Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Daily Crunch: Birdlime Edition

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Apple set to absorb price increases caused by Japan?s continuing power problems?

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Japan?s continuing problems with power are having a serious affect on manufacturers of components used in many of Apple?s products. The power constraints are causing upstream components to increase in price. According to DigiTimes, Apple has decided to absorb these additional costs in exchange for smooth shipments.

The DigiTimes source also pointed out that the iPad 2?s monthly shipments are expected to be ramped up to four million units in the second quarter of this year. Apple?s Japanese based upstream component suppliers should be able to meet these demands up until May; from June there may be a problem.

[DigiTimes]

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Monday, April 11, 2011

MTbiggie is a DIY Surface for the masses

Practical or not, there is no denying the nerd-gasm inducing wow factor of Microsoft's Surface. Of course, Surface is expensive -- like, unless you're a millionaire you're probably not buying one for personal use expensive. There are some DIY solutions out there, but designer and developer Seth Sandler has come up with the cheapest and easiest yet. Built from about $400 worth of material (some of which you probably have lying about your home / apartment / dungeon), the MTbiggie brings big-screen multitouch to the masses. Like the hacker's previous homebrew multitouch device, the MTmini, there's nothing particularly difficult to find here. All you need is a couple of chairs, a mirror, a projector, an infrared webcam (which you can easily hack together with some old film negatives and cardboard), a big sheet of paper and an equally large piece of clear acrylic. Just set it all up according to the instructions in the video below and in no time you be finger painting and playing Angry Birds on a screen that dwarfs your iPad -- and possibly your kitchen table, too.

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Asus PA246Q ProArt 24-Inch LCD Monitor Review

When we heard Asus was coming out with a P-IPS display, we were a bit taken aback at the thought of Asus getting into the high end monitor game. But as the old cliche goes, there's a first time for everything, and the PA246Q ProArt 24-inch LCD monitor is Asus' first foray into the professional display market.

Every other monitor Asus has come out with has been of the TN variety, some of them very good, but there's a clear divide between what you get with an IPS panel and a TN display. The former boasts better viewing angles, much improved color accuracy, and in recent times have even proved up to the task of gaming...

Asus PA246Q ProArt 24-Inch LCD Monitor Review

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Skype with video calling leaks for HTC Thunderbolt, celebrations unsurprisingly erupt (update)

Verizon may have left it out from the get-go, but it looks as if eager HTC Thunderbolt owners needn't wait another day to test out a video-enabled version of Skype. For those outside of The Loop, there was quite the back-and-forth going during the early days, with Verizon announcing at the 11th hour that its flagship LTE phone would be shipped sans Skype. It's still unavailable in the bona firde Android Market, but a build has appeared from the ether and seems to be humming along just fine here at Engadget HQ. Hit the source link if you're feeling froggy, and let us know in comments how things work out.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Update: So we just happened to have a Thunderbolt on hand, and gave Skype's mobile video chat a try. We came away quite impressed -- video is as good as can be expected from the handset's 1.3 megapixel front-facing camera, and the experience on WiFi and LTE is virtually indistinguishable. The app even worked on 3G, though that reduced the picture quality to the point of being almost unusable.

Michael Gorman contributed to this report.

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Pantech Laser Review

The last several years have seen an explosion of mobile phones, more and more of which are able to access features and apps via wireless broadband.� Most of the attention has been on the big players with their ?smartphones,? such as Apple?s iPhone, RIM?s BlackBerry and the many Google Android-based devices from various hardware makers.� However, there is another whole group of phones known as ?feature phones? or ?quick messaging phones? that, while they may not command the horsepower or notoriety of the big boys, are nonetheless loaded with features.� One such device is the Pantech Laser, a super-slim, touchscreen mobile phone with slide-out QWERTY keyboard available through AT&T.� Let?s have a look!

NOTE: All images in this review are clickably enlargeable for your viewing pleasure.

Background

To set the stage here, my perspective is shaped by currently being a very happy iPhone 3GS user.� I am also a former BlackBerry Curve user and was happy with that device as well prior to getting the iPhone 3GS.� However, though I doubt I?ll ever go back to a BlackBerry-style device (I like my full touchscreen a lot), never say never.� I also reviewed the Pantech Link from AT&T, which is currently serving quite nicely as the ?spare? phone in our household.� I will make references to the iPhone 3GS and the Link throughout this review as a frame of comparison.� Also, my 10-year-old daughter, who has been the most frequent user of the Link, checked out the Laser and helped give me another perspective on it.

