Archive for the ‘Q1’ Category

Samsung’s YP-U4 and YP-Q1 DAPs go official

Friday, August 29th, 2008

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We heard the YP-Q1 was brewing, and now Samsung has confirmed the new player, along with a followup to the U3 thumbDAP, the previously rumored YP-U4. The U4 borrows a few design cues from Samsung’s TV lineup, but while it’s certainly sexier than the previous generation, we can’t help but think it looks a bit frumpy given the teensy grey OLED screen and stingy 2GB and 4GB capacities. The players boast 16 hours of playback, DNSe 2.0, and come in rose, purple and blue flavors. Meanwhile, the Q1 (pictured) seems to be frump grown up, with a 2.4-inch QVGA LCD and those purported 4, 8 and 16GB capacities. Samsung is also touting its DNSe 3.0 in the new player, which can “upconvert” audio to improve quality… supposedly. You can score one in October in black, white or silver, while the U4 (pictured after the break) should be shipping nowish.

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Original post by Paul Miller

Samsung prepping YP-Q1 PMP for IFA

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

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It’s not officially announced yet, but Samsung’s expected to announce the YP-Q1 PMP at IFA this week. The vertically-oriented player will come in 4, 8 and 16GB varieties with a 2.4-inch QVGA screen, support for MP3, WMA, WAV, Ogg, FLAC, MPEG4 and WMV, and an FM RDS radio. No word on pricing yet, but does anyone else think it’s funny that Samsung will now have two entirely different slow-selling Q1s?

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Original post by Nilay Patel

Samsung intros two new Q1 Ultra UMPCs: one with Vista Business, one with HSDPA

Monday, July 28th, 2008

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The next-generation Q1 Ultra may be due next year, but Sammy’s trying to squeeze every bit of life it can out of the current iteration with two new flavors. Announced today, the Q1U-CMXP boasts an integrated HSDPA 3G cellular modem, while the Q1UP-V is a Q1 Ultra Premium featuring Vista Business. As for the former, it includes just about every connectivity option you could wish for: 802.11b/g WiFi, Bluetooth 2.0+EDR, Ethernet and a WWAN modem that connects to the AT&T Broadband Connect network; outside of the one new feature, however, the specifications are the same as the standard Q1 Ultra XP model that was launched in May of 2007. Both newcomers (if you can call ‘em that) are available as we speak for $1,499 and $1,449 in order of mention.

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Original post by Darren Murph

ATTIGO TT elegantly integrates touch panels into DJ setup

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

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Just after seeing how the Nintendo DS’s touch panel could be used to scratch things up, along comes a full-blown turntable setup that relies heavily on interactions with touchscreens. Dreamed up and designed by Scott Hobbs, the ATTIGO TT enables DJs to manipulate sounds via sensors, and the added visual effects are fantastically beautiful, if not useful. Check out a video of the creation being used after the jump — just make sure one earcup is firmly planted around the ear first, alright?

[Via Coolest-Gadgets]

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Original post by Darren Murph

PASMO Card Services: Ensuring Japanese Kids Don’t Play Hooky

Monday, May 12th, 2008

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The PASMO card is an RFID technology introduced in Japan to pay for trains, which remain the primary mode of transportation in the country. To put the technology to good use, Tokyu Security is rolling out a range of services, which happen to be quite viable since the PASMO card is widely-used. Home access is now included among the list of services, while a number of others are geared towards school children.

Aside from the possibility of paying cafeteria lunch using the PASMO card, it can also serve as a child tracking service. Since the Japanese working force is characterized by salarymen and office ladies, people who’ve little time for their brood, the Tokyu Security can notify parents via web or mobile every time their children use their PASMO cards to log-in at school, access their homes, or ride the train. Of course, issues regarding privacy arise, especially for adults using the same technology (bosses can check one’s activities, rendering one’s laundry list of excuses when late all but useless). This seems to only be the beginning though–the list of services for the PASMO card will only grow in time.

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Original post by Mariella Moon

HTC spy shot reveals handful of new phones

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

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Apparently, HTC is having a little trouble keeping people with cameras out of its offices, as evidenced by this totally great spy shot of a what appears to be a bunch of (or two) new phones. We’re familiar with quite of few of these devices, like the TyTn II, Touch Cruise, and Touch you see in the upper row, but things get a little stickier down below. Save for that P3470 that’s second from left, we have no clue what those slick looking square numbers are. The far left model and the far right might be the same device, but its hard to tell. It also looks like all the devices in this picture are using Windows Mobile, but we’re holding out hope that maybe the model on the far right boots Android… and soon.

[Via IntoMobile]

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky

Sketchy pictures of new MacBook, MacBook Pro, and 32GB iPhone surface

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

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Whoops! Apple’s gone and leaked its brand new aluminum MacBook and redesigned MacBook Pros to the interblogs. Yeah, it seems old Jobsy has really loosened the binds over in Cupertino — he doesn’t care what gets out these days. No, but seriously, some cats on the internet supposedly discovered a .Mac page which appears to display mockups (or actual product renderings) for a new line of laptops, as well as adverts for iTunes 8 and iPhones in the 32GB variety (for Australia, naturally). Of course, this is wild, crazy, unfounded speculation, and likely has no basis in reality at all. Then again, you never know… stranger things have happened. Steve, we await your takedown requests. See full pages for yourself in the gallery after the break.

