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Super Bowl, Mortgage Crisis Combine for Arizona Mega-StoryAssociated Content, CO - 2 minutes agoSomeone is listing a "last minute cancellation" at their condo for $600 total, saying "lucky for you we're not gre
Blabbermouth.net, NY -These Swedes have been touring tirelessly (aside from a little holiday gluttony) since the release of "Sworn To A Great Divide" last October. ...

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Andrey Golub :: Voice Mobility Introduces Google Apps: the same change that Salesforce.com once brought to the CRM market

Voice Mobility Introduces Google Apps™

UCN Vmerge is the first UC solution for Google Apps in the Workplace and Campus Markets

Vancouver, BC, CANADA – February 14, 2008Voice Mobility International, Inc. (TSX: VMY, OTCBB: VMII and FWB: VMY), a Vancouver-based developer and provider of carrier and enterprise enhanced messaging solutions, today announced its new Google Apps™ functionality, a first in the enterprise market.

Voice Mobility’s UCN Vmerge is now integrated with the Google Apps solution suite to provide workplace and campus customers full collaboration functionality. The Google Apps suite includes Gmail, Google Talk, Google Calendar, Google Docs, Contacts, Mobile apps and other collaboration tools all using the workplace or campus domain. UCN Vmerge adds unified communications to complete messaging, collaboration, calendaring and presence functionality.

Enterprise clients want the ability to enable their enterprise voice and fax communications to work seamlessly with Gmail. UCN Vmerge allows full on-premise or hosted enterprise PBX integration with a hosted personalized Gmail service. Industry analysts have calculated that the average IT manager spends 75% of their budget on infrastructure maintenance, leaving a small amount for new technology. With Google Apps, free or premium service combined with the cost-effective UCN Vmerge solutions, IT managers can roll out new technology to keep pace with consumer technology. 

“By integrating UCN Vmerge with Google Apps, workplace and campus customers have price-effective options for collaboration functionality,” said Mike Seeley, Voice Mobility’s VP of Global Sales. “This is like deploying a full Microsoft® Exchange® server, Active Directory® and Office Communication Server® at a fraction of the cost. No longer are customers forced to utilize expensive on-premise solutions from providers like Microsoft for collaboration functionality." 

"The market has asked for this type of solution and Voice Mobility is proud to be the first to bring it to the market. This new functionality will bring the same change to the workplace and campus markets that Salesforce.com® brought to the CRM market. Combine this functionality with our mobile applications and we can deliver unified communications on all Symbian™, Windows Mobile® or Blackberry® devices.” 

UCN Vmerge enables users to access voice, fax and email messages directly from their Gmail account and synchronize all messages across all their devices — in essence, gluing the Google Apps to the enterprise telephony infrastructure. For example, if an email is heard via the user’s mobile device, it will be show as ‘read’ in their Gmail account. Other functionality enables users to:

  • Send faxes directly from their Gmail account;
  • Receive voice and fax messages in their Gmail account;
  • Record and deposit office conversations in their Gmail account;
  • Manage live calls from their desktop;
  • Click-to-dial internal and external numbers from any Google application;
  • Synchronize call logs;
  • Import Google Contacts into UCN Vmerge for remote access;
  • Utilization of least cost routing available from the enterprise PBX;

As is standard with all Voice Mobility’s UCN solutions, included are message waiting indication and message notifications, mobile workforce integration and offline access to the user’s inbox. Our next UCN Vmerge release will offer PBX presence integration with Google Talk and other exciting features. 

The combined collaboration suite is easy to set up and manage: Google Apps is installed in six easy steps, and UCN Vmerge is compatible with the majority of PBX and Centrex solutions in the market.

n most cases, one day is all it takes for a certified Voice Mobility technician to install the UCN Vmerge product with flexible training and support options available. Workplace or campus customers also have the choice between purchasing the UCN Vmerge solution outright or selecting managed or hosted solutions from Voice Mobility and its certified partners.

For more information about Voice Mobility’s product line or how to purchase Voice Mobility solutions, please contact one of our sales representatives.

For Immediate Release

http://www.voicemobility.com/News/14Feb08news.html

Team Bruno Wins Dance War
For nine singers and dancers, it all comes down to tonight. Zack, Kelsey, Lacey, Phillip, Bradley, Chris, Qis, Mariel, and Elizabeth -- otherwise known as Team Bruno and Team Carrie Ann -- have been working tirelessly for weeks just to get to tonight, the season finale of Dance War: Bruno ...
Samsung M520 Slim Slider Unveiled
Sprint today announced the Samsung M520, a new slim slider that lets users access the web, find local restaurants, watch live television, download their favorite songs, send text messages or use GPS to find their way home. Offering multi-tasking capabilities, customers can play music in background mode while also using the phone for text messaging, playing games or surfing the Internet. Operating on Sprint's broadband network, the M520 provides access to Sprint multimedia content, including: - S...
Samsung SPH-M520
Samsung SPH-M520

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Samsung SPH-M520 Photo 1Samsung SPH-M520 Photo 2
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- View Specs

Sprint today announced the Samsung M520, a new slim slider that lets users access the web, find local restaurants, watch live television, download their favorite songs, send text messages or use GPS to find their way home.

Offering multi-tasking capabilities, customers can play music in background mode while also using the phone for text messaging, playing games or surfing the Internet. Operating on Sprint's broadband network, the M520 provides access to Sprint multimedia content, including:

- Sprint Navigation, powered by Telenav, with GPS-enabled audio and visual turn-by-turn driving directions, one-click traffic rerouting and more than 10 million local listings
- Live Search for Sprint, by Microsoft, gives voice-enabled access to directory information on-the-go, GPS-enabled directions, interactive maps and one-touch click to call access
- Sprint Music Store allowing users to browse and wirelessly download full-length songs directly to their phone from a selection of more than 1.8 million songs for just 99 cents each
- Sprint TV with more than 50 channels of live and on-demand video and audio
- Sprint Exclusive Entertainment (SEE), made-for-mobile sports and entertainment video programming network

The M520 is integrated with basics including web access, SMS voice and text messaging, Phone as Modem, picture caller ID, Wireless Backup and a microSD slot supporting up to 4 GB of memory (64 MB card enclosed). Additional features include stereo Bluetooth with audio caller ID that lets users identify callers with their voice while they listen to music and a 1.3-megapixel camera with 2x digital zoom and camcorder functionality.

The Samsung M520 is now available in all Sprint retail channels starting at $49.99 with a $50 mail-in rebate and 2-year contract.

- Samsung M520 Specs


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CLEAR Registered Traveler System To Improve; Airport Security Competitors Coming!

In my past post, Using CLEAR To Clear Airport Security -- This Is Efficient?, I covered what a joke it was that after being biometrically verified as myself, I still had to show the TSA a picture idea. In an email today from CLEAR, it sounds like that hassle is going away -- along with other promised improvements. In writing this up, I was also amazed to discover that competing registered traveler programs will be coming.

From the newsletter:

We have persuaded TSA to drop what we considered the illogical requirement that Clear members need to present a photo identification along with their biometrically-secure Clear cards to pass through security. When this change is implemented, you will no longer need to present a separate photo ID. Instead, the agency has now agreed that it will allow us to place your digital photos (which we captured when you enrolled) on your Clear cards. This is a practical compromise; we'll simply be issuing you a new card with your photo on it in the coming weeks, at our expense, so you won't have to use a second ID. (However, until then please remember to bring that other photo ID.)

Now if only I could convince CLEAR of the illogical requirement that I carry a card with me when I have always in my possession my eyes and fingers, which they use to verify that I'm me.

Click to continue reading...

Separating Web Spam from Quality Content - What are the Metrics?

Posted by randfish

Let's try a little excercise...

