Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Tablet Wars: Apple iPad vs BlackBerry PlayBook vs Samsung Galaxy Tab | MAGGadget

RIM has stepped into tablet wars with a powerful tablet. BlackBerry PlayBook is powered by 1 GHz dual-core porcessor, 1 GB of RAM, features BlackBerry Tablet OS, 7-inch capacitive touch screen with full multi-touch and gesture support, multitasking, 5 megapixel rear camera with 1080p HD video recording, 3 megapixel front camera for video conferencing, Adobe Flash 10.1, Adobe Air Mobile, Java more. The hardware of the BlackBerry PlayBook is powerful and has the ability to beat iPad, Galaxy tab and other tablets available so far.

Checkout the comparison between Apple iPad, Samsung Galaxy Tab and BlackBerry Playbook:

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Tagged as: Android, Apple, Blackberry, BlackBerry OS, Compare, Galaxy Tab, iOS, iPad, PlayBook, samsung

Posted via email from Rayzor

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Sony PRS-650 Touch Edition eBook Reader Review — The Gadgeteer

Sony PRS-650 Touch Edition eBook Reader Review

by Janet Cloninger on September 28, 2010 · 0 comments

in Featured Items,Reviews,eBook Readers and Gear

It’s September, and that means updated readers from Sony!  I’ve been a devoted fan of the PRS readers since 2006 – first the PRS-500, then PRS-505, and the PRS-600 last year.  I’ve loved my Sonys and spent thousands of hours reading on them over the years.  Unfortunately, the PRS-600, while beautiful, eventually fell out of favor with me.  The touchscreen layer made the reader reflective and glare-y, and it also made the text on the screen lighter and a bit harder to read than on the previous PRS-505.  I admit that I eventually began reading exclusively on my iPad.  The iPad screen was beautiful and it never caused eyestrain for me, but all its other fabulous functions seemed to tempt me away from reading.  I haven’t been reading much at all for the past few weeks.   When the new Sony readers were announced, I was excited to hear the old resistive touchscreen layer had been replaced with a new method – neither capacitive nor resistive

Posted via email from Rayzor

Galapagos: Sharp Announces 5.5-Inch And 10.8-Inch Android Tablets (Video)

It took them a while, but now it seems Sharp is serious about entering the e-book and tablet business. The company announced “Galapagos”in Tokyo today [press release in English], with Galapagos being the (terrible) name both for Sharp’s cloud-based e-book service and two new Android devices supporting that service.

The smaller one, the “mobile type”, has a 5.5-inch LCD screen (1,024 × 600 resolution) that’s optimized for displaying paperback books (it will be available in red and black). It also comes with a trackball to scroll through pages.

The other model, the Galapagos “home type”, misses said track ball (you’ll turn pages just like you do on the iPad). It has a 10.8-inch LCD screen (1,366 × 800) for magazine content formatted across a two-page spread. By way of comparison: The iPad has a 9.7-inch LCD screen featuring 1,024×768 resolution.

Both Galapagos devices will have Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11b/g) on board. Buyers will be able to surf the web, view “PC documents”, play games (via apps), and share comments and recommendations with other owners via a pre-installed “social app”. That’s the reason why Sharp, on its Japanese website, advertises the devices as “media tablets” – not just e-book readers.

The Galapagos e-bookstore service is scheduled to start in Japan in December. Sharp says that buyers of the reader can expect a total of 30,000 newspapers, magazines, and books at time of launch.

The company has yet to announce further details (more specs (which Android version?), prices, exact release dates, international availability). It expects to move about 1 million units next year. We’ll keep you posted.

Here is Sharp’s official promo video (it’s in Japanese, but that doesn’t matter that much in this case):

Posted via email from Rayzor

RIM introduces PlayBook -- the BlackBerry tablet -- Engadget

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Because Everyone Needs a Router

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programming and human factors
by Jeff Atwood
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Sep 25, 2010

Because Everyone Needs a Router

Do you remember when a router used to be an exotic bit of network kit?

Those days are long gone. A router is one of those salt-of-the-earth items now; anyone who pays for an internet connection needs a router, for:

  1. NAT and basic hardware firewall protection from internet evildoers
  2. A wired network hub to connect local desktop PCs
  3. A wireless hub to connect laptops, phones, consoles, etcetera

Let me put it this way: my mom -- and my wife's mom -- both own routers. If that isn't the definition of mainstream, I don't know what is.

Since my livelihood revolves around being on the internet, and because I'm a bit of a tweaker, I have a fancy-ish router. But it is of late 2007 vintage:


Although the DGL-4500 is a nice router, and it has served me well with no real complaints, the last major firmware update for it was a year and a half ago. There have been some desultory minor updates since then, but clearly the vendor has, shall we say, moved on to focusing on newer models.

