Zune HD commercial hits major selling points, forgets to include unsettling female spokesperson

Looks like the Zune HD commercials are now hitting the scene, and unless multicolored flashing lights aren’t your thing, this isn’t likely to cause uneasiness or provoke blatant fanboyism. Instead, we’ve got a neon spectacle highlighting four of its big selling points: HD radio, video playback, wireless, and yes, games are there, too. See it for yourself after the break.

[Via Dark Zune]

Continue reading Zune HD commercial hits major selling points, forgets to include unsettling female spokesperson

Filed under: , ,

Zune HD commercial hits major selling points, forgets to include unsettling female spokesperson originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Sep 2009 20:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Conceptual Xbox 1080 handheld beautifully merges Xbox and Zune

Carl Archambeault: you sir, are a champion. We’re not exactly sure if you’re on a first-class seat to Redmond or not, but the boys and girls in Washington could probably stand to learn a thing or two from the Xbox 1080. ‘Course, that’s probably just the fanboy in us talking — after all, who wouldn’t want the powers of an Xbox 360 and a Zune HD merged into one beautiful handheld? — but could you imagine the market shakeup if this thing became real? Paging Mr. Benjamin J. Heckendorn!

[Via Coolest-Gadgets]

Filed under:

Conceptual Xbox 1080 handheld beautifully merges Xbox and Zune originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Sep 2009 15:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Microsoft releases XNA update for Zune HD developers, multitouch drawing app created

Microsoft releases XNA update for Zune HD developers, multitouch drawing app created

A lot of people had differing emotions when reading the Zune HD launch announcement yesterday: joy that the system would indeed sport a selection of apps and games, all free; dismay that those apps would be developed almost exclusively by Microsoft. Today you can turn that frown upside down, sweetheart, as it seems that exclusivity won’t last long. An update to the XNA Game Studio development environment has already been released, enabling coders to target the Zune HD. The new version, 3.1, adds libraries for handling the system’s accelerometer and multitouch screen, both put to use by developer Elton Muuga to create a simple drawing app, shown in video form after the break. It makes lines on a screen with finger touches and, like a ridiculously expensive Etch A Sketch, erases with a shake. It’s not much, but impressive given the thing’s only been available for a day now, and while we’re still unsure how apps like this will find their way into the Zune’s app store, we’re sure all will be answered soon enough.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Read – XNA Game Studio 3.1
Read – First Zune HD Multi-Touch Drawing App

Continue reading Microsoft releases XNA update for Zune HD developers, multitouch drawing app created

Filed under: , ,

Microsoft releases XNA update for Zune HD developers, multitouch drawing app created originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Sep 2009 07:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Semi-customizable Zune HDs now available at Zune Originals

Semi-customizable Zune HDs now available at Zune Originals

It wasn’t exactly a surprise, given that Microsoft told us last month exactly when they would be available, but sure enough you can now get yourself a Zune HD with some funky wallpaper on the front and a fresh etching on the back. The artistic designs are just as interesting as the earlier ones applied to the dearly departed models, and as before you can get custom inscriptions added to the top, like the example above we created to mark the budding romance between our own Joshua Topolsky and his Zune. Best of all, custom designs and inscriptions are totally free — if you don’t mind paying MSRP, of course.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Filed under: ,

Semi-customizable Zune HDs now available at Zune Originals originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Sep 2009 06:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

New Zune HD colors found in source files: pink, magenta, purple, and atomic

Well, here’s something interesting. According to tipster Josh S, a perusal through the Zune Software source files will net you pictures of four as of yet unknown Zune HD palettes. From left to right, we’ve got pink, magenta, purple, and “atomic.” We’re still looking through the source code ourselves to confirm. It’s not like early adopters wanted anything other than platinum and black anyway, right?

Update: We’ve finally come up from digging through source code and, sure enough, those images are all in there.

Filed under: , ,

New Zune HD colors found in source files: pink, magenta, purple, and atomic originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 21:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

“Other touch-screen Zune players” referenced in Zune HD manuals

So were poring through the Zune HD’s various manuals and documentation, like you do, and we noticed this little line in the A/V dock’s quick start guide: An HDMI cable (included) and a high-definition TV are required for high-definition viewing. Zune HD and other touch-screen Zune players also work with the composite A/V cable (included). Now, that’s pretty interesting, since, you know, there aren’t any other touchscreen Zunes out there. We’d say that’s either solid evidence the boys in Redmond are planning to give the Zune HD the family it’s always wanted — or it’s just a huge mistake. Only your doctor knows for sure.

Filed under: ,

“Other touch-screen Zune players” referenced in Zune HD manuals originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 18:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

The Portable Media Player Is Dead, Long Live the… Portable Media Player

The portents have hung in the air for a while, but it’s clear now that the traditional dumb PMP is dead, like a dull and rusted Swiss army knife. In their stead we’ll have…smart PMPs.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but yeah, we’re talking about the iPod touch model: It’s about platforms. That run apps. That people can develop awesome little programs for. In other words, a good PMP won’t just have great codec support and be able to push HD video, it’ll get you on Twitter or Facebook or tell you what’s good to eat nearby.

Not convinced? Check out the new Archos 5, which dumps the old OS for Android. Or the Creative Zii, also allegedly launching with Android. If you’re in the second tier, grabbing a popular app-friendly platform is not a bad way to compete.

Apple itself noted that old-school iPods were on a death march—so the company added a video camera to the nano, to keep it alive for a generation or two more. True, Sony’s X-Series appears to be keeping on keeping on, but it feels like an anacrhonism, albeit with a nice screen—no extendability, and a horrible internet browser.

