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Fuji Soft’s new humanoid is powered by Atom and Ubuntu

December 21st, 2009

The world needs humanoids, and Fuji Soft is heeding that call. It just unveiled its new humanoid line at the ever-popular All Japan Robot Tournament, and while the robot doesn’t have a model name yet, one of the delightful personalities pictured above is named Sakura-Chan and both seem pretty keen on a bit of robo-Sumo. The mobility and capabilities of the bots seems pretty standard, with an LED visor for facial expressions, speech recognition and a camera for taking in this odd carbon-based world it finds itself in. What’s more interesting is the Robovie-style off-the-shelf parts inside: Atom CPU, Ubuntu OS and WiFi, all of which are compatible with the Eclipse development environment. The robot should be hitting the streets (of Japan) in early 2010 for a supposedly competitive price. Video is after the break.

Continue reading Fuji Soft’s new humanoid is powered by Atom and Ubuntu

Fuji Soft’s new humanoid is powered by Atom and Ubuntu originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Dec 2009 21:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Barnes & Noble giving $100 for Nook pre-orders that miss Christmas

December 20th, 2009

Haven’t got your Nook yet? You may actually be in luck. For people who pre-ordered early enough to expect a pre-Christmas delivery, Barnes & Noble is promising a $100 B&N.com gift card if it misses December 24th — which is apparently distinctly possible. Of course, if you’re one of the lucky / unlucky ones to have this on offer, you’ve probably already seen the email, and if you’re a different sort of hapless pre-orderer that won’t be seeing a Nook until next year, this is just another reason to curse your lot in life. To think: not only are you not ushering in 2010 from an economy suite in a space hotel, but you’re going to wrap up this year reading paper books, without $100 to show for it! Can’t we do better as a civilization?

Barnes & Noble giving $100 for Nook pre-orders that miss Christmas originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 20 Dec 2009 10:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Barnes & Noble giving $100 for Nook pre-orders that miss Christmas

December 20th, 2009

Haven’t got your Nook yet? You may actually be in luck. For people who pre-ordered early enough to expect a pre-Christmas delivery, Barnes & Noble is promising a $100 B&N.com gift card if it misses December 24th — which is apparently distinctly possible. Of course, if you’re one of the lucky / unlucky ones to have this on offer, you’ve probably already seen the email, and if you’re a different sort of hapless pre-orderer that won’t be seeing a Nook until next year, this is just another reason to curse your lot in life. To think: not only are you not ushering in 2010 from an economy suite in a space hotel, but you’re going to wrap up this year reading paper books, without $100 to show for it! Can’t we do better as a civilization?

Barnes & Noble giving $100 for Nook pre-orders that miss Christmas originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 20 Dec 2009 10:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Artopz Minitopz Ion-based nettop lamp rains down confusion, wonder

December 19th, 2009

We don’t get it. At all. That said, we’re totally enamored with this Artopz Minitopz, which manages to both be an impressively-specced Atom and Ion-based nettop, and simultaneously a completly confounding piece of “art.” Apparently it’s supposed to be perceived as a lamp, but we’d say that stretches the limits of imagination. But it stretches them in a good way, that’s all we’re saying. Oh, and the Minitopz costs $2,250, just in case you thought you’d penetrated this fog of luxurious gadget oddity to the point of pulling out a wallet. Maybe the video after the break will help clear some things up? Nope, not really.

Continue reading Artopz Minitopz Ion-based nettop lamp rains down confusion, wonder

Artopz Minitopz Ion-based nettop lamp rains down confusion, wonder originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 19 Dec 2009 23:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tiki’Labs virtual keyboard for iPhone takes shot at Swype, one-handed typing wars commence

December 18th, 2009

One-handed touchscreen typing is the hip new thing, apparently, since mere weeks after getting our first whiff of Swype, Tiki’Labs has debuted its own free TikiNotes app for the iPhone with a proprietary “large target” sort of keyboard. We’ve seen the idea before, specifically with some accessibility devices, which lets the user drill down into one of six alphabet sectors, and then pick one of six characters. TikiNotes improves upon that by not only predicting the word you’re currently typing, but also often correctly guessing the next word you were planning on typing. To be honest, we find that second feature just a little depressing — all that money the government spent on our two years of high school education and we still form sentences like everybody else — but certainly useful (Tiki’Labs claims a 40% success rate). We tried out the free app for a couple of minutes and found it more akin to a Brain Age-type exercise than a typing utility, but we’re sure we could get used to it. What we can’t get used to, however, is how hilariously great it is that Tiki’Labs spliced a Swype demo video (originally pitted against the iPhone keyboard) to serve as a typing race example… and still only barely squeaked through with the victory. It can be found after the break, naturally. The app will be available on Windows Mobile and Android soon.