Common features of spam domains include:

  • Long domain names
  • .info, .cc, .us and other cheap, easy to grab TLDs
  • Short registration period (1 year, maybe 2)
  • High ratio of ad blocks to content
  • Javascript redirects from initial landing pages
  • Use of common, high-commercial value spam keywords like "mortgage," "poker," "texas hold 'em," "porn," "student credit cards," and related terms
  • Many links to other low quality, spam sites
  • Few links to high quality, trusted sites
  • High keyword frequencies and keyword densities
  • Small amounts of unique content
  • Very few direct visits
  • Very few links sent out in (non-spam) email to the site
  • Registered to people/entities not associated with trusted sites
  • Not frequently registered with services like Yahoo! Site Explorer, Google Webmaster Central or Live Webmaster Tools
  • Rarely have short, high value domain names
  • Often contain many keyword-stuffed subdomains
  • More likely to have longer domain names
  • More likely to contain multiple hyphens in the domain name
  • Less likely to have links from trusted sources
  • Less likely to have SSL Security certificates
  • Less likely to be in directories like DMOZ, Yahoo!, Librarian's Internet Index, etc.
  • Unlikely to have any significant quantity of branded searches
  • Unlikely to be bookmarked in services like My Yahoo!, Del.icio.us, Faves.com, etc.
  • Unilkely to get featured in social voting sites like Digg, Reddit, Yahoo! Buzz, StumbleUpon,  etc.
  • Unlikely to have channels on YouTube, communities on Facebook or links from Wikipedia
  • Unlikely to be mentioned on major news sites (either with or without link attribution)
  • Unlikely to register with Google/Yahoo!/MSN Local Services
  • Unlikely to have a legitimate physical address/phone number on the website 
  • Likely to have the domain associated with emails on blacklists
  • Often contain a large number of snippets of "duplicate" content found elsewhere on the web
  • Unlikely to contain unique content in the form of PDFs, PPTs, XLSs, DOCs, etc.
  • Frequently feature commercially focused content
  • Many levels of links away from highly trusted websites
  • Rarely contain privacy policy and copyright notice pages
  • Rarely listed in Better Business Bureau's Online Directory
  • Rarely contains high grade level text content (as measured by metrics like Fleisch-Kincaid Reading Level)
  • Rarely have small snippets of text quoted on other websites and pages
  • Cloaking based on user-agent or IP address is common
  • Rarely contain paid analytics tracking software
  • Rarely have online or offline marketing campaigns
  • Rarely have affilliate link programs pointing to them
  • Less likely to have .com or .org extensions
  • Almost never have .mil, .edu or .gov extensions
  • Rarely have links from domains with .edu or .gov extensions
  • Almost never have links from domains with .mil extensions
  • Rarely receive high quantities of monthly visits
  • Rarely have visits lasting longer than 30 seconds
  • Rarely have visitors bookmarking their domains in the browser
  • Unlikely to buy significant quantities of PPC ad traffic
  • Rarely have banner ad media buys
  • Likely to have links to a significant portion of the sites and pages that link to them
  • Extremely unlikely to be mentioned or linked-to in scientific research papers
  • Unlikely to use expensive web technologies (Microsoft Server & Coding Products that Require a Licensing Fee)
  • Likely to be registered by parties who own a very large number of domains
  • Unlikely to attract significant return traffic
  • More likely to contain malware, viruses or spyware (or any automated downloads)

For high quality content domains, the opposite is true (at least, for a good percentage of these). Now think about the sites you're building - which features apply to them? What could you do differently to be more like the "high quality" category and less like the "spam"?

BTW - Love to hear your take on features you think are common to spam, or to high quality sites.


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Mpowerplayer Users Reach 12 Million Mobile Games Played

Mpowerplayer, the leading provider of online mobile game trial and merchandising for the wireless industry, announced that it has surpassed a milestone of 12 million mobile game demos played by over one million consumers. This rapidly expanding audience of worldwide mobile gamers has emphatically embraced Mpowerplayer?s PC-based try and buy storefront solution.

?We?ve brought the iTunes approach to mobile gaming,? said CEO Michael Powers. ?Now everyone can easily find and try mobile games right from the comfort of their PC.?

Most mobile consumers? exposure to mobile games is limited by short text descriptions, occasional screen shots, and slow browsing on their cell phones. Analysts agree that poor discovery and hassle-prone consumer experiences continue to hamper industry growth.

With Mpowerplayer, consumers browse and play mobile games on their PC prior to purchase. Users can share their favorite content with friends via email and the web.

?With unsurpassed ease of discovery and hands-on consumer interactivity, we remove the biggest obstacle to growing the industry,? Powers said. ?We unleash the market for mobile games.?

Blackberry Losing Business Customers to iPhone?
During the design process of the new iPhone, Steven Jobs approached business smart phone users directly and asked them what they would need in an iPhone for them to switch. There were several responses, but more than any other it was the desire for immediate and simple syncing with Microsoft Outlook. Push email was and is [...]

During the design process of the new iPhone, Steven Jobs approached business smart phone users directly and asked them what they would need in an iPhone for them to switch.

There were several responses, but more than any other it was the desire for immediate and simple syncing with Microsoft Outlook. Push email was and is a critical make it or break it issue with business customers who need to be able to retrieve their email on their phone and on the fly, without hassle.

Apple answered with just such a push email program that works with Outlook and that, combined with Apple’s new App store, has even die hard RIM customers considering switching to the more modern, flashier iPhone.

Consider that HSBC is considering ending their relationship with RIM and opting instead to transition their workers to iPhones. This deal, if it happens, will result in a bulk order of up to 200,000 iPhones, perhaps the largest single purchase of the revolutionary handset to date.

In addition to getting a great sale, HSBC’s decision to move to the iPhone would go far in shifting the public’s perception of the iPhone as a business smart phone.

One of RIM’s challenges is that its application programming interface (API’s), are not only outdated but are not fully disclosed to would-be third party developers, making it difficult to create exciting applications.

This stands in stark contrast to the Apple model, in which developers are provided all the tools they need to produce fully functional applications that get attention. Bottom line: Apple currently is able to allow for applications to come to market faster than RIM.

RIM’s Blackberry line has long dominated both business and government sectors, but if they wish to retain, indeed grow, such market share, they will have to become far more nimble in the release of new products.

Come on RIM. Get the Bold and Thunder out there and see if you have what it takes to stand toe to toe with the new and improved iPhone.

Fix Your SSL Setup Or Lose Business
For a long time if your ssl cert was jacked up users would be displayed a popup warning and continue what they were doing. Firefox has taken a waaaaaaaaaay more intrusive approach to this and now displays a server error like page for misconfiguration servers/certs. I had quickmarked my AdSense account url as https://google.com/adsense and [...]

For a long time if your ssl cert was jacked up users would be displayed a popup warning and continue what they were doing. Firefox has taken a waaaaaaaaaay more intrusive approach to this and now displays a server error like page for misconfiguration servers/certs.

I had quickmarked my AdSense account url as https://google.com/adsense and when I just went there I saw this:

Google Error

Then I retried it a few seconds later and it was ok. Not sure if it was a FireFox error or something on Googles side but 1 thing is for sure that new Firefox error page is no joke and will cost people business if they see it.

L8r is Future Mail with a Business Model
L8r is a new service that lets users create an email and have it delivered at a specific time in the future. It’s similar to the popular site FutureMe where anyone can write a simple letter to themselves or a friend and have that letter sent by email sometime in the future, for you know, [...]

L8rL8r is a new service that lets users create an email and have it delivered at a specific time in the future. It’s similar to the popular site FutureMe where anyone can write a simple letter to themselves or a friend and have that letter sent by email sometime in the future, for you know, fun. But what L8r has done is combined this idea of sending an email at a later date with email reminders and a focus on Getting Things Done. (Well, if I put it that way, it sounds more like a basic reminder service) L8r suggests using the service for things like sending out birthday emails, reminding yourself to buy flowers on your anniversary, setting personal goals, and impressing your boss by “sending” an email late at night.

Signing up with L8r will allow you to have three pending emails at any time for free, but if you need to send any more than that, it will cost you. You can purchase 10 emails for $1.99, 200 emails for $9.99, and 1,000 emails for $24.99. When you run out, you’ll be switched back to the free plan. Now, you may be wondering, why pay for L8r when you can send emails in the future with a service like FutureMe for free? Paid users of L8r get more features like file attachments, the ability to send HTML email, unlimited pending emails, and SSL security. L8r will also get rid of that annoying “sent later with l8r” message at the bottom of your messages.

L8r Messages

What I like about L8r is that you can create email drafts and view pending and sent email in the messages area just like you would a normal email client. The benefit of this is that you can keep record of sent mail and fix any mistakes you have made in a pending email before it gets sent out. L8r will also send you an email when a message cannot be delivered and put it in the “undelivered” tab. This way, if you sent a message to an email address that doesn’t exist or if someone’s mail server is down, you can find out what email didn’t make it and send again. Another feature is the ability to send an email to more than one person. You just separate multiple email addresses with a comma in the “to” field and L8r will send to each recipient.

Compose Future Mail in L8r

Even though L8r isn’t anything all that new when compared to email reminders (except that it sends up to five years in the future), I think it’s a pretty neat service. I can see it being helpful for people that use reminders in their daily workflow and need more than basic text messages. You can have three pending emails at any time for free and get extras like HTML mail, attachments, and SSL when you pay for more. Something L8r may also want to consider is allowing users to send recurring messages to themselves for repeating tasks and personal goals. I also ran into a couple minor problems. First, when editing an email, the time did not offset properly from its original set time. Also, when trying to buy more email credits, L8r directed me to a PayPal checkout for Netherlands users and I couldn’t make a purchase. (Maybe not such a minor problem) Otherwise, everything ran well and future emails that I sent out arrived on average 2-3 minutes after my set time.

As a last note, another service similar to L8r and FutureMe is FutureMail which allows you to send email in the future as a note or reminder to yourself. FutureMail also has this neat concept of a “FutureMail Blog” where you get a public stream of your future messages and an RSS feed to share with friends.

