Archive for February 4th, 2008

Yes, although PMA ended on Saturday, we’re still digging news out of the show. Here’s a good one for any photographer considering buying one of HP’s well-reviewed — including in this publication — wide-format Z-Series printers which are seeing some significant price cuts. Usually this means a new model is on the way, but […]

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Yes, although PMA ended on Saturday, we’re still digging news out of the show. Here’s a good one for any photographer considering buying one of HP’s well-reviewed — including in this publication — wide-format Z-Series printers which are seeing some significant price cuts. Usually this means a new model is on the way, but after meeting with HP at the show, this doesn’t seem to be the case. The way it was explained to us, the lower prices are being offered as an substitute to the previous mail-in rebate program which many people find annoying. (Including us!)

The new price breakdown on these big printers from HP is below.

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Dan Havlik is Technology Editor at PDN Magazine and Editor of DemystifyingDigital.com. For more professional photography news, visit PDNonline.com.

Via [crunchgear]

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Ben Heck can mod like a mofo, but is he a one trick pony? Don’t get me wrong. I was thoroughly impressed by his modded Xbox 360 laptop last year, but transforming an Elite into a laptop, again, is not that cool. Not that I could do it, but I think you see the point. […]

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Ben Heck can mod like a mofo, but is he a one trick pony? Don’t get me wrong. I was thoroughly impressed by his modded Xbox 360 laptop last year, but transforming an Elite into a laptop, again, isn’t that cool. Not that I could do it, but I think you see the point. If you want to try your hand at possibly FUBARing your Xbox then feel free to do so thanks to Ben’s thorough instructions. I’m more impressed by the video, though.

Ben Heck

Via [crunchgear]

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Right on KDDI’s heels comes Softbank, roaring in with fourteen new models (not including the oh-so-pricey Tiffany phone) for the spring season. Though the lineup includes the usual array of crazy clamshells, this particular group includes a curious model designed specifically for stock trading and the Japanese introduction of a couple phones we’re already well acquainted with. Can ya spot ‘em in the picture there? Read on!

Panasonic 920P
Taking a page out of Sharp’s book, Panasonic is slapping branding from its television biz on the 920P; ‘course, the magnificent 3 inch WVGA LCD with a 160 degree viewing angle is pretty darned worthy of the VIERA label, if we do say so ourselves. The phone is also capable of over six hours of continuous one-seg operation, features a 5 megapixel primary cam, and can operate on global GSM networks. It’ll be available in Black Metal, gold, white, light blue, or pink.

Sharp 921SH FULLFACE 2
Any guesses what “FULLFACE” means? You got it: it’s all about the gargantuan display dominating the top half of the slider. That sucker’s 3.2 inches, to be exact, of wide VGA glory — which works out to about one bajillion pixels more than any phone we get around here. Enough bellyaching, though, and onto the remainder of the specs: 3.2 megapixel main cam (better than the 913SH’s 2 megapixel sensor, for you diehard FULLFACE fanatics out there), microSD expansion to 4GB, and naturally, support for one-seg. Black, white, blue, gold, and pink will be your choices when it lands in early March.

Sharp 922SH “Internet Machine”
You don’t see this form factor terribly often in a Japanese carrier’s lineup, so if you’re feeling it, you might want to get in while the getting’s good. The 922SH sports a measly 1.18 inch monochrome OLED on the outside but flips open to reveal a 3.5 inch AQUOS-branded WVGA display — not bad for viewing website intended for desktops, and likely responsible for the “Internet Machine” name. We’d have liked to have seen a numeric keypad on the outside, which might very well mark the first time in history we’ve been underwhelmed by a Softbank offering. It’ll rock out in Gold Bronze, Metallic Black, Pearl White, and Pearl Pink.

Toshiba 921T
The 921T’s claim to fame has to be its 2.8 inch WQVGA OLED, touting a 10,000:1 contrast ratio. You suffer in the resolution department against some of these other WVGA beasts, sure, but that’s just the price you’ve to pay for OLED joy these days. A one-seg tuner and 3.2 megapixel cam are along for the ride, but be warned — the 921T lacks international 3G roaming. The 921T will hit shelves in late March in Black Silver, Vivid Pink, Khaki Gold, white, and plain ol’ pink.

