Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Apple's iPad goes on sale in S.Korea

Apple's iPad went on sale Tuesday in South Korea, three weeks after the local giant Samsung Electronics launched its rival tablet computer the Galaxy Tab in its home market.

One hundred invited preorder customers, anxious to get their hands on the popular new gadget, lined up before dawn at a downtown Seoul branch of wireless operator KT, the sole Korean partner for iPhones and iPads.

First in line was Lee Jun-Young, 39, who slowly unwrapped the box with a wide grin on his face, then raised his iPad high above his head.

"I love it. I've waited for the iPad for such a long time,"Lee, who said he also has an4, told the newspaper Money Today."I plan to use the iPad on my way to work and at home to study English."

KT said it had received 50,000 preorders for thesince November 17.

"We've started distributing it nationwide. Customers are receiving their preordered iPads at the moment,"said KT spokesman Ham Young-Jin.

The company earlier announced the popular gadget would start selling at 218,000 won (192 dollars) with a two-year contract, rising to 865,000 won for models with additional features.

, the biggest rival of Apple, has already introduced its seven-inch screen Galaxy Tab in the United States and Italy and aims to sell over a million units globally by the end of this year.

Apple has sold over seven million iPads worldwide since its January debut.


Source

Monday, November 29, 2010

Gift Guide: Tech gadgets for frequent travelers

(AP) -- If you have people on your gift list who travel a lot, you may want to think about giving them something to keep them comfortable and entertained while on the go, even if they're not as nomadic as George Clooney's road warrior character in the movie"Up in the Air."

We can't do anything about delays, cramped seating, jetlag, traffic jams and noisy passengers, but thesecould make it easier to tune them out:

Livescribe Echo Smartpen (4GB: $170; 8GB: $200)

Pros: Livescribe makes pens that record audio and match it up with what you're writing. So people taking notes during a presentation can get away with jotting down keywords and then going back and listening to the conversation, cued up to different words on the page. Users can download free software to their PC or Mac that pulls in their notes, along with the audio, whenever they plug the pen into their computer's. Livescribe claims the pen lasts five to six hours when it's recording audio, and it charges using the.

Cons: The pen works only with paper that's pre-printed with a special pattern. It comes in notebooks of different sizes ($8-$25), but each has the same icons lining the bottom of every page. Tap on the controls to stop, start and pause audio recordings, as well as do things such as adjust the volume of the pen's speaking voice.

Microsoft Arc Touch Mouse ($50)

Pros: This mouse lies flat when you're not using it, but, with one satisfying click, can be bent into a curved shape, making it look more like a standard mouse. Light and low maintenance, it turns off automatically whenever you press the mouse into a flat shape. It promises up to six months ofbefore travelers have to recharge it. It's designed to be usable on any surface, so there's no need to pack a mouse pad. A small dongle plugs into a Windows PC or Mac to create the wireless connection.

Cons: The scroll wheel is simulated by a touch-sensitive strip that lacks the feel of a real wheel.

Apple iPad (Wi-Fi only: $499-$699; 3G: $629-$829)

Pros: Although ads for the iPad often depict someone relaxing with the tablet, legs propped up, it is an ideal companion for people on the go as well. True, you can surf the Web and watch movies on a phone or laptop, but the iPad's 9.7-inch display makes for easier viewing. It looks better than most laptop screens. Because the iPad turns on instantly and lasts up to 10 hours unplugged, using it is less of a hassle than booting up your PC and hoping that you can finish the movie before the battery runs out. The fact that the Transportation Security Administration doesn't require travelers to remove iPads from bags during airport security checks is the icing on the cake.

Cons: With a starting price of $499, the iPad is one pricey toy. And that's not counting the cost of applications and a protective case. (We like Apple's $39 offering because it doesn't add bulk and also has a stand, making hands-free movie-watching easier.) At 1.8 pounds, it won't weigh down a carry-on, but it's more cumbersome to whip out than a phone.

Klipsch Image S4 headphones ($80)

Pros: For some people, the iPod's standard-issue white ear buds get uncomfortable when worn in long stretches. Travelers will find comfort in the S4's small, tapered ear buds, which come with soft tips in different sizes. I found them more comfortable than iPod buds. They're sturdier, and they block out some ambient noise. When I wore them on my subway commute, I could still hear announcements over the loudspeaker, but not other people's conversations or the rattle of the tracks. As a bonus, the buds come with a metal carrying case and a tool to clean off earwax.

Cons: The cable tangles easily and is awfully thin, although the ear buds are covered by a generous two-year warranty should they break. Over-the-ear headphones with active noise cancellation, such as Audio-Technica's ATH-ANC1 QuietPoint headphones ($80), are better at muffling the roar of jet engines.

iGo Laptop Travel Charger ($100)

Pros: Every laptop comes with a power brick, but this one, made by iGo, is easier to take on the road and works with a variety of Windows-based laptops, thanks to a bevy of"tips,"or adapters, that fit into differing power jacks. Someone who travels with two or more laptops could find it a god-send. Weighing 13.5 ounces and measuring 0.7 inches thick, the charger is lighter and thinner than most AC adapters for full-size laptops. It comes standard with a cigarette-lighter adapter.

Cons: Not compatible with Macs. Works with international wall current, but you still need a separate adapter to plug it into the wall in most countries.


Source

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Sony eyes December launch of e-readers in Japan

Sony, battling Amazon and Apple in the electronic book reader race, said on Thursday it would launch its latest devices in Japan in December along with a dedicated virtual library.

The move will mark a return to Japan for the electronic giant's e-reader business since it left the market in 2007 after seeing low demand at a time when Japanese consumers were focused on mobile phone books.

The success of Apple's iPad and Amazon's Kindle has however sent electronics makers scrambling to gain a slice of the growingand e-reader market.

Sony has cut the size and weight of its e-readers while expanding the use of touch technology to all models -- allowing users to turn pages with a swipe of the finger like theiPad.

Unlike the colour, the Sony Reader uses black-and-white e-ink technology.

Its two models, Reader Pocket Edition and Reader Touch Edition will be available December 10 in about 300 Japanese stores, selling for 20,000 yen and 25,000 yen (240 and 300 dollars).

Sony will also open a digital bookstore for the device in Japan as it has elsewhere, offering downloads of around 20,000 titles.

The group hopes to sell 300,000 e-readers in Japan in the first year and expects a 50 percent market share by 2012, the company said.

It also recently created a joint venture with Japan's second-largest telecommunications operator KDDI, the Asahi newspaper group and printing technology firm Toppan to offer services for a variety of devices.

Sony unveiled the latest devices in September and expanded their availability to Australia, China, Italy, and Spain as well as the United States.


Source

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Gadgets: Gifts for the Apple lover

Having an iPod, iPhone, iPad or laptop is pretty common and the gift choices this holiday season seem endless.

The Dexim P-Flip ($69.95) is a multi-functional charging device but also acts as stand for both vertical and horizontal display of an iPhone (4, 3Gs or 3G).

When not in use, it easily fits in a pocket; when opened it has a dock so the device can slide into a 2,000mAh rechargeable battery.

Dexim states the battery, which will charge via USB (cable included), gives users up to six hours to talk time, 40 hours of music or up to 10 hours of video watching.

Having your device docked enables easy movie viewing or hands-free access to an endless number of apps.

A thermoplastic polyurethane case with an antiglare screen protector is included.

Dexim's Supercharged Leather Power Case ($69.90) is another choice for power and protection.

In addition to storing the device in the dark-black leather case, an iPhone/iPod will also get a power assist with the built-in 2000mAh.

This gives users the same extendedas the P-Flip and has an on/off switch on the bottom.

Charging and syncing is also done via USB and all the phone's features are accessible while in the case.

Details: dexim.net
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Winter weather can cause havoc for anyone trying to use a portable device. To the rescue come Etre Touchy gloves.

The gloves are made without thumb and index fingertips, enabling users to keep their hands warm and have access to touch screens, buttons or even milking cows as suggested in a recent press release.

The gloves are made with 100 percent lamb's wool, come in many colors and are sized small, medium and large.

Details: etretouchy.com, $31.70
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Griffin Technology seems to have every solution for powering, playing and controlling any of the Apple devices while in a car.

The PowerJolt plus ($17.93) 12-volt accessory socket car charger supplies the power from the car's 12V port, but also gives users a second port for an addition car charger for another device.

