Slacker intros Radio Plus subscription service, makes Premium Radio look like Basic Radio

Internet radio provider Slacker is bulldozing the thin line dividing itself from subscription-based music services today, with the launch of Radio Plus. The new pricing tier joins the existing gratis Basic Radio and ad-free Premium Radio plans, adding an all-you-can-eat music model akin to services like Rhapsody and Rdio. Subscribers who shell out $9.99 a month receive all of the features of the $4.99 Premium Radio users, plus unlimited access to eight million songs, letting them listen to what they want, when the want, and generally play god with the site’s existing radio services. Radio Plus also gives you on- and offline access to music on a number of mobile devices, including the iPad, iPhone, iPod touch, Android, and BlackBerry handsets — not to mention unlimited bragging rights to all of your broke friends who are still rocking the Basic Radio plan. Don’t feel too bad for ’em, though — at least they didn’t get suckered into slotRadio.

Continue reading Slacker intros Radio Plus subscription service, makes Premium Radio look like Basic Radio

Slacker intros Radio Plus subscription service, makes Premium Radio look like Basic Radio originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 May 2011 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why Android Honeycomb Tablets Aren’t Hot — Yet

Motorola's Xoom — the first Honeycomb-powered tablet device to hit the market — isn't selling as well as Apple's iPad. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Nvidia’s head honcho knows that sluggish sales of Android tablets are a problem, but says it won’t be that way forever.

“I think that the vast majority of tablet users are actually buying from retail, and Wi-Fi only,” said Nvidia CEO Jen-Hsun Huang on a quarterly earnings conference call with reporters, explaining why sales for Android-powered tablets have been lackluster so far. But, he explained, you couldn’t buy Wi-Fi-only versions at retail outlets. “The first generation of tablets initially came out from our carriers, and with 3G,” said Huang, whose Nvidia Tegra 2 processors can be found inside multiple Android tablets currently on the market.

Despite a wealth of options from different hardware manufacturers, Android-powered tablets don’t have the same momentum as the iPad. Apple’s tablet still accounts for 82 percent of the tablet market, according to Nielsen.

Huang’s statement places much of the blame squarely on Motorola’s release strategy for the Xoom, Google’s flagship tablet product running Android’s tablet-optimized version 3.0 (Honeycomb) software. The Xoom debuted on Verizon’s 3G network in February for $600 with a two-year Verizon contract, or without a contract for a whopping $800.

And some say that’s not the way we want to buy our tablets. “Our data shows that [people] don’t want to be tied in to a fixed data contract, and they don’t want to buy from a carrier,” wrote Forrester analyst Sarah Rotman Epps in a blog post. “Meaning that pricing strategies that work for mobile phones won’t work for tablets.”

Apple’s baseline, Wi-Fi only version of the iPad 2 costs just $500.

Take a look at some of the raw numbers for the sake of perspective: In the first weekend of the original iPad’s release, Apple sold more than 1 million devices. Compare that to the 220,000 units shipped in the Xoom’s first month of release.

Last month, Motorola’s CEO Sanjay Jha cited a different reason for the Xoom’s relatively poor sales: Android’s app ecosystem. “Consumers want more apps for Android tablets,” Jha said during the company’s quarterly earnings call in April.

Huang agreed with Jha to a degree. “It’s a software richness-of-content problem,” Huang said in an interview with Cnet.

The forecast for Android-powered tablets to come in 2011 isn’t entirely grim. Huang — whose company certainly has skin in the game — remains optimistic. “We’re going to expect another wave of tablets that are coming out to the marketplace now. Ones that are even thinner and even lighter than the best offerings from any place,” Huang said, most likely referring to Samsung’s soon-to-debut Galaxy Tab 10.1.

Huang is also betting big on the new version of Honeycomb released for Android tablets (3.1), currently available only for the Motorola Xoom tablets but will roll out to other Android tablets in the next few weeks. The update includes support for peripheral USB devices and user-interface enhancements, among other improvements.

And finally, Huang hinted at Nvidia’s integration with Google’s software: “We’re working very closely with [Google’s] teams on the Ice Cream Sandwich,” Huang said, though he wouldn’t go into further detail. Google teased details of the upcoming Android software version, codenamed “Ice Cream Sandwich,” at its I/O developer conference in San Francisco last week.

As for issues with Android’s app ecosystem, Google seems to be trying to remedy the situation. The company recently added a number of lists and sections highlighting the most popular apps across specific categories — gross sales, number of downloads over a seven-day period, top free apps downloaded — in an attempt to make the market easier to browse for consumers, as well as a more lucrative venue for developers who want to sell their apps.


