Samsung OmniaHD’s camera put to the test

Samsung sure has made some high claims about its OmniaHD supermegaphone, and now we’ve got some HD footage and stills to put those claims to the test. The camera does seem pretty stellar for a phone, and the video is undoubtedly HD, but we saw pretty sluggish performance in the HD recording mode, both in the on-screen preview and in the finished product. We’ll chalk that up to the super-early build of the device software, but hopefully this will be resolved before the phone ships. The phone also does ultra-slowmotion video, which is awesome, but seems similarly inconsistent and stuttery in frame rate. We’ll shut up and let you see it all for yourself, both in the gallery below and the videos after the break. Again, this is all from a pre-production phone, and we’re really expecting (or at least hoping for) the frame rate to smooth out by launch. The video was shot in 720p, but it was downsampled for web playback — it looks pretty sharp in native form, and the first image in the gallery is a screencap from the video in full resolution for your perusal.

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Samsung OmniaHD’s camera put to the test originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 19:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rubik’s TouchCube hands-on and video

We just stopped by TechnoSource’s booth at the Toy Fair to check out its just-announced Rubik’s TouchCube, a fully touch-sensitive update on the old classic Rubik’s Cube. The new model boasts a few features the old one did not (besides the lights and touchscreen), namely undo and hint options if you get stumped. Each of its six sides are touch-sensitive, and the cube’s got an internal accelerometer so that it only recognizes the touching going on on the top side of the cube. It also remembers your place even if you turn it off — great for those of us who will likely spend years trying to solve it just once. The Rubik’s TouchCube is going to hit shelves this fall for $149.99. Check the gallery and video demo after the break

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Rubik’s TouchCube hands-on and video originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 17:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia 6710 Navigator and 6720 classic hands-on

Nokia’s 6710 Navigator and 6720 classic aren’t gonna win any beauty contests. Our friends at Engadget Spanish can attest to that, and after getting some hands-on time with the GPS-friendly handsets, they pointed in particular to the simple, inelegant design. Still, they say the navigational functionality should more than make up for the aesthetics, so if you’re in the market for such a phone, this might be the ugly duckling for you. Hit up the gallery for more beauty shots.

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Nokia 6710 Navigator and 6720 classic hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 15:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amosu hands-on: pink, pricey, and plenty of diamonds

While scavenging for pricey handsets to hang on the gilded walls at the Mansion, we luckily bumped into one Alexander Amosu, of Amosu fame. The Amosu brand is synonymous with gold, encrusted and dripping with gemstones, and most of all, pricey. In his bag of tricks we found three fully-kitted BlackBerry Bolds, a pink iPhone, and an iced Motorola Aura. If you lined them up on a table — which, of course, we did — you’d be looking at some 12 plus carats and a price tag somewhere up around 50k. Sure, we’re normally harsh on these types of things, but seeing them up close, we could almost kinda get it. Huge sparkling gallery after the break, so if you have shades, now’s the time to don them.

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Amosu hands-on: pink, pricey, and plenty of diamonds originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 14:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hyundai’s phones are creatively ridiculous

We associate the Hyundai name more closely with cars and ten-year warranties than we do phones in these parts of the world, but Hyundai Mobile does a little business selling low-cost phones in parts of Europe, the Middle East, and Asia (cars… phones… right, makes sense). We had a chance to check out some of the offerings today, and yeah, let’s just put it this way: some of these devices are a bit off the beaten path. Pictured above from left to right are the MB-400 (bearing absolutely no resemblance to any existing device), the MB-910 touchscreen watch phone, and the lovely MB-105 “Chico” (which — interesting fact — features a whopping 50-message SMS storage capacity). The Chico wasn’t functional for us, but follow the break for some hands-on time with the unfortunate iPod rip and one of the nicer watch phones we’ve seen come to market. Odd couple, isn’t it?

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Hyundai’s phones are creatively ridiculous originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 13:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Magic in-depth hands-on, with video!

We only got a brief glimpse of this device before it was whisked away at the Vodafone press event today, so we tracked down HTC’s megabooth and sat down for a much longer gander at the new HTC Magic. The unit we played with has a non-final button layout on the front — we’d say the final version, reflected in official press shots, is much-improved — but was raring to go otherwise. Check out our impressions, along with a couple of videos after the break!

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HTC Magic in-depth hands-on, with video! originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 12:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Acer’s four other phones in the flesh, not powered on

Acer made a lot of noise about launching “eight” handsets yesterday, but we only got hard details on the four Tempos — which was probably the wrong way to go, because the prototypes of the F1, white C1, L1, and the E1 due to launch later this year are way hotter. Too bad Acer won’t turn ’em on or tell us anything about them — we can see the F1 has a five megapixel camera, but the lack of a Windows Mobile 6.5-required hardware Start button on any of these doesn’t bode well. Check ’em all out in the gallery.

