NVIDIA’s Tegra in the flesh, booting to Android and pumping out 1080p video

NVIDIA really has a technical wonder in the Tegra APX 2600 chipset, and is more than happy to show it off, with a myriad of tech demos on display here at MWC. Some of this they showed off back in June of last year, but it’s no less impressive — there aren’t really any mobile devices out there capable of this stuff right now. Still, we’re here for the new, and NIVIDA showed up with Android running on one of its proof-of-concept units, and with another unit pumping out 1080p video, with a claimed 10 hours of battery life at that task. NVIDIA says it took them just a few weeks to port Android to the system, and we found it already quite snappy and even usable on the capacitive touchscreen-ed device. We also saw the forthcoming Android-running Yulong N8 and IAC S2 Tegra APX phones, along with an untitled CompalCom set — they were all in non-working prototype form, but it’s clear this chipset isn’t just for MIDs. Check it all out in the videos after the break and the gallery below!

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NVIDIA’s Tegra in the flesh, booting to Android and pumping out 1080p video originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 10:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MWC 2009: Samsung Valencia Has TouchWiz, Sans Touch

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Samsung has said here at Mobile World Congress that their theme for the show is touch, and that they’re aggressively promoting their TouchWiz overlay for Windows Mobile. (For more on TouchWiz, check out our review of Verizon Wireless’s Samsung Omnia.)


So I was surprised to go to Microsoft’s booth and find the Samsung Valencia, a TouchWiz smartphone – without touch! This non-touch-screen phone uses a variant of TouchWiz that includes a menu/widget bar in the left hand column, but you navigate through it using the phone’s cursor pad. Other touch-like features include photo speed dial and what appeared to be support for Internet-based widgets.


According to Microsoft, the Valencia has a 393 Mhz processor, a 2-megapixel camera, 128MB of RAM, a 320×240 screen, GPS, Bluetooth, 3G, Windows Mobile 6.1 and “20GB of storage,” which must be some sort of typo.


Samsung did not release any details about the Valencia.

Acer working on two Android phones to launch this year

Alright, this one’s pure tradeshow silliness — when Engadget Spanish pressed the Acer rep at MWC about rumored plans to launch an Android handset, dude pulled out a notebook and whipped up a quick product roadmap, including the two mysterious “Android secret models” shown here. That’s all we know for now, but anything’s got to be better than the sad Tempos Acer launched yesterday — and hey, we also got the names of the four announced-but-not-revealed sets we’re due to see sometime later this year. One more pic of Acer’s secret diary after the break.

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Acer working on two Android phones to launch this year originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 09:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG doesn’t rock the WinMo boat, launches S60-powered KT770 on the downlow

In light of its fresh tie-up with Microsoft, we can understand how any LG smartphone not running WinMo might be perceived as a black sheep this week. Still, it bums us that the the company has launched its latest S60-powered handset — the KT770 slider — at MWC this week with little more than a brief mention on LG’s official MWC site and a couple of forlorn demo models stuffed in the corner of the company’s booth. The good news is we decided to make good on LG’s oversight and give this little beauty the love it deserves with a mention, a gallery, and a quick video of its tweaked S60 3.2-based UI in action.

The faux carbon fiber back is a little cheesy — particularly for a device that otherwise looks fairly businesslike — but with 7.2Mbps HSDPA, GPS, a WQVGA display, and a 5 megapixel camera on board, it’s hard to argue that this device can’t be competitive (put this up against the far bulkier, uglier N95, for example). The UI seemed reasonably responsive, and though we weren’t able to test the browser without a connection, we imagine the stock S60 apps work every bit as well as they do on Nokia fare. Check out the video after the break!

Continue reading LG doesn’t rock the WinMo boat, launches S60-powered KT770 on the downlow

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LG doesn’t rock the WinMo boat, launches S60-powered KT770 on the downlow originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 09:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ralph de la Vega says he was misquoted, doesn’t know of a Dell smartphone

We just spoke with AT&T’s Ralph de la Vega who says that he’s been misquoted about Dell’s rumored aspirations to enter the smartphone market. As we suspected might be the case, he claims he’d been referring to the fact that he’d heard rumors of a Dell phone — you know, the same rumors we’ve all been hearing — and was simply commenting on that fact. Either that, or there’s a Dell smartphone running some futuristic S60 / Android hybrid in his pocket as we speak… one of the two.

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Ralph de la Vega says he was misquoted, doesn’t know of a Dell smartphone originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 09:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gigabyte’s S1200 and Smart Zone user interface on video

Same story, different company: yet another Windows Mobile ODM has broken down, taken the plunge, and invested some cash engineering its own unique skin for the platform. This time around it’s Gigabyte’s GSmart division with its “Smart Zone” UI, and to kick it off on the right foot, they’re grafting it onto the all-new S1200. We spent some time fiddling with the S1200 at MWC today, and we’re actually pretty impressed; it’s sleek, a wacky thin 11.4mm, narrow enough to comfortably fit in the smallest hands, and feels pretty well-built — and with full HSPA and a 3.1-inch WVGA display, it’s spec’d with the best of ’em. Gone are Gigabyte’s days of chunky plastic, thank goodness.

