Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Sony NEX-5N replaces NEX-5, adds 16.1 MP sensor, 25,600 max ISO, OLED viewfinder option (video)



Without a doubt, today's biggest news on the NEX front is Sony's 24.3 megapixel NEX-7. But for photographers looking for a bit less power (and a lower $600 body-only price tag), the NEX-5N delivers some of the 7's headline features in a slimmed-down magnesium-alloy body. Sony boosted the NEX-5's sensor from 14 to 16 megapixels in the N, also adding 1080 / 60p AVCHD video capture, a 10 fps continuous shooting mode, a touch-enabled 3-inch LCD, and a maximum sensitivity of ISO 25,600. The mid-range NEX cam also supports an optional XGA OLED electronic viewfinder, which attaches to its accessory port and carries a price tag of $350. We should note that although the accessory port appears to be similar to that used on the NEX-C3 and previous gen NEX-5, the OLED attachment is only compatible with the 5N. Want to know more? Jump past the break for a brief overview video, and check out the rather comprehensive gallery of press shots below.

Continue reading Sony NEX-5N replaces NEX-5, adds 16.1 MP sensor, 25,600 max ISO, OLED viewfinder option (video)

Sony NEX-5N replaces NEX-5, adds 16.1 MP sensor, 25,600 max ISO, OLED viewfinder option (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Aug 2011 01:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.


Sony Alpha A77 hands-on preview (video)



When it comes to cameras, digital SLRs are a breed all their own. Many DSLR owners don't upgrade their bodies often -- if at all -- and even fewer would consider a switch to a competing camera system, especially after investing in a handful of high-end lenses. Manufacturers need to push innovation even further to target this segment of the market -- when some cameras cost thousands of dollars and already offer excellent performance, simply releasing a body with more megapixels and HD shooting options won't prompt photographers to pull out their credit cards. With its excellent 24.3 megapixel sensor and high-res OLED electronic viewfinder, however, Sony's $1,399 Alpha A77 may just be the DSLR upgrade you've been waiting for. We spent a few days with a pre-production A77 paired with Sony's brand new 16-50mm f/2.8 lens ($1,999 in an A77 kit), and were very impressed with what will undoubtedly be a worthy successor to the well-received A700. Jump past the break for our initial impressions, along with plenty of still photo and HD video samples.

Continue reading Sony Alpha A77 hands-on preview (video)

Sony Alpha A77 hands-on preview (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Aug 2011 01:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Proposing with portals: how really romantic gamers pop the question

Proposing with Portals
Unless you proposed from orbit, chances are your marriage request was not nearly as elaborate as Gary Hudston's. And, perhaps outside of 2008's homebrew Bejeweled proposal, no where near as geeky either. Hudston hired a skilled developer to create series of custom levels for Portal 2 that his potential betrothed would have to play through. When it heard about his apparently not so secret project, Valve even helped him secure Ellen McLain, the voice of GLaDOS, to record original audio. You can check out the hilarious and heartwarming video after the break or just play through the levels yourself by downloading them at the source link. Sadly, unless you happen to be the future Mrs. Hudston, you'll be no closer to marrying yourself off after solving its puzzles.

Continue reading Proposing with portals: how really romantic gamers pop the question

Proposing with portals: how really romantic gamers pop the question originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Aug 2011 07:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Friday, August 19, 2011

Motorola's XT531 hits the FCC, ready for its US crossover



Motorola's XT531 has gone through more name changes than a certain rapper-cum-vodka shilling mogul, and the trend might continue as it makes its way to the US. The budget-friendly handset, known as the Fire XT in Europe and the Spice XT in Latin America, has just surfaced at the FCC toting AT&T-compatible GSM bands, UMTS / HSDPA 850MHz / 1900MHz support, WiFi and Bluetooth. Based on Moto's official PR for the handset's Chinese release, we know this 3.5-incher also sports a front-facing VGA / 5 megapixel rear camera, and is set to launch with Android 2.3 onboard. With Google's newest pal clearly chasing after heat-related naming conventions, we expect to see this one launch with an equally caliente moniker.

