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Sunday, December 5, 2010

The PlayStation Phone

It's hard to believe that what we're looking at is real -- but we assure you, the picture above is in fact the PlayStation Phone you've long been waiting for. As we reported back in August, the device you see is headed into the market soon, likely boasting Android 3.0 (aka Gingerbread), along with a custom Sony Marketplace which will allow you to purchase and download games designed for the new platform. The device snapped up top (and in our gallery below) is sporting a 1GHz Qualcomm MSM8655 (a chip similar to the one found in the G2, but 200MHz faster), 512MB of RAM, 1GB of ROM, and the screen is in the range of 3.7 to 4.1 inches. Looking almost identical to the mockup we hit you with this summer, the handset does indeed have a long touchpad in the center which is apparently multitouch, and you can see in the photos that it's still bearing those familiar PlayStation shoulder buttons. For Sony buffs, you'll be interested to know that there's no Memory Stick slot here, but there is support for microSD cards.

The particular model in these shots is still in prototyping mode. As such, the unit doesn't have a custom skin (not even SE's Timescape design seen on the Xperia devices), and is said to be rather buggy. We're digging into more facts as we speak, but it's likely that much of what we reported earlier is still accurate, and though the device could still be headed for a 2010 release, 2011 is looking much more realistic. Still, there's a lot of time between now and the holidays... so keep your fingers crossed!

Facebook Profile Changes Rolled Out Today

So a fellow named Josh Wiseman today tells of a mighty change that’ll be occurring on your Facebook profile soon. Included in this change are several updates including A New Introduction, Featured Friends, New Experiences, and Improved Photos and Friends Pages. This entire setup will be rolling out gradually, Facebook’s Wiseman says, getting to everyone by early next year, or you can opt to upgrade immediately if you wish.


This new profile first has “A New Introduction” with includes location, school, work, and a row of photos right up at the top of your profile where you want them, (especially if they’re totally embarrassing and you havn’t had a chance to de-tag them yet.) Next, there’s “Featured Friends”, recalling nightmares of MySpace, this feature isn’t quite so bad as that ol’ beast, highlighting the friends you want and allowing you to create groups of friends at your leisure.
The first of two bigger changes is “New Experiences” which gives you a new way to share you activities and interests. List your favorites just like you used to do before social networking existed! Each of your interests and experiences have their own representative image. One option for this is the ability to create a group of people you’ve gone to or go to school with, tagging the people that go in that group, this feature then displaying updates from only them.
The next bigger addition is in “Improved Photos and Friends Pages,” these additions beginning with an “infinite scroll” feature which allows you to cycle through photos in a way new to Facebook. Your friends page, on the other hand, now allows you to more easily search for friends by name, hometown, school, phone number, and more

Advent Vega Tegra 2 tablet back in stock

Advent’s Vega Android tablet is back in stock this morning, with retailer PC World showing the £249 slate up for home delivery. As we’ve seen over the past couple of weeks, however, stock of the 10-inch Tegra 2 tablet doesn’t hang around for long, so we’d advise buying sooner rather than later if you’re hoping to get one from this batch.


Advent has also confirmed that all pre-orders from the Vega’s last sales availability earlier in the week have been processed, so if you were lucky enough to punch in your credit card details in time you should have a present winging its way through the post soon. More details on the slate in our hands-on unboxing; we’ll have a review of the Vega very soon.

Notion Ink tease “big day for Android” on December 6: Pre-orders or Gingerbread?

Notion Ink has put out another of its weekend updates, and it seems Adam is already going through FCC testing. The company also has a few teasers, including the suggestion that “6th December is another big day for Android and you will find out how fast Notion Ink can work. (Eden is extremely compatible with 2.3)”; that could be a hint that pre-orders will open on the 6th, that Android 2.3 Gingerbread is set to launch on that day and Notion Ink will be quickly updating their slate to support the new version, or even that Adam will launch with 2.3 pre-loaded.



Meanwhile there are fresh details about the browser and mail apps, and what sounds like a note-taking app that can collate snipped screenshots and text from the browser. Interestingly, the company has also added in a password-protected email feature, which supposedly allows you to lock down a message to only the person you’ve sent it too; seems Notion Ink grew a little wary of email after seeing some of their developer early-application emails misused.
All six versions of the Adam slate have passed EMI testing – you can find details and pricing on the different SKUs here – and Notion Ink’s sales and marketing team are now apparently in Europe, likely talking to carriers and distributors there. CEO Rohan has also confirmed that pre-orders will initially be limited to those who have commented on the company’s blog, before opening up shortly after to the general public.

