How would you change Gigapan’s Epic camera robot?

Gigapan’s Epic camera robot is an interesting beast, and calling it a niche device would be understating things rather dramatically. We had the opportunity to take an Epic 100 for a spin earlier this year, and we’re guessing that a few of you adventurous photographers have managed to pick one up since. If so, we’re curious to know how you’re enjoying things. Are you satisfied with the panoramic results? Is it snappy enough? Versatile enough? Any modifications you’d like to make if you were leading up the redesign? Toss your thoughts in comments below, cool shutterbug?

How would you change Gigapan’s Epic camera robot? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 23:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Core Values: What’s next for NVIDIA?

Core Values is our new monthly column from Anand Shimpi, Editor-in-chief of AnandTech. With over a decade of experience poring over the latest in chip developments, he’s here to explain how things work and why our tech is the way it is.


I remember the day AMD announced it was going to acquire ATI. NVIDIA told me that its only competitor just threw in the towel. What a difference a few years can make.

The last time NVIDIA was this late to a major DirectX transition was seven years ago, and the company just quietly confirmed we won’t see its next-generation GPU, Fermi, until Q1 2010. If AMD’s manufacturing partner TSMC weren’t having such a terrible time making 40nm chips I’d say that AMD would be gobbling up marketshare like a fat kid. By the time NVIDIA gets its entire stack of DX11 hardware out the gate, AMD will be a quarter away from putting out newly refreshed GPUs.

Things aren’t much better on the chipset side either — for all intents and purposes, the future of NVIDIA’s chipset business in the PC space is dead. Not only has NVIDIA recently announced that it won’t be pursuing any chipsets for Intel’s Core i3, i5. or i7 processors until its various legal disputes with Intel are resolved, It doesn’t really make sense to be a third-party chipset vendor anymore. Both AMD and Intel are more than capable of doing chipsets in-house, and the only form of differentiation comes from the integrated graphics core — so why not just sell cheap discrete GPUs for OEMs to use alongside Intel chipsets instead?

Even Ion is going to be short lived. NVIDIA’s planning to mold an updated graphics chip into an updated chipset for the next-gen Atom processor, but Pine Trail brings the memory controller and graphics onto the CPU and leaves NVIDIA out in the cold once again.

Let’s see, no competitive GPUs, no future chipset business. This isn’t looking good so far — but the one thing I’ve learned from writing about these companies for the past 12 years is that the future’s never as it seems. Chances are, NVIDIA’s going to look a lot different in the future because of two things: Tesla and Tegra.

Continue reading Core Values: What’s next for NVIDIA?

Core Values: What’s next for NVIDIA? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ask Engadget: Best headset / microphone for podcasting?

We know you’ve got questions, and if you’re brave enough to ask the world for answers, here’s the outlet to do so. This week’s Ask Engadget question is coming to us from Marcus, who’s looking to hook himself up with a solid USB headset / microphone for Skype calling, podcasting and just generally having a royally great time.

“I’ve found myself using my PC for a lot of conversations lately, and I’m also considering recording a podcast to share with anyone who will listen. There are tons of USB headset / microphones out there, and I’m hoping someone has some solid recommendations based on experience. I’ll consider both headsets and standalone mics, by the way, but I’d like to keep the bill under $100 if possible. Help!”

To be completely honest, we’re still trying to determine for ourselves which device is best for these kinds of activities. If you’ve found a diamond in the proverbial rough, spill it in comments below, won’tcha?

Ask Engadget: Best headset / microphone for podcasting? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Dec 2009 23:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Switched On: The TV is personal again

Ross Rubin (@rossrubin) contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

The short history of digital content includes several examples of on-the-go services like Audible and Slacker that were started out on own devices before expanding to others, But FLO TV, which started its service on handsets from Verizon and then AT&T, has gone the other way. After being stalled by the digital TV transition delay that held up spectrum it needed to launch and expand service in several markets, FLO TV has launched a dedicated $250 device, the HTC-branded Personal Television, even as it seeks to expand the number of handsets supporting its receiver.

