7
Sep/10
0

Sanho’s 750GB HyperDrive photo backup HDD plays nice with your iPad

Here’s a little nugget you may not have already been aware of — Apple’s iPad is only capable of registering USB hard drives (via the Camera Connection Kit, of course) that are 32GB or smaller, which may or may not bum a vast majority of you out. Thankfully, Sanho’s latest and greatest HyperDrive was tailor made to circumvent that limitation, and it just so happens to be the company’s most capacious. Checking in with 750GB of open space, this unit boasts a “patent pending ability to turn individual file folders into virtual 32GB drives on the fly that are readable by the iPad,” and as you’d expect, there’s also a CompactFlash and Secure Digital slot for offloading images directly from your camera’s memory card (at up to 40MB/sec). There’s even a 3.2-inch QVGA color display, support for JPEG and RAW files and the ability to act as a vanilla USB hard drive; it’s available now for $599, though smaller versions are available for those with less pocket change.

Gallery: Sanho HyperDrive for iPad

Continue reading Sanho’s 750GB HyperDrive photo backup HDD plays nice with your iPad

Sanho’s 750GB HyperDrive photo backup HDD plays nice with your iPad originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Sep 2010 16:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Engadget Spanish  |  sourceHyperShop  | Email this | Comments


12
Aug/10
0

Exclusive: Dell Thunder prototype rumbles into the wild (video)

Did it get hot in here all of a sudden or is it just this extremely sexy prototype we’re looking at? Yes, the Dell Thunder that boomed onto your internet screens back in April is back, and this time we’ve got video of it too. Our tipster reports an 8 megapixel camera with LED flash on the back — which includes 720p video capture capabilities — along with a removable 1,400mAh battery. His prototype’s running vanilla Android 2.1 at present, though the final units can probably be expected to ship with Dell’s custom skin on top. Screen resolution is purportedly 800 x 480, though judging by that 7 x 4 icon grid up there and our tipster’s own experience, it could be even higher; the 4.1-inch display looks to indeed be of the OLED variety, as our earlier leak had indicated. All that and it has the looks of a pocket-sized supercar. Enough teasing, skip past the break for the video.

[Thanks, Fahad]

Gallery: Dell Thunder prototype leaks out

Continue reading Exclusive: Dell Thunder prototype rumbles into the wild (video)

Exclusive: Dell Thunder prototype rumbles into the wild (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Aug 2010 04:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments


7
Jun/10
0

iPod nano modded to play inside 8-track player, blow minds with ease (video)

Oh, sure — they’ve a place in history, but the 8-track ain’t got nothing on the record player when it comes to retro audio sources. This, however, is no vanilla 8-track deck. The Mad Hacker decided to add a little 2-oh-oh-to-the-dime to his Channel Master by modding a Beach Boys deck to connect to his iPod nano. He even threw a headphone socket and USB port on the front for listening on the go and charging (respectively), but the real amazement comes when you plug the thing in. Somehow or another, he hacked the 8-track to transfer iPod signals into the antediluvian source, providing a bona find plug-and-play solution that’s (way) more awesome than practical. Seriously, it needs to be seen to be believed — lucky for you, the video demonstration is just a click away.

Continue reading iPod nano modded to play inside 8-track player, blow minds with ease (video)

iPod nano modded to play inside 8-track player, blow minds with ease (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 Jun 2010 06:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Technabob  |  sourceModRetro  | Email this | Comments


2
Jun/10
0

Motorola Droid Shadow / Xtreme pictured again, powered by Ninjablur?

Because we can’t seem to get enough Motorola Droid Shadow / Xtreme teasers in our lives, here’s a few more with which to tide you over. First on the docket is a pair of pics from Droid Life, with the screen-saving film intact (and a still-visible Verizon logo underneath) and a cleaner side shot of its bulbous derriere. If that wasn’t enough, the clue-dropper wnrussell of HowardForums — who gave us the vast majority of the previous leaks — is back showing off a 1500mAh battery and claiming a name for that monochrome Motoblur-esque skin we saw earlier. In his words, “Ninja Blur is Blur running without the user knowing. For those who don’t like Blur.” Translation: it’s an Android skin that does very little but make aesthetic differentiators and probably slows down the processing speed a bit. Any chance the ninja can go into hiding in lieu of a vanilla robot experience?