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Tags: l8r, future, mail, email, reminders, gtd,
Track Your Expenses with BudgetPulse
BudgetPulse is a new financial management service in closed beta that aims to simplify the way you manage your money and track budgets. It allows you to manage multiple accounts and track income, expenses, assets, bills, and more. Additionally, BudgetPulse lets you set goals which assists you in tracking and recording how much money you [...]

BudgetPulseBudgetPulse is a new financial management service in closed beta that aims to simplify the way you manage your money and track budgets. It allows you to manage multiple accounts and track income, expenses, assets, bills, and more. Additionally, BudgetPulse lets you set goals which assists you in tracking and recording how much money you spend over certain durations of time. (weeks, months, years, etc.)

If you’re looking for a financial application with all the usual Web 2.0 design elements, BudgetPulse may be the service for you. You’ve got your gradients and reflections, Ajax calls with every action, and of course, neat JavaScript slider effects. I can’t say I’m a fan of applications that over do it with Ajax, but enough about that and let’s get started. Logging in to BudgetPulse will direct you to the Dashboard showing a brief overview of your financial situation. You can see each of your accounts and their balances on the left as well as upcoming expenses and expense categories that are close to going over budget in the middle. BudgetPulse also aggregates financial news from top financial news sources like Google and Yahoo! which can help you plan your spending and budgets accordingly. You can also search through all of your transactions using the search form on the right column.

BudgetPulse Dashboard

To get an account up and running, head over to the accounts area in the tracking section. You can add an account and set its opening balance, then start adding expenses, sources of income, and recurring payments like bills. BudgetPulse also allows you to make a money transfer from one account to another like real banking. Additionally, you can categorize each transaction you add to an account so BudgetPulse can later group the transactions and base them against your budget goals. Expect to type out the category every time you add a transaction though as BudgetPulse does not pre-populate your list of your categories for you.

BudgetPulse Budgets

As you’ve probably guessed, BudgetPulse helps you create and track budgets on the expenses your make. It groups up each expense by the categories you create and allows you to set a specific budget amount to an expense category. So, for example, if I were to add a couple transactions with the category, “entertainment”, BudgetPulse will show that category in the budgets area and allow me to set a budget amount to it. It will then display a simple bar that compares how much I have actually spent on entertainment and what I have budgeted. At default, it bases the data on a months time, but you can set a date range at the top.

BudgetPulse GraphsAfter getting some data into BudgetPulse, you can view charts and summaries on your financial activity. The charts are especially useful because just seeing your expenses visually can be a real eye-opener and help you better plan for the future. There are three different charts: Expense allocation (pie chart), monthly expenses shown by day (line graph), and monthly expenses shown by month (bar graph). The BudgetPulse summary section allows you to view each transaction category and narrow down into each category showing totals of the last four months and the overall difference of your income and expenses.

With many other personal finance services out there, where does BudgetPulse stand? BudgetPulse offers a nice set of features, though I found the interface a bit clunky and ran into some small bugs here and there (mostly when submitting a form with invalid information or nothing at all). However, I did like the ability to quickly search through all of my transactions. I also liked the summary overview and the budgets area where you can assign budget amounts to specific categories of transactions. On the down side, you cannot export or import data, but that’s said to be in development for BudgetPulse’s public beta, along with other features like a calendar, mobile access, and SSL encryption. As it stands, I’m going to continue using my favorite money manager for the mac, Cha-Ching, but I am interested in seeing the public beta release of BudgetPulse. I have noticed some changes to BudgetPulse since I first started testing too, which is always a good sign.

In related news: check out Expensr, a social expense tracking application reviewed by Webware. Also keep an eye out for Mint, a personal finance service that’s been generating some buzz lately.

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Tags: budgetpulse, money, finance, budget, expense, tracking,
Virgin Mobile's First Helio-App Handset Due September 28th: The Shuttle

Virgin Mobile USA is soon to launch its first handset that uses tech from newly acquired Helio. Just as predicted, the slider phone will indeed include advanced features like social networking and other mobile services "through partnerships with Accuweather, ESPN, Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, Yahoo!" and others. There's also Virgin Mobile's first location-based services like "Buddy Beacon" (a friend-finder) and "Where," which supplies local service info. The 3G EV-DO handset is set to cost below $100, have a 1.3-megapixel cam, Bluetooth and a 2-inch screen, and will be exclusively out at Best Buy Mobile and BestBuy.com on 28th September. Press release below.

WARREN, N.J. Sept. 10– Video and web entertainment on a cell phone without the hassle of a contract just got a whole lot faster. Virgin Mobile USA and Personal Communications Devices, LLC [PCD] are launching the Shuttle, Virgin Mobile USA's first EV-DO handset, designed with high performance for data and content in mind. Available exclusively at Best Buy Mobile and BestBuy.com as of September 28, the Shuttle ushers in a new era of performance for consumers who demand the flexibility of monthly plans with no contract but also feel the 'need for speed.'

Following Virgin Mobile USA's recent acquisition of Helio, the Shuttle will be the first handset enabled to integrate several features from the Helio portfolio. This will include improved access to social networking communities and other mobile internet sites through partnerships with Accuweather, ESPN, Facebook*, MySpace, YouTube, Yahoo! and more.

The Shuttle is also slated to feature Virgin Mobile's first location-based services from uLocate including:

· Buddy Beacon®, the popular 'friend-finder' solution which allows customers to find friends in a crowded city and show where they are and what they're doing; and

· Where™, the application that delivers local information to easily discover nearby places and things of interest such as locating the lowest gas prices, finding local events, and getting restaurant recommendations.

According to Bob Stohrer, Virgin Mobile USA's Chief Marketing Officer, the time has arrived for Virgin Mobile USA to make the 3G leap. "With the Helio acquisition and the new Shuttle, we've made a strong move into 3G, satisfying our customers who want the speed and affordability, while greatly enhancing our handset line-up just in time for the holidays," Stohrer said.

Jam-packed with features such as a 1.3 megapixel camera, 2'' screen; video capture, playback and messaging, integrated media player that supports both streaming and sideloaded music, stereo Bluetooth** wireless technology, and SD card support, while sporting a stylish S-curve design in a compact slider form factor.

"Virgin Mobile USA is a natural fit for the handset, especially considering their game-changing commitment to innovation, service and value," said Philip Christopher, President, PCD. "The Shuttle is the latest in a long line of PCD offerings that deliver on that commitment, a tremendous and affordable device that will surprise and delight discerning Virgin Mobile USA consumers, just in time for the holidays."

New Virgin Mobile USA Mobile Web Offer

With the new Shuttle, Virgin Mobile USA is also introducing its first Mobile Web data packs as add-ons to calling plans, as more and more customers access the mobile web and other mobile data services. "Data is the center of growth in wireless. This handset is a perfect fit for our new Mobile Web, heavily discounted for customers who purchase a monthly voice plan, and a big benefit for users looking to take advantage of the fast web-browsing abilities," said Stohrer.

For Monthly Plans: $ 5.00 - 20 MB Surf the Web, Unlimited VirginXL [WAP deck]

$10.00 – 50 MB and Unlimited VXL

For Pay As You Go: $ 5.00 – 5 MB Surf the Web

$10.00 – 20 MB, Unlimited VXL

$20.00 – 50 MB, Unlimited VXL

The new Shuttle adds a cost-effective and attractive product to Virgin Mobile USA's lineup, as customers have access to a host of calling and messaging plans without annual contracts, including the $79.99 Totally Unlimited voice plan that provides unlimited calling without roaming charges, activation fees or a two-year commitment. Here are highlights of the Shuttle handset:

· Sleek and small, this slider measures 3.9" x 1.9" x 0.7" – all at just a shade over 3 ounces and about the size of half a candy bar, the phone fits perfectly in a pocket or the palm of a hand.

· EV-DO 3G-capable data speeds for browsing mobile internet and downloading content.

· Boasts a 1.3 megapixel camera, 2" screen, video capture and video messaging, a music player, stereo Bluetooth*, and SD card support.

· Comes preloaded with an array of playful games, along with downloadable animated and Real Music ringtones.

· More than 235 minutes of talk time and nearly 2 weeks of standby time on a single charge

· Room for 500 contacts that accommodate 5 numbers, 2 email addresses, 2 IM handles and 1 website slot for each contact.

· Has Virgin Mobile USA's Contact Vault, which allows customers to store, retrieve, delete and transfer their wireless phone's personal contacts list online in the event the phone is lost, stolen, damaged or upgraded.

Sony Ericsson Xperia X1 to Hit Streets First in Europe, September 30

Sony Ericsson's upcoming Xperia X1 smartphone is due to go on sale at first in Europe in just 20 days. It'll hit the streets in the UK, Germany and Sweden then, followed by many other countries throughout the remainder of 2008. To "start the countdown" SE will be launching a live global webcast on September 15 at 1PM London time, demonstrating the handset's fucntions. That's fab news, and confirms that rumor the phone would go on sale this year... just not in the US. Dates for North America and other countries will be out "in the coming months" apparently. Press release below.

