Canon prepping 60D and 550D / 600D with articulating displays?

Camera aficionados, looks like it’s time for the pre-PMA rumor mill to start churning. Our inaugural whisper this season comes care of a forum poster at d-spot.co.il, who according to Canon Rumors‘ tipster has been accurate in the past (at this point we’ve been unable to corroborate). Here’s the deal: a Canon 60D and Canon 550D / 600D (i.e. Rebel series). Both apparently feature a 15.1 megapixel APS-C sensor, articulating screens, and 720p video at 30 frames per second. The 60D, however, can also claim 1080p footage — odd that the Rebel doesn’t, since the current T1i has 1080p — an electronic level, and a new battery and grip compared to its 50D successor. That one’s apparently priced at around $1,190 and due out in May, while the other is $799 with no connection to a release date given. Make no mistake, between this and those waterproof Sony point-and-shoots, this is only the beginning.

Canon prepping 60D and 550D / 600D with articulating displays? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jan 2010 19:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Tablet Will Likely Support 2 Kinds of Apps


In addition to launching its tablet Wednesday, Apple will likely introduce a new programming solution for iPhone developers to easily tablet-enable their apps.

Developers polled by Wired said they expected additions to Apple’s software-development kit that would help make iPhone apps work at any resolution, for full-screen support on the rumored device.

But how will that work? The tablet will likely support all iPhone apps out of the box in their current 480-by-320 resolution. These apps will probably be able to run in the background, perhaps in separate windows. It’s unlikely they’re going to automatically maximize to fill up the tablet’s screen, which is rumored to be 10 inches diagonally, developers polled by Wired.com agreed, because that would result in a blurry, pixelated mess — not Apple’s style.

Therefore, it’s likely that Apple will offer a quick workaround for developers to rescale their apps for full-screen tablet support.

For people who buy the tablet, that means we’ll see a slightly bifurcated world of apps. We’ll be able to access all iPhone apps in small windows, and some of those apps will be resizable to fit the tablet’s larger screen.

“It’s easy to imagine how Apple might offer tools to make it easy for me to not have to make all my graphics from scratch,” said Bart Decrem, CEO of Tapulous, developer of the popular iPhone rhythm game Tap Tap Revenge. “That’s one of the things I’d be on the lookout for.”

“We’ve made a big investment,” he continued. “People have made huge investments in their games. I’d expect Apple to accelerate the process of having lots and lots of apps that feel native and migrate from a fixed-resolution world to resolution independent.”

Decrem said he could not comment on whether Tapulous would be appearing as a presenter at Apple’s Jan. 27 event in San Francisco, where the Cupertino, California, company is rumored to be launching a tablet. Tapulous appeared in the recent September iPod event to present a new game, Riddim Ribbon.

Multiple independent reports agree on the physical description of Apple’s tablet: a blown-up iPhone or iPod Touch with a 10-inch screen. But the software experience has remained a mystery. Offering a glimmer of insight, The New York Times just a day before Apple’s product event has published a bold report claiming the tablet would support all 100,000 iPhone and iPod Touch apps currently in the App Store.

“It will run all the applications of the iPhone and iPod touch, have a persistent wireless connection over 3G cellphone networks and Wi-Fi, and will be built with a 10-inch color display, allowing newspapers, magazines and book publishers to deliver their products with an eye to the design that had grabbed readers in print,” NY Times wrote.

Corroborating NY Times‘ report, McGraw-Hill CEO Terry McGraw said in a live TV interview that McGraw was developing e-book content for the Apple tablet. He explained that the tablet’s OS was based on the iPhone OS, meaning McGraw’s e-book iPhone apps will be easily portable to the tablet.

Other iPhone developers polled by Wired agreed that Decrem’s theory was solid. They said the SDK needed to be updated with new tools streamlining migration to the upcoming tablet. Jeff Meininger, iPhone developer of Snaptic, said Decrem’s proposed solution regarding resolution-independence would work.

“It would be the simplest and most effective way to be able to support all iPhone apps,” Meininger said. “It’s absolutely technically feasible.”

David Castelnuovo, developer of the immensely popular iPhone game Pocket God, said it was likely Apple would offer some new sizability code in the iPhone SDK with the tablet in mind. But he said it wouldn’t be a blanket solution for all 100,000 apps in the App Store.

Pocket God, for example, is game that involves torturing pygmies on an island, and it would have to be redesigned for a tablet with a bigger island and more pygmies, Castelnuovo said. So, some quick and easy sizability code will likely accelerate full-screen tablet support for form-based apps such as Facebook. For games or apps with more complex interfaces, it could take more thoughtful tweaking.

“Ideally we wouldn’t want to just scale [Pocket God],” Castelnuovo said. “We’d want to make the world bigger.”