[Thanks, al]

Gallery: Sketchy pictures of new MacBook, MacBook Pro, and 32GB iPhone surface

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky

T-Mobile’s Shadow II revealed in spy pic

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

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Just when we were getting used to T-Mobile’s Shadow, it appears we’re going to have to make room in our pockets for its successor… the Shadow II. Picking up almost exactly where the first iteration left off, this grainy spy shot reveals that its going to be more of the same for the revamp, save for some new rounded edges and oh-so-chic reflective finish. We’ll assume the company is sticking to the plan with a slide out numeric keypad, but you never know; they could be hiding a QWERTY under there… or some kind of weird Gremlin.

[Thanks, Jason]

 

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky

Canon’s Rebel XSi turns up in retail spy shot

Friday, April 11th, 2008

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You know that Rebel XSi we saw pop up on Amazon? Well thanks to a tipster, we now know it’s appearing in more than one location. That photo above shows one of these babies fresh out of a shipping crate at Best Buy — so if you’ve been saving your pennies, they could find their way into the hands of a blue-shirted sales associate any day now.

 

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky

Compulsive e-mailing, texting could be classified as bona fide illness

Monday, March 17th, 2008

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Considering the plethora of facilities that have opened just in the past few years to deal solely with individuals that have become undoubtedly addicted to video games, the internet and all things Hello Kitty (we jest, we jest), we’re not surprised one iota to hear that uncontrollably texting / e-mailing could soon become “classified as an official brain illness.” According to a writeup in the latest American Journal of Psychiatry, internet addiction is a common ailment “that should be added to psychiatry’s official guidebook of mental disorders.” More specifically, Dr. Jerald Block, a psychiatrist at the Oregon Health and Science University in Portland, even goes so far as to argue that said phenomenon (neglecting basic drives to spend more time online) be “included in the [next edition of] Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, psychiatry’s official dictionary of mental illnesses.” Until then, we wish you the best of luck convincing that creature living in your basement with a dedicated T1 line that he / she isn’t alright.

[Via textually, image courtesy of TheSkylineBand]

 

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Original post by Darren Murph

Professor decries robotic killing machines, clearly prefers to do killing himself

Thursday, February 28th, 2008

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So the military is continuing down the totally inevitable path of computer-controlled autonomous robo-warriors capable of fighting deadly human battles on our behalf — and out come the naysayers like U of Sheffield prof Noel Sharkey, who, at The Ethics of Autonomous Military Systems conference in London, decried the bots’ self-determined killing abilities as “a threat to humanity” — especially if they’re captured and re-purposed by terrorists to do their evil bidding. Sharkey exclaimed that he’s “worked in artificial intelligence for decades, and the idea of a robot making decisions about human termination terrifies [him],” but — and we’re just gonna throw this out there — what if being oppressed by a race of automatons run amok were actually an improvement over our corrupt governments of men? Isn’t that a possibility, too? We’re certainly going to keep telling ourselves it is, thankful we’ve somehow managed to not be overthrown by our own creations. Thus far.

P.S. -We dare you, commenters, NOT to bust out the welcoming our robot overlords cliché.

 

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Original post by Ryan Block

Kurzweil predicts that machines will match man by 2029 — bring it on

Sunday, February 17th, 2008

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Famed technologist and futurist Ray Kurzweil is on the record about human-machine intelligence parity: it’s going down by or before 2029, so be prepared to get digital on entirely new levels. Apparently, machines “will have both the hardware and the software to achieve human level artificial intelligence” by then, but even if it’s not in the form of meatbag-terminating cyborgs, Kurzweil thinks one future of intelligent machines is on the nano scale, with interfaces to enhance our own physiology and intelligence. Oh sure, this stuff is completely pie in the sky — but it’s still absurdly fun to think of what kinds of crazy crap the 21st century’s going to hold.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

 

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Original post by Ryan Block

Skyfire browser for Windows Mobile is game changing, does Flash

Monday, January 28th, 2008

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The Skyfire browser is set to finally bring PC-like browsing to your Windows Mobile device with crazy speeds and support for all manner of embedded content. Sure, there are ways to get Youtube and other mobile video content through proxy sites that convert on the go or with other 3rd-party applications, but this puppy does it all in one sweet and free package. Facebook and Myspace pages load up in no time, video plays in the browser, and all of this is accomplished with some server side magic on the part of the Skyfire server but is completely transparent to the user. All flavors of Windows Mobile — 5 and 6 for both touchscreen and not — are supported with the roadmap hinting at Symbian support in the near future. Sounds too good to be true? It is, and you don’t have to just take our word for it, follow the read link to get signed up for the beta, this is something that just cannot be missed.

Update: Check the video of it in action after the break.

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Original post by Sean Cooper

AMD launches “unlocked” Phenom 9600 Black Edition CPU

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007

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The fury has really been unleashed over at AMD, as the cats in 2nd place take aim at the pocketbooks lowdown, dirty overclockers. Feeling like getting into it? Then you’ll probably want to get your hands on the extra-special Phenom 9600 “Black Edition” quad-core processor, which allows brave souls to tweak (i.e., overclock) to their hearts content by utilizing the company’s OverDrive utility. It’s not all rainbows and unicorns, however, as these chips apparently contain a bug which under extreme conditions can cause the CPUs to perform in a less than stellar manner. AMD says that it hasn’t witnessed any of its production installations exhibit the errata, and that only its internal stress-tests have pushed the processor into the danger zone (cue Loggins). If you’re really concerned, a BIOS patch will circumvent the issue, but may suck away 20-percent of your delicious speed. The choice is yours.

[Via TG Daily]

 

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Original post by Joshua Topolsky


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