Why HP Buying Palm Is Good for You [Hp]

Rejoice: HP is buying Palm! If the boring beigeness of HP doesn’t kill it in the process, this could only be good for anyone looking for a neat, solid smartphone that beats Google and Apple in many areas. More »

Compaq Airlife 100 exclusively available to Telefónica customers for 229 euros in May

We just had a feeling that the Compaq Airlife 100 would be the first smartbook to ship when we caught wind of its official spec page last week, and now our Spanish counterparts are reporting that the Android-running clamshell will be exclusively available through Telefonica Movistar in mid-May. The carrier is also finally revealing a price — the Snapdragon smartbook will set Spaniards back 229 euros and that doesn’t even include the accompanying 48 euros a month Internet Maxi plan (insert iPad joke here). We are told there’s also a 39 euro Internet Plus plan, but that requires you to shell out 299 euros for the little laptop. Seems to be a bit more expensive than we originally thought, considering you can get a more powerful netbook for less than 199 euros these days, but we will see how this whole smartbook thing pans out soon enough. As for us Americans, HP recently told us there are no plans to bring the Airlife 100 stateside.

Compaq Airlife 100 exclusively available to Telefónica customers for 229 euros in May originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Apr 2010 13:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba NB305 and HP Mini 210 to be upgraded with Atom N455 CPUs and DDR3 memory

A little bit of Euroland investigation this morning has revealed signs that Intel’s upcoming 1.66GHz N455 and 1.83GHz N475 Atom processors are close to making their official debut. Netbook Italia spotted the official Toshiba website posting up an NB305-10F model a little prematurely — a page that was promptly yanked, but not before our amici were able to note the inclusion of the DDR3-compatible N455 CPU, a gigabyte of RAM, 250GB hard disk and otherwise unchanged specs. The expected price for that netbook is noted at €350 ($467), which is also the price at which the upgraded HP Mini 210 — spotted by German outfit nDevil — is listed on Amazon.de. Shipping dates are predictably not yet ascertained, though it’s looking like things are about to get moving nice and swiftly from here on out.

Toshiba NB305 and HP Mini 210 to be upgraded with Atom N455 CPUs and DDR3 memory originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 08:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Entelligence: Happy 10th birthday, Pocket PC

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.

Microsoft introduced the world to Pocket PC on April 19th, 2000 at a relatively small gathering in Grand Central Station in New York City. Pocket PC was the company’s response to Palm, which at that time was leading the PDA market — for many geeks, using a personal digital assistant was indeed a public display of affection. I was at the launch event — in fact, I was even quoted in the press release. Microsoft introduced four devices that day with their partners: the Casio EM500, the HP Jornada 545 & 548, the Symbol Technologies PPT2700, and the Compaq iPAQ. The iPAQ was the flagship of the Pocket PC line and the hottest handheld you could buy at the time: it had a slim form factor with “sleeves” that could be attached to add functionality such as Compact Flash or PCMCIA cards, a “fast” ARM processor and a killer indoor/outdoor screen. Availability was limited and prices on eBay quickly topped $1,000 for the scarce unit.

Continue reading Entelligence: Happy 10th birthday, Pocket PC

Entelligence: Happy 10th birthday, Pocket PC originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 25 Apr 2010 17:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP ships Swing motion controller hardware with Pavilion PCs in India

The vaguely kidney bean-shaped device above is actually, believe it or not, yet another motion controller. Details are scant, but apparently the HP Swing is being bundled with HP Pavilion desktop PCs in India (starting at 29,990 Rupees, or about $670). The thing will not be available separately, and as far as we know there are no plans to release it in the states. We’re not saying that it won’t be released in the US, but we are saying that we probably don’t care. Either way, we’ll let you know when we hear more.

Continue reading HP ships Swing motion controller hardware with Pavilion PCs in India

HP ships Swing motion controller hardware with Pavilion PCs in India originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 24 Apr 2010 18:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP takes chisel in hand, mulls over Android and Linux slates

Feelings about the leaked HP Slate notwithstanding, the company’s already considering its tablet PC successors — and if The New York Times‘ sources are right, they may be of Android and Linux varieties. Where the forthcoming HP Slate is, erm, slated to run Windows 7, The Grey Lady reported last week that a six-inch Android tablet was also on the way. Now, a prominent magazine editor reportedly tells the paper a Linux version may also be in development. For its part, HP isn’t denying the claims. “I’m certain that we will be announcing new Slates in the future as they are a very interesting area for us,” said media relations director Marlene Somsak, whose only added caveat was that HP isn’t currently announcing an Android slate.

HP takes chisel in hand, mulls over Android and Linux slates originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Apr 2010 09:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Envy 17 pops up on HP.com begging to be officially launched

HP’s clearly been updating its website with new products over the past few days, but our guess is that the Envy 17 that was just added to the domain slipped through a bit early. We wish there were more details thrown up there, but unfortunately the spec and data sheet pages come up blank. One of our eagle-eyed editors did spot some fine print indicating that the laptop “may require” a separate DVD drive to upgrade Windows 7, so our guess is that the 17-incher — like its Envy 13 and Envy 15 brethren — lacks an integrated optical drive. We assume it shouldn’t be all that long before HP officially comes clean about this multimedia system, but we’re just hoping they plan on cramming some NVIDIA Optimus and Core i7 in there to sweeten the deal.

[Thanks, Ali]

Envy 17 pops up on HP.com begging to be officially launched originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 15:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP’s Designjet 3D series start shipping to wealthy European prototypers

HP's Designjet 3D series start shipping to wealthy European prototypers

Just three months after HP bought itself into the 3D printer market by making a partnership with established player Stratasys, the company’s first Designjet 3D models are now shipping in Europe, set to start churning out bits and bobs soon. HP is offering two models, the plain Designjet 3D and the Designjet Color 3D which, wait for it, prints in color. We don’t know what the multi-hue model will set you back, but the base model clocks in at €13,000 — about $17,500. That’s roughly $2,500 more than a low-end, non-HP Stratasys additive fabrication printer will cost you, and we’re not sure what else you’re getting for that premium beyond the little chrome HP badge stuck on the top. Expensive? Sure, but we remember a time when color laser printers cost more than cars and now look at ’em, selling for less than $200 shipped. Funny how their toner cartridges aren’t any cheaper…

Continue reading HP’s Designjet 3D series start shipping to wealthy European prototypers

HP’s Designjet 3D series start shipping to wealthy European prototypers originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 10:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP stuffs Core i3 / i5 into TouchSmart PCs, gently revamps other desktops

Down for a solid spate of updates? Wipe that sleep from your eye and listen up, then. HP‘s pushing out a list of updates tonight across a rather strange combination of desktops, so we won’t waste any time breaking it down. The standouts of the bunch are the revamped TouchSmart PCs, with both the TouchSmart 300 and 600 getting a dose of Core i3 / i5, some sort of “Beats Audio” inclusion and a suite of software that you may or may not wish to keep loaded on. Starting tags on these are listed at $799 and $1,099, respectively. Moving on, there’s the All-in-One 200-5020, a $699 (and up) machine with a 21.5-inch 1080p display, Windows 7, built-in WiFi, an optional keyboard / mouse, DVD burner, integrated webcam and MediaSmart software bundle. For the suits in attendance, there’s the HP Compaq 6005 Pro Ultra Slim, which measures 10-inches high and 2.6-inches wide, includes ATI’s Radeon 4200 GPU and sports a $599 starting point. The whole lot should be available by the month’s end if you find something you like.

HP stuffs Core i3 / i5 into TouchSmart PCs, gently revamps other desktops originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 01:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP Compaq AirLife 100 specs revealed

HP hasn’t exactly shrouded its Android-running Compaq AirLife 100 in mystery — you know, considering we spent some quality time with it at MWC and it recently just cleared the FCC — but the full specs of the company’s first smartbook have now been confirmed on HP’s website. Frankly, we’re not all that surprised by what’s going on inside the 10-inch clamshell device — it’s powered by a 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor with WiFi / 3G connectivity, 512MB of RAM, and 16GB of flash storage. Just as we saw at CES and then again in Barcelona, in addition to a touchpad it’s got a resistive touchscreen (no multitouch here) for navigating the mobile OS. We’re still assuming it won’t have access to the Android Marketplace, but HP is listing the preloaded apps, which interestingly includes a “data transfer counter” and NDrive GPS. The AirLife is set to launch soon in Latin America and in parts of Europe with carrier partners, but because it’s popping up on HP’s US site there’s reason to believe it may be headed stateside. We’re still awaiting HP’s official word on that American AirLife so stay tuned.

HP Compaq AirLife 100 specs revealed originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Apr 2010 23:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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