London, UK - 10 September 2008 - Sony Ericsson today announces 30 September 2008 as the official launch date for the highly anticipated Xperia(TM) X1 - initially available to consumers in the UK, Germany and Sweden. The handset will be available in other markets across Europe, Asia and Latin America throughout Q4 2008.

APAC:
Indonesia, Singapore, Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Malaysia, Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam
Western Europe:
Spain, France, Italy, Switzerland, Netherlands, Austria, Norway, Denmark, Belgium, Portugal
Central Europe:
Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic
Middle East:
UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait
Africa:
South Africa
Latin America:
Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay and Bolivia

Availability dates for North America, China, Australia and Russia along with other countries not mentioned above will be announced by local markets in the coming months.

Webcast
To start the countdown to the launch of Xperia(TM) X1, Sony Ericsson will host a live global webcast on September 15 at 13:00 GMT + 1, offering viewers the first in-depth demonstration of the handset. The web cast will also premiere the first episode of an alternative reality thriller Johnny X. To register to view the web cast and Q&A session with Xperia(TM) X1 Senior Product Manager Magnus J Andersson, please visit: www.sonyericsson.com/premiere.

"We are extremely pleased with the innovation and new user experience we have created for consumers on the Xperia(TM) X1," said Rikko Sakaguchi CVP and Head of Creation and Development at Sony Ericsson. "The in-depth demonstration on the web cast will showcase how this handset is truly unique. The nine panel eco system puts the user in total control of the primary experiences available on the phone and allows consumers to personalise the panel interface to suit their needs and lifestyle. The Xperia(TM) X1 has the highest quality screen on the market, four-way navigation keys and optical joy stick to give a stressless browsing experience and, with its super fast processor and network speed the Xperia(TM) X1 really bridges the gap between personal, entertainment and work mobile needs."

Johnny X Alternative Reality Thriller
Johnny X is about a young man with amnesia desperately piecing together his identity. The webisodic thriller comprises of nine episodes, created to demonstrate the rich, immersive and experiential elements of the Xperia(TM) X1.

The storyline follows Johnny X on his mission to rediscover his identity. As he finds out more about his lost life in a race against time, he updates his Xperia(TM) X1 with new content to piece together his personality and identity, reflecting how the phone can be personalized to suit users' individual lifestyle and needs. Will Johnny X find out who he really is before it's too late?

"Producing the Johnny X thriller has given us an engaging platform to demonstrate all the capabilities and features a user can experience with the Xperia(TM) X1 phone," said Lennard Hoornik, Head of Marketing at Sony Ericsson. "The panel interface is a perfect way to reflect your personality and can be tailored and changed to suit your exact needs at any given time. No two Xperia(TM) X1 will ever have the same combination of panels on the phone; we are all individuals and deserve to have a phone that reflects that. "

Over a three week period, one new episode of Johnny X will be posted online atwww.sonyericsson.com/Johnnyx every Monday, Wednesday and Friday starting on Monday, September 22. Check out the trailer for the series at www.whoisjohnny-x.com

Global Launch
The official global launch of the Xperia(TM) X1 will take place at Tent London as part of London Design Week between September 18 - 21st. Journalists are invited to attend the official Tent London opening party on Friday evening 19 September 2008 to see the Xperia(TM) X1 and meet with Sony Ericsson spokespeople. To register, please email: sonyericsson@bm.com

Tent London is one of the most comprehensive and diverse design events of the year. It is a multi-disciplinary event in an exciting location that will appeal equally to designers, media and consumers - embracing art to architecture, vintage to contemporary and raw talent to established trend-setters.

Open to general public from 18-21st September, from 10am, with admission prices starting at:
Public & Students ÂŁ7.50 in advance ÂŁ10.00 on the door
Child (under 16) ÂŁ5.00
Child (under 5) FREE
For advance ticket purchases, visit: www.tentlondon.co.uk
Address: Circa at Tent London, The Truman Brewery, Brick Lane, London, E1

Xperia(TM)
The Xperia(TM) X1 is the first product under Sony Ericsson's new premium sub-brand Xperia(TM). Designed to meet consumers' needs for a converged entertainment and mobile web communication experience, the Xperia(TM) X1 is an extremely stylish handset encased in a real stainless steel body, with a striking arc-slider design, supported by a powerful multimedia ecosystem.

Consumers can access a world of experiences by tapping on one of the unique customisable panels on the three-inch high resolution touch-widescreen. Windows Mobile® lets you choose from a dynamic range of activities anytime and anywhere; from enjoying your music, watching a video, checking email, shopping online or working with Windows Mobile Office on-the-move. The full QWERTY keyboard and quality metal casing completes this premium handset. For more information please visit: www.sonyericsson.com/x1

[SonyEricsson]

Using media, the RNC and protecting protestors
via Mars and Jane Hamsher: Twitter is a true definition of a tool that helps brings smart mobs together quickly and effortlessly. During the Republican National Convention, two groups: Coldsnap Legal Collective and Uptake took it upon themselves to keep the media updated in real time about what was happening during the arrests in St. [...]

via Mars and Jane Hamsher:

Twitter is a true definition of a tool that helps brings smart mobs together quickly and effortlessly. During the Republican National Convention, two groups: Coldsnap Legal Collective and Uptake took it upon themselves to keep the media updated in real time about what was happening during the arrests in St. Paul, protecting activists that who were protesting at the RNC.

Nothing that law enforcement did happened in secret, and ACLU lawyers and other observers were able to be quickly alerted to anything that was happening. When we first arrived we started following their bulletins in the wake of the weekend raids, and as more information came in verifying their reports it became clear that they were a highly trustworthy source of information.

Put together with the efforts of Uptake:

Meanwhile, the Uptake provided an army of video journalists with Qik cameras that broadcast live on the internet. You could track their whereabouts on a Google map, and they provided on-the-spot coverage of what was happening in real time. Really, I can’t recommend enough going to their main page and taking a look at what they managed to do yesterday. They also provided a lounge where visiting bloggers could have internet and video editing space, and that’s where we were headquartered yesterday. We were able to not only hear about what was happening all across the city virtually instantaneously, but see their reporters quickly diverted to anything that was happening and watch as their cameras went into action.

It was like a million ants scurrying around the city, passing back bits of information that formed themselves into a whole in a completely decentralized manner. Its very nature defied efforts to control and spin and propagandize.

It was the anti-Fox News.

While protesters have been around for ages, social media and smartmobs have opened the doors that traditional media has not been able to and shined the light in the dark interior. In doing so, they’ve helped protect the rights of Americans voicing their opinions. A remarkable thing to behold.

03/19/08, 11:51:54
Into The Casual Game Cafe With Trip Hawkins
By Harold Goldberg During the past few days, you've been privy to the fascinating, decades-ling history of Trip Hawkins from the man himself. During these interview sessions, I found that Hawkins, a pioneer and innovator since the early days of...

By Harold Goldberg

During the past few days, you've been privy to the fascinating, decades-ling history of Trip Hawkins from the man himself. During these interview sessions, I found that Hawkins, a pioneer and innovator since the early days of gaming, is someone you just want to believe. Said one major developer, “If I was looking at a red building across the street, and Trip said it was blue, he’d be able to make me believe it was blue.” Now, Hawkins is excited about games and social experiences on mobile phones. He’s trying to innovate once again with Digital Chocolate. But the question remains, Can mobile gaming experiences be accepted by mass audiences around the world? Hawkins thinks it can happen, and he’s putting his heart and soul into making that bet happen each and every day.

HG: We’ve talked about how casual cell phone games can be made more creative and compelling by adding social elements to the experience. That’s fine. But when are mobile games going to take off?

TH: You know, that is a really interesting question. The mobile market has evolved historically at a pace that conforms to what the carriers are willing and able to do. I think that pace is accelerating now, and there are other independent accelerators including things like WiFi, the Federal auction for a broader spectrum band, and the iPhone. Those are catalysts that will open up more opportunities for growth. But that’s the future.

HG: So what are you doing for us right now?

TH: What we’re trying to do with the Café series within the existing mobile infrastructure is to bring those Web 2.0 features over to the phones. We enable the viral spread by allowing the sending of SMS messages and emails and allowing there to be free trials of games. We also allow for cross-promoting of one game to another. We actually are starting to have some very strong evidence that that works. As an illustration, one of the first operators that launched was 3 in Italy. They did an MMS marketing campaign. So the users got, via MMS, to see some screenshots of Café. They were offered a link they could click to get a free trial: 50 percent of them did so, which is a very high trial rate. Then, of those who tried it, more than 50 percent bought it.

HG: That makes sense because one of the problems with mobile phone games is that the games are utterly difficult to find on the phone.