The router is (literally!) the central component in my overall internet experience, and I was growing increasingly uncomfortable with the status quo. Frankly, the prospect of three year old hardware with year old firmware gives me the heebie-jeebies.

So, I asked the pros at Super User, even going so far as to set up a Recommend Me a Router chat room. (We disallow product recommendation questions as they become uselessly out of date so quickly, but this is a perfect topic for a chat room.) I got some fantastic advice from my fellow Super Users via chat, though much of it was of the far too sane "if it ain't broke don't fix it" variety. Well, that's just not how I work. To be fair, the router market is not exactly a hotbed of excitement at the moment; it is both saturated and heavily commoditized, particularly now that the dust has settled from the whole 802.11 A/B/G/N debacle. There just isn't much going on.

But in the process of doing my router research, I discovered something important, and maybe even revolutionary in its own quiet little way. The best router models all run open source firmware!

That's right, the truly great routers are available in "awesome" edition. (There may be other open source router firmwares out there, but these are the two I saw most frequently.) I learned that these open source firmwares can turn a boring Clark Kent router into Superman. And they are always kept updated by the community, in perpetuity.

In my weaker moments, I toyed with the idea of building a silent mini x86 PC that could run a routing optimized distribution of Linux, but the reality is that current commodity routers have more than enough memory and embedded CPU power -- not to mention the necessary wireless and gigabit ethernet hub bits already built in. Dedicating a whole x86 PC to routing is power inefficient, overly complex, and awkward.

Yes, today's router marketplace is commoditized and standardized and boring -- but there are still a few clear hardware standouts. I turned to the experts atSmallNetBuilder for their in-depth technical reviews, and found two consensus recommendations:

Buffalo Nfiniti Wireless-N High Power Router ($80)


NETGEAR WNDR3700 RangeMax Dual Band Wireless-N ($150)


Both of these models got glowing reviews from the networking experts at SmallNetBuilder, and both are 100% compatible with the all-important open source dd-wrt firmware. You can't go wrong with either, but I chose the less expensive Buffalo Nfiniti router. Why?

  1. It's almost half the price, man!
  2. The "high power" part is verifiably and benchmarkably true, and I have some wireless range problems at my home.
  3. I do most of my heavy network lifting through wired gigabit ethernet, so I can't think of any reason I'd need the higher theoretical wireless throughput of the Netgear model.
  4. Although the Netgear has a 680 Mhz embedded CPU and 128mb RAM, the Buffalo's 400 MHz embedded CPU and 64mb of RAM is not exactly chopped liver, either; it's plenty for dd-wrt to work with. I'd almost go so far as to say the Netgear is a bit overkill… if you're into that sort of thing.

I received my Buffalo Nfiniti and immediately installed dd-wrt on it, which was very simple and accomplished through the existing web UI on the router. (Buffalo has a history of shipping rebranded dd-wrt distributions in their routers, so the out-of-box firmware is a kissing cousin.)

After rebooting, I was in love. The (more) modern gigabit hardware, CPU, and chipset was noticably snappier everywhere, even just dinking around in the admin web pages. And dd-wrt scratches every geek itch I have -- putting that newer hardware to great use. Just check out the detailed stats I can get, including that pesky wireless signal strength problem. The top number is the Xbox 360 outside, the bottom number is my iPhone from about 10 feet away.

 

Worried your router is running low on embedded CPU grunt, or that 64 megabytes of memory is insufficient? Never fear; dd-wrt has you covered. Just check out the detailed, real time memory and cpu load stats.

 

Trying to figure out how much WAN/LAN/Wireless bandwidth you're using? How does a real time SVG graph, right from the router admin pages, grab you?

 

It's just great all around. And I haven't even covered the proverbial laundry list of features that dd-wrt offers above and beyond most stock firmware! Suffice it to say that this is one of those times when the "let's support everything" penchant of open source projects works in our favor. Don't worry, it's all (mostly) disabled by default. Those features and tweaks can all safely be ignored; just know that they're available to you when and if you need them.

This is boring old plain vanilla commodity router hardware, but when combined with an open source firmware, it is a massive improvement over my three year old, proprietary high(ish) end router. The magic router formula these days is a combination of commodity hardware and open-source firmware. I'm so enamored of this one-two punch combo, in fact, I might even say it represents the future. Not just of the everyday workhorse routers we all need to access the internet -- but the future of all commodity hardware.

Routers; we all need 'em, and they are crucial to our internet experience. Pick whichever router you like -- as long as it's compatible with one of the open source firmware packages! Thanks to a wide variety of mature commodity hardware choices, plus infinitely and perpetually updated open source router firmware, I'm happy to report that now everyone can have a great router.

