Friday, February 24, 2012

First Firefox 6 build next week, Firefox 7 by May, and aurora channel introduced

Firefox 5, 6, 7 and release channels
Mozilla's Engineering Project Manager, Christian Legnitto, has detailed the release schedule for Firefox 5, 6 and 7. If all goes to plan, Firefox 6.0a1 will be released next week, April 12, and Firefox 7.0a1 in the middle of May. The final build of Firefox 5 should be released on June 21, exactly three months after the release of Firefox 4.

Along with the faster 6-week release cadence, Firefox's new Chrome-like release channels have also been given names and anticipated update frequencies. The most notable change is the introduction of a new alpha channel -- which is analogous to Chrome Canary -- that will be called 'aurora' and will update nightly. Aurora will be where fixes and features are tested, and either approved for Beta, or backed out to Central. Aurora will have a new icon, too.

The Nightly (mozilla-central) channel will remain unchanged in name and frequency, but it will gain a new 'nightly icon.' The Beta (mozilla-beta) channel will remain as-is, with new builds rolling out weekly. The Release (mozilla-release) channel will also remain as-is, with security and stability updates coming every 6 to 12 weeks.

It should be noted that the names (including 'aurora') are not necessarily final, but it's unlikely that they'll change. We're also awaiting the arrival of the new 'channel switching' technology, which should arrive in the next few days -- in time for the release of Firefox 6 aurora!

First Firefox 6 build next week, Firefox 7 by May, and aurora channel introduced originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 07 Apr 2011 05:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Computer Software ELECTRONIC DATA SYSTEMS

Monday, February 20, 2012

Renewable energy projects in California go unused

Millions of dollars in renewable energy projects intended to provide power to facilities in California's national parks and forests are sitting idle because of a years-long squabble with Southern California Edison.
A new $800,000 solar project at Death Valley National Park, photovoltaic panels at the state-of-the art visitors center at Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area and a solar power system at the U.S. Forest Service's new facility at Mono Lake are among dozens of taxpayer-funded projects in Southern California on hold as the federal agencies try to hash out an agreement with SCE to tie the projects to the state's electrical grid.
The apparent stumbling block involves contract restrictions imposed by federal law, but utilities elsewhere in California have signed similar agreements with the agencies with few problems or delays.

information database FACTSET RESEARCH SYSTEMS

Sand Trap is a fun and difficult physics maze game

Sand Trap
Sand Trap is one of those games that at first seem too hard to bother with, but when you try to stop playing it you discover you're hooked.

The goal is to get as much sand as you possibly can out of the maze and into the bucket at the bottom of the screen. You need to rotate your maze every which way to get the sand rolling around it. You then try to direct the sand to one of the exits of the maze, and hopefully into the bucket. It took me several tries to actually get sand into the bucket, but that might be due to the fact that I didn't even realize the bucket was there at first. Things improved significantly after that.

As you level up, the mazes get more complicated, with moving parts and other things making your life more difficult. Once you manage to get through all these obstacles and get enough sand into your bucket, you can move on.

As I mentioned, this is not an easy game, but it's highly addictive. The graphics remind me of some long lost game from the 80s, but this just proves that you don't need super graphics and crazy sound to make a game work. There's a soothing guitar track playing in the background and that's it, as far as I could hear, and you can enjoy it just as much with no sound at all.

If you like a fun physics challenge, don't miss out on this one!

Sand Trap is a fun and difficult physics maze game originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 04 Apr 2011 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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POW! Agent Hero: Fellows Friday with Suleiman Bakhit

Computer Hardware AUTODESK

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Engadget Podcast 281 - 02.17.2012

Call us loco, but after this, the 281st edition of the Engadget Podcast, we're excited about a future where desktop operating systems, mobile gaming and telecommunications platforms, and hoverboard interfaces converge into one new distinct product category. We're not sure exactly where in the Walmart it will sit, but we're sure they'll figure something out. They always do.