Motorola's XT531 hits the FCC, ready for its US crossover originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Aug 2011 16:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Logitech G300 mouse delivers gaming friendly features on the cheap

Logitech G300 Gaming Mouse
Logitech isn't exactly new to the gaming peripheral scene, but the company knows its strength lies not in pleasing hardcore FPS fans, it's in delivering solid consumer products. The G300 isn't a gaming mouse for the twitchy virtual gun slingers out there, it's for folks that fire up the occasional shooter, but want better performance than they get out of the pointer packed with their PC. The nine programmable buttons and 2,500dpi laser aren't jaw-dropping, but they're certainly respectable for only $40. It does pack one interesting feature -- gaming profiles that are stored on the mouse's internal memory. This way you can set up different configurations for particular games and even move the mouse across PCs without any hassle. And, the lighting on the side will glow different colors to identify which profile you're using. While you wait for the G300 to land in September, check out the PR after the break.

Continue reading Logitech G300 mouse delivers gaming friendly features on the cheap

Logitech G300 mouse delivers gaming friendly features on the cheap originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Aug 2011 14:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

A vacation worth a cool million: five days in the CSS space hotel


Boarding the Soyuz rocket, seven hotel patrons will be asked to fork over £500,000 ($825,000) for the flight and another £100,000 ($165,000) for a five-night stay -- who needs family road trips when you can vacation in space? Russian company Orbital Technologies announced plans to construct a Commercial Space Station (CSS) by 2016, offering guests an unforgettable vacation and kick-ass view of Earth below. Way more fashionable than the ISS 62 miles away, customers can lounge in horizontal or vertical beds, enjoy some astronaut ice cream or chill with this guy.

A vacation worth a cool million: five days in the CSS space hotel originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Aug 2011 15:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

HDHomerun Prime CableCARD tuner hands-on


Looking a little different than the prototype we got our hands-on at CES, the retail version of the CableCARD tuner from SiliconDust found its way in front of our camera today. Those who preordered this little guy for $249 should start receiving it shortly, as a series of frustrating delays finally come to an end. We can't wait to plug this network tuner in and toss up to three HD feeds at a time through our Ethernet cabling and expect most others feel the same way.

Check out out our pics in the gallery below, we'll let you know if the InfiniTV 4 has competition worth worrying about -- seems like it, given the price drop -- shortly.

HDHomerun Prime CableCARD tuner hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Aug 2011 20:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Buy Nokia C6-00 Touch Screen Mobile Online

Buy Nokia N8 Touch Screen Mobile Online, Cell Phone, Mobile Phones, Online Mobile Deals

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Onkyo remote app ushers in a new area of losing Android phones in the couch


Is the devoted remote going the way of dodo? HiFi audio manufacturer Onkyo is certainly hedging its bets with the release of its first Android app, which gives users the ability to control a number of its home theater systems. The Remote App, due out in August, makes it possible to browse content and stream audio from Android smartphones to the TX-8050 and all Onkyo A/V network receivers released this year. This isn't the company's first flirtation with the open world of Android. Late last year, Onkyo beat the competition to the punch by announcing a couple of Android tablets.

Continue reading Onkyo remote app ushers in a new area of losing Android phones in the couch

Onkyo remote app ushers in a new area of losing Android phones in the couch originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jul 2011 01:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | | Email this | Comments"

Verizon's Blackberry Bold 9930 unveiled early thanks to website blunder


Oh boy, we don't envy the Verizon web admin who made this particular mis-click. If you go to VZW's sales page for the Blackberry 9650 and click on the 'Explore Features' video, you get an unexpected treat: a walkthrough not of the 9650, but of the unreleased Bold 9930. The specs are familiar, like the 1.2GHz processor, 2.8-inch touchscreen and Blackberry 7 OS. But at least we now have it from the horse's mouth that the new Bold Touch is indeed coming to Verizon. We've stuck our own rip of the video after the break, as the original will likely disappear any second -- much like that poor web admin.

