Sunday, March 20, 2011

Nano Wristwatch Strap, Now ?For Women?

From left to right, the women's Hex strap comes in very dark pink, light pink, dark pink and pink

Pop quiz: What?s the difference between a man?s and a woman?s watch? If your answer involves styling differences, or watch-faces designed to easier fit the typically smaller female wrist, then don?t even bother opening your mouth to tell us.

The difference is that a girl?s watch has a thin strap, and it?s pink.

That?s the difference according to Hex, at least, which has fulfilled an imaginary demand for a women?s version of its iPod Nano-holding wrist-strap. Available in pink, dark pink (purple), light pink (white) and really-dark-pink (black), the all-pink silicone lineup has the exact same size pop-in pop-out square case to hold the tiny touch-screen iPod as does the bigger man-size strap.

Have any of you tried to use a Nano as a watch? I have, and it?s terrible. Like those old 1970s LED digital watches, it requires that you press a button to read the time, defeating the point of having a glanceable clock on your wrist. The wrist-mounted position is fantastic if you you use it as an iPod, though. Just remember to thread the headphone cable up your sleeve or it will annoy the hell out of you.

The rubber Hex strap-on comes in pink (did I mention that?) and costs a rather humorous $30. Available now.

Hex strap product page [Shop Hex. Thanks, Valerie!]

See Also:

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Adobe Flash 10.2 for Android available today, improves performance, adds hardware acceleration for Honeycomb

Adobe Flash Player 10.2 will land in the Android Market today, bringing with it modest performance improvements for Android 2.2 and 2.3, and hardware acceleration for 3.0. Flash 10.2 is also the first version of Flash to work on the Motorola Xoom tablet.

Engadget says that they "saw a slight but noticeable boost in framerate when playing a YouTube trailer at 480p" on their Droid 2, and that the same videos were "perfectly smooth" on their Motorola Xoom tablet. Engadget were playing with a beta version of Flash 10.2, however, so performance might be further improved by the time it hits the Market later today.

Other than some further performance and usability improvements for Android 3.0, there doesn't seem to be much else of note in Flash 10.2.

Tags: adobe, adobe flash, AdobeFlash, android, android 2.2, android 2.3, android 3.0, Android2.2, Android2.3, Android3.0, flash, flash player, FlashPlayer, froyo, gingerbread, hardware acceleration, HardwareAcceleration, honeycomb, web

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Words With Friends for Android updated, promises "smoother game experience"

As several of you noted in the comments to our post asking for cross-platform iOS/Android games, Words With Friends for Android does not provide the smoothest gaming experience... and that's being rather charitable.

You might be happy to hear that a couple of days ago Zynga released an update which promises to solve many of the Android-specific issues, such as notifications not popping up.

Sadly, installing the update is not a smooth experience; you have to manually uninstall the previous version, and then go to the Android Market and install it. What's nice is that it doesn't lose your saved games ? this screenshot shows a game I've started before the update and continued after updating.

How's the new update working out for you? Let us know in the comments!

Tags: android, gaming, scrabble, words with friends, zynga

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Microsoft and ASUS show off all the stylish stylus action you can have on an Eee Slate (video)

It's the year 2011, but it might as well be 2001. The company that Bill built is still going strong in the pursuit of its founding father's dream: a pen-based tablet computer. The latest, and perhaps best, exhibitor of this ideal is ASUS' Eee Slate, a 12.1-inch, Core i5-equipped Windows 7 tablet that comes with a Wacom digitizer and a dedicated silo in its side for accommodating that snow-white stylus. A Bluetooth keyboard also comes in the box, leading Microsoft to describe it as a device that's simultaneously "very PC" and "not very PC." To understand what the Redmond brainboxes mean by this apparent case of doublethink, make your way past the break and soak up all the video action.

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Firefox 4 to be released March 22, will it beat IE9?

Firefox 4 logoFirefox 4 RC1 has survived the rigors of public beta testing and, come March 22 -- just five days away! -- it will drop its Release Candidate tag and become Firefox 4 final.

This isn't to say that Firefox 4 RC is bug-free, but it does mean that there are no significant issues that would warrant an RC2. The only real issue that the Mozilla Dev mailing list has been dealing with is Vietnamese localization, which looks like it will be bumped back to Firefox 4.0.1.

In other news, all eyes are now on Mozilla to see if it can match Microsoft's opening-day salvo of 2.3 million IE9 downloads. The last major release of Firefox, version 3, recorded 8 million downloads in 24 hours, a world record that might be hard to beat.

It's worth noting, too, that Firefox 3 supported Windows XP and Vista, which accounted for something like 90% of the PC market at the time. IE9's 2.3 million downloads are pretty impressive when you figure in the fact that it only supports Windows 7 and Vista -- which together only represent about 34% of the PC market. Believe it or not, Windows XP still accounts for over 55% of PCs, and given Firefox 4's support for XP, it would be shocking if it manages less than 2.3 million downloads.

As for why Microsoft dropped support for XP is another question entirely. In a few months we'll be able to see whether it made the right decision or not.

Tags: apps, browsers, ff 4, Ff4, firefox, firefox 4, Firefox4, ie9, internet explorer, internet explorer 9, InternetExplorer, InternetExplorer9, microsoft, mozilla, web

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Mozilla details new Chrome-like release schedule and channels, Firefox 5 soon

Engineering Director of Mozilla, Rob Sayre, has detailed the upcoming changes to the Firefox release schedule. The most notable change is a shift away from feature-driven releases to a fixed six-week schedule-driven release pattern.

Instead of major releases every 12 to 18 months, Firefox will shift to a four-channel system, just like Google's Chrome browser. The nightly channel (mozilla-central) will remain in place, but the beta audience will be split into Experimental and Beta channels. The final channel will be a stable build (Firefox 4, Firefox 5, etc.)

