Samsung’s 2.5-inch Spinpoint M8 1TB drive fits in your laptop, no cramming necessary

Samsung Spinpoint M8

The trouble with high capacity hard drives is that they’re about the size and weight of a brick, and just as bad for throwing in glass houses or ultrathin laptops. Samsung is slimming up the beastliest of disks though, with the just announced Spinpoint M8. Inside this 1TB drive are a pair of 500GB storage platters, instead of the three 334GB ones found in most storage solutions of this size. By using AFT, Advanced format technology, Sammy was able to up the storage density and trim its latest Spinpoint to a svelte 9.5mm thick (your average 1TB drive is 12.5mm). As an added bonus, the increased density also boosts performance and power efficiency since the drives heads need to move less. If you want to slap one in your notebook you can pick one up for $129, and we’re sure a few of these will find a home those skinny “ultrabooks” that Intel has been talking up. Check out the PR after the break.

Continue reading Samsung’s 2.5-inch Spinpoint M8 1TB drive fits in your laptop, no cramming necessary

Samsung’s 2.5-inch Spinpoint M8 1TB drive fits in your laptop, no cramming necessary originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Jun 2011 22:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Series 5 3G Chromebook gets iFixit teardown, lays bare its telling internals

It’s already made an early debut, just to sell out in a matter a hours, and now Samsung’s answer to the Chromebook, the Series 5, is getting some attention of a more destructive sort. The folks over at iFixit have proven once again that ripping apart consumer electronics is not only therapeutic, but also enlightening, this time putting Google’s ultraportable under the knife. On top of the specs we already have, this Chromebook’s inner workings reveal 2GB of non-upgradable DDR3 RAM (the CR-48 apparently packed upgradable RAM), Intel NM10 graphics, a Qualcomm Gobi WWAN board, an Atheros AR9382 802.11n WiFi chip, and a 16GB SanDisk SSD. If you want even more intimate details (and have some cash to burn) you can wait to rip into the Chromebook yourself — or you could to do the practical thing, and click on the source link below.

Samsung Series 5 3G Chromebook gets iFixit teardown, lays bare its telling internals originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Jun 2011 17:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy S II said to be Verizon-bound in July (update: just a miscommunication)

Absence makes the heart grow fonder, so when it comes to the Samsung Galaxy S II, our tiny American hearts are getting rather sick of all the love we’ve been experiencing lately. Computerworld’s latest rumor may be just what we need to stay sane for another month, though; it cites an unnamed Verizon spokesperson who mentioned this Fascinate follow-up, which will likely be known as the Function, will be coming in for a soft landing sometime in July, though no specifics were offered. The Galaxy S II is already being sold in Europe and Asia and blends a 4.3-inch Super AMOLED Plus display, Gingerbread, dual-core 1.2GHz CPU, and many more top-of-the-line specs into one sleek and gorgeous package. If the July window is accurate, it means Verizon could be one of the first US carriers out of the gate with the phone. This is great news for the carrier that was, of the four national powers, dead last in getting its model of the Galaxy S to market. We’re anxiously awaiting word from a Verizon spokesperson for additional comment and will keep you posted — if our heart hasn’t popped out of our chest by then.

Update: We just received word from a Verizon spokesperson that the reference to a July release was just a miscommunication and was actually in reference to the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1. Yeah, we’re bummed out, too.

Samsung Galaxy S II said to be Verizon-bound in July (update: just a miscommunication) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Jun 2011 15:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 review

When we met with Samsung in late May, company representatives didn’t seem entirely sure that the company would meet the rumored June 8th ship date here in the US, but lo and behold, it’s done just that. The tablet’s launching at noon today at the Best Buy in New York City’s Union Square, and if you can’t make it up to the Big Apple, it’ll hit the rest of the nation on June 17th. But here’s the real question: is it worth making an effort to snag it on either date? The Galaxy Tab 10.1, much like its Limited Edition sibling that we reviewed last month, is ever-so-slightly thinner than the iPad 2, a slate that most sane individuals (and competitors, for that matter) would confess is the market leader today.

Naturally, everyone and their sister is gunning for Apple in this space, and Honeycomb’s the first mobile OS we’ve seen that has the potential to put any sort of damper on Cupertino’s ongoing rave. By and large, the consumer version of the Tab 10.1 is the same as the device launched at Google I/O, but there’s two key differences that we’ll focus on here: the tamed design, and the thoroughly different OS version (v3.1 here versus v3.0 before). Head on past the break for an in-depth look into both of those, but be sure to first take a gander at our Limited Edition review to wrap your noodle around the basics.

Continue reading Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 review

Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Jun 2011 11:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung brings Van Gogh ‘paintings’ to Korea via Smart TV, makes us reach for the absinthe

This is sort of strange. People in Korea are looking at masterpieces of Western art on a TV screen — and not from the comfort of their laptops. It’s all part of something called Rêve et Réalité (Dream and Reality), a Samsung-sponsored exhibition that brings some of the world’s most celebrated works to Seoul’s Hangaram Museum via four, 46-inch LEDs. The expo, on display until September, features some of the greatest hits from Claude Monet, Jean F. Millet and, most notably, Van Gogh, whose Starry Night has never been on display in Korea (and, as far as we’re concerned, still hasn’t). Televised docents provide background info on the artists, whose paintings are all transmitted via a giant Smart TV video wall that blurs out all semblance of texture and nuance — much like that bottle of absinthe we’re about to pound.

