Sony PSP Go Leaked on Video, Official Photos Emerge

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This is the PSP Go, the new mini PSP from Sony. And these are official Sony publicity shots, although they don’t come straight from Sony PR. Rather, they were leaked after the new console was spotted in a prematurely showing of the June 2009 Qore video (Qore is an online PlayStation magazine). It’s no quick mention, either. The new Go is the subject of a full-on piece by the first lady of podcasting, Veronica Belmont.

It’s cute, and it will sell alongside the current PSP 3000. The specs:

  • 16GB flash storage
  • Less than half the weight of the current PSP
  • Bluetooth
  • No UMD drive
  • Memory Stick Micro

Price is as yet undisclosed, but we’d hope that its cheaper than the PSP 3000. Likewise, there is no shipping date. But there’s one thing we do know. The PSP will no longer look ridiculously large and brick-like next to the Nintendo DS or the iPod Touch. Or a brick.

GCN Exclusive: Say hello to the PSP Go+BOX PICS+ offical pics [PlayStation Forums]
Screenshots & Images [Eurogamer]
Video: Sony’s PSP Go leaks out before E3, is obviously a go [Engadget]


Plastic Logic E-Reader is Slimmer than Kindle DX

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Plastic Logic’s electronic book reader is an ultra skinny, extra large device targeted at business users. And if you’re lucky enough to be at the All Things D conference, you’re getting one for free.

In a demo Wednesday at the ongoing at the Wall Street Journal’s conference in California, Plastic Logic showed a prototype device with an onscreen keyboard and an annotate feature, and said every attendee would be getting one. The company has been showing prototypes of its e-book reader for over 8 months since its debut at DemoFall last year, but has yet to announce a public ship date or pricing for its product.

The Plastic Logic e-reader, when it releases, will be a rival to Amazon’s broadsheet Kindle DX, which is expected to start shipping this summer.

Plastic Logic’s e-reader is 0.27 inches thick, significantly thinner than Amazon Kindle 2’s 0.33 inches, and has a 8.5 x 11 inch E Ink touchscreen display that makes it seem almost like a large notepad.

Because of its large screen size, the device is aimed at business users who will use it to view PDF files, Word documents, spreadsheets and even PowerPoint presentations. The device will include Wi-Fi and 3G capability and will initially be available in black and white, with more colors likely. It will also have its own online store for books and newspapers among other things. While users noticed a lag while turning pages, Plastic Logic has said it expects it to improve over time.

Laptop Mag has a hands-on with the Plastic Logic reader and says scribbling on the screen with a stylus was fairly responsive. Check out their gallery of photos.

Plastic Logic has yet to offer a release date for the device or how much it will cost.

Photo: Joanna Stern/Laptop Mag. Used by permission


Zune HD Official: Multi-Touch, OLED and… Radio?

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Microsoft may have been playing catchup to the iPod ever since it launched the Zune, but the Zune HD, which today materialized from a rumor to a real product, looks to be a rather nice piece of hardware.

The new player has a 3.3-inch capacitive OLED touch screen at 480 x 272 resolution, which will give some kind of multi-touch functionality and let you watch movies in 16:9 widescreen format. It also has Wi-Fi, an HD radio (what?!) and “HD Video Out”, for which you will require an optional dock (and an optional HDTV). Also, see if any of this sounds familiar:

Enjoy your favorite websites with a full-featured web browser including tap to zoom technology, built-in accelerometer, and touchscreen QWERTY keyboard.

<Cough> Safari <cough>. Will this be a mobile version of Internet Explorer? We hope not. Of course, success will come down to the software, something that the Zune isn’t exactly famed for. There is, though, one real killer app — music streaming over Wi-Fi. The iPod Touch can do this with some third party apps, but it looks like the Zune HD will use the Zune Pass subscription service and let you stream any track you like, direct. It’s a shame there’s not a 3G radio in there, too. Wait… Could this mean there’s a Zune Phone coming?