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Comments

Also, if you're upgrading your router, don't forget to choose fast DNS nameservers when setting it up!

http://code.google.com/p/namebench/

The NameBench tool will use your browser's history to tell you which (free) DNS servers are optimal for you. Very, very slick tool. (and yes UltraDNS wins for me as well.)

Jeff Atwood on September 25, 2010 3:00 AM

I see you're sharing your MAC address. Is it risk-free? Don't you fear being tracked?

Federico Poloni on September 25, 2010 3:11 AM

MAC addresses are routable only on the local ethernet, so feel free to post those all over the place :)

Thomas on September 25, 2010 3:35 AM

> I'm so enamored of this one-two punch combo, in fact, I might even say it represents the future

It has been for some time with a range of manufactures, so that is a safe bet! I mean, using the GPL sources the vendors are obligated to share it, and the community has pretty much 'forced' the issue by providing forked versions of the firmware.

By now, vendors are beginning to understand.

Seth Heeren on September 25, 2010 3:35 AM

These open source firmwares are indeed great, but I have one major problem with them: They are just inferior to my old clunky USR Robotics Router when i comes to QoS/Traffic Shaping (a very importing feature for me).

I am still using a 2005 US Robotics 9107 (http://www.usr-emea.com/support/s-prod-template.asp?loc=grmy&prod=9107), which has a horrible web interface and doesnt have a lot of options, but its QoS Technology is, for some reason, just way better than anything else i tested. I wanted to replace this router for years and tested a couple of different models (dlink,linksys,zyxel) with a lot of differnt firmwares (openwrt, ddwrt, tomato, oem firmware) but a soon as i turn on my Torrents web access becomes slow. If you use Traffic Shaping with them it gets a lot better. (Accessing web pages is not slow anymore, but you can still tell if your torrents are running or not).

With my old USR i can upload with uTorrent at 80Kbyte/sec (~85 is my connection's maximum) and ping/latency goes up from around 40 ms to around 50-55 ms for most of the web sites i visit. I can even play online shooters without noticing that my torrent-pc is pumping stuff at almost full throttle. When using other routers you can just feel that web pages come in more slowly.

Maybe it has sth. to do with the way the USR applies his rules to the traffic. On the webinterface you can specify an 'atm priority' which I havent seen on other firmwares.

 

Erik Winter on September 25, 2010 4:08 AM

Forgot to mention, that the issue is even bigger when working remotely.

I do a a alot of stuff over ssh/rdp and with ddwrt/tomato i always had to close uTorrent or limit the upload rate. (I hate it when a console has a delay for every keystroke you make, really annoying) With the USR router the ssh/rdp connection stays responsive.

I know im whining like a crybaby here, but does anyone know a router/modem which has a simliar QoS?

thanks,
erik

Erik Winter on September 25, 2010 4:23 AM

The problem I have with routers is that I prefer the adsl/router combo (because buying two devices seems silly), but the product lines in that area seem a lot more crappy, for some reason.

Oh, and don't buy anything from Linksys. I've got some of their stuff and it is some of the worst hardware I've used so far.

WimD on September 25, 2010 5:34 AM

@Erik Winter

Look at this: http://ace-host.stuart.id.au/russell/files/tc/tc-atm/#details

If this is indeed your issue, you can get an experimental build of Tomato with the tc-atm patch here: http://touristinparadise.blogspot.com/2008/04/linksys-wrt54gl-routers-improving.html

The implementation of the tc-atm patch is very early, though, and it hasn't yet been integrated with the web GUI.

Matt Horner on September 25, 2010 6:02 AM

Which version did you flash? mega, VPN, voip, etc?

Churnd on September 25, 2010 6:06 AM

Interesting. I would have expected you to go for a DrayTek (what with being geeky *and* having built in VPN endpoints...).

Thefalken on September 25, 2010 8:13 AM

If the author cares that much he really shouldn't be using an all in one anyway. He should be rolling with separate access points and router. I do the whole Airport Express (for music streaming) and pfSense / m0n0wall thing (lately I've been using the ALIX boards from PC Engineshttp://www.pcengines.ch/alix.htm).

Jared on September 25, 2010 8:27 AM

> I'm so enamored of this one-two punch combo, in fact, I might even say it represents the future

So...does this mean that you will be replacing your iPhone with an Android phone?

Michael Ross on September 25, 2010 8:37 AM

I'm still running a router from circa 2001.

I tried upgrading once. The results were... less then acceptable.

Miff on September 25, 2010 8:55 AM

I just ordered an ASUS RT-N16 two days ago. It was pretty much a tie between that and the Buffalo, but I decided to go with the ASUS because, if you'll skim over the Buffalo WZR-HP-G300NH forum thread on dd-wrt.com, you'll notice that there are different versions of the router, and some simply refuse to work normally with that firmware. Also, I haven't seen much info on Tomato being able to support the Buffalo router, and I've been itching to try it and maybe even get away from DD-WRT, which my current router is running.

