Monday, February 28, 2011

iDisplay now ready to turn your Android device into a secondary display

While iPhone and iPad users have been able to use iDisplay to turn their device into a secondary display for some time now (with at least some degree of success), Android users have unfortunately been left to their own devices -- until now, that is. The folks behind the app have finally made an Android version available as well, which is apparently compatible with all Android smartphones and tablets running Android 2.1 or later, and works in both portrait and landscape modes. As with the iOS version, it's also compatible with both Windows and OS X, and it'll set you back the same $4.99.

iDisplay now ready to turn your Android device into a secondary display originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Mar 2011 01:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/03/01/idisplay-now-ready-to-turn-your-android-device-into-a-secondary/

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Check Into Foursquare, Facebook Places With Your Watch

If you've ever thought "I'd get so much more geo-location done in my day if it could all just be done from my watch," the folks at inPulse smart watch have an app for you. This hack allows inPulse smart watch users to check into Facebook Places and Foursquare with a tap of their watch button. It's pretty kludgey right now because it requires a Bluetooth connection to an Android smartphone to work but, as an extension to the standard check-in APIs used on phones, it could prove useful.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/xMbt91ljGjI/

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YouCeleb Lets You Look Like a Star For Cheap

Do you secretly wish you could look like a celebrity but don't have the entourage, breakfast cereal in your name, or cash flow to make it possible? Well, thanks to YouCeleb, an e-commerce site launching today, now you can look and feel like a celebrity. (A sober one, of course.) The startup offers daily deals and discounts on designer fashion that celebrities wear after the cameras stop rolling. Here's how it works: The YouCeleb team identifies paparazzi photos of a celebrity, determines what they're wearing, and then works with the relevant celebrity and brand to provide you with deals on those particular clothes and accessories. Operating under a group buy model similar to Groupon's, YouCeleb offers a daily deal on a certain item and then sets a minimum number of items that must be sold. If you're interested in the item, you fill out your payment information, but you don't pay anything until that minimum is met.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ZQ8fxxix9As/

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Nintendo 3DS gets torn apart and hacked a day after Japanese launch

So you just got a Nintendo 3DS following its launch in Japan -- what do you do? While most would be content to simply pass the time with Pilotwings for at least a few days, others are a bit more... curious. In that group you'll find the folks from Tech-On!, who have already torn the handheld apart and even gone the extra mile to examine its 3D display under a microscope -- they assume it's a Sharp parallax barrier display, but weren't able to confirm it as such. As if that wasn't enough for a day-old system, YouTube user ayasuke2 has already hacked the system use R4 cards and run unauthorized Nintendo DS games. Head on past the break for some video evidence of that, and hit up the source link below for the complete teardown.

Continue reading Nintendo 3DS gets torn apart and hacked a day after Japanese launch

Nintendo 3DS gets torn apart and hacked a day after Japanese launch originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 Feb 2011 13:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/02/28/nintendo-3ds-gets-torn-apart-and-hacked-a-day-after-japanese-lau/

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FlyRuby Aims to Be the Kayak of Private Air Travel

Launching today at the Demo Conference in Palm Springs is flyRuby, a platform that enables you to search, compare, and book private air charters online. There is something to be said for startups that identify successful services and business models and apply those to under-served niche markets. Through its website, flyRuby hopes to deliver a quick and efficient way to book private air charter that is comparable to the instantaneous search, booking, and competitive pricing of commercial airline sites, like Orbitz, Kayak and Expedia. The project of founder and CEO Michael Leek, flyRuby owes its technology to CTO Dr. Stephen Smith, who, working in conjunction with Carnegie Mellon University, developed the algorithms as part of a DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) research initiative to assist the U.S. Air Force. Operating in a similar manner to the technology behind commercial airline booking sites, flyRuby's artificial intelligence instantly scans thousands of flight routes and seating charts for private flights across the country, finding available seating, and streamlining the booking process.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/obncPwgxFeI/

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AT&T To Start Selling Amazon Kindle 3G In US Stores, Beginning March 6

Amazon still refuses to share how many Kindle devices it has sold to date, short from saying it's the best-selling product in its history, but you can be sure it will become a whole lot more really soon. AT&T this morning announced it will begin selling the Kindle 3G digital publication reader in company-owned retail stores across the United States, beginning March 6.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/1R4rTvJMrn0/

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Abrams Media Network Launches ?The Mary Sue,? New Site For Nerd Girls