Product page [Zune.net]

Press release [PR Newswire]


Buying Guide: How to Choose an E-Book Reader

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E-books are the ‘it’ gadget of the year. But picking an e-book reader is more difficult than choosing a brand of cereal or a bottle of shampoo. Every other week, a new reader is gussied up in the factories of Taiwan, ready to make its debut. At last count, we estimated at least 12 different e-book readers on the market or close to release.

How do you know which one is right for you?

All e-book readers promise to do one thing well: display text, especially for books. But there are a few more basic requirements: It must offer long battery life, be easy to carry, have a screen that doesn’t strain the eyes and can be easily read in all environments including bright sunlight. Fortunately, most e-book readers for sale today meet that basic criteria.

There are many devices to choose from, and there’s also a lot of homogeneity in looks, style and function. Almost all the e-book readers available are paperback-sized and sport a display sourced from E Ink, the Cambridge Massachusetts-based company.

So should you buy the $360 Amazon Kindle (after all, it’s the most widely known e-reader and is backed by the Amazon brand) or the $250 upstart Cool-er e-book reader launched just a week ago?

Read on for our guide on what you need to think about before buying an e-book reader, whether you want to read the latest book from the Twilight saga or Thank God It’s Monday, the current No. 2 bestseller on Amazon’s list.

Location: Whether you are in the lower 48 will determine how well the Amazon Kindle 2 and the upcoming Kindle DX will work for you. Both devices use Sprint’s EVDO network to offer wireless downloads of e-books and periodicals. But tough luck if you are in Alaska or the U.K.

International buyers might have a tough time getting their hands on the Kindle DX. Users have to trick Amazon into believing their billing address is associated with an address in the United States. Even if they get one, they’ll end up with a crippled device that allows only for transfer of e-books using USB.

In which case, it may be a better option to buy a cheaper device that only offers USB-based connectivity such as the Sony Reader, the Hanthe Foxit eSlick Reader or even the newly launched Cool-er. Some of the e-book readers are also country-specific. The BeBook is available largely in the Netherlands, the Fujitsu Flepia that promises a color screen will start shipping in a few weeks but only in Japan.

Access to content: This is probably the single most important factor to consider when you buy an e-book reader. Most e-book manufacturers have their own e-books store. And size matters here. The more publishers the manufacturers can ink deals with, the greater the chances that the book you want is available. 

That’s where Amazon’s Kindle scores. As the biggest online retailer of books, Amazon has been able to leverage that relationship for the Kindle and its e-book store is probably the largest, with more than 285,000 books, according to Amazon.

But Sony is fast catching up. It announced a partnership with Google to bring about half-million classic books to its digital book store. Sony Readers can get those books for free. Sony had about 100,000 titles in its e-book store at the end of 2008.

Other e-book readers such as the iRex iLiad or the Hanlin eReader don’t have that kind of muscle and though these e-book owners can buy books from other online book stores, it doesn’t offer a smooth, integrated experience. Think buying music through iTunes for the iPod vs. buying music on iTunes for the SanDisk music player.

Formats supported: Almost all the e-book readers support HTML, Txt, MP3 and JPG. The battle of formats in the world of e-books is largely between the proprietary format that Amazon uses called .azw, a flavor of Mobipocket, and the open source ePub. Amazon’s Kindle does not support ePub; almost all other e-book readers do.

Why should you care? Many of the largest publishers have books available in the ePub format, including Google’s classic books. Because ePub is an open source format, it allows book designers to create better-formatted titles than Amazon’s proprietary file format. Also, if you don’t like DRM on your books, you have a better chance of finding DRM-free books in the ePub format than the .azw format. There’s speculation that Amazon might open up the Kindle to support ePub. But till that happens, you have to make the decision: Which side of the fence do you want to be on?

