Showing posts with label later. Show all posts
Showing posts with label later. Show all posts

Monday, April 22, 2013

Pink Nintendo 3DS XL misses Easter, arrives in the UK later this Spring

Pink Nintendo 3DS XL misses Easter, arrives in the UK later this Spring


If the adorable patterns on the Animal Crossing special edition 3DS XL didn't tug at your heart (and wallet) strings, perhaps this English rose will. Set to arrive in the UK on May 31st, there's no software tie-in to mark the occasion, just the vivid hues of an entirely pink handheld. For the international purveyors of all things kawaii, there's still a pearl-finish pink and white 3DS XL listed on Amazon. Regardless of the shade, both options should pair really well with your vast collection of Hello Kitty tat goods.


Source: Edge Online


More Coverage: Amazon, Joystiq

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Motorola design chief: stock Android phones, cross-carrier brands coming later this year



Back in February, Google CFO Patrick Pichette said its recent purchase, Motorola, didn't "wow" on the smartphone front, but it looks like the two companies have long since smoothed over any hard feelings. Speaking to PC Mag, Motorola design chief Jim Wicks revealed plans for the first post-acquisition handsets, demonstrating a philosophy that seems perfectly in line with Mountain View. According to Wicks, his company is embracing stock Android with as little bloatware as possible, and hardware itself won't likely reach Galaxy Note II proportions; he says the new design philosophy is "better is better" rather than "bigger is better."


Motorola will also change its approach to carriers, with a move toward offering devices across several service providers rather than keeping certain handsets -- such as the Droid and Razr lines on Verizon -- as exclusives for one. For AT&T and Sprint customers who were tempted by the Razr M on Verizon, for example, this strategy could go a long way in bringing them into the Motorola fold. Wicks says the first batch of new smartphones will debut in the second half of 2013 -- and, at least according to Eric Schmidt, they should be quite impressive.


Source: PC Mag

Monday, March 25, 2013

FAA may ease 'reading device' restriction during takeoff and landing later this year

NYT FAA may announce reduced takeoff landing electronics restriction this year


By early 2014, passengers may be able to use certain electronic devices in airplane mode during takeoff and landing, according to a New York Times report. The publication's industry sources say that the Federal Aviation Administration may announce more lenient electronics policies later this year, allowing passengers to use "reading devices" during takeoff and landing -- while it's not clear which gadgets would qualify, cellphones would remain on the ban list. The FAA commissioned an industry group to study the issue of in-flight electronics use -- the team, which includes representatives from Amazon, Boeing, the CEA, FCC, and others, will announce the results of its study by July 31st.


The issue has support from key lawmakers as well. Senator Claire McCaskill is calling the FAA out on its authorization of pilots to use iPads in the cockpit and flight attendants to use devices of their own, while restricting passengers from reading books on e-readers -- "A flying copy of 'War and Peace' is more dangerous than a Kindle," she told the Times. And we'd have to agree. Until the FAA announces a policy revision, we all have no choice but to reluctantly comply with the ban, but with devices like Google Glass on the horizon, updated restrictions could not come too soon.


Source: The New York Times

Sunday, December 23, 2012

The Forgotten eMate 300—15 years later

Fifteen years ago, Apple released its first and only touchscreen laptop (so far), the often forgotten eMate 300. This translucent clamshell portable, which ran Apple’s Newton PDA operating system, represented a bold experiment in educational computing and a drastic departure from Apple’s traditional hardware design.

The machine’s colorful case, which later inspired the iMac and the iBook, launched a new era in Apple design—though few realized it at the time. In fact, few people could actually buy the rugged machine when it launched in March 1997, as Apple offered it for sale only through education channels.

Shrine of Apple

With a 25MHz ARM CPU, 1MB of RAM, and 2MB of flash memory for document storage (unusual at a time when most PDAs used battery-backed RAM), the eMate wasn’t made for heavy lifting. Instead, Apple designed it as a low-cost educational computer for children.

Indeed, the eMate was one of the cheapest computers Apple had ever made. Its $799 price (which is equivalent to about $1151 in today’s dollars when adjusted for inflation) made it seem like a steal compared to Apple’s flagship notebook at the time, the PowerBook 3400, which retailed for $4500 in its most bare-bones configuration (that’s about $6485 today, and it wasn’t even gold-plated).

Tucked into the eMate’s first product spec sheet is a brief tract that lays out the basics of a bold educational ideology. It’s slathered in marketing lingo (they called it a “Distributed Learning Environment”), but it’s there.

Essentially, Apple wanted to put a cheap, portable, rugged computer in the hands of every child. It wanted to make the device easy to use and interoperable in a world full of both Windows and Mac machines. And it wanted the eMate to be network friendly—both peer-to-peer (via IrDA transfers) and peer-to-Internet. Sound familiar?

One Laptop per ChildXO-1

Those are all features that would be replicated a decade later in the highly publicized One Laptop Per Child initiative that produced the rugged, portable XO-1 laptop.

Interestingly, the eMate 300 did not gain significant traction in the educational sector, but the very features that Apple designed to appeal to school administrators—low cost, ease of use, ruggedness, and long battery life among them—ended up appealing to the government market in ways that Apple did not expect.

For example, in 1997, the Largo, Florida police department announced plans to outfit 20 of its patrol cars with eMate 300s for wireless arrest reporting from the field. A news report from that time also mentions that the department was waiting for Apple to produce a less-colorful “business version” of the eMate (which never happened). And according to one Newton fan page, Australia was planning to replace all of its government PCs with eMates, but Apple pulled the plug on the entire Newton line before that could happen.

At the time of the eMate’s release, all of Apple’s desktop computers sported platinum gray cases, and its laptops came cloaked in charcoal gray. In the midst of that conservative color palette, Apple’s Newton division brought forth a translucent dark emerald green computer with playful curves, bulbous corners, and a prominent carrying handle.

Frankly, it looked like a toy, and for good reason: It was an educational product, and Apple designed it to appeal to children. Translucency worked well in that regard. According to the eMate’s primary enclosure designer, Thomas Meyerhoffer, Apple designed eMate’s translucency to evoke a sense of accessibility—in that one could see the unit’s interior components, and nothing would be hidden from the user.

Apple’s pre-Steve Jobs experiments with translucent plastics, especially in the eMate 300, proved to be very important to Apple’s fate. Without the eMate, there would have been no iMac—at least not what we recognize as the iconic early translucent models today.

Ralf PfeiferApple Newton MessagePad 2000

As a member of the Newton family, the eMate allowed users to draw or write (via handwriting recognition) with an included stylus on its 480-by-320 backlit grayscale LCD. It could run any software written for Newton OS 2.0, which also powered Apple’s handheld MessagePad PDA devices.

One of the eMate’s biggest strengths as a portable learning machine was its set of built-in applications included in 8MB of ROM. With a push of a button, users could call up an integrated office suite that included word processing, spreadsheet, and drawing capabilities.

Apple also offered NetHopper, a Newton-based Web browser, and a Eudora email client on CD-ROM (installable through a Mac connection) as a nod to its Internet capabilities. Users could add a modem or ethernet card to a PC Card slot on the side of the machine to hook up to the Net, but Apple did not include any network adapter in the box.

To this date, no sales records for the eMate have ever been released, but many believe that the machine, which was highly regarded by the press, had the potential to be a best-selling product if Apple had made it more widely available.

In September 1997, the eMate received a significant endorsement as a product with a “bright future” from an authority no less than Steve Jobs himself as part of an email to a customer. The about-to-be interim CEO clearly appreciated its vision and design, although the eMate, first announced in December 1996, originated from an Apple without Jobs.

Ultimately, Steve Jobs knew that Apple could only survive in that troubled time if it focused on its core business (the Macintosh), so the entire Newton line met its end in early 1998, much to the chagrin of Newton fans everywhere. The eMate died with it, but its legacy lives on. Its innovative visual design helped catalyze a new era of success for Apple, and its role as a low-cost learning machine for kids has now been fulfilled very well by the iPad.


View the original article here

 

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