Inside the Box

As with the Link, the Laser?s box is small and compact, with little wasted space.� Box contents:

  • Pantech Laser mobile phone
  • AC wall charging adapter ?brick?
  • Micro-USB cable
  • Quick-start guide
  • Tutorial CDROM

Hardware Specs

  • Display ? 3.1 inch resistive touchscreen, 480 x 800 pixel, 262K AMOLED
  • Input ? touchscreen with predictive text, slide-out full QWERTY keyboard with backlit keys
  • Weight ? 4.06 ounces
  • Dimensions ? 4.45 x 2.28 x 0.39 inches
  • Color ? Blue
  • Battery ? removable Lithium Ion; up to 1000 mAH; up to 5 hrs talk , up to 14 days standby time
  • Operating Frequency ? GSM/GPRS/EDGE = 850/900/1800/1900 MHz; 3G = UMTS/HSDPA 850/1900 MHz
  • Memory ? Internal = 150 MB; Expandable = up to 32 GB via microSD card
  • Camera ? 3 megapixel (2048 x 1536) still, MPEG4 video, 8x zoom
  • Worldphone capable ? 190+ countries for phone, 130+ for data
  • Bluetooth 2.0, USB port, speakerphone
  • Ringtones: polyphonic, MIDI, MP3

Software and Apps

  • Mobile email ? through Yahoo! Mail, AOL Mail, Hotmail, AT&T Mail, Gmail
  • Messaging ? text; IM through AOL�, Windows Live, Yahoo Messenger; video share
  • Address Book ? 1000 contacts
  • Mobile Browser
  • AT&T Mobile Music Player ? supporting MP3, MIDI, iMelody, WAV, QCP, M4A, AAC, 3GP audio formats, streaming radio, music subscription services, MusicID and playlist creation
  • Multitasking ? voice and data simultaneously
  • AT&T Navigator ? with turn-by-turn directions
  • AT&T Social Net
  • Ypmobile
  • AT&T Social Net
  • Voice memo recording
  • PC suite for PC to phone file sync
  • Drawing Commander ? access apps with the trace of a finger

The Hardware

First Impressions

The Laser is touted by Pantech as the ?thinnest sliding full keyboard device ever offered by AT&T,? and at less than 1cm thin, it seems to live up to this billing.� It is very thin and I almost didn?t believe it had a slide-out QWERTY keyboard until I actually tried it for myself for the first time.

Front/Face

The Laser?s face has a simple, understated look.� First, the shape.� The Laser?s footprint is rectangular with flat sides, slightly rounded along the top and bottom, and with rounded edges and corners.� Shape and size feel good in the hand.� Framing the face is a very deep blue (so deep you?ll only be able to distinguish that it?s blue and not black while in the right light), glossy metallic bezel. � Three dedicated keys (hang-up, escape and answer) line the bottom of the face.

Sides

As mentioned above, the Laser is quite thin, especially for a having a full-keyboard slider.� Around the outer perimeter is an iPhone 4-esque matte silver band, textured with a checked pattern to provide some gripability.� Along the upper right side is a volume rocker key and along the upper left side is a device lock key.

Top

Along the top is a pop-out cover for the charge/headphone jack port.� Though I like the idea of built-in port protection, I?m not a big fan of these pop-off covers, because they are typically time-consuming to use, can be difficult to open and close, and they eventually break off and get lost anyway.� However, this is a micro-USB connection, which I think is more versatile than some type of proprietary connector (which the Pantech Link has).

Back

The back is a matte, slightly metallic blue with a textured pattern.� The camera, situated in an oval-shaped silver bezel, is located in the upper left corner of the back.� The speakerphone grille is located in the lower left of the back.

The battery was easy to access, just get a fingernail in the small groove and give a small push.� To access the microSD card and SIM card, the battery itself must be removed.� Not much of an issue with the SIM, since you probably won?t need to remove it much.� However, having to remove the battery before popping out the microSD might be an issue, depending on how often you access it.

Touchscreen

The touchscreen?s display is quite nice, with the colors and resolution being visually appealing.� The touchscreen?s performance, however, leaves a bit to be desired.� I am accustomed to the iPhone?s capacitive touchscreen interface, which, after having sampled multiple devices, I have to say I still feel is best.� The Laser?s resistive touchscreen often requires some finessing to get it to do what you want.� Multiple pokes, hesitations and mis-selections were fairly common, as well as inadvertently launching an app while page-swiping.� A bit frustrating.� This in fact was one of the things that my daughter noticed and commented on right away.