Panasonic 822P
The spec sheet here is pretty embarrassingly bad when put up against its stablemates, but check it: the 822P is a mere 8.9mm thick. Like the World wide web Machine, Panasonic’s thin marvel is in a pretty rare form factor for the Japanese market — candybar this time around. The QVGA display and 2 megapixel camera aren’t going to be turning any heads, so you’ll have to leave it to the blade-thin shell to wow your friends and family. Red, pink gold, black, and white are the colors for this one when it drops in mid February.

Samsung 820SC
With a 2.6 inch QVGA OLED display and not much else to write about, we suspect the 820SC lies at or near the bottom of the new range. The Samsung-sourced flip does have a couple nice things going for it, though: international roaming and a comparably big, color external OLED. It’s available in the next couple weeks in gold, black, silver, and red.

Samsung 821SC
Geared toward women (because Softbank states so), the 821SC matches the 820SC’s relative impotence, though it drops a tiny thickness and trades the square color OLED for a thin monochrome strip. White, silver, purple, red, and Pink Pearl are the shades for launch in mid March.

Sharp 823SH “Premium Texture”
Yep, it’s pretty obvious where they’re getting the “Premium Texture” name from here. In all, there are two body colors (silver and black) to choose from along with nine textures, ranging from real wood to real carbon fiber and pretty much everything in between. It’s only 14.3mm thick, though the 2.6 inch WQVGA screen is a bit weak. FeliCa and a 2 megapixel shooter make appearances here, too. It’ll be available (and a handful of trees will no longer be available) starting in early March.

Toshiba 820T
The 812T came out literally a few weeks ago, but time marches mercilessly on, and it’s apparently time for the 820T to make its grand entrance. As you might gather from the shape, color, and feature set, the 820T is Softbank’s kiddie phone, specially designed with a loud-ass buzzer and “anticrime lamp” (Softbank’s words, not ours) for scaring off would-be miscreants. It can also be used to track tykes from afar thanks to integrated GPS abilities and features programmable usage limits and a 3.2 megapixel cam with macro. Get it for the young one in your life in Pink Flower, Snow White, or Jet Blue when it launches in the next few days.

Toshiba 821T
The 821T flip from Toshiba is a really, really boring phone — and that’s by design. This one is intended for the older set, featuring big, simple to read buttons and menus, three one-touch dialing keys, and a large monochrome external display. Seniors aren’t left completely out in the tech cold, though; they still make out with a 2 megapixel camera and their choice of silver, pink, black, blue, or Red Wine shells. It’s available early next month.

Toshiba 822T
Toshiba’s really getting busy with niche market here; we’ve got the kiddie phone, the old folks’ phone, and now, the waterproof phone. The flip makes do with a forgettable 2.4 inch QVGA screen and 2 megapixel primary cam, but the VGA secondary cam can be used to recognize your face and unlock the phone — a nifty trick, if we do say so ourselves. This one should be on shelves by the end of the month in white, pink, black, and blue.


Nokia X02NK
This wouldn’t be the first time Softbank has scored a Nokia device, and for their sake, we hope it’s not the last. The N95 is the phone getting domesticated this time around, featuring the same spec sheet as its international cousins. It’ll come around in late April in red (look familiar?), white, and Blue Storm.

HTC X03HT
Here’s another one that should ring a bell for a few peeps. The X03HT shares design and components with the S730 “Wings,” a Windows Mobile 6 Standard device with a side-sliding QWERTY keyboard. As you might expect, the X03HT offers international roaming, WiFi, and a 2 megapixel camera — all borrowed from the Wings, as is the milquetoast QVGA display. It launches in late April in red, black, and white.


Sharp 920SH YK
If there’s one phone in this group that it makes sense to only offer in “Metal Black,” this is it. The 920SH YK is designed specifically with day traders in mind, offering a variety of apps that’d bore anyone besides a financial guru to tears. The 3.2 inch rotating WVGA display makes it easy to view charts — and one-seg Television, too, for when the business day is over. Stock gurus can add this device to their portfolio of ways to lose millions of dollars in a single day starting in late March.

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We though we’d seen it all when it came to creative device destruction — iPod with a bullet: check, exploding laptops: check, everything in a blender: double check — but we’ve never seen anything spend over an hour on the highway and survive. Yet that’s exactly what Mike Beauchamp’s iPhone did after he left it on his trunk and drove off from a gas station — and the kicker is that just as he was about to run out and grab it, he watched it get run over by a semi truck. Shockingly, the unit still work perfectly, even receiving a call as Mike finally nabbed it. Obviously, it’s missing a few chunks and there are some broken pixels, but the touch sensitivity is solid, and it sounds like Mike’s been talking to Apple PR about using it in a promo — how’s that for random luck? Check the read link for a few more photos of the damage.

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Back when we were young’uns, red was red, blue was blue, and that’s the way we liked it. Nowadays, everything needs a fancy name, and not even the simplest of colors are spared. Take AT&T’s new 6555 shade, for example: it can’t just be brown or beige. Heck, we’d even be cool with ochre. But no, Nokia has to get all fancy on us with “sand.” Okay, okay, we’re just messing around, sand’s a fine name, and you can pick up the 3G flip’s newest color now for about $50 on contract. Supremo Red, on the other hand…

[Via phoneArena]

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See, the problem with most phone manufacturer / boutique hookups is that the handsets start out at a fairly high price — but not high enough to keep them out of all but the most privileged, ridiculous people — then swiftly fall off to the point where even we can afford to put one in our pocket if we really wanted to. What’s the point in a designer-branded device if it’s actually attainable? Well, Tiffany and Japan’s Softbank Mobile have it all figured out, vowing to release a phone this month that comes in somewhere north of

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It’s bad enough that we’re getting teased with the HTC Touch Cruise from afar, but to hardened customers in the US, the fact that O2’s offering the Xda Orbit 2 for as little as

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The clever souls at PhoneNews seem to have cobbled together info from dcd’s posts at XDA-Developers and other places on how to get gpsOne — this technology uses both satellite and your provider’s network to determine location — up and running on CDMA HTC Titan sets. Once your handset — including PPC-6800, XV6800, Mogul, P4000, and likely others — is tweaked, applications like TomTom, Google Maps, and other GPS tools will be available for your navigational enjoyment. This hack will require that you unlock your handset, update the device’s software, and then update the baseband radio firmware to get at the goods. Instructions and all the files you’ll need — software updates are listed for Alltel, Sprint, Verizon, Bell, and Telus — are available by hitting the read link. Of course, this’ll likely blow your warranty away, so fiddlers beware and if you’re even a little concerned, it may be patience will pay off as a provider update could bring this in the future.

Update: Fixed credit for the work, thanks everybody for clarifying

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Sure, this thing isn’t for everybody, but some of you are going to be drooling on your lobster bibs. Alienware is expanding into your home even more with this media monster, sort of a cross between an irradiated TiVo and an Apple TV on crack. It sure looks like this High Definition Media Server is meant […]

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Sure, this thing isn’t for everybody, but some of you are going to be drooling on your lobster bibs. Alienware is expanding into your home even more with this media monster, sort of a cross between an irradiated TiVo and an Apple TV on crack.

It sure looks like this High Definition Media Server is meant to go in your home server closet, with its rack-mountable good looks and size, but it’s got 7.1 optical out and 4 seperate HDTV tuners, meaning you might have to keep it near your home theater system.

It’s HD offerings are rounded out with Blu-ray, a huge HD, and Cable Card. If you’re serious about making an HD content library instantly accessible, you should investigate this box.

Alienware HD Media Server [Product Page]

Via [crunchgear]

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When you’ve finally exhausted the entire spectrum of colors for your phone models ranging from the subdued to the wild, what’s the next frontier? Mixing and matching, of course. Samsung’s so-called “Secret Color” SPH-W3600 and SCH-W360 sliders for the Korean market look like factory seconds — manufacturing mistakes that accidentally found their way into the public domain — and with most products, you’d expect such buffoonery to warrant a discount. Not so here, though: the limited-edition models will run between 500,000 and 600,000 won (about $530 to $635), though we suppose the haptic keypads and 7.2Mbps download speeds at least partially justify the cash outlay.

[Via Mobilewhack]

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