Friday, December 3, 2010

ONA Union Street Camera and Messenger Bag hands-on

Laptops, DSLRs, iPads, even Moleskines – we ask a lot of the bags we carry, and in return it takes a lot to impress us. ONA’s Union Street messenger bag is certainly ticking the right boxes from first impressions, billed as a camera bag – indeed, it fits a DSLR complete with a lens attached – it’s well padded, very well made and still has room for a MacBook Pro. More first impressions after the cut.


Currently up for pre-order at $279, the Union Street comes in black, smoke or the ranger tan of our review sample. Rather than leather or nylon, ONA has opted for hand-crafted waxed cotton canvas, punctuated with leather straps, detailing and a tough base section. It works well with the antiqued brass hardware.

There’s room in well-bolstered, adjustable sections for up to three lenses or flash units, together with a full-size DSLR, and then a laptop in the removable side pouch. A 13-15-inch MacBook Pro slotted in easily with a leather strap to hold it in place.

It’s not cheap, but it’s comfortable and very well constructed; there’s obviously been plenty of attention paid to putting the bag together. Certainly one of the best hybrid camera/laptop messenger bags we’ve come across, and with the toughness to leave us confident toting it across a show floor.

Eliminar los metadatos (EXIF) de una foto

A veces tomamos una foto y la recortamos a gusto pensando que solo estamos mostrando lo que vemos en pantalla y esto no es asi, cada fotografiá tiene lo que se llaman metadatos o EXIF (medidas, fechas, geolocalización, etc) que es un conjunto de información referida a la misma, para ver estos datos se puede utilizar programas como FOCA.
El ejemplo en video que cita Alejandro en su post es muy didáctico al respecto donde se ve uno de los metadatos que es una imagen en miniatura de la original, pero al editar la foto este no cambio por lo cual muestra “información” que no querías mostrar.
Asi que si no desean entregar esta información cuando comparten sus fotos en sitios como Facebook, Flickr y demás pueden utilizar MetaStripper, una aplicación que solo realiza la tarea de eliminar los metadatos permitiendo la selección de una carpeta para agilizar la misma.

Orange offers cheap subsidized iPad

If you are a UK tablet computer geek that has been lusting after an iPad for Christmas this is your chance to get one on the cheap. Orange has announced a new low price for the iPad if you don’t mind signing away 24 months of your wireless freedom.


The iPad at Orange is £199 with a 24-month contract for 3G data. That works out to about $310 here in the states, which is a big discount. If you are planning to get a data plan with your iPad anyway, this is a great deal.
Orange also reminds that its 3D data network covers 93% of the population and they will give your 2 for 1 movie tickets and pizza with Orange Wednesday. Discount pizza and movie tickets are chock full of win.

Prosecution in Xbox 360 modder case drops charges

Like most geeks, I think that once I spend my money on something like a computer or a game console such as the Xbox 360, it is mine to do with as I wish. If I want to mod the thing, I should be allowed to do so. One modder of and Xbox 360 found himself in court over the modifications he made to the console.


The mods in question were allegedly made to allow the gamer to play pirated games and homebrew software. After the judge lectured the prosecution for half an hour earlier this week, the prosecuting legal team decided to drop the case against the modder. The modders name is Matthew Crippen.
Part of the lecture by the judge was to do with the fact that key evidence in the case was obtained by means that violated privacy laws in California. The key evidence were video tapes of Crippen modding Xbox consoles in his home and the tapes were recorded secretly. Crippen had faced up to ten years in prison.

Best Buy offers free Android phones just in time for Christmas

If one of the things you or someone on your Christmas list really wants is a new smartphone, you might want to head over to Best Buy. The retail giant is offering up some nice new smartphones free with a new contract or an upgrade. The devices include a single Blackberry Curve on Sprint and the rest of the free phones are Android devices on other carriers.


The free smartphones on Verizon include the Droid Incredible, LG Ally, and LG Vortex. The last offering comes in black or purple colors. AT&T users can get the HTC Aria or the Sony Xperia Mobile Phone in silver or black. Sprint users can get the LG Optimus S, Sanyo Zio, and the Blackberry Curve.
T-Mobile fans will be offered the LG Optimus T in burgundy and titanium. All of the phones will be available to upgrades and new customers with a new 2-year contract. There will be free smartphone offers every Friday during the holiday shopping season.

Kaleidescape debuts Cinema One movie server

Kaleidescape has unveiled its latest movie server called the Cinema One. The device is an out of the box

The server box uses four 500GB mini disc cartridges that has enough storage space for storing 225 DVD movies and offers RAID-K parity for data protection. Multiple Cinema One devices can be grouped for more storage space if needed. The device has HDMI, component, S-Video, and composite video output and digital coaxial, optical, and analog stereo audio outputs.
It supports Dolby Digital Sound, DTS Digital Surround, and MPEG Audio. Supported resolutions include 1080p60/50, 1080i, 720p, 576p, 576i, 480p, and 480i. The device supports all sorts of CD formats and DVD formats for recordable media. The Cinema One is far from cheap with a MSRP of $4,995.

