Report: iPod Touch Getting Camera and Mic in Next Few Months

OK, so the latest report that the next generation iPod Touch is getting a camera and microphone doesn’t seem to be any more legitimate those all of those that proceeded it, beyond the fact that Wired is reporting that “[a] well-connected source tells us those rumors are on the money, and that Apple’s factories in China are already manufacturing iPod Touch models with integrated cameras and microphones.” Oh well, it’s just more fuel for this already steady-burning fire.

According to said well-connected source, the digital audio player is set to go on sale “in two to three months.” The most important aspect of these new features are their ability to turn the Touch into a nice little VoIP device every time the user is around a decent open Wi-Fi connection.

AT&T? Where we’re going, we don’t need AT&T.

MoGo Talk intros Bluetooth headset for iPhone, everyone else

At this point, Bluetooth headsets are pretty played, but it’s some kind of thrilling to see at least one company keeping things interesting. Newton Peripherals is that very outfit, today introducing a pair of new devices that are definitely unique in a sea of me-too ear pieces. First up is the MoGo Talk for iPhone, which adheres to the back of your handset and keeps the headset nearby at all times — think LG’s Decoy, but a tad less elegant. Next up is the MoGo Talk for VoIP & Skype (our personal favorite), which slides inconspicuously into one’s ExpressCard slot in order to a) stay out of harm’s way and b) charge when not in use. Too bad Apple decided that these slots were practically unwanted in its newest 13- and 15-inch MacBook Pros, huh? Both devices can be pre-ordered right now for $99 apiece, with shipments expected to begin next month.

[Via HotHardware]

Read – MoGo Talk for iPhone
Read – MoGo Talk for VoIP and Skype

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MoGo Talk intros Bluetooth headset for iPhone, everyone else originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Jul 2009 09:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TechSaver: Olympus Camera, Skype Adapter, Jenson Music System

Olympus1050.jpg

Apparently I have something in common with the iPhone: I also shut down in the summer heat.

1. Sing it with me: “I want to be/ Under the sea/ With a waterproof Olympus camera.” I’m going to have to work on that last bit. Anyhoo, Adorama is practically giving away the Olympus 1050 digital camera for $149 with free shipping. This classy compact camera delivers 10.1 megapixels and a 3X optical zoom, and it’s waterproof up to 10 feet. So take it snorkeling with no worries. Take it with you in the pool. Take those secret bathtub pics you’ve been waiting to try. This Olympus will still work perfectly when it’s out of the water.

2. Here’s a clever device for people who want to use Skype at home but aren’t crazy about wearing a headset. The D-Link DPH-50U IP Telephone Adapter lets you use your exiting corded or cordless home phone with Skype. Your phone will be able to receive both standard and Skype calls. You can even forward Skype calls to your cell phone when you leave home. How does it do all this? Magic. Buy.com has it for $8.99 after $10 mail-in rebate, with free shipping.

3. It’s a whole compact stereo system for $34.98 (with free shipping). That’s the NewEgg.com price for the Jensen Docking Digital Music System, which plays and charges your iPod, and also includes speakers, an AM/FM radio, and an alarm clock.

Engadget’s recession antidote: win a FREETALK headset and Skype voucher!

This whole global economic crisis, and its resulting massive loss of jobs got us thinking. We here at Engadget didn’t want to stand helplessly by, announcing every new round of misery without giving anything back — so we decided to take the opportunity to spread a little positivity. We’ll be handing out a new gadget every day (except for weekends) to lucky readers until we run out of stuff / companies stop sending things. Today we’ve got a FREETALK Wireless Stereo Headset along with a Skype voucher that’ll net you free calls for three whole months. The World Plan voucher will link you up anywhere in the world that Skype supports, and coming off of a trip to Central America, we can certainly say it comes in handy (and works well, to boot). Read the rules below (no skimming — we’re omniscient and can tell when you’ve skimmed) and get commenting!

Major thanks to Skype for the goods!

