Friday, October 29, 2010

CherryPad: This is What a $188 Tablet Looks Like | News & Opinion

CherryPad: This is What a $188 Tablet Looks Like

By: David Pierce

$499. $399. These are the prices we're seeing for tablets (and those are the cheapest ones). But how about $188? That's what Cherrypal is asking for its Android tablet, the CherryPad. Cherrypal is best known for its $99 computer, so the $188 CherryPad comes as no surprise. It's a 7-inch, Android 2.1–running tablet that weighs a little over a pound, has built-in WiFi, an 800-MHz processor, resistive touch screen, 2GB internal memory with a slot for more, and lots of the other trappings you'll find on much more expensive tablets.

But is the CherryPad any good? That remains to be seen. Based on the few minutes I had with the device, it's totally functional, and is faster and more responsive than I expected, but you're very much getting what you pay for—from the exposed screws to the resistive touch screen, there's none of the beauty and polish of a device like the Apple iPad (which the CherryPad's design essentially copies as much as possible). But if $188 is what you want to pay, the CherryPad might not be such a bad idea.

We've got the CherryPad in our labs for testing, and we'll report back with a full review. Before we do, we took some shots to show you what you can expect to see with the CherryPad, so hit the slideshow to see exactly how much tablet you'll get for your $188.


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Thursday, October 28, 2010

320 GB Playstation 3 is the Classic Upsell - PCWorld

Sony's getting creative with its Playstation 3 bundles, adding a 320 GB console for $350.

That's $50 less than a console with the same size hard drive and the Playstation Move starter kit, which includes the camera, the motion controller wand and Sports Champions. It's $50 more than Sony's basic PS3 with 160 GB hard drive.

I've read the opinion that the $350 price point shows Sony's willingness to subsidize the Playstation Move. On its own, the Move starter kit costs $100, so in essence, Sony is cutting the Move price in half when bundled with a $400 console. I think of it in a different, admittedly unsubstantiated way: Sony's putting out the sans Move bundle mainly to lure people towards its new motion controller.

I can already envision the pitch at Gamestops across America: So you're buying the 320 GB PS3. Why not spend an extra $50 for the Playstation Move bundle? That's a $100 value for less than the cost of one game, which you're already getting in Sports Champions.

The upsell isn't so much in the initial Move bundle as the purchases that will inevitably follow: New games for the Move, the subcontroller that's required for certain games, more wands so people can play together. Clever.

Of course, it's also possible that Sony's trying to get buyers of the 160 GB model to pay $50 more for twice the storage (that's the current pitch at Sony's official Playstation blog). I wonder, then, how many people will be double-upsold?


For more smart takes on technology, visit Technologizer.com. Story copyright © 2010, Technologizer. All rights reserved.

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Wednesday, October 27, 2010

The Galaxy Player Looks Like One Sweet Android iPod Touch

The Galaxy Player Looks Like One Sweet Android iPod Touch

The Galaxy Player Looks Like One Sweet Android iPod Touch

The Galaxy Player Looks Like One Sweet Android iPod Touch We'd gotten a quick look at the Galaxy Player before, but not like this: a nearly three minute video that shows that Samsung's brought a gun to the iPod Touch gunfight.

The Galaxy Player is an Android 2.1 media player, and it looks like the first device to really go toe to toe with Apple's iPod Touch. It's got a 2MP camera, 8GB or 16GB internal memory along with a microSD slot, an FM radio, GPS, Wi-Fi, 3.2-inch screen, built-in DivX support. And access to the Android Market for all your Angry Birds needs.

There's no price announced yet for the US, but it's currently available for at 200 euros overseas. The iPod Touch costs about the same in euros and in dollars, so we'll hopefully see the Galaxy Player come in at around 200 bucks. If you're an Android fan, you've been waiting a long time for this. [Samsung Hub via Wired]

Send an email to Brian Barrett, the author of this post, at bbarrett@gizmodo.com.


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Jesus Christ, Samsung. At least PRETEND you're not just stealing all of Apple's designs. This is getting silly. Reply


With enough budget to produce all-CGI scenes, Samsung cuts the funds to hire a professional hand model. Sad, sad thing to watch the crooked finger for 2 minutes. Reply


As an iPhone owner, I can't wait to get this and bring Android into my life. This is exactly what I've been waiting for. Reply


How can it have the Android Market if it doesn't have a 3G signal radio? That is one of the requirements that prevent just any tablet from getting in on the fun. Reply
AreWeThereYeti promoted this comment

I am very excited about android tablets, but I am still not too sure on an MP3 player. They just seem so redundant with cell phones. Reply


For some reason that screen look like it was added to the video cuz in a few instances, that persons finger looks out of place when touching icons like hes fat fingering the screen. Is this an attempt to fake the speed of the phone and clarity?

one part he pressed an icon and the media player came on just before he was touching the icon to bring it up on the main screen. Reply


But...I hate the music player on my Android... Reply


Does it look pretty fat to anyone else? like slider phone fat? Reply


It looks great...but people keep missing what makes iPods the huge sellers that they are: the ecosystem.

You can find any number of peripherals, docks, adapters, etc. etc. for your iPod.

For example, if you go to a party, you can more than likely dock an iPhone or iPod into one of the DJ's peripherals or a home stereo; devices like these, not so much, at least not without carrying some kind of a cable with you.

Hell, most home-theater-in-a-box systems sold at places like Best Buy are packaged with an advertised iPod dock. Reply


It's too bad I have no idea how the thing will work because the entire thing is simulated. Reply


Jesus H. Christ. Someone FINALLY did it. I've been wanting to cut the last tie I have to Apple products but there hasn't been a true competitor to the iPod touch until this. If it has a screen as good as the Galaxy S phones and maybe even a 4" screen, that's even better!

Ten thousand thank yous Samsung! Reply


I'm happy to see this come out for one simple reason- the more Galaxy series devices there are, the more likely Samsung will actually put some effort in supporting them. We know for sure that Galaxy S phones will be getting 2.2. There is a very high chance this will have it before the end of the year. If they keep coming out with devices that share a code base, maybe we'll even see gingerbread on them. Reply


"And access to the Android Market for all your Angry Birds needs."

Android Market? On a non-cellphone device?

I will buy this, maybe. Reply


Regardless if the screen is simulated, but does he not seem to hold down his finger when pushing on an app or anything for that matter, a bit long? Reply


Sweet, I can't wait to play Angry Birds Halloween on it. Reply


Usually not into circus/indie/happy-go-lucky music, but I liked the song they used in this. :) Reply
blehbleh13 promoted this comment

How did it get Android Market and what media player will it use to sync with Reply
QLAB promoted this comment

MSN Droid, that just sounds funny.

This looks pretty cool. I like the augmented reality app. Reply


If only it could pretend to be an iPod to all those car stereos that only make good use of an iPod through that 30-pin connector.

iPod is the best cross-brand, best-featured CD changer ever to come to mobile audio. Reply


Same price? Repeat after me.. NO RETINA DISPLAY

Thank you... Reply


I don't get it. All it would take for a device like this to become a serious ipod touch competitor would be to knock $50-$100 off the price. The android fanboys (myself included) will inevitably love this but for the Christmas shopping parent or the not-tech-savvy adult looking for a music player, what would entice them to go with an unproven product over the behemoth that is Apple's ipod? Apple's marketing machine is too good and their head start is too advanced for any company to go toe to toe with them in terms of pricing. Reply


I'll be watching this closely. I need an Android device for dev purposes. BTW is this the cheapest way to get an uop-to-date Android device besides getting a phone with contract? Reply

Ok the flying Android with the cape outside the plane was friggin adorable. Reply
TheLostVikings promoted this comment

Same concept should be applied to WP7. Instead of creating the Zune hardware and abandoning for WP7, MS should have extended the brand to a WP7 Player--a device that's part of the entire WP7 ecosystem and not have neglected the Zune market. Can WP7 or a variant run on a Zune HD? Reply


Great! This is great but, how about audio quality? The iTouch is known by being the higher end portable player out there. I'm an audiophile you know... Reply


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