A coiled cable with a dock connecter at the end is attached to the PowerJolt for easy connection to a device.

At the end of the PowerJolt is a cover, which opens up to allow the second charger to be connected.

With the extra port, digital cameras, cell phone, GPS units or anything needing power can be charged.

Griffin's TuneFlex AUX Handsfree ($42.95) device let's users talk on anin the all important hands free manner, while powering or charging with the car's 12V charging port.

A case-friendly cradle holds the device in place and has a plug attached for the charging.

It also comes with an AUX/Mic cable for connection to a car stereo for listening to the player's contents or phone call. The caller hears you through the cable's microphone.

Details: griffintechnology.com
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The Logitech Speaker Lapdesk N550 allows compact laptops (up to 14.1") and Netbooks to sit on your lap at an angle while shielding uses from the heat they generate.

Rubberized feet keep the computer in place and a soft padded bottom made with soft air-mesh fabric sits on your lap to keep everything in place, cool and comfortable.

The Lapdesk also has a pair of built-in stereo speakers that connect to the computer via USB.

Users also get of the sound volume with controls built right in on the upper right side of the desk.

All this is done software-free and without the need of a power cord or batteries since it draws the power from the computer.

Details: Logitech.com, $59.99
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If it's just anor any other eReader you want stationed on your lap, then Veyl Products ePillow is what you need.

Just as it's advertised, the pillow is comfortable, convenient and portable.

Sewn into the pillow is a vinyl shelf to hold an iPad or other eReaders in place while reading or watching a movie hands free.

For airline travelers, the pillow can be used with your device or even save you money and use it as a pillow and not have to pay money since airlines charge for their pillows.

A carrying strap and storage compartment is also built in.

Details: epillow.net, available in brown or black for $29.95 with free ground shipping.
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Anytime a company makes the same old thing in a different way and it works well, it's a winner in my book.

The MoGo Talk XD is just that. The device is a well-made combination of a protective slim MoGo Grip case for analong with a Bluetooth headset.

What makes this unique is the Bluetooth piece is stored in the case itself when not in use.

The in-ear piece is built with SmartAudio sound and voice enhancement along with noise and wind reduction, which all results in very good quality.

Charging is done with the included microUSB cable and users can expect about four hours of talk time or 72 hours of standby.

Details: id8-mobile.com , $99.99


Source

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Sharp holiday price drops seen for flat-panel TVs

(AP) -- If you're in the market for a new flat-panel TV, it's a good time to buy. TV prices usually drop from year to year, and the decline will be sharp this season thanks to a supply glut. Consumers have been holding out all year for better deals, leaving lots of unsold televisions on the shelves. Prices for high-definition LCD TVs will fall more than twice as fast as they have so far this year as manufacturers and retailers clear out inventory, analysts predict.

New sets will also be cheaper becausehave been getting great deals on the most expensive parts, the glass LCD panels.

However, DisplaySearch analyst Paul Gagnon expects prices for those components to level off early next year, so discounts won't be this steep again until the holidays next year, or even later.

For the consumer, that means that if you pull the trigger on a new set in the next few months, you probably won't be kicking yourself next year for not waiting a little longer.

The law of supply and demand is at work here:

- A TV-buying spree in late 2009 led to component shortages, which kept prices high in early 2010. That discouraged consumers.

- Makers of LCD panels invested profits from last year's buying spree in more manufacturing capacity. Thinking 2010 would be as strong as 2009, they flooded the market. But the economy didn't improve as expected.

- As a result, there's an oversupply of panels, and prices started dropping over the summer. That means cheaper sets should be making their way to stores now.

Already,Stores Inc. has slashed prices for some older models. Among the deals: a 32-inch Vizio set that went to $298 from $348. Amazon.com Inc. andCo. are starting to advertise deals, too.

Some of the best deals this season will be on 32-inch, the most popular size. They will sell for rock-bottom rates of $300 or less, compared with about $400 last year. That's because manufacturers are selling raw panels of that size for only slightly more than the cost of making them - $160 to $170 each, far less than the $210 to $220 they fetched earlier this year.

Prices for 40-inch and 42-inch sets will drop about 20 percent, approaching $500, said Gagnon, the DisplaySearch analyst.

Deep price cuts also are coming for higher-end models, including LCD TVs with LED backlights, which use less energy than regular sets and can be thinner or provide improved picture quality. Manufacturers have increased production capacity for parts specific to LED sets; that will drive down prices for components and, ultimately, the TVs themselves.

Overall, good deals will be 15 percent to 20 percent lower than holiday 2009 prices for regular LCD TVs. The price drop had been slimmer at 7 percent earlier this year, Gagnon says, and the decline should return to the single digits by spring.

Of course, the longer a buyer waits, the lower thego. But that has to be weighed against the value of having a new TV. If a 32-inch set turns out to be $20 cheaper next summer, the buyer could have gotten six months of better TV for $20.

"In this industry you always know that in the future, you will buy new technology at a lower price. That's not the point,"said Sweta Dash, an analyst at iSuppli Corp."Especially this holiday, the price you will see is very good."


Source

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Review: Paper wins over e-books for travel guides

(AP) -- It sounded like a better, lighter way to pack for a trip to Germany: a Kindle with a Lonely Planet travel guide in lieu of an 844-page brick of a book.

Yet to my surprise, the 10-day visit to Munich, Dresden and Berlin turned into a lesson about the pitfalls of cramming an old medium - the book - into a new one - the electronic.

It's a good thing that I had the foresight to bring a paper copy of Lonely Planet's"Germany,"borrowed from the public library. My plan was to bring it as a backup in case something went wrong with the Kindle, but leave it in the hotel room to lighten my backpack. Instead, I ditched the Kindle and carried the book around.

That made me sad, because the Kindle, and the e-reading revolution, promises so much.

Thefrom Amazon.com Inc. is light and can store not only the travel guide, but all the bulky novels I've been meaning to catch up on. A built-in dictionary lets me look up strange words.

The Kindle lets me type notes, highlight passages, and find them easily again. I added tips on tipping and transit fares as well as a reminder to visit a concentration camp memorial outside Berlin. The Kindle also lets me add bookmarks, the digital equivalent of the folded corners, or doggie ears, that I've marred many paperbacks with in the past.

Preparing for the trip, there was no need to go to a book store or even a computer. I just bought the book through the Kindle's wireless connection. The Kindle version of the Lonely Planet guide was cheaper, too - $15.39, compared with the paper version at $18.47 on Amazon (the list price for both is $27.99).

Lonely Planet also let me buy individual chapters - for example, the one on Munich and surrounding Bavaria - for less than $5 (though it wasn't clear that I'd be getting the same content contained in the main book, rather than a distinct guide for the region).

But I quickly came to realize what I like most about paper books: I can touch the pages, and I can see more at once, whether it's a map, some text or a combination.

I missed all that reading on the Kindle, which was clumsy by comparison. There were two main reasons for this: the screen technology and the way the book was converted for e-reading

Consider the Lonely Planet's 2.2-mile, 16-stop walking tour of Dresden, which takes me by the major churches, markets and other sights rebuilt following the Allied bombings of the city in the waning days of World War II. The narrative gave me bare-bones descriptions of each sight. To learn more, I had to flip to a different section in the book and sometimes consult the index to find the right page. To navigate the route, I had to flip to a map and follow a black line marking my route.

Holding the paper version, I simply kept my thumb on one page and a finger on another to flip back and forth between the narrative and the deeper descriptions. The map was either on the same page or just one page away.

With the Kindle, I had to hit"next page"and"prev page"repeatedly, and the pages took their sweet time to turn, because the"electronic ink"technology of the screen doesn't respond as fast as a computer screen. Out of frustration, I flicked a switch to turn the device off instead.

E-ink also means scrolling and zooming doesn't work well. The Lonely Planet's solution was to break maps into four, so that you could get a closer look at each quadrant on the full screen. The idea is good in principle, but clunky in practice. I found I had to flip back and forth too many times because the legends telling me what sight each number corresponds to ended up on the wrong quadrant. Had the guidebook been developed in digital form from scratch, points on the map could have taken me to the corresponding entry with one click.

In the paper version, the region I explored was printed on the top of each page, whether it was Berlin or Central Saxony. On the Kindle, I had no such guide. I came across a listing for Thomaskirche, a church where composer Johann Sebastian Bach once worked. I thought it would be a good place to visit, until I realized I had already left the Dresden section of the book and moved on to Leipzig, which wasn't part of my journey.