The argument really comes down to the Zune HD, launching this week. It finds itself in an awkward position, essentially because of the effective limbo Microsoft’s mobile OS is in—in other words you can’t easily develop apps for both Zune HD and Windows Mobile, which Zune’s Brian Seitz basically admitted to the Seattle Times: “What we didn’t want to do was build two parallel app store experiences that didn’t work together.”

So there’s no open app store, but in the meantime, Microsoft’s providing the apps with a handful of chosen developers, so we’re stuck with games, and soon a Twitter and Facebook app. But what is clear is that Zune is a platform that people can develop for. And it seems inevitable that’ll be common with the next version of Windows Mobile, or the mysterious project Pink, if that is something else—at least, if Microsoft’s actually serious about the Zune having a future.

In other words, it’s startlingly clear now that the traditional PMP is history, replaced by PMPs powered by mobile platforms. They’re smartphones without the “phone,” and even lacking that major element, they’re surprisingly valuable, more pocket computer—with internet and apps—than glorified video player.

Microsoft’s Zune HD already cracked open and photographed (updated)

Considering that even now only a swath of Zune HD owners are able to update their software in order to — you know — have a working device, we can understand Anything But iPod’s eagerness to stop trying and just crack open Microsoft’s newest entrant into the portable media player market. Without getting too gushy, we can definitively say that the innards look just as sexy as the exterior, but unfortunately the make and model of the internal WiFi chip (amongst other things) remains a mystery. Hit the read link for a nice gallery of closeups, but be sure and shield your screen from any lingering cube passers.

Update: iFixit just went live with their teardown as well!

Update 2: The iFixit teardown is complete. While there aren’t any 802.11n WiFi or vacant camera-space surprises like those found inside Apple’s iPod touch, the Zune HD doesn’t need any to pique our interest. What you will find photographed in exquisite detail is the NVIDIA Tegra SoC, SiPORT HD Radio module, Toshiba-sourced flash NAND, a 2.45Wh battery, Wolfson MIcro WM8352 audio subsystem, and Foxconn logo confirming its manufacturing origin. There’s also a “for our princess” inscription meant as a tribute to a Zune team member who passed away during development. Check the gallery for a tease or head over to iFixit to get knee-deep in it.

Filed under: , ,

Microsoft’s Zune HD already cracked open and photographed (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 08:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Zune HD gaming and app downloads confirmed: Twitter, Facebook, and 3D games on the way (updated)

The promotional video and leaked shots already made it clear but now it’s official: the Zune HD will be a gaming and application platform. In addition to a few casual games, calculator and MSN Weather apps pre-loaded onto the Zune HD, the official Microsoft press release touting the launch contains this little nugget of gaming gold:

“Later this year, Zune plans to release free applications such as Twitter for Zune and Facebook for Zune, in addition to fun 3-D games such as “Project Gotham Racing: Ferrari Edition,” “Vans Sk8: Pool Service” and “Audiosurf(TM) Tilt.” Games can be added to Zune HD via Zune Marketplace over the Wi-Fi connection or when connected to the Zune PC software.”

Hear that Nintendo, Sony, and Apple? There’s a new handheld gaming platform in town. All that remains to be seen is how it will integrate with the Xbox 360.

Update: A bit more is revealed in a Seattle Times Q&A with Brian Seitz, Microsoft’s Zune marketing manager. At the moment, the strategy is to keep all the apps and games free and developed in-house or in close collaboration with third parties — no third-party SDK for devs to freely crank out apps just yet. Seitz is clear that games will be the primary focus of the “sometimes-connected” Zune HD and the Windows Marketplace is Microsoft’s priority for handheld app development:

“So what we didn’t want to do was build two parallel app store experiences that didn’t work together. Right now our product roadmaps didn’t line up perfectly for us to snap to what they’re doing or vice versa… Down the road if there’s a way we can work with Windows Mobile or another group inside the company that’s building an app store and take advantage of that, that’s something we’ll look into.”

Man, Windows Mobile 7 and the rumored OneApp app store can’t get here soon enough.

Filed under: , ,

Zune HD gaming and app downloads confirmed: Twitter, Facebook, and 3D games on the way (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 03:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Zune 4.0 software is out, ready to fulfill your dreams (update: kills “squirting”)

If you’re one of the few Earthlings with a Zune HD sold ahead of its US street date… and still awake, consider yourself obsessive. And lucky: the Zune 4.0 software just popped and is ready to download for the newest must-have portable media player. Our full review is on the way, ’till then check our hands-on and official launch-day press release just beyond the read link.

P.S. Looks like older Zunes are getting a version 3.2 update — screengrab after the break.

Update: The new Zune software is fully Windows 7 optimized as you’d expect. That means it supports Windows 7 Jump Lists (for quick access to your music controls and playlists from the Taskbar), Previews letting you glimpse and control media by hovering your mouse over the Zune button on the Taskbar, and Aero Snap auto-resizing of the Zune software window. Here’s a quick overview of what else is new:

  • Quickplay menu: quick access from your Zune HD to your favorite media including those you most recently added or played
  • Smart DJ: Like Apple’s Genius, Smart DJ creates like-minded music mixes. It also adds music from the Zune Marketplace if you have a Zune Pass.
  • Mini Player Mode: Keeps a mini version of the player on top of your PC apps
  • Download to own: For the first time you can download-to-own or rent full movies and TV shows in SD or HD formats.

Surprisingly, CNET says that Microsoft has killed the ability to “squirt” DRM-crippled music directly between Zune users. Not that it will be missed.

[Thanks to Mario H., Travis, and everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading Zune 4.0 software is out, ready to fulfill your dreams (update: kills “squirting”)

Filed under: ,

Zune 4.0 software is out, ready to fulfill your dreams (update: kills “squirting”) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 03:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments