Twitter and Facebook for Xbox Live will be free for Gold members, ‘free trial’ for Silver

This shouldn’t really come as too much of a surprise, but anyone wanting to enjoy Twitter and Facebook on Xbox Live will have to pony up for Gold member subscription, the same premium prerequisite currently needed for Netflix Instant Watch and pretty much all online gaming. Silver membership will be given a “free trial,” but exactly what limitations that entails, or if they’ll be an option to “upgrade” to the full version, is anyone’s guess.

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Twitter and Facebook for Xbox Live will be free for Gold members, ‘free trial’ for Silver originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Aug 2009 00:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Chumby widgets to appear on photo frame, other devices by year’s end

Chumby announced that it’d be bringing its snuggly little widgets to other devices all the back in February, and it looks like we’re finally seeing some action — “powered by Chumby” gear should be on shelves by the end of the year. The first device out of the gate will be — surprise, surprise — a digital picture frame from an unnamed partner that will apparently integrate with Flickr, Facebook, and Twitter, and offer new feeds, internet radio, and weather. You know, Chumby stuff. We’re more interested in seeing the fruits of Chumby’s new partnership with Samsung — Sammy’s already doing widgets like crazy with TouchWiz on mobile and Yahoo’s Widget Engine in the living room, so we’re wondering where Chumby fits in. We’re also wondering what’ll happen to the Chumby hardware now that the company seems focused on becoming a software company — maybe we’ll finally place that order.

[Thanks, Craig; Photo is that sweet Chumby telephone mod]

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Chumby widgets to appear on photo frame, other devices by year’s end originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 14:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Homebrew Robot Raises Hand to Call Attention to Tweets

little_ken

If you are struggling to keep up with all the twitter updates from your friends, there’s a little robot that can help you out.

The ‘Guardian Robot’ is an adorable machine that monitors your twitter feed for “happy” or “sad” updates from friends and then alerts you of the tweets by either raising its hand for a high-five or lowering its head, reports U.K. publication The Guardian. The robot that can sit on your desk will even tweet a reply on your behalf from its own twitter id @guardianrobot

The Guardian Robot is not as sophisticated as the Cybraphon, a musical band housed inside an antique wardrobe that we recently wrote about. The Cybraphon monitors its Facebook, Twitter and Flickr pages and plays music that reflects its online popularity at that moment.

But what makes the Guardian Robot interesting is how inexpensively it has been put together. It costs just over £60 ($70).  It uses two servos–one to rotate the arm and another to raise or lower its head– and two microswitches. The body of the robot has been created out of a discarded Nintendo Wii Sports Resort game box.

All of this is connected to an Arduino board that powers and controls the switches. The Arduino, an open source single board microcontroller, is connected to a desktop via a USB. The board connects to an application written in the open source programming language, Processing 1.0.

The app polls Twitter every minute for tweets that match a specified criteria. When it finds a matching tweet it classifies it as a “happy” or sad one and directs the robot to the appropriate response.

For more details on the robot works or to see its actual code, check out The Guardian

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Photo: Guardian Robot/The Guardian


Blu-ray support coming with iTunes 9?

Take this rumor with a fairly large grain of salt and please hold your “bag of hurt” comments until the end. Boy Genius claims he’s got it on word from a “pretty reliable source” that the next big iTunes revision will include better organization options for your iPhone / iPod touch apps, something vague concerning integration with Twitter, Facebook, and Last.fm, and… Blu-ray support. To be fair, the HD disc format wars are all but over at this point, and the most recent Final Cut Pro actually lets you burn video directly to a third-party BD drive, only to have to play the discs on another, non-Mac device. This is all pretty sketch at the moment, and we doubt the boys in Cupertino will be showing their hands until just after the eleventh hour — let’s not forget, also, that iTunes is also available for Windows which does have other third-party Blu-ray playback software. In possibly related whispers, AppleInsider has offered some none-too-descriptive hints at possible iMac refresh with some improvements catering to the “semi-professional audio / video crowd.” Between this and talk about a tablet, we can’t wait for the next Apple press conference, if only to subside all the rumors for a few months.

