Hitachi and Toshiba subpoenaed in DOJ optical drive price fixing probe

We kinda knew that there couldn’t be any antitrust smoke without the fire of market collusion, and sure enough, Sony Optiarc has been joined on the naughty step by Hitachi-LG Data Storage and Toshiba Samsung Storage Technology Corp. As the names should tell you, these are joint ventures involving some of the world’s biggest electronics manufacturers, whose American optical drive divisions appear to be under suspicion of fixing prices. We’d have expected Hitachi and LG to wise up after paying out fines for LCD price fixing recently, but when you look at Hitachi’s stock trading up after this news — with traders confident any forthcoming fines will be too small to dent the company’s bottom line — maybe “by hook or by crook” is actually a viable business plan?

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Hitachi and Toshiba subpoenaed in DOJ optical drive price fixing probe originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Oct 2009 05:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba’s BDX2000 Blu-ray deck hits Best Buy for $199, sour grapes also on sale

Man, poor Toshiba. The company’s already sucked up its pride and started putting Blu-ray drives in its laptops, but here’s its first stab at a proper standalone player, the BDX2000, on Best Buy shelves a bit early for $199 — or $50 less than its announced price. Sure, that makes sense given the falling prices of Blu-ray decks as the holidays approach, but even at that price it’s not super competitive with the slew of other decks out there that can do Netflix streaming. We’ll see if Tosh’s next efforts are a little more interesting than this, or if this is just more heartbreak than its worth.

[Thanks, Alex]

Continue reading Toshiba’s BDX2000 Blu-ray deck hits Best Buy for $199, sour grapes also on sale

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Toshiba’s BDX2000 Blu-ray deck hits Best Buy for $199, sour grapes also on sale originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Oct 2009 20:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba Dynario fuel-cell: the battery revolution begins October 29th

We can hardly believe it but the day has finally arrived: Toshiba just launched the first Dynario fuel-cell for portable consumer electronics. That’s right, the long promised and highly anticipated direct methanol fuel-cell (DMFC) with dedicated fuel cartridge for on-the-go refueling will go on sale October 29th in Japan for ¥29,800 (about $328) plus another ¥3,150 (about $34) for a set of five, 50ml fuel cartridges. Dynario takes about 20 seconds to fill its 14ml fuel tank with an injection of a concentrated methanol solution at which point it’s ready to charge USB-connected devices. Dynario’s hybrid structure uses a lithium-ion battery to store enough electricity to charge two typical cellphones, according to Tosh. That works out to be about $1 per recharge, if our calculations are correct, based on the fuel costs alone. We assume the battery can be charged via wall socket power too but this isn’t explicitly stated in the press release. The first run consists of only 3,000 units after which Toshiba will gauge consumer reaction before extending the launch outside of Japan. Boy oh boy, a new age in portability has begun.

Toshiba Dynario fuel-cell: the battery revolution begins October 29th originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Oct 2009 01:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Acer fulfills prophecy, overtakes Dell as number two PC maker worldwide (update)

As if on cue, here’s some new data research firm Gartner lending credence to Lanci’s boasting. Looks like Acer has leapfrogged over Dell for the number two spot in global market share for the third quarter of 2009, from 12.5 to 15.4 percent of the Big Pie Chart[TM]. Meanwhile Dell is just below at 12.8 percent, and HP is sitting happily atop with a 19.9 percent ownership.

Update: Let us adjust our glasses a bit. According to the charts, Acer is number two in worldwide PC sales, not in US as this previously reported. Stateside, the company is sitting at number three at 13.9 percent, behind HP (25.7 percent) and Dell (26.2 percent). Apologies for the confusion, the person responsible for eyesight has been subsequently sacked, the person responsible for the sacking has been sacked, etc.

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Acer fulfills prophecy, overtakes Dell as number two PC maker worldwide (update) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Oct 2009 20:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba announces touchscreen notebooks, netbooks for Windows 7 launch

Toshiba’s just announced a couple new lappies — and a whole host of refreshes — in anticipation of the Windows 7 launch later this month. The big news here is definitely the touchscreen models: The Satellite U505 (due out November 1) is a 13.3-inch, 5 lb device with an MSRP of $1,049.99, while the Satellite M505 (street date October 22) has 14.4-inches of real estate and an MSRP of $949.99. Both come with the touch-ready LifeSpace software package that includes Bulletin Board (some sort of organizer with to-do lists, calendars and the like), and ReelTime, which apparently “helps you find files based on when they were opened using a visual history.” Tosh is promising to ship Windows 7 devices with minimal software running in the background — which is important if you want to retain performance increases that the new OS might provide over Vista.

Also included in this batch of lappies are new Satellite A500s (optional Blu-ray, Intel Core 2 Duo or AMD Turion II Ultra CPU, discrete graphics options, a 16-inch HD Edge-to-Edge display on select models, starts at $589.99), Satellite L500 Series (displays ranging from 14 to 17.3-inch, Turion II and Athlon II CPU, hard drives up to 500GB, starting prices range from $504.99 to $579.99), Satellite P500 Series (18.4-inch HD TruBrite display, Intel Core 2 Duo or AMD Turion II processors, Blu-ray in some models, starting at $799.99), Satellite L500 Series (up to 17.3-inch display, up to 500GB HDD, and various processor options, starting at $504.99), the Qosmio X505 with an 18.4-inch display and optional 64GB SSD / 320GB HDD dual-drive configuration priced at $1,899.99, and finally the mini NB205, a 10.1-inch netbook with a nine hour battery life, up to 250GB HDD, and five fabulous finishes including Sable Brown, Frost White, Indigo Blue, Posh Pink and Onyx Black (starting at $399.99). PR after the break.