Motorola Droid Shadow / Xtreme pictured again, powered by Ninjablur? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Jun 2010 15:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Android Authority  |  sourceDroid-Life, HowardForums (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments


13
Apr/10
0

ASUS U30Jc-1A review


Core i3 laptops with no more than 2.5 hours of battery life… seen ‘em. Intel ULV laptops that last for more than 5.5 hours… seen ‘em. A Core i3 laptop with NVIDIA’s Optimus discrete graphics that boasts 9.5 hours of battery life? Well, now that sounds new, and that’s exactly what the 13.3-inch ASUS’s U30Jc promises to be – that perfect chocolate vanilla swirl of portability and performance. But like us, you’ve got to be thinking there’s got to be sacrifices here, right? We thought so too, but surprisingly enough they’re extremely minimal considering the $900 pricetag. You aren’t going to find out what they are up here — hit that read more link for our full review.

Gallery: ASUS U30Jc-1A review

Continue reading ASUS U30Jc-1A review

ASUS U30Jc-1A review originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Apr 2010 10:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments


12
Apr/10
0

ASUS introduces EeeBox EB1007 with Pinetrail, without Ion

ASUS introduces EeeBox EB1007 with Pinetrail, without Ion

If you’re looking for a nettop without all the fussy ability to play high definition content, ASUS’s upcoming EeeBox EB1007 might be your ticket to standard-definition minimalism. According to Netbooked, the vanilla desktop was said at CeBIT to be HD-capable, but what we’re seeing on the company’s site doesn’t appear to be, packing the new Intel Atom D410 processor, 1GB of DDR2 memory, 160GB of storage, three USB 2.0 ports, all topped off with 802.11b/g/n WiFi. No word on when it’ll be available or how much it will cost when it does, but it should certainly slot in under the $387 EB1012.

Gallery: ASUS EeeBox EB1007

ASUS introduces EeeBox EB1007 with Pinetrail, without Ion originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Apr 2010 11:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Netbooked  |  sourceASUS  | Email this | Comments


23
Mar/10
0

Dell Inspiron Mini 10 shipping April 1st with integrated Clear WiMAX

Dell’s vanilla Atom N450-based Mini 10 just started shipping a couple of months ago, and if you’ll recall, we spotted one slip through the FCC’s oh-so-vulnerable database with WiMAX built-in. Today at CTIA, Clearwire spilled the news that it’ll be providing the service for a 4G-infused version of the netbook come April 1st. What’s interesting is that Clearwire only mentions it being for sale “through select Clear retail locations, telesales and Clear.com,” so it’s still unknown if it’ll be offered up through the Round Rock powerhouse itself (as the Studio 17, Studio XPS 1640 and Latitude E4300, etc. are). The machine will be sold for $249.99 after an instant rebate, though no specifics were mentioned concerning a per-month data plan price. If we were the betting type, we’d say it’ll probably run you 40 bones for every 30 days based on existing rates.

Dell Inspiron Mini 10 shipping April 1st with integrated Clear WiMAX originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Mar 2010 18:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceClearwire  | Email this | Comments


9
Mar/10
0

Motorola Devour review

While Motorola’s vanilla-Android Droid has become the most recognizable Android device on the market — thanks in part to a bombastic ad campaign — Motorola’s primary focus has been on its own custom Blur UI. At least, if quantity of devices are any indication. Hitting Verizon just as the Blur-powered Backflip heads to AT&T, the new Motorola Devour is an odd cross section of the “consumery” Backflip and Cliq, and the high-end Droid slider. We’ve been playing with the phone for a week or so (you can find our initial hands-on, video walkthrough and unboxing here), so follow us after the break as we walk through the triumphs and tragedy that is this device.

Gallery: Motorola Devour goes hands-on

Continue reading Motorola Devour review

Motorola Devour review originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Mar 2010 13:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments


3
Mar/10
0

Archos 7 Home Tablet (and PMPs) hands-on

Why hello there, Archos. My, what nice Android you have there. Tucked away in a little booth at CeBIT, the PMP maker was showcasing its latest 7-inch Home Tablet. Unfortunately, it was pretty barebones as far as content goes, but the vanilla Android 1.6 was running smooth, and if company precedence indicates anything, the video playback is still fairly solid. The selling point here, really, is a decent screen and that $200 or so price tag. No dice on espying Archos 8, though; we’ve passed by the company’s booth twice now, and both times it had yet to be sent to the show floor. Instead, on hand were the A14VG and AV15VS, but there isn’t a lot to say about music players with the same feature set you’d find in PMPs sold at grocery stores — there’s definitely a market, but it’s targeted at your wallet more than your desire for cutting edge goods. Video of Archos 7 after the break.

