LG commits to major smartphone, tablet, and smart TV investments for New Year’s resolution

LG’s set aside quite a big chunk of change — 21 trillion won (about $18 billion) — for investments next year, almost 12 percent higher than its 2010 allowance. And a good chunk of that, 14.2 trillion won, is going to electronics: smartphones, tablets, advanced TVs and components for 3DTVs, according to the Wall Street Journal. (The rest, if you’re curious, is going into medical products, electric vehicle batteries, and an assortment of other businesses.) True, LG’s position in the smartphone market isn’t quite what it wanted — its now-former CEO Nam Yong claimed responsibility and retired in September — but we’d be lying if we said we haven’t been smitten with its Optimus lineup of Android handsets lately, and already we’ve seen some impressive future devices. Now, those tablet investments… figure out an OS yet? Can we make suggestions?

LG commits to major smartphone, tablet, and smart TV investments for New Year’s resolution originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Dec 2010 11:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony says Google TV sales meeting expectations, TV division working more closely with Google than cellphone group

It’s been mostly bad news about content blocks for Google TV since the platform launched in late October, but it sounds like Sony’s staying optimistic: Hiroshi Yoshioka, head of the company’s TV division, told the New York Times that Sony’s Google TV sales have been “in line with expectations,” and that “it might take a little longer for users to really start having fun” with the new platform. What’s more, Yoshioka also said Sony’s TV group and Google collaborate more on Google TV devices than Sony Ericsson and Google do on Android phones, which sounds insane to us — but perhaps not entirely surprising, given that the Xperia X8 is only just getting Android 2.1.

Of course, all this cheerleading from Sony comes against the backdrop of Google asking TV manufacturers to delay several planned CES Google TV product introductions while it reworks the software and tries to negotiate with the networks on continued content blocks, so “expectations” could mean almost anything, really — especially since Yoshioka didn’t provide any hard Google TV sales numbers and later said that Sony’s TV business would fail to meet its targets and struggle to become profitable this year. Ouch. We’ve got a feeling we’ll be hearing more about all this at CES one way or another — stay tuned.

Sony says Google TV sales meeting expectations, TV division working more closely with Google than cellphone group originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Dec 2010 10:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CSIRO’s Ngara internet transmission project begins in Tasmania, shows hopes for rural broadband

Hard to say if you’re aware, but Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (best known ’round these parts at CSIRO) was the first to develop the WiFi transmission technologies that are widely used on Planet Earth today, and they’ve got stacks of infringement lawsuits to prove it. Now, the organization is testing out a radical new approach to solve the rural broadband problem, and rather than relying on newly opened spectrum or other forms of black magic, they’re simply tasking existing analog TV antennas to work a little overtime. Put simply, Ngara uses the broadcast towers that already exist in rural towns that receive television signals, and then with a new set-top box and a modified TV antenna, it’s able to funnel broadband internet into faraway homes. Recent tests in Tasmania — sections with higher populations of Devils than Earthlings — have shown the uplink working just fine, but they’re still a good ways out from getting data to download. Project manager David Robertson surmises that it’ll be around four years before the technology is ready for the commercial market, and you can bet your bottom (Australian) dollar that we’ll be counting down the days. And so will everyone else stuck in the Big Apple wondering why Jimmy McMillan didn’t get elected for mayor.

[Image courtesy of Geoff Ambler / CSIRO]

CSIRO’s Ngara internet transmission project begins in Tasmania, shows hopes for rural broadband originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Dec 2010 02:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Panasonic TV Records Straight to SD Card

We might still say we’re “taping” a TV show, but unless you’re my parents, who still watch old Star Trek: TNG episodes on VHS, then you will have thrown out your VCR years ago. But what if you want to record something, and you don’t have a TiVo?

Then you buy one of Panasonic’s Viera G3-series TVs, which lets you record direct to an SD card. The first set is the 42-inch TH-L42G3, and it will rip hi-def TV-shows to SD, SDHC or SDXC cards at up to 1920×1080 resolution at 24Mbps. A 64GB card will hold five hours’ worth of video.

Should $200 for a 64GB card be a little steep, there’s also a USB port so you can hook up a regular hard-drive — a less portable but probably more practical solution.

Otherwise, the TV sports all the usual modern niceties: two HDMI ports, Ethernet, an IPS, LED-backlit display for a wide viewing angle, and Panasonic’s own Viera-link, which lets you hook up compatible cameras to view slideshows and video directly.

The G3 TVs will ship to Japan February 18th 2011.

Oh, and if you are my parents, the Christmas parcel arrived, thanks. There had better be some chocolate in there, is all I’m saying.

Viera G3-series press release [Panasonic via Akihabara News]

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Hannspree Creates More Novelty TVs

Apple28TV.jpgIf you’ve ever seen an oddly designed LCD TV that looks like it would be at home in a child’s playroom, chances are it was designed by Hannspree. Surprisingly, the market for novelty TVs isn’t saturated and Hannspree is making more of them. The company just announced an apple-shaped 28-inch set and a basketball-shaped 28-inch set. These LCDs have a wide viewing angle, a 1920 x 1200 native resolution, a 16:9 aspect ratio, 2 HDMI inputs, and a 10,000:1 contrast ratio.

Hannspree has also just released a simple, sleek, 28-inch set with a piano-black bezel, and you can find it at BJs.com, CircuitCity.com, Costco.com, and TigerDirect.com. If you want one of the novelty shapes, however, look for a Hannspree retail store at Hannspree.com. They list for $499.99, so you’ll pay a little extra for that unusual shape.

