Cowon’s Pocket-Sized Media-Player: 1080p, Specs-Free 3D

The Cowon 3D is, as you may have worked out, a 3D-capable personal media player (PMP). But who cares? Much more interesting is that this palm-sized, 4.8-inch movie-player has full 1080p video-output via HDMI, making it a rather compelling device for the movie-buff.

Here are the rest of the specs: That little screen has a resolution of 800 x 480, and as well as movies you can browse the web via Wi-Fi, read ebooks, play music and watch photo slideshows. The battery will juice the player for 10-hours-worth of movies, and you can pick between 32GB and 64GB versions.

OK, so 3D isn’t so lame, and the Cowon 3D has one neat trick: you done’t need glasses to watch it, although watching a 3D movie on that little screen seems to be such a headache-inducing a feature that it should be sponsored by the aspirin industry.

Finally, the price. When it goes on sale in Korea in December, the 3D will be KRW500,000 and 590,000 ($430 and $510) for 32GB and 64GB. At those prices, and with that tiny screen, you’d better really want the 1080p output, or the gimmicky 3D.

Cowon 3D press release [Cowon]
Cowon 3D product page [Cowon]


The Hidden Secrets of Apple’s AirPlay

The iOS 4.2 update brings one really big new feature to the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch: AirPlay. IPad users might be overjoyed with folders and support for background processes, but the real star is the new music and video-streaming function. It will change the way you consume your media, and it will justify all the AirPort Express units you have dotted around your home. But first, how does it work?

You’ll need a device running iOS 4.2, and at least one of the following: an AirPort Express, a v2 AppleTV, a third-party AirPlay-ready speaker, or a Bluetooth audio device. Using it is as easy as you’d expect when Apple controls the whole infrastructure. In any app that uses the standard media-controls (iPod, Video, Spotify, YouTube) you will see a new symbol, a rectangle being penetrated from underneath by a triangle. Tap this and a menu pops up showing available devices.

From this menu, you simply pick where you want to send the media currently playing on your iDevice and, after a couple seconds buffering the signal, it starts. Audio will play anywhere, and video and/or audio will play on the AppleTV (not every video app is yet working – YouTube in Safari, for instance, sends only audio, while the YouTube app works as expected).

And that’s it. Thanks to background processes, you can switch away from the music or video app and read a book or surf the web. The stream continues, uninterrupted. The background stream can be controlled from the standard iOS 4 places: Double-tap the home button and swipe right to bring up the media controls to play, pause, skip or adjust volume. On the iPad you’ll also see the currently-playing app’s icon in this view. If your iDevice is locked, a double-tap will bring up the controls overlaid on the lock-screen, and both these shortcuts also give access to the AirPlay icon and menu.

Another handy trick is that you can adjust the volume using the hardware volume keys on the iDevice while the display is still sleeping.

One little-known extra is that any paired Bluetooth audio devices also show up in the same AirPlay menu. Tapping one switches the audio stream to that device, with one just difference: Bluetooth streaming starts instantly, without the two-second buffer required by Wi-Fi. If the speaker has media controls, then these buttons will allow you to play/pause and skip music without touching the iPhone in your pocket.

AirPlay also works from iTunes, although not as well as it does from an iOS device. While your iPhone will sync an on-screen movie with streamed audio, iTunes will let you select an AirPlay destination, but it will play the soundtrack locally. It will let you choose multiple sources, however (although not Bluetooth), while iOS devices can send to just one place at a time.

That’s pretty much it, apart from one oddity. If you’re streaming music to, say, an AirPort Express and then start playing, say, Angry Birds, then the game’s soundtrack will also be piped to the speakers. This could be a neat feature, but the sound suffers the same two-second delay, lagging behind the on-screen action. This seems to be a bug, and is inconsistent. Perhaps it is caused by apps that have yet to be updated to be iOS 4.2 compatible.

AirPlay really is a big deal, and you should expect to see it built-in to more and more third-party speakers and components in the future. Not only does it give you an instant, multi-room audio setup without a computer, it also turns your iPhone into a pocket home-theater.

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Play Button, an Annoying MP3-Player In a Button

The Play Button is either a desperate attempt to incorporate all the annoyances of analog music into a digital package, or it is a genius marketing move which will perhaps usurp the USB thumb-drive as the ultimate in corporate schwag giveaways.

It’s an MP3 player, and it’s built into a button. The front of the button (or badge, as it is called in Great Britain) can be customized to show an image of the latest cool-haired band of the moment, and the body has a single jack socket used for both headphones and for charging the battery within.

And then things turn bad. The controls are set into the back panel, making them hard to get to, definitely a case of function following form. Worse, there is no way to change the music, or the order it is played in. Mercifully, you can skip backwards and forwards, but in every way you are treated as if you are listening to an old LP or CD.

It’s tricky to say if an iPod has a larger environmental footprint than CDs and vinyl. On the one hand, iPods get tossed out every few years while record collections are kept. On the other hand, the packaging for a CD alone uses more plastic than that of a few a Nanos. The Play Button combines the worst of all of these.