Arktronic on September 25, 2010 9:16 AM

To some extent you get what you pay for. My old Linux-based router would break persistent SSH tunnels after about 24 hours. When I upgraded to an expensive but rock-solid Cisco 877 (running IOS, not the consumer Linksys crud), my problems stopped.

Facebook on September 25, 2010 9:16 AM

Good article, but would have been better without the sexism.

Lloyd Budd on September 25, 2010 9:51 AM

What about using a Mac Mini? We don't own any desktop computer, and as much as I love my TimeCapsule it doesn't do all the nifty things I'd like it to do, like upload the weekly snapshots to S3, for example. Right now I use the Capsule as a router, but as it's now time to move on, I was wondering if replacing it with a Mini made sense? Any insight on this?

julien.genestoux.myopenid.com on September 25, 2010 9:51 AM

I recently went and replaced my modded ASUS WL500gP (32MB ram stock, 128MB ram after mod) with a newer Netgear WNR3500L. The L = Linux as would be the case alot so it was easily modded and I dropped DD-WRT almost the day I got it. Internally it contains a 453Mhz Broadcom BCM4716 processor, 8MB flash, and 64MB ram which is plenty. The added bonus is that this particular router came with a TTY interface not only available but the header was already installed. ;) Therefore if I do happen to brick it then I can easily recover. The cable can be had for $20 and modded to work with the TTY pinout on the router. It went for $90.

Oh and it is gigabit ethernet too.

shinji on September 25, 2010 10:55 AM

Forgot to mention that I usually go by the "if it ain't broken, don't fix it" rule but my ASUS was going on the fritz on me.

shinji on September 25, 2010 10:58 AM

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Posted via email from Rayzor

Seagate FreeAgent® GoFlex™ TV HD Media Player Review

I’ve read reviews on The Gadgeteer for media players that hook up with your TV or home theater setup and let you view your home videos, pictures, movies, and even play your music files.  I’ve always been interested in them, but I’ve never had one of these devices.  I had looked into an Apple TV some months back, but they didn’t do HD.  I liked the idea of the Apple TV because of the easy access to movies I could rent or buy for the device.  Recently, I’d been noticing that some companies making these devices were forming relationships with Netflix or other movie services, and my interest in media players was growing again.  When Julie offered the Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex TV HD media player, I was excited to give it a try.

What’s in the Box
FreeAgent GoFlex TV HD Media Player
Composite A/V cable
Component A/V cable
Power supply
Remote control
(Seagate’s website says a Quick Start guide and a CD should be included, but there wasn’t either in my packaging)

Specifications
Dimensions: 4.30in L x 5.91in W x 1.65in H (110mm x 150mm x 42mm)
Weight: 0.67lb (0.30kg)
Video file compatibility: AVI (Xvid, MPEG1/2/4, TS), MPG/MPEG, DVD (VOB, IFO) MP4/MOV (MPEG-4), H.264, VC-1 (WMV9), ISO, RM/RMVB, Motion JPEG, FLV, DivX HD
Audio file compatibility: MP3, WAV/PCM/LPCM, WMA, WMA Pro, AAC, FLAC, MKA, OGG, APE, Dolby Digital (AC3), DTS
Video resolutions: NTSC 480i/480p, PAL 576i/576p, 720p, 1080i,1080p
Computer system requirements: Windows® XP, Windows Vista®, or Windows® 7 operating system or Mac® OS X 10.4.11 or 10.5.6 or later operating system ;  available USB port
Video output: Composite video, component video or HDMI
Audio output: Stereo, S/PDIF Optical Digital Audio or HDMI audio
Network: Ethernet connectivity enables access of shared folders on computers and other devices connected to your network such as a GoFlex Net media sharing device, media server or a NAS
Wireless: Optional Wi-Fi adapter (sold separately), Wireless-N supported
Internet Services: Netflix, YouTube, Paramount, vTuner, Mediafly, Picasa, Flickr, Video feeds (RSS), Text feeds (RSS), Finance widget, Weather widget

(Note: Some of the pictures in this review are clickable for an enlarged view.)

My A/V setup is very simple.  I have a 60” Sharp Aquos LCD TV, a cable box, and a Sony Blu-ray player.  Other than TV programming through the cable connection, our entertainment has been mostly limited to the DVDs we currently own.  We don’t often bother with our local DVD rental store because they have a problem with correctly checking in returned movies.  Our cable service allows us to rent On Demand movies, but we seldom do because of the often choppy, pixelated playback of these movies.  This poor playback of the On Demand movies can’t be attributed to our bandwidth, because we have outstanding bandwidth for home service.  I was happy to see that the GoFlex was partnered with Netflix, and I hoped that the playback of those movies would be better than the On Demand movies.  We were ready to broaden our entertainment horizons! 

