HTC Imagio launches on Verizon: WinMo 6.5 and VCAST TV on October 6

Those Imagio rumors have proven to be deliciously correct, with Verizon officially announcing the beastly Windows Mobile 6.5 set for availability on October 6 — the first day 6.5 devices will officially be available anywhere. HTC’s latest CDMA device features a spacious wide VGA display clocking in at 3.6 inches, a 5 megapixel autofocus cam, quadband EDGE plus HSPA 2100 for when you’re looking for a little connectivity abroad, a 3.5mm headphone jack, and the very latest iteration of TouchFLO 3D featuring social network integration, but the most interesting feature might be its support for MediaFLO-based VCAST TV — a first for HTC and Windows Mobile. Interest parties need only wait until next Tuesday to latch onto an Imagio online, while retail stores will be taking delivery on the 20th of the month — either way, you’ll be paying $199.99 on contract after rebate.

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HTC Imagio launches on Verizon: WinMo 6.5 and VCAST TV on October 6 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Oct 2009 00:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry Storm 2 dummies coming to Best Buy around October 25?

We’ve long suspected that the Storm 2 would be bowing in the next couple months, within earshot of the original Storm’s one-year anniversary — and new evidence suggests that even if we can’t get an actual device in October, we’ll at least be able to make clicking sounds with our mouths as we amble around a non-functional display unit (you laugh, but it’s our idea of a good Saturday night). Boy Genius Report has been slipped a Best Buy inventory screen — a familiar sight in the phone scooping world — that reports an in-stock date for Storm 2 dummies of October 25. Those dummy units can end up arriving before or after the actual phones, and considering that we’ve seen other evidence pointing to an October launch, this could be the real deal. Tao envy might be a problem by the time this hits, but we’re sure there’ll be a few folks willing to give RIM a mulligan on its touchscreen dealings.

[Via PhoneArena]

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BlackBerry Storm 2 dummies coming to Best Buy around October 25? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Sep 2009 21:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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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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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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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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AT&T, Verizon poised to fight FCC’s net neutrality stance on the wireless front

Verizon and AT&T, the States’ number one and number two wireless carriers by subscriber count respectively, share a common bond in that they both have deep ties to the Bell System of old and have ended up running huge wireline broadband and legacy telephone businesses. That means they’re liable to end up sharing a lot of common interests like candlelit dinners, walks on the beach, and a general agreement with the FCC’s Julius Genachowski on new net neutrality legislation — for wired broadband, anyhow. Both companies’ wireless divisions are expressing concern that the proposed rules would apply to ISPs regardless of medium, and the argument is that while landlines (and the accompanying bandwidth) are a theoretically limitless resource, wireless bandwidth is ultimately limited by available spectrum no matter how advanced the underlying technology may be — and if the carriers don’t have authority to clamp down on certain types of heavy use, everyone loses. Though every bone in our body is telling us to vehemently disagree with the argument, they’re right on the point that wireless capacity doesn’t flow from an everlasting font of spectrum, and it’s got to be managed. Thing is, “managed” doesn’t necessarily mean “restrict.” Here are the options we see at a quick glance:

  • Lobby the FCC to aggressively search for and free up additional spectrum that can be safely re-purposed. The CTIA’s already pursuing this angle, so it’ll be interesting to see what becomes of it.
  • Before raising hell, AT&T and Verizon should both consider completing their moves to LTE and coming within a stone’s throw of tapping out their current spectrum allocations. Both carriers own swaths of 700MHz bandwidth that they haven’t yet capitalized on, and AT&T is actively freeing up 1900MHz by moving a number of markets to 850 for 3G.
  • As with everything else in a free economy, the market should decide wireless data pricing. It’s a limited resource and it’s in demand — as long as the appropriate regulatory bodies are keeping a close eye on anti-competitive practices (which it seems they’re looking to do a better job of), simply charge a fair market rate for usage rather than discriminating by application. We’ve got a long way to go from the virtually identical pricing structures and limited options that national carriers offer today.

See, guys? Lots of options here without waging a fight that goes against the popular (and largely correct) side of a hot-button topic.

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AT&T, Verizon poised to fight FCC’s net neutrality stance on the wireless front originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 14:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon’s Samsung Omnia II pictured, drops cubic center button

We know that Verizon’s version of the Windows Mobile-based Omnia II superphone is incoming, and by all accounts, we would’ve figured on it looking more or less like its global counterpart — but those tinkerers over at Big Red apparently can’t leave well enough alone, because the phone that’s appeared on Samsung USA’s site actually looks a bit different. The most notable change is the move away from the original model’s distinctive cubic center button, though the replacement — a shield design in the same vein as the B900 for South Korea — really doesn’t look any more user-friendly. Otherwise, there’s not much to see here, but there’s a brief mention of a relatively generous 1500mAh battery which should come in handy for spending hours on end using those YouTube, WeatherBug, and Facebook TouchWiz widgets you’ve got installed, eh?

[Thanks, Austin]

Update: As many folks have pointed out, it’s merely a button, not a true d-pad. Thanks, everyone!

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Verizon’s Samsung Omnia II pictured, drops cubic center button originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 03:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon says trackball issue is ‘addressed’ on Tour, no longer a problem

Sprint had told us in a statement that its BlackBerry Tours only had trackball issues on “early production” units, and now Verizon is telling us pretty much the same thing:

Early on there was an issue with the trackball that affected a small percentage [of] the early production units — far less than industry norms. The issue was detected early, addressed immediately and is no longer an issue. Returns on this device are some of the lowest among any of our smart phones.

In other words, it sounds like new buyers (and anyone who’s taken the plunge recently) should be fine, and Verizon’s actually taking it to another level by boasting that the handset’s now one of its most return-proof smartphones. That doesn’t change the fact that the trackball’s a little too recessed for our liking — but at least it should stay functional.

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Verizon says trackball issue is ‘addressed’ on Tour, no longer a problem originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Sep 2009 22:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Vodafone thinking long and hard about its Verizon stake

Though Verizon Wireless and corporate half-parent Vodafone are finally getting close to achieving technological synergy now that both are moving to LTE for their next-gen networks — and contrary to recent statements — rhetoric is heating up that suggests the marriage may not last forever. Speaking at an investor’s get-together this week, Voda CEO Vittorio Colao said that “the board continues to look at” the company’s investment in the joint venture with Verizon — which we take as executive-speak for “everything’s for sale for the right price.” The popular rumor is that Vodafone’s bummed about Verizon’s failure to pay dividends for the past four years, which effectively means that Big Red isn’t actively contributing to the wireless giant’s bottom line. Verizon’s made no secret of the fact that it’d love to own the joint venture outright, so come on, guys… Verizon’s got money, Voda’s got the goods, let’s sit down at that oaken conference table on the 45th floor and work this out.

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Vodafone thinking long and hard about its Verizon stake originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Sep 2009 13:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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