Onkyo remote app ushers in a new area of losing Android phones in the couch

Is the devoted remote going the way of dodo? HiFi audio manufacturer Onkyo is certainly hedging its bets with the release of its first Android app, which gives users the ability to control a number of its home theater systems. The Remote App, due out in August, makes it possible to browse content and stream audio from Android smartphones to the TX-8050 and all Onkyo A/V network receivers released this year. This isn’t the company’s first flirtation with the open world of Android. Late last year, Onkyo beat the competition to the punch by announcing a couple of Android tablets.

Continue reading Onkyo remote app ushers in a new area of losing Android phones in the couch

Onkyo remote app ushers in a new area of losing Android phones in the couch originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jul 2011 01:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Voomote One turns your iPhone into a well organized universal remote

Voomote One

Ok, so the name isn’t great, but the Voomote One is actually kinda neat. It’s not the first universal remote adapter we’ve seen for the iPhone and, unlike the Surc IR case, you probably wouldn’t want to leave this bulky add-on attached to your handset when not in use. But, the app does have some convenient features, like the ability to create custom layouts that can easily be switched based on the devices in a particular room. So you can setup a living room profile to control your big screen and cable box, and a separate bed room one for your more modest set and a stereo. You can also create command macros that fire up multiple devices with the tap of a single virtual button. The Voomote app is available for free in the app store, but the actual IR-blasting sleeve will set you back $99. Check out the gallery below and head on after the break for some PR.

Continue reading Voomote One turns your iPhone into a well organized universal remote

Voomote One turns your iPhone into a well organized universal remote originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Jul 2011 10:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Vizio Tablet tiptoes into retail, starting at Costco

We know it’s been a long wait since CES, but after getting pawed at by both Blake Griffin and yours truly, the Vizio Tablet is starting to show up in stores right about on schedule. Frequent Engadget commenter DaHarder took a step away from the Disqus box and snagged this tablet at a local Costco store for $329 ($20 off the regular price), an achievement also unlocked by the folks at Mobileslate. According to their reports you may have to ask around to find out if the VTAB1008 is actually in stock but it may be lurking along with its $40 Accessories Kit, while it’s already showing in stock on the Vizio online store. Impressions so far suggest a “budget” tablet experience above that of the flood of craptablets with decent hardware and battery life, but a software experience behind the top of the line slates due to the custom UI, small internal storage and RAM and slower single core Marvell CPU. Our review is yet to come, but if there’s around three bills burning a hole in your pocket and you’ve just got to have an Android tablet with integrated IR blaster, we’re not seeing too many other options available.

[Thanks, DaHarder]

Vizio Tablet tiptoes into retail, starting at Costco originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jul 2011 07:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Surc combination iPhone 4 case and IR remote now shipping for $75

Mashed Pixel’s Surc iPhone 4 case is finally ready take on the challenge of making Apple’s slab a universal remote now that it’s on sale for a mere $74.95. That’s pricier than the RedEye Mini Dongle but cheaper than the Peel receiver, and it does pull double duty as a protector. The built in MicroUSB hookup and included cable means it can stay on even while charging before jumping into action when the companion app is opened on the phone. It can be controlled via buttons, gestures or motion control, with plenty of programmability built in. The only downside we can find is that this is definitely a goner whenever you upgrade to Steve’s next iThing, and it means leaving the sweet, potentially reception-improving case you already picked out behind.

Surc combination iPhone 4 case and IR remote now shipping for $75 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Jul 2011 05:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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D-Link brings the Boxee Box remote to PC, Mac users

Boxee users on PC and Mac should no longer feel ignored, with promises of updated software on the way and now the option to use a Boxee Box remote from D-Link. The two sided QWERTY design is unchanged and the included RF dongle means your HTPC can stay safely out of sight while you enjoy some branded remote control action without selling out for a one-size-fits-all box. The roll your own media player crowd can pick up the remote at a penny under $50 at a variety of online retailers right now, the long awaited software update is still due this fall.

Continue reading D-Link brings the Boxee Box remote to PC, Mac users

D-Link brings the Boxee Box remote to PC, Mac users originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Jul 2011 12:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Insert Coin: Triggertrap open source automatic camera release (video)

In Insert Coin, we look at an exciting new tech project that requires funding before it can hit production. If you’d like to pitch a project, please send us a tip with “Insert Coin” as the subject line.


Perhaps the simplest function on any camera, the shutter release is typically triggered using a dedicated button, or — most often in the case of a professional rig — using a wired or wireless remote. The Triggertrap falls into that latter category, completing the circuit necessary to capture an image after receiving commands from a virtually limitless array of sources. After pairing with your DSLR or ILC using a universal connector, you’ll be able to trigger the device to snap a photo using a laser beam (thanks to the built-in photo transistor), sound (a hand clap, for example), or a timer — typically most applicable to time-lapse photography. An auxiliary port will enable you to get even more creative — you could release the shutter using a remote control, pressure trigger, or even a cell phone call, for example.