Continue reading Tiki’Labs virtual keyboard for iPhone takes shot at Swype, one-handed typing wars commence

Tiki’Labs virtual keyboard for iPhone takes shot at Swype, one-handed typing wars commence originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 10:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gadget Venue  |  sourceTiki’Labs  | Email this | Comments



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Wii Fit found to have ‘little effect’ on family fitness level, boredom seems to be the main culprit

December 17th, 2009

In a new study conducted by Scott Owens out of the University of Mississippi, the Wii Fit was loaned to eight families and the usage and fitness impact was tracked over time — three months before they got the Wii, and three months after. The verdict? “No significant changes” in family fitness from the Wii. Interestingly, over the period of three months the daily Wii Fit usage declined a staggering 82 percent, from 22 minutes a day for the first half of the time all the way down to an average of four minutes a day for the last six weeks. The biggest winners here were the children, who did display some “significant” increases in the specific area of aerobic fitness, but we get the feeling that with a bit more stick-to-itiveness the whole family might’ve been able to raise its game here. Or maybe Nintendo could invest in making some more motion-controlled games that don’t become repetitive and shallow after two playthroughs.

Wii Fit found to have ‘little effect’ on family fitness level, boredom seems to be the main culprit originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Dec 2009 02:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink PC World  |  sourceOle Miss  | Email this | Comments



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Rooted Nook gets Pandora, shot at true happiness

December 16th, 2009

Outside of swearing up a storm on a Twitter app, there aren’t many better ways to announce your presence on a new Android device than the comforting song selections of well-curated Pandora station. A newly rooted Nook with an unlimited supply of free 3G? Even better. The folks behind the rooted Barnes & Noble Nook have now managed to install Pandora onto the device. It took some VNC trickery to get past the login screen, but after that the app works perfectly with the Nook’s touchscreen and even runs in the background while you read. Right now the NookDevs are working on a software unlock so that you don’t have to open the Nook to root it, and are also looking into a Nook app marketplace of sorts. We don’t know how long the fun will last, or what Barnes & Noble’s response will be — so far they’ve been mum on the issue — but the NookDevs claim that based on a perusal of the end user license agreement “there is nothing in there to get us into trouble,” so hopefully we’re looking at the beginnings of a beautiful, awkward friendship between a device maker and hackers. We can dream, right?

Rooted Nook gets Pandora, shot at true happiness originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Dec 2009 22:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Wired  |  sourceNookDevs  | Email this | Comments



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Kindle App for iPhone goes international, starts to get a little annoying at parties

December 14th, 2009

We get it, Amazon Kindle App: you’ve just become available in over 60 countries, you’re something of a jet setter now. But you don’t have to go around and rub it in our faces. So what if we’ve only been to Mexico that one time by accident and can’t sync books and page placement via Amazon’s Whispersync technology… that doesn’t make us any less valuable as a person. Oh, and you’re coming to the Mac and BlackBerry “soon,” huh? Well, aren’t you special.

Kindle App for iPhone goes international, starts to get a little annoying at parties originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Dec 2009 17:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Texthook holder puts your phone where it belongs: between you and your progeny

December 13th, 2009

Finally, proper protection for your baby. The child, too.

Texthook holder puts your phone where it belongs: between you and your progeny originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 13 Dec 2009 20:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gizmag  |  sourceTexthook  | Email this | Comments



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Acer Liquid A1 hits the FCC with AT&T’s HSDPA flavors

December 11th, 2009

It’s already selling in Europe with one of AT&T’s 3G bands, but the prospect of a US-friendly Acer Liquid A1 just got real, governmental-involvement style. The FCC has approved a 850 / 1900MHz version of the Android device, and while this is no guarantee of an AT&T berth — much of Canada is crowding in on this spectrum, not to mention the possibility of selling the phone unlocked and unsubsidized — we’re massaging our temples this very second with the appropriate good vibrations to get this thing out and about in the States and on the cheap.

Acer Liquid A1 hits the FCC with AT&T’s HSDPA flavors originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Dec 2009 13:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Boy Genius Report  |  sourceFCC  | Email this | Comments



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Fusion Garage JooJoo tablet rises from the ashes of the CrunchPad

December 7th, 2009
Fusion Garage has finally come clean with its side of the story in regards to the CrunchPad debacle, and just unveiled its new Arrington-free version of the device: the JooJoo. The way Fusion Garage tells it, the device was already in the works at the time of the original TechCrunch post about the idea, and that Michael Arrington and co. made zero contributions to the development of the device -- and apparently don't have any sort of contract to prove otherwise. The device is much along the lines of what we'd been hearing: it runs a UNIX-based OS, boots straight to a web browser (otherwise no apps at all), weighs about 2.4 pounds and features a 12.1-inch capacitive touchscreen. There are no physical buttons on the slate outside of the on-off switch, which taps into a 9 second boot time. Under the hood there's a 4GB SSD, WiFi (no 3G), an accelerometer and about 5 hours of battery life. Pre-orders start on December 11th, with a dream-shattering $499 pricetag bringing this thing back into the realm of reality. We're supposed to see demos of the Joo Joo in the wild this week, and another shot of the device can be found after the break.