Another example of poor conversion from paper to bits: There's an index at the end of the Kindle book that serves no purpose. The listings aren't clickable. I would have expected the digital index to function like a search - click on it for all the references to those keywords throughout the book.

And because the Kindle can't handle columns well, some text was presented as a graphic, making it unsearchable.

As a technology writer for more than a decade, I hardly consider myself a Luddite. I do believe e-books have their place in society - even as travel guides, when designed properly. The Kindle works well for linear novels, but stumbles badly when given another task. The experience might have been different on, say, an iPad, which has a responsive color screen.

Even then, I'd have to hope for a guidebook specifically designed for the screen, rather than a conversion from paper. Or I'd at least hope for an e-book that gets updated frequently, something more difficult with paper. As it was, theedition I bought in August was based on the 2007 version of the guidebook, not the 2010 edition that just came out four months earlier.

And perhaps if I ever get to take an around-the-world trip one day, I'd appreciate being able to bring multiple guidebooks for multiple destinations without having to carry all that weight, even with the Kindle's limitations.

One of the Lonely Planet executives I talked to after my trip pointed out that printed books have a head start of several centuries.

That's true. I'm dealing with first-generation e-book technology at best.

So for my next trip to a single destination, I'll stick with the tried and true: I'll just carry the book.


Source

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Rare Apple I computer sells for $210,000 in London

Its processor works 1,000 times slower than the Apple iPad, but the first ever Apple computer has sold for 425 times the price.

TheI, one of only 200 such models ever made, was sold Tuesday afternoon at Christie's auction house in central London for 133,250 pounds (about $210,000.) It came with its original packaging and a signed sales letter from, one of Apple Computer's co-founders and the current CEO of Apple Inc.

When the Apple I was introduced in 1976, it was the only personal computer to come with a fully assembled motherboard, making it ready to use straight from the box - provided the user supplied a keyboard, power supply, and display, Christie's said.

It sold for $666.66 and was available until it was discontinued in 1977.

Bidding on the Apple I came quickly, with the computer eventually going to Italian businessman and private collector Marco Boglione, who made his offer over the phone.

Marco's brother Francesco Boglione, who attended the auction in person, told The Associated Press that Marco's purchase was a testament to his love of computers.

"The first time I had heard of the idea of a personal computer, it was from Marco,"Boglione said. He bought it"because he loves computers."

Present at the technology auction, which aslo included manuscripts, prints, and science-themed texts, was Appleco-founder, who agreed to add an autographed letter to the lot.

He said the auction was a historic moment for his work, especially when sold alongside such other technological greats as an Enigma, the German code-making machine, and writings of British mathematician Alan Turing, considered one of the founders of modern computing.

"Today my heart went out as I got to see things auctioned off like the Turing documents and the Enigma machine - and the Apple I,"Wozniak told journalists after the auction."It really was an important step, (even though) I didn't feel that way when I designed it."

"I'm very delighted for the gentleman who purchased it,"he added.

Boglione said his brother's newly purchased Apple I would likely be returned to working condition - and eventually join a collection of Apple computers.

Inside the auction house Tuesday afternoon, many patrons studied the sale catalog using Apple's iPads and iPhones - a sign of the times, said Christie's Julian Wilson.

"It is a fitting illustration of how computers have revolutionized the world,"he said.


Source

Monday, November 22, 2010

Apple releases updated operating system update for iPad

Apple released the latest version of its mobile operating system Monday bringing multitasking, folders, a unified inbox and wireless printing to the iPad.

Apple said iOS 4.2 for the iPad, theand iPad Touch offers more than 100 new features for the popular devices from the Cupertino, California-based company.

Apple chief executivesaid the upgraded software, which can be downloaded for free from online entertainment store,"makes the iPad a completely new product."

"The iPad with iOS 4.2 will define the target that other tablets will aspire to, but very few, if any, will ever be able to hit,"Jobs said in a statement.

Apple got the jump on its competitors with the launch of the iPad in April but a number of rivals have launched, or are planning to launch, their own touchscreen tablet computers including South Korea's Samsung and Canada's, maker of the Blackberry.

Many of the features in iOS 4.2 were already available for the latest versions of the iPhone and thebut not for the iPad.

Apple said iPad users can now switch between applications instantly and run more than one at a time, playing a music program like Pandora, for example, while running another application.

Applications can now be organized into folders with a drag-and-drop feature.

Email features a unified inbox for users with more than one account while"Game Center"lets users of the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch play against friends or other opponents and discover games that others are playing.

A new feature called"AirPlay"streams music, video and photos wirelessly from the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch to a television set equipped with Apple TV, Apple's TV set-top box.

"AirPrint"allows an iPad owner to wirelessly print documents or photos to AirPrint-enabled printers from US computer maker Hewlett-Packard.

Apple said Monday that 40,000 applications have been created for theand 300,000 for the iPhone and iPod Touch.


Source

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Apple's iPad to go on sale in S.Korea on Nov. 30

South Korea's wireless operator KT said Sunday it would start selling Apple's iPad on November 30 amid growing competition in the potentially lucrative tablet computer market.

KT, the nation's sole distributor of Apple's iPhone and iPad, said the popular tablet PC would start at 218,000 won (192 dollars) with a two-year contract, rising to 865,000 won with additional features.

More than 40,000 South Koreans have pre-ordered the popular gadget since November 17, a KT spokesman said, adding the company would begin sending out products on November 30.

The announcement comes after South Korea'slaunched its ownlast week in the domestic market in a bid to get the jump on Apple.

Apple has sold more than 7 million iPads worldwide since its market debut in January.

Samsung Electronics, which has already introduced Galaxy Tab in countries like the US and Italy, aims to sell over a million units globally by the end of 2010.

Global computer and handset makers have scurried to respond to the roaring success of Apple'sand.

Tablet PCs feature bigger screens than smartphones and have no keyboards, instead employing touch screens or stylus pens.

The global tablet PC market is expected to expand to 30 million units next year from 13 million this year, according to industry data.


Source

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Review: Samsung Galaxy Tab vs. Apple iPad

More than eight months after the release of the Apple iPad, fans of Google's Android mobile operating system finally have a contender in the race for tablet supremacy.

The Samsung Galaxy Tab is just the first in an avalanche oftablets planned for release in the winter months.

The Galaxy Tab is much smaller than the iPad, with just a 7-inch screen. That makes it a breeze to hold with just one hand. It feels more like an oversizedthan thepacked with powerful features that it is.

The iPad's considerable heft - it's almost twice as heavy as the Galaxy Tab - has made it a hard sell for the on-the-go crowd. Samsung's tablet would be a joy on a bus or airplane as a personal gaming or video device.

It features a superfast 1-gigahertz processor that makes navigating around the device snappy. Its touch screen is extremely responsive and never stutters.

It has front- and rear-facing cameras for video chats, mobile hotspot capabilities and turn-by-turn navigation - all unavailable on the iPad, which has sold more than 7 million units.

The Galaxy Tab is available from T-Mobile, Sprint and Verizon, with more carriers coming on board soon. I tested a model on the Verizon network.

FOR READERS AND GAMERS

Samsung has brushed the Galaxy Tab with the same technicolor interface it uses on its superb line of Galaxy smartphones.

And when paired with the tablet's super-vibrant display, that interface is a welcome respite from Android's often utilitarian, machine-like appearance.

The Galaxy Tab also has the same widgets Android users have grown accustomed to, like e-mail and calendar notifications.

As an e-reader, the Galaxy Tab is a no-brainer. Its size is almost exactly the same as the latest- think of a paperback - and the color screen offers utility not available on the leading single-use e-readers.

Users can download the free Android apps for e-booksellers including Amazon and Barnes&Noble to turn the Galaxy Tab into a full-featured e-reader.

The Galaxy's size makes it a great mobile gaming device, too. You'll get the same suite of games available on other Android devices. I found almost all of them to be a great experience, especially the popular Angry Birds, which really shines on this screen size.

TROUBLE IN THE APPS

The Galaxy Tab struggles a bit, though, if you're looking for a fully realized computing experience.

And Android - historically the less-polished sibling of Apple's iOS mobile platform - struggles a bit on the bigger screen.

The apps available for the Galaxy Tab are the same available on any Android smartphone, andhas been mum on whether it plans to open a separate section of its Android Market for tablet-optimized apps.