The device is aimed at bulk orders, so you’ll have to wait until you local bank loads one with Christmas songs as a festive “fun” giveaway before you can open one up and hack it. Until then, why don’t you join me and cry a little inside at this willful technological step backwards?

Play Button product page [Play Button]

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$5,000 Audiophile Media-Server Controlled by iPhone

If you ever wondered what a Slingbox would look like if it were hewn from aluminum instead of plastic, here it is: The 06HD from Olive, a 2TB music-server that costs – wait for it – $5000.

That price-tag says one thing: audiophile. And the 06HD is certainly audiophile-buzzword compliant, from its Burr-Brown 24-bit PCM1792 DACs (two of them for the regular output, plus a separate DAC for the headphones) to its stabilized, noise-free power-supply. It also has a touch-screen ( using the “latest glass-on-glass technology”) for navigation and artwork, and a TV-hookup for a larger display when remote controlled using an iOS device.

But $5,000? It does at least have a 2TB drive, ready to accept CDs copied (not ripped) from its own CD-player, and surely a large proportion of that price can be apportioned to the anti-vibration feet, something truly essential in a machine that uses solid-state electronics. Part of your cash probably also goes to pay for the photograph of two hands holding the just-carved headstock of a violin, which illustrates the “Hand-Built in the USA” section of the blurb.

If you’re an audiophile with deep pockets, and are still holding onto your CD collection because MP3s sound so damn bad, then go ahead. Olive also makes some cheaper servers, and even a multi-room player which will beam your music throughout your home for “just” $600 (and with only 802.11g Wi-Fi). Available for pre-order now.

06HD product page [Olive]

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Orb Brings Hulu and Network TV Streaming to Your Living Room

The common opinion of the Google TV is that its way too geeky for the average couch-bound TV addict, all while Google pretends that it isn’t built for nerds. But if you really want to get your hands dirty with your TV programming, why not try yet another set-top box: The Orb.

The Orb, which would more accurately be called “The Disc”, is a $100 box that plugs into a TV via component or composite connections. It doesn’t actually bring any content in itself: for that you need a computer. You run server software on a PC or Mac and the Orb grabs content from there via Wi-Fi (it has to be on the same network). This sounds awkward, but it has one big advantage: Unlike Boxee and Google TV, your computer isn’t blocked by Hulu, ABC, NBC and CBS. That means you can watch any streams on the big screen.

To control the Orb, you use your phone. Apps are available for iOS and Android devices, and let you browse and choose content from online sources or from your own local collection without having to drag your computer into the living room.

It’s an ingenious solution, and one that works well if you always have a computer switched on anyway. There’s one downside, though: Only standard-def is supported.

OrbTV [Orb]

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World’s First Android TV Made of Rock, Weighs 90 Pounds

Swedish manufacturer People of Lava has finally gotten its Android TV, the Scandinavia, into stores. First seen here on Gadget Lab back in April of this year, the computer/TV hybrid is now ready for pre-order in Sweden, with a future US launch planned pending the raising of enough money to do it.

The TVs look gorgeous, made from stone as well as the usual metal and glass, and will come in 42, 47 and 55-inch sizes, all running the rather ancient Android 1.5. That’s not really a problem, though, as the custom UI is designed for a big screen, not a tiny cellphone display.

All models are 1080p and have a backlit LED display, along with every port and hookup you could wish for, and come prepped with YouTube, Google Maps, apps for weather, a calendar, web-browser built in, and other apps like Twitter and Facebook ready to download. Connection to the internet is via reliable ethernet, but you can opt for a USB Wi-Fi dongle if you prefer.

The 42-inch model is available now for pre-order, and will cost 22,000 Swedish Krona, or $3,630 (the price is doubtlessly raised partly because the sets are made in Sweden). The 55-incher will cost a whopping 40,000 Sweden Krona, or $5,800, and because of the bauxite rock used to make it, the set will weigh a wall-busting 40-kilos, or almost 90-pounds.

In some ways, Android is better than Google TV itself. For instance, the TV networks are currently blocking Google TV from accessing their shows. That isn’t yet the case with Android (although in Sweden I case nobody cares about the US networks anyway). On the other hand, most people know the hell of watching somebody else drive a computer, and this can only get worse on a bigger screen. I’ll stick with browsing on my iPad while other people watch soap operas.

Scandinavia product page [People of Lava]

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Vimeo Adds ‘Couch Mode’ for Google TV

Video-sharing site Vimeo, the classier YouTube, has added a “Couch Mode” to let you kick back and enjoy movies on the big-screen. It was designed for watching on your giant television using Google TV, but will work anywhere friendly to fancy HTML5 code. Right now that means the Chrome and Safari browsers.