[Thanks everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading Verizon's Blackberry Bold 9930 unveiled early thanks to website blunder

Verizon's Blackberry Bold 9930 unveiled early thanks to website blunder originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jul 2011 03:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | sourceVerizon [while it lasts] | Email this | Comments"

Bang & Olufsen's BeoSound 5 Encore redefines 'affordable,' looks good doing it (video)


It's certainly been a while since Bang & Olufsen's given any love to its gorgeous (but pricey) BeoSound 5, but refining self-proclaimed perfection takes... well, about three years. The more affordable $3,350 BeoSound 5 Encore carries over the svelte 10.4-inch LCD / scroll wheel toting controller from its predecessor, but nixes the BeoMaster music server requirement, allowing it to run headless (and in turn save you bookodles of cash). So how does one play tunes if it rides solo? With a bevy of new connectivity options: content can now be slung over USB (be it via a 'mobile device,' thumb key or hard drive), from a NAS, over A2DP Bluetooth, or from one of 13,000 internet radio stations. It'll ship in August, which'll leave you plenty of time to count those pennies, and perhaps to ponder why it couldn't spring for finer graphics in the video that awaits you beyond the fold.

Continue reading Bang & Olufsen's BeoSound 5 Encore redefines 'affordable,' looks good doing it (video)

Bang & Olufsen's BeoSound 5 Encore redefines 'affordable,' looks good doing it (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jul 2011 05:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | sourceBang & Olufsen | Email this | Comments"

Dell Launches Ultrasharp U2412M 24 Inch IPS Monitor

Dell has added a new monitor to their Ultrasharp range with the launch of the Dell U24212M monitor which features a 24 inch display with a resolution of 1920 x 1200 pixels.

The new Dell 24 inch monitor features an IPS LED backlit display, and it comes with a contrast ratio of 2,000,000:1, and features 1 DVI, 1 DisplayPort, 1VGA port, and 5 USB ports.

Dell Ultrasharp U2412M(...)
Original Story Dell Launches Ultrasharp U2412M 24 Inch IPS Monitor


© Geeky Gadgets, 2011. | Permalink | Unauthorized duplication and or distribution of our content is strictly forbidden © Geeky Gadgets, 2011

A rel=canonical corner case

I answered an interesting rel=canonical question over email today and thought I’d blog about it. If you’re not familiar with rel=canonical read these pages first. Then watch this video about rel=canonical vs. 301s, especially the second half:

Okay, I sometimes get a question about whether Google will always use the url from rel=canonical as the preferred url. The answer is that we take rel=canonical urls as a strong hint, but in some cases we won’t use them:
- For example, if we think you’re shooting yourself in the foot by accident (pointing a rel=canonical toward a non-existent/404 page), we’d reserve the right not to use the destination url you specify with rel=canonical.
- Another example where we might not go with your rel=canonical preference: if we think your website has been hacked and the hacker added a malicious rel=canonical. I recently tweeted about that case. On the “bright” side, if a hacker can control your website enough to insert a rel=canonical tag, they usually do far more malicious things like insert malware, hidden or malicious links/text, etc.

I wanted to talk today about another case in which we won’t use rel=canonical. First off, here’s a thought exercise: should Google trust rel=canonical if we see it in the body of the HTML? The answer is no, because some websites let people edit content or HTML on pages of the site. If Google trusted rel=canonical in the HTML body, we’d see far more attacks where people would drop a rel=canonical on part of a web page to try to hijack it.