This creates a roadblock for developers, who are now in the position of designing one program that will be on screens of several sizes and on devices from several manufacturers.

Even the app for Google's own YouTube video-sharing service feels less than fully featured. When a list of videos is viewed in landscape mode, the vertical list runs the entire width of the device. This is a wasted opportunity to provide more context for the videos in a preview pane on the right or left.

When using the 7-inch tablet, you're seeing the same thing you'd see on your 3-inch smartphone screen, and in many cases that doesn't feel like enough.

And, like other Android devices, the Gmail inbox is still maddeningly relegated to a separate app, keeping it separate from other e-mail accounts.

SMARTPHONE FEEL, IPAD PRICE

There's no doubt, though, that there will be considerable interest in these Android tablets as they roll out.

And the brisk competition should bring down prices for tablets, which are still prohibitively expensive.

The Galaxy Tab retails for a whopping $600 - just $30 less than a comparable iPad.

But while thefeels like a wholly different computing experience, theultimately feels like an indulgently large smartphone.

Now, there's nothing wrong with an indulgently large smartphone. In fact, I'll take two, please.

But paying $600 for one - in addition to more monthly 3G connectivity fees - is a hard road to cross.
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SAMSUNG GALAXY TAB

- Carriers: Available now from T-Mobile, Sprint and Verizon Wireless; coming soon to AT&T and U.S. Cellular

- Operating system: Android 2.2 (Froyo)

- Price: $400 with two-year contract from T-Mobile or Sprint, $600 from Verizon

- Data plan: Verizon tablet data plans start at $20 per month for 1 GB and go up to $80 for 10 GB; T-Mobile data plans are $25 for 200 MB or $40 for unlimited data each month; Sprint offers 2 GB for $30 or 5 GB for $60.

- Weight: 13.58 ounces

- Size: 4.74-by-.47-by-7.48 inches

- Screen: 7-inch WSVGA display; 1024x600 pixels

- Camera: 3-megapixel rear-facing with LED flash, 1.3 megapixel front-facing; 720p video recording

- Storage: 16GB microSD preinstalled, expandable up to 32GB


Source

Friday, November 19, 2010

Nokia admits power problems in N8 top handset

(AP) -- Nokia Corp. said Friday its top N8 model, aimed at making up lost ground in the smart phone market, has had power problems with some handsets not turning on after recharging.

The fault was limited to"a small number of"and will be fixed in line with Nokia warranty rules, Nokia spokeswoman Eija-Riitta Huovinen said. She gave no details of whether the problem was regional or how many handsets were affected.

"We've had a lot of positive feedback about the N8. This problem involves really a small number,"Huovinen said.

The N8, which looks like Apple Inc.'s iPhone, features a 12-megapixel digital camera with Carl Zeiss optics and a 3.5 inch display. It is built on Symbian 3, a new version of the Symbian software with photo uploading connections to social networks like Facebook and Twitter.

Available also in North America, Nokia's worst market, the N8 was meant to compete with the iPhone that has set the standard for today's smart phones andLtd.'s BlackBerrys that are the favorite of the corporate set.

More recently, Google Inc.'s Android software has also emerged as a choice for phone makers that want to challenge the iPhone.

And the N8 has been beset with problems.

It was unveiled in April with deliveries expected in the summer but Nokia did not start shipping it internationally until the end of September.

The latest fault, though relatively small, comes at a bad time as the fourth quarter traditionally means strong growth in the wireless industry.

"This doesn't help the Nokia brand, that's for sure. The problems have been mounting for the past few years and every little negative headline adds to that,"said Neil Mawston from London-based Strategy Analytics."It's not a great start for their supposed iPhone orkiller."

Nokia's share price was down more than 1 percent at euro7.41 ($10.11) in afternoon trading in Helsinki.

In September, Nokia replaced its Finnish CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo with Microsoft executive Stephen Elop, a Canadian, the first time the company appointed a non-Finn at its helm.

The choice of a North American executive to lead a Finnish company was seen as reflecting the increasing dominance of U.S. and Canadian companies in the evolution of the top end mobile phone business.

The N8 is selling at European retailers for some euro460-euro600 ($625-$820), and can be ordered on Nokia's Web site for euro500.

Mawston said that in America it has an edge on the latest iPhone in price.

"The N8 is pretty competitive. Very similar in specifications to the iPhone 4 at roughly half the price,"Mawston said."Theis roundabout the $650 level and the N8 is about the $300 to $350 level."

reported a third-quarter net profit of euro529 million, up from a net loss of euro559 million last year, but said it had lost market share to 30 percent in the period - from 34 percent in 2009.

Despite setbacks, it is still the global leader in handsets, including smart phones, selling 26.5 millionin the quarter - up 60 percent on a year earlier. Its closest rivals, Apple sold 14 million and RIM 12.5 million.


Source

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Review: Samsung tablet good, but not good enough

(AP) -- When Apple released the iPad in April, it set a high bar for tablet computers. The first real competitor has arrived in Samsung's Galaxy Tab.

With a screen that measures 7 inches diagonally, two shorter than the, the Tab is good - but not good enough.

The Tab is nearly the same size as Amazon's Kindlebut slightly thicker. It's a bit more portable than the iPad, but has a smaller screen to play with.

For me, at least, this in-between size - bigger and heavier than a smart phone, smaller and lighter than an iPad - made for an in-between experience. It was more engaging than playing around with a phone but less immersive than what I've felt with the iPad.

The Tab, currently available from T-Mobile, Sprint andand coming soon from AT&T, costs $400 to $650, depending on whom you buy it from and whether or not you agree to a two-year contract. It runs Google's Android operating system, which is mostly used for.

The Tab I tested, which worked over Sprint's cellular network and Wi-Fi, had a bright and brilliant screen. That makes it well-suited to surfing the Web, watching videos and reading e-books with Amazon's Kindle app.

But when I bought and downloaded an episode of"Law&Order: SVU"fromElectronics Co.'s online store for TV shows and movies, I found I couldn't quite lose myself in it as I could when watching videos on the iPad. The Tab's screen simply felt more appropriate for media snacking than gorging.

The Tab runs the most recent iteration of Android, version 2.2, which means it can play Flash videos - a trick the iPad and Apple Inc.'s iPhone haven't learned. This came in handy when surfing the Web, as it let me watch videos I usually can't access unless I'm on a computer.

The device has a speedy processor and sensitive touch screen, and it is suited for the typical Android layout of having several hidden home screens that you swipe to see. These home screens can fill up with applications and widgets that let you do such things as check the news or weather.

A number of apps I downloaded from the Android Marketplace looked fine on the Tab's screen, but they don't all magnify to fill up the available space. While the Yelp app and the disturbingly addictive game"Angry Birds"worked well with the larger real estate, others such as Retro Camera were more centered on the screen, surrounded by black emptiness.

Speaking of cameras, that's another feature that the Tab has but the iPad doesn't. There are two on the Tab: a 1.3-megapixel camera on the front and a 3-megapixel camera on the back, both of which can be used for taking photos or video chatting.

I was glad to see the front-facing camera, as one of the iPad's few shortcomings is its lack of a video chat option. The Tab comes with Qik, an app that lets you conduct video chats with others who have Qik or who watch a live video stream on Qik's website. But video chats didn't work so well in my tests. I tried using Qik over Wi-Fi and Sprint's network, but in both cases my friend on the other end looked extremely pixelated.

I thought that having a camera on the back of the Tab would be useful, but it ended up being a throwaway feature - partly because I felt so awkward and silly holding up the clunky Tab to take photos as I wandered around. Thanks, but I'll stick with my smart phone and point-and-shoot camera for now.

The Tab will hold up well to plenty of video chatting or other battery-intensive activities. With Wi-Fi on, I got a little more than six hours of use, including quite a bit of time streaming videos from YouTube. It isn't as good as the 10 hours maximum promised for the iPad with Wi-Fi on, but it's still plenty of play time.

Despite its shortcomings, if you do decide to get a Tab, be prepared to wade through a morass of differing prices and data plans, which vary by carrier. You can get the Tab for as low as $400, but you'll have to sign a two-year wireless service contract (and in some cases you'll have to pay even more to send and receive text messages on it). And if you hate the idea of another monthly commitment or want a no-contract plan, expect to pay much more for the device. Verizon charges $600 for the Tab, and AT&T will charge $650 when it begins selling it on Sunday; neither will require a contract.