Continue reading Fusion Garage JooJoo tablet rises from the ashes of the CrunchPad

Fusion Garage JooJoo tablet rises from the ashes of the CrunchPad originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 Dec 2009 12:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon beefing up Kindle’s functionality for vision-impared users as B&N’s Nook stays silent

December 7th, 2009
While the Amazon Kindle's text-to-speech functionality might seem like a gimmick for some, it's anything but for blind, vision-impaired and dyslexic users. Unfortunately, the device's accessibility so far hasn't extended to the menus. That's set to change next year, however, with Amazon promising to release an audible menuing system for navigating the unit look-free. Amazon's also prepping a new "super size" font, that doubles the current largest font in height and width. It all sounds great, but it also seems like a subtle dig at Barnes & Noble, whose brand new Nook reader is skipping out on text-to-speech (for this generation, anyway). Barnes & Noble claims that it's due to the sub-par experience on "other devices," but for now that means the Kindle might just be most accessible dedicated e-reader around -- at least once this new software rolls out, supposedly by summer 2010.

Amazon beefing up Kindle's functionality for vision-impared users as B&N's Nook stays silent originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 Dec 2009 11:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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E-bookReader, Kindle2, KindleDx, Technology, TextToSpeech, amazon, e book, e reader, e-book reader, kindle, kindle 2, kindle dx, text-to-speech ,

Intel’s Larrabee graphics processor delayed, downsized to mere software development platform

December 5th, 2009
Well. NVIDIA has to be loving this. Intel has announced today that not only is its Larrabee graphics chip delayed, that chip which promised to usher in a new era of post-GPU computing, but that it's been downgraded to a "software development platform." Intel isn't even saying what that "software development" will be aimed at, though we have to assume it would be some future version of the hybrid GPU / CPU chip. As to when the kit itself might arrive is anybody's guess, Intel is merely saying "next year." Meanwhile we can look forward to Intel's first example of a GPU / CPU hybrid in the upcoming Pineview Atom processor, which kicks those lackluster integrated graphics to the curb and moves everything onto the CPU. Who knows if that will be enough to quell the NVIDIA's quiet takeover of the higher-end netbook space with its ION graphics, but with Intel's current track record in the graphics space, we doubt it.

Intel's Larrabee graphics processor delayed, downsized to mere software development platform originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 05 Dec 2009 03:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceCNET News  | Email this | Comments


GraphicsProcessor, SoftwareDevelopmentPlatform, Technology, chip, delay, gpu, graphics processor, intel, larrabee, software development platform ,

Motorola prepping ‘La Jolla’ low-end Android clamshell?

December 4th, 2009
It's a source code-palooza these days! Fresh off that huge HTC code name find, someone's dug into the Motorola CLIQ's source code and found references to a new Motorola device dubbed "La Jolla." Meaning "The Jewel" in Spanish, La Jolla apparently means "low-end Android clamshell" in Motorola-ese, with mention of a WQVGA screen, 528MHz processor and what seems to be a QWERTY keyboard. (What such a phone might look like is pictured above. Thanks, LG). In fact, a QWERTY Android clamshell (the clamshell bit was extrapolated from the display driver by the folks at AndroidandMe, but sounds reasonable) seems to be the perfect cure for the recent rash of QWERTY featurephones we've been seeing lately, perfect for the SMS / email junky that doesn't want to bother with high-powered apps or a big price tag or the resistive touchscreen-only typing of the HTC Tattoo. Now, if only could find some device source code that could solve our trigger shyness brought on by this steady stream of Android handsets -- not that we're complaining.

Motorola prepping 'La Jolla' low-end Android clamshell? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 15:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Phone Arena  |  sourceAndroidandMe  | Email this | Comments


La Jolla, LaJolla, Technology, android, clamshell, motorola, qwerty, rumor, wqvga ,

Nearly two million mobile WiMAX subscribers worldwide by year’s end, most eyeing LTE suspiciously

December 4th, 2009
The folks at ABI Research have done up a nice summary of the status of mobile WiMAX globally, saying that they expect the total number of subscribers to be at around two million come January. Overall it's not the most optimistic picture, with many service rollouts falling short of their projected aims both in availability and in subscribers, South Korea's numbers "stagnant," and LTE breathing down everybody's necks -- particularly in the US and Japan. Still, there are some notable bright spots, most particularly Russia's Yota service, which broke 200,000 subscribers last month after five months of commercial operation, and which is also flirting with profitability at this early stage. Clearwire is the other main shining light, with "more-than-adequate funding" allowing for an increased pace of deployment. It's hard to say just exactly what sort of market share we should expect from WiMAX in the long run, but after the painful eons of CDMA vs. GSM, we really are rooting for one of these 4G technologies win decisively over the other.

Nearly two million mobile WiMAX subscribers worldwide by year's end, most eyeing LTE suspiciously originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 11:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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4g, Technology, clearwire, wimax, yota ,

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