Archive for the ‘digital downloads’ Category

Hands-on with LG’s BD300 Netflix / Blu-ray deck

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

Filed under: ,

When we waltzed over to have a gander at LG’s recently priced BD300, one of the reps on hand wasn’t so keen on letting us take close-ups. Not one to just roll over and accept a command, we casually walked over to the other BD300 kiosk, flashed the Engadget gang sign to the much kinder rep, and continued on to snap a few shots of the new box. The unit set up was fully functional and able to stream Netflix movies, and it even detected the network connection before playing in order to deliver the best quality without introducing skips and stutters. Feel free to get all up in your monitor when checking out the gallery over at Engadet HD, we won’t hassle ya. One love.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph

LG’s BD300 Netflix / Blu-ray deck ships next month for $399.95

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

Filed under: ,

We hate to say we called it, but our complete in-the-dark guess of just under four C-notes was right on the money. LG has just announced that it’s BD300 Network Blu-ray player (and Netflix streamer) will begin shipping to national retailers (Best Buy, Circuit City, Bass Pro Shops, etc.) next month (as in, a month later than initially anticipated) for $399.95. Not the cheapest BonusView-enabled deck in the mix, but given the Netflix functionality tossed in on the side, we can still see quite a few folks joining the BD camp with this one. Matter of fact, we’ll just go ahead and ask — is this your ticket into the Blu?

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph

Double toil and trouble, VUDU rumor pot bubbles over

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Filed under: ,

VUDU cauldron

With apologies to Shakespeare, something is brewing at VUDU. With CEDIA just around the corner, the company has laid off some of its staff, most notably some of its marketing higher-ups. Additionally, rumors are swirling regarding just about every aspect of the upstart company’s future. CEPro got some talk-time with the VUDU’s national dealer channel manager, and a theme of decreased emphasis on the retail channel seems to run throughout the conversation, punctuated by a end-of-life status on the VUDU X100. Meanwhile, the company is making some CEDIA promises for its custom-install-targeted VUDU XL: more HD content (1,000 titles), more connectivity (HD over component) and lifetime warranties on purchased titles. It’s all rumor, but we wouldn’t be surprised to see VUDU move exclusively into the custom-install market where it seems to have a toe-hold. So what say ye — is something rotten in VUDU, or should we hang up the codpiece and get back to work?

[Image courtesy Blog of Wishes]

Read - CEPro’s VUDU interview
Read - VUDU CEDIA plans

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Steven Kim

VUDU announces $0.99 extended rentals, “99 for 99″ movie channel

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

Filed under:

Shortly after picking up its very own adult channel, VUDU is announcing a more, shall we say, family friendly bit today. Effective immediately, VUDU users will be able to renew any SD rental for $0.99 within seven days of first viewing the film, while renewals of HD rentals will cost $1.99. Additionally, VUDU has launched a new “99 for 99″ movie channel which contains a rotating list of 99 films that can be rented for — you guessed it — just south of a Washington. Interestingly, VUDU calls the deals “summer blockbuster specials,” though there’s no sign of an end date for either. Can’t say this totally changes the way we see the movie set-top-box, but it’s certainly a step in the right direction. Full release after the jump.

Continue reading VUDU announces $0.99 extended rentals, “99 for 99″ movie channel

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph

LG’s BD300 Netflix & Blu-ray box lightly stroked

Friday, August 1st, 2008

Filed under: ,

Need some early impressions of how LG’s BD300 Blu-ray / Netflix combo player feels from the couch? Crave got some seat time in front of the device last night, finding its handling of Netflix streams basically the same as the Roku Netflix Player, unfortunately with a much larger price tag. The remote’s home button may also link up to music and photos from a PC or the USB port, while BD Live support is present and accounted for. Hit the read link for a few more details ahead of the September launch, and hope “well under $500″ is more like $399 at most.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Richard Lawler

Sony Ericsson’s Paris phone gets demoed in video

Friday, May 30th, 2008

Filed under:

If you just can’t get enough news about Sony Ericsson’s forthcoming Symbian UIQ touchscreen phone — currently known as Paris — perhaps this promo video of the thing in action can help. Sure, these appears to be pre-renders, but it does whet the appetite for things to come with the device, and who can complain about that pop-up weather app and confirmation that this will have a flash for its camera? Also, the dude in the clip sports a totally stylish cardigan. Watch the whole thing after the break and see for yourself.

[Via PHONE Magazine]

Continue reading Sony Ericsson’s Paris phone gets demoed in video

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Joshua Topolsky

Western Digital rolls out colorful new My Passport Elite USB hard drives

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

Filed under:

Western Digital has never been one to skimp on color choices for its portable hard drives, and it now busted out the crayons yet again for its new batch of My Passport Elite USB drives. Available in bronze, titanium, westminster blue and cherry red, the drives each boast a “soft-touch finish” to keep ‘em from slipping out of your hands, and weigh in at a mere 5 ounces. You’ll also get a built-in capacity gauge to let you know how much space you have left, as well as the usual back-up software and security measures. If that sounds like the drive you’ve been looking for, you can grab a 250GB model now for $170, or move on up to a 320GB drive for an even $200.

[Via Register Hardware]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Original post by Donald Melanson

Asus and Microsoft working an Eee-targeted version of Windows 7?

