RedEye Mini dongle now on sale for $49, looking good in early review

You’ve heard about it for months, and now the universal remote that looks nothing like a universal remote is finally on sale in 52 nations. Thinkflood’s RedEye Mini — which simply plugs into the headphone jack of your iPad, iPhone or iPod touch — can now be procured for $49, and when used with the gratis app in the App Store, can control anything in your home entertainment setup that accepts IR commands. ZDNet was fortunate enough to get a little hands-on time with the device, and their early impressions are quite positive. In fact, they recommend skipping the Harmony hoopla and heading right for this if you’re already an iDevice owner (who doesn’t use an imposing case or Bumper), and at a buck under a Grant, we certainly aren’t in a position to argue.

Continue reading RedEye Mini dongle now on sale for $49, looking good in early review

RedEye Mini dongle now on sale for $49, looking good in early review originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Jul 2010 10:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Uebo introduces versatile M200 media streamer, we go hands-on

Yes, the world needs another high-definition media streamer like it needs a shot in the foot, but never let it be said we passed up the chance to try a promising product simply because the competition was good. We’re talking about the Uebo M200 –a never-before-seen box from storage company UIT — whose claim to fame is a $130 price for everything-but-the-kitchen-sink media center functionality. Out of the box it’s your standard streamer, playing loads of media formats from memory cards, attached storage and thumbdrives, plus ShoutCast internet radio, RSS feeds and UPnP shares from your PC, but also the usual suspects Hulu, Netflix, CBS and more via PlayOn media server. Pop in a 3.5-inch SATA disk, however, and things get more entertaining, as the box itself turns into an external hard drive, a network-attached storage device and even a Bittorrent client. It also doesn’t hurt that the Uebo can hook up to most any entertainment system, with not only HDMI, component and composite connections but also every standard (HD, NTSC and PAL) video mode, there’s a $30 optional wireless dongle, and the digital audio front includes both optical and coaxial jacks for output.

Sadly, in practice the above functionality isn’t as streamlined as it sounds — as is usually the case with these devices image quality can suffer slightly, and Uebo’s GUI has a face only a mother could love. While the device admirably played the vast majority of one editor’s anime music video collection (though it stumbled over XviD and Sorenson Video 3), sorting through nested menus to get to our content was a hell of a chore. PlayOn and Bittorrent seemed to work, though their roundabout implementation left much to be desired, with the former only accessible through a deep dive of the UPnP menu, and the latter requiring torrent trackers to be uploaded from a separate PC using a web client. We had a couple of crashes when testing the device, too, including a Bittorrent-related one where the Uebo completely stopped responding to input, but the majority of the time we enjoyed HD and SD content on the fairly capable little TV server. All in all, it’s not the most polished product and shouldn’t distract you from popcorn-eating elephants in the room, but if you’re looking for a cheaper alternative it’s hard to argue with Uebo. Take a brief tour with our gallery below, or hit up the more coverage link for a full datasheet.

Uebo introduces versatile M200 media streamer, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Jul 2010 10:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Exclusive interview with Joe Belfiore, corporate VP of Windows Phone

By now you’ve probably read our in-depth blowout of Windows Phone 7 (and if not, what are you waiting for?). But what you haven’t seen yet is our exclusive sit-down with Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore, wherein we talk about the ins and outs of the new mobile operating system. We grill the Windows Phone corporate VP about a whole stack of items, and do our very best to make him start crying like a Barbara Walters interview subject (spoiler alert, he doesn’t cry). Still, we think there’s some good insight here into what the company thinks of its odds in the smartphone wars, and what kinds of features we will (and won’t) see when these devices launch this fall. Take a look at the video after the break — you won’t regret it.

Continue reading Exclusive interview with Joe Belfiore, corporate VP of Windows Phone

Exclusive interview with Joe Belfiore, corporate VP of Windows Phone originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Jul 2010 14:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry Storm 3 detailed in training slide: same look, more RAM?

For those of you hoping that RIM could pull off a handset capable of challenging the incredibly slim and futuristic tree-borne Android handsets in the touchphone hardware arena, you’ll have to dream past the Storm 3. From the looks of it, we’ll be getting a fairly minor “refresh” of the Storm 2, according to our tipster, with upgrades more designed to accommodate BlackBerry 6 than anything. As seen on the the slide, the phone will double the Storm 2’s RAM with 512MB, the camera will be bumped up to 5 megapixels, and the WiFi is being shifted to 802.11n — a spec RIM is already rocking on the Pearl 3G, so not unprecedented. Outside of BlackBerry 6 and that (supposedly) blazing new WebKit browser, we’re probably most enthused about the “coming soon” 3G mobile hotspot functionality, something that’s made our Android handsets invaluable as of late. We were already hearing the Storm 3 and Curve 3 (another refresh, says our tipster) were holiday possibles for Verizon, and the bottom of this slide points to an “___ember” month.