Okay, so now we come to another corner case where we probably won’t trust a rel=canonical: if we see weird stuff in your HEAD section. For example, if you start to insert regular text or other tags that we normally only see in the BODY of HTML into the HEAD of a document, we may assume that someone just forgot to close the HEAD section. We don’t allow rel=canonical in the BODY (because as I mentioned, people would spam that), so we might not trust rel=canonical in those cases, especially if it comes after the regular text or tags that we normally only see in the BODY of a page.

But in general, as long as your HEAD looks fairly normal, things should be fine. If you really want to be safe, you can make sure that the rel=canonical is the first or one of the first things in the HEAD section. Again, things should be fine either way, but if you want an easy rule of thumb: put the rel=canonical toward the top of the HEAD.

Goal: getting email under control

Each year I try to settle on a small set of big goals for the year. Last year my big goal was to climb Mt. Kilimanjaro. This year, I settled on 2-3 goals I wanted to achieve:

1. Go skydiving. I was with a group of ~15 people in January and we realized that no one in the room had gone skydiving or run a marathon. Both sounded fun, so I made them goals for this year. I met some great folks at Foo Camp a couple weeks ago who had been skydiving, and this past weekend we went skydiving together:

Matt skydiving at 8000 feet or so

It was a lot of fun; I’d recommend skydiving to anyone. You’re up high enough that a fear of heights doesn’t come into play… much. (If you live in the Bay Area, I went to Bay Area Skydiving in Byron, California and had a great experience.)

2. Run a marathon. This goal came from the same group in January where no one had run a marathon. I’ve been training for a couple months now and I’m up to nine miles on my long runs. Unless I’m injured, I think I’ll run a marathon this year. (By the way, USA FIT is a great organization in a bunch of U.S. cities where people get together to train for running a marathon.)

3. Get my email under control. This is a recent goal, but it might be the most important. Email is flawed in a lot of ways. Some wise people have referred to it as a “to-do list that anyone can add to.” It’s typically a poor use of time: you’re often talking to someone 1:1 when those cycles would be better spent working on something that will help a broader range of people or to realize a broader goal. Emails can take a long time to craft compared to other ways to communicate. Email is near-universal, but it lacks good ways for better processing or prioritizing (e.g. “show me the five least useful mailing lists” I get). Lots of email is sent to too many people or is just trying to find the right person to ask a question. Email also encourages us to pay attention to things that are urgent at the expense of things that are important.

Like most people in the tech industry, email has grown into monster for me in a lot of ways. I recently had a day without meetings, and I ended up spending the entire day replying to email, and still only took care of the email that I’d received that day. That’s just not sustainable–even a little more email would mean that I could never catch up–and that’s time that I’m not talking with my team, or thinking about new ways to improve search quality, or making videos or blog posts that can benefit a lot of people.

I’ve tried various email challenges before, e.g. not replying to outside emails for 30 days or not replying to emails after 10 p.m. I don’t know what my final solution to email will be, but this is a heads-up notice that I’m going to try a bunch of things until I find a better balance. I suspect that the final answer may be fairly radical, so if you’re hoping for an email reply from me, you should probably lower your expectations to zero. I’m going to try not replying to outside-Google emails for a while and then adjust things more over time.

Email is a big part of the problem, but I’ll probably have to say “no” more often as well. Please be patient with me while I try to recalibrate. I want to make sure that I spend my work time in the best way I can.

Buy BlackBerry 9800 Torch

Product Description

This high end gadget integrated with Blackberry 6 OS and Social Feeds presents itself as a delight to the internet savvy. Now surf the web at the speed of lightening and with utmost ease. BlackBerry Torch is a hi-end phone in every posiible way and has all the latest features that makes it a hot selling product.