Update: Our resident HD expert Ben Drawbaugh has chimed in on the matter, hypothesizing that this might be referring to support for Managed Copy, a digitized (and DRM restricted) copy of the film that you would save onto your local hard drive. But in that scenario, it still doesn’t behoove Apple to add that to iTunes unless it was looking to put Blu-ray drives on its own machines, which makes this (still very faint) rumor all the more interesting.

Read – Apple iTunes 9 details, Blu-ray, app organization
Read – Apple’s next iMacs rumored with compelling new features

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Blu-ray support coming with iTunes 9? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 08 Aug 2009 14:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toaster, Toilet Lead Appliance Invasion of Twitter

twitter-toilet

Pimpy3wash just finished doing a round of laundry. Hacklab.toilet just flushed and mattsoffice tweeted that the temperature is 83.3° F.


It might seem like just another day in the Twitterverse, where prosaic, personal updates stream throughout the day. Except @Pimpy3wash, @hacklab.toilet and @mattsoffice are not real people: They are a washing machine, a toilet and an array of home light and temperature sensors. Each of them, with help from some microcontrollers, wires and Arduino boards, have been rigged to answer Twitter’s basic question: “What are you doing?”

“It started as a joke,” says Seth Hardy, a researcher for an anti-virus company who modified his toilet to tweet. “I don’t like Twitter much and think everyone puts up very mundane stuff on Twitter. I thought, ‘Why not have my toilet in there, too?’ Now it’s turned into a fun way to test out the Arduino boards.” His twittering toilet, @hacklab.toilet, now has more than 580 followers.

As Twitter’s use has exploded, the service has seen a twittering cat (the British kitty, Sockington, is fast approaching a million followers), a duck, an R2D2 and even a kegerator that tweets from Wired.com’s office. But unlike these profiles, where humans are merely pretending to be the cat or robot on whose behalf they post, tweets from appliances are the real thing.

Hooking up home appliances is part geek bravado, part insider joke and part open-source hardware experiment. And it illustrates the larger trend of home automation that is catching on among do-it-yourselfers.

“Tweeting appliances speaks to this whole ‘internet of things’ idea,” says Hans Scharler, a tech consultant who also writes comedy material. “If your appliances were outputting information, it can always go to a database. But we love to share information. So why not find a way to do that?” Scharler found online fame for his twittering toaster, whose tweets alternate between “toasting” and “toast is done.” @mytoaster has about 200 twitter followers.

Do It Yourself

Want to make your toaster tweet? Wired’s How-To Wiki has instructions on getting started with microcontrollers and Twitter. It’s a wiki, so if you’ve got extra advice or links, log in and contribute!

Among the first kits to help DIYers get their appliances tweeting was the Tweet-a-watt. The $90 open source hardware kit from Adafruit Industries let users post the daily energy consumption of their refrigerator or TV set to a Twitter account. The Tweet-a-watt also lets receivers log and graph the power consumption information.

“We feel there is a social imperative and joy in publishing one’s own daily KWH (kilowatts per hour),” says the company on its blog. “By sharing these numbers on a service like Twitter, users can compete for the lowest numbers and also see how they’re doing compared to their friends and followers.”

But to go beyond that, DIYers have devised their own homebrew solution. And driving their interest are modules available for hobbyists from companies such as Adafruit and ioBridge.

Scharler says the off-the-shelf IO-204 monitor and control module allowed him to bring his toaster online without having to run a home server. All it took was a few hours on Thanksgiving Day to get his BagelMaster tweeting. Scharler glued a switch to the toaster’s exterior that is triggered by the slider’s movement. The switch hooks up to the control module’s digital input.

“Using a terminal board, a pull-up resistor (1k), and some alligator clips, I hooked up the resistor from the digital input to the +5v source from the module, and clipped my clips on the resistor and the ground,” Scharler explains on his blog.