However, I was pleasantly surprised to find the Laser equipped with touch feedback vibration, I feature wish I had on my iPhone.� If I get sick of it, I can turn it off, but for now I kinda dig it.

Keyboard

The Laser?s keyboard is full QWERTY with four rows of keys.� The layout and spacing are fine, at least for my hands, but the keys, which are a soft rather than hard plastic, have a bit too much compliance for my linking.� I had to press on them harder than I?d have liked in order to get them to register.

Battery Life

The Laser?s battery has a decent life.� At full charge, it had no problems going several days in a combination of standby and active use.� I suspect that were I to utilize the data connection heavily, the battery life would decline sharply.

Camera

The Laser?s camera performance, while not quite up to par with many of the higher-end smartpones, is nonetheless not bad.� As shown below, it can produce still images up to 3 megapixel (2048 x 1536) and videos in MPEG4 format.

As is typical with phone cameras, no flash means interior images will usually only turn out when the subject is well-lit.� See the sample pic above of my desk at work.� Keep in mind that my work area has the prototypically harsh industrial overhead fluorescent lighting found in most corporate cubicle farms, which actually made it turn out quite well, though with some graininess.

On the other hand, exterior images turn out quite decent, as seen above.� One item of note here: the camera hesitates quite a bit when snapping a pic.� If you?re trying to snap something quickly, forget it.� Daisy, one of our pugs in the photo above, had been patiently staring at me for a photo, but in the time between me hitting the button and the camera actually snapping the pic, she?d turned her head to check out a ?Squirrel!? (Doug the Dog reference for you Up fans out there).

Voice and Data Performance

Voice performance is on par with other AT&T phones?not terrible, but not outstanding.� Data performance was so-so, even on the 3G network.� It appeared slower than the iPhone 3GS.� Not sure if this was a function of the speed of the device, or the actual data connection.� The Laser?s data connection performance is acceptable.� Although it is capable of utilizing AT&T?s 3G data network, I found its performance on 3G to be a bit choppy.� It occasionally hesitated when launching web-based apps and frequently hung for several seconds when refreshing the screen on a web page.

Software

The Laser?s OS layout appears borrowed from style elements of iOS, but a bit more from Android with its swipe-left/right page feel and some limited capabilities of adding widgets and favorites.� The Laser has a suite of factory-provided software and has the capability of downloading additional apps via the mobile web.� Here is where I got really irriated with this phone.� For nearly every on-board app that I launched, the Laser would go out to the web, then come back with a message telling me that I would need to pay to use the app.� This was in addition to the data rate I was already paying.� I don?t really know if this is an AT&T thing, or a non-smartphone thing, but it seemed very ?bait-and-switch?-ish, or at the least, very ?nickel-and-dime?-ish.� If the phone already has an app installed (or appears installed), why then make the owner pay to use it?� That said, between the pre-installed apps and what is available through the AT&T AppCenter, you can find Laser-compatible versions of most, if not all, of today?s more popular apps.� Facebook, Twitter, a mobile mail client and web browser, and so forth are on-board, with more available in the AppCenter.

Final Thoughts

OK, so maybe you?re not into all the smartphone hoopla.� But maybe you are really into texting, and occasional mobile web use.� And yeah, you wouldn?t mind having some of the hardware and software features on those shmancy smartphones.� If this even kinda describes you, then have a look at the Pantech Laser.� No, it?s not a smartphone, but I?m not sure it?s actually trying to be one.� Its hardware (super thinness, form factor and slider keyboard) are all very nice and its software and performance are fair to good.� It?s a pretty decent step in the smartphone direction from its cousin, the Pantech Link.

Product Information

Price: $99.99 w/ 2yr AT&T contract and online discount ($249.99 no commitment price)
Manufacturer: PanTech
Retailer: AT&T
Pros:
Cons:
  • - Touchscreen is frustratingly inconsistent in responsiveness

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Samsung Nexus S 4G hits the FCC

Nexus S 4G FCC label location

What appears to be the Sprint Samsung Nexus S 4G (see our hands-on) has shown up on the FCC page, bringing things that much closer to a release.� It's a Samsung device, with CDMA and WiMax radios, and going by the device outline we're pretty sure that the SPH-D720 will turn out to be Sprint's version of the latest Googlephone.� This news should make a lot of people on the "Now Network" awful darn happy, and the rest of us a little bit envious of a sweet vanilla Nexus that can get 4G speeds.�

Hit the source link to read all the technical stuff, and jump in the forums to share some of that excitement you're feeling.� [FCC via Android Central forums] Thanks, Richard1864!

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