DVPRemote iOS app easily replaces your factory Roku remote (video)

This, friends, is what happens when convergence is approached correctly. Rather than asking you to keep yet another remote in the hopper, one Phil Irey has crafted DVPRemote — a lovely iOS app that enables your iPhone or iPod touch to act as your main control mechanism for any Roku set-top box. The app itself has been floating around in the App Store for a tick, but its the newly released version 2.0 that’s really of interest. This build ushers in a completely overhauled user interface, and aside from providing the standard Roku shuffle controls, it actually goes above and beyond to make your night easier. There’s full integration with Netflix to support automated Instant Queue navigation, full keyboard support for any screen that requires text entry, direct navigation to user-organizable Channels, toolbars for added channel functionality within Netflix and support for the new “Instant Replay”, “Info”, and “Back” buttons. Heck, it’s even compatible with iOS 4’s background operation protocol. Head on past the break for a hearty demonstration, and tap that iTunes link when you’re ready to ditch Apple’s own Remote App and part ways with $2.99.

Update: Hey Android users — looks like someone’s lookin’ out for you, too. Check out Roku Remote over on your side.

Continue reading DVPRemote iOS app easily replaces your factory Roku remote (video)

DVPRemote iOS app easily replaces your factory Roku remote (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Nov 2010 13:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Philips Pronto lineup of universal remote controllers to be discontinued

If you’re a home theater or home automation buff then you’re certainly familiar with Philips’ Pronto lineup of remote controls. Unfortunately, Philips has decided to discontinue its Pronto business after failing to find a buyer. Here’s the official quote:

“In December 2009, Philips announced the intention to relocate some of its existing remote control activities in Leuven, Belgium to Asia. At the same time, the intention was communicated to investigate alternative strategic options for the Pronto business, as this activity no longer fits with the Philips strategy. Following thorough research, no suitable partner was found for the acquisition of these activities. As such, Philips confirms today that it will discontinue the Pronto product line and related activities.”

Logitech, the playing field is all yours.

Philips Pronto lineup of universal remote controllers to be discontinued originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Nov 2010 04:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Remote control app for Logitech Revue hits the Android Market

Logitech may have it’s own set of accessories for its Revue Google TV box, but the best peripheral may just be that Android phone you already have, which can be turned into a full-fledged remote control with the Logitech Revue app that’s just hit the Android Market. Like other similar smartphone remote apps, it will give you both a trackpad and a keyboard in addition to the usual remote control buttons, and it’s thankfully free to download. Hit up Android Market to find it right now, or head on past the break if you’d prefer to download it QR code-style.

Continue reading Remote control app for Logitech Revue hits the Android Market

Remote control app for Logitech Revue hits the Android Market originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 Oct 2010 12:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hammacher Schlemmer’s tablet-controlled ‘Emotive Robotic Avatar’ captures your heart, nest egg

Hammacher Schlemmer's tablet PC-controlled 'Emotive Robotic Avatar' will capture your heart, nest egg

Yeah, it’s almost time for the holidays, and smart busy-bodies are already checking items off their shopping lists. For that special someone, consider the most outrageously overpriced plastic toy we’ve ever seen. $65,000 buys you this “Emotive Robotic Avatar” from Hammacher Schlemmer, a little servo-actuated guy that can wave its arms around and go from looking happy (above) to evil (below). It’s all controlled by a tablet PC with a 30 foot range that receives a real-time video feed, as we saw when we checked this guy out at the Toy Fair earlier this year, back when he was called Quasai. As shown in the video after the break, the “operator” can even speak through the robot, which will pitch shift his or her voice, a trick sure to give your children nightmares. If that doesn’t work, just tell ’em you blew their college fund to buy the thing and they’ll have to get work study jobs. That ought to send the shivers up their spines.

[Thanks, Evan]

Continue reading Hammacher Schlemmer’s tablet-controlled ‘Emotive Robotic Avatar’ captures your heart, nest egg

Hammacher Schlemmer’s tablet-controlled ‘Emotive Robotic Avatar’ captures your heart, nest egg originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Oct 2010 08:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lego’s MINDroid Android app remotely controls Mindstorms NXT robots

Hardcore hobbyists have been controlling their Mindstorms NXT creations with all sorts of paraphernalia for years, but now Lego itself is stepping in to lend a hand. The new MINDroid app just splashed down in the Android Market, and it enables Android 2.1 (or greater) handsets to dictate Mindstorms NXT robots over Bluetooth. According to Lego, tilting / turning the phone can make the robot move forward, turn to the sides, and by pressing an action button on the phone’s screen, activate the ‘Action’ motor. Given that the download will cost you absolutely nothing, what are you waiting for? Your robot army awaits your commands.

