Category: Links

  • Review of Google I/O Day 2

    Nice reporting from Engadget.

  • Google TV Unveiled. It’s All About The Ad Reach

    MG Siegler:

    “TV meets web. Web meets TV” is the slogan Google is going with for this new endeavor. It will work as a new box — you’ll just hook up your existing cable or satellite box to it. All the hardware will include a keyboard and a mouse — but it will work with Android phones too. And you can use multiple Android devices to control the same TV — no more fighting over the remote.

  • Adobe Flash 10.1 for Android Enters Public Beta

    No word yet on performance or battery life. Interestingly it only works on the newest version of Android – 2.1.

  • Why HP Really Bought Palm: Printers

    This is stupid, if HP really bought Palm to bring WebOS to their printers then they are a special kind of idiot. Printers are going to become specialty items shortly. There is no need for them other than art production.

  • Sprint Evo 4G Review

    Mossberg:

    However, the data speeds I got in my tests weren’t spectacular, or anywhere close to the typical maximum Sprint claims, even in Baltimore, where the company’s 4G network is mature. And, when using 4G, the EVO’s battery runs down alarmingly fast. In my tests, it didn’t last through a full day with 4G turned on. The carrier, in fact, is thinking of advising users to turn off the 4G network access when they don’t think they need it, to save battery life. This undercuts the whole idea of faster cellular speeds.

    This is the same as Google telling people to turn off the features that they bought the phone for to save battery life. It is stupid – this is clearly the reason so many people evangelize the iPhone. Imagine if Apple was telling users to do something like this, they would be slaughtered in the media. So should Sprint.

  • Curated hypocrisy: How Google camouflages its attacks on Apple

    Kontra @ Counter Notions:

    The evil man behind the curtain in this scenario is not Apple’s curation, it’s the frightening prospect of Google getting cut off from search and ad revenue derived from its naked domination of the search box on top of your web browser.

    Harsh words for Google, but I can’t disagree.

  • The fate of a generation of workers: Foxconn undercover fully translated

    Richard Lai:

    They often dream, but also repeatedly tearing apart their dreams, like a miserable painter who keeps tearing up his or her drafts, “if we keep working like this, we might as well quit dreaming for the rest of our lives.” They manufacture the world’s top electronic products, yet gathering their own fortune at the slowest possible pace. The office’s guest network account has a password that ends with “888” — like many businessmen, they love this number, and they worship its phonetic equivalence [“rich”]. Little did they know that it’s their own hands protecting the country’s “8,” yet their overtime hours, lottery tickets, and even horse racing bets, struggle to find the “8” that belongs to themselves.

    This is an amazing story, this is a great look at the company that makes all the worlds gadgets. Humbling.

  • I want choice, but only if I agree with your choice

    Thomas Fitzgerald:

    I think Ted’s problem, like that of many analysts/bloggers/journalists/geeks etc on the issue is that they’re confusing fundamental flaws with not liking something. People like Ted don’t like the closed nature of the App store, but that doesn’t mean it’s fundamentally flawed, or a lack of choice. If it was fundamentally flawed it wouldn’t be a success because people would have chosen to buy something else. That success been determined by the market you so desperately want to preserve the freedom of.

  • Mobile OS web-browsing share

    Very interesting to see how well the iPad is fairing given how new it is. Also there is a much larger share of Mac users than I would have expected.

  • Urbanspoon’s RezBook Lets Restaurants Manage Reservations on the iPad

    Christina Warren:

    From a pricing perspective, RezBook won’t break the bank. The app itself will be free, and subscriptions to the service will start at $99 per month. In addition to having the iPad app, restaurants will also be able to access reservation data on a web-based back-end, which is useful for managers who might want to check in on things from home.

    Very neat, I especially want them to start allowing people to place take out orders from the web. Teriyaki restaurants would finally get my order right.

  • Foxconn’s Tegra 2-powered Android tablet hands-on

    Looks similar to something I have seen before, I just can’t quite place it.

  • International iPad App Store Now Open for Business

    Charlie Sorrel:

    Good news for international iPad owners. Apple has finally switched on the iPad App Store in your country. Or rather, it is in the process of switching it on in those countries that will be lucky enough to get the iPad itself at the end of this month.

  • AT&T Sees No Threat in a Verizon iPhone

    Brian X. Chen:

    The CEO added that “churn” rates (i.e., a measure of customers leaving) for AT&T are staying at record-low rates, so he expects that customers will remain loyal.

    He either knows something that we don’t about Verizon’s ability to get the iPhone (very likely) or he has his head stuck way in the sand.

  • Google I/O Day 1 Wrap-Up

    Wrap-up of the first day of the Google I/O conference. Where they announced all sorts of things, including a web app store for Google’s Chrome web browser.

  • Poor Android Battery Life is Users / Developers Fault

    Andrew Karneka:

    Translation: turn off GPS if you aren’t using it, turn off background sync if you aren’t using, and stop setting your Twitter app to constantly update for new tweets. The same goes for your RSS apps, widgets, and more. Of course, these are major features that attracted many people to Android, so asking them to forgo those options in favor of extending battery life is an unattractive solution to many.

    Now Apple doesn’t look so crazy does it?

  • Data Access, Data Ownership, and Sharecropping

    Kellan Elliot-McCrea:

    With Flickr you can get out, via the API, every single piece of information you put into the system.

    Every photo, in every size, plus the completely untouched original. (which we store for you indefinitely, whether or not you pay us) Every tag, every comment, every note, every people tag, every fave. Also your stats, view counts, and referers.

    Not the most recent N, not a subset of the data. All of it.

    It’s your data, and you’ve granted us a limited license to use it.

    Yep, this is why I love Flickr.

    [via Daring Fireball]

  • A Data Center Power Supply That Moos

    Ashlee Vance:

    According to H.P.’s calculations, 10,000 cows could fuel a one-megawatt data center, which would be the equivalent of a small computing center used by a bank. Mr. Kanellos has tracked both the data center and green technology industries and agreed that there was some convenient overlap. Computing equipment produces a lot of heat as a waste product, and the systems needed to create biogas require heat. So, there is a virtuous cycle of sorts possible.

  • Twitter for iPhone Released (formerly Tweetie)

    Some new features, and you can now use the app without being signed in. You can also sign up in the app.

    [Updated: 5/19/10 at 11:12 AM]: How annoying is that you have to re-enter your accounts? Besides that the new search screen is a great addition.

  • ASUS Working on Netbook Using Plug-in Phone

    James Kendrick:

    The company that kicked off the netbook craze is reported to be working on a netbook that uses a phone plugged into the device for connectivity. ASUS is looking at the modular phone system by Modu to provide connectivity on an as-needed basis by popping the phone into a slot designed for that purpose. This method would allow owners to have mobile connectivity with a single data plan on the phone.

    I think this is a very poor solution, but perhaps the only one we will get in the U.S., whereas in Spain it was announced that their leading mobile carrier will let you share your iPhone data plan with your iPad – no extra cost.

  • Check.in – One Checkin to Rule Them All

    Now open to all, full iPhone/iPad support. I have been waiting to test this for a while.