The front of the GoFlex TV is actually a hinged cover. A GoFlex hard drive can be plugged in the chamber behind the cover.

The GoFlex TV HD is a small black plastic box, some parts shiny and some matte.  There’s only the Seagate logo and an LED on the front.  The LED is solid amber in standby mode, blinks amber while starting up, and is solid white when the unit is powered on.  If you find it distracting, you can disable the LED in the setup options.

The GoFlex TV HD doesn’t have any internal memory, so I was planning to use an external hard drive I had on hand with it.  When I received the package from Seagate, I was surprised to see that they had also sent a 1 TB Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex Ultra-portable hard drive.  The GoFlex Ultra-portable hard drive is also made of shiny black plastic, and it is even smaller than the GoFlex TV.  The hard drive comes with a connector cable that allows you to plug it directly into a USB port.  There is no power adapter for the hard drive; it is powered through the USB port.

Internal chamber for plugging in a GoFlex hard disk

The GoFlex TV actually has an internal chamber (behind the hinged front cover) where you can install a GoFlex Ultra-portable drive, but the chamber is sized for a much smaller drive than the one I received.  The 1TB GoFlex hard drive is physically bigger than the smaller capacity GoFlex drives.  No problem, however, because the GoFlex TV has two USB 2.0 ports – one on the back, and one on the side.  I plugged the GoFlex Ultra-portable drive into the port on the back, leaving the more accessible port on the side available for plugging in USB flash drives, a digital camera, a digital video camera, or the like.

Back of the GoFlex TV showing power connection, composite video, component video, optical audio, HDMI, LAN connection, USB 2.0 port

I did not receive the optional Wi-Fi adapter.  They were on backorder, so I bought an Ethernet cable and connected the GoFlex TV to my router.  Luckily my router and my TV are in the same room.  If you do decide to add the Wi-Fi adapter to your setup, you’ll be happy to know that it supports wireless-N for best range and speed.

Side of GoFlex TV showing USB 2.0 port and reset button

The GoFlex TV comes with composite and component cables, but no HDMI cable is included.  My new Sharp Aquos TV has a lot of HDMI connectors, so I bought an HDMI cable.  Now, I’m finally ready to go.  Or was I?

As I mentioned, my package didn’t contain a Quick Start guide, CD, or manual.  I’m resourceful, so I went to the internet and found the most recent version of the manual and the Quick Start guide.  I hooked everything up in the order specified by the Quick Start guide.  No problems, until I came to the place where I was told to insert the CD.  I couldn’t find downloadable software for the GoFlex TV on the internet, so I contacted Seagate customer service and was eventually told the Media Sync software (which allows you to automatically sync files on your computer with the GoFlex hard drive) was not available for 64-bit systems, and that the GoFlex TV device required no other software installed on the computer. 

I did find a trial version of Media Sync on the GoFlex Ultra-portable hard drive itself.  I connected the hard drive to my computer, installed the software, and ran it to copy my video files to the hard drive.  I found the copy to be rather slow, but I don’t add a lot of files to my video directory.  I won’t have to worry about needing a sync manager – I can just quickly attach the drive and copy over any new files as I add them if I want them on the Seagate’s disk.  At the time I began testing the Seagate with my TV, I had copies of my home video files on both my laptop and on the hard drive attached to the GoFlex TV.  My music files and my picture files are only on my laptop.

The GoFlex TV comes with a remote control.  It is small, with only a few buttons.  There’s a power button, Menu and home buttons (to quickly return to the home menu), a circular set of up/down/right/left/OK buttons to navigate the menus, video playback controls, volume controls, and video zoom buttons.

On-screen keyboard

Some options will require you to input data.  There is an on-screen keyboard that you navigate and select letters with the remote control.  This option works well enough, but you can imagine it is slow.  You can attach a USB keyboard (wired or wireless) to the GoFlex TV using one of the USB 2.0 ports to make entering data much easier and faster.

Home screen

Finally, I’m ready to try out the GoFlex TV Media Player.  I selected the proper video source on my TV and powered on the GoFlex TV, and I was immediately connected.    The final option on the top row in the above image, Browse, lets you search the devices connected via the USB ports, and it lets you find computers on your network and setup shortcut connections for quick access to files stored on them.  I easily created a shortcut to my laptop by signing in once through the Seagate.  You can set up these shortcuts to allow free or restricted access to your files.  After defining the shortcut, you quickly and automatically get logged in to the network devices by browsing to your list of shortcuts.  I had to access the files on my computer through the Browse option or through the Network icon (looks like two computer screens) in the bottom row seen in the above image.  The “Movies”, “Pictures”, and “Music” options on the first row showed only the files on the connected hard drive.