BlackBerry Storm 3 detailed in training slide: same look, more RAM? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Jul 2010 14:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon leaks another Droid 2, getting BlackBerry Storm 3, Curve 3, 10.1-inch tablet later this year?

Now that the Droid 2 has officially reached “leaking like a sieve” status, we thought we’d toss you another couple shots of the Droid X’s QWERTY-equipped cousin, which we’re being told is locked for an August release on Verizon. If you’re more of the BlackBerry type, though, we’ve got some news for you, too: our source is telling us that both a Curve 3 and Storm 3 are “possible” for the holidays this year. If we had to guess, the Curve 3 is likely a variant of this 9300 we’ve been seeing lately, whereas the Storm 3 could be a version of the 9800 slider or an entirely new keyboardless slate. There’s also a 10.1-inch tablet on the docket; the carrier has already confirmed that Android tablets are in the pipeline, but this could also be a version of the rumored BlackBerry beast. More on this noise as soon as we get it; in the meantime, follow the break for another shot of that Droid 2, won’t you?

[Thanks, RWN]

Continue reading Verizon leaks another Droid 2, getting BlackBerry Storm 3, Curve 3, 10.1-inch tablet later this year?

Verizon leaks another Droid 2, getting BlackBerry Storm 3, Curve 3, 10.1-inch tablet later this year? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Jul 2010 01:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon’s 4G LTE SIM in the wild

It’s still baking our noodles to think about a Verizon device using a SIM on American soil — but sure enough, those cards allegedly set up in Big Red’s systems are floating around in the wild. What you’re looking at here is a SIM that will slot into Verizon’s LTE-enabled 4G devices when they launch later this year (hence the big “4G” logo on there), and yes, they look just like the SIMs you’ve been using for the last two decades on carriers around the world. The more things change, the more they stay the same, it seems.

[Thanks, RWN]

Verizon’s 4G LTE SIM in the wild originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Jul 2010 01:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon FiveSpot CDMA / GSM mobile WiFi hotspot leaks out

Looks like Verizon’s about to take its mobile data game worldwide — we just got this snap of the “FiveSpot,” a “global ready” mobile WiFi hotspot . That certainly sounds like a hybrid CDMA / UMTS mobile hotspot to us, which makes sense — Verizon already sells a bunch of world phones with dual CDMA and GSM radios, so a globetrotting riff on the MiFi fits right in. Based on the name, we’d guess this supports five simultaneous users, but that’s a guess. No idea when this will hit or how much it might cost, but we’ll keep our eyes open — check the box shot after the break.

[Thanks, RWN]

Continue reading Verizon FiveSpot CDMA / GSM mobile WiFi hotspot leaks out

Verizon FiveSpot CDMA / GSM mobile WiFi hotspot leaks out originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Jul 2010 01:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon’s LTE rollout is imminent, computers updated for 4G SIM cards

We just got some alleged (but very convincing) internal documents on Verizon’s 4G plans, and it’s mostly stuff we’ve already heard — 5-12Mbps down, aircards before smartphones, and plans to roll out in 30 cities in 2010. That said, documents dated this week show the company’s still on track to serve up 100 million connections by the end of the year, and a pair of independent tipsters have just sent us pics of Verizon computers ready and waiting for those precious LTE SIM cards. Furthermore, the docs also claim that the planned LTE isn’t just fast, it’s got a lag-destroying 30ms latency too, and fans of wider wireless computing can expect 4G tablets of some sort in 2011 as well. See all the goodies in our gallery below.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Verizon’s LTE rollout is imminent, computers updated for 4G SIM cards originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 18 Jul 2010 15:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T execs get a better Captivate unboxing experience than you do

We don’t know how often this happens, but it seems that AT&T brass are being provided with these ridiculously over-the-top packages for the Samsung Captivate that’s officially launching this weekend, including bundled accessories that us unwashed masses aren’t offered. As they say, membership has its privileges.

[Thanks, anonymous tipster]

AT&T execs get a better Captivate unboxing experience than you do originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Jul 2010 12:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hulu Plus launches on PS3, exclusive to Sony’s console through 2010

The Sony Defense Force has reason to celebrate today, as the circle is now complete — where Netflix HD once spited PS3 for Xbox 360, today Hulu Plus has chosen the PlayStation for limited console exclusivity through the end of the year. Today, “a select group” of PlayStation Plus subscribers can download the Hulu Plus app and start watching immediately, while regular ol’ paying members can ask nicely (via the same app) and wait patiently for the privilege of shelling out an additional $10 a month. Those who aren’t dropping $50 a year on PlayStation Plus aren’t entirely out of luck, they’ll just have to wait till the end of the preview period to get their Hulu on. Press release after the break, more info at the official PlayStation.Blog.

Continue reading Hulu Plus launches on PS3, exclusive to Sony’s console through 2010

Hulu Plus launches on PS3, exclusive to Sony’s console through 2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Jul 2010 16:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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