Mar
19
2009
Dave Allen writes “Despite Nintendo publicly claiming no direct competition with the iPhone or iPod Touch with its new DSi console, reports have been leaked about the Big N actively encouraging developers to begin work on small form gaming and non-gaming applications for the DSi’s download service. This is the first step toward Nintendo putting together a direct App Store rival, and could be the marketing hook it’s been desperately searching for to convince gamers to upgrade their DS.” It seems only fair that since the iPhone is now a gaming platform, the DS is becoming a PDA. And, if the only difference between them is a 3G wireless connection, the rivalry can only get more fierce.

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Comments Off on Nintendo To Take On Apple With DSi App Store | tags: 3G, Apple, developer, games, google, iphone, Phone, wireless | posted in technical news
Mar
17
2009
Manastorm writes “A man who was wheelchair bound due to a motorcycle accident twenty years ago gained the ability to walk again after being bitten by a recluse spider. ‘I can’t wait to start dancing,’ he said as he looks forward to a full recovery after experiencing what some call a ‘true miracle.'” I think we all know how this story is going to end. I hope The Sinister Six have been practicing.

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Comments Off on Spider Bite Allows Man To Walk Again | tags: 3G, google | posted in technical news
Mar
17
2009
Apple unveiled the iPhone 3.0 software just now in Cupertino. Here’s MacWorld’s live-action blow-by-blow coverage. The announcement included new features for developers and users. For developers, the big items were in-app purchasing (for example for game upgrades, map content, and subscriptions) for paid apps only; peer-to-peer connectivity via Bluetooth; giving apps access to hardware via the dock connector or Bluetooth; maps embeddable in apps; and push notifications. For users, there’s finally cut-copy-paste available in all apps; search across everything in the iPhone; landscape keyboard; MMS messaging; and voice memos. Developer beta starts today and 3.0 will be available in the summer — free for all 3G phones, for iPod Touch.

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Comments Off on iPhone 3.0 Software Announced | tags: 3G, Apple, cap, developer, google, iphone, Mac, Phone | posted in technical news
Mar
16
2009
Lorien_the_first_one brings word that in Europe, a breakthrough for post-4G communications has been announced. A public-private consortium known as IPHOBAC has been developing new communications technology that is near commercialization now. Quoting: “With much of the mobile world yet to migrate to 3G mobile communications, let alone 4G, European researchers are already working on a new technology able to deliver data wirelessly up to 12.5Gb/s. The technology — known as ‘millimeter-wave’ or microwave photonics — has commercial applications not just in telecommunications (access and in-house networks) but also in instrumentation, radar, security, radio astronomy and other fields.”

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Comments Off on Europe Is Testing 12.5 Gbps Wireless | tags: 3G, google, mobile, network, security, technology, telecommunications, wireless | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
Al writes “The economy has hit green energy technologies hard, but technologies focused on energy efficiency and clean coal are still attracting money. Over the next few years, venture capitalists say that the biggest winners in clean tech will most likely be companies with technologies that improve efficiency. Such ventures often take advantage of cheap sensors, communications hardware, and software packages to monitor and control energy use both in buildings and on the electricity grid. High-capital businesses are now more likely to succeed if they can attract foreign funding. For instance, Great Point Energy, based in Cambridge, which has developed a process for converting coal into natural gas, has attracted 0m in funding from China.”

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Comments Off on How the Economy Is Changing Clean Energy | tags: 3G, cap, china, google, news | posted in technical news
Mar
12
2009
What makes the OCZ Apes Series different from OCZ’s previous SSD offerings, however, is the Apex series’ use of what OCZ calls an “internal RAID 0 configuration” Instead of relying on a single drive controller, the OCZ Apex series is equipped with two controllers and the dual storage arrays are linked internally in a pseudo-RAID 0 setup.
Comments Off on OCZ’s Apex 120GB Solid State Drive, Competition For Intel | tags: 3G, Intel | posted in technical news
Mar
11
2009
Al writes “A new lithium-ion electrode allows batteries to be charged and discharged in 10 seconds flat. Developed by Gerbrand Ceder, a professor of materials science at MIT, it could be particularly useful where rapid power bursts are needed, such as for hybrid cars, but also for portable electronic devices. In testing, batteries incorporating the electrodes discharged in just 10 seconds. In comparison, the best high-power lithium-ion batteries today discharge in a minute and a half, and conventional lithium-ion batteries, such as those found in laptops, can take hours to discharge. The new high rate electrode, the researchers calculate, would allow a one-liter battery based on the material to deliver 25,000 watts, or enough power for about 20 vacuum cleaners.”

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Comments Off on New Electrode Lets Batteries Charge In 10 Seconds | tags: 3G, google, laptop | posted in technical news
Mar
11
2009
magacious writes “March 10 is the 133rd anniversary of the first telephone call. It occurred between Alexander Graham Bell and his assistant Thomas Watson back on this day in 1876. But there is some debate about whether Bell is actually the rightful owner of the crown for such invention. Having worked on the idea of transmitting speech using electricity for some time, Bell filed his patent on 14 February 1876, either just before or just after his main rival for the title of inventor of the telephone, Elisha Gray, filed his own. Bell won the patent and Gray died in obscurity.”

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Comments Off on The First Phone Call Was 133 Years Ago | tags: 3G, google, Phone | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
If you want to install cool apps on your iPhone or iPod Touch for free, easily, breaking Apple-imposed limitations without breaking your warranty or Applethingie, here is the how-to guide for Mac and Windows users.
Comments Off on How to: Install Apps on Your iPhone 3G Easily & Free | tags: 3G, Apple, iphone, Mac, Phone | posted in technical news
Mar
2
2009
reifman links to his thorough and thoughtful review of the experience of reading a newspaper on the Kindle 2. “I’ve been eager to try The New York Times on the Kindle 2; here’s my review with a basic video walk-through and screenshots. I give the Kindle 2 version of The Times a B. Software updates could bring it up to an A-. Kindle designers should have learned more from the iPhone 3G. Unfortunately, my Kindle display scratched less than 24 hours after it arrived. As I detail in the review, Amazon customer service was not very accommodating. Is it my fault — or will Kindle 2 evolve into an Apple 1G Nano-like .5M settlement? You can read about Hearst’s e-reader for newspapers from earlier today on Slashdot.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Reading the New York Times On a Kindle 2 | tags: 3G, amazon, Apple, google, iphone, kindle, news, Phone | posted in technical news