Pictures, Movies, and Music files display with this format

After I created the shortcut, I could see a listing of my computer’s directories.  For music, picture, or video directories, you see an alphanumeric sorted list of icons like the one above.  I’ll be honest and say I have no interest in playing music through my TV, so I gave that a cursory look.  I navigated using the menu control buttons, selected a song, and played it.  Music plays well, and information about the song and time remaining displays on the screen during playback.  I was able to play songs I had ripped from my CDs and songs I had purchased as digital files.

A picture file displayed on the Sharp TV screen.

I’m also not very interested in looking at pictures on my TV screen, but you can view your photos in a slideshow while you’re listening to your music, if you so desire.  Even high-resolution pictures taken with our Nikon camera could sometimes appear fuzzy when blown up to fit our 60″ TV.  The movie playback also works great with our home videos.  They played smoothly and cleanly.

Internet options screen

The “Internet” option takes you to the same options you see in the middle row of the home screen.  We’ll talk about those options in more detail later. 

My Shortcuts lists pre-defined logins to my network devices, and Workgroups lets me see devices on my network

Browse function lets you see files on the attached USB drive or networked computers and media servers

I found an HD movie trailer online and downloaded it to my computer.  I tried streaming it wirelessly from my computer, and it froze up a time or two during the first playback.  I tried playing it from my computer again on a different day, and it played perfectly.  When I copied the trailer to the GoFlex drive connected to the GoFlex TV, playback was smooth and uninterrupted. 

Setup options for GoFlex TV HD

My TV can display information about the attached sources, and I was concerned to see that my video playback from the GoFlex TV was NOT in HD.  After all, I have a full-HD TV, an HDMI cable, and a GoFlex HD media player.  After a quick consultation of the manual I had downloaded from the internet, I realized that I needed to go into the setup function and select the appropriate video resolution for the GoFlex HD. 

Video resolution setup

I selected HDMI Auto resolution, and my playback is now 1080p.

Listing of the movies in my Netflix Instant Queue

We’ll finally discuss the Internet options.  I’m ready to try out the real reason I was interested in a media player – streaming movies from Netflix.  I created my Netflix account, activated my Seagate GoFlex, and was connected – just like that!  You can only play movies that you have already added to your Instant Queue at the Netflix website.  After a few minutes searching around the Netflix database from my computer, I had created an Instant Queue.  On the TV, you see a scrolling list of “movie posters”, and the playing time and rating for each movie.  When you select a movie and press the OK button on the remote, you see a summary description of the movie, an option to rate the movie, and an option to remove it from your queue.  The only parental controls are those you set up for your Netflix account.  Once you select PLAY, you get a progress screen showing the movie retrieval which displays for a few seconds, then the movie starts.  We’ve watched several movies since installing the GoFlex TV.  Every single movie downloaded and played absolutely flawlessly.  There was no hesitation, no pixelation, no problems of any kind.  We won’t be renting any more On Demand movies from the cable company!

Despite being listed in the online information, the Paramount video service isn’t an option on my GoFlex TV.  YouTube videos can be accessed by several categories, including recently added, top rated, etc.  Or you can search for videos by name or sign in to access your account.  Mediafly lets you access popular videos or audio files, search, or sign in to your user account.  vTuner lets you listen to radio stations from around the world.   These functions were easy to use and worked well.

The Picasa picture service lets you search through and view public pictures, or you can access your account.  Flickr lets you search through photos, but there is no login option for your account.  These functions worked well, but some pictures didn’t look their best blown up to fit the screen of our TV.

There are video RSS feeds for world or US news, business and technology, entertainment, and sports.  There are text RSS feeds from CNN News, NPR News, and BBC News.  There’s a weather widget that shows information for pre-selected cities, or you can specify a zip code for your local weather information.  There’s also a finance widget that shows you information for the Dow Jones Industrials and several pre-selected stocks; you can also add stocks to the list or delete stocks you are no longer interested in. 

There seems to be a little redundancy in the home screen options.  As I mentioned before, the “Internet” option at the top takes you to the exact same functions shown in the middle of the home screen.  The complete set of icons on the bottom row on the home menu are exactly the same options that are accessed through “Browse” at the top of the screen.  I don’t mind this, though I wish I could re-order the sets of options.  I’d like to have Netflix on the top row, or at least be able to define it as my pre-selected option when I turn on the GoFlex TV. 

You’ll be happy to know that the GoFlex TV’s firmware can be updated.  Simply check the Seagate website periodically for downloads to keep your GoFlex TV up-to-date with the lastest version.