Now consider that the cheapest iPad, which has just Wi-Fi for connecting to the Internet, costs $499, and the decision isn't so tough.

My time with the Tab was fun, but it just never got me thinking,"I want this."And if somebody was kind enough to give me one, I'd probably exchange it for an iPad.


Source

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Google working on phone with built-in payment tool

Google Inc. is taking another stab at designing a game-changing mobile phone, this time by including a built-in payment system that could eventually enable the devices to replace credit cards.

The new phone got a brief preview Monday whenCEOtook the stage to kick off the Web 2.0 summit, a technology conference held annually in San Francisco.

Schmidt confirmed that Google has been working on a sophisticated new computer chip and an upgrade of itsmobile operating system that will include a payment processing tool. He showed off the new phone with the device's name and manufacturer concealed.

Several technology websites have speculated the new phone will be called"Nexus S"and will be manufactured byCo.

Google unveiled a phone called the Nexus One with much fanfare at the beginning of this year, but stopped selling it several months ago after other similar devices powered by Android hit the market. Samsung already makes several phones that run on Android software and just introduced a new computer tablet called Galaxy that's powered by Google's 3-year-old mobile operating system.

Schmidt declined to address the reports about the Nexus S. He indicated the new phone, equipped with the upgraded version of Android software called"Gingerbread,"will hit the market within the next few weeks.

The new phone will feature a Near Field Communication, or NFC, chip that will enable phones to transmit the payment information of the device's owner to vendors using compatible technology. The transactions will be completed by tapping a physical point, such as a payment terminal or other objects encoded with the information needed to complete the purchase.

Schmidt said the chip will be more secure than the magnetic stripes that carry personal information on credit cards, an advantage that has been greeted enthusiastically by payment processors.

Google intends to forge partnerships with payment processors rather than try to expand into that line of commerce, Schmidt said. Although he expects mobile phones to supplant credit cards, Schmidt said the transition is still a long ways off.

"I still expect to be usingfor many, many years,"he told reporters after his presentation. Asand mobile software continues to improve, Schmidt envisions the day when phones will be able to alert their owners when they are passing by a merchant with a product or service on their shopping list.

Mobile phones powered by Android have become ubiquitous since Google released the free mobile software two years ago. HTC Corp., which made the, and Motorola Inc. are among the other major manufacturers that have developed Android handsets. The widespread usage helped Android surge to a 25.5 percent share of the market for mobile phone software, up from 3.5 percent a year ago, according to the research firm Gartner Inc. That ranked Android's software second only to the Symbian operating system, a staple on Nokia Corp. phones, which holds a nearly 37 percent share, by Gartner's reckoning.


Source

Monday, November 15, 2010

US e-book sales near one billion dollars in 2010: Forrester

Sales of electronic books are expected to hit nearly one billion dollars in the United States this year and to triple by 2015, according to a new report by Forrester Research Inc.

The market research firm said US spending onwas expected to total 966 million dollars this year, up from 301 million dollars last year and to reach 2.81 billion dollars in 2015.

Forrester said the number of e-book readers with dedicated devices in the United States was expected to grow from 3.7 million at the end of last year to 10.3 million at the end of this year to 29.4 million in 2015.

Seven percent of online US adults who read books read e-books, a number that is expected to double a year from now, Forrester said.

A Forrester survey of e-book readers found that 35 percent read e-books on a, 32 percent on Amazon's Kindle, 15 percent on Apple's iPhone, 12 percent on a Sonyand 10 percent on a netbook computer.

Nine percent said they use a Nook e-reader from Barnes and Noble, nine percent said they use Apple's iPad, eight percent said they use some other e-reader and six percent said they use a cellphone other than the.

Forrester also said Amazon's Kindle store"stands to benefit tremendously"from the rise in e-book reading because of its existing relationship with book buyers through Amazon.com.

Fifty percent of people who bought an e-book in the past month have purchased e-books from the Kindle store, Forrester said.


Source

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Kno textbook reader to ship this year

Kno Inc., a California company making a digital textbook reader for students, announced on Tuesday it would begin shipping the tablet computer by the end of the year.

Kno, which has received funding from Andreessen Horowitz, alaunched by Netscape founder Marc Andreessen, said its 14.1-inch (35.8-centimeter) single screen tablet will cost 599 dollars.

The dual-screen version will sell for 899 dollars.

Kno, which is short for"knowledge,"said it was accepting a limited number of pre-orders for an initial shipment that is expected to be delivered by the end of the year.

"Kno's extraordinary benefits represent only a tiny fraction of the overall cost of college,"Kno co-founder and chief executive Osman Rashid said in a press release."When you do the math, it actually pays for itself."

Kno said it has been testing the product with students and received a positive response for both the single and dual screen devices.

You need Flash installed to watch this video

Digital textbooks will be sold through the Kno bookstore and cost between 30 percent and 50 percent less than physical textbooks, the company said.

Kno is working with a number of publishers including Cengage, McGraw Hill, Pearson, Macmillan, Bedford, Freeman&Worth, Holtzbrinck, BarCharts Publishing, Kaplan, Random House and University Presses.

"According to the not-for-profit College Board's 2010 report, the average college student spends approximately 1,100 dollars a year on books and supplies,"Kno co-founder and chief technology officer Babur Habib said.

"Kno can reduce that cost while bringing education into the 21st Century, providing students with a far superior learning experience than they have today."

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The Santa Clara, California-based Kno was founded in May 2009 and announced in September it had received 46 million dollars in the latest round of funding from Andreessen Horowitz and other venture capitalists.

Apple launched itsearlier this year and a number of other companies have since announced plans to come out with touchscreen devices for reading electronic books or surfing the Web.

The iPad costs between 499 and 829 dollars.

You need Flash installed to watch this video



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Saturday, November 13, 2010

Review: Nifty scanner eases farewell to paper

(AP) -- Here's where the iPad has gotten me: I'm sitting with an old book in one hand and a utility knife in the other. My plan is to make the two meet, by cutting up the book and feeding the pages through a scanner.

The printed word has been shackled too long to paper, and I want to carry it around on my.

Cutting a book is hard, though. There's a mental block to overcome. After a lifetime of valuing books, I find it difficult to destroy one, even to preserve it in digital form - particularly if it's a hardback.

The iPad, as a fantastic replacement for paper, deserves only half the blame for putting me in this position. The other half goes to the Fujitsu ScanSnap s1500.

As I started thinking about scanning my documents and"going paperless,"I thought about the ideal: It should take a pile of papers and scan both side of each sheet, so I don't have to feed them one by one.

It turns out that there aren't many affordable, consumer-level scanners like that. But all we need is one good device, and the ScanSnap is it. If you can swallow the $430 price tag, it's ideal. It goes through paper like a bonfire.

The ScanSnap is designed from the ground up to turn stacks of pulp to bytes. It doesn't have the large glass bed of the conventional scanner or copy machine. Instead, it looks like a small inkjet printer, taking up only a bit more desk space than a lunch box. It has a 50-sheet holder and feeds each sheet between rollers while scanning both sides at the same time through two thin strips of glass.

It takes just 3 seconds for the ScanSnap to scan a sheet at a decent resolution. That compares with 30 seconds for the two other sheet-fed, double-sided (or duplex) scanners I tried, the $140 Canon Pixma MX870 and the $270 HP ScanJet 5590.

The quality of ScanSnap's output is good, too. The other scanners had problems with pulling the paper at an even pace past the scanning slit. That resulted in letters that were either stretched out - too tall - or squished. That"funhouse effect"was nearly absent on the ScanSnap. It was also better at pulling the paper straight across the slit, avoiding skewed lines.

What if you forget to take out the staples from your tax return before stuffing it in the scanner? No problem! The ScanSnap is smart enough to figure out if two sheets are sticking together, and it will stop so you can fix the problem. Return the sheets to the feeder, hit a button and scanning resumes.

So what's the point of scanning your documents? Well, it's an easy way to organize everything. Like most scanners, the ScanSnap comes with software that"reads"the scans, making them searchable. Scanning also makes it easy to send documents around - if your mortgage broker needs your utility bill, it's easier to scan and e-mail it than to fax it. And obviously, scans take less space than binders full of documents.

Because the ScanSnap is so fast, it's tempting to scan books as well. You could carry a couple of bookshelves worth of scanned books on the iPad.