Samsung brings Van Gogh ‘paintings’ to Korea via Smart TV, makes us reach for the absinthe originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Jun 2011 09:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Chromebook Teardown Reveals Netbook-Like Interior

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It’s teardown time again, and this time the poor gadget under iFixit’s menacing spudger is the Samsung Series 5 3G Chromebook, one of Google’s follow-ups to the rather poorly-received Cr-48 Chromebook.

Before we get inside, it’s worth mentioning that Samsung has fixed the two big problems with the original. The trackpad now works properly (can it really have been so hard to get right? It’s not like trackpads are new tech) and the battery life is now a good long 8 hours. It is also a little faster thanks to its Atom N570 processor, and — according to iFixit CEO Kyle “The Can-Opener” Wiens — looks a lot better. I’m a sucker for clunky, utilitarian design, so I actually prefer the old one.

Then we dive inside the device. It’s possible to disassemble the whole thing with the spudger, a plastic opening tool, and a Phillips number 1 screwdriver.

The Series 5 is put together a lot like a vanilla netbook, with standard slot-in parts for things like Wi-Fi and 3G WWAN. The 16GB SanDisk SSD is also a standard plug-in module, so it should be possible to upgrade if you want to. In the pictures above, you can see the insides of both the new Chromebook and the original Cr48 for comparison.

Ifixit gives the Series 5 3G Chromebook a Repairability Score of 6 out of 10. Not bad. Be sure to check out the full teardown, complete with “huge” photographs of each step.

Samsung Series 5 3G Chromebook Teardown [iFixit. thanks, Kyle!]

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 on sale at NYC Best Buy today, pre-orders now open

The Galaxy Tab 10.1 is finally among us. At noon Eastern Time today, Best Buy’s New York City store at Union Square will start selling Samsung’s extra-slim 10-inch Tegra 2 tablet, with the first 200 buyers also receiving a matching leather pouch to store their precious inside of. Geographically challenged Android tablet lovers will also be able to pre-order the Tab 10.1 from Best Buy today (eventually, the pre-order button doesn’t currently work) and widespread US availability is still expected on June 17th. Pricing isn’t explicitly listed on Best Buy’s landing page, but we presume it’s the same as we’ve been told earlier: $499 for the 16GB or $599 for the 32GB WiFi-only versions. If you can’t live without some LTE goodness in your mobile life, Verizon’s also promised pre-orders for the 4G-capable Galaxy Tab 10.1 today, though that costs a far less palatable $530 (16GB) and $630 (32GB) on top of a two-year data contract.

[Thanks, Jack and Arturo]

Update: Best Buy has sorted out its systems and all four WiFi variants (black or white, with 16GB or 32GB storage) are up for pre-order.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 on sale at NYC Best Buy today, pre-orders now open originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Jun 2011 05:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung shows affection to CyanogenMod, gives its devs a free Galaxy S II (update)

Let’s see if we’re grokking this: Samsung is not only telling the dev community it’s okay to place custom ROMs on its flagship device, it’s actually encouraging the practice by handing out free phones? Atinm, the developer responsible for prepping CyanogenMod on the Captivate and Vibrant, took to Twitter to praise the manufacturer for sending him a free Galaxy S II. From the looks of it, Samsung sent the phone to a select number of devs intent on building an official release of CM7 for the GSII. Unlocking bootloaders has already become the new fancy with manufacturers like HTC, Motorola, and Sony Ericsson jumping on the bandwagon, but this is the first time we’ve heard of a company doling out free devices to the custom ROM community. Does this mean that, instead of enforcing TouchWiz with an iron fist, Samsung is looking at how this practice could actually benefit consumers? We doubt this will be the case for all of the company’s future Android phones, but wouldn’t you love to live in a world where it was?

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Update: As it turns out, this was not the first time a free device has been handed out to the CyanogenMod community. It’s been done at least once before, when T-Mobile gave out a G-Slate in April.

Samsung shows affection to CyanogenMod, gives its devs a free Galaxy S II (update) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Jun 2011 02:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Courts Modders With Free Smartphones

CyanogenMod developers received free Samsung Galaxy S II phones, the successors to its highly successful Galaxy S (pictured above). Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

There’s no sure-fire way to silence software modders, so you might as well work with them. That seems to be the idea Samsung had with a group of phone hackers.

Four members of the CyanogenMod software team on Monday received Galaxy S II smartphones in the mail, direct from the company at no charge.

“All four of us involved in the porting process for the first Galaxy S received a new phone,” CyanogenMod team member Kolja Dummann told Wired.com in an interview. “After the [Galaxy S II] launched in Europe, we just asked about getting some of those phones. Samsung agreed.”