Specifications

General
General Form: Touch & Slide

Size
Dimensions: 111 X 62 X 14.6 mm
Weight: 161 G

Display

Type: TFT Capacitive Touchscreen
Resolution: 360 X 480 Pixels
Color: 16m Colors
Size: 3.2 Inches

Camera

Primary Camera: 5 MP,Autofocus, LED Flash
Video Recording: Yes, Vga@24fps
Video Player: Yes , Plays Divx/Xvid/Mp4/Wmv/H.263/H.264 Formats

Battery
Type: Standard Battery, Li-Ion 1300 Mah
Talk Time: Up To 5 H 30 Min (2g) / Up To 5 H 40 Min (3g) (Maximum)
Standby Time: Up To 432 H (2g) / Up To 336 H (3g) (Maximum)

Music & Sound
Music Player: Media Player MP3/Wma/Aac+ 3.5 Mm Audio Jack Ringtone Formats: Vibration, MP3 Ringtones
Speaker: Yes

Data & Connectivity
GPRS: Class 10 (4+1/3+2 Slots), 32 - 48 Kbps
Edge: Class 10, 236.8 Kbps
3G: Hsdpa, 3.6 Mbps
WLAN: Wi-Fi 802.11 B/G/N, Uma (Carrier-Dependent)
Bluetooth: Yes, V2.1 With A2dp
USB: Yes, Microusb V2.0
WAP: Yes

Input
Keyboard Type: Full Qwerty Keypad & Touch Screen
Touch Screen: Capacitive Touch screen

Platform
OS: Blackberry Os 6.0
CPU: 624 Mhz Processor
Operating Frequency: 2G: GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 , 3G: HSDPA 850 / 1900
Java: Yes, Midp 2.0
GSM/CDMA/Dual SIM/Triple SIM: GSM

Memory
Internal Memory: 4 GB Storage, 512 MB Ram, 512 MB ROM
Cards Slot: Microsd, Up To 16GB,
Phone Book: Practically Unlimited Entries and Fields, Photocall
Call Records: Yes

Other Features
Games: Yes + Downloadable
Gps: Yes, With A-GPS Support
Browser: HTML
Messaging: SMS, MMS, Email, Instant Messaging
Miscellaneous: Voice Memo/Dial
Blackberry Maps

Video Preview

Click here to buy this products online, http://www.22bestdeals.com/p-blackberry-9800-torch-1056.html

Offer Price Rs: 23699/-

Buy LG Optimus GT540 Android

Product Description

Add excitement to your life with this sleek and sophisticated, touchscreen phone with Camera and MP3/MP4 Player. The LG Optimus is also integrated with the Android operating system, which means stronger security, improved stability and a range of core applications. 
At Rs. 7499, it is definately a must buy!



 

Specifications

GeneralFeatures:
2G Network GSM 850/900/1800/1900
3G Network HSDPA 900/2100
HSDPA  850/2100
Announced 2010, January
Status Available. Released 2010, June

Size
Dimensions 109x54. 5x12.7mm
Weight 115.5g

Display
Type TFT resistive touch screen, 256K colors (65K effective)
Size 320x480 pixels, 3.0 inches
AccelerometersensorforUIautorotate

Sound
Alert types Vibration, MP3 ringtones
Speakerphone Yes
3.5 mm audio jack

Memory
Phonebook Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall
Call records Practically unlimited
Internal 139MB user available,156MB RAM
Card slot microSD, upto 32GB,

Data
GPRS Class10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 3248kbps
EDGE Class10, 236.8kbps
3G HSDPA 7.2Mbps
WLAN WiFi 802.11b/g
Bluetooth Yes, v2.1 with A2DP
Infrared port No
USB Yes, micro USB

Camera
Primary 3.15MP, 2048x1536 pixels, auto focus
Features Geotagging, face and blink detection
Video Yes, VGA@17 fps
Secondary No

Features
OS Android OS,  v1.6,upgradable to v2.1
CPU 600MHz processor
Messaging SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email, IM Browser HTML
Radio Stereo FM radio with RDS
Games Yes + downloadable
Colors Black,White,  Pink
|GPS Yes, with A GPS support
Java Yes, MIDP 2.0
Social networking integration with live updates
Google Search, Maps, Gmail
YouTube, Google Talk
MP4/DivX/Xvid/H.264/H.263/WMV player
MP3/WAV/WMA/eAAC+ player
Organizer
Document viewer
Voice memo