The real gem in this hack is the control module from ioBridge, which is available for $88. It can bring most devices online and you don’t need to be a programming or electronics whiz to hook it up, says the company.

“There was all this excitement around twitter last year,” says Scharler. “But at the same time I had been playing with the ioBridge controller so I decided to get them both together.”

Scharler posted a guide to creating the twittering toaster on Instructables, a website with lots of instructions on how to complete various DIY projects. “It’s not very difficult for someone with no programming experience to do. That’s the whole purpose of the ioBridge module. You don’t have to touch a line of code, you don’t need too many resistors or any weird things like that.”

The twittering toaster went on to inspire Matthew Morey, an engineer at Texas Instruments, to create his own twittering appliances. In less than a month, Morey found a way to get the temperature and lighting of his single-family home in Houston on Twitter. A typical post from those sensors reads: Temperature = 82.5°F / Ambient Light = 901. Morey can also send commands to his appliances via Twitter. Doing that is as easy as sending a reply with words such ‘@MattsOffice light on’ or ‘@MattsOffice light off’ to turn on or off the light at his desk.

“I can adjust the air conditioning or the wireless security camera to take a picture of a particular spot in the backyard through Twitter,” he says.

The output from the light and temperature sensors could have well gone into a e-mail alert or even a database, says Morey, but tweeting is a lot more fun.

Though Morey doesn’t have a step-by-step guide on how you can do this yourself, he says he hopes to publish that on his site soon. Right now, his website offers the code that he is using to auto-update the Twitter account.

But keeping your followers on twitter is no easy task, as Hardy’s toilet discovered. A broken switch in the middle of the night led to a malfunction that had the toilet twittering more updates about flushing than its followers could handle. The toilet lost a few hundred followers the next day.

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Photo: Twittering toilet/Seth Hardy


@iPhoneHater INQ Mini 3G and Chat are now posing for photographs, lol #hands-on

While you’d expect the first hands-on shots of INQ’s new sociable Mini 3G and Chat to emerge on Twitpic, it’s TechRadar doing the honors. Both of these featurephones are fairly attractive in their own right, with each being suitably slim and chock full of status updating power. In fact, we’d say the Mini 3G’s red and black QWERTY keypad is amongst the sexiest we’ve seen. Why not judge Like[TM] for yourself by giving those read links below a look?

Read – INQ Mini 3G hands-on
Read – INQ Chat hands-on

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@iPhoneHater INQ Mini 3G and Chat are now posing for photographs, lol #hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Aug 2009 00:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Updated FiOS Twitter and Facebook widgets add onscreen keyboard, not friends or followers

Just a few weeks after debuting its Twitter and Facebook widgets, Verizon is refreshing them by giving viewers an onscreen cellphone-style keyboard to mash out their own tweets and Facebook status updates from the remote. Though we wonder if it wouldn’t be easier to just use ones actual cellphone to spread your inane viewing habits amongst those unlucky enough to count you as a friend, the services have apparently been quite popular so far, with millions of Tweets and Facebook photos viewed since it was released. As usual, the free apps can be found in the Widget Bazaar, where Verizon CIO Shaygan Kheradpir will be looking for more tools that “engage viewers” once the SDK is released later this year. Not close to your TV (or an area with FiOS TV service?) check out a few screens of the new functionality below.

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Updated FiOS Twitter and Facebook widgets add onscreen keyboard, not friends or followers originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Aug 2009 19:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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INQ Mini 3G and INQ Chat offer slimmer, sexier angle on “social mobile” segment

INQ’s unique take on the featurephone just got a significant facelift in the form of the new INQ Mini 3G and the INQ Chat. Leaving behind the INQ1’s last-gen looks, the new INQ Chat offers a QWERTY keyboard in an E71-esque chassis, 2.4-inch screen, GPS and a 3.2 megapixel auto focus camera, while the Mini 3G takes up the T9er’s mantle with a slim candybar form factor, 2.2-inch screen and 2 megapixel camera. The big deal of course is still the (award winning) software side, which already includes features such as Skype, Facebook and Windows Live Messenger integration, along with a Synergy-style integrated address book. New additions include a Twitter app, push Gmail, and iTunes syncing, courtesy of DVD Jon’s doubleTwist software, and INQ claims that it’ll be much more proactive with software updates this time around. The phones are only dipping their toes into the media playback pool, with hardly any onboard storage, empty microSD slots, and the ever-annoying USB-to-3.5mm converter headphone jack situation, but all the parts are there. INQ’s also going to pull together an “app store” of sorts by curating freely available Java applets compatible with the handsets.