Like a Kindle, iPod nano, or Flip camcorder, the pocketable Personal TV has a straightforward, optimized purpose. And for technophiles who live in a world of Hulu, TV-on-DVDs and Apple TV, it recalls a simpler time when TV content and device were an integrated pair. Turn on the device, press a GPS-style safety disclaimer, and you’re watching TV. Apart from power and volume/mute controls, it has only a single front-mounted button brings up the electronic programming guide, which can be navigated by touching and swiping its 3.5-inch touchscreen. A laptop battery-style power status button lights up a series of LEDs to let you know how much charge is left in the device.

Continue reading Switched On: The TV is personal again

Switched On: The TV is personal again originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Dec 2009 19:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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WowWee Cinemin Swivel iPod and iPhone pico projector review

The first time we saw a pico projector some of us thought: “Err… What’s the point?” Slide show presentations from your phone? Doubt it — not powerful enough for practical use. Cinematic experience in the toilet? Maybe, but you’d want a built-in projector on your PMP instead of a separate brick. Funky dance? Only in Japan. Finally, WowWee took a break from robotics to give us the answer with its foldable Cinemin Swivel pico projector: for watching videos on the ceiling while lying in bed, obviously. Still, we have our doubts about image quality, portability and practicality — especially for $299. Read on to find out if this little guy is worth it.

Continue reading WowWee Cinemin Swivel iPod and iPhone pico projector review

WowWee Cinemin Swivel iPod and iPhone pico projector review originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Dec 2009 12:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kingston 40GB SSDNow review

From the moment that we heard of the new 40GB Kingston SSD, we couldn’t help but get our hopes up. Who knows if (or more likely, when) SSD drives will ever completely replace spinning platters with all the digital media people collect today, so rather than stretching your budget and compressing your media in order to stuff everything onto a 256GB solid state drive, we dug the idea of snagging a small (and affordable) SSD for boot / application operations and utilizing a spacious HDD for archival. Not to mention — regardless of how fast a disk is — two are almost always better than one. If you’re interested in rigging up a similar setup, hop on past the break to have a look at our impressions.

Continue reading Kingston 40GB SSDNow review

Kingston 40GB SSDNow review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Dec 2009 12:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Omnia II unboxing and hands-on

It’s here at last, and we’re frankly thrilled to be holding Samsung’s very first TouchWiz 2.0 device, the Verizon Wireless-bound Samsung Omnia II. The 2.0 software brings with it a Widget Store, and as a general UI manages to skin over a majority of Windows Mobile 6.5, which is puttering along underneath. The handset is a tad on the bulky side, but makes up for it with a wonderful 3.7-inch AMOLED WVGA screen and a very nice 5 megapixel camera. We’ll have a review for you before long, but for now you can check out a quick video rundown (including some playtime with the Samsung-exclusive “Swype” keyboard) after the break. And if that video is enough to convince you, the phone is available now on Verizon Wireless for $200 after rebate.

Continue reading Samsung Omnia II unboxing and hands-on

Samsung Omnia II unboxing and hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Dec 2009 11:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Entelligence: What’s the future of Nokia?

Entelligence is a column by technology strategist and author Michael Gartenberg, a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a quality New York bagel is dwarfed only by his passion for tech. In these articles, he’ll explore where our industry is and where it’s going — on both micro and macro levels — with the unique wit and insight only he can provide.

It’s the largest cell phone maker in the world, with the largest share of any smartphone vendor in the world. Yet I increasingly look at Nokia’s products and listen to its strategy wondering if the company can remain relevant in a mobile world that’s changed drastically over the last two years. I’m not talking about a Nokia deathwatch, or whether the company will remain in business — that’s foolish. Of course Nokia is going to stick around; it’s what it’s going to look like that concerns me. A future of selling low-end phones into emerging markets with some minor services might be profitable, but it’s not a direction that leads to industry relevance or influence.