Battery
Standard battery, Li-ion 1500mAh
Standby Upto 500h (2G)/ Upto 500h (3G)
Talktime Upto 5h30min (2G)/ Upto 7h 20min  (3G)
 
Video Preview

Click here to buy this products online, http://www.22bestdeals.com/p-lg-optimus-gt540-android-1059.html

Offer Price: Rs. 6399/-

Buy HTC Imagio Windows 6.5 Smartphone

Product Description

Featuring the Windows Mobile 6.5 Professional platform, the ultra-slim HTC Imagio combines performance and functionality in one sleek package. This touchscreen-enabled smartphone offers a large and vibrant, 3.6-inch display with a customizable home screen and an on-screen QWERTY keyboard for fast and easy typing. It also comes with a host of multimedia features which will make sure that you are never far from your favourite music, movies or social platform.

Specifications


Brand: HTC
Model: Imagio
Type: Mobile
3.5 mm audio jack
3.6 inches, TFT resistive touchscreen, 256K colors
5 Megapixels Camera
B/W: HTML
GPRS, EDGE, 3G, WLAN, Bluetooth, USB
Internal Memory: 288 MB RAM, 512 MB ROM
Memory Card: microSD, up to 16GB
Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.5 Professional
MP3/MP4 player
Photo editor
Pocket Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, PDF viewer)
SMS, MMS, Email, IM
Standard battery, Li-Ion 1500 mAh
Stand-by/Talk Time: 324 hrs / 5 hrs 50 min

Video Preview

Click here to buy this products online, http://www.22bestdeals.com/p-lg-fathom-windows-mobile-professional-pocket-pc-4866.html

LG Fathom Windows Mobile Professional Pocket PC

Product Description


This GSM/CDMA Windows Mobile smartphone is notable for its world roaming capability including high-speed 3G data, fast processor, high-resolution touch display and slide-out QWERTY keyboard. Other key features include 3.15 megapixel Camera, 802.11 Wi-Fi, Memory card slot and 3.5mm audio jack.

 

 

Specifications


Network

2G Network: GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
3G Network: HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100

Size
Dimensions: 115 x 56 x 17 mm
Weight: 152g

Sound
Alert types: Vibration, MP3 ringtones
Loudspeaker: Yes

Memory
Phonebook: Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall
Call records: Practically unlimited
Internal: 256MB RAM, 512 MB ROM
Card slot: microSD, up to 16GB

Data
GPRS: Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 - 48 kbps
EDGE: Class 10, 236.8 kbps
3G: HSDPA 7.2 Mbps
WLAN: Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n
Bluetooth: Yes, v2.1 with A2DP
Infrared port: No
USB: Yes, v2.0 microUSB


Camera
Primary: 3.15 MP, 2048x1536 pixels, autofocus
Features: NA
Video: Yes, VGA@30fps
Secondary: No

Features
OS: Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.5 Professional
CPU: 1 GHz Scorpion processor, Adreno 200 GPU, Qualcomm QSD8250 Snapdragon chipset
Messaging:SMS, MMS, Email, Push Email, IM, RSS
Browser: WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML
Radio: No
Games: Yes
Colors: Black
GPS: Yes, with A-GPS support
Java: Yes, MIDP 2.0
Others: MP3/WAV/eAAC+/WMA player
MP4/H.263/H.264 player
Document viewer/editor
Organizer
Voice memo/dial/commands
Predictive text input

Battery
Type: Standard battery, Li-Po
Stand-by: Up to 475 hr
Talk time: Up to 7 hr

Video Preview

Click here to buy this products online, http://www.22bestdeals.com/p-lg-fathom-windows-mobile-professional-pocket-pc-4866.html