Leak: AT&T’s Confidential 4G LTE and T-Mobile Plans

Last week, a partly redacted document about the AT&T-Mobile merger was oh-so-briefly posted on the FCC’s site by Arnold & Porter LLP, a law firm working on the deal for AT&T. Outlining some of AT&T’s confidential LTE plans, it was quickly taken down. Well, here it is. More »

Sifteo Cubes up for pre-order tonight, gaming gets tangibly-cute this September

Want a game for the tabletop with on-screen pop, and a sprinkle of adorable? Sifteo is officially set to get your gears going when its interactive Cubes, up for pre-order by the end of today, ship out in September. If you’ll recall, the MIT-rooted project uses blocks equipped with 1.5-inch displays to create a variety of gaming environments mixing touch, motion and on-display content. Also announced is a bundled “Creativity Kit,” which enables you to make your own games on the fly. It was was briefly available to early adopters in January for $99.99, and now $149.99 gets everyone in on some good times. You’ll receive a triplet of the oh-so-cute Cubes, a charging hub and a 2.4 Ghz wireless USB adapter for connectivity, as well as transferring Sifteo store apps purchased on your computer. Interest piqued? You’ll find details in the PR just past the break — unless you’re a square, that is.

Continue reading Sifteo Cubes up for pre-order tonight, gaming gets tangibly-cute this September

Sifteo Cubes up for pre-order tonight, gaming gets tangibly-cute this September originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 10 Aug 2011 19:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSifteo  | Email this | Comments

IOGEAR USB Sharing Station connects to WiFi, cuts the cord on four of your devices

You’re so over corded gadgets, but you can’t justify replacing every device in the house with a pricier wireless version just because being leashed to a USB printer or external hard drive is a slight inconvenience. We get it, and it looks like IOGEAR does too. The peripheral company’s Wireless 4-port USB Sharing Station makes any connected gadget WiFi-enabled, letting you wander far away from those desktop devices without dropping your connection. The compact hub includes one USB 2.0 port on the front and three on the rear, along with an Ethernet port and wireless antenna, and it’s compatible with a variety of USB gadgets, including printers, hard drives, memory card readers, scanners, and webcams. Oh, but why would you want to wander far from your webcam, you ask? A remote webcam can be used as an instant, inexpensive home security system, providing access from anywhere within your wireless network. Sure, $100 may seem like a lot to spend on a wireless USB hub, but considering the cost of WiFi-enabling four individual devices, it’s probably the way to go.

IOGEAR USB Sharing Station connects to WiFi, cuts the cord on four of your devices originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Aug 2011 03:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceIOGEAR  | Email this | Comments

LightSquared donates phones to North American tribes, keeps the rural connectivity flame a burnin’

It looks like LightSquared’s crush on rural America is still ongoing, folks. The firm announced today it’ll donate 2,000 satellite phones to the Indian Health Service and other tribal organizations, allowing them to make calls in areas that terrestrial networks don’t cover. Sadly, no details on exactly what gear it’s deploying, but according to Computerworld the devices are voice-only, meaning IHS employees better get pretty damn crafty if they want to surf Engadget whilst on the job — can you say dial-up tether? Either way, with connectivity headed to facilities in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Arizona, can the firm’s wholesale debut be that far off? We’ll have to see, but in the meantime, indulge in the official PR beyond the break.

Continue reading LightSquared donates phones to North American tribes, keeps the rural connectivity flame a burnin’

LightSquared donates phones to North American tribes, keeps the rural connectivity flame a burnin’ originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 16:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Computerworld  |   | Email this | Comments

Boingo announces streamlined WiFi data plans with support for any two devices

Boingo’s WiFi plans may come in handy for frequent travelers, but they haven’t exactly been the most straightforward — especially if you’re using multiple devices. The company’s gone some way towards simplifying things today, however, announcing that it’s revised its unlimited WiFi data plans so that you can now use any two WiFi-enabled devices (as opposed to just two laptops) as part of the basic plan, and up to five more for an additional five bucks apiece. Unfortunately, none of those changes extend to the company’s recent partnership with GoGo for in-flight internet access, which you still have to cough up the full price for.