Every six weeks, code will be shifted from one channel to the next. At week 6, code will move from mozilla-central to firefox-experimental; firefox-experimental will move to firefox-beta; and firefox-beta will move to Firefox, the stable channel. Around week 12 and 18 the same process will occur, and so on, until the end of time. This means that we could see a major Firefox release every six weeks, once the machine starts turning.


Rather than waiting 16 to 18 weeks for Firefox 5 to emerge, however, we might see a rushed release in just 12 or 13 weeks, sometime around the middle of June. We could then see Firefox 6 by October, and maybe Firefox 7 by the end of the year (but it's unlikely).

It should be noted that the details of this new development process are subject to change -- Sayre's document is clearly labeled 'draft' -- but at this stage, we're almost certain that Mozilla will be moving to schedule-driven releases, and that Firefox 5 will be released in just a few months.

For more details about QA, localization, security patches and support for extension developers, be sure to read the full document -- there's a lot of important information in there.

Tags: apps, beta, browsers, experimental, firefox, firefox 4, firefox 5, firefox 6, firefox-beta, firefox-experimental, Firefox4, Firefox5, Firefox6, fx, mozilla, release schedule, ReleaseSchedule

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USB Flashdrive Pendants from Unica Italian Design

I have a fascination for USB flash drive jewelry, and Unica Italian Design has some really pretty pieces that caught my interest.� Unica Italian Design is a company formed by people with years of experience in designing and manufacturing gold and silver jewelry.� Their mission was to combine jewelry with technology to make art out of the necessary.� They have a line of stainless USB drives, some with diamonds, that can be worn as a pendant or as a keychain fob.� These pieces sell for about $85 to $115.� You?ll need to contact Unica Italian Design for specifics on capacities and price.


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How would you change Samsung's Nexus S?

The first phone to ship with Android 2.3 has been kicking around for a solid quarter now, which means it's just about time to roast it here on How Would You Change. The Nexus S didn't provide the same system shock as did the Nexus One, but bringing a curved display, Gingerbread and an embedded NFC chip to US airwaves definitely made an impact. 'Course, we're still waiting for a version to ship with support for AT&T's 3G bands, but we're confident that quite a few T-Mobilers have bit the bullet by this point. You've heard our thoughts on the matter, and now it's your turn -- if you were in control of dictating the second-ever Nexus phone, how would you have done things differently? Would you have stuck with HTC rather than heading over to Samsung? Shipped it on a different carrier from day-one? Thrown in a white version just to rub things in? Get creative down in comments below -- there's no telling how your nuggets of wisdom will shape the inevitable Nexus T 2.

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Saturday, March 19, 2011

iPad 2 Is Everywhere and Nowhere

Apple is currently selling the iPad 2, but for all practical purposes that really means it's accepting payment and promising delivery in over a month. Buyers quickly exhausted supplies at launch, but that appears to be par for the course for new iThings. Is its supply chain stretched to the limit or is it shortage by design? Meanwhile, Netflix pulls an HBO, AT&T pushes data caps and HP reaches for the cloud.


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The new iPad 2 has arrived, sort of. It made a brief appearance last Friday in Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) stores and a few other retailers. But by Saturday the only place you could find one was either chained to an Apple store table as a demo model or clutched in the hands of a neighbor who decided that getting up in the wee hours to stand in line on Day One was a sensible thing to do.

Ordering online didn't necessarily mean instant gratification either. Some extremely early orders have come in, but by the second day, delivery times had stretched to three weeks. Now it's more like five.

So yeah, it's once again a hard life for desperate Apple fanboys and fangirls. But they've been here before. Every time Apple puts out a new iObject there are lines, shortages, riots. The company never seems to have enough on opening day, and that might be strategy, it might be accident, or it might be one big mistake.

Obviously, if you leave customers waiting long enough, they'll just go somewhere else. With the original iPad, there was really nowhere else to go for a tablet, but now several other choices with certain degrees of similarity to the iPad are out there, ready to go, and others are just around the corner. The Xoom is one big rival, and by the end of this month, Motorola (NYSE: MOT) says it'll start selling a WiFi-only model that will be competitive with iPad 2 on price.

Or are shortages all part of Apple's master plan? Make it harder to get, make people line up for it, make 'em beg for it, and suddenly it's more desirable than if you could just pick one up at a Fry's any time you please.

Perhaps a shortage tends to have that effect on some people's perception of the product, but I don't know that Apple's intentionally choking its own supply pipeline. The things are built in a factory by incredibly hard workers, but Apple has to play the calendar just as hard as everyone else. It needed to get it out there fast in order to claim new buyers and get them hooked on a brand in a market where most loyalties haven't been established yet. Some analysts estimate that more than two-thirds of iPad 2 buyers do not own an original iPad.

Also, there's a gaping maw of demand that just isn't evident for a lot of other products. Did you see lines for the Xoom or the Galaxy Tab? On the other hand, maybe lines just form because people think there will be a shortage. Kind of a chicken-and-egg thing, I guess.


Listen to the podcast (12:22 minutes).

Only on Netflix?

Netflix's (Nasdaq: NFLX) instant library is very big, but it contains a whole lot of movies that might be charitably described as "niche content." Which is to say, there's an awful lot of dreck amongst those thousands and thousands of titles. Some really great B movies, foreign films and under-appreciated fare as well, no doubt, but if you're looking for last summer's or fall's blockbuster releases, look elsewhere.

But despite that, Netflix Instant is extremely popular. Netflix's share of digital movie units -- downloaded or streamed -- reached 61 percent last February, according to NPD. So it's kind of its own TV channel already, and now it looks like Netflix is about ready to pull an HBO. No, it's not putting HBO shows on Instant (like that'd ever happen). It actually might be moving from just distributing content made by studios to making content of its very own, or at least holding exclusive rights.

