Archive for July 13th, 2008

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Handhelds (and handsets, in particular) have long since been used as tools for home automation, but the forthcoming App Store is likely to bring a niche concept to the masses… or some of them, at least. Beginning on July 11th (that’s the iPhone 3G launch day, you know), a Crestron interface titled iLoveControl will be available for download; during the first 30 days of launch, stated app will “offer a one-room Crestron solution free of charge, configured for the control of lights, drapes, HVAC, audio and video.” If you’re looking to control more than that, it’ll cost you $250 per configuration. This is just one example of what’s likely to fill the App Store, and quite frankly, we’re pretty excited about the possibilities.

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A handful of countries are now able to stick their tongues out to the rest of the world thanks to a little quirk of chronology called the International Date Line. Of course, we took full advantage of that quirk and landed an iPhone 3G of our very own — but Apple’s bringing the noise on the original iPhone today, too, with the launch of the App Store and firmware 2.0. Have a quick gander at all the news so far:

Read - It’s iPhone 3G tear-down time
Read - iPhone firmware 2.0 is live
Read - iPhone 3G first look, what do you want to know?
Read - iPhone 3G international launch lineblog
Read - App Store hands-on, notable apps
Read - Apple App Store is now live!
Read - Apple’s Remote: turns your iPhone into a WiFi remote control

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Two more Internet Service Providers have agreed to cut off access to Usenet as a result of New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo’s crusade to eliminate child pornography once and for all. AT&T and AOL now no longer carry the alt.* hierarchy, something that the New York politician is trumpeting as nothing short of peace […]

andrewcuomo

Two more Internet Service Providers have concurred to cut off access to Usenet as a result of New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo’s crusade to eliminate child pornography once and for all. AT&T and AOL now no longer carry the alt.* hierarchy, something that the New York politician is trumpeting as nothing short of peace in our time. To the right is Mr. Cuomo for you non-New Yorkers who might know know what he looks like.

Additionally, Cuomo has launched a Web site promoting his success; that the title of the site is “Press Releases“ should be a clear indicator that the man is just as concerned with getting “good press” as he is making any real difference in the fight against child porn.

The site even has form letter that it encourages New Yorkers to send to their ISP asking them to help stop child porn. You know, as if carrying the nearly 30-year-old Usenet service is tantamount to running some sort of illegal sex slave ring.

What’s most troubling is that child porn is pretty much the only crime that’s universally condemned—it’s not like “big deal, I download a motion picture off The Pirate Bay.” It wouldn’t be too hard for someone to accuse you of being “soft” on child porn because you’re trying to argue that blocking Usenet access, as provided by ISPs, makes no sense, since anyone hell bent on downloading it can get Usenet access from any number of different places at the drop of a hat. That, and never mind that we’d have to ban the Web as a whole because Lord knows there’s nastiness on there, too.

At the same time, ISPs probably know that such a small percentage of their subscribers can even pronounce Usenet, let alone how to configure a news reader to download binaries, so that blocking access isn’t too large a deal. It certainly beats having Cuomo & Co. call you “soft” on child porn, right?

All that being said, these ISPs sometimes do own the servers where all these alleged files are stored, so there would, theoretically, be some sort of liability there.

Now let’s ban access to HTTP, FTP, BitTorrent and each other protocol since untold amounts of undesirable content flows through them each day!

Is there a politician in this country who understands how technology works, and isn’t looking to further his or her own ends by exploiting the public’s lack of knowledge? Thought not.

Via [crunchgear]

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Finally, the 14 people who have been waiting patiently can now get their hands on HP’s iPAQ 910 Windows Mobile-based phone. There’s not much to say you haven’t already read — the HSDPA, WiFi, and GPS equipped device can be bought unlocked from HP’s online store for the tidy sum of $499.99. They’re shipping now… so what are you waiting for?

[Thanks, James]

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Via Engadgetmobile

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Did you wake up this fine Sunday morning and say to yourself, “You know, I need an terribly thorough look at the new dock for the iPhone 3G”? What luck, then, for iLounge has put together such hands-on. First, the bad: the dock for the iPhone 3G isn’t included with the phone itself. The privilege of […]

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Did you wake up this fine Sunday morning and state to yourself, “You know, I need an terribly thorough look at the new dock for the iPhone 3G”? What luck, then, for iLounge has put together such hands-on.

First, the bad: the dock for the iPhone 3G isn’t included with the phone itself. The privilege of snapping your phone into little stand now costs $29. It’s also not a universal dock, meaning that it only works with the iPhone 3G.

dock3g2 1

Other than those issues, if you can call them that, it’s the same dock you’ve become familiar with since your first iPod. It charges your phone like the dickens, and it has a proper audio-out jack.

For those of you prone to complain, how else do you expect Apple to lower the price of the iPhone without cutting out a few extras?

Via [crunchgear]

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Finally, the 14 people who have been waiting patiently can now get their hands on HP’s iPAQ 910 Windows Mobile-based phone. There’s not much to say you haven’t already read — the HSDPA, WiFi, and GPS equipped device can be bought unlocked from HP’s online store for the tidy sum of $499.99. They’re shipping now… so what are you waiting for?

[Thanks, James]

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Via Engadgetmobile

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A number of shots have surfaced of an upcoming Sidekick that we’ve alternately known as the Gekko and Gecco, but the rumor du jour on the naming front is that we’ll actually be calling it “Sidekick 2008″ by the time it launches (later this month if we’re lucky). The grainy photography shows a device looking roughly like what we anticipate the new model to look like — but more interestingly, it shows the phone wearing a variety of different shells, some of which rock as much bedazzlement as a Swarovski one-off. Pretty cool. Oh, and don’t bother trying to go to sidekick.com.shells — we did, and it isn’t on the web yet.

[Via Hiptop 3]

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Via Engadgetmobile

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