The rules:

  • Leave a comment below. Any comment will do, but if you want to share your proposal for “fixing” the world economy, that’d be sweet too.
  • You may only enter this specific giveaway once. If you enter this giveaway more than once you’ll be automatically disqualified, etc. (Yes, we have robots that thoroughly check to ensure fairness.)
  • If you enter more than once, only activate one comment. This is pretty self explanatory. Just be careful and you’ll be fine.
  • Contest is open to anyone in the 50 States, 18 or older! Sorry, we don’t make this rule (we hate excluding anyone), so be mad at our lawyers and contest laws if you have to be mad.
  • Winner will be chosen randomly. The winner will receive one FREETALK Wireless Stereo Headset along with a Skype voucher that’ll net you free calls for three whole months.
  • If you are chosen, you will be notified by email. Winners must respond within three days of the end of the contest. If you do not respond within that period, another winner will be chosen.
  • Entries can be submitted until Tuesday, June 23rd, 11:59PM ET. Good luck!
  • Full rules can be found here.

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Engadget’s recession antidote: win a FREETALK headset and Skype voucher! originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Jun 2009 12:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Virgin America lights up entire fleet with in-flight WiFi

Hold up AirTran — not so fast with those wild claims of in-flight WiFi superiority. If you’ll recall, the aforesaid airline proclaimed that it would soon be the first to have its entire fleet doused with Gogo, but it looks like Virgin America has swept in to claim that title. We should point out just how unfair the challenge is, though: VA has 28 planes as of today, whereas AirTran has 136. At any rate, we’re still thrilled to see airlines duking it out in order to get more WiFi to more fliers, and we fully anticipate that every new aircraft added to Virgin America’s fleet will be lit from day one. Now, if only they’d allow Skype functionality for more than just an Oprah demonstration, we’d really be playing with fire.

[Via Gadling]

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Virgin America lights up entire fleet with in-flight WiFi originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 May 2009 17:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How to Hack the iPhone to Use SlingPlayer and Skype Over 3G

AT&T’s impotent network—and good ol’ fashioned greed make it do douchey things sometimes, like lock down SlingPlayer and Skype for the iPhone. But you can unlock their true 3G powers.

Step 1: Free Your Phone
There are lots of reasons to jailbreak your phone. Skype and SlingPlayer over 3G is just one of them. Luckily, we’ve got a comprehensive guide to easily jailbreak your iPhone 3G (or iPod touch). Follow it.

Step 2: Trick Your Phone
Welcome back! If you’re just interested in using Skype, SlingPlayer and Fring’s VoIP over 3G we’re already at the end—search for Tricker Three3G in Cydia, install it, and you’re good to go. SlingPlayer, Skype and Fring will think they’re running on Wi-Fi, no matter what connection you’re on. Right now, Tricker Three3G only fools those three apps. There’s a more involved process if you want to fool other apps too.

Step 2b: The Long Way
In Cydia, the app you want to search for and install is VoIPover3G, which tricks any app into thinking a 3G connection is actually Wi-Fi. You also need to grab OpenSSH or DiskAid and the latest version of MobileSubstrate. From there, you have to tap into phone and install some custom text files for every app that you want VoIPover3G to trick. But you do have the power to trick any app with it, unlike Tricker ThreeG. If you’re completely new to the game, I’d start with this guide to getting Skype to work over 3G and then just substitute the final steps for the relevant Sling parts from this guide. They’re laid out pretty well, so fairly easy to follow. [ModMyi, iHackintosh, iPhone Download Blog]

3 UK promises free mobile Skype calls until the end of time

While most carriers are having quite a tift about Skype intruding on their territory, UK-based 3 is letting customers use unlimited Skype-to-Skype calls and messages without any extra fees. The new rules start May 1st for any compatible 3 headset, and later this summer it’ll expand to every 3G phone on the network. The company says it sees the initiative as a win to everyone, not just the customers, as the hope is it’ll lessen calls to people on other networks, which carries a hefty Mobile Termination Rate fee. Whatever the reasons, we’re just happy to see at least one company embracing the VoIP service. We (and Nokia) can only hope this move is somehow contagious.