Netflix is rumored to be in advanced talks to acquire its own TV miniseries. The show's called "House of Cards," and it has some big names attached: director David Fincher, who was nominated for an Oscar for "The Social Network," and actor Kevin Spacey, who will executive produce and star.

This could mirror what HBO started doing a long time ago -- sprinkling its schedule with some high-quality original programming to keep from becoming just another movie channel. Now other premium channels have followed suit, and the original shows are usually the main reason anyone ever subscribes to them in the first place.

But Netflix could put a totally new spin on it by virtue of being a Web channel, not a cable TV channel. If it builds up its lineup with lots of good shows, it would probably want to charge more than $8 per month to access it, but that might still be a bargain for some viewers. With most cable companies, even if all you want is a couple of premium channels, you still have to buy the basic cable package as well. You're paying nearly $100 per month even if all you're really here for is some "Boardwalk Empire" and "Breaking Bad."

Also, Netflix Instant is truly on-demand -- watch whatever show, whatever episode, whatever time. Premium cable channels have tried to do these kinda-sorta on-demand offerings, but they limit their availability, and sometimes the whole setup relies on those famously unreliable leased cable boxes.

Finally, since Netflix isn't part of a TV package, it doesn't have to wheel and deal with cable providers at every turn the way HBO and the like have to. That doesn't mean it's free and clear of any conflict, though. Most of those cable providers also happen to provide broadband Internet, and they're growing more and more concerned about how much of a burden new services are beginning to place on their networks.

Mind the Meter

You might consider broadband access to be just another household utility, like water and power, but it isn't always distributed the same way. For most utilities, you're billed by kilowatt hours or cubic feet -- in other words, you pay for what you use. But with broadband, it's just a constant stream of data, limited only by how many hours of your life you're willing to devote to sitting in front of a screen. At least, that's the way it used to be.

Lately, some Internet providers have instituted data caps -- limits on how much data your home connection can download and upload per month. The most recent ISP to put a policy like that in place is AT&T (NYSE: T). Starting in May, subscribers to AT&T's U-Verse package, as well as its DSL services, will be capped.

This echoes a rule Comcast (Nasdaq: CMCSK) instituted a couple years ago for its own broadband subscribers. AT&T's plan follows similar lines in terms of the amount it's giving users -- both carriers max you out at 250 GB per month for their cable broadband packages. AT&T's DSL customers will get 150 GB.

What happens if you go over that limit? Depends on your ISP. Comcast apparently gives you dirty looks and threatening phone calls telling you that if you keep breaking the limit, they're going to boot you as a customer.

Judging by AT&T's approach, it's more interested in keeping customers and making more money off them -- if you break the limit, you just have to pay more, but you won't necessarily have to worry about being denied Internet access. It's also promised to roll out usage monitoring tools and a system for warning people if they near the limit. Comcast has monitoring tools too, though it's been slow at rolling them out.

How likely you are to break -- or even come close to -- those limits depends on what kind of Internet user you are. AT&T says most DSL customers use just 18 GB per month. But some users have a taste for streaming or downloading shows and movies through Netflix and iTunes and the like, and if they have faster connections through the U-Verse service, they might more often opt for high-definition streaming content, which uses a lot more data. In fact, with all the entertainment you can get online, lots of customers have given up on cable TV completely.

It's not just about entertainment; all sorts of personal data is taking up residence in the cloud rather than local hard drives, and the more popular these services get, the less people want to have to worry about whether or not they still have a few gigabytes left on the account this month. ISPs can't control what new services Web entrepreneurs come up with, and today's so-called data hog may well be tomorrow's average user.

But bandwidth is a finite resource, and there's concern that data caps could eventually give way to metered usage -- pay by the gig. If that happens, a fondness for high-def movie downloads could be as hard on your household budget as a 30-minute hot shower habit.

Apotheker Lives

In case you were wondering whether Leo Apotheker actually exists, the answer is yes. He finally made what should qualify as a big entrance speech at the HP (NYSE: HPQ) Summit 2011 in San Francisco, though he actually signed on as HP's CEO nearly six months ago. From then until this week, he took to living in a bunker as his company got pulled deeper and deeper into Oracle's (Nasdaq: ORCL) war with SAP (NYSE: SAP), Apotheker's former employer.

But enough of that tangle has blown over that Apotheker felt safe enough to show up and deliver a speech broadly outlining HP's overall strategy in the months go come. Topping the agenda were concepts like cloud computing and Internet-connected hardware. WebOS, the mobile operating system HP picked up when it bought Palm, is also going to play a big role for HP.

In order to fly closer to the cloud, HP might need to tone up some of its software offerings, and that consideration did figure into why the company picked Apotheker. Generally speaking, though, announcing that a company like HP is pushing a big cloud strategy doesn't exactly make Apotheker's inaugural address very dramatic. IBM (NYSE: IBM), Dell (Nasdaq: DELL), Oracle -- everyone's going so cloudy lately it's making people sick of the word. But at least it came off as safe, stable and sane.

The mobile side of the strategy may be a bit more interesting. HP has the resources to take webOS way further than Palm ever could. It's staying in smartphones, it's headed toward tablets, and just last week we heard it would start appearing in all PCs HP produces starting in 2012.

So, HP clearly intends to run with webOS, but how far it will get is uncertain. Quality-wise, webOS was on par with the competition back when it debuted in 2009, and now that it has the attention of a rich benefactor like HP, the development of the OS itself isn't likely to be neglected. But in the realm of app selection, it's suffering. The bigger platforms have these diverse collections of third-party development teams of all sizes, and this regular flow of new software is what keeps the platforms strong. WebOS has always had the potential to grow something like that, but now it's up to HP to pull it off.

