CrystalRoc Galaxy Tab: 5,700 Swarovski crystals, zero shame

We can only assume that Stuart Hughes will eventually one-up it with a gold-plated, diamond-encrusted model of its own but, for the time being, it looks like this new CrystalRoc Galaxy Tab is the most “exclusive” Android tablet around. While there’s no word on a price (we assume it’s on a need to know basis), CrystalRoc does proudly boast that the tablet packs 5,700 Swarosvski bright crystals, not to mention a custom logo to match. Head on past the break for a quick video, and look for this one to show up exclusively at Harrods in London on Monday, November 1st.

Continue reading CrystalRoc Galaxy Tab: 5,700 Swarovski crystals, zero shame

CrystalRoc Galaxy Tab: 5,700 Swarovski crystals, zero shame originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Oct 2010 15:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony earnings call entertains PlayStation Phone, reveals tablets are on the radar

Earnings calls aren’t usually that interesting, and that’s doubly true when trying to listen via official translators. Still, we couldn’t help but give an ear to Sony’s fiscals, and sure enough, someone asked about our (still real) PlayStation Phone leak. We’re not sure who answered since it’s through interpreter, either Executive VP / CFO Masaru Kato or Senior General Manager of Investor Relations Division Gen Tsuchikawa (we’re assuming the former).

Citing the aforementioned device, the curious party asked if such a product would come out of Sony or of Sony Ericsson, and no, it wasn’t a complete denial. Instead, we’re told just how such a device would happen, that a gaming phone would be planned and prototyped under the (recently restructured) Network Services umbrella. We’re also told how SCE’s move to Sony City headquarters now puts them closer to the planning and engineering group, meaning the company “can better incorporate all these capabilities better… so when the timing is right we can probably announce to you the new product we have.” Ericsson is later cited as a resource “on smartphone and for the games devices,” although this might be something peculiar with translation. Again, that’s far from a confirmation, but they’re certainly entertaining the notion in a very, very detailed response.

But that’s not all; there’s also apparently a tablet brewing in the background, one that would obviously fall somewhere in between PC and Sony Ericsson’s efforts. There isn’t much else said, but if you’re up for psychoanalyzing executive commentary, we’ve transcribed and placed the full quote after the break.

Continue reading Sony earnings call entertains PlayStation Phone, reveals tablets are on the radar

Sony earnings call entertains PlayStation Phone, reveals tablets are on the radar originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Oct 2010 14:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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WiFi-only Galaxy Tab stops by the FCC for tea

WiFi-only Galaxy Tab stops by the FCC for tea

$599 is a bit pricey for a seven-inch tablet, and while you can get $200 off that at some places by signing your life away to a data contract, that really isn’t any fun either. Thankfully Samsung appears to have another option with what looks to be the $499, WiFi-only model that showed up in a Best Buy flier earlier this week. That version has now been cleared by the FCC, indeed with only tests for 802.11 and Bluetooth wireless. The absence of 3G looks like it will save you $100 and obviously make the device a little less flexible than its bar-bearing brethren, but whether that modified cost:inconvenience ratio works out in your favor depends largely on the value of your income:restlessness factor.

WiFi-only Galaxy Tab stops by the FCC for tea originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Oct 2010 07:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS lays out Armdroid and Wintel tablet plans, we already feel overwhelmed

Leave it to ASUS to blast out an entire series of tablets that saturate the market in a single go. Many of these have already been mentioned, leaked, or even revealed at trade shows. But now we’ve got company president, Jerry Shen, filling in the launch details. Starting in December, ASUS will begin launching tablets in 7-, 9-, 10-, and 12-inch form factors. The 12-inch model will run Windows on an Intel chipset and be ready for purchase in January. Of interest, Shen says that Microsoft assisted in the development by making several enhancements to related technologies including touch control and the user interface. In March ASUS will launch a pair of 7 inchers (one with WiFi and the other with “3.5G” and phone functions) and another pair of 9-inch tablets (an ARM-based Tegra 2 model running Android and another Wintel tablet) with a price gap of $100. Of course, we’ve see a 10-incher around as well. That means we should see a grand total of five or six tablets from ASUS at CES in January. Fun.