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Acer’s four other phones in the flesh, not powered on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 11:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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OpenOffice.org 3.0 Beta Download

This article was written on May 07, 2008 by CyberNet.

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It’s here! I’ve been waiting for OpenOffice.org 3.0 Beta for what seems like forever. I was getting a little bit worried when it wasn’t released on April 30th like it was supposed to be, and the release date was never revised. Luckily it’s only rolling in about a week late.

If you were one of the people expecting a huge facelift in this version of OpenOffice.org I’m afraid you’ll be a little disappointed. For the most part the interface is the same as it was with the exception of some refreshed icons. Some people I talked to were keeping their fingers crossed that the next major release of OpenOffice.org would include an Office 2007-like Ribbon, but it’s still using the classic toolbar style. Hey, it can now run on Mac OS X without needing X11 which is a huge feat in itself.

What I’m really excited about is that OpenOffice.org 3.0 is able to open the Office 2007 document formats. I’ve been using Office 2007 for a little while, and trying to use OpenOffice.org was quite a pain since I have a relatively large number of files saved in the Office 2007 file format. This will help ease the transition for many users.

And there’s still more! Here’s a look at the new features included in OpenOffice.org 3.0 Beta:

  • Mac OS X Support
    OpenOffice.org is now able to run on Mac OS X without the need for X11. Thus, OpenOffice.org behaves like any other Aqua application. The cool thing is, while the market leading office suite vendor dropped VBA support and the Solver feature, OpenOffice.org recently introduced limited VBA support and includes a powerful Solver component.
  • ODF 1.2 Support
    OpenOffice.org 3.0 already supports the features of the upcoming version 1.2 of the ISO standard OpenDocument Format (ODF). ODF 1.2 includes a powerful formula language as well as a sophisticated metadata model based on the W3C standards RDF and OWL.
  • Microsoft Office 2007 Document Support
    OpenOffice.org 3.0 is now capable of opening files created with Microsoft Office 2007 or Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac OS X (.docx, .xlsx, .pptx, etc.).
  • Solver
    OpenOffice.org now also has a solver component which allows solving optimization problems where the optimum value of a particular spreadsheet cell has to be calculated based on constraints provided in other cells.
  • Chart Enhancements
  • Improved Crop Feature
  • Spreadsheet Collaboration
    This new feature in OpenOffice.org 3.0 allows collaborating on spreadsheets with multiple users. By sharing a spreadsheet; other users can easily add their data to the spreadsheet.
  • 1024 Columns Per Calc Sheet Instead of 256
  • Display Multiple Writer Pages While Editing
    With the new zoom slider, it is now easily possible to change the zoom factor. More importantly, OpenOffice.org Writer can now display multiple pages at the same time.
  • Improved Notes Feature in Writer
    With version 3.0, OpenOffice.org got an advanced notes features which displays notes on the side of the document. This makes notes a lot easier to read. In addition, notes from different users are displayed in different colours together with the editing date and time.
  • New Icons
  • Start Center
    When you open the application; you are now welcomed by a Start Center that allow you to chose which module you would like to use, or if you would prefer to open a document.

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Acer F900, M900, X960, and DX900 hands-on with video

Acer’s new Tempo lineup of middling Windows Mobile 6.1 sets isn’t going to steal the show from the TG01, the OmniaHD, or the Magic, but it’s not like they’re total failures — they’re just way behind the curve. Engadget Spanish did the honors, and it looks like Acer would have been better off spending the time getting these ready to ship with 6.5 instead of the amusingly quaint Microsoft Bob-like Acer Shell it’s come up with to skin 6.1 — all it’s missing is the dog. Add in a general sense of lagginess and a stubborn resistive touchscreen, and we’d say this round is better off skipped. So much for those budding Acer fanboys. More galleries and a video after the break.

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Acer F900, M900, X960, and DX900 hands-on with video originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 10:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA’s Tegra in the flesh, booting to Android and pumping out 1080p video

NVIDIA really has a technical wonder in the Tegra APX 2600 chipset, and is more than happy to show it off, with a myriad of tech demos on display here at MWC. Some of this they showed off back in June of last year, but it’s no less impressive — there aren’t really any mobile devices out there capable of this stuff right now. Still, we’re here for the new, and NIVIDA showed up with Android running on one of its proof-of-concept units, and with another unit pumping out 1080p video, with a claimed 10 hours of battery life at that task. NVIDIA says it took them just a few weeks to port Android to the system, and we found it already quite snappy and even usable on the capacitive touchscreen-ed device. We also saw the forthcoming Android-running Yulong N8 and IAC S2 Tegra APX phones, along with an untitled CompalCom set — they were all in non-working prototype form, but it’s clear this chipset isn’t just for MIDs. Check it all out in the videos after the break and the gallery below!

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NVIDIA’s Tegra in the flesh, booting to Android and pumping out 1080p video originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 10:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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