To try it out, head to vimeo.com/couchmode and tell your browser to go full screen (this doesn’t work yet in Safari). From there, you can control the video with your keyboard (likely a horrible, zillion-key QWERTY remote if you have bought an actual Google TV box), browse video via on-screen thumbnails and even access your own videos and playlists once you’ve signed in.

It’s very slick, if a little buggy. When switching to full-screen in Chrome, one video got stuttery and another didn’t, but these are just kinks to be worked out. It even works in Safari on the iPad, kinda: you get the navigation, but I couldn’t get a video to play.

The best part of writing this post was cruising around Vimeo. The movies over there are actually worth watching, with lots of very creative and well made short films. The difference between Vimeo and YouTube is like the difference between watching a movie at a beautiful arts cinema and watching the shopping channel through a TV-store window, whilst sitting on a urine soaked couch and sipping Thunderbird.

Introducing Couch Mode… get comfy! [Vimeo blog]

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Apple Teases iTunes Announcement ‘That You’ll Never Forget’

Something is going to happen to iTunes tomorrow, only we don’t quite know what. Apple’s front door at Apple.com has the above graphic and nothing more:

Tomorrow is Just Another Day. That You’ll Never Forget. Check back here tomorrow for an exciting announcement from iTunes.

What could it mean?

Like any Apple teaser campaign, the fun is in the guessing, so let’s try. Perhaps Apple will be adding Tomorrow’s Just Another Day by Madness to the iTunes Store? Nope. It’s there already. Or perhaps we’ll be able to rent Gone With the Wind, which ends with that same line in both movie and book versions? I doubt it.

So that leaves iOS 4.2, which seems a little dull for such a big announcement.

My guess is an iTunes streaming service. We can already rent movies, so why not pay for an all-you-can-eat music subscription service, like the amazing Spotify we already have over in Europe? Apple has its giant data center, and although it doesn’t look finished, that doesn’t mean it isn’t fully armed and operational. Or maybe, just maybe, Apple has invented a new version of iTunes that doesn’t suck.

Whatever it is, it’s not a worldwide phenomenon. The clocks in the picture show cities in three countries, the U.S, Japan and England. All of these have the same teaser, but others don’t. Spain, for instance, still has that annoying full-page MacBook Air spot.

I guess we’ll see tomorrow.


ITunes Movies, AppleTV Launch Internationally

Apple has at last begun a proper international roll-out of its iTunes Movie Store, and with it the Apple TV. Just five years after video was first available in iTunes, non-US customers can buy and rent films.

The extent of this new wave is not entirely clear. Spain has movies to buy and rent, and the rumors says that Taiwan, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Portugal, and Belgium are also on the list. There are a few non-US countries, like the UK and Germany, which already have access to video.

The AppleTV is also showing up in online Apple Stores. Here in Spain, it is going for a too-expensive €119, or $163, way above the $99 charged back at home. As for movies, they cost €10 ($14) to buy in SD, €17 ($23) in HD and €4 ($5.50) to rent. Ouch.

To check if your country is included, just head over to the iTunes Store, where a new top-level category has been added. You can also buy movies from your iOS device. While the iPad version of the store has not yet gotten the new section, the movies can be found, previewed and bought by searching.

There’s one giant piece of bad news, though. The movies are dubbed, not subtitled. This is fine for the multiplex blockbuster crowd, but the demographic which will buy and rent movies from iTunes is surely the demographic which would prefer the original soundtrack with subs.

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What’s Inside? Boxee Box Teardown

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Never invite the folks at iFixit to your home. Leave them alone for just a minute and they’ll have unpacked their torx-wrenches and spudgers and be all up in your TV, laptop, iPad or whatever you foolishly left in the room with them.

Keep them in their natural habitat, though, and they’re awesome, as we can see from this teardown of the Boxee Box, the set-top box that brings all your media, and all the internet’s media, onto your home TV.

Kidding aside, we were pretty excited to see the inside of the Boxee Box, if only to find out just how the computery bits fit inside the odd-shaped case. The answer, it turns out, is “neatly”.

The truncated cube shape of the box means some clever thinking has gone into packing everything in. Circuit-boards have been made to non-standard shapes, but the actual bits and pieces are easy to get to. Everything is held in by Phillips screws, and there are standard parts, too, like the Mini PCI-E wireless card.

The Box itself is actually pretty small (as is the very clever QWERTY-backed remote), and features a glass front-panel through which the Boxee logo glows. There’s an SD-card slot for quickly loading up movies, 1GB RAM and 1GB flash storage and an Intel CE4110 processor running at 1.2GHz. This, along with many of the internals, is identical to that in the more expensive Logitech Revue Google TV box.

The Boxee Box, made by D-Link but powered by Boxee’s popular XBMC-based multimedia software, launched today in 33 countries. In a post on Wednesday night, Boxee’s Andrew Kippen announced that the company was working to bring Hulu Plus and Netflix Watch Instantly to the device before the end of the year.

For a full rundown of the Boxee Box’s hardware specs and components, take a look a the iFixit gallery.

Boxee Box Teardown [iFixit]

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