Copyright law gets in the way of that vision, though. You don't have a blanket right to scan your books. This probably comes as a surprise to people who have been"ripping"their CDs for a decade. The music industry doesn't challenge this practice, but that doesn't mean it's legal, strictly speaking.

Although copyright law is complicated, one thing is clear: Books published in the U.S. before 1923 are fair game. I bought a collection of fairy tales from 1913, and after steeling myself, cut the pages from the spine. It helped my conscience that the binding was already in poor condition. It took 10 minutes for the ScanSnap to turn it into a lovely PDF file, with the color illustrations intact. I loaded the file into the GoodReader app on the iPad, and it looked glorious.

One odd thing that needs mentioning is that the ScanSnap comes in two versions, for Windows and Mac. The printers are identical. Only the bundled versions of the PDF-editing software, Adobe Acrobat, are specific to Windows or Mac. However, the basic software that comes with each printer works on Windows and Mac, and that is sufficient to create PDFs. So one scanner will work OK even if you have both Windows and Mac computers in the house.

Secondly, the ScanSnap isn't quite a replacement for a good flatbed scanner if you want to scan photos. It's optimized for speed, not photo reproduction.

The Pixma and the ScanJet aren't necessarily bad products. They simply lack the ScanSnap's focus on scanning stacks of paper. Both have flatbeds for careful photo scanning, and the Pixma works as a colorand a fax machine. They're also cheaper than the ScanSnap, but if you have a lot to scan, it's the one that's a bargain.


Source

Friday, November 12, 2010

First Apple computer ready for auction

Created in 1976, the Apple-1 was only worth $666.66 and was one of an estimated 200 produced by the hand of co-founder Steve Wosniak. The original version, sold without a keyboard, monitor or power supply, came equipped with only 8 kilobytes of RAM, which is small potatoes compared to today’s memory standards.

A major drawback of the Apple-1 was the lack of a floppy drive. The programs were loaded onto the memory fromtapes that were sold separately, making the total invoice for the Apple-1 a mere $741.66. One tape, labeled“BASIC,” that was used to load programming language, will be included in the sale at the.

Other items said to be included will be original packaging, manuals, cassette interface, basic tape, early documentation and provenance and a rare letter from Steve Jobs.

Though the Apple-1 was the first of its kind, it was soon replaced in 1977 by the more famousII. Just two months ago, another Apple-1 was sold on Ebay for $22,766.66 with only the cassette interface.

The auction will be at Christie’s auction house in London on November 23rd and feature the the Apple-1 alongside manuscripts and papers by Charles Babbage, Alan Turing and more. The Apple-1 is expected to sell for an estimated $242,400.


Source

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Controversial JooJoo tablet to be phased out

(AP) -- A tablet computer that got a controversial start last year is being discontinued.

JooJoo won't be updated with new software that its maker, Fusion Garage, says it is producing.

Fusion Garage plans to have devices with different screen sizes on the market in 2011. The new software will be based onInc.'ssystem.

High-profile technology blogger Michael Arrington of TechCrunch sued Fusion Garage in late 2009 after the implosion of a joint effort between the two companies to build the CrunchPad, a cheap tablet for Web surfing. Fusion Garage announced it would sell the device under a new name, without Arrington's involvement.

The 12.1-inch JooJoo went on sale in February for $500. Fusion Garage, based in Singapore, won't say how many were sold.

The federal lawsuit is ongoing.


Source

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

RIM shares up as CEO says tablet to cost below 500 dollars

Shares in Research In Motion surged on Wall Street on Wednesday after the chief executive of the company behind the BlackBerry said its upcoming tablet computer would cost below 500 dollars.

RIM shares were up 7.53 percent at 59.14 dollars in afternoon trading.

RIM co-chief executive Jim Balsillie said the Canadian firm's touchscreen, the"PlayBook,"will be introduced in North America in the first quarter of 2011 with a global launch in the second quarter of the year.

"There's a lot of demand and we are seeing a lot of interest from international retailers,"Balsillie told The Wall Street Journal on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit in Seoul.

RIM unveiled the Playbook in San Francisco in September as it seeks to compete with Apple's popularand Samsung's recently launched Galaxy Tab.

The PlayBook has a seven-inch (17.8-centimeter) display, smaller than the 9.7 inches of Apple's iPad, and plays Adobe Flash video software, which is banned from the Apple device.

The cheapest iPad costs 499 dollars while the top model is priced at 829 dollars.


Source

Monday, November 8, 2010

Interest is growing in e-readers

Jamie Groves has doubled his reading - up to more than 40 books a year - since he began downloading e-books on his Kindle.

Sandra Hines calls her Nook her"best Mother's Day present ever,"after initially worrying,"It wouldn't feel like I was reading a real book."

Liz Jones used to buy a book every few months until she began reading on her. Now she's downloading a book a week.

All are converts to- books read on handheld devices. Still a minority, their ranks are growing and transforming the definition of reading and books.

E-book sales make up 9 percent of the consumer book market. Through August, their sales are up 193 percent over a year ago, according to the Association of American Publishers.

Novelist Stephen King, who says he does nearly one-third of his own reading on an iPad or Kindle, sees e-books becoming 50 percent of the market"probably by 2013 and maybe by 2012."But he also warns:"Here's the thing - people tire of the new toys quickly."

For now, King, who experimented with writing a digital book,"Riding the Bullet,"in 2000, when it had to be read on a computer, thinks people are reading more"because the screen now feels like home to them."

HarperCollins CEO Brian Murray reports"a sea change in the past few months"among new best-selling books:"On some books, the e-books are outselling the hardcovers."

It's a transformation, says Peter Osnos, founder of PublicAffairs Books,"in the same way that people moved from silent pictures to talking pictures to movie theaters to television to television-on-demand. We are adapting to the notion that we can choose where, when and how we read books."

An estimated 4 million U.S. homes have ansuch as Amazon's Kindle or Barnes&Noble's Nook, according to Forrester Research, which predicts sales of more than 29 million devices by 2015.

In a Harris poll conducted in August, 8 percent say they have an e-reader; 12 percent are likely to buy one in the next six months. But 80 percent say they're not likely to do so.

Those results"ratify that using devices for something (reading) that doesn't require a device at all, and has worked perfectly well for centuries, may not be of obvious appeal to the bulk of readers,"says Michael Cader, founder of Publishers Lunch, a digital newsletter.

Michael Norris, an analyst with Simba Information, a market research firm, also questions if a tipping point has been reached.

He sees"gradual, uninterrupted growth in e-books, but tipping point implies there will be something overnight which will instantly change the character of the publishing business. Thousands of new consumers are showing up in the e-book 'yes' column every day, but on the other hand, there are still over 120 million people who buy print books."

But that could change. A poll, released last month by Scholastic, the children's publisher, found that 57 percent of kids 9 to 17 said they're interested in reading e-books; one-third said they'd be more likely to"more books for fun"with greater access to e-books.

Both Barnes&Noble and Borders have moved print books from the front of their stores to make room to display and demonstrate e-reading devices.

Most, but not all, e-books are cheaper ($9.99 to $16.99) than the print versions ($25 and up for hardcovers). And thousands of titles (from classics in the public domain to self-published) can be downloaded for free.

The cost of the device ranges from $99 for the most basic to $499 or more for Apple's iPad, which can be used for much more than reading books. But prices have dropped. The first Kindles cost $399 in 2007; the newest models start at $139.

Readers cite a variety of reasons for going digital, especially the ease of downloading e-books with a few clicks:

-In Huntington, Ind., Groves, 42, a county prosecutor, says that after his 9-year-old son found the first book in Rick Riordan's best-selling"Percy Jackson&The Olympians"series in his school library, it"was just too easy to order books 2 to 5 on the Kindle. Some nights we would finish one book, and it was nice to have the next book there in 60 seconds after downloading it."

But he doesn't share the Kindle as much with his daughter, 7, who favors picture books:"Dr. Seuss and 'Harold and the Purple Crayon' do not translate well into the black-and-white Kindle."

The only other downside, Groves says:"I purchase a lot more books, whereas I would previously trade with friends and family."

-In Lithonia, Ga., Hines, 49, a bookkeeper, says she has always been an avid reader:"Love opening a book, cracking the spine and having it in my hands."

But she's reading more than ever on her Nook, from classics such as"Dracula"to"sappy romances and some short stories of authors I've never heard of. It's easier carrying than a book, especially a hardcover, as they can get heavy."