Lego’s MINDroid Android app remotely controls Mindstorms NXT robots originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Oct 2010 12:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Savant stuffs iPod touch into multifunctional Touch Remote, includes VoIP and FaceTime promises

That’s no render we’re looking at, Savant assures us, it’s the most recent photograph of the company’s Touch Remote prototype. This crazy do-it-all peripheral comes with an embedded fourth-gen iPod touch — no word on whether you’ll be able to remove it, though it looks unlikely — and mirrors the abilities of Savant’s iPad home control and automation app. That means that once you get your lights, climate control, network cameras, and home cinema hooked up to Savant’s control hub, you’ll have yourself a neatly streamlined remote to save you doing anything yourself again. Or so goes the theory, anyhow. Savant augments the offering with promises of VoIP and FaceTime integration by the time the Touch Remote ships to retailers in the first quarter of next year. MSRP is set at $399, which may or may not be feasible given that the iPod touch by itself costs at least $229. We shall see. For now, you can see the prototype device on video after the break.

Continue reading Savant stuffs iPod touch into multifunctional Touch Remote, includes VoIP and FaceTime promises

Savant stuffs iPod touch into multifunctional Touch Remote, includes VoIP and FaceTime promises originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 07 Oct 2010 04:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Ericsson LiveView acts as a 1.3-inch remote control for your smartphone, requires Android 2.0

You’ve been asking for someone, anyone, to please kick out a tiny remote control display that can save you from having to whip your smartphone out for every little thing and Sony Ericsson, it seems, has listened. The 1.3-inch OLED screen above is a new Bluetooth accessory for Android 2.x phones that’s said to function very much like a desktop widget. There’s an app you can install on your phone that’ll get it to communicate with the 128 x 128 pixel grid, which can then be used to read messages, find your phone, control music playback, and receive those precious social networking updates from your friends. We know by now you’ll be crying foul over Sony Ericsson releasing an Android 2.0 accessory when its handsets are stuck somewhere below that marker, but the plan is to dish this “micro display” out in the last quarter of the year, after that messianic Android 2.1 update has arrived. Fingers crossed.

Continue reading Sony Ericsson LiveView acts as a 1.3-inch remote control for your smartphone, requires Android 2.0

Sony Ericsson LiveView acts as a 1.3-inch remote control for your smartphone, requires Android 2.0 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Sep 2010 04:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy Tab as Home Watcher remote control (video)

Seems like only yesterday that we were begging a big named consumer electronics company to get into home automation. Now Samsung, the world’s biggest consumer electronics company, complies with a demonstration of the connected home of the future using its own Galaxy Tab. The demo depicts live widget-based control over your home’s HVAC, TV (including remote viewing), stove, oven, dryer, vacuum robot, and refrigerator with integrated grocery manager that suggests recipes based upon the food you have. Unfortunately, instead of offering details on when (or how) Samsung’s vision might become reality, the demo’s main intent seems to be showing off Samsung’s latest product line from IFA earlier this month. It’s still worth a trip beyond the break for a peek though.

Samsung Galaxy Tab as Home Watcher remote control (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Sep 2010 06:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DeviceVM unleashing MeeGo on Splashtop PCs, flexes MeeGo netbook muscle to remote control Windows machines (video)

Got “Smart On,” “Quick Start,” “Express Gate,” “QuickWeb,” “Latitude ON” or even the plain vanilla Splashtop instant-on OS embedded in your PC? Chances are, sometime next year, you’ll be getting a MeeGo app-capable upgrade. Splashtop manufacturer DeviceVM has just promised a MeeGo-based version of Splashtop to all current OEM partners for distribution in the first half of next year, and you should be able to simply upgrade the instant-on client in your existing PC. We spoke to DeviceVM in person at IDF 2010, and were told it’s not quite as easy as it sounds — for one thing, the Splashtop MeeGo Remix, as it’s called, is still in the early stages, and it’s going to be up to the ASUS, Acers and Dells of the world to actually roll it out. HP’s committed to delivering an free, transitional version of Splashtop for its machines that will allow end-users to easily upgrade, however. What you’re looking at above on this Lenovo S10-3t is the first step in the process — MeeGo with Splashtop branding and some simple touchscreen drivers. To make up for the relative boredom, DeviceVM showed off something else moderately neat — a port of its Splashtop Remote app to MeeGo that allows a tiny HP Mini to seamlessly remote into a Windows PC. Imagine the potential for covert fun with our video after the break!

Continue reading DeviceVM unleashing MeeGo on Splashtop PCs, flexes MeeGo netbook muscle to remote control Windows machines (video)

DeviceVM unleashing MeeGo on Splashtop PCs, flexes MeeGo netbook muscle to remote control Windows machines (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Sep 2010 11:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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What happens when you leave a skateboard and a tank alone in a dimly lit room? (video)

You get all-terrain vehicle babies, is what. Ben Gulak, the youngster that brought us the Uno electric unicycle, is back with a new transportation device, this time aiming to woo military procurement types with a rugged and extremely versatile one-man transporter. The DTV (Dual Tracked Vehicle) Shredder has enough torque to tow an SUV, but is also flexible enough to turn within a circle of four feet and scale slopes as steep as 40 degrees. To be honest, though, nothing we say can do justice to just how badass this thing really is, you’ll want to see the videos after the break for that. Our favorite part? The Shredder can be remotely operated and its makers even advertise its ability to carry offensive weaponry and serve as a “robot attack platform.” What self-respecting supervillain wouldn’t want an army of those?

Continue reading What happens when you leave a skateboard and a tank alone in a dimly lit room? (video)

What happens when you leave a skateboard and a tank alone in a dimly lit room? (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Sep 2010 05:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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