The Disneyfication of 4chan

If you've ever visited 4chan, in particular its Random message board, then no explanation is necessary. If you've never been there, no explanation is possible. I'll do my best: It's an open forum where just about everyone is anonymous and just about anything goes. Check you gag reflex at the door.

It's the kind of environment that tends to churn out a wide variety of filth, but once in a while the demented collective creativity of the place gives birth to stuff like underground activist movements, not to mention thousands of popular Internet memes, many of which you've probably encountered at some point. Sort of a compost pit of Internet culture.

But as well-known as 4chan has become, it's so far failed to be much of moneymaker. Most advertisers won't get anywhere near it. But now its founder, Christopher Pool, is striking out with a classier, more family-friendly project called "Canvas."

Basically, Canvas will be a photo sharing and editing site where users are encouraged to mash and mix each others' work. Video editing will eventually be part of the package too. Sounds sort of like 4chan so far, but one big difference is money: Canvas has some major investors pulling for it already, including Andreessen Horowitz, Lerer Ventures, and Founder Collective.

With investors, of course, comes a greater responsibility to actually administer the site beyond just popping in to take down a flat-out illegal image someone posted somewhere. Canvas' purpose will be to foster the same general creativity as 4chan, but its soul will be very different. That might not appeal to longtime 4chan fans, but to other users and certain advertisers, it could be worth checking out.

Canvas will also support a certain level of user anonymity, but that's a relative term. Even though users will be able to post messages anonymously, in order to get into the site in the first place, they'll have to log on using Facebook Connect.

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Speedtest.net overhauled with new look, new features

Speedtest.net is pretty much the go-to site for quickly figuring out how fast (or slow) your connection really is and comparing the numbers your ISP boasts with what it actually delivers. And now it's got a new coat of paint and a couple of neat features. In brief:
  • New UI: The map widget is much improved; it actually looks like a map now, and it's easy to see where you are.
  • Smart server selection: If there are several test servers nearby, Speedtest will now ping each to see which has the least latency and use that for the test. You can still specify servers manually, too.
  • User accounts: You can sign up for a free account and aggregate results from several computers/connections.
  • Speed Wave: This new feature lets you add your test results to the results of many other users, and get a nice composite view.
All in all, you get some nice, new functionality and a snazzier interface to boot. Nice!

Tags: adsl, apps, bandwidth, cable, idp, internet, speed, speedtest, web

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ITSEF 2011: It's a Mobile, Social, Cloudy, Insecure World

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Cloud computing, mobile computing and social networking are reshaping the face of the information security industry, Sarah Friar, managing director at Goldman Sachs, said Wednesday. "I believe the cloud shift we're seeing is similar to what we saw in the shift from mainframe to client/server," Friar told attendees at ITSEF 2011.

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New and updated iPhone and iPad apps for Monday, March 7

Every day, TiPb gets flooded with announcements for new and updated iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad apps and games. So every day we pick just a few of the most interesting, the most notable, and simply the most awesome to share with you!

  • TaskMatrix: Simple, no-nonsense, interactive Task Manager for iPad with a grid-like UI. [$3.99 - iTunes link]

  • iStreamNet: (Jailbreak): Stream TV shows directly in your iOS device. [Available via Cydia]

  • Kalimat: Fun, Scrabble-like word game with Openfeint support. [$2.99 - iTunes link]

  • Lockinfo 3.0 (Jailbreak): Make up for Apple?s lack of a good notification system. Out of beta! [Available via Cydia]

  • FarmVille: Updated to perform much faster, support for iPhone 3G and original iPhone, and the ability to share gifts with all FarmVille friends, including those not on iOS. [Free, with in-app purchases, iTunes link]

Any other big apps or game releases or updates today? If you pick any of these up, let us know what you think!

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Daily Crunch: Discovery Edition

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Iran Sends First ?Life Capsule? Into Near Orbit Transfer Super 8 To Digital? The Hard Way Zoomin Watch Zooms In First Impressions Of The Nintendo 3DS: 3D Done Right iPhone-Controlled Kitchen Island Slides Up With A Slickness

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HeLauncher for Android offers 10 different home screen styles including HTC Sense, Motorola Blur

HeLauncher, pick from 10 different home screen stylesPicking an Android launcher is tricky business. Most of them have so many features and config options that it takes a matter of weeks to learn all of their intricacies -- and you can't possibly know which one suits your needs without trying out a few!

HeLauncher, by offering no less than 10 different home screen styles, gives you a simpler way of finding a home screen that suits your style. This isn't to say that HeLauncher emulates the features of Android launchers like ADW or LauncherPro; rather, it makes your phone look like it's running HTC Sense or Motorola Blur (MOTOBLUR).

In terms of actual features, HeLauncher doesn't do much. It offers resizable widgets, which are fairly cool, and drop-icons-on-trash-can-to-uninstall, but that's about it.

Download HeLauncher from Android Market

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Tesla opens its workshop, shows off more Model S prototypes

It's expected that when the Tesla Model S hits full production it'll be rolling out of the company's newly acquired facility in Fremont, California -- formerly the NUMMI plant jointly owned by General Motors and Toyota. For now, though, the cars are being put together at Tesla HQ in Palo Alto and the company invited some media to go check things out. GigaOM has some pictures showing various Teslas in various states of disassembly, including motor and rear suspension assemblies about to be bolted in, and Chief Engineer Peter Rawlinson talking about the car's massive front radiator assembly. Oh, and the matte orange models? No, they're sadly not the first examples of a special General Lee edition. Those cars are destined to be run into various walls at various speeds to test the car's performance in a crash, much like this poor Volvo was. Do spare a thought.

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Should you upgrade from the original iPad to iPad 2?