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Filed under:

So now that the nine-inch Eee is officially available with Windows XP pre-installed, people are wondering the obvious — why XP and not Vista, since XP is being discontinued in June and Vista can kinda-sorta be made to run on an Eee? The answer, direct from Microsoft, is both obvious and a little surprising: Given the Eee’s “other requirements,” Asus and Microsoft “couldn’t go the Vista route,” presumably because the Eee doesn’t really have the horsepower for it. Sure, but what caught our interest was that Microsoft is “in close discussions with Asus [regarding] how to take that forward… in regards to the Windows 7 Europe timeframe.” Windows 7, you’ll recall, has that lean new kernel, which would presumably make building a stripped-down version specifically for Eee-class machines easier — but the last we heard, Windows 7 wasn’t due until at least mid-2009 (and possibly not until 2011), so either Microsoft is planning to continue shipping XP after June or Windows 7 is coming much earlier than we thought. Our money is on XP continuing to soldier on, but here’s hoping.

[Thanks, Omar]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Original post by Nilay Patel

Eee PC hacked to accomodate 1.2GHz Pentium M processor

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

Filed under:

In case you haven’t noticed, the Eee PC has quickly become a favorite among folks that like to, shall we say, customize things, and it now looks like you can chalk up another big modification to the list of operations the laptop has gone under. This latest come to us from one “guryhwa,” who managed to cram a 1.2GHz Pentium M processor into the laptop, giving it a bit of boost of the stock Celeron. Needless to this, this particular hack involves some soldering and a good deal of guts, but you apparently at least don’t have to make any modifications to the BIOS. Without any changes, however, the processor only runs at 840MHz, although guryhwa’s apparently working to improve that.

[Via Eee Site]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Original post by Donald Melanson

Eee PC hacked to accommodate 1.2GHz Pentium M processor

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

Filed under:

In case you haven’t noticed, the Eee PC has quickly become a favorite among folks that like to, shall we say, customize things, and it now looks like you can chalk up another big modification to the list of operations the laptop has gone under. This latest come to us from one “guryhwa,” who managed to cram a 1.2GHz Pentium M processor into the laptop, giving it a bit of boost of the stock Celeron. Needless to this, this particular hack involves some soldering and a good deal of guts, but you apparently at least don’t have to make any modifications to the BIOS. Without any changes, however, the processor only runs at 840MHz, although guryhwa’s apparently working to improve that.

[Via Eee Site]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Original post by Donald Melanson

Asus’ Eee PC gets torture tested on video

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

Filed under:

For those that had no qualms kicking Teddy to the curb and cuddling with Asus’ Eee PC throughout the night just as soon as it was released, you may want to utilize your scroll wheel right about now. For those with a tough stomach and a perverse appetite for destruction, you can most definitely stay put. In the video posted after the jump, the Eee PC is pushed from great heights onto solid floors, forced to sit in extreme temperatures and repeatedly prodded to see if it still functioned. Interested? You’re just one click away from a clip sure to make gadget aficionados everywhere cringe.

[Thanks, Roman]

Continue reading Asus’ Eee PC gets torture tested on video

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Original post by Darren Murph

Researchers devise method for colorizing metals, alchemists swoon

Sunday, February 3rd, 2008

Filed under:

Unfortunately, Dr. Chunlei Guo of the University of Rochester hasn’t yet figured out how to turn scrap metals into gold, but he, along with Dr. Anatoliy Y. Vorobyev, has discovered how to colorize a variety of metals. By utilizing a “femtosecond laser processing technique,” the duo has crafted a method for turning even aluminum into aluminum with an impeccable gold finish. Furthermore, they’ve also been successful in turning tungsten dark blue, leaving reason to believe that nearly any metal could be altered to appear as a different color. Ah, just imagine what these folks could do with your MacBook Pro.

[Via The New York Times, thanks Jonathan]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Original post by Darren Murph

Graphene could be used in creating solar cells, LCDs

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

Filed under: ,

Not to sound alarming or anything, but apparently, we’ve only got a decade or so before our planet runs clean out of indium. Thankfully for us, a team of researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Germany are purportedly onto a replacement. For those in the dark, indium is a critical resource in “creating solar cells, LCD and other devices which must have transparent electrodes to carry out their function,” but the aforementioned crew has seemingly been able to take graphene (”single layer 2D sheets extracted from the common material graphite”) and build an acceptable alternative. The creation is 80-percent transparent to visible light and 100-percent transparent to infrared light, which could actually lead to solar cells capable of soaking up even more energy from more of the EM spectrum. ‘Course, there’s no telling how close this discovery is to being commercially viable, but we suppose we could always resurrect RPTVs and rely solely on wind farms for renewable energy if necessary, right?

[Via DailyTech, image courtesy of About]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Original post by Darren Murph

EU to investigate TomTom / Tele Atlas deal

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Filed under:

The European Commission has just opened an investigation into TomTom’s proposed purchase of Tele Atlas, claiming that consumers could be hurt by a GPS hardware maker owning one of the two major digital map providers. Specifically, the so-called “in-depth inquiry,” which will be concluded no later than April 17th of next year, stems from “serious doubts that the acquisition by TomTom of Tele Atlas might…lead to a significant impediment of effective competition within the EEA.” With Nokia going after NAVTEQ and Garmin having given up on Tele Atlas, this investigation clearly makes sense from the free market standpoint, as the Dutch firm is not likely to slip past without at least committing to fair map licensing terms for other PND manufacturers. In response to the Commission’s announcement, TomTom decided to extend its offer for shares of Tele Atlas until March 31st, 2008, with the option to issue another extension if certain conditions are not met.

[Thanks, Daniel]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Original post by Evan Blass


Developages - Development and Technology Blog

Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS and Subscribe to Developages by Email.