[Via GigaOM]

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3 UK promises free mobile Skype calls until the end of time originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 25 Apr 2009 19:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dealzmodo Hack: Don’t Give Up On Your Symbian Phone

Symbian is the planet’s most popular smartphone OS—everywhere except the US, that is. It’s also arguably the most boring. In this last, most urgent installment of the cellphone revitalization series, we alleviate your Symbian shame.

Symbian’s dominance isn’t evident here in the US, as it’s driven by smartphones—like Nokia’s N series or Sony Ericsson’s P Series—that don’t really have much of a market/mindshare outside of Europe. We’ve even gone so far as to declare it too marginal to include in our smartphone OS guide.

But there are still plenty of UIQ and S60 phones around, and they all suffer from the same sense of staleness—a stagnation that’s obvious, whether it’s because of Symbian’s global popularity and fragmented nature or despite it. So what do you do to shake the feeling that you’re toting a last-gen device? Try this:

Get a new browser
Oddly enough, lots of Symbian phones actually ship with not-so-bad browsers, like S60’s, which is based on WebKit just like Mobile Safari and Mobile Chrome. Unfortunately, most of these phones also ship without touchscreens, and depend on a clunky d-pad navigation system. This makes panning around fully-rendered pages a bit of a pain—a problem not helped by the browser’s often slow performance. Luckily, there are plenty of alternatives.

Opera Mobile/Mini: Opera has made an appearance in every last one of my smartphone revival stories, and with good reason. Each version offers its own advantage for Symbian: Opera Mobile brings fast-ish full-page rendering with inertial scrolling—only really a boon if you’re lucky enough to have a touchscreen handset like the XpressMusic 5900. The newer 9.5 beta, complete with Google Gears support, can be had for UIQ phones, but S60 handsets will have to settle for 8.65. Opera Mini, a Java app, will work on virtually any phone. It’s not the prettiest browser, but server-side data compression and clever formatting tricks make it a good fit for smaller-screened Symbian hardware. Bolt is another Java-based browser in the same lightweight, data-conscious vein, and it matches Opera’s app feature for feature. You know, six of one…

Skyfire: This surprising little browser takes the Opera Mini/Bolt rationale a little further, running everything through server-side compression, including Flash video. What does that mean, in a word? Hulu. Unfortunately support is limited to Nokia N and E series phones.

Work On Your Communication Skills
Out of the box, most Symbian phones take you as far as emailing. With a few downloads, though, you’ll be privy to the same range of messaging capabilities as your smug iPhone and BlackBerry-toting friends, and then some.

Fring: This isn’t your locked down, Wi-Fi tethered iPhone Fring. No, this is the real deal: Multiprotocol IMing, VoIP over 3G and Wi-Fi and most importantly, background processing. Skype is supported, sans video.

Truphone: A dedicated VoIP app that integrates rather seamlessly with your S60 handset, Truphone can save you a pretty penny on international, long-distance and even in-plan calls. By routing calls through Truphone’s network over Wi-Fi or a cell data connection, Truphone can connect you to other users for free, and connect international calls for a few cents a minute. Other perks include voicemail-to-email forwarding and Google Talk support, but discounted calls are the star of the show here.

Agile Messenger: It may lack the VoIP accouterments of the previously mentioned apps, but for straight up instant messaging you really can’t beat it. All the big protocols are here, accessible through the same simple interface. You can send videos and voice messages, but not engage in full conversations—this app is about messaging, and message it does.

And All The Rest
Once you’ve updated your browser and messaging software, you’ve edged much closer to a modern smartphone experience. Now to fill in the blanks:

Google Maps: Google’s superb maps app is as good here as it is anywhere else, with GPS integration, local search and a clean, intuitive interface. Perhaps most importantly, it’s not just for fingers; Google Maps is well-suited to d-pad navigation.

JoikuSpot Lite: It’s tethering+1: Any Wi-Fi-equipped S60 3rd Edition phone can operate as an access point with JoikuSpot. The Lite version is free, and adequate.

