Motorola Tao’s photographer zooms out a little, better shot ensues

Now that the Sholes has seemingly been gifted with a less bizarre, less reminds-us-of-a-shoe-insert name, pictures and specs of the so-called Tao are starting to flow en masse — just in time for a possible introduction at next week’s CTIA show out in San Diego (we can only hope, anyway). The first round of in-the-wild shots really didn’t reveal much of anything, but the cameraman has elected to apply just enough wide-angle this time around to give us a full-on view of the high-end Android beast in its closed position — and if this is what we’re going to be getting on Verizon shelves, HTC (and heck, even Moto’s own CLIQ) should be on high alert. So, who’d switch to Verizon for this?

[Via Boy Genius Report]

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Motorola Tao’s photographer zooms out a little, better shot ensues originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Sep 2009 15:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon bubs flub, hawk their last Hub

No, we didn’t accidentally link to the wrong page — that “page not available” you’re getting over on Verizon’s site is where the Hub’s product site used to reside. The whole thing’s been unceremoniously yanked and the product sunsetted, suggesting that the carrier’s functionality-rich VoIP base station wasn’t getting the love it needed to justify its continued existence, Verizon didn’t know how to market it, or some combo thereof. We got the following statement from Verizon today, which doesn’t exactly come right out with the discontinuation — companies often avoid admitting that a product’s said its last goodbyes, for whatever reason — but basically says the same thing in a more wordy fashion:

“Verizon Wireless, like many companies, continually changes and updates the products and services it offers to customers. Our sales teams in all channels will continue to focus on providing our customers the latest and most innovative wireless products and services. Verizon Wireless will continue to support existing Verizon Hub customers with post-sale service or support .”

So the good news is that current Hub owners should be good to go without disruption in service — for the time being, anyhow. Question is, where’s that Hub 2? Is the company completely abandoning the curious practice of competing with itself by pitting traditional landlines against VoIP and Verizon Communications against Verizon Wireless, or are they just making way for something a little more awesome?

[Via Zatz Not Funny]

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Verizon bubs flub, hawk their last Hub originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Sep 2009 20:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, Verizon goaded into customer service showdown

It doesn’t matter who your carrier is, you’re gonna have some complaints. But is the grass always greener somewhere else? To answer that question, the kids at Laptop Magazine have conducted a test of the customer service practices of the big four (Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile, and AT&T) to ascertain each company’s friendliness, knowledge, and timeliness. The publication placed customer service calls twice during a week (once at midday and once during rush hour), visited two stores per carrier in New York City, and tried to find solutions to its problems using each carrier’s online knowledge base. Apparently, T-Mobile takes the prize for in-store assistance and web support, and Sprint, while not always able to answer questions, at least had taken steps to streamline the support process (and the fact that its employees were friendly didn’t hurt). Apparently Verizon Wireless offered solid in-store support (albeit with grumpy employees), “quick and accurate phone support” and “solid” online help. AT&T, sadly, was the loser here — Laptop says it left the store “shocked” that one representative couldn’t figure out how to get email up and running on its Blackberry. Shocking! Hit the read link to see for yourself.

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AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, Verizon goaded into customer service showdown originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Sep 2009 14:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gateway’s LT2016u netbook coming to Verizon next weekend

Following the introduction of the HP Mini 1151NR earlier this year, Verizon’s push into the brave new world of subsidized netbooks continues this coming Sunday with the Gateway LT2016u, essentially a warmed-over LT2000 with enough legalese attached to it to make sure you’re a loyal Big Red customer for the next 24 months of your life. Like the Mini, the new Gateway features Qualcomm’s Gobi tech to make sure you’ve got 3G data available essentially anywhere in the world, but otherwise, the specs aren’t terribly interesting: 10.1-inch 1024 x 600 display, 1GB of RAM, a 160GB hard drive spinning at an uncreative 5400rpm, VGA webcam, Windows XP Home, and a package that tips the scales at 2.95 pounds (up a noticeable tick from the Mini’s 2.45). If you sign up for a two-year deal, you’re looking at $149.99 after a $100 mail-in rebate; a year ago, we were hoping these things would end up going for free on subsidy, but it looks like that dream might yet be a few years off.

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Gateway’s LT2016u netbook coming to Verizon next weekend originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 Sep 2009 03:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget Podcast 164 – 09.27.2009

It’s been a crazy week in news, and after a couple cross-country flights the podcast crew is together and ready to break it all down. Join Josh, Paul and Nilay as they take on Microsoft’s Courier tablet concept and rumored Pink smartphones, dish on the HTC Leo and Windows Mobile, debate the finer points of net neutrality, and talk over the highlights from the Intel Developer Forum and the Tokyo Game Show. Yeah, there’s a ton here — grab a snack and tune in!

Hosts: Joshua Topolsky, Nilay Patel, Paul Miller
Producer: Trent Wolbe
Song: Today

Hear the podcast

00:02:34 – Microsoft’s dual-screen Courier booklet emerges, isn’t near production
00:06:18 – Codex and InkSeine — the roots of Microsoft’s Courier?
00:33:30 – Microsoft’s Pink phones revealed?
00:43:00 – HTC Leo looking confirmed for O2 UK debut, will be free on the right plan
00:46:20 – Steve Ballmer talks ‘three screens and a cloud’ and more with TechCrunch
00:50:00 – Ballmer: Windows Mobile 7 should have been out, like, yesterday
00:55:58 – FCC chairman formally proposes net neutrality rules
00:58:45 – AT&T, Verizon poised to fight FCC’s net neutrality stance on the wireless front
01:10:00 – AT&T’s 3G MicroCell tested and reviewed by Charlottean: yes, it works
01:13:56 – Intel announces Moblin 2.1 for phones
01:18:07 – Dell announces Moblin Mini 10v at IDF (updated with pricing)
01:17:25 – Video: Moblin 2.1 for MIDs and phones, sort of in action
01:21:15 – USB 3.0 has a SuperSpeed coming-out party at IDF
01:22:44 – Video: Intel’s Light Peak running an HD display while transferring files… on a hackintosh
01:28:40 – 13 PS3 motion control games confirmed for next year, motion-enhanced Biohazard 5 coming Spring 2010
01:30:03 – Nintendo finally confirms new $199 Wii price


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Contact the podcast

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Twitter: @joshuatopolsky @futurepaul @reckless @engadget

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Engadget Podcast 164 – 09.27.2009 originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 27 Sep 2009 18:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Pre confirmed for Verizon? Probably.

We were already pretty sure that reports that Verizon was passing on the Palm Pre were unwarranted, but the rumors just keep coming. Now BGR is reporting that it’s confirmed — albeit through an unnamed source — that the carrier will in fact land the device. It’s all starting to seem like a non-starter of a story at this point, considering we sort of already knew the Pre was probably going to Verizon, but at least now we’re less unsure that it’s not not on its way, right? Right.

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Palm Pre confirmed for Verizon? Probably. originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Sep 2009 18:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon: LTE rollout to be ‘as close to all-at-once as possible’

Historically, wireless rollouts have been miserably long, protracted affairs that take countless years to complete, but Verizon’s talking in some really aggressive terms as it moves to LTE. The company wants to be at or near 100 percent overlay with its legacy CDMA footprint by 2013, but a ton of major markets will be covered and commercially well before then — up to 30 in 2010. Speaking in an interview this week, Verizon Wireless CTO Tony Melone has reiterated that the company is still on track with its LTE deployment — music to our ears — and that they’re not looking to “tease” customers at length with trial deployments that would require moving cross-country to enjoy. They’re looking to establish a “significant footprint” out of the gate, which is allegedly made possibly in part by the LTE equipment’s ability to share some infrastructure (backhaul equipment, for instance) with the CDMA network it’ll be joining in cell sites around the country. Now, how about those USB LTE modems, Verizon?