Apple offers free repairs for iPhones, other products damaged in Japan quake


Apple customers with Macs, displays, and iOS devices that were directly damaged in the Japan earthquake and tsunami may be eligible for free repairs. The offer, posted on the company’s Japanese website, excludes iPod classic, nano, and shuffle, and only applies to customers living in areas covered by the Ministry of Health’s Disaster Relief Act. Originally posted in March, Apple’s announcement joins Softbank’s offer to replace lost iPhones registered to its network, and free calls to Japan from U.S. carriers, among others. Considering water and other accidental damage typically voids a device’s warranty, you’ll want to give AppleCare a call soon — the acceptance period only runs through June 30th.

Apple offers free repairs for iPhones, other products damaged in Japan quake originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 May 2011 12:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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500-GB SeaGate Wi-Fi Hard Drive Streams to iPad

Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite comes with iPad software to browse its 500GB content

How does 500GB storage for your iPad sound? That’s kinda what Seagate is offering with its new GoFlex Satellite, an external hard drive with iOS-friendly Wi-Fi built in.

The drive is much like Seagate’s other GoFlex drives, and you can hook it up to any computer via USB2 or USB3. The difference is the wireless (802.11n) radio. This supports up to three connections and lets you access any media on the drive through a web browser.

However, if you have an iPad you can use a companion app — GoFlex Media — to browse the drive. This will let you view and play back any iOS compatible file, be it music, video, a document, or a photo.

You can’t send the content to other apps (yet) but you can at least cache content locally. Also, the drive’s Wi-Fi can’t connect to an existing network, so you’ll have to manually connect to the drive from your device, switching away from your home or work network as you do so.

The drive costs just what you’d expect: $200, or the same as a regular pocket drive and a MiFi wireless router together. It’s not cheap, but it sure is convenient. Available soon.

Seagate GoFlex Satellite review [CNET]

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Conductive Picks and Sticks for iPad Garage Band

Pix & Stix let you strum and drum in iPad Garage Band, just as nature intended

Garage Band is one of the stand-out apps on the iPad, whether v1 or v2. Not only is it easy to use, it’s fun. This is why I, a person who’s guitar’s main function is to hang on the wall collecting dust, have spent more time with Garage Band since I first downloaded it than I have with a real instrument in the past few years.

In some ways, Garage Band is more of an awesome game about music than a musical device itself.

And what makes any game better? Cool accessories. Enter Pix & Stix, accessory picks and sticks to help “play” Garage Band. In the kit you get two sticks and one pick. All of these have electro conductive tips so the iPad’s touch-screen thinks that you are tapping and strumming with a finger.

Of these, I expect the sticks to be more useful. It feels a little awkward tapping away at the on-screen drums with my flesh fingertips, and it’s quite hard to keep to a rhythm. A pair of sticks would clearly be way better.

But given the way we play the guitars in Garage Band, the pick may work less well. I guess you could hoist the whole iPad up in front of your belly as if it were a real guitar, but that seems like a recipe for dropping the thing. I’m sure that the inevitable guitar-shaped iPad holder is already on a designers drawing board somewhere, but until it’s real, fingers are probably fine.

The kit will cost $15 if it makes it to market. I say “if” as Pix & Stix is funding itself like a Kickstarter project, only without Kickstarter. Thus, if the goal is reached, you get the gear. If not, you get a refund. If you’re trusting enough to pay out on this kind of deal, go ahead.

Pix & Stix [Pix & Stix via Red Ferret]

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Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite portable hard drive streams content over WiFi (review)

Seagate just took the wraps off what’s likely the niftiest portable HDD to cross our path in a long, long while. The GoFlex Satellite is part storage device, part wireless media streamer, and it manages to wear both hats with little compromise on either end. For all intents and purposes, this is a standard 500GB GoFlex HDD with a bit of extra girth, an AC input, an 802.11b/g/n WiFi module and a built-in web server. The reason for those extras? A simple depression of the on / off button starts the streamer up, and it’s ready for a connection in around 30 to 40 seconds. Once fired up you can stream data to just about anything — even iOS devices. That’s an impressive feat, not quite a “first” moment as Seagate would like you to believe (we’ll give that crown to AirStash), but still a rarity.

Our unit shipped with a GoFlex USB 3.0 adapter and a car charger, with the latter enabling users to entertain their children on long road trips — a nice addition, we have to say. Installation is a cinch; just fire up a media sync application that resides on the drive (for OS X users, anyway), and you’re ready to drag and drop files as if it’s any ‘ole HDD. No media management software or anything of the sort, thankfully. The purpose of having your media onboard is to stream videos, photos, documents and music to your iPad, iPhone, iPod touch, or any other tablet, phone or laptop with WiFi. You heard right — while there’s only a dedicated app for the iOS family, any WiFi-enabled device with a web browser can tap into this. Care to hear our take on this $200 do-it-all hard drive? Have a look at our review video just after the break.