We posted our iPad Buyers Guide earlier today but have since gotten quite a few emails asking whether or not original iPad owners should upgrade to iPad 2? There are only a few big differences between the original iPad and iPad 2 so the question comes down to whether or not any one (or more) of them are compelling enough to warrant an upgrade.

We?ll take a look at them and help you decide after the break!

If you compare the original iPad to iPad 2 you?ll see the screen is the same size and resolution ? 9.7-inch 1024�768 ? and the storage options are the same ? 16GB, 32GB, and 64GB. Battery life will be the same ? roughly 10 hours ? and both will have iOS 4.3 so the software will be similar. What?s different?

Cameras and FaceTime

The original iPad has no cameras while iPad 2 has two cameras ? a front facing VGA at 30fps, 640�480 and a rear facing 720p at 30fps, 1280�720. It means iPad 2 can do FaceTime and use other video calling software like Skype. These might be great for families and individuals to see their long distance friends, relatives, or special someones. It also means you?ll be able to take video and low quality stills in a pinch and use augmented reality apps. You?ll even be able to use Apple?s new built in Photo Booth app and similar video and picture apps from third parties. Those cold be fun for little ones or grown ups alike. If any or all of that is important to you, you might want to upgrade.

Display mirroring

With iOS 4.3 you?ll be able to use the existing VGA adapter and the new HDMI adapter to output video from your iPad. However only iPad 2 will be able to use the new display mirroring. With display mirroring anything that?s on your iPad 2 will be shown identically on your TV ? the home screen, your apps, your games. That?s great for teachers, for business users, for bloggers and reviewers who want to use HDMI capture to record the iPad screen, and for anyone who just wants to get everything out. (Or almost anything, Hollywood companies like Hulu will no doubt block any output they can.) If display out is a killer feature for you, you might want to upgrade.

Black and white

With all the delays surrounding the white iPhone 4 it?s surprising to see Apple offering the iPad 2 in white starting on day one. But they are. They really truly are. (The lack of LED flash and proximity sensor might have made it easier.) The original iPad was only available in black so if you?ve always wanted a white iOS device, or you want to make sure everyone knows you have an iPad 2, you might want to upgrade. (I know it?s superficial but it?s still a reason!)

Verizon 3G

AT&T was the only carrier choice in the US for the original iPad (unless you used Mi-Fi or a mobile hotspot phone for the connection). With iPad 2, there will be 6 models (one of each storage size in each color) that support Verizon?s CDMA/EVDO network. If AT&T doesn?t have great reception in your area but you really want to be able to use your iPad when you?re away from Wi-Fi connections, you might want to upgrade.

2x faster, 9x better graphics, gyroscope

The iPad 2 sports an Apple A5 processor which they swear will do 2x faster processing and 9x better graphics. It also adds a gyroscope to the mix. Developers will no doubt take advantage of that to provide smoother, more beautiful, better controlled games for iPad 2. Imagine Infinity Blade or Real Racing HD with more action, crazier texture mapping, and even more immersive play. Next generation gaming requires next generation hardware so if that tempts you, you might want to upgrade.

Thinner and lighter

iPad 2 is slightly shorter and skinnier but significantly thinner and lighter than the original iPad. If you carry your iPad around a lot or hold it up to read or play games or have just always found the original iPad too heavy and the iPad 2 seems just right, you might want to upgrade.

And?

Those are our reasons for considering upgrading from the original iPad to iPad 2. If none of those are a big deal to you, stick with the original iPad. If any of them are game changers (like HDMI out will be for many of us here at TiPb) then upgrade away and sell your old iPad or gift it to someone special.

Did we miss any reason for why you would choose to upgrade (or not upgrade?) If so, tell us in the comments!

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Songbird media player for Android exits beta, adds Facebook Like and scrobbling support

songbird androidLess than two weeks after releasing the third beta of its Android app, Songbird has announced that it has now gone stable. Songbird 1.0 is available for download form the Android Market and it's packing plenty of slick features, like:
  • Matching widget with album art
  • Flickr photo-stream and Facebook 'Like' on the go!
  • Playlist creation and editing
  • Set track as your ringtone
  • Scrobbling to Last.fm support
Since Beta 3, Songbird has gotten a bit more responsive and several touch-ups have been made to both the app and its widgets.

Scan the QR code after the break, or download Songbird 1.0 from the Android Market. Once you've had a chance to kick the tires, share your thoughts with us in the comments!

Tags: android, apps, audio, mobile, mp3, music, music player, MusicPlayer, songbird

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Sprint's CTIA announcement details leaked -- Expect Evo 3D, Evo View 4G, and Xoom

Sprint at CTIA11

Rumors have been flying for a few days, but there's now a new leak with a bit more information.� BGR reports that they have been tipped about two new devices from HTC, and more about the Motorola Xoom.� The specifics --

The Sprint Motorola Xoom will be identical to the Verizon model, except the Sprint version will run on the WiMax 4G network.� This lines up very nicely with what we've already heard about Sprint and the Xoom.

The HTC View 4G will be Sprint's version of the HTC�Flyer, a seven-inch tablet with a 1024x600 display, an aluminum body, 5 MP rear and 1.3 MP front camera, HTC�Scribe pen support, a 4000 mAh battery, HDMI�out and DLNA�support running Android 2.3 on Sprint's 3G/4G network.� See our Flyer hands-on here.

The HTC�Evo 3D is the real show-stopper though, and has some awesome specs.� The Evo 3D supposedly has the following hardware:

  • 4.3-inch 3D qHD capacitive 960 x 540 px display
  • 1730 mAh battery
  • 4GB internal memory with 8 GB SD card, expandable to 32 GB
  • 1 GB RAM
  • 1.2 GHz dual-core Snapdragon CPU
  • Android 2.3
  • Dual 5 MP rear cameras (3D)
  • 1.3 MP Front camera
  • records 2D @ 1080p, 3D @ 720p
  • Dimensions = 5.0 x 2.6 x .48 inches
  • DNLA support and HDMI port

BGR�reports that special 3D versions of the Blockbuster and YouTube apps will be on board as well.� And don't forget the rumors of a Nexus S 4G either.� CTIA looks like a lot to be happy about if you're a Sprint customer, and we'll be there to cover it all.� [BGR]

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Samsung Shows See-Through LCD / Notebook Panel Prototypes

Over the years, we've seen some pretty unusual notebook designs. There have been large ones, small ones and ones with tilting/swiveling screens. A few have even shipped with two LCDs, and Lenovo even created one with a slide-out LCD. But by and large, the general notebook design has remained constant over the years. Is it time for a major overhaul? Possibly, and Samsung Electronics may be the company leading the charge. At FPD China 2011, Samsung introduced and showcased a 14" see-though LCD panel. That's right: it's an LCD panel that you can see through.
It's obviously a prototype for now; Samsung's not ready to ship these in commercial products. But still, the idea is terrific, and if Samsung is investing the money in this idea, it's logical to think that we'd see them in retail products before too long. As of now, the prototype has a 1680x1080 resolution, and a white LED unit is installed on each of the four sides of the panel. Light from the outside takes the place of a backlight, which greatly increases battery life. While great for notebooks, Samsung envisions a future where these see-through LCDs are also used in larger panels.
The company showcased a 22" and 46" version, which are currently expected to be used as windowpanes or outdoor signs. In a perfect world, we'd love to see these in bathroom mirrors and possible for use as televisions. The best news of all is that Samsung is actually giving consumers a time frame to look forward to. Unlike many prototype devices, which are simply shown with no expected date of commercialization, Samsung had this to say on this particular product: "We are planning to commercialize them for one of those applications in or after the third quarter of 2011 (from July to September 2011)." Here's hoping it doesn't cost and arm and a leg when it ships!

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Opera 11.10 beta released, adds plug-in installer, improved standards support

Yesterday we let you know that the Opera 11.10 beta would be available for download today -- and here it is. As we've shown you before, the betacuda Barracuda beta includes a much-improved Speed Dial page. There's also an improved Presto 2.8 rendering engine, support for Google's WebP image file format, improved CSS support, and an enhanced mail client. Opera 11.10 also offers improved feature tips, which you may see appear from time to time -- they're subtle, and easy enough to hide.
One other change you'll notice is that Opera 11.10 will now offer to install the Flash Player plug-in if it's missing from your system and required by a page. Firefox and Internet Explorer have offered this functionality for some time, and it's nice to see Opera finally fold it in.

Opera 11.10 beta is available for Windows, Mac, and Linux. If you don't want to overwrite your existing Opera data, just make sure you choose the USB option during installation.

Tags: apps, barracuda, beta, browser, browsers, linux, mac, opera, opera 11.10, Opera11.10, presto, web, windows

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Friday, March 18, 2011

Samsung Shows See-Through LCD / Notebook Panel Prototypes

Over the years, we've seen some pretty unusual notebook designs. There have been large ones, small ones and ones with tilting/swiveling screens. A few have even shipped with two LCDs, and Lenovo even created one with a slide-out LCD. But by and large, the general notebook design has remained constant over the years. Is it time for a major overhaul? Possibly, and Samsung Electronics may be the company leading the charge. At FPD China 2011, Samsung introduced and showcased a 14" see-though LCD panel. That's right: it's an LCD panel that you can see through.
It's obviously a prototype for now; Samsung's not ready to ship these in commercial products. But still, the idea is terrific, and if Samsung is investing the money in this idea, it's logical to think that we'd see them in retail products before too long. As of now, the prototype has a 1680x1080 resolution, and a white LED unit is installed on each of the four sides of the panel. Light from the outside takes the place of a backlight, which greatly increases battery life. While great for notebooks, Samsung envisions a future where these see-through LCDs are also used in larger panels.
The company showcased a 22" and 46" version, which are currently expected to be used as windowpanes or outdoor signs. In a perfect world, we'd love to see these in bathroom mirrors and possible for use as televisions. The best news of all is that Samsung is actually giving consumers a time frame to look forward to. Unlike many prototype devices, which are simply shown with no expected date of commercialization, Samsung had this to say on this particular product: "We are planning to commercialize them for one of those applications in or after the third quarter of 2011 (from July to September 2011)." Here's hoping it doesn't cost and arm and a leg when it ships!

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Engadget Podcast 234 - 03.18.2011

Don't front like you had an excuse to avoid listening to the Engadget Podcast before. If you do keep fronting like that, though, just know in your heart of hearts you're missing the very last scheduled meeting around the microphones of these three particular Engadget Podcasters. Join us for two hours of mayhem, pent-up aggression getting un-pent, and a dramatic re-telling of one of Aesop's most poignant fables set to extremely serious music. It's the Engadget Podcast, and that's that.

Hosts: Joshua Topolsky, Nilay Patel, Paul Miller
Producer:
Trent Wolbe
Music: (I've Had) The Time Of My Life

00:03:34 - iPad 2 review
00:06:00 - iPad 2 launch day: everything you need to know
00:07:05 - iFixit has an iPad 2, and they're ripping it apart (video)
00:15:04 - iPad 2 specs discerned, 900MHz dual-core ARM CPU and PowerVR SGX543MP2 GPU blow away graphical benchmarks
00:18:11 - Editorial: It's Apple's 'post-PC' world -- we're all just living in it
00:33:43 - iPad 2 vs. Motorola Xoom vs. HP TouchPad vs. BlackBerry PlayBook: the tale of the tape
00:49:27 - MacBook Pro review (early 2011)
00:54:35 - Apple's Phil Schiller confirms: white iPhone to be available 'this spring'
00:55:00 - Apple TV software update adds NBA League Pass, MLB.tv and Netflix 5.1 audio support
01:00:12 - Microsoft sells 10 million Kinects, 10 million Kinect games
01:06:28 - Microsoft reportedly kills off Zune hardware, will focus on software instead
01:08:00 - Microsoft says Zune isn't exactly dead, that it doesn't want to go in the cart
01:17:15 - Microsoft taking 'extra time' to make sure Windows Phone 7 copy and paste update is solid, targeting late March
01:33:03 - Verizon Wireless stops being coy, confirms HTC Thunderbolt for March 17th at $249.99
01:37:21 - Kyocera Echo hits Sprint on April 17th for $200
01:43:33 - PlayStation Suite coming to Tegra 2 devices

Hear the podcast

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1-888-ENGADGET or podcast (at) engadget (dot) com.

Twitter: @joshuatopolsky @futurepaul @engadget @reckless

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Google mandates longer Apps passwords

google apps passwordStrong, carefully-crafted passwords are imperative nowadays. Google seems to agree, and the company has announced that it is now requiring all Apps for Domains passwords to be a minimum of 8 characters -- two more than the previous limit.

How much difference can two measly characters make? Plenty. A quick test with a few different combinations over at How Secure is My Password bumped the time-to-crack from 8 seconds (6 characters) to more than a day. That's a substantial difference, and it's nice to see Google enforcing the 8-character minimums.

If you can handle something longer, go for it. You're only going to make things harder for the bad guys, after all. A bump to 10 characters pushes your time-to-crack to about 10 years.

Tags: apps for domains, AppsForDomains, google, google apps, GoogleApps, length, minimum, password, passwords, security, web

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TaskAware Knows Its Place but Has a Funny Interface

TaskAware puts its own spin on the old task-reminder type of app: You can set reminders to go off when you near a certain destination, not just when the clock hits a certain time. A free ad-supported version has recently been introduced. Its location-awareness feature works, but certain parts of its interface seem a bit confusing.


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Task Aware, an app from Nino D'Aversa, is available for free at the App Store. A paid version without ads is available for US$4.99.

My quest for a perfect taskmaster app to babysit my absent mind continues. I still haven't discovered one with perfect vigilance, something that will consistently, doggedly nag me at intervals of my choosing after I blow it off, regardless of how often I keep hitting Snooze.

But a maniacal dedication to annoy me wasn't what initially drew my eye to Task Aware. Instead, it was the app's ability to know the user's location and apply it to a list of reminders.

Once a task is entered into Task Aware, the user can also set a location anywhere in the world. When the app detects that your phone is near that location, it'll buzz you with a notification. Works well for grocery runs, remembering to ask your friend to borrow that miter saw the next time you visit, or any other task predicated by the phrase "Next time I'm there, I should remember to ..."

Free and Not So Free

Task Aware is available in two versions: a free one with ads and a $4.99 paid version without ads. I tried the free version, and the banner ads didn't give me much trouble. There's still plenty of space to see what you're doing. On the other hand, if you're wary of any app that knows your location and serves you ads, take that into consideration.

The startup screen is somewhat similar to those of other task apps: blank field bordered by lists of functions. To add a task, hit the + button at the upper right, and it will take you to the Task Details screen.

Here's where things get a bit strange. Besides the usual fields like Task Description, a priority marker and a Due Date selector, you have options for marking the task New, Pending or Complete. Complete makes sense -- this is the task editing screen, and perhaps you'll later want to mark this complete but not erase it from the list. But New and Pending ... technically, isn't any task "pending" until it's complete?

If you mark a task as Pending, it will receive an orange icon with circular arrows on your main list. More on that later.

Other options on the Task Details screen include setting a due date notification on or off, labeling a task with a category (all of which must be supplied by the user), adding task notes, and last but not least, including a location.

A Sense of Place

This is Task Aware's main event. Touch the blank field under Location, and you'll go to your personal list of places. The list will be blank the first time you use it, so it's time to start adding some. The + button will take you to a map of the world. From there, you can search for a specific address or zoom in and set a pin manually. You can also make a more general search ("Costco," for example) but you'll need to specify the city you want it to search also. It doesn't seem to use your present location by default.

Once your point is found, it will be surrounded by a shaded circle. Next time the phone detects that it's in this area of the map, it will give you an alert. The radius of the circle is adjustable; you can set it to cover just a few blocks or the better part of a whole city.

Once the place is selected, turn on Nearby Notification and set a time. For example, if you don't want to be given this reminder today or tomorrow as you pass by the place in question, but after that you do want it to speak up as soon as you get close, it can be set to do that.

Once that's all set, you will be given the reminder when you're near your target. It did its job even after I'd shut down the application and killed it in the multitasking menu.

However, Task Aware's ability to sense its location raises some power drainage questions. Its App Store entry advertises "low power consumption, with brand new multitasking location services in iOS 4.0 Task Aware can track your location without ever turning on the GPS."

Further down the page, it reads "*For best performance, have your phone plugged into a charger while traveling in the car." The asterisk reference is a sentence at the bottom of the page: "Continued use of GPS running in the background can dramatically decrease battery life."

I'm not exactly sure what to make of that -- does Task Aware continuously run GPS in the background or not? Does it kick up the GPS only when it can tell you're in a moving vehicle?

I'm not sure how it does any of this, but I do know that since installing Task Aware, I haven't noticed a significant drain on my iPhone's battery when I'm walking around, and I do keep it in a charger when I drive. So use as directed, I suppose.

Bottom Line

Beyond its location awareness feature, Task Aware is an average task app that shares shortcomings with others I've used before.

There's a Snooze feature that will re-remind you later if you blow off an alert, yet that snooze alarm only seems to go off when you actually open the app. The whole app also crashes from time to time, though I'm not sure whether that's due to some kind of iAd traffic jam or if the no-ad paid version also suffers the same hiccups.

Finally, back to the Pending feature: Any task marked New receives a blue icon with a dash; Complete gets a green icon with a check mark, and Pending gets an orange icon with circular arrows. To me, circular arrows imply it's a repeating task -- hit me with a notification every Monday at 8 AM, for instance. Yet I couldn't figure out how to set anything to repeat. Perhaps I'm way off course.

However, Task Aware's location feature does its trick, and it could save you a moment of self-reproach when you realize that yet again you drove right past the grocery store without picking up a bag of tangerines. Just keep an eye on your battery meter, and remember to close it down completely.

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New and updated iPhone and iPad apps for Monday, March 7

Every day, TiPb gets flooded with announcements for new and updated iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad apps and games. So every day we pick just a few of the most interesting, the most notable, and simply the most awesome to share with you!

  • TaskMatrix: Simple, no-nonsense, interactive Task Manager for iPad with a grid-like UI. [$3.99 - iTunes link]

  • iStreamNet: (Jailbreak): Stream TV shows directly in your iOS device. [Available via Cydia]

  • Kalimat: Fun, Scrabble-like word game with Openfeint support. [$2.99 - iTunes link]

  • Lockinfo 3.0 (Jailbreak): Make up for Apple?s lack of a good notification system. Out of beta! [Available via Cydia]

  • FarmVille: Updated to perform much faster, support for iPhone 3G and original iPhone, and the ability to share gifts with all FarmVille friends, including those not on iOS. [Free, with in-app purchases, iTunes link]

Any other big apps or game releases or updates today? If you pick any of these up, let us know what you think!

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Save on cases for the HTC Thunderbolt [Sponsored]

The Android Central Store has the HTC Thunderbolt cases you want at prices that beat the manufacturer retail price.

The Body Glove Snap-on Case for HTC Thunderbolt features robust protection and a removable clip than can also double as a kickstand. Looking for lower-profile hard cases for the Thunderbolt? Got 'em. There are also HTC Thunderbolt Skin Cases made by HTC in multiple colors.

Find more Thunderbolt Accessories right here!

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Steel Disk Replaces Paper Aeropress Coffee Filters

The Coava Disk replaces paper Aeropress filters with a perforated steel plate

Anyone serious about their coffee has likely tried ? or at least heard of ? the Aeropress. It?s like a giant espresso-making syringe. You load it with coffee and hot water, plunge the plunger and mainline the coffee, not into a vein but into a waiting cup.

In short, it?s a great way to make cheap, quick espresso-ish coffee, with one possible problem ? paper filters. The Aeropress needs a disposable paper disk every time you make a cup. And the Coava Disk coffee filter replaces this with a stainless steel reusable filter. If you make a lot of coffee, this may save you some money, but it also changes the coffee itself.

The holes in the Coava Disk are sized to let through a little ?mud?, sludging your coffee up slightly, thickening the body and possibly ? depending on who you ask ? strengthening the flavor. I use a stove-top mocha espresso jug, which has its own built-in aluminum filter basket, but if I was an Aeropress kind of guy, I?d try the Disk. Not for taste reasons, but because I get European liberal guilt every time I toss disposable stuff in the trash.

The Disk is cheap enough just to try, and begins at $15.

DISK coffee filter [Coava]

See Also:

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Thursday, March 17, 2011

GM extends OnStar smartphone control to 14 more vehicles

Once solely slated for the Chevy Volt, the OnStar MyLink smartphone app has gained considerable ground -- last July, GM expanded the iPhone and Android remote domination over your horn, door locks, and real-time data to every 2011 automobile, and now it's reaching back through time to activate fourteen vehicles from 2010. As you'd expect, that's mostly a smattering of SUVs and crossovers like the Cadillac Escalade, Buick Enclave, GMC Yukon and Chevy Avalanche, though the Impala will also get the goods, and if you live in the lap of low-end luxury, you may be able to listen to Facebook updates on your 2010 Cadillac DTS or Buick Lucerne. Find the full list of compatible vehicles at our source link.

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Play with Mozilla's HTML5 and WebGL Web O' Wonder

Step right up! Mozilla's Web O' Wonder is a fantastic and enthralling and slightly terrifying playground for surfers of all ages and experience levels. Feast your eyes on funky uses of WebGL and CSS3 transitions as slick as a bald man's pate. Marvel at the flexibility of HTML5 video -- but most of all, revel in the fact that everything in the Web O' Wonder is made of Open Web technologies.

The Web O' Wonder is Mozilla's new demo site, and much like Microsoft's Internet Explorer Test Drive it's designed to showcase its new browser, Firefox 4. Unlike the IE Test Drive, however, the Web O' Wonder is actually fun. While the IE Test Drive is soulless, a raw and synthetic benchmark for new browsers, the Web O' Wonder will actually entertain. The Planetarium demo is beautiful, and the Motivational Poster demo is a lot of fun. Click through the demos, you won't be disappointed.

Don't get too excited, however. While the Web O' Wonder is undoubtedly very cool, it only really works with Firefox 4, brutally reminding us yet again that truly cross-platform HTML5 Web experiences are still flights of fancy. The Web O' Wonder just about works in Chrome, but IE9 and Opera can only run a few of the demos successfully.

In other news, the final build of Firefox 4 is expected to arrive on March 22!

Tags: browsers, css3, demo, firefox 4, Firefox4, html5, mozilla, open web, open web technologies, OpenWeb, OpenWebTechnologies, tech demo, TechDemo, web, webgl

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