Going beyond just books: What do you want to use your e-book reader for? If the answer is just books, e-book readers such as the Cool-er start at $250. But the Cool-er won’t do much beyond books because it does not support magazines and periodicals. Like to read blogs or newspapers on your e-book reader? You’ll have to get Kindle 2 for that because Amazon lets users publish blogs to the Kindle. Thanks to its wireless connection, the Kindle also offers basic web surfing. Even better, would you like to hack your machine and make it run some cool applications? You’re better off choosing a lesser known e-book reader that runs the Linux operating system

Price and brand: What’s your budget and how important is the brand for you? In this recessionary economy, everyone’s watching their dollars. And while the Kindle is attractive, at $360 it isn’t cheap. If you’d like to save a few bucks, the Bookeen Cybook is an alternative priced at $350. Or go for the Cool-er at just $250. There are cheaper alternatives to the Kindle, but hey, it isn’t a Kindle. Can you live with that?

See also:
Detailed e-book reader matrix wiki from Mobile Read.  The wiki offers a list of the most popular e-book models and how they compare in terms of price, formats supported, and features.

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Analyst Predicts Apple Will Unleash Touchscreen Tablet Next Year

Evidence continues to mount that Apple will deliver a touchscreen tablet next year, with an analyst laying out solid reasoning for this rumored device to become a reality. It appears more likely to be an oversized iPod Touch, not a tabletized MacBook.

“Between indications from our component contacts in Asia, recent patents relating to multi-touch sensitivity for more complex computing devices, comments from [chief operating officer] Tim Cook on the April 22 conference call, and Apple’s acquisition of PA Semi along with other recent chip-related hires, it is increasingly clear that Apple is investing more in its mobile-computing franchise,” Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster said in a research statement issued to clients.

Apple’s next step in mobile computing will likely be the release of a touchscreen tablet featuring a 7-to-10-inch display sometime in the first half of 2010, Munster predicts.

Apple enthusiasts have been gossiping about a Mac tablet since July 2008, when the first rumor about the fabled device surfaced at MacDailyNews. Since then, a stream of clues, rumors and statements from Apple suggest this product will indeed join the Apple product family soon, as Gadget Lab has been reporting for several months.

Apple itself has steadfastly refused to confirm or deny any hint of an Apple tablet.

While in theory Apple could simply make a larger-screen iPod Touch, Munster believes creating a tablet will be more complex. He speculates the operating system will be a hybrid between the iPhone’s mobile operating system and Mac OS X. Or, Apple could optimize a version of Mac OS X for the multitouch interface.

Price range? Munster is guessing between $500 and $700, positioning this device as Apple’s response to netbooks.

At its recent quarterly earnings call, Apple chief operating officer Tim Cook said the company had no plans to release a netbook, calling the device category “junky.”

“For us, it’s about doing great products,” Cook said. “And when I look at what is being sold in the netbook space today, I see cramped keyboards, terrible software, junky hardware, very small screens and just not a consumer experience … that we would put the Mac brand on, quite frankly.”

Other indications that it’s an upsized-iPod-Touch–style tablet in the works (rather than a “junky” netbook) involve Apple’s recent hiring of several chip designers, as well as its acquisition of PA Semi to develop mobile processors.

Would a touchscreen tablet be worth putting the Mac brand on? We think so.

Apple Tablet in 2010 [Silicon Alley Insider]

See Also:

llustration of an imaginary iPhone tablet: Flickr/vernhart


Teen Truck-Struck While Rescuing iPod

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You know you’re too attached to technology when you risk your life for a gadget. That’s what a 16-year-old did in Tampa, Florida when she dropped her iPod in the street and ran back to retrieve it, only to be hit by a pickup truck.

The teenager suffered a broken leg. Police did not disclose the name of the victim or the condition of the iPod.