ASUS lays out Armdroid and Wintel tablet plans, we already feel overwhelmed originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Oct 2010 05:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Galaxy Tab notches a fifth American carrier, coming to US Cellular

Milking this one for all it’s worth, eh Samsung? In what’s easily becoming the most drawn-out product launch in the history of product launches, Sammy is just now informing us of a fifth American carrier onboard to carry its Galaxy Tab: US Cellular. The regional CDMA operator has been chosen as the token ‘little guy’ to offer the 7-inch, Froyo-based tablet, but the company’s not saying when it will be arriving nor for how much. We’re guessing it’ll cost between $400 and $600 depending on the contract situation, but considering that every other carrier is getting it within a fortnight or so, those minor points should be clarified in short order.

Continue reading Samsung Galaxy Tab notches a fifth American carrier, coming to US Cellular

Samsung Galaxy Tab notches a fifth American carrier, coming to US Cellular originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Oct 2010 10:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Walgreens now selling $100 Maylong M-150 Android tablet

Kmart may have been the first department store to get into the cheap Android tablet business, but it looks like Walgreens isn’t about to stay out of this race to the bottom — it’s now offering the Maylong M-150 Android tablet for a mere $100. As you can see above, it’s pretty much the tablet of your dreams. Not only does it run Android, but it boasts a familiar iPad design and interface, plus Internet Explorer for a web browser (icon), and access to the always useful “App Market.” As for specs, it looks like you’ll get a 7-inch resistive touchscreen with an 800 x 480 resolution, a 400MHz VIA VM8505+ processor, built-in WiFi, an unspecified amount of built-in flash memory, and a microSD card slot or expansion. Head on past the break for a video, and hit up the source link below if you’re ready to place your order.

Continue reading Walgreens now selling $100 Maylong M-150 Android tablet

Walgreens now selling $100 Maylong M-150 Android tablet originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Oct 2010 17:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Android Tablet Hits Walgreens for $100

walgreens_tablet.jpg

Walgreens isn’t exactly known for being at the cutting edge of consumer technology. In fact, if you’ve been in a Walgreens lately, odds are that it involved picking up a prescription or buying some socks. That said, Maylong isn’t really know for, well, anything, so maybe this is a good match, after all.

The pharmacy chain has begun selling the Maylong 7-inch M-150 Universe Tablet, a low-priced Android tablet. The device features a seven inch 800 X 480 pixel color screen, 256MB of RAM, built-in 802.11b/g (cutting edge, eh?), built-in speakers, an unlisted amount of unboard flash memory, and runs an unknown version of Android. Consider those last two things wild cards.

Thrill to such features as,

  • Full Internet browsing capability
  • Experience YouTube at your fingertips
  • Download and play games
  • e-Book reader

All of this for the low, low price of $99.99 (plus shipping). Too good to not be terrible? Yeah, probably. But at least it kind of looks like an iPad…

JooJoo Tablet Promises To Be Back in a New Avatar

The ill-fated JooJoo tablet that debuted the same weekend as the Apple iPad had fallen off the radar for the last few months. But now the Singapore-based Garage Fusion Garage says it will be back next year with a new family of tablets based partly on the Android operating system.

“We want to say we are alive and looking at launching a new product in the first half of next year,” Chandrasekar Rathakrishnan, CEO of Fusion Garage told Wired.com. “We will build a new operating system based in part on Android and launch a family of tablets next year.”

The new tablet will support the Android app store, Android Market.

It’s an ambitious dream for a company that struggled to launch its first tablet, a 12.1-inch touchscreen device, and received a scathing review.