Google +1 social network now involving Sergey Brin?

Google’s work-in-progress social networking system, which we last heard was delayed until spring 2011, may end up launching as “Google +1″ or “Google Plus One”. According to TechCrunch‘s sources, Sergey Brin has joined VP Vic Gundotra in working on the project, which is believed to consist – at least initially – of a toolbar spread across each of the company’s services including some form of Chrome browser integration.


That integration could be fully baked into Chrome, or it could take the form of an optional extension. The search giant’s apparent intention is to spread adoption across third-party sites, taking on the Facebook “Like” button and other widgets in the process. Unfortunately, “there is still a lot of grumbling” internally one source claims, which earlier rumors suggested were the cause of Google’s launch delay; another says the company is also considering “@ Google” or “At Google” as a potential service name.

CLEAR Modem with WiFi wants to replace your DSL

CLEAR has launched a new modem for use with its WiMAX service, though it’s targeted at home or small-office users rather than mobile mavens. The unimaginatively titled CLEAR Modem with WiFi is, as you can probably guess, a CLEAR WiMAX modem with an integrated WiFi b/g/n radio, for sharing the 4G connection with multiple users.


There’s also a single ethernet port for hooking up a wired computer, and a simple five LED signal strength gauge. What we’d really like to see is a WAN port for using the router with a cable/DSL modem, opening up the possibility of either coupling the bandwidth from two connections, or keeping the WiMAX as a fall-back should the hardline go down.
The CLEAR Modem with WiFi is available now, priced at $120 outright or $7 per month leased. It’s available with month-to-month or two-year agreements, with service plans starting at $35/month (plus tax); CLEAR Voice can be added for $15/month (plus tax).

1m Samsung Galaxy Tab sold; 10-inch Tab in 1H 2011

Samsung has announced that global sales of the Galaxy Tab have already met its one million unit target for 2010, and that the company now expects to shift 1.5m of the Android slates before the year is out. The milestone follows Samsung’s last announced sales goal of 600,000 Tabs back in late November 2010.


According to Samsung, 10-percent of the total sales to-date have been in Korea alone, with 100,000 Galaxy Tabs being snapped up since the 7-inch tablet went on sale there on November 13. The company now plans to launch a 10-inch Galaxy Tab in the first half of 2011, believed to be the first in a range of models both larger and smaller than their initial attempt.

Sony Ericsson LiveView Review

A tiny sub-display, for remotely-controlling your Android smartphone and sneaking glances at incoming messages when you probably should be paying attention in class, in meetings or in the midst of romantic dinners: what’s not to like about Sony Ericsson’s LiveView? The compact OLED display promises to pick out the most important updates from your smartphone and push them out to your wrist or wherever you have the LiveView clipped, but does the real-world experience live up to the marketing promise? Check out the full SlashGear review after the cut.


Hardware

Measuring in at 35 x 35 x 11 mm, the plastic-bodied LiveView is a lightweight if somewhat thick black square, fronted by a 1.3-inch 128 x 128 color OLED display. On the back there’s a metal clip, sturdy enough to keep the LiveView fixed snugly to your lapel or the shoulder-strap of your bag; Sony Ericsson also supply a nylon wrist-strap and a plastic frame assembly to turn the LiveView into a chunky watch. Hardware controls are limited to a power button with integrated multicolor LED on the top left corner and a second button on the top right; on the bottom edge there’s a microUSB port for charging, covered with a somewhat fiddly rubber flap.

Unfortunately there’s no touchscreen – likely to keep the price down – and instead the bezel around the display hides four touch-sensitive directional controls, with the right physical button acting as select. It’s not as intuitive as, say, sweeping the display on the iPod nano. As well as flashing its notification light, the LiveView also has a vibration motor inside for discrete updates of new messages, calendar appointments and the like. It’s not the most powerful we’ve seen, but it’ll get your attention, particularly if you have the display clipped to your wrist.

Software

Sony Ericsson get points for not making the LiveView an accessory solely for their own range of XPERIA smartphones, and more again for opening up the SDK for third-party developers. Instead, it’ll work with most Android smartphones running OS 2.0 or above, and the LiveView application – which runs in the background on your phone – is freely available in the Android Market.
It’s not quite as straightforward as installing the app and going from there, though; there’s actually a second app, Sony Ericsson LiveWare, which the company tells you to install first and then which guides you through the LiveView installation. It’s not entirely clear from the description of either app as to the differences, which could well lead to confusion, especially as – when we tried running both or just the LiveView app on different devices – we couldn’t see any particular difference in operation.