Continue reading Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite portable hard drive streams content over WiFi (review)

Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite portable hard drive streams content over WiFi (review) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 May 2011 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Demoes Retina-Resolution Tablet Display

PenTile displays use less subpixels but produce output that is tailor-made for our brains

Samsung has a new 10.1-inch “retina” resolution LCD panel ready to show off next week. It will demonstrate the 2560 x 1600 panel at the SID Display Week 2011 International Symposium starting Tuesday May 17th. And if you weren’t already thinking it — yes, this is perfect for tablets.

The panel has a resolution of 300dpi, the same as that of print, and the number Apple uses to define its Retina displays. In most uses, the pixels disappear and it appears that you are looking at a printed page.

Samsung’s new panel is interesting for two reasons. First is that it uses PenTile RGBW tech. PenTile is a way of grouping subpixels — each multicolor “pixel” on a screen is made up of several smaller single-color dots. In the case of PenTile, there are five dots (hence the “pent” or “penta” part of the name). The RGBW part means that an extra white pixel is added to the usual red, green and blue ones.

This white pixel works in conjunction with a variable, locally dimming backlight. This ramps up when bright colors are needed, but when colors are desaturated or just black and white, the backlight dims and only the white pixel is switched on. This reduces power consumption by a claimed 40% vs. a regular RGB stripe panel.

And that power reduction is the key to its use in tablets. The biggest draw on tablet battery power is the screen. Until a panel exists that can deliver the same battery life as today’s tablets, we won’t see a Retina display in the iPad. Of course, driving all of those extra pixels is also extra work (4x) for the graphics chips, but that’s another problem.

Samsung Electronics and Nouvoyance Demonstrate 10.1-inch, 300dpi WQXGA PenTile RGBW Prototype Display for Tablet Market [Samsung/Businesswire via TUAW]

How PenTile tech works [NouVoyance]

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IKeyboard, A Slap-On Rubber Keyboard for iPad

The iKeyboard adds tactile feedback with minimal bulk

Despite writing over 1,200 words in his product’s description, inventor Cliff Thier doesn’t once describe how it actually works. No matter. With a little sleuthing, we see that his iKeyboard is quite clever indeed.

Cliff’s iKeyboard is an overlay for the iPad’s own soft keyboard. Instead of carrying a bulky external keyboard, you can just slap Cliff’s floppy accessory onto the iPad and enjoy the tactile feedback you don’t normally get with a touch screen.

The iKeyboard has two main sections. A sheet has cutouts for each key, and underneath this are the keys themselves. These are rectangular panels, curved so that they only touch the screen along their upper and lower edges. They are presumably made of conductive material, and when you press one down the key is activated.

I spent the last few days with my family in dreary, rundown England, and — aside from getting poisoned by English food — I showed my iPad 2 to my mother. She loved it, but as a touch-typist she kept resting her fingers on the home keys, with predictable results. The iKeyboard lets you do this, perhaps making typing easier for some people.

Cliff’s project is up on Kickstarter, where it has already reached its $4,000 funding goal. The price looks as if it will be just $30. which is just right for this kind of thing.

iKeyboard [Kickstarter]

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OpenPaths lets you visualize your iPhone location data, donate it to science (video)


What use could science possibly have for your iPhone location data? Well, you won’t be curing cancer, but you could theoretically be contributing to epidemiology, land use surveys, or a study proving that people move around just as quickly on foot in New York as they do inching down the 405 in LA. At least that’s the idea behind OpenPaths, a web-based tool that lets you securely and anonymously “donate” your cache. If you’ve upgraded to iOS 4.3.3, your iPhone will no longer store your location, but there should be plenty of coordinates spinning around on your hard drive to play with. After downloading the OpenPaths Uploader, you’ll be able to visualize your own location information, and even if you’ve somehow deleted the data from your computer, the tool will search Time Machine backups (for Mac users) — a little scary, no? Of course, there’s always potential for misuse with any such service, but a researcher probably won’t care that those late nights at the office were actually spent in Cindy’s home office, unless that researcher also happens to be your wife.

Continue reading OpenPaths lets you visualize your iPhone location data, donate it to science (video)

OpenPaths lets you visualize your iPhone location data, donate it to science (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 May 2011 14:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Fingers-On: Adobe’s Photoshop Touch Apps for iPad

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Adobe on Tuesday released three lightweight iPad apps to complement its famous Photoshop editing tool.

Priced from $2 to $5, the three apps are called Adobe Nav, Adobe Color Lava and Adobe Eazel. The apps don’t replace Photoshop, but they aim to enhance the experience for artists and designers.

Here’s a quick look at the three apps.

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