Let's just face it, being a geek girl on the internet sucks. Even if you're relatively smart and a woman your lot in life is basically relegated to this unless you're Oprah.�My point is that there's never really been a successful and lasting site targeted only to nerd girls (Village Voice Media's*�Heartless Doll tried to no avail until it entered the deadpool last May). Dan Abrams and the folks behind Mediaite are trying to break this curse, with today's launch of �The Mary Sue.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/9ylQELOzqSw/

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Microsoft Unveils Windows on ARM, Surface 2 at CES

Hours before Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer took the stage for his Jan. 5 keynote here at the Consumer Electronics Show, his company held a press conference to spoil at least a part of his big surprises.

The reason seems fairly straightforward: CES takes place in Vegas, and Ballmer's keynote--scheduled for 6:30 p.m. PST--takes place after all but the most die-hard news junkies have signed off their RSS feeds. By holding a press conference for 1 p.m. Vegas time, Microsoft could occupy at least part of a news cycle with the announcement that the next version of Windows will support System on a Chip (SoC) architecture, in particular ARM-based systems from partners such as Qualcomm, Nvidia and Texas Instruments.

What does this mean for you? The potential for a broader variety of Windows-based devices in the future, notably tablets. Windows currently dominates the x86 platform used by traditional PCs, but the rise of powerful mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets--powered largely by ARM chip designs--has effectively created a whole new market for the operating system, provided Microsoft can work out the inevitable engineering issues.

"Under the hood there's a ton of differences that need to be worked through," Steven Sinofsky, president of Windows and Windows Live Division, told the audience at the press conference. "Windows has proven remarkably flexible at this under-the-hood sort of stuff. We work on storage from Flash all the way up to terabytes of storage" and "Windows kernel on alternate architectures."

Microsoft used the press conference to show off ARM running various Windows applications, including Internet Explorer and PowerPoint. It all seemed very smooth in the demonstration, but much work evidently needs to be done before ARM-based Windows becomes a reality you can purchase at your local Best Buy--Sinofsky seemed reluctant to offer any sort of firm release date.

Microsoft executives also demonstrated some interesting new devices in the pipeline, including a Samsung laptop whose keyboard slides to make the device a tablet, and an Acer laptop with two touch-screens. (Whether you pay hundreds of dollars for the latter, of course, seems dependent on your tolerance for virtual keyboards.) Also on display: Surface 2, the next generation of the company's table-sized touch-screen tablet. This new version runs Windows 7, and its Gorilla Glass front apparently means it can resist a bottle dropped from 18 inches or less--evidently, restaurants are among the commercial enterprises intended as potential customers for the device.

These little demonstrations, of course, make me wonder what the company's holding in reserve for Ballmer's presentation. We'll see in a few hours.


Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/MicrosoftWatch/~3/_2h9Q9P8r84/microsoft_unveils_windows_on_arm_surface_2_at_ces.html

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Sunday, February 27, 2011

Weekend Giveaway: Rebtel Wants You To Have A Motorola Atrix

Rebtel is offering us one hot little Motorola Atrix to give away this weekend to one lucky reader. How do you win? Well first you have to be very very nice to animals and the environment and then you need to click through to comment.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/XZqpMw5vLg4/

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HTC Thunderbolt said to have terrible battery life, might explain delay?

We're hearing from... well, let's call them "people familiar with the matter" that HTC's Thunderbolt -- a phone that's supposed to be Verizon's first with LTE -- is experiencing positively miserable battery life that's making it difficult for testers to avoid carrying a second phone around as a backup. How bad? Two to three hours from full to empty in some cases. Of course, we wouldn't be surprised if battery life was really bad with the LTE radio left on -- the EVO 4G wasn't much different at launch with WiMAX lit up -- but the word on the street is that the power situation is largely responsible for the delays we've been seeing. In fact, our source tells us the phone is currently working on its sixth retail delay at the moment. More on this situation as we get it.

Update: We've just heard from another trusted tipster that there's definitely a new firmware in the works to address battery life and signal issues (which -- you guessed it -- are interrelated). Thanks, HTC Kid!