Out of the box, the app supports incoming calls, SMS, Facebook and Twitter updates, along with basic media player control, RSS headlines and date/time. It’s straightforward to toggle each on or off from the app’s settings – if you don’t want to use the RSS functionality, you don’t have to see it on the LiveView’s display – and you sign into Facebook and Twitter independently from any other apps you may be using on your phone. If you’re reading an SMS or RSS excerpt and want to review it (or, indeed, reply to it) on your phone, hitting a button automatically opens that page on the handset itself.

There’s also a “plug-ins” option, which opens the LiveView up to third-party apps also distributed via the Android Market. So far, with the sub-display in its infancy, the choice is limited; there are weather and Gmail apps, together with a “Where Am I” app which shows your current position in a zoomable snapshot from Google Maps, along with a few others.

Performance

Unfortunately, while the premise has merit, the actual experience of using the LiveView falls well short. Most frustrating are the regular connection failures, with the LiveView randomly dropping its link to the various handsets we tested it with and then proving unable to re-connect. Most of the time either power-toggling Bluetooth or the sub-display itself addressed the issue, but it happened far too frequently for our liking.
Navigation, too, felt more convoluted than it should be. The menu layout should be straightforward – cycle through the top level of Sony Ericsson’s native apps with the left/right touch keys, select with the right-hand physical button and then move up and down lists of RSS headlines or missed calls with the up/down keys – but all too often presses would fail to be recognized. We also found the LiveView would often stall, refusing to back out to the main menu and instead leaving us either looking at a blank screen or simply the status bar of time and battery life.

Integration between phone and LiveView is also patchy. There’s no access to existing phone call logs or messages, only those that come in from the point you connect the LiveView, and you can’t browse through your calendar entries, only see alerts on those you’ve set notifications for. Bizarrely, while the included watch strap obviously positions the LiveView as a timepiece, it’s entirely dependent on your phone for the actual time. Lose connection, and it caches neither time nor date.
The LiveView works best with the simplest functionality: incoming calls. The sub-display shows the number of the caller and, if they’re saved in your phone’s address book, their name as well. You can mute the ringer but not actually answer the call; the LiveView doesn’t work as a Bluetooth speakerphone, so your Dick Tracy ambitions will go unachieved. If you’ve lost the phone itself, a locator function will make it chirp until you find it, though if your handset is set on vibrate or silent it won’t make a noise.

It’s also possible to control the normal Android media player – though not any third-party media apps, such as Spotify – using the LiveView’s buttons, with basic track skip, volume and play/pause functionality. You also see track information, though nothing more than artist and title.
As for the third-party plug-ins, we had mixed results with these, too. The Gmail app does what you’d expect, though is relatively bare when it comes to options for things like frequency of updates, and the weather app does what it promises. We had high hopes for the Where Am I app, imagining discrete navigation from our wrist rather than pulling out a phone and looking like a tourist, but the reality was somewhat less impressive.

Much of the time was spent watching a clock icon that never disappeared, though by tapping the up and down controls – which steps through different levels of zoom – we did find two frames that had successfully made it over from Google Maps. Unfortunately it’s not a dynamically updating display, instead literally a snapshot of your current position, with no direction indicator. We’d like to have been able to pan around the surrounding area with the direction buttons, but that’s not possible either. Hopefully a developer will step in with a Google Maps Navigation plug-in that puts updating pedestrian directions onto the LiveView’s display.

Battery

Sony Ericsson reckon the LiveView’s non-replaceable battery is good for up to four days use, though we found that was overly ambitious. Instead, we managed almost two days of sporadic use, though it’s worth noting that on some occasions, when we tried to use the LiveView, it had dropped the Bluetooth connection and refused to reconnect; it’s not clear how much of the time was spent unconnected in this way. The problem is compounded by a flaky battery gauge, which for much of the time seemed to bear little relationship to how much use we subsequently got out of it.

Wrap-Up

The concept behind the LiveView is brilliant: offsetting alerts and updates to a secondary screen, allowing you to keep on top of them without having to constantly pull out your phone. That demands consistency, however, and it’s there that the LiveView stumbles. We experienced far too many random disconnects or apparent crashes for comfort, and all too often had to resort to power-cycling Bluetooth on our phone in order to get the LiveView working again.
Sony Ericsson deserves credit for the concept and flexibility with a range of Android devices, and the price – at around what you’d pay for a mid-range Bluetooth headset – is considerably less than the company’s earlier Bluetooth watches. Unfortunately the day to day experience simply doesn’t live up to the promise.
Thanks to Clove for the loan of the Sony Ericsson LiveView. It’s available now, priced at £69.