TH: It’s a much better model than just waiting for the public to show up at the carrier deck and deciding to purchase something after reading one line of text. The idea of the carrier deck was, OK, we’re going to put up all these ring tones and games on these listings for the handset. And we’re just going to wait for the public to figure it out. Clearly, the public is still waiting. The Café series is bringing a next generation of thinking to the mobile phone, including that all-important viral spread and community features. We continue to have major carriers feature the Café games and we’ll have sweepstakes promotions as well.

HG: Is the new Nokia N-Gage platform important to that mix?

TH: They’re a little bit of a next generation story themselves. We all know what happened the first time around with the N-Gage. And there were many valuable lessons that were learned.

HG: What did you think of the original N-Gage, the infamous taco-shaped phone?

TH: It had higher performance technology than the typical mobile phone. But the problem was it was an expensive phone. When you look at the price of it and you compare it at the time with other game systems in the same price range, it was not a good enough game system, either. Then, of course, there were usability issues, including the fact that the games were really big. So they couldn’t be downloaded over the air. The typical N-Gage game was 32 megabytes and the networks were all too slow at that time.

But they learned a lot, and put that knowledge to work on the new platform with many mobile phones. If you look at where they are today, they’re selling at a clip of 50 million smart phones a year. And that number keeps going up. Smart phones and smart phone capability as a function of Moore’s Law will continue to shrink into a feature phone form factor which will make them less bulky and cheaper. So you’ll find more of the public willing to carry one around. With the new N-Gage and the iPhone as well, there’s a certain sex appeal that helps to educate the market. So more people start figuring out that it’s there and say, I want to do that, too. Hopefully, that will occur with games on the N-Gage as well.

HG: Are they really thinking about games in the right way this time?

TH: They’re thinking of the phones as a software platform. And they’ll continue to work this into their handset roadmap, so you’ll get to a point where most of the handset will have the capabilities to include great games. More and more customers will be moving up the food chain to get to that level of performance.

HG: Do you think enhanced graphics are important to mobile gamers?

TH: Certain genres need more graphics than others. What we’ve learned about the casual gamer is that simplicity and convenience are more important than the graphics. One example of that is, if you’re running something in your browser, it may not be as powerful as if you downloaded a big, C++ coded file and installed it. But a lot of people don’t want to go through the hassle of an installation. So clearly, if you have this larger and different audience of people that are looking for casual and social entertainment, they’re not as focused on whether they have the immersive graphics of Madden Football, Grand Theft Auto, Second Life or World of Warcraft.

HG: It seems as though there will always be a nasty divide between hardcore and casual gamers.

TH: Without any disrespect to those major brands and the audiences they can attract, they are tiny audiences compared to the mass audiences who want something more casual. So you have all these women playing casual games and chatting, making the experience almost the modern equivalent of a sewing bee. It’s like guys doing fantasy sports on the Web. It’s far bigger than Madden, and it’s simpler, more accessible and more social. That’s been our direction from the beginning. The Café series is sort of the first, full-grown expression of that, and the fact that Nokia is on board is great.

HG: The Café series is happening right now. What are you doing beyond that?

TH: From there, we’re moving to more directly social services like AvaPeeps. You can make your own avatar, go on dates with other avatars and then have others get stories about what happened. So you can build the social life of your avatar. So it’s like a Tomagotchi. We think that could be the next big thing.

http://www.digitalchocolate.com/

http://www.digitalchocolate.com/displayAllApps.do

Pwnd

Fringe reviews: Oedipus at FDR, Pichet Klunchun and Myself, Ballad Boys, Stuporwoman, Vampire Lesbians of Sodom, Geografia intima
Fires crackle and blaze out of trash cans. We're sitting on the ground in a concrete bowl under I-95, with music (the endlessly brilliant James Sugg) throbbing into our brains through earphones. Trucks rumble overhead. Emmanuelle Delpech-Ramey found this astonishing venue, conceived and directed this thrilling version of the myth of Oedipus at Colonus (written by Suli Holum) and assembled a fine and diverse cast, including a chorus of skateboarders.
08/12/08, 18:06:33
Got Content? Get Netvibes for your Brand
Over the past year, we've helped more than 1000 of the world’s top marketing agencies, media companies, celebrities and organizations leverage our award-winning start page technology and widget distribution tools for their brands. Nearly every day, we're asked the same question: How can we...

Over the past year, we've helped more than 1000 of the world’s top marketing agencies, media companies, celebrities and organizations leverage our award-winning start page technology and widget distribution tools for their brands.

Nearly every day, we're asked the same question: How can we use Netvibes for our brand?

Today, we're proud to announce the launch of our new Business website to help brands Create, Distribute and Showcase widgets:

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Simply give us your content, we'll take care of the rest and help you rapidly widgetize your content. Premium Widgets are built by Netvibes on our Universal Widget (UWA) platform, so they're automatically compatible on virtually all major start pages (Netvibes, iGoogle, Live.com), desktops (Mac OS X Dashboard, Windows Vista), Web browsers, blogs, social networks and mobile devices. Build widgets once with Netvibes and run everywhere.

Sponsored Placement

We can help distribute your widgets directly within the Netvibes personal environment. We believe widgets are not ads and shouldn't be distributed like one, so we operate entirely on a Cost-Per-Install (CPI) basis, which means that you pay only once the widget has been chosen and installed by users, ensuring actual usage, long-term engagement and happy users.

Premium Universe

Your brand. Your start page. Netvibes Premium Universe offers a completely branded start page that integrates seamlessly within your domain, using the same award-winning technology that powers Netvibes.com. Netvibes gives your brand 100% control over the design and content, while also allowing you to retain 100% of the advertising and traffic revenues generated on your start page.

For more information, visit: business.netvibes.com

Samsung LN-S4092D LCD TV

Challenge me to an FPS and you will get smoked. I repeat: I will smoke you like a Christmas ham. Halo 2, Gears of War, it doesn't matter -- you're toast. How can I talk such blatant trash? I recently acquired untouchable gaming skills not from practice, tenacity, or even (scoff) natural talent. No, my suddenly improved fragging ability stems from the LN-S4092D in my living room. This 40-inch, 720p LCD recently replaced my Podunk 12-inch college-era set, and due to the massive upgrade in clarity, I'm now able to identify and blast opponents a crucial split second faster. The TV has badass beauty on the outside, too; the shiny black finish looks like it could have come from the same Imperial engineers who created Vader's suit. The LCD also plays nongaming content like HD-DVDs and hi-def television flawlessly -- perfect for when my fingers are too blistered to pick up a controller. -- D.D.
[RATING: 8/10] [RETAIL: $1,900] [ samsung.com ]

Photos: Hands-on with the new Apple iPod classic (Crave at CNET UK)

Crave at CNET UK:
Photos: Hands-on with the new Apple iPod classic  —  We're huge fans of the iPod classic.  When you rip all your CDs in Apple Lossless format, have about 30 podcast subscriptions, an archive of music videos, and insist on carrying the whole lot around with you, the 160GB model is the only way to go.

Play DOS games on your Mac

Filed under: , ,


Lee's posts about gaming old school in your browser or on your PC have had me itching to get in on the old-school action myself. Unfortunately, because I use a Mac and prefer to stay in OS X when possible, some of the cooler emulators and browser ports are off limits. Sure, I can always play with the wicked cool Virtual ][ and get my Oregon Trail on like it's first grade all over again -- complete with whirring disk sounds -- but I think we all know that all the real old school computer games were made for DOS.

Russell Heimlich, AKA kingkool68 in the comments, tipped us to a great OS X front-end for DOSBox: Boxer. If you aren't familiar with DOSBox, it is an emulator that simulates an Intel x86 PC running MS-DOS, with a focus on running games as smoothly as possible.

Boxer feels very Mac-like and is extremely easy to use. Just add .boxer to a game's folder and the corresponding EXE files will open up in Boxer. You can then launch games from the Finder and have access to Mac-friendly keyboard shortcuts.

Sound, video, the whole thing works flawlessly. Within a few seconds of downloading Doom, I was presented with that familiar music and the the bloody menus that brought back to 5th grade all over again. Now I want to track down some old school games like Theme Park and Sim Ant!

If you're a Mac user and want to get your DOS-game on, check out Boxer! It runs on Intel Macs running OS X 10.4.11 or higher, though Leopard is recommended.
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Sony Ericsson Xperia X1 to Hit Streets First in Europe, September 30

Sony Ericsson's upcoming Xperia X1 smartphone is due to go on sale at first in Europe in just 20 days. It'll hit the streets in the UK, Germany and Sweden then, followed by many other countries throughout the remainder of 2008. To "start the countdown" SE will be launching a live global webcast on September 15 at 1PM London time, demonstrating the handset's fucntions. That's fab news, and confirms that rumor the phone would go on sale this year... just not in the US. Dates for North America and other countries will be out "in the coming months" apparently. Press release below.