I found the GoFlex TV HD media player to be a snap to set up.  It’s easy to connect the player to computers on your network, even when you use the on-screen keyboard and the remote to enter your information.  I was able to easily access and play files on my computer with few problems.  It’s easy enough to copy any personal files onto the GoFlex Ultra-portable hard drive, and playback from there is flawless.  My favorite thing is the Netflix option.  It’s a snap to connect to Netflix and select a movie from your Instant Queue.  Netflix movies worked perfectly – no choppiness, no pixelation, and no problems of any kind.  The only hiccough I had was because of the missing CD – that I didn’t actually need.  I would recommend that the Quick Start Guide be amended to remove the CD installation step.  Quick Start also should tell you to go into setup and choose the correct output resolution for your home theater.  I recommend the Seagate GoFlex TV HD media player, and it will have a permanent place in my A/V setup.

I didn’t mention the GoFlex Ultra-portable drive much in this review.  I’ll be covering it, along with a 500GB version in more detail in an upcoming review.

The photo of the tall building shown on my TV screen is from the public pictures at Flickr.

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Product Information

Price:$129.99
Manufacturer:Seagate
Pros:
  • Easy setup
  • Streaming, HD playback works flawlessly
  • Easy to access content from hard drives, USB flash drives, and cameras
  • Netflix access is easy and works perfectly
Cons:
  • Quick Start Guide steps include installing software that wasn't included nor needed
  • Can't sign in to your Flickr account
  • No HDMI cable included
  • Home screen options are a bit redundant

Posted via email from Rayzor

Scrabble Becomes The First Premium App For The Kindle

We knew they were coming. We knew the Kindle would soon turn into a multi-purpose device thanks to the KDK. Well, here’s the first premium app — Scrabble from EA. It lacks any wireless multiplayer functions, but it does allow you to compete against either the all-knowing Kindle or a buddy. It can be yours for only $5.

But be careful. Buying games for your Kindle is a slippery slope. Right now it’s just innocent Scrabble. Who knows what app will invade your Kindle next and take precious time away from your reading. Battleship? Trivial Pursuit? Stratego? You’ve been warned.

Posted via email from Rayzor

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Adobe offers beta 64-bit Flash plug-in with IE9 support

Adobe offers beta 64-bit Flash plug-in with IE9 support
by Cyril Kowaliski — 6:00 AM on September 16, 2010
On the heels of Microsoft's Internet Explorer 9 beta, which is available in a 64-bit flavor for Windows 7, Adobe has released a 64-bit Flash plug-in. Dubbed Flash Player Square, this preview plug-in is available for Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux, although judging by the "features" section of the download page, Adobe is clearly targeting IE9:
  • 64-bit support — Native support for 64-bit operating systems and 64-bit web browsers on Linux, Mac OS, and Windows.
  • Internet Explorer 9 hardware accelerated rendering support — Enhanced support for Internet Explorer 9 Beta. It takes advantage of hardware accelerated graphics in Internet Explorer 9 Beta, utilizing hardware rendering surfaces to improve graphics performance and enable seamless composition.
Adobe goes on to note that this is a "preview release to highlight 64-bit and enhanced IE9 support in Flash Player." Interestingly, the firm adds that Flash Player Square shouldn't be mistaken with a "'beta release' of a specific version of Flash Player." A production-ready 64-bit Flash plug-in will be released by the middle of next year. Full IE9 support, meanwhile, will arrive when IE9 goes out of beta—no big shock there.
You can grab Flash Player Square right here on the Adobe Labs website.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Samsung NX100, Slimline Mirrorless Camera with Smart Lenses


Samsung’s new NX100 is a cut-down version of its mirrorless NX10, coming on a like a compact camera to the NX10’s slimline SLR design. Like its older brother, the new camera has an APS-C-sized, 14.6 megapixel sensor and shoots 720p video. What it lacks is the bigger camera’s electronic viewfinder (although Samsung will sell you an add-on which slots into the hotshoe). But that’s not the point. The real news is in the lenses, which use something called “i-Function” to make the camera easier to use.
I-Function puts buttons on the lens itself. Hit the switch and you can then cycle through settings like white-balance, ISO, shutter speed, aperture and exposure compensation, controlling them by turning the focus ring on the lens. Yes, it has taken years of research and innovation (the word “innovative” is used six times in the press release) to finally put an aperture ring back on the lens, just where it had sat since time began.
Samsung is also changing the descriptions of its lenses. Now you can buy a “landscape lens” or a “portrait lens”, and these i-Function lenses will tell the camera what they are so the camera can configure its own settings. This is called lens-priority mode, and compatible lenses will have little icons on them to let you know just what they are. I really like the on-lens control idea, but the auto-settings business seems a little gimmicky, and maybe even pointless on a camera clearly aimed at an enthusiast, not a point-and-shooter.
There will be accessories, too. Joining the viewfinder will be a GPS unit, and there are two lenses at launch, a 20-50mm ƒ3.5-5.6 zoom and a 20mm ƒ2.8 pancake lens. Other NX lenses will work, too, but you don’t get the fancy new features.
Pricing and availability are yet to be revealed. Given that an NX10 can be had in a zoom kit for $700, my guess is that the street price will be $500 to $600. The camera will come in black and (as seen in the gallery below) brown.
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Back To School: Properly Toting Your Books, Gadgets Around Campus


Backpacks are a necessary part of school and around here, we’re not strangers to backpacks, messenger bags, and bags in general. We’ve looked at a ton over the years and recently wrapped up our last bag week where we looked at an absurd amount of bags.
School requires a different sort of bag than grown-up life and, well, there are different types of students. Not everyone carries all their books with them at all times and others shop for style over function. Then there’s the college gamer and the occasional student. That’s fine. We’ve got everyone covered.