[Via Hot Hardware]

Read – The new Satellite U500 Series
Read – The new Satellite M500 Series
Read – The new Satellite A500 Series
Read – The new Satellite P500 Series
Read – The new Satellite L500 Series
Read – The new Qosmio X500 Series
Read – The new mini NB200 Series

Continue reading Toshiba announces touchscreen notebooks, netbooks for Windows 7 launch

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Toshiba announces touchscreen notebooks, netbooks for Windows 7 launch originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Oct 2009 14:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba rolls out Dynabook MX/43, MX/33 thin-and-lights for Japan

Toshiba certainly isn’t hurting for laptops big or small these days, but it looks like it’s nonetheless decided to mix things up a bit further with two new CULV models: the 13.3-inch MX/43 and 11.6-inch MX/33. Of course, both come with a few trade-offs to performance for that added portability, but you’ll get a slightly better balance with the MX/43, which packs a Core 2 Duo SU9400 processor, 2GB of RAM (up to 8GB), a 250GB hard drive, a promised 10.5 hours of battery life, and Windows 7 Home Premium for an OS. The MX/33, on the other hand, dials things back with a 1.3GHz Celeron 743 processor and a smaller battery, among other similar specs, although you can get it in you choice of three different colors. No word on a release over here, but folks in Japan will be able to pick this one up on (you guessed it) October 22nd.

[Via Engadget Japanese]

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Toshiba rolls out Dynabook MX/43, MX/33 thin-and-lights for Japan originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Oct 2009 14:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba finally weds SpursEngine and Blu-ray in 18.4-inch Qosmio G60 laptop

Toshiba’s beastly Dynabook was last updated in April, but at the time, Toshiba was still walking around with its chin up and refusing to integrate Blu-ray technology into its products. Now, however, the 18.4-inch Qosmio G60 (Dynabook MX in overseas markets) is finally bringing together a Cell-based SpursEngine HD video co-processor with a Blu-ray drive, ensuring oodles of movie watching bliss for those mettlesome enough to lug this thing around. Other specs include a 2.53GHz Core 2 Duo P8700 CPU, NVIDIA GeForce GT 230M GPU, 500GB hard drive, 4GB of RAM, twin TV tuners, Windows 7 Home Premium and a 1080p panel. If all goes well, it’ll ship next month (at least in Japan) for around ¥220,000 ($2,457), though your guess is as good as ours on a US release.

[Via Engadget Japanese]

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Toshiba finally weds SpursEngine and Blu-ray in 18.4-inch Qosmio G60 laptop originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Oct 2009 13:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba 43nm MLC NAND-based SSDs spotted in retail

If you were lusting after those 43nm drives that Toshiba recently started shipping to OEMs, we found a source for you. If you’re in Japan (or comfortable ordering from Japan) ioPLAZA has the 256GB (2.5-inch) SSDs listed for ¥85,800 (about $970). Intrigued? We bet you are. Orders placed now ship later this month. Hit the read link to see for yourself.

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Toshiba 43nm MLC NAND-based SSDs spotted in retail originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Oct 2009 00:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba’s DMFC fuel cell seen ‘powering phones’ at CEATEC (video)

Toshiba has been promising the world a healthy dose of fuel cell chargers for what feels like ages now, with its most recent swearing happening just two months ago. Here at CEATEC, the company’s wares were being trumpeted by KDDI. We witnessed a standard handset have its stock battery removed and replaced with an admittedly bulky fuel cell container. The booth attendant proudly juiced up the cell, clipped it onto the phone’s rear and mashed the power button. Within seconds, the device booted up normally, and a handy level indicator on the charger itself kept us in the know on how much life was left. Or — you know — maybe the whole thing was just an elaborate hoax to fool English-speaking media into thinking this stuff was really nearing its commercial release. Have a look at a brief video just beyond the break, but try not to get your hopes up too high. No need in having your heart broken again unnecessarily.

Continue reading Toshiba’s DMFC fuel cell seen ‘powering phones’ at CEATEC (video)

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Toshiba’s DMFC fuel cell seen ‘powering phones’ at CEATEC (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Oct 2009 17:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft Announces Full Array of Windows Mobile 6.5 Phones

tilt.gifWith the retail launch of Windows Mobile 6.5 this morning, Microsoft announced a wide array of phones running their new OS.

We have hands-ons, previews or reviews of three of the four US phones: the HTC Tilt 2, HTC Pure, and HTC Imagio. The fourth US phone, the Samsung Intrepid, will be coming to Sprint on Sunday, October 11 for $149.99 with a two-year contract and $100 mail-in rebate.

But the real Windows Mobile activity, it seems, is going on outside the US. Here’s what foreigners get:

  • Acer beTouch E100, beTouch E101, beTouch E200 and Acer neoTouch
  • Garmin-Asus nuvifone M20
  • HTC Touch2, HD2, MDA Vario V, and MDA Compact V
  • LG GM550 and GM750
  • Samsung Omnia, Omnia II, Omnia PRO (three different models), and Omnia LITE
  • TMN Bluebelt 2 and Silverbelt
  • Toshiba TG01 W
  • ZTE X60

Now, that isn’t quite as bad as it seems for Americans. Some of those models, such as the Samsung Omnia II, are slated to come here eventually, and the HTC MDA Vario V and Compact V are better known here as the Tilt 2 and Pure. But it’s a big world, and as usual, we’re only a small part of it.