London, UK - 10 September 2008 - Sony Ericsson today announces 30 September 2008 as the official launch date for the highly anticipated Xperia(TM) X1 - initially available to consumers in the UK, Germany and Sweden. The handset will be available in other markets across Europe, Asia and Latin America throughout Q4 2008.

APAC:
Indonesia, Singapore, Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Malaysia, Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam
Western Europe:
Spain, France, Italy, Switzerland, Netherlands, Austria, Norway, Denmark, Belgium, Portugal
Central Europe:
Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic
Middle East:
UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait
Africa:
South Africa
Latin America:
Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay and Bolivia

Availability dates for North America, China, Australia and Russia along with other countries not mentioned above will be announced by local markets in the coming months.

Webcast
To start the countdown to the launch of Xperia(TM) X1, Sony Ericsson will host a live global webcast on September 15 at 13:00 GMT + 1, offering viewers the first in-depth demonstration of the handset. The web cast will also premiere the first episode of an alternative reality thriller Johnny X. To register to view the web cast and Q&A session with Xperia(TM) X1 Senior Product Manager Magnus J Andersson, please visit: www.sonyericsson.com/premiere.

"We are extremely pleased with the innovation and new user experience we have created for consumers on the Xperia(TM) X1," said Rikko Sakaguchi CVP and Head of Creation and Development at Sony Ericsson. "The in-depth demonstration on the web cast will showcase how this handset is truly unique. The nine panel eco system puts the user in total control of the primary experiences available on the phone and allows consumers to personalise the panel interface to suit their needs and lifestyle. The Xperia(TM) X1 has the highest quality screen on the market, four-way navigation keys and optical joy stick to give a stressless browsing experience and, with its super fast processor and network speed the Xperia(TM) X1 really bridges the gap between personal, entertainment and work mobile needs."

Johnny X Alternative Reality Thriller
Johnny X is about a young man with amnesia desperately piecing together his identity. The webisodic thriller comprises of nine episodes, created to demonstrate the rich, immersive and experiential elements of the Xperia(TM) X1.

The storyline follows Johnny X on his mission to rediscover his identity. As he finds out more about his lost life in a race against time, he updates his Xperia(TM) X1 with new content to piece together his personality and identity, reflecting how the phone can be personalized to suit users' individual lifestyle and needs. Will Johnny X find out who he really is before it's too late?

"Producing the Johnny X thriller has given us an engaging platform to demonstrate all the capabilities and features a user can experience with the Xperia(TM) X1 phone," said Lennard Hoornik, Head of Marketing at Sony Ericsson. "The panel interface is a perfect way to reflect your personality and can be tailored and changed to suit your exact needs at any given time. No two Xperia(TM) X1 will ever have the same combination of panels on the phone; we are all individuals and deserve to have a phone that reflects that. "

Over a three week period, one new episode of Johnny X will be posted online atwww.sonyericsson.com/Johnnyx every Monday, Wednesday and Friday starting on Monday, September 22. Check out the trailer for the series at www.whoisjohnny-x.com

Global Launch
The official global launch of the Xperia(TM) X1 will take place at Tent London as part of London Design Week between September 18 - 21st. Journalists are invited to attend the official Tent London opening party on Friday evening 19 September 2008 to see the Xperia(TM) X1 and meet with Sony Ericsson spokespeople. To register, please email: sonyericsson@bm.com

Tent London is one of the most comprehensive and diverse design events of the year. It is a multi-disciplinary event in an exciting location that will appeal equally to designers, media and consumers - embracing art to architecture, vintage to contemporary and raw talent to established trend-setters.

Open to general public from 18-21st September, from 10am, with admission prices starting at:
Public & Students ÂŁ7.50 in advance ÂŁ10.00 on the door
Child (under 16) ÂŁ5.00
Child (under 5) FREE
For advance ticket purchases, visit: www.tentlondon.co.uk
Address: Circa at Tent London, The Truman Brewery, Brick Lane, London, E1

Xperia(TM)
The Xperia(TM) X1 is the first product under Sony Ericsson's new premium sub-brand Xperia(TM). Designed to meet consumers' needs for a converged entertainment and mobile web communication experience, the Xperia(TM) X1 is an extremely stylish handset encased in a real stainless steel body, with a striking arc-slider design, supported by a powerful multimedia ecosystem.

Consumers can access a world of experiences by tapping on one of the unique customisable panels on the three-inch high resolution touch-widescreen. Windows Mobile® lets you choose from a dynamic range of activities anytime and anywhere; from enjoying your music, watching a video, checking email, shopping online or working with Windows Mobile Office on-the-move. The full QWERTY keyboard and quality metal casing completes this premium handset. For more information please visit: www.sonyericsson.com/x1

[SonyEricsson]

SDK for Sony xPeria X1 Phone Launched, Doesn't Cost a Penny

Sony's just come up with the software development kit for the xPeria X1, designed to let programmers create new "panel" apps for the phone's funky one-touch panel interface that sits on top of its Windows Mobile 6.1 OS. The idea is to create stuff that will "meet the consumer’s demand for a rich, individualized multimedia experience on their phone"—everything from search engines to social networking apps, all easy-access through the panels, or so says Sony anyway. If you're keen to get to grips with making software for this phone, you'll be able to get hold of the SDK for free here. Otherwise, check out a video of the panel interface at the Sony link. Press release below. [Sony]

London, UK — 3 September 2008— Sony Ericsson today published its Software Developer Kit (SDK) for Xperia™ X1 and invited developers and content creators to capitalize on the opportunities offered by developing mobile content for the phone. Whether it is music, photography, email or instant messaging, gaming, social networking or video applications, developers can now create a host of unique multi-media entertainment and content for the Xperia™ X1 for consumers to enjoy.

Xperia™ X1 brings a totally new experience to mobile phone users by introducing nine easy-to-use, interactive panels which sit on the touch screen interface of the phone.

Developers can use the Windows Mobile SDK, free of charge, to produce a wide variety of panels to meet the consumer’s demand for a rich, individualised multimedia experience on their phone. Users of the Xperia™ X1 will be spoilt for choice as they personalize their handset with panel applications to suit their mood and lifestyle. Whether it is a search engine, advanced calendar or social networking application, music or film catalogue, sports or news related content, the panels enable you to access any information – quickly and directly – with a simple tap on the 3” super high resolution touch screen.

“Sony Ericsson is committed to providing its customers with rich, open content environment to make their mobile experience more enjoyable and entertaining,” said Rikko Sakaguchi , CVP and Head of Creation and Development at Sony Ericsson. “Making the Windows Mobile SDK available for free to developers and mobile content creators will accelerate the development of new panels and applications for the Xperia™ X1, offering consumer choice and personalisation.
The Xperia™ X1 will offer the richest mobile user experience, putting the world at the fingertips of the user.”

Entertain yourself:

* Customise your Xperia™ X1 panels so you are a touch away from your favourite content – music, film, TV, sports
* Or, be the envy of your friends by watching TV or film clips in DVD quality on the three-inch high resolution touch-widescreen
* Get picture happy on the 3.2 megapixel camera and show the images in crystal clear clarity on the 800 X 480 pixels screen
* Access the latest 3D mobile games by simply touching a favourite gaming panel you have selected

Make your personal life a little easier:

* Access all your contacts and calendar entries wherever you are, as the Xperia™ X1 can automatically sync with your PC making sure you never miss a birthday, anniversary or meeting
* Search or book a holiday in your lunch hour by going online via a travel panel
* Add your local supermarket website and do your weekly food shop in just a few taps on the bus on the way home
* Read the latest restaurants reviews, look up cinema listings, call a friend or reply to personal email on the move using the full QWERTY keyboard
* Find that bar, restaurant or hotel using Assisted GPS and Goggle Maps™ for mobile when you’re on vacation or a business trip

Work on the move:

* Windows Mobile™ 6.1 makes working on the move easier with easy access to work emails and Microsoft® Office Mobile applications, such as Excel, Word and PowerPoint
* Always stay up-to-date with colleagues and important appointments by syncing the handset to Microsoft Outlook on your work PC

“The X1’s panels are a simple but immersive way of interacting with content, services and applications that will delight and engage consumers,” said Todd Peters, corporate vice president, Mobile Communications Marketing Group, Microsoft Corp. “Sony Ericsson’s X1 is a fantastic demonstration of how to harness the power of Windows Mobile to connect people to the things they care about most.”

Xperia™ X1
The Xperia™ X1 is the first product under Sony Ericsson’s new premium sub-brand Xperia™. Designed to meet consumers’ needs for a converged entertainment and mobile web communication experience, the Xperia™ X1 is an extremely stylish handset, with a striking arc-slider design, encased in real stainless steel, supported by a powerful panel multimedia ecosystem.

The Xperia™X1 can be personalised through its nine panel user interface to suit the user’s moods and lifestyle. Users can access content quickly and directly through the touch screen, easily switching between applications by touching one of the unique customisable panels.