Continue reading Boingo announces streamlined WiFi data plans with support for any two devices

Boingo announces streamlined WiFi data plans with support for any two devices originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 21:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBoingo  | Email this | Comments

Verizon LTE-packing HP Compaq Mini CQ10-688nr hitting the retail cloud on August 4th

It’s the not the first laptop to sport Verizon Wireless’s LTE — the HP Pavilion dm1-3010nr grabbed that title about a week ago — but the Compaq Mini CQ10-688nr is being touted by VZW as its first netbook to pack the technology. The 10-inch system, which was first announced back in January, packs 250GB of storage, 1GB of RAM, and a multicard reader into a three-pound frame. Oh, and you also get access to HP’s Cloud Drive — you don’t want that 4G technology to go to waste, do you? The netbook will go on sale via Verizon’s site on August 4th for $450.

Continue reading Verizon LTE-packing HP Compaq Mini CQ10-688nr hitting the retail cloud on August 4th

Verizon LTE-packing HP Compaq Mini CQ10-688nr hitting the retail cloud on August 4th originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 11:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Sonos Play:3 review

Sonos Play:3

Sonos may not inspire the sort of high-end audio lust that a company like Polk can, but it doesn’t draw the ire of serious audiophiles the way Bose does either. It straddles a fine line between respectability and gimmicky, and rightfully so — Sonos isn’t really an audio company in the purest sense of the term. Rather than loading up its components with vacuum tubes and gold-plated connectors, units like the recently launched Play:3 make their mark by incorporating wireless streaming — a feature that’s actually painless to setup. They’re for people who have embraced the digital music revolution, but don’t want to be stuck sitting in front of the computer or tethered to an iPod when the mood to groove strikes. The Play:3 also happens to be the first accelerometer-packing speaker we’ve ever tested that dynamically changes the EQ based on its orientation. As usual all the details — from connecting and controlling the player to whether or not it produces the sound quality to justify its somewhat lofty $299 price tag — are after the break.

Continue reading Sonos Play:3 review

Sonos Play:3 review originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Aug 2011 17:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite HDD invites Android users to its media streaming party

When we took a look at Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite back in May, we recommended that non-iOS buyers hold off until the company rolled out an app for different operating systems. Android users take note, the storage company today took the wraps off of an app that lets users wirelessly stream content like HD videos from the external hard drive to devices running their favorite dessert-themed mobile OS. No internet connection is required to stream, you just need to be in range of the drive. The 500GB GoFlex Satellite has a built-in battery that can stream video for up to five hours. The drive will run you $200, but the Android app is decidedly more free. Check the relevant press info below.

Continue reading Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite HDD invites Android users to its media streaming party

Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite HDD invites Android users to its media streaming party originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Aug 2011 10:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

WIMM Labs introduces tiny wearable computer platform, we go hands-on

Tablets and smartphones might rule the present, but if you ask the folks at WIMM Labs, the future of data consumption is a one-inch by one-inch square. The Palo Alto startup just revealed its new, wearable computing platform, developed, in part, through a partnership with Foxconn, that it hopes will change the way we look at computers. Currently known as the WIMM wearable platform, this new modular device packs a full-color 160 x 160 touchscreen, WiFi and Blutetooth connectivity, an accelerometer and magnetometer, and runs on good old Android. What’s more, it’s waterproof. Basically, it’s a tiny, multifunctional computer, packed with “micro apps” that can make it anything from a smart watch to a health monitor, from a mobile payment device to an all-in-one remote. As of now, the company doesn’t have plans to market it direct to consumers, but says it has a few partnerships in the works that could bring a WIMM-powered something to market by year’s end; a developer kit will go on sale in the next few weeks for an undisclosed price. If you’re itching to ditch that tired old diamond-encrusted nano watch, check out the galleries below and hop on past the break for our first impressions, video, and full PR.

Continue reading WIMM Labs introduces tiny wearable computer platform, we go hands-on

WIMM Labs introduces tiny wearable computer platform, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Aug 2011 06:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

AT&T Chokes Unlimited Data Dead. Dead Dead Dead.

If you’ve still got an unlimited AT&T data plan that you’re holding onto for dear life to stream gigs and gigs of Spotify and Netflix and god knows what else, your life is about to suck a lot more. More »