Tivit promises to bring Mobile DTV to the iPhone and other WiFi-equipped mobile devices

The Mobile DTV standard is official, sure, but the device selection at this point isn’t what we’d call plentiful or even appealing — so leave it to CES to attract a virtually unknown company with an attractive alternative. Dubbed Tivit, the pocketable box is a said to be a bit smaller and lighter than a deck of cards and claims to stream television to a number of WiFi-enabled devices, including Windows laptops, Motorola Android phones (no clue why other Android devices wouldn’t be in the running here), WiFi-equipped BlackBerrys, and even iPhone 3G / third-gen iPod touch (software via related App Store download). One charge gets you three hours of reception, and while that $120 price tag isn’t too terrible a fee for keeping the phone you like, when the dongle launches in Spring, it better hope the channel selection is more interesting. Press release after the break.

Continue reading Tivit promises to bring Mobile DTV to the iPhone and other WiFi-equipped mobile devices

Tivit promises to bring Mobile DTV to the iPhone and other WiFi-equipped mobile devices originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 04 Jan 2010 17:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint Overdrive dual-mode WiMAX / EV-DO mobile hotspot leaks into the wild (update: $50 U301 on contract?)

Move over, MiFi — this Sprint Overdrive dual-mode WiMAX / EV-DO mobile hotspot that just hit our inbox has taken over as our new object of broadband desire. Our tipster says internal training on the Sierra-built device has already begun, and that the unit itself features a microSD slot, support for location services, and has a 100-foot Wi-Fi range — but sadly we don’t have pricing or availability deets to share yet. We’re hoping we find out more at CES — and we’d bet that new dual-mode U301 WiMAX modem that leaked a couple weeks ago makes an appearance as well. Fingers crossed.

Update: The same tipster that sent us the information to start with is back with a few tidbits on the U301. According to the anonymous individual, that USB modem will be launching in February for $49.99 on contract. Also on the horizon? A WiMAX home desktop modem with a special price plan of its own.

Sprint Overdrive dual-mode WiMAX / EV-DO mobile hotspot leaks into the wild (update: $50 U301 on contract?) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 16:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Continental to launch in-flight WiFi in 2010

Looks like Continental is the latest to inch closer to our dream of WiFi on every flight: the airline just announced that it’ll be rolling out Gogo in-flight internet service on 21 Boeing 757-300s in its fleet starting in Q2 2010. The service will cost $4.95 and up based on flight length, and the 757s in question mostly serve domestic routes — we’re hoping Continental takes a cue from American and US Airways and lets passengers check to see if their plane is WiFi-enabled.

Continental to launch in-flight WiFi in 2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Dec 2009 17:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Use Your PSP as a Wi-Fi Scanner

While having a netbook slightly decreased the hassle of whipping out your laptop to check for wireless nodes, it’s still a pain. If you keep your PSP in your gadget bag, put it to work as a Wi-Fi scanner.

If you live in a city you’re surrounded by free wireless nearly everywhere you go, the key is knowing what’s available and open for use. Much easier than stopping every hundred feet and busting out your laptop is using your tiny PSP as a scanner. At MakeUseOf they cover two techniques for using your PSP to sniff out Wi-Fi locations. The first can be done with a stock PSP. You simply go into the network settings on the PSP and tell it to look for new wireless networks. That will work, but it won’t look continuously just when you ask it to.

If you’ve set up your PSP to run homebrew software you have access to a superior option. Road Dog scans continuously, shows you the strength of the signal, and can even be set to alert mode where it will notify you on new finds even when you’re not paying attention to the scanner. You don’t need to write down the spots it finds, just press the NOTE button on the PSP and it’ll save the information of the network you’re looking at for later use.

If you’re looking for novel things to do with your homebrew-enabled PSP, check out previous articles on how to use your PSP as a universal remote and how to use your PSP as a additional monitor in Windows. Have a favorite PSP application or trick for finding Wi-Fi without the hassle of booting up your laptop? Let’s hear about it in the comments.

Withings Wi-Fi Scale Review (A Scale For the Year 2010)

The Withings Wi-Fi would have been alien technology in the 1950s. “What do you mean, this scale posts your weight on the ‘internet’, and then graphs it on your ‘iPhone'”? And yet, folks, this is our world today.

The Price:

$160

The Verdict:

Expensive, but worth it.