Sony Ericsson Xperia™ X1 – A new era in mobile convergence

* Unique arc slider with 3.0” WVGA display and finger touch navigation
* Customisable panels
* Wide pitch easy-to-use QWERTY keyboard
* Four way navigation keys and optical joy stick for stressless browsing
* 3.2 megapixel camera
* DVD quality video and 3D Gaming capabilities
* Windows Mobile® capabilities such as Microsoft® Outlook Mobile, Internet Explorer® Mobile and Microsoft® Office Mobile: World, Excel, Powerpoint

Distribution information
The Sony Ericsson SDK for Windows Mobile™ 6.1 will be made available for easy download on the Sony Ericsson Developer World website: www.sonyericsson.com/developer.

Click on http://www.sonyericsson.com/x1panelvideo/ to see a video of Ramanath Bhat, Application and Product Planning for the Xperia™ X1, talk about the phone’s unique panel interface and the benefits of publishing the Windows Mobile SDK for Xperia™ X1.

As Hurricane Ike grows, Texas orders evacuations - Los Angeles Times

New York Daily News

As Hurricane Ike grows, Texas orders evacuations
Los Angeles Times - 1 hour ago
The storm's winds are near 100 mph and strengthening, on target to strike Saturday between Houston and Corpus Christi. Four counties face mandatory or voluntary evacuation orders.
Oil rises in Asia as Ike strengthens toward Texas The Associated Press
Energy industry reprises actions taken for Gustav Houston Chronicle
Bloomberg - Kansas City Star - Austin American-Statesman - New York Times
all 2,058 news articles
Rangel Tries to Explain Back Taxes on Villa - New York Times

Seattle Post Intelligencer

Rangel Tries to Explain Back Taxes on Villa
New York Times - 2 hours ago
“I really don’t believe making mistakes means you have to give up your career,” Representative Charles B. Rangel said at a news conference in Washington on Wednesday.
Video: Rangel: I Should Be Held to a Higher Standard AssociatedPress
Rangel Tussles With Boehner on House Floor Over Ethics Charges FOXNews
New York Sun - Washington Times - The Associated Press - Reuters
all 473 news articles
Photos: Hands-on with the new Apple iPod classic (Crave at CNET UK)

Crave at CNET UK:
Photos: Hands-on with the new Apple iPod classic  —  We're huge fans of the iPod classic.  When you rip all your CDs in Apple Lossless format, have about 30 podcast subscriptions, an archive of music videos, and insist on carrying the whole lot around with you, the 160GB model is the only way to go.

Fotolia Announces Partnership With pingg.com


New Online Invitation, Event Management Company to Incorporate Fotolia
Image Gallery Into Custom Invitation Application, pingg Plus+

NEW YORK, June 17 /PRNewswire/ -- Fotolia (http://www.fotolia.com), the
largest online marketplace for micro-priced digital stock images, announced
today a partnership agreement with pingg.com, a new online invitation and
event management Web site.

The partnership integrates Fotolia's collection of nearly 4 million
images directly into the pingg platform and seamlessly powers the pingg
Plus+ application. The API is integrated into the site allowing users to
license an image from the Fotolia database for a fee directly through the
pingg site.

pingg Plus+ provides consumers a truly unique opportunity to design
fully customized online and print invitations. Hosts can search for then
select a unique image from the Fotolia collection. Once an image is chosen,
a host can utilize cropping and layout tools to further customize their
online and/or print invitations.

"This partnership grants pingg's users on-demand access to our database
of high-quality stock images and gives Fotolia the ability to further
expand our offerings through strategic partnerships with innovative Web
companies," says Oleg Tscheltzoff, co-founder and president of Fotolia,
LLC. "Fotolia's image collection will give pingg users deeply integrated
access to images for use in their custom invitations."

Our Business API allows partners to integrate and offer Fotolia
services to their customers. This is an ideal solution for companies who
want to produce customized on demand items for their clients in an
automated fashion.

"Fotolia has built an incredible collection of high-quality images.
Partnering with them," stated Lorien Gabel, Co-Founder/CEO of pingg,
"enables us to offer the pingg consumer the widest selection of images
anywhere for designing and personalizing their online and print
invitations."

About Fotolia

Fotolia, LLC, based in New York, with offices in nine countries around
the globe and offering Web sites in eight languages, is the world's largest
provider of micro-priced stock images. Launched in early November, 2005,
Fotolia's image marketplace has acquired more than 3.7 million images in
its database and nearly 700,000 international members. In December, 2007,
Fotolia became the first independent microstock agency to enter the
traditional stock marketplace, with the launch of Fotolia Infinite
Collections. For more information about the company or to access the
Fotolia Web site, visit http://www.fotolia.com

About Pingg.com

Based in New York, pingg.com was launched in March '08 by brothers
Lorien Gabel and Matt Harrop. Lorien and Matt are CEO and CTO respectively.
Their third business venture together, pingg.com is a new, free online
invitation and event management platform that lets image conscious hosts
seamlessly create, send and manage stylish online and print invitations
from one platform and then follow-up via email, SMS, web and Facebook. The
platform also features advanced list management and reporting tools,
gift/charity registries and more. For additional information, visit
pingg.com.


Press Contact Fotolia:

Michael Conner
Global Director of Communications
Fotolia, LLC
d: 541-704-0800
michael@fotolia.com

Press Contact pingg:

Margo Spiritus
pingg.com
VP, Marketing & Business Development
(w) 646.277.7348
(c) 917.757.9241
skype: margospiritus
mspiritus@pingg.com

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Gear Gallery: Sexy and Tough Mobile, Green Dell PC and More
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First, a word to the RAZR fans. (There are some still left.) Though the V750 has similar looks and ergonomics, this isn't the second coming of the world's favorite fashion phone. With military-grade protection from dust, shock and high and low temperatures, it's a different creature entirely. Even though it casts the same fragile silhouette as the RAZR, my review unit took repeated 4-foot drops and dirt naps with ease (and just a few cracks). After brushing the phone off, I was still able to make and receive calls with reasonably clear audio. If you're concerned with the average accidental drops and collisions a cellphone endures on a day-to-day basis, the V750 has you covered, hands down.

Ohhh, but that doesn't mean all is well in Rugged Town. The phone's hard plastic chassis and keypad did fine in my splash tests, but without the official certification in place, it's unlikely that the V750 could take a full dunk. Luckily, Motorola defied rugged convention by outfitting the V750 with an impressive array of multimedia features. Be it pictures, video, music or (gasp!) mobile web, the V750's brisk interface and capabilities match pace with most midlevel multimedia phones. Its 67 MB of memory and crippled Bluetooth keep it from groundbreaking status, but paired with its price, these features make the V750 a solid investment for the weekend adventure-seeker.

WIRED: Sensible balance of utility and entertainment. Fantastic data speeds via EV-DO Rev A. 1,000-entry phone book stores multiple numbers per entry and postal addresses. 1.6-inch external LCD makes on-the-go media playback a breeze. Looks and handles like a sleek, non-rugged phone.

TIRED: Modestly rugged at best. Push-To-Talk setup is convoluted and clunky. Muddy speakerphone audio at high volumes. Flimsy battery door flies off during impacts. Verizon OS cripples Bluetooth, video message length and file sharing. Flashless cameras are the stuff of the Dark Ages.

$260, Motorola

7 out of 10

Read our full Motorola V750 Adventure review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The Dell Studio Hybrid doesn’t run on ethanol and D-cells, but it does consume about 70 percent less electricity than those hulking desktop towers. This über-cute little media-cruncher comes in your choice of rich automotive colors (or bamboo, for Pier 1-themed abodes), and you can swap colors on demand with interchangeable sleeves.

The Hybrid starts at $500, but by the time you trick it out with goodies like a slot-loading Blu-ray drive, Wireless-N adapter, Logitech’s diNovo Mini Keyboard (a must if you’re planning couch time), a digital TV tuner, and the bamboo sleeve (a $130 upgrade -- WTF?), the price rockets north of $1,300. Hybrids can serve desk duty or accent your living room: Even the base model comes stocked with HDMI port (DVI, too), so it’s a cinch to pair with HDTV. Blu-ray movies at 1920 x 1080 did just fine aside from a video stutter every time we adjusted the volume. Dell scores big points for style, power conservation and customization.

WIRED: Sips power, unlike those heinous watt-guzzling towers. Swappable color sleeves let you change the paint job to match your mood -- or paint job. Reports for media-center duty with HDMI port and slot-loading Blu-ray drive. Metal stand cleverly morphs between vertical and horizontal positions.

TIRED: Wussy integrated graphics choke on 3-D games. Looks rigged for silent running, but actually runs a little noisy. $130 bamboo sleeve will only appeal to aristocratic pandas.

