LG Vu Plus coming to AT&T on June 6 for $150

So that Vu Plus we’d tipped for a June 6 release has just gone official, and needless to say, it’s not your daddy’s Vu. The most notable change is the addition of a landscape slider QWERTY keyboard, but one of the Vu’s hallmark’s — support for AT&T’s FLO-based Mobile TV service — carries over for $9.99 a month with a free 7-day trial subscription. It’s got a 3-inch capacitive touchscreen, 7.2Mbps HSDPA, a 3 megapixel autofocus cam with video recording, AT&T Video Share compatibility, and microSD expansion if the phone’s internal 50MB just aren’t cutting it. Look for it to hit shelves for $149.99 after a $50 mail-in rebate. Follow the break for the full release.

Continue reading LG Vu Plus coming to AT&T on June 6 for $150

LG Vu Plus coming to AT&T on June 6 for $150 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 May 2010 10:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG Fathom gets real with Windows Mobile 6.5.3 on Verizon

If you’re still hanging on to the hope that Windows Mobile is going to serve you just fine in the coming years, LG and Verizon have at least one more option for your phone needs — and it’s running 6.5.3, a first for a US carrier launch. Enter the LG Fathom, a 1GHz touchscreen device with a 3.2-inch screen, slide out QWERTY keyboard, WiFi, a microSD slot (for up to 16GB of storage), and a 3.2 megapixel camera. The device will be available for pre-orders on May 27th, with a street date of June 3rd, and will run you $149.99 after a two year contract and $100 mail-in rebate. If you want all the details, just check out the PR after the break.

Continue reading LG Fathom gets real with Windows Mobile 6.5.3 on Verizon

LG Fathom gets real with Windows Mobile 6.5.3 on Verizon originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 May 2010 09:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How to Use an iPad on (Almost) Any Data Plan in the World

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The iPad will be arriving at homes across the globe this Friday as Apple begins its international roll-out. Much has been made of AT&T’s excellent contract-free data plans in the United States, but is the rest of the world going to be so lucky? No. In some cases, you may be better off ignoring the iPad plans altogether and (literally) hacking together your own solution.

AT&T offers cheap chunks of data (250 MB for $15), or a truly unlimited plan for just $30 a month. By contrast, many carriers in other countries are up to the usual telco tricks and offering contract-only plans, or “unlimited” data plans which slow bandwidth to a trickle after just a couple of gigabytes. I got a 64-GB iPad 3G shipped in by esteemed Wired New York Bureau Chief John C Abell, and it arrived last week. Official iPad plans have been detailed here in Spain, but as they are crazy-expensive and also not yet available, I rolled my own.

03aufklebenTo do this, you’ll need to acquire a micro SIM that will fit in your iPad, or you can cut a regular mini SIM down to size. There are already several products on sale to help you do this, such as the SIMCut pictured right. This 5-pound kit consists of a pair of foil stickers that adhere to your existing SIM and have a clear window showing you exactly where to cut. Yes, cut! Most of the size difference is made up of plastic which is safe to trim away. The most important part is making sure you cut it so that the metal contacts line up with those inside the iPad.

You don’t need to get fancy. I just lined up the AT&T micro SiIM that came in my iPad with the contacts on a pre-pay Vodafone card, marked the lines with a sharp knife and then took to it with scissors. Thus trimmed, I slid it into the iPad in its little aluminum tray and it was recognized immediately. Next up, making it work:

In the United States, to sign up for data you just follow along inside the settings app, adding credit card details and picking your plan. Maybe, with the official international partners, this will happen elsewhere. For early-adopters and those who choose a different carrier, you’ll need to get a bit more nerdy. Don’t worry, though. It’s easy.

All you need once your card has been activated (the salesperson should do this in-store) is to open up the Cellular Data section in settings and add the APN, the password and the username. These are all standard on a per-country and carrier basis: You don’t have your own password. For example, Vodafone Spain uses these settings:

APN: airtelnet.es

Username: vodafone

Password: vodafone

Using those settings will get anything on the network, from an iPad to a MiFi (I have tried both). Why are the settings in the screenshot different? ITunes did it. A few days ago I was prompted to update my carrier settings while syncing with iTunes. Warily, I accepted and after a restart, the new settings were in place, my internet seemed faster and VodafoneES displayed properly in the menubar (previously it just said “voda…”).

It seems that Apple is rolling out settings ahead of the launch that that may perhaps be automatic. You’ll find an amazing resource that lists pretty much every carrier in the world, along with settings, on Ross Barkman’s GPRS Info Page.

And that’s it. It really was easy. Will I be switching to a proper iPad plan when my pre-paid moth runs out? I doubt it. I have to pay 50 pounds a month for this current data plan that gives me “unlimited” access without a contract. The iPad plan gives less data before you get slowed down and requires a contract. A contract without any subsidy on the hardware. No thanks.

SIMCut sticker kit [SIMCut]

Ross Barkman’s GPRS Info Page [Taniwha]

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FCC leaves out the ‘effective competition’ description for the wireless industry

Make of this what you will, but when the FCC recently released its report on the state of competition in the wireless industry, it left a few choice words out. Namely, it failed to describe the industry as having “effective competition” for the first time since 2002. The report — which covers the period of 2008 and part of 2009 — could signal the government is getting ready to regulate and impost policies to encourage and increase competition in the wireless industry. AT&T’s senior vice president of federal regulatory policy, Robert Quinn, said that the move toward more regulation is “unwarranted,” while Verizon’s Kathleen Grillo said that the “facts” have already shown that there is, in fact, enough competition in the industry. Regardless, the report actually fails to come to a conclusion on the whole matter, leaving the FCC’s options pretty open at this point, so we’re going to have to keep an eye on the boys.

FCC leaves out the ‘effective competition’ description for the wireless industry originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 May 2010 09:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung demos 19-inch transparent AMOLED display

We don’t know what kind of display-making genii Samsung has locked away in its R&D labs, but the Korean giant is once again demonstrating a world’s first. This time we’re looking at a 19-inch transparent AMOLED display, taking the technology up from the 14-inch model we saw live at CES in January. The company has now achieved a 30 percent transparency on its designs, and its ideas for how they may be used are fittingly futuristic. Samsung envisions storefront advertising, à la your favorite sci-fi movie, as well as HUDs for helmets and car windshields — maybe if TomTom can secure a supply of these screens, the dedicated GPS device can find a way to live on after all.

Samsung demos 19-inch transparent AMOLED display originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 May 2010 09:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Steve Jobs will be front and center at WWDC 2010 for keynote duties

Just in case you were wondering if Steve Jobs would manage to show up to WWDC 2010 and totally party on the Apple faithful… yes. As you would expect, Steve will be rocking the keynote address on Monday, June 7th at 10AM Pacific. Afterwards you’ll be wondering where you’re going to find the money for that new iPhone. Full PR after the break.

Continue reading Steve Jobs will be front and center at WWDC 2010 for keynote duties

Steve Jobs will be front and center at WWDC 2010 for keynote duties originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 May 2010 08:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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N-trig’s Digital Pencil plays pen and fingertip roles, claims mastery of both

It’s hard to justify rolling into summer school with just an electronic wooden ruler, but pairing that with one of N-trig‘s new Digital Pencils just seems like a match made in detention heaven. The company responsible for pushing out that snazzy DuoSense technology back in 2008 is hitting back with yet another digital writing instrument, with this particular one designed to work with multitouch devices. Being a part of the DuoSense family, the battery-powered device can actually act as either a fingertip (you know, for those capacitive screens) or a digitizer pen, enabling it to play nice with a smorgasbord of third-party peripherals. The company claims that the two-pronged approach will give users far more flexibility, and the DuoSense software identifies the position of the Pencil and the pressure level, removing the need for an excitation coil within the DuoSense digitizer. Curiously enough, there’s no public mention of a price, but we’re guessing it’ll sell for far more than you’re willing to pay here in just a few days.

Continue reading N-trig’s Digital Pencil plays pen and fingertip roles, claims mastery of both

N-trig’s Digital Pencil plays pen and fingertip roles, claims mastery of both originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 May 2010 08:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Home Made Coffee for the of Price Restaurant Coffee: Illy IperEspresso

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Capsule espresso machines have driven the price of proper home-made coffee down to (usually) under $100. The problem is we now have a razor-blade, or games-console model to deal with: the machines are dirt cheap, but you need to reload them with expensive (and environmentally nasty) capsules or pods. Illy, maker of some of the best espresso available, is in on the game, and has added a characteristically high price tag to the mix.

The new Illy Y1 iperEspresso Machine, from coffee-machine maker Francis Francis costs $125 and, like all such machines, uses disposable, pre-dosed and tamped capsules containing the ground coffee. The consistency of these factory-made plugs is what gives you a perfect cup every time. In this case, the hot water is pushed into the grounds at a pressure of 19 Bars, or 276 PSI, and despite the huge base just seven spent pods can be contained within before you need to clean up. Water capacity is 24-ounces.

And the capsules? When you buy the machine, you’ll also be signed up for a recurring monthly delivery of three packages of coffee. If bought separately, these cans cost $16 each for just 21 servings, or $0.76 per cup. To qualify for free shipping, you’ll need to spend over $75. That probably won’t be too hard.

As handsome as this machine is, I’ll stay away. My local bars all serve great espresso from real machines, made by people who know what they’re doing. A cup costs only €0.90 (just over a dollar), and I get to take a break instead of slurping at my desk.

Experience the next generation of espresso with iperEspresso [Illy via Uncrate]

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Seagate pairs 7200RPM HDD with 4GB of NAND in 2.5-inch Momentus XT hybrid drive

Just as we surmised, Seagate is taking the wraps off its new hybrid drive, with OEM shipments of the Momentus XT starting today. Hailed as the fastest 2.5-inch laptop drive on the planet, this here device marries a 7200RPM hard drive (250/320/500GB) with 4GB of SLC NAND flash memory and 32MB of cache, and the company’s Adaptive Memory technology allows it to store frequently used information on the latter for ultra-speedy access. It can boot up to 100 percent faster than a conventional 5400RPM hard drive, and thankfully for us all, it utilizes a standard 9.5mm-high form factor that the vast majority of laptops use. Seagate also affirms that the drive “operates independently of the operating system and the motherboard chipset,” but we’re going to hold tight until we see the first real benchmarks (it’ll soon be an option in ASUS’ ROG G73Jh gaming laptop) before getting all hyped up. In related news, the outfit also announced the world’s highest capacity 7200RPM drive at 750GB, with the Momentus 750GB boasting SATA 3Gbps support, an NCQ interface, 16MB of cache and “silent acoustics.” No price is mentioned, but you can bet a hefty premium will placed on something this capacious. The full presser, another image and a specs sheet awaits you beyond the break.

Update: The reviews are already pouring in, and at just $155 for the 500 gigger, it’s receiving a fair amount of praise.

Continue reading Seagate pairs 7200RPM HDD with 4GB of NAND in 2.5-inch Momentus XT hybrid drive

Seagate pairs 7200RPM HDD with 4GB of NAND in 2.5-inch Momentus XT hybrid drive originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 May 2010 08:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Seagate hybrid hard drive raises perfomance bar

Seagate unveils a new hybrid internal hard drive that offers SSD-like performance at a fraction of the cost.