How do we justify a $160 scale when normal scales are $20 at Target? Think about when the last time your parents replaced their bathroom scale. Was it before you were born? Was it never? $160 isn’t too much when you spread it out over a lifetime.

But even if you you just look at the features, the Withings scale is worth it. On the “weighing you” side, it reports your weight in pounds, kilos or the weird British stone, plus calculates out your fat mass and BMI.

The top of the scale is made out of, in their words, “tempered glass slab, covered with a layer of metal”, which looks and feels classy. The whole thing feels modern—again, the complete opposite of a normal filthy bathroom scale.

After the Withings weighs you, it’ll send all three data points online, to their free website, where it charts and graphs it for you. You can even have different users in your family, each with their own separate data graphs. And (this is probably something you won’t use) it’ll post your weight updates to Twitter, if you want. It’s not mandatory.

And here, for example, is a kid being tracked as she gets older—not a person devolving into a serious eating disorder.

And if you have an iPhone/iTouch, you can access your chart via the free app as well, in case you want to show off to your friends how much weight you’re losing.

In essence, the Withings makes for the perfect holiday gift. It’s pricey enough to not make you look cheap, yet it still conveys the “I think you’re fat” message that’s inherent in giving someone a scale. [Withings]

Internet connectivity and functionality is impressive for a scale


Works great as a scale


Slightly expensive

Xbox 360 Wireless N Adapter Review

Sure, wireless n is great and everything, but if you told me I’d be streaming media between 2 and 3x faster through Microsoft’s new Xbox 360 Wireless Adapter (802.11a/b/g/n) than their old a/b/g version, I’d never have believed you.

The Price

$100ish (cheaper at retail)

The Verdict

If you upgrade to the new Xbox 360 Wireless Adapter from the old, 802.11g version, you won’t notice any difference while gaming. But media streaming over your home network will see a legitimate speed increase.

For a moment, let’s ignore Microsoft’s traditionally ridiculous price for their Xbox 360 Wi-Fi adapters. Instead, let’s just focus on performance.

Upgrading from 802.11g networking to 802.11n has a few key advantages: range is longer, speeds are faster and, since 802.11n sits on the 5GHz band, you won’t interfere as much with 2.4GHz frequencies used by 802.11g and basically everything else in existence.

But there’s one big thing that stops 802.11n from being any better than 802.11g for gaming: latency. Overall throughput may be faster on 802.11n (the pipe is bigger), but latency is really no less present than on 802.11g (it takes just as long for that first burst of water to come through). So those quick gaming commands aren’t faster on n, and my multiplayer testing (Modern Warfare 2 and Borderlands…it was a real chore) confirmed it. Then again, I didn’t really notice any lag over my 802.11g adapter to begin with.

Media streaming, however, is where those big throughputs pay off. Using Connect360, I streamed HD episodes of Mad Men from my Mac to the Xbox. I timed from the moment I hit play to to the first frame of video playback. And the difference was noticeable.
Buffering occurred between 2 and 3x faster, which was well beyond my expectations, despite how fast 802.11n is on a spec sheet. Clips went from taking as many as 15 seconds to playing (rounding up) to actually breaking the 5 second barrier. I’d love to have tested 1080P streaming over Live as well, but my DSL is the bottleneck in that scenario.

Yes, the Xbox 360 Wireless Adapter is still profanely expensive. No, if you have an older adapter (or you’re just using some other solution), I wouldn’t recommend the upgrade (nor do I think Microsoft is even marketing it that way). But it’s nice to see a tangible improvement all the same.



Streams intra network media between 2 and 3x faster


Tiny formfactor still unique to the industry


No perceivable speed increases gaming


It’s $100.


Costs half the price of a new 360


It’ll set you back a month of dinners at McDonalds


I don’t even want to think about what that is in White Castles

Cisco: New Wi-Fi Flip Camera Early Next Year

If you thought “huh?” when network supremo Cisco bought out Pure Digital – the maker of the Flip camera – earlier this year, then we at last have some reason for the purchase. A spokesman from Cisco has confirmed that a new Flip will go on sale early in 2010, and that it will have Wi-Fi built in.

This is such a perfect fit it seems obvious. The Flip’s main rival as we see it is the iPhone 3GS, which can shoot video and upload it, all without a computer. Adding Wi-Fi transfer claws back one bullet point on the spec sheet.