The Triggertrap is well on its way to a Kickstarter campaign goal of $25,000, but there’s still time to pre-order a DIY kit for $70, or a turn-key version for five bucks more. As always, Kickstarter will issue a refund if the project isn’t funded before the July 31st deadline. Both devices are Arduino based and open source, so you’re free to make modifications as you wish — assuming you don’t mind getting your hands dirty with a bit of programming. Jump past the break for a quick demo video, and keep an eye out for the creator’s Pringles can DIY macro lens, just past the 13 second mark.

Continue reading Insert Coin: Triggertrap open source automatic camera release (video)

Insert Coin: Triggertrap open source automatic camera release (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Jul 2011 16:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Capture Pilot: iPad Remote Control for Phase One Cameras

Ad agency parasites now have even more control over poor photographers with Capture Pilot

Normally I’d complain about an iOS camera triggering app which requires a computer as well as a camera to make it work, but when that camera is loaded with the Phase One back, which pumps out 80MP images, you’re going to need somewhere bigger than the iPad to put them.

The app is Phase One’s Capture Pilot with Camera Control, and it works in tandem with Capture One Pro 6 on your computer. In its free form, the app lets you view, tag and rate images as they are snapped in-studio. This feature is aimed less at the photographer and more at those people who bother him as he tries to go about his work.

Imagine: You’re taking meticulously set-up photos of, say, the hot new cellphone, and the ad agency sends someone to look over your shoulder. Only now, instead of having to sit at your computer, they can lounge around on your couch with their iPad and order you around from there. Or worse still, thanks to the feature that allows the app to be used from “remote locations,” the parasite can sit in the coffee shop across the street and have their lackey call you and direct the shoot.

Once these morons have left for the day and gone for some egg-white sushi, or whatever the hell it is they eat, you can make a $15 in-app purchase and gain full remote access over your camera. You can control exposure settings and see on-screen readouts for ISO sensitivity, exposure mode, shutter speed, aperture, exposure compensation, and so on. You can also trip the shutter.

And this will work with pretty much any Canon or Nikon SLR, along with (of course) Phase One gear, and also Leaf and Mamiya cameras.

Capture One 6 Pro costs $400. Capture Pilot with Camera Control is free, plus $15 to get the features you’re actually interested in.

Capture Pilot [Phase One. Thanks, Kathy!]

Capture One Pro 6 [Phase One]

See Also:


Yahoo! Connected TV watches with you, delivers a more personal ad experience

For a medium heavily ridiculed for its zombie-making capabilities, television is certainly taking on more of an active role courtesy of Yahoo! Connected TV. Coming later this year to select Sony and Toshiba models, the interactive software that’s already in eight million homes gains two new features destined to either creep you out, or snag you a twofer on those wings — broadcast interactivity, and device control. While the latter enhancement merely transforms your smartphone or tablet into an extended remote, it’s the former that’ll turn your TV choices into a game of peeping Tom, delivering ads custom-fit for you. But the old, yodeling tech giant’s not stopping there — the company also plans to trot out an app store by the years’ end, which is currently in pilot testing with Ford and HSN (among others). If widget-based ads are your thing, you might want to hold off until the big manufacturer roll-out next year, or you could always consider that Google option. Brain-rot, please meet the tech loop.

Yahoo! Connected TV watches with you, delivers a more personal ad experience originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Jun 2011 07:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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OnLive and Juniper team up on cloud-based services for enterprise

OnLive’s MicroConsole may not have exactly taken the video game market by storm just yet, but it looks like the company isn’t about to wait any longer to expand its cloud-based empire. Today it announced that it’s partnering with Juniper Networks on what it’s describing as a “no-compromise, media-rich, enterprise experience.” While it’s still apparently in the early stages, that solution will combine OnLive’s own instant response video compression technology with Juniper Networks’ Junos Pulse client, which together promise to make remotely-accessed desktops and applications “indistinguishable from a local one,” regardless of the device you’re accessing it on (including tablets and OnLive-enabled TVs). Unfortunately, anything much more specific than that — including any indication of an actual rollout — remains a bit light for the time being, but the two companies have already demoed the system at the NExTWORK Conference in New York City today, so it certainly seems like it might not be too far off.

Continue reading OnLive and Juniper team up on cloud-based services for enterprise

OnLive and Juniper team up on cloud-based services for enterprise originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jun 2011 01:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Smart View shrinks Smart TV down for your Galaxy S II

Samsung Smart View

We’re not sure how many of you happen to own both a Galaxy S II and a Samsung Smart TV but, if you do, you’ll probably want to download Smart View from the Android market. Like now — don’t worry, we’ll wait. This handy app lets you stream content from your set to your smartphone over WiFi, and can even be used as a controller for games from the Samsung app store. Unfortunately, you’re limited to either mirroring the content shown on the TV or watching an optional second stream from a Sammy-branded Blu-ray player but, hey, at least you won’t have to miss a single second of Game of Thrones just because that box of Cheez-Its keeps whispering your name. Like any good TV-connected app, Smart View can also act as a remote with a program guide and the ability to change channels, and even more functionality is promised for the future. Eventually, it will make its way to Galaxy Player, Galaxy S, and Galaxy Tab owners but, while you wait, check out the gallery and PR below.

Continue reading Samsung Smart View shrinks Smart TV down for your Galaxy S II

Samsung Smart View shrinks Smart TV down for your Galaxy S II originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Jun 2011 18:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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