JooJoo started its life as CrunchPad, an ambitious project dreamed up by Web 2.0 chronicler Michael Arrington. Arrington posted a note on his TechCrunch blog outlining the idea for a $200 Linux-based tablet and partnered with Fusion Garage to launch the product.

A fallout between the two led to a lawsuit and Fusion Garage renamed the CrunchPad JooJoo. In March, it launched the JooJoo for $500. But since then buzz about the JooJoo hasn’t been encouraging. The device drew criticism for the bugs in its software and user interface. Documents filed for the JooJoo TechCrunch lawsuit showed just 90 people had pre-ordered the product.

Sales have been better than that, claims Rathakrishnan.

“If those were really the kind of numbers we saw, we wouldn’t be still here today talking about new products,” he says. Fusion Garage has raised an additional $10 million in funding, he claims.

Meanwhile, Fusion Garage has decided to drop the the JooJoo product line. The new tablets are likely to have a different brand.

Though the tablets will be based on Android, it won’t be entirely the Android OS and a skin on top of it, says Rathakrishnan. Fusion Garage plans to take “elements of Android” such as the base kernel and then build on it.

“Think of it as Mac using Unix BSD,” says Rathakrishnan. Fusion Garage now has about 40 employees.

Rathakrishnan says he has learnt from his mistakes.

“With JooJoo we launched prematurely,” he says. “We wanted to be there ahead of everyone else, and we were there before Apple but the product was entirely ready. When you push the envelope, you have more problems than you anticipate.”

Since JooJoo’s launch, Rathakrishnan says his team has worked to make the performance stable and iron out bugs. There’s still work to be done, he says. For instance, though the JooJoo supports Flash it is not GPU-accelerated so it is still slow.

As for upcoming Fusion Garage tablets, they will be ready to take on the big boys of consumer technology–Dell, Samsung, Research In Motion and Asus all of whom have promised or introduced new tablets– claims Rathakrishnan.

“We will differentiate ourselves by innovation,” he says. “What we will produce will redefine the category.”

The JooJoo may have been a bust but Fusion Garage isn’t willing yet to give up on its dreams.

See Also:

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


UI Centric cancels Macallan UI project for Windows 7 tablet

Waiting for a Windows 7 tablet PC with the page-turning Macallan UI on board? Don’t hold your breath, because UI Centric tells us the project has been canceled and isn’t talking details. Though a July press release claimed the touchscreen interface was slated for an undisclosed tablet in Q3 of this year, that document has since been pulled, so it’s probably safe to say that deal fell through. Still, the company informs us that there’s a new announcement on the way, and we hate to dismiss vaporware out of hand — if you’ve got a spare diving-class oxygen tank or three, perhaps you can afford to breathe in.

[Thanks, Brian]

UI Centric cancels Macallan UI project for Windows 7 tablet originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Oct 2010 13:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ExoPC Slate review

Of all the Atom-powered, Windows 7 tablets we’ve seen over the last year and a half (and boy have there been a lot!), the 11.6-inch ExoPC has been the one we’ve been waiting on. Sure, its specs are similar to the recently reviewed Tega v2 and CTL 2goPad — it’s also got a capacitive touchscreen, accelerometer, Atom Pinetrail processor and 2GB of RAM — but unlike the others the company has put some serious love into its Windows 7 software layer, which we’ve dubbed the Connect Four UI. ExoPC’s also preloaded the tablet with touch apps, built out its own app store and included a Broadcom Crystal HD accelerator to handle full 1080p video. You can clearly see why we’ve had high hopes for the ExoPC ever since we got to check it out at Computex, but does it live up to the promise and provide the more enhanced and finger-friendly Windows experience we’ve been looking for? And is the software stable and robust enough for the average consumer? We’ve spent the last week with the $599 tablet so read on to find out in our full review.

Gallery: ExoPC slate

Gallery: ExoPC apps

Continue reading ExoPC Slate review

ExoPC Slate review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Oct 2010 10:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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