Just how big a portion of the App Store will support full-screen tablet resolution will be up to the developers. Appcelerator, a company that helps developers build cross-platform mobile apps, polled 554 developers on their interest in coding for the tablet. 51 percent of respondents said it would be “very important” for them to port iPhone apps for the tablet “in a simple, easy fashion without too much cost or delay.” Thirty percent responded “Somewhat important” and 19 percent responded “Not important.”

It remains a question whether Apple will launch an entire section in its App Store for tablet apps. Decrem said he doubts that, because all iPhone apps will work with the tablet. He said it’s realistic that developers will state in their apps’ descriptions whether they feature full tablet support.

We’ll find out soon. Stay tuned on Gadget Lab for full, live coverage of Apple’s tablet event, which kicks off 10 a.m. PDT Wednesday.

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A mockup of an imaginary Apple tablet: Stephen Lewis Simmonds


The Apple Tablet: a complete history, supposedly

It’s no secret to us (or our readers) that Apple’s products tend to generate what some might consider insane amounts of interest for weeks, months, and even years before they’re launched or even announced. Whether you love the company or hate its guts, you can’t deny that Apple is particularly prone to being fodder for the rumor mill. It comes in all forms: leaked photos (be they real, fake, or merely imaginative fan creations), analyst speculation based on “what if” scenarios for investors, “insider” reports from Asian supply chains, and a fair amount of conjecture via the press, both mainstream and blog alike. Here at Engadget, we’ve always been pretty proud of our ability to decode fact from fiction, and we try not to add too much noise to the echo chamber in which the gadget world seems to sometimes live. That said, we do cover plenty of rumors — and the Apple Tablet (in its many rumored form factors) may just be the biggest and most twisted of them all.

Apple’s been kicking around the idea of a tablet since at least… oh, 1983. From real, physical prototypes to out-there ideas such as the Knowledge Navigator — the company (who did not, alas, invent the idea of a tablet PC) has, somewhat unsurprisingly, seen fit to investigate the possibility for almost as long as it’s been around. For one reason or another, though, they’ve never actually produced a device which saw the light of retail day (well, besides the Newton). Perhaps that’s part of the fascination that Apple fans have with the product — it’s been rumored so long, and seemed on the verge of actual arrival so many times that it’s become a Holy Grail of sorts for the tech community.

Evidence that any tablet actually existed or would come to retail, however, has always been slim at best. In the entire lifespan of Engadget, not one viable photo of a real-looking prototype has ever emerged, and not one source within Apple itself has ever really hinted that it was at work on such a product. Oh sure, there have been dozens — possibly hundreds — of people “familiar with the matter,” but almost no one who would or could go on record to talk about the tablet, and in the end, it’s always seemed like a non-starter. The Apple Tablet rumor started in earnest around 2002 — before Engadget was even around. By the time we arrived to the party, the idea that Apple might be working on a tablet or slate PC was pretty firmly entrenched into the psyche of the avid gadget geek, but again, perilously little evidence existed to support the idea, or shall we say… the hope?

And here we are, in January of 2010, on the verge of yet another expiration date for the rumored launch of an Apple Tablet (though let’s be honest — this thing is starting to feel pretty real). We thought now might be as good a time as any to take a look back — back through the rumor timeline of one of the gadget world’s longest-standing, and seemingly best-loved unicorns. Join us for the ride, won’t you?

Continue reading The Apple Tablet: a complete history, supposedly

The Apple Tablet: a complete history, supposedly originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jan 2010 10:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Designer Publishes ‘Leaked’ Apple Tablet Photos

photos-of-the-apple-tablet

These wonderful fake tablet photos come from user interface designer Dustin Curtis. They supposedly show the Jesus Moses Tablet atop a 15-inch MacBook Pro. Unlike many blurry spy-cam shots, Dustin had faith in his Photoshop abilities and these pictures are sharp and clear.

photos-of-the-apple-tablet-1

It’s a sweet-looking design, with dual dock ports for horizontal and vertical charging (and movie-watching). Even the bezel (although it looks thin on a large tablet) is wide enough for fingers to grip without obscuring the screen.

But the telltale signs are there. A bad, overly soft drop shadow (most obvious in the close-up), an off-looking reflection (the glowing Apple and the screen edge on the main shot) and the rather pale reflection of the MacBook keyboard in its own screen (again on the close-up). Still, it might be my favorite mockup so far, if only because the super-simple slab-like design fits with my idea of what the actual tablet will look like. For more debunking and analysis, head to Dustin’s blog, where these images were posted. Good try, Dustin!

Photos of the Apple Tablet [Dustin Curtis]

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Drowning in a Sea of Rumors? There’s an App for That

screenshotA simple iPhone application aggregates tech rumors and lets you join the fun by picking which are the winners (iTablet: tomorrow) and which are the lame ducks (Zune phone: ever). Better still, the Prediction application was approved by Apple and appeared in the store today, just in time for the biggest rumor-fest of the year, Apple’s (probable) iSlate event tomorrow.