Qik: Qik is a cool app that can only be described in ways that sound utterly stupid. Lifecasting? Live vlogging? Either way, with the right phone, Symbian can do it well.

Nokia has some ongoing beta projects to check out, and a few of them are worthwhile. SportsTracker feeds a GPS-tracked record of your run or bike rides to a handy web interface. WidSets is a widget dashboard for a rich variety of web apps. ShareOnline provides basic portals for media uploads, whether it be photo, video or audio content.

And finally, we have Mobbler. A lovely little Last.fm radio client, Mobbler is an iffy addition to this list because Last.fm is cutting off third-party radio support at some point in the near future, so it probably won’t work for long. But it’s good, so use it while you still can.

If what you see so far isn’t overly heartening, hold on: The Ovi App Store for S40 and S60 is on its way, hopefully in May. Symbian’s laissez-faire take on the App Store, it promises a slew of applications and media downloads, installable through a handset client. This could end up two ways: As a consolidated Symbian app aggregator, collecting the above apps and others into an easy interface, or as an attraction for new developers, who’ll be drawn by the large audience and easy publishing features of the store. That latter scenario may be better, but neither is bad.

Dealzmodo Hacks are intended to help you sustain your crippling gadget addiction through tighter times. If you come across any on your own that are particularly useful, send it to our tips line (Subject: Dealzmodo Hack). Check back every other Thursday for free DIY tricks to breathe new life into hardware that you already own.

CTIA 2009: ATT Wireless OK With Skype, In The Future

AT&T is okay with VOIP over their wireless network. No, not their current wireless network – their future LTE network. Execs gave a picture of the network future at a Q&A session today that showed connections getting really fast, then going all data.

The nation’s number-two carrier is currently upgrading their network to HSDPA 7.2, which will up to double the speed of their current high-speed network HSDPA 3.6. Realistically, that means we’re looking at about 1.5 mbits/sec on average. After that, though, they’re going to 14.4 and even HSDPA Release 7, which offers maximum speeds of 20 Mbits/sec, AT&T Mobility CEO Ralph de la Vega said.

“We’ve got an all-out assault to increase the bandwidth on the radio access network as well as on the backhaul,” de la Vega said.

That’s just the opening act, though. Just like Verizon Wireless, AT&T is prepping a next-generation LTE network. With LTE, everything becomes data; there are no circuit-switched voice calls. And once everything’s data, AT&T will become much more comfortable with VOIP systems like Skype, de la Vega implied. Right now AT&T disapproves of running VOIP applications like Skype for iPhone on their cellular network.

“It will be an environment where people just buy the amount of data they need. What rides on the data could be voice, and it could be whatever you want,” he said.

Skype for iPhone now live in US

It’s finally here, and even a few minutes early. Skype for iPhone is now available in the US iTunes store, free of charge. We’ve heard great thing from the folks in Japan who’ve been fiddling with it for the last twelve hours, and so far it’s sounding pretty good for us, too, with only minor hiccups. Not sure if it’s a glitch, but despite what we heard earlier, we seem to be able to dial out while on 3G and not over WiFi (at least running OS 3.0 beta). Hit up the read link for quickest route to the app store page, and let us know what you think. Betcha wish you could ditch that AT&T voice plan now, huh?

Update: We’re getting reports the app is crashing for jailbroken iPhones — and possibly non-jailbroken ones as well. We just got our first denial when dialing out over 3G via a popup notification, but it only happened once and we were back to old habits one call later. We did experience a brief period where no sound was coming through, but that might have something to do with using OS 3.0 and was remedied by restarting the phone.

Update 2: So far, it looks like dialing over 3G’s only working for those with OS 3.0 beta, but unfortunately all of us in that situation are now suffering from frequent crashes and loss of audio. Things seem to be going smoothly for those running the latest non-beta firmware, but the calls only work over WiFi. That said, when using the app as intended (non-beta firmware over WiFi), audio quality was surprisingly good, far better than any third party apps we’ve used.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in!]

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Skype for iPhone now live in US originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Mar 2009 23:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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