The Overloaded


Sometimes you need a big bag. I remember those semesters where there wasn’t time to swap books and had to carry all the supplies for multiple classes. That means books, binders, workbooks, gadgets, computers — basically everything at once. What you need is a bag large enough to hold all that while not causing a hunch. The North Face has your back. (I’m truly awesome)
The North Face On Sight tackles both of these requirements with ease. I found it roomy, comfy, and overall great. It’s not the largest bag I’ve tested — that goes to the Booq Boa Flow XL — but I’m confident that the On Sight is large enough to handle just about anything. Plus, it’s approved by the American Chiropractic Associations, which is always good to know.

The Part Timer


So you’re taking a class or two. Fair enough. That probably means a modest dual-purpose bag will work fine for you — maybe even a messenger bag that can moonlight as a computer bag.
Let me steer you towards two Ogio bags: the Street Corp or the Hip-Hop. The later has been my bag of choice for the past five years and has performed with flying colors. It’s about the perfect size for a computer, a couple of smaller-sized books and random gadgets. The often-overlooked shoulder strap is just fine, too. The Street Corp shares a lot of the same design, but adds a five-section document originizer, which is perfect for school. I love these bags.

The Northwest Hipster


Do you ride a single-speed bike, wear flannel shirts in the summer and hang out with Devin? If so, chances are you wouldn’t be caught dead with a North Face bag. That’s fine, but you still need to carry around books and whatnot; check out MissionWorkshop’s Shed.
This awesome bag screams nonconformity. There isn’t a single logo or branding on the outside. It’s just a whole lot of slate gray with black piping. And that’s great. It’s sparse style is what sets it apart from department store specials. The shed isn’t just about style, though. No, this bag is a true messenger bag, in that it’s made for real-life bike messengers. It’s built to last and that philosophy shows. The materials are top-notch and all the compartments are have a waterproof lining. The top flap can even roll down, making a true waterproof dry sack.
The only downfall is that the Shed is rather large. It’s huge, but MissionWorkshop also sells two smaller sizes as well so there’s probably one to fit your lifestyle.

The Dropout


School isn’t just about books. It’s also about making lifelong friends and there isn’t a better way to get to know someone than over a game of Madden. But don’t throw your Xbox in a grocery sack. No, instead use the Astro Scout Gaming Backpack.
This novel backpack is specifically designed for transporting gaming consoles. There’s a large, double padded and fleece lined storage compartment that will keep your most expensive possession nice and safe while all the necessary accessories like controllers, headphones, and Monster Energy are stored in other pockets. At only $80, you can probably afford it, too.

Canon G12 With HD Video Now Official

You may remember that last month, Canon’s flagship G12 compact camera was leaked in an accidentally published CNET review. Now, over three weeks later, the same camera is officially official.

One of the annoying things about Canon is the artificial hobbling of features to make its cameras fit into the product line hierarchy. The cameras all use the same processing chips (currently the DIGIC 4), but only have a subset of features switched on. All manufacturers do this, but the G-series has been a particularly bad example: After the G9, released back in 2007, Canon switched off hi-def video in its top-of-the-range compact. Why? Nobody knows.

Now it’s back, and the G12 will shoot 720p video at 24fps. The camera keeps its sensor at a sensible ten megapixels and will shoot up to ISO3200. The rear 2.8-inch LCD has a rather pedestrian 461,000 dots, then optical zoom runs from 28mm to 140mm (35mm equivalent) and the aperture ranges from a fairly wide ƒ2.8 to ƒ4.5.

Mercifully, Canon’s other additions are also useful to the serious photographer. Instead of a slew of gimmicky extras (cough Samsung NX100 cough), Canon has added an EOS SLR-style front control dial, hybrid image-stabilization (which works in multiple planes) and multiple aspect-ratios, so you can shoot wide-screen or square pictures in-camera. These come in addition to the already popular manual control knobs.

The G12 is a very solid (literally) update to the G11, although now it has some serious competition in the form of Nikon’s almost identical P7000. That is, of course, great for us buyers. The G12 costs $500.

G12 product page [Canon]

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Posted via email from ray roxas's posterous

Samsung i8700 Caught On Video