First, I’m confused by Nokia’s platform strategy. There’s been a lot of chatter about Maemo being the future, and while it might be a strategic direction, it’s nowhere near ready for primetime now. Chris Ziegler suggested to me the other day that “Maemo 6 (or 7) in an X6 form factor with a more cohesive Ovi strategy could be killer.” Perhaps, but right now Maemo feels very immature and unfinished. In fact, it feels like what it is: an OS designed for Nokia’s Internet Tablet MIDs. On a phone like the N900 it’s just too kludgey for the mainstream market. That leaves Symbian-based S60, which was totally innovative in 2002 but now looks creaky and has fragmented into multiple versions, leaving a very confused developer market. Sure, Nokia supports Flash and Silverlight with Qt somehow tying all this diversity into some unified grand theory, but it’s enough complexity to make most developers look elsewhere — and that’s exactly what’s happened. Without a clear platform strategy, it’s going to be difficult for Nokia to get the developer mindshare required to stay relevant to the mass market.

Continue reading Entelligence: What’s the future of Nokia?

Entelligence: What’s the future of Nokia? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 17:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Klipsch ProMedia 2.1 Wireless speakers impressions

Back in the day (or way back, as it were), we recall quite vividly the impression made upon us by Klipsch‘s ProMedia v.2-400. It wasn’t the cheapest four-piece speaker set for the PC, but compared to the competition at the time, it certainly offered up a sound rivaled only by much higher-end options — options that were generally tailored for home theater applications. Fast forward to today, and Klipsch is still carrying on the ProMedia line nearly a decade later. The latest set to waltz into our labs are these: the ProMedia 2.1 Wireless. Essentially, these are the exact same ProMedia 2.1 speakers that were released eons ago (in the midst of the Y2K chaos, if you’re looking for specifics), but with a wireless twist. Klipsch has integrated 2.4GHz wireless technology into the subwoofer, and it tossed in a USB dongle in order to beam out audio from whatever PC or Mac that you connect it to. Pretty simple, right? Hop on past the break for our two pennies on how this package performed.

Continue reading Klipsch ProMedia 2.1 Wireless speakers impressions

Klipsch ProMedia 2.1 Wireless speakers impressions originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 16:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Test Websites in Internet Explorer 5.5, 6, 7, and 8

This article was written on June 02, 2008 by CyberNet.

Windows Vista.jpg
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arrow Windows Windows XP/Vista only arrow
As a web designer one of the things that is difficult to do is test a site in multiple versions of Internet Explorer, especially if you’re running Vista which doesn’t really include an option to run prior versions of IE. A significant amount of computer users still use Internet Explorer 6 as their main browser, and it renders sites rather differently than Internet Explorer 7. And then there’s Internet Explorer 8 which is currently in the Beta stage, and yet again that renders differently than any prior version.

To make things a little easier a nifty free application called IETester has been developed. With it you can test your website in Internet Explorer 5.5, Internet Explorer 6, Internet Explorer 7, and Internet Explorer 8 Beta. The best part is that the application has a tabbed interface (as seen above) so that you can quickly switch between website renderings in different versions of Internet Explorer.

A nice feature that I didn’t catch at first was that you can actually view them side-by-side by dragging one tab into the content area of another tab. It will “split” the window so that both tabs are next to each other, which is really handy.

I played around with the program for about 15 minutes, and it does what it’s advertised to do, but it definitely has some bugs. In that 15 minute period the application crashed three times on me, but I think I was pushing it too hard. I was trying to open multiple websites simultaneously using different versions of Internet Explorer, and it buckled under the pressure. So it’s obviously not designed to be a day-to-day browser, but it’s fine for testing a website here and there.

What I don’t get is why Microsoft doesn’t take matters into its own hands and start a project like this one. Web developers would probably still be bitter because of their non-compliance of standards in the past, but an application like this would help regain a little respect. We just need to keep our fingers crossed that Microsoft doesn’t go the opposite route and shutdown this project for redistributing the IE DLL’s. ;)

Get IETester
Thanks to Yansky for the tip!

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