Host: Tim Stevens, Brian Heater
Guest: Sean Buckley
Producer: Trent Wolbe
Music: Orbital - Never

00:01:42 - The Engadget Show returns Saturday, February 18th with DJ Spooky and Google -- get a ticket to the taping!
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Engadget Podcast 281 - 02.17.2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Feb 2012 18:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Multimedia distribution mechanism PRICELINECOM

Gotham Bike Light Is Nearly Impossible To Steal, Looks Like A Gun Barrel Revolver’s Cylinder

By David Ponce Cycling in an urban environment, it’s not a bad idea to see where you’re going. Lights help but these tend to get stolen quite a bit. That’s why we like the The Defender bike light by Gotham Bicycle Defense. Not only does it look somewhat badass shaped like a gun’s barrel revolver’s [...]

Computer Software MICROS SYSTEMS

Saturday, February 18, 2012

PSA: Can your machine run Mountain Lion?

Mountain Lion
Ah, compatibility, she can be a cruel mistress, prone to leaving your favorite devices out in the cold and your wallet a few bills lighter. Apple's latest OS update, Mountain Lion, is no different. OS X 10.8 won't run on just any Mac, so, the question is, will it run on yours? Well, if you've got any machine from 2009 or newer the answer is yes. Older than that and things get a little bit shaky. iMacs are the most forgiving, with support starting on the mid-2007 models. Any Pro desktop from early 2008 on should be fine, while Xserves get cut off at early 2009 along with the Mac Mini. The original Air is already getting turned aside and you'll need a late 2008 model (or newer) for the update, while vanilla MacBooks are nearing total obsolescence as support starts with the aluminum models from 2008. Lastly, those of you rocking 15- or 17-inch MacBook Pros should be golden starting with late 2007 models. Oh, and any 13-inch Pro should be good to go.

PSA: Can your machine run Mountain Lion? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Feb 2012 10:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Home Server 2011 released to manufacturers

windows home server 2011 whs
Just a little under two months after its release candidate went live, Windows Home Server (WHS) 2011 has been finalized and released into the wild. The new version of Microsoft's slick, do-it-all server OS is a big step forward from its predecessor.

Built on the Windows Server 2008 R2 base, Home Server 2011 features a simpler dashboard, a better backup solution, dead simple remote access to your home computers, and Silverlight-powered remote media streaming. For a more detailed look at what's new in Windows Home Server 2011, you check out Microsoft's official breakdown.

Drive Extender, of course, didn't resurface for the final release of WHS 2011 and that's something a lot of power users are still pretty irked about. Even without Extender, Windows Home Server offers a boatload of useful functionality and might be a good fit for your home network. Manufacturers have already begun building hardware, so you should be able to pick up a device in the very near future.

An evaluation download for Windows Home Server 2011 will be made available in April -- we'll let you know when the links are ready.

Windows Home Server 2011 released to manufacturers originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 30 Mar 2011 08:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Friday, February 17, 2012

Apple adds a Text and Alerts tone Store in iTunes!

Apple has just released a new section that allows users to buy Text and Alert tones from iTunes!
The ringtones store has always been in iTunes but the alerts store is new.  You can get access to this by going to Settings, Sounds, Buy more Tones.
Ringt...

Read More... ADVANCED SEMICONDUCTOR ENGINEERING

Windows 8 wallpaper available to download, Jupiter and Twin UI spotted

windows 8 wallpaper
With Windows 8 milestone 3 now up for grabs for select Microsoft Connect partners, it's inevitable that leaked bits and pieces will start popping up around the Web. In fact, the first "official" wallpaper image from the still-brewing OS is already making the rounds.

As you can see, it's got a similar feel to the good ol' Windows 7 default background, but features a more subdued smattering of cerulean hues. Those of you who want to use the Windows 8 wallpaper on your current desktop can download it from our file dump.

A few other details have been revealed, too. According to ZDNet's source, the Windows 8 Jupiter libraries and Twin UI are starting to take shape -- though all that's been located thus far are "[various files] scattered throughout the OS" and the aptly-named twinui.dll.

Windows 8 wallpaper available to download, Jupiter and Twin UI spotted originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 31 Mar 2011 10:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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This week on the web

We had a quiet but highly productive week here at Opera HQ. For all of you Android users, we pushed out a couple of silent updates to Opera Mobile 11.5 which should fix some issues with devices running Honeycomb and Ice Cream Sandwich - particularly following an upgrade from Gingerbread. Now, there's really only one word for those kinds of improvements, and that's:

Sweet!

:)

(By the way, it does seem fairly certain that the next version of Android will be called "Jellybean." I am putting my money on "Krispy Kreme" for K.)

Meanwhile, out on the information superhighway, the three letters on everyone's lips this week were I.P.O. Facebook's filing for an initial public offering valued the company in the billions. That's dollars, BTW, not farm cash - which is not to say that all that stuff you have online isn't worth something in the quote-unquote real world.

Speaking of nutty stuff, a museum devoted to nonsense has just opened in Austria. Called the Nonseum, it is a celebration of unnecessary inventions and overcomplicated solutions to simple problems, such as a spoon that trims spaghetti overhang and a heatable garden gnome, among other great ideas. (Gives you a whole new perspective on patent trolls, doesn't it?).

To wrap up this week's report, I'm going to give you something to look forward to, though I'm not quite sure what to call it. Tee-TV? The technology is an eensy-little screen that could be worn on clothing. Though it's only about the size of a logo now, like most screens it will probably grow over time. One day, we'll all be walking billboards - and there will, most definitely, be an app for that.

Have a great weekend, everyone!

:)

IT professional NOVELL

Thursday, February 16, 2012

BBC 3D London Olympics plans include one live sporting event, daily highlights

The Beeb has finally detailed its plans for 3D broadcasts during the London 2012 Olympic Games this summer, and unfortunately for fans of the technology, the content available for live viewing will be pretty limited. The BBC's site lists the Opening / Closing ceremonies and the men's 100m dash for its experimental coverage... and that's it. At the end of each day a "highlights package" will be available, but we're still not sure what other sports will be included yet. This approach harkens back to NBC's 24 hour tape delayed HD broadcasts of 2004, and according to director Roger Mosey, is mostly due to limited capacity. If the BBC is using one of its HD channels for the free-to-air 3D broadcast, then it takes away an HD channel for another event at the same time, so the ceremonies have the advantage of not blacking out any other coverage. In the US, it's possible things could be different if 3D broadcasts are made available on a dedicated events channel as Versus nee NBC SportsTalk has done before, but we'll wait to hear what NBC has planned and hope Usain Bolt doesn't false start again.

BBC 3D London Olympics plans include one live sporting event, daily highlights originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Feb 2012 18:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBBC, Roger Mosey  | Email this | Comments

Enterprises IT ATandT

Mac OS X Lion Preview 2 released, introduces mega exciting leather bound iCal skin

This is one of those posts that could probably be condensed into a tweet: Apple has released the second Preview of Mac OS X 10.7 Lion. If you're running Preview 1, it looks like you'll first receive a small update via Software Update, and then you can download Preview 2 from the Mac App Store.

There has been some speculation that Apple is getting close to a release or Golden Master build, but judging by 9to5 Mac's initial findings there's definitely some way to go. The Golden Master will probably appear at, or just before, the Apple WWDC in June.

So far, it's looking like the only changes in Preview 2 are the leather bound iCal skin that you can see above, and the main iChat window now combines your AIM, Bonjour and Jabber contacts, like Adium. We're sure that more details will emerge throughout the day, though, and there's bound to be lots of invisible changes, too. We'll update this post when we find out more.

Mac OS X Lion Preview 2 released, introduces mega exciting leather bound iCal skin originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 31 Mar 2011 05:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sun Microsystems KONINKLIJKE KPN

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

You could have a tiltrotor Osprey in your driveway by 2016

The military, since it has bigger sticks than everyone else, always gets its hands on all the coolest toys before the rest of us do. Eventually, military tech does make its way into the civilian market, and in about five years, you’ll be able to buy your very own commuter-sized version of the V-22 Osprey

Multimedia distribution mechanism IOMEGA

What does your Opera look like?