Teen Takes Pickup Truck Hit To Save iPod [Wesh via Gizmodo]

Photo: A totaled 1975 Nissan-Datsun pickup truck (not the vehicle involved in the accident in this story). scalpel/Flickr


Review: Digeo Moxi HD DVR

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We love DVRs, but sweet crackers, why must they be all the same? Same look, same features, same UI. Thank jeebus someone is approaching DVR a little differently. Check out what Moxi has been cooking up. From reviewer, Terrence Russell:

Digeo’s Moxi HD DVR sports a slick, Emmy-winning (seriously) user interface and all the commercial-skipping accouterments of competitors like TiVo. It even ditches a monthly bill in favor of flat pricing. And due to a recent firmware update, the Moxi also grants access to online video and music.

But the big difference is the UI. That aforementioned Emmy? Totally deserved. Digeo outfitted the Moxi with a stunning full-HD user interface, full of slick transitions and responsive performance. Unfortunately, sleek visuals don’t conquer all. Basics like surfing through the program guide (or accessing a previously recorded show) took a lot of hunting and pecking through a menu tree. Though we never truly got lost in the Moxi’s dazzling menus, there are a few tasks that grew tiring. Finding pre-recorded shows and getting them to play took searching, highlighting, selecting Play, confirming that you selected Play, and then finally watching.

$800 moxi.com
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You can read the rest of the review of the Diego Moxi HD DVR right here.


Rumor: iPods Nano and Touch to Gain Cameras

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So says the Apple-centric Hardmac, citing “informations from one of our sources”. The scoop says that the next-gen iPhone will look exactly the same as the current one from the outside, and that both the iPod Touch and the iPod Nano will gain cameras. We’ll be kind and say that Hardmac has scored one out of three with its guesses. Sorry: “informations”.

The one feasible rumor here is that the Touch could get a camera. It’s a real lack when it comes to running iPhone software — Evernote, for example, is next to useless on the Touch and the general ease of taking grainy, noisy snaps with your phone of course disappears. The 2G Touch gained external volume switches and a (tinny) speaker. Why not a camera for the 3G?

The Nano with a camera idea strikes us as nonsensical, though. But them so did a Nano with video until it happened. It seems unlikely, though, that Apple would put a camera into an iPod that doesn’t run the mobile OS X, and it would certainly mean a price hike, or at least a cut in profits, neither of which Apple likes.

Last, the non-updated iPhone hardware. This is clearly foolish. One of the main reasons to upgrade Apple hardware is that the new models always make the old ones look tired and clunky. This is why I have a Unibody MacBook when there’s a perfectly good last-generation MacBook Pro on the shelf (it’s for sale, by the way). That Apple would bump the specs of a product and not make it look sleeker, thinner and generally more desirable is quite unthinkable.

[Rumors] Informations about the Future iPhone and iPod [Hardmac via Mac Rumors]

Photoshop mockup: Charlie Sorrel


Why E-Books Look So Ugly

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As books make the leap from cellulose and ink to electronic pages, some editors worry that too much is being lost in translation. Typography, layout, illustrations and carefully thought-out covers are all being reduced to a uniform, black-on-gray template that looks the same whether you’re reading Pride and Prejudice, Twilight or the Federalist Papers.

“There’s a dearth of typographic expression in e-books today,” says Pablo Defendini, digital producer for Tor.com, the online arm of science fiction and fantasy publisher Tor Books. “Right now it’s just about taking a digital file and pushing it on to a e-book reader without much consideration for layout and flow of text.”

With the popularity of the Kindle and other e-book readers, electronic book sales in the United States have doubled every quarter. Though still a very small percentage of the overall book industry, sales of e-books touched $15.5 million in the first quarter of the year, up from $3.2 million the same quarter a year ago. By contrast, the printed book market sales in North America alone was nearly $14 billion in 2008.

The rapid growth of e-books has piqued many publishers’ interest, enabling Amazon to sign all the major publishers and offer more than 275,000 books in its Kindle store.

But despite the rapid growth, e-books are still new territory for most publishers. Add proprietary publishing standards such as the .mobi file format for the Amazon Kindle, and you have a recipe for confusion among many would-be e-book designers.