HTC Thunderbolt said to have terrible battery life, might explain delay? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Feb 2011 19:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/02/25/htc-thunderbolt-said-to-have-terrible-battery-life-might-explai/

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Sprint HTC Arrive with Windows Phone 7 copy and paste first hands-on! (video)

HTC also brought along a Sprint-branded Arrive to our San Francisco reader meetup, and while we're already familiar with this Windows Phone 7 slider from our time with the HTC 7 Pro it's still nice to see a CDMA WP7 device in the flesh. Oh, and the keyboard is pretty fantastic -- not only does it feel great, but the dedicated number row alone is reason for keyboard fans to give this thing a look. The best part? The demo unit was loaded up with the Windows Phone 7 copy and paste update, which is the first time we've seen it in the wild. The system worked well, but we noticed that you once you paste out of the clipboard your text is gone, so you can't multiple paste. It's a little odd -- we'll have a video up shortly.

Update: The video is up -- check it below!

Update 2: Okay, so you can multiple paste! The paste icon just disappears after the first paste, which is super confusing. You can just swipe to the right to bring it back, though. We'd suggest Microsoft re-think this implementation a little for an update, since it wasn't clear to anyone here at first glance.

Continue reading Sprint HTC Arrive with Windows Phone 7 copy and paste first hands-on! (video)

Sprint HTC Arrive with Windows Phone 7 copy and paste first hands-on! (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Feb 2011 20:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/02/25/sprint-htc-arrive-with-windows-phone-7-copy-and-paste-first-hand/

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Apple?s iPad Still Has No Competition

Editor's Note: Jim Dalrymple has been writing about Apple for more than 15 years. You can follow him on Twitter @jdalrymple and on his Web site at The Loop. It's been almost a year since Apple released the iPad and we're less than a week away from the unveiling of the iPad 2, and still there's no competition. There are a few very good reasons for Apple's success and why its competitors are finding it difficult to gain any traction against the king of digital devices. There's the infrastructure, the combination of hardware and software, and the fact that its competitors are content to settle for second best.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/_agAa749l64/

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Crush Notifier, From The Makers Of Breakup Notifier, Finds Mutual Crushes

Breakup Notifier creator Dan Lowenhertz should just give up on Crate (his actual job) and just make a whole network of these types of things. After having his wildly popular app Breakup Notifier blocked by Facebook, Lowenhertz has dusted himself off and is back in the game, trying to "turn a negative to a positive" with Crush Notifier. From his blog:
"So what does the popularity of Breakup Notifier tell us? I believe it?s that human beings, above all else, value relationships. I never knew how many people would end up using Breakup Notifier.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/juBBbR9jy3c/

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Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 Update Snafu No Minor Issue

Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 plans hit a bit of a speed-bump this week.

A few days ago, the company began pushing through a "smaller infrastructure update that will help future updates," including the long-awaited addition of a cut-and-paste feature sometime in early March. "While it may not sound exciting, it's important because it's paving the way for all future goodie-filled updates to your phone," Michael Stroh, a writer for Microsoft's Windows team, posted Feb. 21 on the Windows Phone Blog.

For some Windows Phone 7 users, though, that update made things a little more exciting than expected, if you define "exciting" as "stall midway through the update and force a hard reset or, in some cases, totally brick my phone." Within a day of the update starting to push its way into the ecosystem, Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 help forum erupted with commenter threads about the issue, with titles like, "WP7 Stuck on Step 7 of 10, how long should this update take?" and "Update error with Optimus 7."

Most of the issues seemed to affect Samsung smartphones, which is apparently why Microsoft decided to pull the update for those devices.

"We have identified a technical issue with the Windows Phone update process that impacts a small number of phones," a Microsoft spokesperson wrote in a Feb. 23 email to me. "In response to this emerging issue, we have temporarily taken down the latest software update for Samsung phones in order to correct the issue."

Microsoft has several updates scheduled for the second half of 2011, including multitasking, Twitter integration with the platform's "People" Hub, and Office document sharing and storage via Windows Live Skydrive. Internet Explorer 9 will also be added to the platform.

In the not-so-distant past, when Microsoft was prepping Windows Phone 7 for release, I suggested that the smartphone platform's rollout needed to be near-flawless in order to have the slightest chance of succeeding against Google Android and Apple iPhone. Having bled smartphone market-share for the past several quarters, Microsoft had precious little capital with either consumers or businesses in the mobility realm; one high-profile flub with Windows Phone 7's software or hardware would risk all the effort spent touting it as a viable alternative to those rival platforms.

I'm not sure this issue with the update counts as a catastrophe for the platform, but it's certainly giving Windows Phone 7 a burst of negative publicity it doesn't need. It also increases the pressure on Microsoft to execute the balance of its 2011 updates as flawlessly as possible.


Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/MicrosoftWatch/~3/Tc4tuqPsRQU/microsofts_windows_phone_7_update_snafu_no_minor_issue.html

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Microsoft, Nokia Deal Poses Big Questions

I'm a fan of John le Carr� novels and other pop-culture spycraft, so when Nokia CEO Stephen Elop announced Feb. 11 that his company would enter into a wide-ranging agreement with Microsoft--one that would see Windows Phone 7 ported onto its devices--I immediately thought: sleeper agent.

Remember that, until recently, Elop was president of Microsoft's Business Division. Then he leaves to take the reins at Nokia. A few short months later, he announces that Nokia will essentially become a Microsoft subsidiary, at least in terms of mobile software. Of course, it's not like he and Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer planned all this from the beginning--but wouldn't it be interesting if they did? Maybe Elop has other movie-spy skills, like the ability to build a bomb out of common household materials or kill a man with his pinkie. Both those might come in useful with the Nokia employees who are apparently less than enthusiastic about this whole deal.

Some intrepid reporter at this week's Mobile World Congress in Barcelona asked Elop if he was a "Trojan horse," penetrating Nokia in order to execute Microsoft's plan.

"The obvious answer is 'no,'" Elop apparently replied, according to an Associated Press article. "Thanks for asking."

Oh, that's no fun. But for both companies, the benefits of such an agreement seem pretty obvious. "The two companies are on their respective back feet," Andrew Brust, founder of Microsoft analysis and strategy provider Blue Badge Insights told my eWEEK colleague Darryl Taft. "But they can certainly help each other: Microsoft gets global reach and market share from Nokia; Nokia upgrades from the somewhat stunted Symbian OS to something modern, touch-centric and contemporary in design value, through Microsoft's WP7."

Other analysts don't seem quite so sold on the deal.

"We think Nokia have created a new set of issues--a lack of ecosystem control, margin decline and a raft of new royalty payouts--in return for a 'unique relationship,'" Lee Simpson and Andrej Krneta, analysts with Jeffries & Co., wrote in a Feb. 14 research note. "With WP7 as Nokia's new primary smartphone OS, why would any operator take an end-of-life product (Symbian). This can only cap the top-line for Nokia going through 2011 and much of 2012."

The analysts believe that Nokia's first Windows Phone 7 devices will be "hollowed out 'N8s' or the like," referring to one of the manufacturer's higher-end smartphones. "Despite longer-term assertions of speedy time to market designs, the overhauling of roadmaps (and cancellations near-term) will likely dent near-term progress and leaving Nokia dangerously exposed to further market-share erosion."

The other question is whether Nokia can convince its third-party developers to make an abrupt about-face and start developing for the Windows Phone 7 platform. I'd be interested in hearing whether those developers are open to the switch, or if they're irritated enough to head into the open arms of iOS and Android. Over the past few months, Microsoft has been aggressive about promoting the virtues of Windows Phone 7 to the developer community, and I wouldn't be surprised if its executives use the Nokia deal to further push the virtues of their platform and apps.

Meanwhile, Nokia apparently confirmed Feb. 13 that leaked concept images of a Windows Phone 7 device, floating around on sites such as Winrumors, are in fact genuine. If those designs hold true to a finished product, Nokia's WP7 offerings will be sleek and thin, in a way that seems calibrated as a direct response to the iPhone and Motorola's Droid franchise.

But many details of the new alliance remain unclear. "We have a formidable plan to ensure our collective leadership in the smartphone market and in the ecosystem that surrounds it," Nokia CEO Stephen Elop told a London press conference Feb. 11. "Our long-term strategic alliance will build a global ecosystem that creates opportunities beyond anything that currently exists."

He could tell you more about that strategy, but then he'd have to kill you.


Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/MicrosoftWatch/~3/jB5TcAqQeD0/microsoft_nokia_deal_poses_big_questions.html

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Consumer Reports Confirms Death Grip In Verizon iPhone

Apple just can't get a break. Consumer Reports is, well, reporting that in their testing scenarios the Verizon iPhone 4 has the same "death grip" attenuation issues as the AT&T/GSM model, which means dropped calls and signal degradation if you hold the phone wrong. Just as with the previous model, the Verizon iPhone 4 suffers from the same conductive gap issues and the problems manifest when you touch the small spot between the two pieces of metal cladding.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/u5XQC_AYnQM/

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