Still, the boost is relatively minimal (particularly compared to the forthcoming SDXC format), with Class 10 promising maximum speeds of 22MB/sec and Class 6 cards already offering top-end rates of 20MB/sec. Mum’s the word on price, but Panny expects these to ship next month in the UK before heading to other markets sometime later.

Filed under:

Panasonic’s Class 10 SDHC cards make the wait for SDXC easier originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 May 2009 07:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Asus Eee PC T91 reviewed in the UK: “genuinely moves things forwards” for netbook market

Asus’ Eee PC T91 has gotten its first review ahead of the reported late May / early June UK launch, and those cats at TechRadar seem quite smitten with the swivel-proficient touchscreen netbook. Battery life is said to be solid, though points are deducted for not being replaceable. Some issues with the resistive touchscreen also plagued the pre-production model, and while the company assures those kinks are being worked out, we can’t help but worry they’ll invariably still find their way into the finished product, and that glossy display will no doubt keep the memories of fingerprints long after you want it to. Despite these concerns, the review gives much love for the overall performance, video playback, build quality, and keyboard. At £449 ($688), it ain’t the cheapest option on the market, but we do appreciate Asus straying a bit from its tried and true netbook formula. Now how about news on a stateside release, eh?

Filed under:

Asus Eee PC T91 reviewed in the UK: “genuinely moves things forwards” for netbook market originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 May 2009 22:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

QR Buckle Advertises Your Web Site Above Your Crotch

qrbuckle
Remember QR codes? “Q what, you say?” You know, those blocky, two-dimensional “Quick Response” barcodes containing URLs, which direct your smartphone to said web site after you snap a photo of the code.

Oh, wait — QR codes aren’t very popular outside Japan, where most phones are shipped with QR-reading software — so you might not have heard of them. The technology isn’t very popular in Europe either, which is why an Austrian company called Fluid Forms is aiming to bring QR codes into the mainstream with custom laser-cut QR jewelry.

The company is starting with the QR Belt Buckle pictured above. That means you’ll be able to visit Fluid-Forms.com and enter a URL you’d like to advertise above your private parts. Then, the company will laser-cut your QR code into the buckle and ship it to you.

Nerdy and pretty cool. The belt buckle will be available May 27, followed by an entire line of QR jewelry including rings, brooches and cufflinks. No word on pricing yet, but the cheapest product on the site is 30 euros (about $40), so expect to pay at least that.

See Also:

Company Page [Fluid Forms]

Photo: Courtesy of Fluid Forms


METROBuddy electric car debuts, kind of resembles a mail van

Looking from behind, one might assume that the METROBuddy is an electric car with style. Unfortunately, those hopes are dashed when peeking the whole whip from the side, as you suddenly become overwhelmed with hints of USPS mail van, garbage truck and a rather large protractor. Design gripes aside, our good pals over at AutoblogGreen were able to sneak a peek at the bantam automobile, which supposedly packs a range of around 50 to 75 miles on a full charge. There’s been no mention yet of a price or global release (don’t get your hopes up on the latter), but feel free to have a better look around in the vid just past the break.

[Via AutoblogGreen]

Continue reading METROBuddy electric car debuts, kind of resembles a mail van

Filed under:

METROBuddy electric car debuts, kind of resembles a mail van originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 May 2009 20:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Intel fined record $1.45 billion in AMD antitrust case

The verdict is in and it’s huge. As expected, the EU is fining Intel a record €1.06 billion or $1.45 billion (Billion!) dollars due to violations of antitrust rules in Europe. The record fine surpasses that of the €497 million fine originally levied against Microsoft. The EU ruled that Intel illegally used hidden rebates to squeeze rivals out of the marketplace for CPUs. In a statement issued by European Union Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes, the EC said,

Intel has harmed millions of European consumers by deliberately acting to keep competitors out of the market for computer chips for many years.

Intel was ordered to cease the illegal practices immediately and has three months from the notification of the decision to pay up. Of course, Intel will appeal and this will drag the litigation on for years as did Microsoft. Regardless, we’ll bet that AMD, who raised the complaint against Intel back in 2000, will be celebrating come dawn in Sunnyvale.

Update: Intel has issued a formal response to the ruling saying that the commission “is wrong and ignores the reality of a highly competitive microprocessor marketplace,” and that its practices have caused, “absolutely zero harm to consumers.” Oh, and it will <gasp> appeal the decision. Hurrah for corporate lawyers!

[Via Canada.com]

Intel fined record $1.45 billion in AMD antitrust case originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 May 2009 05:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

EU expected to rule against Intel in AMD antitrust case: Microsoft points, afraid to laugh

There are many tried and true methods for beating your competition in the free-market. Product innovation seems to work as does a proprietary ecosystem of peripherals, media, and services that keep customers locked-in for life. Or you can take Intel’s approach: pay computer makers and retailers “to postpone or cancel” products containing CPUs from AMD, Intel’s chief rival. That’s the allegation it faces in the EU which, according to Reuters, has completed its antitrust investigation and is preparing to announce its decision on Wednesday. According to Reuters’ sources, the European Commission will fine Intel for the violations discovered over the last eight years and order changes to Intel’s business practices. It remains to be seen if the related fine exceeds the $655 million levied against Microsoft in 2004. But given the EU’s distaste for anti-competitive practices, we’re not expecting Intel to get off easy — self-proclaimed “rock star” status or not.

Filed under:

EU expected to rule against Intel in AMD antitrust case: Microsoft points, afraid to laugh originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 May 2009 03:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Sony debuts connected BRAVIA Z5500 LCD HDTV line

And the hits just keep on comin’. Shortly after Sony introduced its connected BRAVIA W-Series to the world, in flies yet another trio: the Z5500 line. Arriving in 40-inch, 46-inch and 52-inch models, the set boasts Motionflow 200Hz technology, DLNA certification, the outfit’s BRAVIA Engine 3, its own ‘draw the LINE’ design concept, a 1080p panel and a CI Plus interface, which only those parked overseas will truly understand. Furthermore, there’s an integrated MPEG-4/AVC HD tuner, BRAVIA Sync (HDMI-CEC), an auto shut-off function, a dedicated ‘Energy Saving Switch’ and — for the first time — AppliCast. If you’re curious, the latter feature enables users to access a range of online services (RSS feeds and all sorts of other widgets) via the built-in Ethernet jack. Sony didn’t bother to share a price, release date or any hope of a US debut, but we’ll be keeping our eyes peeled.

[Via TrustedReviews]

Filed under: , ,

Sony debuts connected BRAVIA Z5500 LCD HDTV line originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 30 Apr 2009 08:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments