Apple Tablet rumor roundup: NYT speaks of ‘impending Apple slate,’ new SIM tray leaks (video)

Written by Admin on October 26, 2009 – 4:30 am -

Bear with us as we bring you the latest rumors related to the most important product that never was: the Apple tablet. Today we have a pair of rumors bubbling to the surface of a delicious tattle brew. First, the SIM card tray pictured above said to be procured from Foxconn (the rumored Apple tablet manufacturer) and available for $14.05 starting October 23rd for the 4th generation iPhone / iTablet… whatever the mythical host device might ultimately be named. It’s certainly different than the tray found in previous gen iPhones and its chunkier appearance would be suitable for a larger GSM device. Plausible yes, though really, such a SIM tray could be used anywhere.

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PhotoTrackr Mini geotagging device shrinks down, adds Mac and RAW support

Written by Admin on October 25, 2009 – 2:30 pm -

Looking for a geotagging solution that doesn’t discriminate based on what kind of camera you have? Looking for one that can fit snugly into your Fifth Pocket? The PhotoTrackr Mini looks to be that very device, boasting a diminutive thumb drive-esque appearance and the same geotagging technology as found in the original. Put simply, the device works by syncing the time of your camera with bundled software; when you’re back from a shoot (a shoot where your device also was), you just allow the application to figure out where a given shot was snapped at what time. There’s also Mac and RAW file format support on this model, neither of which were compatible with the prior version. Pre-orders are being accepted now at $69, and the first shipments are expected to go out next month. Read more »


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Southwest builds first "green plane," Ma Earth shows her gratitude

Written by Admin on October 24, 2009 – 11:30 pm -


Southwest Airlines may not own a plane with a headrest infotainment system, but it’s still far and away the most enjoyable commercial flight you’ll find in the US of A (save for Virgin America, naturally). Granted, we’d like to see in-flight WiFi offered on a few more of its flights (read: 100 percent of them), but hey, we’ll take free checked bags and friendly employees any day of the week. We’ll also take fuel savings and environment stewardship, both of which Southwest is aiming to give us by creating the planet’s first “green plane.” By utilizing recyclable InterfaceFLOR carpet, weight-saving seat covers and life vest pouches, a lighter foam fill in the seats and aluminum (as opposed to plastic) seat rub strips, the newfangled Boeing 737-700 ends up some 472 pounds lighter than a conventional one. The savings? 9,500 gallons of jet fuel per year. We’re not sure when the bird is expected to take her first voyage, but here’s hoping a few others are hatched in the near future.

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Sony’s S-Frame DPP-F700 digiframe / printer hybrid hitting America in January for $200

Written by Admin on October 24, 2009 – 3:30 am -

Need a digital photo frame? Need a printer? Need them to happen within the same enclosure? If you’re one of the oddballs who curiously answered yes — and you don’t actually need it until after the holiday shopping season — Sony’s got you covered. The DPP-F700 digital picture frame with one-touch printing that we saw pop up internationally just last month has finally been blessed with a US ship date and price, and if you’ve paid any attention whatsoever to the headline, you’re probably well aware of what those two data points are. The frame itself will boast a 7-inch display (800 x 480 resolution), 1GB of memory, a multicard reader and will print out “professional quality” 4- x 6-inch photos at 300 x 300 dpi. There’s also a nifty “screen capture” mode that prints out exactly what’s displayed during a slide show, though there’s literally no telling how pricey those refills will be.

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Nintendo’s Miyamoto: next-gen Wii hardware could be "more compact, cost-efficient"

Written by Admin on October 23, 2009 – 1:30 pm -

There ain’t much to glean from Shigeru Miyamoto’s recent sit-down with Popular Mechanics, but in the never-ending quest to learn more about Nintendo’s next-generation Wii, a few tidbits of interest have been highlighted. Miyamoto, who is responsible for creating the likes of Mario and Zelda (amongst others), spoke at length about current titles, the future of video games as a whole and on his view of the not-yet-named Wii 2. In answering a question about the future of motion-sensing in the Big N’s consoles, he ran off topic a bit and noted that “it would be likely that we would try to make that same functionality perhaps more compact and perhaps even more cost-efficient” when speaking about future hardware (which honestly may have been talking strictly about accelerometers). Of course, this is about as predictable as it gets — hardware tends to always shrink and get cheaper as technology improves — but hey, there it is! Now, let your imaginations do what they were born to do.

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LG XNOTE T380-GR73K Slim Laptop With CULV Platform

Written by Admin on October 23, 2009 – 1:30 pm -

LG XNOTE-T380-GR73K

Coming with a 13.3-inch LED-backlight display at 1366 x 768-pixel resolution, the LG’s XNOTE T380-GR73K is also a CULV-based notebook that pre-installed with Windows 7 Home Premium OS, just like the Lenovo’s IdeaPad U150. Weighing at 1.89kg, the XNOTE T380-GR73K packs an Intel Core 2 Duo SU7300 processor, 4GB of RAM, onboard GMA 4500MHD graphics chip and a 500GB hard drive. There also a WiFi 802.11a/g/n and USB port.

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The daily roundup: Windows 7 launch edition

Written by Admin on October 22, 2009 – 10:30 pm -

Windows 7 launches

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Sciphone N19 Budget-Friendly Android Phone

Written by Admin on October 22, 2009 – 10:30 pm -

sciphone N19 android phone

The Sciphone N19 is an Android-powered phone, featuring a Samsung S3C2448 400MHz CPU, a 2.8-inch touchscreen display at 320 x 240 resolution, 128MB ROM and 128MB RAM, a microSD memory card slot, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity, and a 2-megapixel camera. It is runs GSM 900/1800 MHz network. The Sciphone N19 will retail for $150. Strangely enough, the phone is lacked some popular Google apps like Gmail Youtube, and Gmap,which is probably due to the strategy to lower the cost.

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Samsung and TeliaSonera bringing LTE to vikings in 2010

Written by Admin on October 22, 2009 – 8:30 am -

Scandinavian folks tend to be a pretty cheerful bunch during the summer, and now Swedes and Norwegians will have reason to smile through the cold dark winters as well, with Samsung announcing an agreement to provide TeliaSonera with “mobile broadband devices for commercial service next year.” This agreement relates to Sammy’s Kalmia 4G USB modem and adds to the Swedish operator’s LTE push, which already counts Ericsson and Huawei among the contracted hardware providers. So that’s 100Mbps mobile broadband, coming to a snow-covered nation near you within the next dozen months or so. All we would ask of our viking friends now is that they remember their world-conquering ways of the past and start spreading that goodness globally. Come on, it’s our right! Full press release after the break. Read more »


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CRTC sets net neutrality rules for Canada, allows throttling as ‘last resort’

Written by Admin on October 21, 2009 – 1:30 pm -

The FCC may be yet to act on Chairman Genachowski’s proposed net neutrality rules, but the agency’s Canadian counterpart, the CRTC, has made a fairly significant ruling of its own on the matter today, and it seems like it may have manged to disappoint folks on both sides of the debate in the process. The short of it is that the CRTC will allow internet service providers to practice “traffic shaping” (a.k.a. bandwidth throttling), but only as a “last resort,” and only after it has issued a warning that the throttling will take place (30 days in advance for regular users, and 60 days for wholesale customers). What’s more, the CRTC is also recommending that ISPs “give preference to Internet traffic management practices based on economic measures” before cutting into customers downloads — in other words, charge more for extra bandwidth, or offer discounts during non-peak hours.

Read – CRTC ruling
Read – The Globe and Mail, “CRTC sets Web ‘throttling’ rules” Read more »


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