Engadget explains net neutrality — and our full interview with Professor Tim Wu!

Still trying to get up to speed on the whole net neutrality situation? Check out the intro above for a recap of the basics — it ran during the last Engadget Show as part of our interview with Columbia law professor and noted net neutrality advocate Tim Wu. Then, head after the break for both cuts of the interview — the edited piece that aired with the show and the uncut half-hour version. If you’ve got the time we highly recommend the full-flavor edition — it’s seriously interesting stuff, and Tim’s not afraid to speak his mind on one of the most important tech issues of our time.

Update: And here’s a downloadable copy, for those who were asking.

Continue reading Engadget explains net neutrality — and our full interview with Professor Tim Wu!

Engadget explains net neutrality — and our full interview with Professor Tim Wu! originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 24 Sep 2010 18:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Facebook phone rumors resurface, Mark Zuckerberg fails to deny them

Let’s try to untangle this Facebook mobile phone mess, shall we? Mark Zuckerberg has recently sat down with Michael Arrington of TechCrunch — the source of the original rumor — to try and dispel some of the confusion that has arisen as a result. The first thing the Zuckmeister says is that Facebook isn’t looking to build its own OS or hardware and is absolutely opposed to competing with the likes of the iPhone and Android. What Zuckerberg wants is deeper social integration, positing the question, “What could we do if we also started hacking at a deeper level?” While there’ll be no single answer or solution for all phones, Mark firmly believes that social elements have to be designed in from the start:

On phones we can actually do something better. We can do a single sign-on if we do a good integration with a phone, rather than just doing something where you go to an app and it’s automatically social or having to sign into each app individually. Those are the two options on the web. Why not for mobile? Just make it so that you log into your phone once, and then everything that you do on your phone is social.

Notably, he fails to deny rumors of such deeply integrated devices being in the pipeline, and Bloomberg has trotted out a trio of insider sources who claim INQ Mobile has been engaged to produce two smartphones with just that purpose in mind — you know the same INQ that already makes Facebook-heavy handsets, so this could very well be little more than a rebrand. One is said to feature a QWERTY keypad and a touchscreen while the other is an all touch affair, and both are reputedly headed for an early 2011 launch in Europe, followed by a late 2011 arrival in the USA. AT&T is the carrier that’s closest to picking them up, we’re told, though deals haven’t been finalized on what could be sub-$100 phones after subsidies are distributed. So, whatever happens, we’re staring down the barrel of a couple of glorified featurephones with deep social integration. Kin 2.0, anyone? Anyone?

Facebook phone rumors resurface, Mark Zuckerberg fails to deny them originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Sep 2010 05:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Ericsson’s CEO promises ‘big surprises in the next few months’ (video)

The grand opening of Sony Ericsson’s new Americas HQ in Atlanta isn’t the sort of thing we spend sleepless nights thinking about, but a PSP Phone is. It’s mighty encouraging, therefore, to hear the company’s CEO Bert Nordberg tease “big surprises” coming from his team over the next few months. That revelation was accompanied by plentiful references to SE as an entertainment phone maker, a sly grin, and the usual disclaimer that “we never announce them in advance” — though considering the gap between the Xperia X10 announcement and arrival to market, maybe Bert should reconsider that part. Either way, unless SE’s big surprise is the delivery of a smartphone with an up-to-date OS and cutting-edge components on time (which would, admittedly, be a surprise), we’re happy to take this as a sign that the Android 3.0-powered gaming platform-cum-smartphone is brewing nicely behind the scenes.

Continue reading Sony Ericsson’s CEO promises ‘big surprises in the next few months’ (video)

Sony Ericsson’s CEO promises ‘big surprises in the next few months’ (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Sep 2010 15:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google’s Eric Schmidt faces off with Stephen Colbert

Last night the man behind the Keep Fear Alive campaign sat down with one of tech’s luminaries — Google’s Eric Schmidt — for a frank discussion about just exactly what it is that his company does. While the focus was on Google’s precarious relationship with our personal data, it would be hard to sum up the entirety of the conversation in a quick post (that’s why Skynet invented video). It is interesting to see Schmidt dodging what are incisive and extremely sharp questions (though veiled in sarcasm they may be) from Mr. Colbert. Put aside the next five minutes or so and do yourself a favor: watch the thing.

Continue reading Google’s Eric Schmidt faces off with Stephen Colbert

Google’s Eric Schmidt faces off with Stephen Colbert originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Sep 2010 11:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia’s Peter Skillman talks design priorities, gives us hope for a sunny MeeGo future

A day before jetting off to London to commence his role as MeeGo’s head of User Experience and Services, Peter Skillman was kind enough to sit down with the design junkies at ZURB and dish out his thoughts on what makes for good mobile design and where it is that most companies trip up. Lest you forget, this is the dude that was in charge of putting the Palm Pre together, so he’s not exactly without credence in these circles. Which is a good thing, because he doesn’t bother with pulling any punches. Peter namedrops Motorola’s Motoblur as an unnecessary layer on top of Android, criticizes the failure of different groups within companies to communicate effectively, and finishes off his treatise with a list of priorities for successful design: consistency, emotional content, and a paranoid fear of mediocrity. Inspiring stuff, we’re sure you’ll agree. Other tidbits of import include the fact that Pete had to withstand nine days of interviews before getting the Nokia job, and also this memorable quote on the topic of smartphones: “if you’re not succeeding at the high end, then you’re absolutely doomed to failure.” We’ve been saying the same thing for ages and it’s encouraging to know that Nokia now has an exec with his finger on the market’s pulse. Now let’s see him deliver on those words. You’ll find the full interview at the source link below.

Nokia’s Peter Skillman talks design priorities, gives us hope for a sunny MeeGo future originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 18 Sep 2010 16:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CE-Oh no he didn’t!: IBM’s Palmisano says HP ‘used to be’ an inventive company

The finest putdowns are usually the simplest. To wit, check out IBM’s Chief Executive Trashtalker, Samuel Palmisano, whose elegant use of the past tense relegates HP’s current status to that of a mere has-been innovator. Now, says Sam, HP is forced to acquire new companies just to keep up, thanks in part to Mark Hurd‘s slashing of investment in research and development. Speaking of Hurd, Palmisano also thinks HP failed its investors by handing him a fat severance package as he promptly jumped ship to Larry Ellison’s Oracle loveboat. Another reason why Palmisano isn’t worried about HP is that he sees the PC era as already over, describing IBM’s sale of its PC business to Lenovo as an act of foresight, and adding that he “couldn’t give it away today.” Clearly they don’t mince their words over at International Business Machines.

CE-Oh no he didn’t!: IBM’s Palmisano says HP ‘used to be’ an inventive company originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Sep 2010 21:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia’s VP of Design has a plan to crack the US market with MeeGo, and we’re all accomplices

One look at the N8 and E7 should be enough to convince the casual observer that Nokia is serious about design. The man behind Nokia’s hardware and software design for the last year is Marko Ahtisaari, Senior Vice President of Design and former CEO and co-founder of Dopplr. We asked Marco what it would take to be successful in the US market. His response, while not direct, was still illuminating and gives us implicit insight into how MeeGo, not Symbian, might be Nokia’s near-term play to conquer the American smartphone market. While gesturing to the N8, Marko had this to say:

“In the US I think it will require a somewhat more consequent approach in the high end. No matter how smooth and fast we make this, and we improve the camera — this is the best camera right — it still won’t cut though enough until we do an operating system level innovation. It will do extremely well in the market but it’s not a breakthrough device.”

Marko later added this clarfication:

“In order to cut through in the media environment, I think you need to do operating system level innovation. The products will be cut-through successes in the market, in people’s hands, in share of palms and share of thumbs it will be successful. But in order for it to cut through and people to say, whoa, why didn’t somebody else think about that and that’s kind of what Nokia should do, it will be easier to cut through, from the media point of view, with MeeGo.”

In other words, it’s the media (read: us), in Marko’s opinion, that will affect consumer opinion by influencing enthusiasts (read: you) who will in turn evangelize Nokia’s products throughout the US. MeeGo, not Symbian, is the product that will generate that degree of buzz and excitement. Marko finished by adding, “My goal is that very soon it will be cool to upgrade to the Nokia.”

So, what will Nokia’s high-end MeeGo devices look like? Click through to find out.

Continue reading Nokia’s VP of Design has a plan to crack the US market with MeeGo, and we’re all accomplices

Nokia’s VP of Design has a plan to crack the US market with MeeGo, and we’re all accomplices originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Sep 2010 04:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP Labs teams up with Hynix to manufacture memristors, plans assault on flash memory in 2013

The memristor‘s come a long way since being hypothesized back in 1971. If you ask HP Labs, the history of this particular memory technology didn’t hit its next milestone for almost four decades, when the company produced the very first memory resistor chip. Just last month, the Labs group proved its little transistor could handle logic and data storage, and as of today, the company’s announcing a joint development agreement with Hynix Semiconductor, with a goal of bringing these chips to the market — and rendering flash memory obsolete.

That challenge against flash (not a very popular naming convention these days, it seems) was thrown down by HP Labs Senior Fellow Stan Williams, who posits that the memristor is “an universal memory that over a sufficient amount of time will replace flash, DRAM, magnetic hard disks, and possibly even SRAM.” But onto the immediate, albeit aspirational goal (i.e. not a commitment, which he stressed on multiple occasions): Williams hopes to see the transistors in consumer products by this time 2013, for approximately the price of what flash memory will be selling for at the time but with “at least twice the bit capacity.” He also claims a much smaller power requirement of “at least a factor of 10” and an even faster operation speed, in addition to previously-discussed advantages like read / write endurance.

With Hynix on board, the goal is to make these “drop-in replacements” for flash memory, whereby the same protocols and even the same connectors will work just fine. For HP, however, Williams says there’ll be an initial competitive advantage for the company due to its comfort level with memristors’ unique properties, but that other companies will be encouraged to license the technology and experiment with new possibilities in hardware design. Williams wouldn’t give any specific product examples where we might initially see the memristor, except to repeat that it’ll be anywhere and everywhere flash memory is. Fighting words, indeed. We normally don’t get excited about minute hardware components — not often, at least — but we gotta say, the seeds of the future look mighty interesting. Can’t wait to see what germinates. Highlights from our talk with Williams after the break.

Continue reading HP Labs teams up with Hynix to manufacture memristors, plans assault on flash memory in 2013

HP Labs teams up with Hynix to manufacture memristors, plans assault on flash memory in 2013 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Aug 2010 17:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sharp’s e-reader ready to ‘rival the iPad’ by year’s end, may have a 3D future

Sharp is going to launch its brand new e-reader in Japan this fall with US retail availability to follow by the end of the year. Riveting stuff, isn’t it? Well, the company’s President Mikio Katayama does his best to spice things up by proposing this device will aim “to rival the iPad,” and it may well sport a color LCD if earlier indications still hold true, but what’s really got us hot under the collar is the potential for 3D down the line. Katayama claims to have witnessed great enthusiasm for 3D — particularly when it comes to games — and posits it as a likely future direction for this new ebook reader. Multifunctional devices are what people want, he says, and since Sharp already has a 3D smartphone in the pipeline and a glasses-free 3D tablet display in the lab, we can’t see many technical hurdles to the realization of his vision. Let’s just hope his depth perception is accurate when it comes to measuring the interest in three-dee.

Sharp’s e-reader ready to ‘rival the iPad’ by year’s end, may have a 3D future originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Aug 2010 03:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia’s VP talks N8, MeeGo ‘milestone product,’ tablets, Android and more!

Nokia’s prepping for a fourth quarter launch of its MeeGo smartphone. The N8 will hit before the end of Q3. The company’s absolutely not planning to use Android and a tablet isn’t happening anytime soon. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the stuff we learned this morning during our captivating chat with Niklas Savander, Espoo’s executive vice president and general manager of the Markets unit. With its quarterly profits dropping and losing daily (in mindshare, at least) to the Apples, HTCs and Motorolas of the world, we were certainly not lacking questions when we headed into the meeting, and Savander took on our questions about Nokia’s short and long term plans with stride. We’ve got the key points of the interview bulleted out after the break — and the full transcript after that.

Continue reading Nokia’s VP talks N8, MeeGo ‘milestone product,’ tablets, Android and more!

Nokia’s VP talks N8, MeeGo ‘milestone product,’ tablets, Android and more! originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Aug 2010 18:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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