This is joeblogs' Opera setup:

What does your Opera look like? There are so many beautiful, unique and personal version of Opera out there, and we'd like to see them all. Share a link in the comments.

Read More... PALM

Tools for Clean Energy Project Financing

Making affordable financing options available to as many people as possible is the key to stimulating widespread adoption of residential solar. That’s why Clean Power Finance offers affordable financing options for qualified installers and homeowners as well as our CPF Tools residential solar sales platform to simplify, streamline and speed up the permitting process.

computer network ELECTRONICS FOR IMAGING

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

The Super Soaker Lightning Storm Is A Water-Blasting Tommy Gun

Nostalgia nothing, where were badass Super Soakers like this when I was a kid? More »

Related News NETWORK APPLIANCE

Google investing $94 million in Sacramento-area solar plants

Google announced that it's investing $94 million in solar panel farms in the Sacramento area. The money will go toward four photovoltaic, or PV, panel farms built by San Francisco-based Recurrent Energy, owned by tech-giant Sharp, and will help fuel the project alongside funding from investment firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., said Axel Martinez, Google's assistant treasurer, in a company blog post Tuesday. The investment pushes Google's portfolio of clean energy investments to more than $915 million, $880 million of which has been invested since January, Martinez said. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Recurrent and Google did not disclose how much Kohlberg Kravis Roberts was investing in the project.

Enterprises IT UNISYS

Solar Thermal (Hot Water) – The Other Type Of Solar

Just like PV solar panels, solar thermal systems are tax credit eligible on both state and federal levels. And, just as there are utility rebates for installing a new, more energy efficient water tank, most power companies also have special incentives for installing solar thermal, as high as $450 dollars per solar thermal installation!

Best Practices ASUSTEK COMPUTER

Monday, February 13, 2012

Google Voice Search learns Latin American Spanish, Indonesian, and Malaysian

google voice search
Google Voice Search has just introduced localizations for Latin America, Indonesia and Malaysia, enabling native language search for hundreds of millions of users.

Google's official blog post offers some interesting insights into the process of collecting and analyzing the speech data needed to expand support. Thousands of hours were spent gathering voice samples and choosing key regional accents to analyze, and International Program Manager Linne Ha is clearly very appreciative of the Google users who helped the company complete the expansion. Without an enthusiastic base of users to lend a hand, Google Voice Search's polyglot powers would have been nearly impossible to deliver.

Google Voice Search learns Latin American Spanish, Indonesian, and Malaysian originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 31 Mar 2011 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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computer network PROGRESS SOFTWARE

Daily Crunch: Finish Line Edition

Thanko Sells Underwater Video Camera Goggles The Pringle’s Can Antenna Is Now 10 This Wood Bike Looks Like It Came Out Of Minecraft – In A Good Way Laser Research Company TeraDiode Starting Humble, But Hopes To Make Ray Guns Soon Card-Case Speaker Is A Speaker Like A Card Case

Read More... MANHATTAN ASSOCIATES

Apple to announce the iPhone 5 on October 4? [Report]

According to AllThingsD, Apple is set to present their next keynote on October 4th! AllThingsD stated that the next Apple media event will occur on Tuesday, October 4th. That’s the day Apple is currently expected to hold its next big media event, according to sources close to the situation, where the tech giant will unveil [...]

Best Practices ELECTRONIC ARTS

Sunday, February 12, 2012

There’s someone on the wing…

There’s someone on the wing, some……thing! Actually it’s a new VFX test I’ve always wanted to do involving an airplane interior.  So yesterday we shot this plate of Sam & Tino on the greenscreen with a slow dolly movement. But, while enjoying the in-fight entertainment, they see something outside.  Don’t worry it’s not snakes, but [...]