“E-books today are where the web was in its early years,” says Andrew Savikas, vice-president of digital initiatives at O’Reilly Media, a major publisher of technical books. “And some of those e-books are as difficult to read and browse as the early web pages.”

After spending a weekend with the Sony e-book reader, I found that the convenience of having so many books in a single, lightweight, slim device had me hooked, and its screen offers nearly print-like readability. But after about four hours of flipping through blocks of grey text I found myself feeling strangely melancholic. It couldn’t have been the lack of sunshine. Moving from one book to another, while easy, didn’t help: I was still staring at the same font, the same gray background and the same basic layout.

I had stumbled onto the reason why design and fonts are so important in publishing, says Mark Simonson, an independent typeface designer.

“Different typefaces are like like having different actors in play or different voices in an audio book,” Simonson says. “The variations in typeface influence the personality of the book. Sticking to one font is much like having the same actor play all the different parts.”

It’s why creative directors at publishing houses try so hard to make one book feel different from another, says Henry Sene Yee, creative director for publishing house Picador.

Sene Yee’s department is cover design. A book’s cover design can be photographic, illustrative, iconic, typographic or something more conceptual, he says. In each case the cover is a finely-tuned representation of the book’s genre and the message it wants to send.

“It’s about what we want readers to see in the book,” says Sene Yee, who says his job is part designer, part ad man. He spends more than two weeks coming up with the first sketch of a book cover — one that he hopes will bait readers in.

If readers are not familiar with a writer, they make impulse buys in bookstores or even online, “so covers are what make readers pick up a book they don’t know,” says Sene Yee.

So, if book design is so important, why is it so absent from e-books today?

“Ultimately the sticking point for e-books is accessibility,” says Defendini. “A large component of this is making sure the text flows right and the fonts are appropriate, even while giving the reader choice to change that. That flies in the face of the traditional role of a typographer, who is in minute control of everything.”

Designing a cover specifically for an e-book is rare: Most e-book covers are digital images of their print namesakes. That’s likely to change soon, says Savikas, who compares e-book stores today to how Apple’s iPhone App stores were when launched.

“With the iPhone App store we have seen app creators get more sophisticated with their choice of icons or the screenshots they use to attract buyers,” Savikas says.

E-books publishers are likely to get there soon, agrees Tor.com’s Defendini.

“The illustrators will be big winners soon,” Defendini says. “The social aspect of buying e-books will go up, just like it did with apps and music.”

When it comes to the guts of the e-book, fundamental aspects such as fonts and page layouts become a battle. There’s a dearth of typographic expression in e-books, says Defendini. That’s because e-readers’ firmware offers few font choices. Licensing custom fonts from a well-known foundry or font designer, a ubiquitous practice in print book design, is an impossibility for e-books.

Savikas says O’Reilly Media learned the hard way when the first-generation Kindle was released. The technology publisher found that the Kindle did not have a way to ensure that blocks of computer code would remain intact and properly formatted.

“As a publisher we are not necessarily looking for 800 different font choices,” says Savikas. “But even at this early stage we are looking for a set of standard fonts that guaranteed to be in any device or software.

“It was frustrating to contrast the Kindle’s limited fonts with that of the iPhone, which has very rich support for fonts, spacing and layout,” he says.

A big part of the problem with the Kindle (the largest selling e-books reader) is its use of the Amazon-specific .mobi file format, rather than the open standard ePub. ePub is based on the XML and CSS standards used in millions of web pages and allows for far more control over layouts than is currently possible with the .mobi file format.

As a result, if publishers want to sell Kindle books, producers like Defendini have to do a lot of manual work to create the digital file. In some cases, that means almost page-by-page customization, ensuring that drop caps appear correctly and that text flows around illustrations properly.

E-books won’t stay ugly forever, says Sene Yee. The devices’ limitations are mostly because they are in their early stages. For instance, color e-book readers are not likely to be widely available until at least mid-2010. And the current black-and-white displays offer readers no choice beyond increasing or decreasing font size.

As e-book readers get more popular they will get more sophisticated, bringing in a new crop of designers that understand a changing world of digital publishers.

“People want more than just plain text and the technology will have to change and keep up with this need,” says Sene Yee. “It won’t stay ugly forever.”

See also:
Hands-On: Kindle DX is a Pricey Pleasure
Kindle 2’s Fuzzy Fonts Have Users Seeing Red
Wired Review of Amazon Kindle 2
Kindle Readers Ignite Protest Over E-Book Prices

Photo: Kindle DX (Bryan Derballa/Wired.com)


Hands On: New Cool-er E-Book Reader Turns Up the Heat

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One of the hottest category in consumer electronics currently is electronic book readers,  which sees a new device launched every few weeks.

The latest kid on the block is the Cool-er, an e-book reader from Interead, a UK-based start up. A slim, lightweight reader, it comes in a choice of eight colors and is targeted at buyers who want an inexpensive yet full-featured device.

“We have created a reader that is light enough to fit into a jacket or a purse and attractive enough to be reading it publicly,” says Neil Jones, founder and CEO of Interead. “This is not just about technology but also about being a lifestyle accessory.”

The launch of the Cool-er comes barely a week after Amazon introduced a new Kindle model, the Kindle DX. Like almost all the major e-book readers available currently, Cool-er uses the black-and-white display from E Ink. But the device joins an increasingly crowded and competitive marketplace that includes players such as Sony, Fujitsu, Samsung and Foxit among others. (See a recent e-books readers round up)

At first glance, the Cool-er seems like the Sony Reader’s twin. It is almost the same width as the Sony Reader and just a little taller.  Where it differs is the weight. The Cool-er weighs 5.6 ounces–compared to 10 oz of the Sony Reader and 10.2 oz of the  Amazon Kindle 2. That means the Cool-er is nearly 40 percent lighter than its biggest competitors.

Despite the light weight and thin form factor, the finish on the device isn’t tacky–though it does have a ‘plasticky’ feel to it.  The Cool-er runs a Linux operating system and has a 1GB storage card slot.

A quick power-on button on the top turns on the device and shows some of the default titles available. You can browse through the titles using a click-wheel on the right. A button on the left offers the choice of a landscape or portrait mode, a feature that sets it apart from many of its competitors.

The buttons are probably the Cool-er’s weakest point. They are not soft-touch and require a bit of pressure to get them to ‘click.’ The user interface is fairly intutive allowing users to click through the different titles and choose what they want to read.

Unlike the Kindle, the Cool-er does not offer wireless connectivity.  It connects to a PC or a Mac using a standard USB cable and also charges via the computer’s USB port . Users can download books from the company’s own online book store at coolerbooks.com.

The device supports books in the ePub, Txt, JPEG and PDF format. Cool-er users can also listen to music and audio books. And they can choose from among red, blue, hot pink, violet, light pink, green, black and silver colors– which look surprisingly better than expected.

Cool-er supports eight languages including English, German, Portugese, Russian French and Chinese. Though many users would have preferred to have over-the-air wireless capability a la the Kindle, the tethering to the computer allows Cool-er to be used in any country, says Jones.

The Cool-er  is priced at $250 and is available for pre-order through the company’s web site. The device is expected to be available to buyers from June 1.

Still the device faces a big challenge in distinguishing itself in a crowded market.  The Cool-er doesn’t have any features that truly stand-out. It’s appeal is in that it is reasonably good looking e-book reader at an attractive price.

Interead is also hoping to strike deals with retailers. If successful, the company could further get the kind of volumes that it needs to drop prices down to $200. The company is also open to working with software develops to create apps for the device which runs the Linux OS and launch an iPhone-like app store for the Cool-er.

More photos

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Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

See also:
Hands-On: Kindle DX is a Pricey Pleasure
Kindle 2’s Fuzzy Fonts Have Users Seeing Red
Wired Review of Amazon Kindle 2
Kindle Readers Ignite Protest Over E-Book Prices