In a compromise, she bought a case for her Nook"that opens, so it now feels like a book."

-In Roanoke, Va., Jones, 58, a legal secretary, says her iPod with a Kindle app is"so much easier to carry than a regular book."

After downloading a free e-book, Naomi Novik's"His Majesty's Dragon,"Jones bought three more e-books in the alternate-reality series. Next on her reading list: free e-books of classics she never got to, including"Uncle Tom's Cabin."

-In Cary, N.C., Julie Powsner, 47, a saleswoman, says theapp on her iPhone changed her reading habits, which include finally reading the"Twilight"series"to see what all the fuss was about."

She borrowed a copy of the first book, bought a print version of the second, and downloaded the last two books:"They were less expensive than the hard copy I purchased, which was a great benefit. I also didn't have to run to the store to get it."

-In Pearl River, N.Y., Kathy Miscioscio, 58, a marketing consultant, loves her local library's digital download center, which saves trips to and from the library.

She's reading more and faster because"e-books from the library cannot be renewed, and they are deactivated in 21 days."

-In Houston, Gregory Williams, 47, a hospital administrator, always has been an avid reader - three books a week - but is enjoying it more with his.

And since he and his wife recently"downsized,"he says,"the e-books have really helped with storage. All the books that I care to keep are in one little folder. It's awesome."

Others disagree. Julie Meier, 41, an office manager in Beaver Falls, Pa., says that part of her reading experience is the book itself:"pulling it from the shelf, inspecting the cover, letting it fall open to a random page."

After working at a computer all day, she wants"a book in my hand. Turning its pages is my way of knowing it's time to relax and slow down."

Other readers question if it's an either/or.

Miscioscio says she still listens to"vinyl records as well as music on an MP3 player,"and that"exchanging good books with friends and browsing the book table at yard sales are activities many avid readers enjoy."But more and more, she's"turning on my Sony Reader rather than picking up a hard copy of a book."

Williams loves both bookstores and"the smell and feel of a new book. But I have noticed that when a new book is released, I immediately try to find out if the e-book is available."

Publishers face an uncertain world.

Grove/Atlantic's Morgan Entrekin says that"the change will not happen as fast as it has happened in the music business or even in the newspaper and magazine world."He sees a substantial market for physical books for at least another 20 to 30 years,"but eventually, 30, 40 or 50 years from now, e-books will be the predominant form."

King has mixed emotions about e-books.

At 63, the author appreciates being able to enlarge the print size, but cautions:"Let's just hope there won't be a terrorist EMP (electromagnetic pulse) that'll wipe them all out.

"They are ephemeral. In a very real sense, not books at all. Of course,themselves are hardly indestructible: The Germans burned plenty. Not to mention the fundamentalists, who have cheerfully burned some of my own."


Source

Saturday, November 6, 2010

MacBook Air a lovely, pricey machine

I didn't dwell a lot on the MacBook Air when Apple first unveiled it in January 2008. Its thin profile and light weight were definitely impressive. But with an $1,800 price tag for the base model, slow processors, only an 80-gigabyte hard drive and no DVD drive, the notebook was too expensive, too underpowered and too limited to get me too excited.

So when rumors surfaced thatplanned a new version, I wasn't expecting a lot. But after getting my hands on one of the new MacBook Airs that Apple unveiled last month, I've been more than pleasantly surprised.

In fact, I love it.

In revamping its lineup of MacBook Airs, Apple made some key changes. First, it introduced a smaller model. Previously, your only choice was an Air with a 13-inch screen; now you can get a smaller, lighter one with an 11-inch screen.

And it trimmed the prices. The new entry-level, the one with the 11-inch screen, is priced at $1,000. A new Air with specifications comparable to the previous entry model, including its 13-inch screen, now costs just $1,300.

That's still high but within the range you'd pay for a high-end Windows-based.

The Air's big difference from most of those other higher-end machines - besides running Apple's much easier-to-use- is that it doesn't have a. Instead, Apple is packing the Air with flash memory - the same chip-based storage found in the, iPod and iPad.

This isn't the first time you've been able to get a laptop with flash-based storage; that was an option with the previous version of the Air and on machines from other manufacturers. But such machines have often been phenomenally expensive.

Flash prices, though, have dropped rapidly. While you still pay a premium for it, Apple has shown that you can now get awith a decent amount of flash storage at a fairly reasonable price.

And flash has advantages over hard drives that are starting to make the trade-off in terms of price and storage space more than worth it. The most notable of these benefits is speed.

One of the things I've long hated about computers is just how long they take to get up and running. Even brand new ones can often take minutes. My experience with the Air was completely different. Thanks to flash, it boots up in about 14 seconds. That's faster than many laptops resume running after being in standby mode, yet alone how long they take to boot up from a standing start.

And when the Air resumes running from standby mode, it takes less than three seconds. It's just amazing.

But the speed is apparent beyond that. The Air has a relatively slow processor from Intel. But thanks to the speed of the flash drive, you'd hardly know it. You don't have to wait for the computer to spin up the hard drive or read the data off it; instead, it's transferred nearly instantaneously. I didn't realize just how much of a drag a hard drive can be on a computer's performance until I started playing around with the Air.

And the Air's flash storage has other advantages. Because there are no hard disks spinning and you don't need a fan to cool them, it's completely silent. It's also much thinner and lighter. The Air is only 0.68 inches at its thickest point - and a near-razor thin 0.11 inches at its narrowest. The 11-inch laptop weighs 2.3 pounds, while the 13-inch one weighs 2.9 pounds.

I often lug a laptop around with me in my backpack when I go to conferences or meetings. By the end of the day my back and shoulders are often sore.

Not so with the Air. I carried it around with me all day last week and hardly noticed it was there.

To be sure, the Air isn't perfect, and it obviously isn't for everyone. Even the entry-level model is pricey. It's a Mac, so it costs extra to run Windows software. And as fast as it is at everyday tasks, it isn't necessarily suited for graphics-heavy games or processor-intensive tasks such as video rendering.

Moreover, the entry-level model has just 64 gigabytes of storage, a scant amount considering you can now find laptops with 500-gigabyte or larger hard drives for hundreds of dollars less. With that little space, you may not be able to store all of your music, videos and photos.

Still, for its light weight and blazing fast speed, I think the Air is more than worth the trade-offs.

APPLE MACBOOK AIR:

-Troy's rating: 4.8 out of 5

-Likes: Light; ultrathin; very speedy

-Dislikes: Pricey; demo model crashed; small storage space

-How much: $999 to $1,599, depending on model

-Web:http://www.apple.com


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Friday, November 5, 2010

Review: Microsoft hits refresh on smartphones

With the launch of the Windows Phone 7 platform, Microsoft is entering a smartphone race that started in earnest more than three years ago.

So, what did it learn in those years on the sidelines?

Quite a bit, apparently.

The first three WP7 handsets - theSurround and Samsung Focus from AT&T Wireless and the HTC HD7 from T-Mobile - will be available Monday for a $200 price tag.

I've spent a week with the Surround and overall I'm impressed.

It would be easy to call WP7 a half-baked smartphone platform, with its long list of omitted features.

But there are some real finds to make you want to take a peek.

INTERFACE DESIGN

This user interface is almost impossibly beautiful, even innovative.

took a decided risk in shunning the grid-like, app-filled homescreen made popular by the Apple iPhone.

Instead, it completely rethought smartphone navigation. Information is stored in vertical queues that can be swiped to the left or right, topped with classy oversized labels.

Animated homescreen tiles can be set to launch frequent apps or tasks, such as calling a certain contact in your address book.

An apparent omission emerged as a welcome change: The phone's reception and battery life are not always displayed at the top of the screen.

That declutters the screen nicely, and a tiny finger swipe brings up the battery and signal-strength indicators if desired.

When you take a photo with the 5-megapixel camera, the image immediately becomes available just left of the viewfinder. To review the shot, swipe to the right and take a look - no more hopping between a camera mode and your roll of images. Smart.

The camera is also instant-on, meaning that you can hit the dedicated shutter button without unlocking the phone's screen first.

KEY FEATURES

The Surround is clearly aimed to appeal to frequent music listeners and video watchers.

The handset features slide-out speakers that give outstanding sound for a mobile device. At the same time, a kickstand becomes available to prop up the device for comfortable video watching.

The Surround is screamingly fast - a credit both to its 1GHz processor and the Microsoft software.

Microsoft draws on some of its big brands to lend credence to the new smartphone line.