The phones came with one simple directive — get CyanogenMod working on the phone.

Essentially, CyanogenMod replaces the stock operating system on your Android phone with a customized build, letting you make tweaks and adjustments that you wouldn’t have otherwise been able to before. Customizations range from changing visual details — like slapping a sleek new uniform skins onto the user interface — to under-the-hood boosts like overclocking the phone’s CPU.

It’s uncommon for a device manufacturer to hand phones over to a community of developers like CyanogenMod. Companies like Motorola and HTC are known to ship devices with locked bootloaders, essentially restricting a user’s ability to customize his or her phone. While frustrating to budding modders, locking the phone down also prohibits a number of headaches on the carriers’ end — like the phone returns that come from users screwing up their devices in attempts to modify them.

“I’ve never heard of vendors giving phones to CyanogenMod or other community developers,” Dummann said. The CyanogenMod development team typically relies on donations from the developer community at large, or purchasing the devices themselves.

Samsung’s gesture is one of many recent manufacturer moves to court the developer community. Last week, HTC announced it would no longer ship smartphones with locked bootloaders. Motorola has also flirted with the idea of future unlocked device releases, though the developer community remains skeptical.

Phone makers on other platforms are starting to follow suit as well. Earlier this year, Microsoft reportedly met with a group of Windows Phone 7 hackers to see how the company could better support “homebrew” apps (or third-party applications that don’t require Microsoft’s approval).

Of course, hackers and phone modification junkies make up a small contingent of total phone purchases on the market. Cyanogen’s estimated user base floats somewhere in the 500,000 range. According to Android product management director Hugo Barra, the company has activated over 100 million Android devices since the platform’s launch. So catering to the modding community isn’t a straightforward play for marketshare by the manufacturers.

It will help, however, to silence the vocal minority of users upset with receiving locked down phones. After Motorola’s Atrix was released with a locked bootloader, modders started an online campaign against the company’s locked-down policy, often bombarding Moto’s Facebook page with less-than-flattering comments.

If nothing else, Samsung’s actions may bolster support from the developer community who in turn can influence others to buy the company’s phones.

Samsung did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The plan seems to be working on at least one of the developers who received a free phone.

“You will not hear me bad-mouth Samsung again,” CyanogenMod team member Atinm tweeted on Monday.


Samsung Courts Modder Community With Free Smartphones

CyanogenMod developers received free Samsung Galaxy S II phones, the successors to its highly successful Galaxy S (pictured above). Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

In an attempt to woo its Android developer base, Samsung recently shipped a number of its smartphones to members of a highly popular phone modification group.

On Monday, four members of the CyanogenMod software team received Galaxy S II smartphones in the mail, direct from the company at no charge.

“All four of us involved in the porting process for the first Galaxy S received a new phone,” CyanogenMod team member Kolja Dummann told Wired.com in an interview. “After the [Galaxy S II] launched in Europe, we just asked about getting some of those phones. Samsung agreed.”

The phones came with one simple directive — get CyanogenMod working on the phone.

Essentially, CyanogenMod replaces the stock operating system on your Android phone with a customized build, letting you make tweaks and adjustments that you wouldn’t have otherwise been able to before. Customizations range from changing visual details — like slapping a sleek new uniform skins onto the user interface — to under-the-hood boosts like overclocking the phone’s CPU.

It’s uncommon for a device manufacturer to hand phones over to a community of developers like CyanogenMod. Companies like Motorola and HTC are known to ship devices with locked bootloaders, essentially restricting a user’s ability to customize his or her phone. While frustrating to budding modders, locking the phone down also prohibits a number of headaches on the carriers’ end — like the phone returns that come from users screwing up their devices in attempts to modify them.

“I’ve never heard of vendors giving phones to CyanogenMod or other community developers,” Dummann said. The CyanogenMod development team typically relies on donations from the developer community at large, or purchasing the devices themselves.

Samsung’s gesture is one of many recent manufacturer moves to court the developer community. Last week, HTC announced it would no longer ship smartphones with locked bootloaders. Motorola has also flirted with the idea of future unlocked device releases, though the developer community remains skeptical.

Of course, hackers and phone modification junkies make up a small contingent of total phone purchases on the market. Cyanogen’s estimated user base floats somewhere in the 500,000 range. According to Android product management director Hugo Barra, the company has activated over 100 million Android devices since the platform’s launch. So catering to the modding community isn’t a straightforward play for marketshare by the manufacturers.

It will help, however, to silence the vocal minority of users upset with receiving locked down phones. After Motorola’s Atrix was released with a locked bootloader, modders started an online campaign against the company’s locked-down policy, often bombarding Moto’s Facebook page with less-than-flattering comments.

If nothing else, Samsung’s actions may bolster support from the developer community who in turn can influence others to buy the company’s phones.

Samsung did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The plan seems to be working on at least one of the developers who received a free phone.

“You will not hear me bad-mouth Samsung again,” CyanogenMod team member Atinm tweeted on Monday.