We talked to Gigabyte about its announcements, and it turns out they’ve designed both Smart Zone and the S1200 with aspirational feature phone users in mind — these are people who might not otherwise consider a smartphone because they’re worried about sacrificing style and ease of use in the process. To that end, the skin definitely seems to get the job done. The transition animations got choppy in places, but we felt immediately at ease with the swipe gestures for getting to different screens, and the graphics look particularly superb at these resolutions.

The S1200 launches this quarter in a variety of colors (it’s fashion-friendly, after all) with WiFi, a 528MHz Qualcomm core, 3 megapixel autofocus cam, a microSD slot to bump up the storage to something more usable than the 256MB built-in, and — perhaps most importantly — upgradeability to Windows Mobile 6.5. Follow the break to see it in action!

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Gigabyte’s S1200 and Smart Zone user interface on video originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 07:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Magic first eyes-on!


Surprise, surprise! Vodafone and HTC launched a new Android set named the Magic today. We had a brief eyes-on with it, though the version we see above is not final hardware. If you peek at the slides in the gallery you’ll notice that there are more buttons and they’re laid out quite differently than what you see above. Of course, we plan a more extensive tour of the Magic and all its Cupcake goodness a little later on today. Pics and a shaky vid after the break.

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HTC Magic first eyes-on! originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 07:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands-on with TechFaith’s QiGi i6 in Android mode

Remember that mysterious dual-boot QiGi i6 from a few months back? If you dream of Windows Mobile / Android dual-boot devices at night, then odds are you do, and we’ve been able to spend a little time with one humming along in Android mode today. It turns out that the i6’s manufacturer is none other than TechFaith Wireless, an ODM more closely associated with WinMo devices — but like so many other manufacturers these days, TechFaith is apparently looking to branch out by adding another platform into the mix.

Anyhow, let’s just be straight about this: odds are you don’t really want this phone, even if you think you do. The physical design feels one or two iterations behind, but the real problem stems from the fact that you’re rocking QVGA resolution here; yes, granted, Android runs — but in its default layout, it’s clearly designed for a few more pixels both horizontally and vertically. Furthermore, we’re told that end users can’t swap ROMs themselves (in other words, distributors would choose one platform or the other and be done with it) — the hardware is designed to run both Android and Windows Mobile, but it’s not like you get some fancy Boot Camp-style setup for booting into either environment. Also, since the i6 features no physical keyboard and Cupcake was little more than a twinkle in Google’s eye by the time the phone was released, you’re dealing with a pretty poorly-designed soft keyboard that’s been grafted onto the build; individual keys are small enough so that you need a stylus to press them, and when you call up the keyboard, it takes up the full screen so you can’t see whatever app you were in while you’re typing. Check it all out (for the hilarious power-on splash screen, if nothing else) in our video after the break!

Continue reading Hands-on with TechFaith’s QiGi i6 in Android mode

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Hands-on with TechFaith’s QiGi i6 in Android mode originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 06:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Vodafone Announces HTC Magic Android Phone

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Okay. So we now have one decent Android phone at Mobile World Congress, but it is very, very much not for the US. Today Vodafone announced the HTC Magic, the follow up to T-Mobile’s G1 Android phone, for the UK, Germany, Spain, France and Italy. The Magic will also be for sale in “several other Vodafone markets” over the next few months, the company said. Vodafone does not operate in North America.


The Magic is an all-touch-screen device with no physical keyboard. It has a 3.2″, 320×480 screen, with a track ball similar to the one on the G1. According to HTC, it runs on a 528 Mhz Qualcomm processor, has Wi-Fi, and its 3G radio absolutely, positively does not work at all in North America. Presumably, there’s a software keyboard for inputting data, though oddly, it doesn’t show up in either Vodafone’s or Android’s photo galleries. The phone also has a 3.2 megapixel camera, HSDPA 3G Internet and GPS.


A Vodafone exclusive makes it complicated for this phone to come to the US. Vodafone owns part of Verizon Wireless, but the two companies don’t use the same phone technology.


The HTC Magic will be available in Europe in April. You can learn more about it on Vodafone’s site.

AT&T Mobility’s CEO seems to confirm Dell is working on a smartphone

Dell hasn’t made an announcement, but it turns out that CEOs love spilling each others’ secrets — and to that end, AT&T Mobility CEO Ralph de la Vega has just mentioned during a Mobile World Congress panel that Dell has “announced they’re entering the smartphone market.” Maybe he got a bit confused about the announcement date or time — or perhaps he’s confusing the countless rumors with official details — but either way, all eyes should be on Round Rock, Texas for the next few hours (or days, or weeks, or months) to see if anything shakes out.

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AT&T Mobility’s CEO seems to confirm Dell is working on a smartphone originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 05:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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