Programming Language SRA INTERNATIONAL

Solar Photovoltaic Companies Shifting From Focus on Market Share Growth to Profitability in 2012

Planned Production Revised Downward; Market Growth Shifting Away from Europe, NPD Solarbuzz Reports

Read More... DELL

Gillmor Gang 02.10.12 (TCTV)

Gillmor Gang test patternThe Gillmor Gang — John Borthwick, Robert Scoble, Kevin Marks, and Steve Gillmor — took a leisurely stroll on a late winter Friday afternoon. The subjects: Path and the Address Book, SuperBowl dynamics, and 21st Century Fox, aka the new television/social media hybrid model. It may seem like all stories are self-referential in this time of trending to zero barrier to entry, but as with many realtime transitions, it's hard to see the forest for the trees until you get enough altitude. With 98 million simulsharing social media out of 119 million in realtime, the uber address book that's being built will absorb all the big players including Facebook and Twitter.

Related Stats MANHATTAN ASSOCIATES

Two People Are Dead Because They Unfriended This Man's Adult Daughter on Facebook

A Tennessee man, Marvin Potter (on the right), is in police custody tonight, charged with two counts of first degree murder in the shooting deaths of a couple who had unfriended his 30-year-old daughter on the popular social site. More »

computer network DIRECTV GROUP

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Daily Crunch: Bike Path Edition

Quick Bike Hack: Put A Seatbelt Inside Your Tires To Resist Punctures Hands-On With The Creative ZEN Style M300 The Bracketron All-Weather Soft Case Bike Protects Your Smartphone During Your Ride The anaPad Is A White Board And Wooden iPad Clone For Kids RIM, You’re Done Here

Computer Software KONINKLIJKE KPN

Don’t Call Me a Douchebag

fearI was once backstage at a news show. Six  people were on a box in the screen screaming at each other about the economy. The producer was laughing. He leaned over to me and said, “the whole idea of this is to fill the time between one commercial segment and the next.” Every day they want to scare me. Greece is going to suddenly disappear. Or have some sort of debt “contagion” that will spread across the Atlantic. Everyone is a “contagion” expert. Just like we were all experts on “Avian Flu”. Whatever happened to that one? Did anyone die of Avian flu?

IT professional LINEAR TECHNOLOGY

Ask DLS: Cross-platform multiplayer games that work on Android and iOS

askdls
Here's one for our knowledgeable commenters: I recently bought my girlfriend an iPad. I, on the other hand, own an Android device. And now we're looking for games we can play using both devices.

There's no dearth of multiplayer games either for Android or for iOS. But finding multiplayer games that can cross the platform boundary is an entirely different matter.

Jay recently posted Words with Friends which is one such game. It's actually an ideal example, because it's turn-based so you don't necessarily both have to be next to your device at the same time (great for long-distance gaming).

But what other examples are there? What multiplayer games are there that let iOS users play with Android users?

[Why am I now humming 'Ebony and Ivory'? -Ed]

Ask DLS: Cross-platform multiplayer games that work on Android and iOS originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 14:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Computer Software QUANTA COMPUTER

7 Things You Didn't Know About Steve Jobs From the Guy Who Designed the Original Mac

You may not know him, but that guy on the right is one of the most influential industrial designers in history, Apple's first Jonny Ive. He designed the original Apple Macintosh, a model that influenced generations to come and defined the all-in-one personal computer. It's a classic that sits today at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. More »

Sun Microsystems SYNTAXBRILLIAN

Friday, February 10, 2012

Opera Talks: Opera Mini and Data Compression

One of the things that makes Opera Mini the world's most popular mobile browser is its ability to compress data. Of course, you know that it saves you time and money - but do you know how data compression really works?

As much as we'd like to think it's all done with a wave of a magic software wand, it turns out that data compression is not one single action so much as a set of processes that preps content from the web and makes it faster and easier to consume on your phone.

Martin Nilsson, Solution Architect for Opera Mini, explains how Opera Mini is able to serve up so much internet tastiness.

Martin, when did the idea for data compression in Opera Mini first come about?

The first project Opera worked on that involved compression of mobile data was the Opera Mobile Accelerator (editorial note: launched in 2004, this was a subscription-based service that cost EUR 12 for 3 months of service!). That project was discontinued and we started working on Opera Mini instead. The idea with Opera Mini was to make a browser for (at the time) browserless phones.

How does Opera Mini work today?

Unlike ordinary web browsers, Opera Mini fetches all content through a proxy server that reformats web pages into a format more suitable for small screens. A page is compressed, then delivered to the phone in a markup language called OBML (Opera Binary Markup Language). This compression process makes transfer time about two to three times faster and the pre-processing also increases compatibility with web pages not designed for mobile phones.

What do the servers do in terms of reformatting?

Mobile devices differ in many ways to desktop devices. Given the smaller screen size, different text handling may be used to improve readability. Also between mobile devices there are those with only numeric keyboard, those with QWERTY keyboard, with D-pad, stylus, touch etc. Many things that work on desktop don't work on mobile, especially when there is no mouse pointer to scroll frames or do mouseover actions. To solve these many small usability issues, tweaks need to be made.

What happens when the data gets compressed?

First of all, and this is very important, data compression doesn't actually help very much in terms of speed. What matters is the latency, the time from the user action until the first response is seen. Some of the primary methods for reducing latency include:

  • Our own client-server protocol that keeps a connection established for sending requests. There is a 20-30% end user benefit in terms of latency.
  • Since we use a single-request - single-response protocol we minimize the usage of the high latency radio network and instead fetch all the inlines, stylesheets etc. from our fast servers.
  • We connect directly to some content partners like Facebook and Google, and even have other companies' web servers in our server rooms so that the latency from our transcoders relative to the volume of content is as small as possible.

There are also several different types of compression and data reduction used in Opera Mini.

  • The servers keep information about the clients, so this information only needs to be sent from the client to the server once, instead of in every request.
  • Cookies are managed entirely on the server side, so that data never have to go back and forth at all.
  • Images are scaled to better fit the display size of the device to make them as size efficient as possible while making the resulting web page as good looking as the end user quality settings permit.

Finally, the resulting data is compressed in different ways. Normally we send text first, followed by links, essential layout elements and finally all graphics. We focus also on sending data where the user will start reading before other parts of the page.

Given that all the data has to pass through Opera's servers, what about security issues?

Opera Mini is like a desktop computer. The browser sits in the computer while the user looks at the screen. In Opera Mini the browser sits on our servers while the user is looking at the page in their handset. We know that the success of Opera Mini depends on us being able to run the servers securely. So far we have not had any incidents.

Are Opera Mini servers all in Norway?

There are some in Norway, but we have servers at multiple locations, where it makes sense from an economic and performance perspective. One example is our Iceland data center, which sits right between US and Europe, and benefits from geothermal energy.

computer network NINTENDO

Heads Up: Google Goggles Could Be A (Virtual) Reality

Google X, Google’s secret think tank, has been lining their stables with electronic engineers who specialize in wearable computers, including the now infamous wearables tech PhD Richard DuVaul who left Apple to join Google. Not content to merely pace Apple’s innovation with computerized wrist watches Google has been prototyping futuristic glasses with a screen in [...]

IT professional MENTOR GRAPHICS

Nokia N9 spotted running Ice Cream Sandwich, dual-boot in the works

Nokia N9 spotted running Ice Cream Sandwich, dual-boot in the works
This above is the first glimpse of Android 4.0 running on the Nokia N9. Yes, it looks like Ice Cream Sandwich is in being ported to the company's iconic handset by no other than Alexey Roslyakov and team NITDroid -- the folks who previously put Android on the Nokia N900. The project, which is still in its early stages, made significant progress after recently overcoming a framebuffer driver/HAL hurdle, allowing ICS to be displayed on the phone. In addition, a dual-boot solution is in the works letting Meego and Android 4.0 coexist on the device. We certainly can't wait to experience using Ice Cream Sandwich on some of the hottest white hardware around. Can you?

Nokia N9 spotted running Ice Cream Sandwich, dual-boot in the works originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Feb 2012 06:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Steve Troughton-Smith (Twitter), Netbooknews  |  sourceAlexey Roslyakov (Twitter), talk.maemo.org  | Email this | Comments

Related News AMPHENOL

Vonage Mobile for Android available now in the Android Market

Android Central

That other VoIP company, Vonage, have launched their new mobile offering with Skype firmly in their crosshairs. The app listing in the Android Market even goes as far as name-dropping the Microsoft owned competitor, while advertising their own service including free worldwide texts and calls.

Vonage Mobile promises high definition audio calls over WiFi, 3G and 4G worldwide, and cheap-rate international calls to people not using the application. You don't have to be a current Vonage customer to take advantage of the service either. Credit can be applied to your account via your Android Market account and it uses your existing phone number and contacts list. Any of your existing contacts using Vonage Mobile will be indicated, leaving it straight forward to take advantage of free communication. 

As a launching offer, all calls to any phone in the US, Canada or Puerto Rico are free from anywhere in the world for a limited time. Terms and conditions naturally apply to this so be sure to check them out first. You'll find a handy promo video after the break, along with download links if this looks like something you want to try for yourselves.  

read more



computer network LAWSON SOFTWARE

Android Central Podcast - Live!

Android Central Podcast

Special time! (Now!) Special guest (Paul O'Brien!) Join us!

Watch the Android Central Podcast!



Sun Microsystems FACTSET RESEARCH SYSTEMS

Four Surprises from the Steve Jobs FBI File

Gawker has unearthed Steve Jobs' FBI file for us all to lay eyes on. Contained within are things most of us knew (or at least suspected). He had enemies? Duh. Drugs? Of course! But there are a few gems that caught our eye. More »

IT professional LIBERTY GLOBAL

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Apple announcing iPad 3 first week of March? Anonymous sources think so

Is the long, treacherous wait for the iPad 3 nearly at an end? That's what anonymous sources tell All Things D. The site caught wind that an Apple event next month will host the announcement of the company's latest tablet. The event is said to be slated for the first week of March at that popular Apple haunt, the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco -- and seeing as how last year's event was held on March 2nd, that timing doesn't seem all that crazy to us. As for an actual release date, said sources are a bit less chatty.

Apple announcing iPad 3 first week of March? Anonymous sources think so originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Feb 2012 09:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAll Things D  | Email this | Comments

Sun Microsystems FIRST SOLAR

How to Rearrange icons on iPad

Response to a reader question on jakeludington.com about how to rearrange icons on an iPad.
Views: 4691
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Time: 01:02 More in Science & Technology

Enterprises IT INTUIT

Aquarium for Google TV [Google TV app review]

Aquarium for Google TV

Most people have at least one TV in their house, and while you're not watching it it's just an ugly, black window.  If you're the proud owner of a Google TV unit of one sort or another, it doesn't have to be this way.  I stumbled across this one in our forums, and I'm glad I did.  It's called Aquarium for Google TV, and it does exactly what you would think it should do -- displays an aquarium scene on your television screen.  It's serene, it's beautiful, and it sure beats an ugly black box hanging on the wall of your living room.

You have the choice of five different scenes, ranging from goldfish and a whimsically bubbly castle, to a computer generated bit of magic that has fish big and small, even sharks.  You can choose to play some soft new-age style background music while the app is running, or just leave it silent.  Unfortunately, and this is the only drawback I can think of, you can't play Google Music in the background while running the app.  I've a feeling that this is a Google TV limitation, because I've not run across any applications that will allow it.  So no pretty fish on the screen while Foghat roars through the speakers for Jerry.  I'll get over it, and I think the wife is sort of happy about that.  

To be clear -- this app is great.  We usually have it running here at château Jeri, and even the dog likes to watch it play.  But I want to take a minute and mention that the developers are just as awesome as the app.  This is the app I was trying to load when my Market account hung.  I fought with Google Wallet, I fought with Logitech, I fought with everyone involved except the developer.  I shot off a quick email with my order number and he sent me a copy to sideload and use until I got everything all straightened out.  Guys like the folks from Arrowhead Technologies make me wish I could give an app more than five stars.  

If you have a Google TV set top box or television, you'll want to give this one a look.  You can find it in the Android Market for just a buck.  We've got video action and a download link after the break.  

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Programming Language NIKON