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Verizon: LTE rollout to be ‘as close to all-at-once as possible’ originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Sep 2009 15:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rumors of a Pre-less Verizon “off base” according to analysts

A dubious rumor from The Street floating around about how Verizon was snubbing the Pre due to lackluster sales and no outlet for its VCast Store (which was a bit too thin to make it onto these virtual pages, in fact) has been questioned by a couple of analysts today. According to Deutsche Bank’s Jonathan Goldberg and Morgan Keegan & Co’s Tavis McCourt, a combination of supply chain orders and Palm’s own 2010 financial projections — not to mention Verizon’s long history with Palm — all point to a Pre launch on Verizon early next year, as previously rumored by the WSJ and confirmed by Verizon itself in July. Jonathan specifically called the new rumor “off base” and “incorrect,” while Tavis says that “We do not have insight as to the marketing support Palm will get from Verizon, but we see little risk in not getting a placement at this carrier.” Analyst fight!

Read – Analyst debunk on AllThingsD
Read – Original story on The Street

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Rumors of a Pre-less Verizon “off base” according to analysts originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Sep 2009 11:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Report: Verizon Snubbed Palm Pre

Holding off on buying a Palm Pre until the smartphone hits Verizon? You may be waiting a long while. Word is that the wireless carrier has turned down the opportunity to support the first WebOS handset, a deal that was set to go into effect in January of next year.

This is all very backroom-type stuff. The Street is citing a number of anonymous sources who told the site that Verizon was less than enthusiastic about the Palm Pre’s performance thus far. The other deal killer was Palm’s unwillingness to stick VCast on the device, which, let’s face it, sounds like the Verizon we all know and sometimes tolerate.

The addition of Verizon’s propriety walled garden software wouldn’t really mesh with the app store than Palm has been pushing on the device in

IREX unveils DR 800SG wireless ebook reader (updated with hands-on!)

IREX is currently, right this very second, taking the wraps off its big new splash in the ebook space, the new DR 800SG. The 8.1-inch unit has wireless connectivity courtesy of Verizon in the US and Qualcomm’s Gobi multi-mode 3G for switching it up in the rest of the world. There’s also 2GB of built-in storage, memory card expansion and stylus input (“true finger touch” is coming in Q2 2010 to a future product, right now you can only use the stylus, and a color reader is in the works as well for 2011), and IREX claims to have the fastest page refreshes in the biz. Perhaps most notable is that the reader is Barnes & Noble’s first big play in the space, with support for the B&N eBookstore — though the whole thing is an “open platform” with support from content from Newspaper Direct and LibreDigital stores as well, and format support of PDF, EPUB, Newspaper Direct, Fictionwise, eReader and TXT. Quite the mouthful, and IREX promises to follow wherever the market leads when it comes to DRM. The $399 device includes a leather cover and stylus in the box, and will be available this October in “select” Best Buy stores and will hit Europe in the first half of 2010. No wireless contract is required.

We got to play with the new reader briefly, and weren’t quite sure how to feel. On one hand, it’s another sexy, slim reader, with a pretty great and fast e-ink screen. On the other hand, the interface is totally minimal and a little nonsensical without the stylus. A bar on the left side gives you a “tactile” method of pushing right or left to turn the page, but it feels pretty janky. Notetaking isn’t enabled currently, so you can’t draw on the screen, making the stylus feel a bit of a burden, not a boon — the closest you get to text input is tapping away at an onscreen keyboard. We’re glad IREX avoided the visibility-hampering pitfalls of Sony’s touchscreen ebook technology, but perhaps some more thought should’ve been put into the alternative. We didn’t do any heavy downloading, but the reader takes a very long time to create a connection — a good 20-30 seconds — which might’ve been due to the concrete bunker we’re hanging out in, or just a sign of a slow processor, we’re not sure which. We love the “openness,” and it’s great to see so many format alternatives right out of the gate, but we’re gonna need more time with the DR 800SG before we’re sure it’s worth the plunge.

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IREX unveils DR 800SG wireless ebook reader (updated with hands-on!) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Sep 2009 12:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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