Prediction pulls in the rumors and pushes them to your iPhone. They are organized by event (the upcoming Mobile World Congress, for example) for easy browsing, and you can vote for the outcome of each, choosing Correct, Partially Correct or just plain Wrong. You can even add your own speculation and share them with other users.

Grab the app right now for $3, or play along with an old-fashioned PDF, available from the site of Prediction’s developer, David Weiss. Download, grab a beer and play along.

Prediction Score Card [Unweary via ]

Prediction [iTunes]


Pentax Optio I-10, H90, and E-90 leak out in full

We caught a glimpse of some new Pentax cams yesterday, and now the new Optio I-10, E-10, and two-tone H90 have leaked out in full. We still don’t kow a ton about them, but the higher-res images mean we know some basic specs: the I-10 cops an old-school vibe and features a 5x zoom on top of a 12.1 megapixel sensor, the H90 also has a 5x zoom, and the E90 looks to be a little more basic with a 3x zoom and a 10.1 megapixel sensor. So… let’s get official with these soon, okay?

Pentax Optio I-10, H90, and E-90 leak out in full originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Jan 2010 11:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Retro-Tastic Pentax Optio Pictures Leaked

pentax-optio-h90-pentax-optio-h90-and-optio-l10-cameras

Three unknown Pentax Optio cameras appeared on the internet yesterday, and then quickly disappeared. But not before the intrepid Photo Rumors managed to grab some pictures from the Google cache of the pages. Behold, the Pentax L-10 and H-90.

As always with Photo Rumors, there is nary a detail to be had, let alone an actual link to the now-defunct pages from which these pictures came. But as these pictures are in keeping with Pentax’s retro-styling of the Optio line, and its love of oddly hideous color schemes in general, we’ll bite. Add in an expected announcement from Pentax tomorrow for rumor-checking purposes and we’re all over this.

In the absence of more concrete specs (and because we want to), we shall instead wonder at the inspiration for these “designs”. I’m saying they’re based on movies, and for the boxy orange and silver H-90, I’m going with Silent Running, Douglas Trumbull’s 1972 low-key sci-Fi masterpiece. And for the white and weird L-10, which has a pale, irritating lack of real substance, what better than Breakfast at Tiffany’s?

Pentax Optio H90 and Optio L10 cameras [Photo Rumors]

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Is this the Motorola MOTOSPLIT?

Okay, we’re not anywhere close to 100 percent on this, but we just got a blurry screenshot of something we’re told is the Motorola MOTOSPLIT, a Snapdragon-powered Android set in the vein of the Droid with a totally wild split-horizontal sliding QWERTY keyboard. Yeah, we want one — it reminds us of the beloved Nokia 6820, although it’s much thinner. We’re told this thing is coming to AT&T in Q3, which makes sense; we’ve only pinned down three of Ma Bell’s five planned Android devices, and this would be a nice higher-end compliment to the Backflip. We’ll keep an eye out — and you let us know if you hear anything good, okay?

Update: Yes, we know it’s a render, sheesh. We have a bit of a history with Motorola and renders, you know.

Is this the Motorola MOTOSPLIT? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Jan 2010 00:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple tablet maybe starts showing up in app-tracking stats, kinda

It’s sort of funny that this is the hardest evidence we have of an Apple tablet, but here we go: mobile app analytics company Flurry is saying that it’s detected around 50 devices on Apple’s Cupertino campus that have the “characteristics” of a tablet, running a new version of the iPhone OS numbered 3.2. How? Around 200 different apps with Flurry’s tracking code were downloaded and used on these mystery devices — mostly games, followed by entertainment and media apps — and Flurry first noticed this new device in October, with numbers picking up in January. Unfortunately, Flurry hasn’t said what these mysterious tablet characteristics are, so we don’t have much to go on — and without specifics like a bigger screen size or a faster processor we’re skeptical. For all we know, this is just a new iPhone running a slightly tweaked build of OS 3.0 that supports a higher-resolution screen or something — especially looking at that 3.2 version number, when everything else we’ve heard suggests the tablet will jump to 4.0.

What’s more, 200 apps in the grand scheme of things really isn’t that many — Flurry only tracks small percentage of the 100,000 apps in the App Store. We’re not exactly willing to accept any detailed analysis based on a dataset that narrow, so let’s just say that it’s very likely that Apple’s testing new devices running a new version of the iPhone OS and leave it at that until Wednesday, shall we?

Apple tablet maybe starts showing up in app-tracking stats, kinda originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 Jan 2010 23:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pentax Optio H90 and Optio L10 cameras briefly leak out

Looks like the color-crazy engineers in the Pentax labs are brewing up some new goodies: these images of a new Optio H90 and new orange-topped Optio L10 were briefly up on a retailer site today, and Photorumors managed to retrieve the images from Google’s cache. There’s also an entry for a third Optio, but there was no associated image or info, so there’s at least one surprise left in this world.

Pentax Optio H90 and Optio L10 cameras briefly leak out originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 Jan 2010 18:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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