The same source, speaking to the Pocket Lint blog, says that the screen will not feature touch, but will move, sliding back to “reveal the record and menu buttons underneath.” This will, presumably, mean a bigger screen than the current 2-inch LCD on the top-end Flip Ultra HD, which happily co-exists with the buttons by its side. We’d also guess that there will be some editing abilities, like the iPhone, so that you can trim and tuck your clips before sending them off to YouTube.

This is what competition does, folks. Fear of death breeds innovation, and we, the customers, are the winners. Good old market Darwinism.

Next-gen Flip camcorder to boast Wi-Fi [Pocket Lint]

Photo credit: Jon Snyder for Wired.com


Withings WiFi Body Scale Tells Your Twitter Followers How Fat You Are

wifiscale.jpg

Talk about a fail whale. Withings today announced that its recently introduced WiFi Body Scale now works with Twitter. Users can step on a scale and have their weight displayed nearly instantly, all over the World Wide Web. Why would a company create such a thing? Because it can, apparently. Says the company’s general manager, Cedric Hutchings:

This social media feature was the next logical step in the evolution of the WiFi scale for our customers. Here at Withings we are committed to roll out new features and services on the field thanks to automatic updates. Adding this social functionality makes the WiFi scale by Withings the first true flagship of the Internet of Objects.

As the company is quick to point, results won’t be automatically posted to Twitter; you’ll have to enable that feature. Once enabled, the feature tweets your current weight and how much you’ve lost or gained. Ah, technology.

Quick, someone get Oprah on the phone.

Google Brings Free Airport WiFi to a Number of Cities

Google is getting into the holiday spirit early this year, bringing the gift of free WiFi to 47 US airports, including Las Vegas, San Jose, Boston, Baltimore, Burbank, Houston, Indianapolis, Seattle, Miami, Ft. Lauderdale, Orlando, St. Louis, and Charlotte. Free WiFi will be available in those airports now through January 15. The Burbank and Seattle airports will be getting their free WiFi on indefinitely.

Those who fly out on Virgin Airlines will be getting free WiFi the whole way, as the two companies recently announced their own free holiday WiFi partnership. The company will also be matching donations made to Engineers Without Borders, the One Economy Corporation, and the Climate Savers Computing Initiative over the networks, up to $250,000. The airport with the largest donation total will receive $15,000 to donate to the charity of its choice.

Google Serves Up Free Wi-Fi at 47 Airports for the Holidays

Holiday season air travel just got a little less crappy—freebie access starts today, and runs through to January 15. Read on for the full list of airports, and info on free Wi-Fi promos from Yahoo and Microsoft, too.

You may also remember that Google already said it would foot the bill for Virgin America Wi-Fi during the same period.

The catch? Once you log into the network, you’ll be pestered if you want to set Google to your homepage or try Google Chrome. But that’s it. I can deal with that. You’ll also have the option to make a donation to Engineers Without Borders, the One Economy Corporation or the Climate Savers Computing Initiative.

Meanwhile, Yahoo is providing free Wi-Fi for an entire year in Times Square, and Microsoft and JiWire will give free Wi-Fi at airports and hotels if you make one search on Bing. I like free stuff! [Google]

Airports for Google-Sponsored Free Wi-Fi:

• Austin (AUS)
• Baltimore (BWI)
• Billings (BIL)
• Boston (BOS)
• Bozeman (BZN)
• Buffalo (BUF)
• Burbank (BUR)
• Central Wisconsin (CWA)
• Charlotte (CLT)
• Des Moines (DSM)
• El Paso (ELP)
• Fort Lauderdale (FLL)
• Fort Myers/SW (RSW)
• Greensboro (GSO)
• Houston (HOU)
• Houston Bush (IAH)
• Indianapolis (IND)
• Jacksonville (JIA)
• Kalamazoo (AZO)
• Las Vegas (LAS)
• Louisville (SDF)
• Madison (MSN)
• Memphis (MEM)
• Miami (MIA)
• Milwaukee (MKE)
• Monterey (MRY)
• Nashville (BNA)
• Newport News (PHF)
• Norfolk (ORF)
• Oklahoma City (OKC)
• Omaha (OMA)
• Orlando (MCO)
• Panama City (PFN)
• Pittsburgh (PIT)
• Portland (PWM)
• Sacramento (SMF)
• San Antonio (SAT)
• San Diego (SAN)
• San Jose (SJC)
• Seattle (SEA)
• South Bend (SBN)
• Spokane (GEG)
• St. Louis (STL)
• State College (SCE)
• Toledo (TOL)
• Traverse City (TVC)