Each phone comes with a mobile version of Microsoft Office - the ubiquitous Word, Excel and PowerPoint - that gets the job done.

There is also integration with XBox Live, which no doubt will cause gamers to flock to the phone. You can play against other XBox Live users, getting the same personalized avatar you use on the XBox.

SOME DRAWBACKS

There are some critical omissions.

WP7 lacks the ability to copy and paste text - a seemingly easy feature famously lacking on the Apple iPhone at its 2007 release.

And since WP7 phones have no support for Flash video, it will be hard for users to find videos they can view.

Some Android users got the ability to play Flash videos this summer through the 2.2 software update. The iPhone cannot play Flash video, but plays the increasingly common HTML5 - another unplayable format on WP7.

There is also no support for multitasking - now standard for the iPhone and Android smartphones - so apps can't stay active in the background.

You also cannot turn the WP7 phones into a WiFi hotspot, a popular feature on competing phones.

During a jaunt through Monroe and Lenawee counties, the Surround on AT&T's network struggled in its turn-by-turn navigation compared to the Motorola Droid X from Verizon Wireless.

The Surround lost track of the GPS and lagged behind my actual position.

The AT&T turn-by-turn navigation is a $9.99-a-month add-on, compared to free navigation with some other phones and carriers.

While the call quality was superb on my end, my call audio dropped on the other end for a few seconds while I was speaking - an issue I face with other handsets on the AT&T network.

IS IT ENOUGH?

Microsoft has built a beautiful, adequately featured smartphone platform with its WP7 handsets. In fact, it's an absolute joy to use.

But it's entering a crowded marketplace dominated by Apple and a surging Google, which both have amassed millions of users.

The key for Microsoft - not known for moving deftly - will be how quickly it can work out the kinks.

Video calling, visual voicemail and tethering need to come soon.

Microsoft's consumer technology stumbles are numerous and well-documented, But there's no discounting that magic that comes with an entirely fresh smartphone experience - something we haven't seen since the iPhone's release more than three years ago.

We have that again in.


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Thursday, November 4, 2010

Panasonic introduces smallest, lightest interchangeable digital lens camera

Panasonic today announced the LUMIX DMC-GF2, the latest of the company’s DSL Micro (DSLM) compact mirrorless cameras, which is Panasonic’s smallest and lightest interchangeable lens system camera– complete with a built-in flash. The LUMIX GF2 is compatible with lenses from the Micro Four Thirds standard, meaning the system is small and compact, while not compromising ease of operation or image quality. Even more, the LUMIX GF2 is compatible with Panasonic’s new 3D interchangeable lens, the LUMIX G 12.5mm / F12, so users can take 3D photos.


“The LUMIX GF2 is key in theDSL Micro line-up, as it’s the smallest and lightest model we offer, while still offering superb image quality, which our consumers have come to expect from LUMIX. Compared to the GF1, its predecessor, the GF2 has been reduced approximately 19% in size and approximately 7% in weight yet is still retains its signature built-in flash,” said Darin Pepple, Senior Product Manager, Imaging, Panasonic Consumer Electronics Company.“We expect the LUMIX GF2 to be an attractive model for consumers who want to step up to a more powerful camera that is easy to use, and a camera that is‘future-proof’ with its 3D capabilities.”

The LUMIX GF2 is extremely easy to operate for consumers at any level, thanks to a newly- designed user interface, which allows for the focus to be set, or shutter released, by simply touching the large 3-inch touch-screen LCD. The touch-screen LCD with a 460,000-dot-resolution makes taking great photos intuitive. Once a user locks on a subject by touch, the LUMIX GF2 tracks the subject with the AF tracking function, even if the subject moves– making it easy to take photos of moving subjects, like children playing. The contrast AF system adopted by the LUMIX DMC-GF2 is not only accurate and easy to use, but also very fast. Users can choose from a wide range of AF (Auto Focus) modes, including multiple-area AF with up to 23 focus areas, 1-area AF with a selectable focus area, Face Detection, and AF Tracking.

The touch operation also dramatically shortens the time spent navigating the menus. With the LUMIX GF2’s newly-designed Touch Q-menu, the user can customize the camera’s shortcuts with the most commonly used settings. Together with the simple button components, including dedicated buttons for video recording and iA (Intelligent Auto) mode which lights in-use, users can operate the camera intuitively with ease.

With the Intelligent Scene Selector in the iA mode, the camera automatically switches to the appropriate mode according to the subject touched. For example, a touch on a human face switches to the portrait mode and a touch on the background or scenery switches to the scenery mode, while a touch on the subject close to the camera switches to the close-up mode. With the MF assist mode for manual focusing, users can enlarge the subject by just a touch to select 1x, 5x or 10x and smoothly move the subject by dragging it on the screen. In iA mode and the Peripheral Defocus mode, the range of defocus can be adjusted by just moving the slider with a finger, something not possible with larger more complicated DSLR cameras that don’t feature touch control.

While achieving breakthroughs in compactness of design and outstanding photo and video quality, the Panasonic LUMIX GF2 can contribute its professional-level imaging performance to well-balanced engine and sensor technologies. For the image processor, the Venus Engine FHD is incorporated, featuring exceptionally high performance signal processing capabilities in both photo and movie recording. With the advanced noise reduction system employing the 3D NR and CNR (Chromatic Noise Reduction), users can capture clear, naturally-balanced images even when shooting at high ISO sensitivity levels to help prevent the color bleeding.

Panasonic’s Venus Engine FHD enables Intelligent Resolution technology, which means that three areas– outlines, detailed texture areas and soft gradation– are automatically detected. Then, the outline parts are enhanced effectively to give edges more clearness while giving a moderate accentuation to the texture areas to look more finely detailed. To the soft gradation part, noise reduction system is applied to make it smoother. Apart from the uniform enhancement of sharpness, the innovative technology Intelligent Resolution precisely performs signal processing pixel by pixel, resulting in images that are naturally clear and crisp in both video and photos. The 12.1-megapixel Live MOS sensor featured in the LUMIX GF2 offers the best of both worlds– the superb image quality of a CCD sensor, plus the lower power consumption of a CMOS sensor.

All of Panasonic’s LUMIX G-Series DSLM cameras are equipped with the highly-efficient Dust Reduction System. If dust gets inside the camera when the user changes lenses, it could cling to the image sensor and show up as a spot in photos. The Dust Reduction System helps to reduce this risk by placing a supersonic wave filter in front of the Live MOS sensor. Vibrating vertically around 50,000 times per second, the filter repels dust and other particles.

The LUMIX GF2 shoots professional-quality full High Definition (HD) videos as well as handling still photography. The LUMIX GF2 can record 1920 x 1080 videos at 60i or smooth HD 1280 x 720 movies at 60p in AVCHD. For those looking for better compatibility with computers, the LUMIX GF2 can also record HD Motion JPEG in 1280 x 720 and QVGA, VGA and WVGA. A dedicated video record button makes it easy to start shooting videos, and high quality sound is recorded with the stereo microphone for Dolby® Digital Stereo Creator. Panasonic’s iA mode extends to video recording, with the following features: Optical Image Stabilizer, Face Detection, Intelligent D-range Control and Intelligent Scene Selector.

The Panasonic LUMIX GF2 is artistic not only in form, but also in function, as it provides an array of features that lets users capture true-to-life images while also creating their own expressive, beautiful images. The LUMIX GF2 features My Color mode which is integrated with the conventional Film mode. My Color mode offers a total of eight preset effects— Expressive, Retro, Pure, Elegant, Cinema, Monochrome, Dynamic Art, Silhouette, plus Custom mode, which lets users manually set the color, brightness, saturation and contrast levels. Also, with the Full-time Live View function, users can see how these settings will affect the images before they shoot, which makes it easier to capture the exact effect desired. The LUMIX GF2 has 17 Scene modes, most which can be used during video shooting, too. The exposure meter can be displayed in the P/A/S/M shooting modes for entry-level users to visually learn the correlation between shutter speed and aperture to enhance their photography skills.

The Panasonic LUMIX DMC-GF2, with a quality and solid aluminum body, will be available in black, silver, white, and red models with the following kit options: DMC-GF2C– 14mm F2.5 Lens Kit and DMC-GF2K– 14-42mm Zoom Lens Kit. The LUMIX GF2 will be available in January 2011 and pricing will be announced approximately 30 days prior to shipment.


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