Gallery: Archos 7 Home Tablet hands-on

Gallery: Archos Vision A15vs and A14vg hands-on

Continue reading Archos 7 Home Tablet (and PMPs) hands-on

Archos 7 Home Tablet (and PMPs) hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Mar 2010 08:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments


19
Feb/10
0

Mitsubishi’s upconverting technology takes 1080p to 4K x 2K, you to cloud nine

So, there’s good news and bad news, and we tend to prefer starting with the former. According to Akihabara News, Mitsubishi has whipped up an upscaling technology to end all upscaling technologies — one that takes vanilla 1080p material to 4K x 2K without breaking a sweat. Now, for the less-than-awesome tidbit. For whatever reason, the tech is not yet compatible with Blu-ray content, and moreover, you’re still nowhere close to being able to afford a 4K television or projector. Here’s hoping this breakthrough makes ‘em a wee bit more feasible for the layman, though.

Mitsubishi’s upconverting technology takes 1080p to 4K x 2K, you to cloud nine originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Feb 2010 05:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAkihabara News  | Email this | Comments


3
Dec/09
0

Multifaceted adapter combines 3-port USB hub with iPod / iPhone connector

Multi-purpose adapters aren’t anything new, but it’s often the simplest of the bunch that prove most useful. Take this bugger for instance, which is little more than a vanilla 3-port USB hub connected to an iPhone / iPod dock connector port. The purpose for its existence? To prevent you from having to haul Apple’s flimsily built charging cable and a USB hub with you each time you scurry out, and to just generally make your time on this planet entirely more enjoyable. Now if only it could recharge our prototype Volt that we’ve secretly got hiding in the Engadget Garage, we’d really be able to extol the $14.99 asking price.

Multifaceted adapter combines 3-port USB hub with iPod / iPhone connector originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Dec 2009 17:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceUSB Fever  | Email this | Comments


17
Nov/09
0

Sony applies next-gen snowflake tech to boost VAIO W’s appeal

Sony applies next-gen snowflake tech to boost VAIO W's appeal

When Sony’s VAIO W netbook was released, we said the company would “have to do better than put a pretty face on a vanilla set of innards to get our next five Benjamins.” So what has the company done to raise the appeal of its little netbook? Boosted the processor? Added a big SSD? Lowered the price? Nah, it went ahead and painted some snowflakes on the lid. Pretty though they may be they still hide the same 10.1-inch, 1366 x 768 LCD, 1.6GHz Atom, and 1GB of RAM. There are some improvements: storage is upped a bit, a 250GB HDD instead of 160, and it now includes Windows 7 Starter instead of XP. And there are snowflakes. Still $499. Get yours before they melt!

[Via Sony Insider]

Filed under:

Sony applies next-gen snowflake tech to boost VAIO W’s appeal originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Nov 2009 09:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


16
Oct/09
0

Acer Liquid slips through human fingers, but not before divulging new specs (updated)

Generic form factor? Check. Default Android skin? Check. Sure, that’s nothing exciting, but the real draw of Acer Liquid’s gonna be its large, 800 x 480 resolution screen (the exact size of which we still don’t know) and its 1GHz Snapdragon chipset. Unfortunately for the guys at Pocket-Lint, they didn’t get to play with the Donut-powered handset long enough to really push those two selling points, but on the bright side they did discover a 5 megapixel camera with autofocus and some ISO adjustment options, GPS, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and what appears to be a 3.5mm headphone jack. Perhaps more importantly, they nabbed some pictures of the thing powered on and in action. Jealous? Yes, yes we are.

Update: We finally have the first images (above) showing Acer’s customized Android UI and social networking integration (after the break) courtesy of HDBlog.it. It not quite the full-blown replacement a la HTC Sense, but they’ve clearly brought a new bag of tricks in an attempt to make the vanilla OS experience Acer-unique.