We had a look at the phones, and while the style might seem aggressive for some, the build of both phones is pretty quality for the target market, and they’re certainly tighter in the design department than the INQ1. The keyboard on the INQ Chat is quite good, especially for featurephone land, and we like that INQ kept some T9-style predictive text in the software to make QWERTY use even more of a pleasure. No, these phones still don’t replace smartphones, but they’re designed to be a low-cost alternative to the smartphone for carriers, who are a little tired of heavy phone subsidies and intense data use from the iPhone types — and sure wouldn’t mind making a few bucks off your Facebook addiction. Unfortunately, there still aren’t any plans for bringing these phones to the States. INQ is “in talks,” but for now these handsets are Europe bound, and should hit stores by Q4.

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INQ Mini 3G and INQ Chat offer slimmer, sexier angle on “social mobile” segment originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Aug 2009 21:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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INQ Plans Sexier, More Twitter-Friendly Phones

inq-chat-wide

Smart  phone, schmart phone. INQ is betting that what really matters to people is a phone’s social media features: Namely, integration with Twitter, Facebook, and other online services that we actually use to stay in toouch with our friends.

They might be right.

INQ’s “Facebook phone,” the INQ1, impressed us by its clever integration with Facebook as well as Skype, Windows Live Messenger and Last.FM. But the phone’s physical presence was gormless and bland, like it had been plucked off the shelf of some Chinese OEM’s Shanghai showroom, which it probably had.

Now INQ is planning a second generation of phones, and it looks like the company got the message that industrial design matters. The upstart handset maker’s two new phones, the candybar INQ Mini and the QWERTY-sporting, BlackBerry-like INQ Chat, sport attractive, sleek hardware that you wouldn’t be embarrassed to be seen with. Black plastic is offset by keys with striking red lettering, the edges are attractively rounded, and the phones both look and feel good in the hand. INQ execs tell us that they’ve even given thought to the weight distribution inside the handsets, so that they are well-balanced in your hand when you’re texting and even “swivel” comfortably around their nav buttons when you whip them out of your pocket.

The new phones also add built-in support for Twitter, so you can both read and post tweets quickly and easily. The company strove to provide the complete Twitter experience, translated onto the tiny screen, even going so far as to display the service’s “fail whale” when Twitter goes offline.

Both are expected to become available in Q4. U.S. users are, for now, out of luck, as no American carrier has agreed to offer these phones yet.

See below for two more photos of these phones, provided by INQ.

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inq-chat-1


Video: Arduino-based ‘insecure, egotistical’ robot band

One part gadget, one part art project, and 100% awesome, the Cybraphon is a MacBook powered, Arduino-based mechanical band housed in an antique wardrobe. Including an organ, cymbals, a motor-driven Indian Shruti box (played with 13 robotic servos, no less), and a gramophone, it relies on infrared motion detectors to sense when it has an audience. A number of factors, including the amount of attention it gets on Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter, help the device determine its “mood,” which in turn determines when the “band” plays, and what material it selects. According to one of the artist / inventors, the Cybraphon is a “tongue-in-cheek comment on people’s obsession with online celebrity. We modeled it on an insecure, egotistical band.” That’s our favorite kind! And you know, the thing doesn’t sound half bad. Check it out for yourself after the break.

Continue reading Video: Arduino-based ‘insecure, egotistical’ robot band

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Video: Arduino-based ‘insecure, egotistical’ robot band originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 31 Jul 2009 17:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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