Regulators push for tough conditions in Comcast / NBC deal, aim to protect internet video

Is it the deal that’ll never go through? Some might hope. For the better part of this year, Comcast has been jonesing to pick up a 51 percent stake in NBC Universal (for a cool $13.75 billion), but as you’d expect regulators have been poking and prodding the arrangement from just about every angle. The potential antitrust issues go on for miles, and now officials are paying particularly close attention to how the deal could shape the future of internet video. As you may or may not know, NBC holds a 32 percent stake in Hulu, and in theory, a Comcast buyout would enable it to limit access to other ISPs or force Comcast internet subscribers to also pay for a programming package in order to have access. A new AP report on the topic mentions that the US government is considering forcing Comcast to sell NBC’s Hulu stake as a stipulation for the deal to go through, and moreover, they may insist that Comcast provide online access to NBC Universal’s content library without a cable sub. Currently, Time Warner Cable requires users to sign up cable in order to access ESPN3 — a nasty, strong-arm tactic at its finest — and if the Fed gets its way, it could also set a new precedent for other operators. Needless to say, there’s quite a bit to be sorted before NBC bigwigs take on corner offices at Comcast, and there’s an awful lot at stake along the way.

Regulators push for tough conditions in Comcast / NBC deal, aim to protect internet video originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 18:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IBM’s Watson supercomputer will play Jeopardy! on these dates

What are February 14th, 15th, and 16th? We’ve known it was going to happen for a while, but now we know when to set our DVRs. A rack of servers — soaked with natural-language processing, armed with a battalion of esoteric pop culture knowledge, and “represented by a round avatar” — will face off against Jeopardy! millionaires Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter (both profiled in video after the break) for three days starting on Valentine’s Day 2011. We’re also hearing that Watson will sign autographs after it’s done decimating its opponents. It will then donate all its winnings to charity and spend the rest of its natural life dodging paparazzi on an undisclosed beach in the South Pacific.

[Photo from Ben Sisto’s flickr]

Continue reading IBM’s Watson supercomputer will play Jeopardy! on these dates

IBM’s Watson supercomputer will play Jeopardy! on these dates originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Dec 2010 14:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Freebox v6 Revolution set-top box brings calling, TV and gaming together

Pay-TV operators have been tossing out “quadruple play” bundles for the better part of three years now, but we dare say that none of ’em have come close to nailing it like this. France’s own Free, a well-known ISP in the nation, has just introduced the Freebox v6 Revolution, a newfangled set-top box designed by Philippe Starck and engineered to handle just about all of your home entertainment needs. It’s stuffed with 250GB of hard drive space, an internal 802.11n WiFi module, Blu-ray drive, inbuilt web browser and Intel’s Atom CE4100 media processor. It also ships with a motion-sensing remote, and in short, it’s designed to provide live / streaming television options, internet (fiber or DSL is supported), gaming (via a streaming service similar to OnLive) and at-home calling to boot. Free’s also planning to dabble in mobile telephony starting in 2012, hence the plans for a quadruple play offering in the not-too-distant future. We’re told that a joystick (presumably for getting your game on) is thrown in, as are a pair of powerline adapters in order to easily network it through your abode’s power network. The Revolution is up for pre-order now, and depending on how long you’ve had your current Free STB, it could cost as little as €59.99 or as much as €119.99. The “basic” Freebox service will run €29.99, and once Free goes mobile in 2012, you can add a mobile line for another €29.99.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Freebox v6 Revolution set-top box brings calling, TV and gaming together originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Dec 2010 08:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Shocker! Internet use now ties TV in time spent avoiding outdoor activity

Despite a huge dropoff in cable subscribers this year, Forrester Research’s 40,000-strong survey pegs consumer TV consumption at about 13 hours weekly, same as it ever was. But lo and behold, reported internet use has also risen to 13 hours weekly, a veritable tie to which we naturally reply, “what took it so long?” This number represents a 121 percent uptake in the past five years and attributes its success to multitaskers and those who are spending less time with radio, newspaper, and magazines — again, nothing too mind-blowing to our perception of reality. If the survey has revealed anything surprise to us, it’s that email is only used by 92 percent of those questioned, leaving at least eight percent classically trained in case the post-apocalyptic world of Kevin Costner’s The Postman ever becomes reality.

[Image Credit: ICHC]

Shocker! Internet use now ties TV in time spent avoiding outdoor activity originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Dec 2010 19:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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PS3 to start streaming ITV and Channel 4 content in the UK this week

Our British mates aboard the VOD ship may look a little cheerier today as The Guardian reports both ITV and Channel 4 — two of the nation’s foremost commercial channels — are bringing their video catchup services to the PlayStation 3. The ITV Player and 4OD have been available as web-based services for a while, but they’ve both now agreed deals with Sony, who projects their overall traffic will improve by around 10 percent as a result. ITV’s leaving the door wide open for adding its content to “other consoles,” web-connected TVs, and tablets like the iPad, whereas Channel 4 has found Microsoft unforthcoming about Xbox 360 deals and the Wii inhospitable because it doesn’t support advertising. For its part, Sony’s clearly making a big content push, having recently welcomed Lovefilm into the fold and completed the rollout of its Qriocity on-demand facility across Europe. Does anyone even play games on these things anymore?

PS3 to start streaming ITV and Channel 4 content in the UK this week originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Dec 2010 03:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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