[Thanks, Josh]

Continue reading Acer Liquid slips through human fingers, but not before divulging new specs (updated)

Filed under:

Acer Liquid slips through human fingers, but not before divulging new specs (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Oct 2009 02:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Related Blogs

  • Related Blogs on Acer Liquid slips through human fingers, but not before divulging new specs (updated)

2
Sep/09
0

Canon introduces first Hybrid Image Stabilization lens: EF 100mm Macro

Well, that was swift. Just 1.5 months after Canon got our camera juices flowing with its Hybrid Image Stabilizer technology, along comes the very first lens to incorporate it. Quietly announced alongside two other vanilla lenses and its EOS 7D, the 100mm f/2.8L Macro IS USM lens is the first from the outfit to feature Hybrid IS. As you well know by now, said tech compensates for both angle and shift camera shake up to four shutter speed steps, and it’s fully compatible with all EOS cameras. As you can likely tell from the title, this one’s ideal for closeups and portrait-length telephoto shots, but you’ll be paying through the nose in order to get it in your arsenal. In other words, you’ll be parting with $1,049 come late September. Gotta pay for delectation, bub.

[Via HotHardware]

Filed under:

Canon introduces first Hybrid Image Stabilization lens: EF 100mm Macro originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Sep 2009 03:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


21
Aug/09
0

HANNSpree’s HANNSnote netbook now available in US, stuffed animal version hopefully in the pipeline

Hannspree’s efforts in the netbook market are finally coming to the US with today’s launch of the 10-inch HannsNote, and frankly, we’re still pining for something a little less vanilla from the company. Sure, it’s the same 1.6GHz Intel Atom N270 processor and assorted specs we’ve come to know and sort of like, but this is the company known for devising some of the most ridiculous televisions we’ve ever seen, including a whole series of plush animals with monitors in their bellies. A $380 price tag isn’t gonna win a lot of people over without a little flair, so please, do us all a favor and stick the components inside of a teddy bear, make his stomach the screen and his feet each one half of the keyboard. We’d buy that.

[Via Electronista]

Filed under:

HANNSpree’s HANNSnote netbook now available in US, stuffed animal version hopefully in the pipeline originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Aug 2009 05:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


13
Aug/09
0

RIM working on Bluetooth watch, other spellbinding accessories?

Filed under: ,

We’re not sure why we didn’t hear more about this way back at RIM’s WES conference way back in May, but it was apparently mentioned by VP Antoine Boucher at the time that they’re working on a Bluetooth-enabled watch. Furthermore, it’s said to be more advanced than the models Sony Ericsson has put forth so far, featuring streaming audio (3.5mm jack on the watch, perhaps?) and Twitter / Facebook updates in addition to the usual things like caller ID and text messages. Note that the image floating around today of this thing isn’t real — it’s just a Sony Ericsson MBW-100 with a swapped logo — so it remains to be seen what this magical wrist accessory will look like, assuming it’s real and coming to retail. It seems Boucher also mentioned a high-end Bluetooth headset codenamed “Alpha 1″ that’ll allow you to stream music and get navigation directions through some sort of totally awesome silicone earpiece boasted to possibly be “the best solution on the market.” It’s pretty hard to pique a lot of interest these days with something as vanilla and ubiquitous as a headset, but at any rate, it’s interesting to see the depth of RIM’s apparent commitment to the accessory market right now.

[Via techfresh.net]

RIM working on Bluetooth watch, other spellbinding accessories? originally appeared on Engadget Mobile on Thu, 13 Aug 2009 16:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


3
Aug/09
0

Sony’s VAIO W netbook reviewed: personable and pricey, and that’s pretty much it

After Sony’s unorthodox VAIO P, did you really expect the outfit’s first “real netbook” to burn the house down? With Microsoft’s inane hardware restrictions still firmly in place on Windows XP-based netbooks, there’s only so much differentiating Sony can do, and evidently those subtle tweaks didn’t exactly justify the higher-than-average $499 price tag. Computer Shopper managed to give the unit a spin a few weeks prior to its US release, and while it definitely appreciated the 1,366 x 768 resolution display, the cramped keyboard, painfully lackluster 3-cell battery and commonplace performance didn’t exactly elicit huge grins across the review room. Naturally, the design here is pretty notable, but with ASUS’ Eee Seashell line already lookin’ pretty decent for a lot less cheddar, we’d agree that Sony’s going to have to do better than put a pretty face on a vanilla set of innards to get our next five Benjamins.

Filed under:

Sony’s VAIO W netbook reviewed: personable and pricey, and that’s pretty much it originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Aug 2009 04:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Related Blogs

  • Related Blogs on Sony’s VAIO W netbook reviewed: personable and pricey, and that’s pretty much it