$1,365 (as tested), Dell

7 out of 10

Read our full Dell Studio Hybrid review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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To instantly win the mine's-better-than-yours camera contest, show friends the Z150's gorgeous 3-inch LCD. It's mammoth for a camera with a sub-$200 price tag, and bright enough to see in direct sunlight. You can also fire off a group shot without having to take the customary 20 steps back to fit everybody in: The Z150's wide-angle lens (28mm) offers a dramatically broader field of view than most pocket cams. Meanwhile, the lens zooms to 4x before the digital faux-zoom kicks in -- that’s a whole "x" better than other models in this price range.

Idjit-proof controls and logical onscreen menus make the Z150 a camera anyone can pick up and use sans manual. A dedicated video-record button captures YouTube-friendly movies at 30 fps. The Z150 tops out at 8.1 megapixels -- more than adequate for the party scene. But as you might expect, the camera produces considerable image noise when the lights are low and the ISO high. Only the color reproduction disappoints: It's good, but lacking that zing we see in competing models from, say, Canon. Of course, some of Canon's pocket shooters tend toward the bulky as well, so we can forgive the EX-Z150 its slightly excessive carriage. And we're mad for its big-screen, sweet wide-angle lens, and affordable price.

WIRED: Wide-angle lens just plain kicks ass, and 4x optical zoom gets you close. One-touch video recording and YouTube-upload software make this the perfect camera for Paris-Lindsay-Bigfoot sightings.

TIRED: Too thick and heavy to leave in your pocket all day. Small, stiff control pad. Snapshot colors lack pop. Battery must be removed for charging.

$200, Casio

7 out of 10

Read our full Casio EX Z150 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Everything’s getting tiny. The once-sexy V-8 engine is now an automotive pariah while the Smart Car gets all the chicks; HD video cameras are now damn near Twinkie-size, and we’ll probably be implanting the next-generation iPod in our molars.

But at least one company isn’t succumbing to all this smaller-is-better madness: TiVo just announced the TiVo HD XL. Stuffed like a Cornish hen with a terabyte hard drive, it’s the highest-capacity DVR available, with room for 150 hours of HD content. That’s, like, every Olympic event you actually care about plus all 60 episodes of The Wire. It’s an entire season of Sunday Night Football with more than enough space for your Food Network-obsessed roommate to go balls-out on Batali. -- Joe Brown

WIRED: Western Digital hard drive is nearly silent. THX-certified audio and video (finally). Say goodbye to the ugly stick -- the XL gets the same slick programmable remote as the Series 3. TiVo-easy, as expected, with the company’s ever-expanding catalog of downloadable videos (YouTube!).

TIRED: Remote collects more greasy fingerprints than a secondhand sexbot. Annoying info screen hovers over the picture a few seconds too long with each channel change. Cutesy TiVo noises are a little grating, and your only other option is to turn all the sound effects off. We noticed an increase in video artifacts when recording off both tuners simultaneously. In San Francisco, at least, you have to deal with Satan Comcast to get service. $600 plus the $20 $12.95 monthly fee is a lot of cheddar.

$600, TiVo

8 out of 10

Read our full TiVo HD XL review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Need to juice up your desktop music scene? Nuforce has just the thing. Its new Icon is a miniature, multithreat amplifier that can be used to pump music from a computer or audio player to your speakers and headphones. Although it's only 12 watts per channel, the Icon is powerful enough to act as a pre-amp to full-fledged stereos and on its own can drive most bookshelf speakers, producing a wide, spacious sound stage.

The sound quality from the headphone jack on my laptop is thin and distorted, but when I hooked up the Icon via the USB port and patched in my Grado SR80 cans, it was a revelation. The Icon uses a high-quality digital-to-analog converter to convert the computer's digital signal to sweet-sounding analog, and all of a sudden the music was crystal clear, the bass cleaner and deeper, and the overall sound infinitely better. The only downside here may be that you'll realize how crummy some of those downloaded MP3s actually sound. In the end, the beauty of the Icon is that it can be used in so many different ways. I've got it powering some outdoor speakers on my patio -- and it excels wherever you rig it.

WIRED: Sturdy silicon-like stand holds it vertically. Rad design and color choices: red, black, blue, silver. Small enough to take on vacation.

TIRED: Ethernet speaker cables are cutting-edge, but standard banana plugs would be better. Bass can be a touch thin in heavier (rock, hip-hop) music.

Price/maker: $250, Nuforce

8 out of 10

Photo: Christopher Jones/Wired.com

Read our full Nuforce Icon Desktop Amplifier review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The Treo Pro sports a shiny, rounded, tuxedo-black exterior and a handful of practical OS "shortcuts." Aside from the industrial iPhone-like design lines, those shortcuts are enough to make even the most die-hard Machead grin and bear Windows Mobile (almost). At the top of our shortcut list are the dedicated WiFi button on the right side and customizable button on the left (ours was set for camera). Circumventing the main menu and tiresome nav made the phone a joy to use. The touchscreen, on the other hand, was far from blissful. Laggy and unresponsive, we found ourselves double- and sometimes triple-tapping -– even with the stylus.

Palm is definitely flexing its once-mighty muscle and trying to say it can build a stylish multimedia device with a touchscreen. But for $550, a touch interface should have more precision than this. We can only hope Palm continues to fine-tune the screen and ditch that archaic stylus permanently.

WIRED: Trim, light and pocketable. Shortcuts prove beyond useful. Decent 2-megapixel pics. MicroUSB Battery lasts almost two full days. 3.5mm headphone jack. PPT/Excel/Word and PDF-reading, of course. Google Maps and TeleNav GPS, which offers turn-by-turn directions plus target searches; e.g., gas stations by price. Ships unlocked.

TIRED: Menu scrolling is about as fluid as a piece of dolomite. Slippery "obsidian" plastic casing retains more fingerprints than the NSA. Noticeable screen glare. Curved design comprised by bottom-side USB/headphone jack that should be recessed more. Bluetooth not included in image send options. Only way to access microSD? Remove battery cover.

Price/maker: $550, Palm

6 out of 10

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Read our full Palm Treo Pro review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Look! Hardware that breaks –- on purpose! The Z10's apparent bendy kick-slide design may be flashy, but turning out an innovative design is about the only thing this phone has going for it. Though it's billed as a "pocket-sized mobile studio," this 4-ounce, platinum-trimmed phone is certainly no substitute for even a mediocre minicamcorder (Exhibit A: the Flip Mino). So why drop $500 on the Z10 when you can get a 5-megapixel camphone (Exhibit B: the Nokia N82) that shoots crisper stills and comparable vids? Beats us.

Maybe it's the intuitive editing suite: The Z10's storyboard feature let us cut together a montage of clips and pics with cinematic fades, circle dissolves, music and title cards in less than 10 minutes. Unfortunately, the OS wasn't nearly as user-friendly. We literally had to break out the instruction manual just to send a Bluetooth pic (no joke). Had Motorola spent even half as much time making the software as innovative as its breakaway hardware, the Z10 would have wowed us. But with its lacking OS and underwhelming camera, the phone didn't feel ready for prime time.

WIRED: 30-fps vid clips don’t look too shabby. Quick, easy uploading to YouTube and Shozu. Storyboarding was a cinch. Camera shortcut button, plus autofocus, great for snapping pics on the fly. Easy-to-access external microSD card slot is ready for 32 GB.


TIRED:
2.2-inch screen isn't ideal for peeping videos. Only 3.2-megapixel cam? (Tarantino wouldn’t settle for less than 5 megapixels). Only a measly 1-GB microSD included. Nav and Symbian UIQ more difficult to penetrate than Fort Knox. Curved slider makes lower keypad buttons harder to press.

Price/maker: $500 (unlocked), Motorola

5 out of 10

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Read our full Motorola Z10 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The Sylvania G Netbook is a fairly direct response to the Asus Eee PC 900 series, with an 8.9-inch screen, Linux OS and chicklet keys that make touch typing a fever dream fantasy. And while some of Sylvania's choices here are merely dreadful (the arrow keys are a mere 12mm wide — thinner than my pinky), it's actually the OS that royally blows it for the Netbook.

Ubuntu is known for being one of the most stable and simple versions of Linux on the market, but Sylvania somehow turns it into a nightmare on this system. For a computer ostensibly designed for inexperienced users, it's a disaster. I had trouble with the Ubuntu installation on the Netbook from the start: Blank screens on bootup. MPEGs wouldn't play and codec installations repeatedly failed (or even crashed the machine). Help files weren't installed. And most annoying of all, the battery meter couldn't decide whether the computer was plugged in, and pegged battery life remaining at 0 or 2 percent no matter how long we charged it. The Netbook abruptly shut itself off on at least one occasion, possibly convinced that it was out of juice.

With stability this dismal, the specs are largely irrelevant. But if you're willing to invest the time to work through the Netbook's quirks and faults, it could make a great replacement for your desk calculator. —Christopher Null

WIRED: Has a real hard drive (80 GB) instead of flash storage. Includes three USB ports and an SD card reader. Comes in colors. Bright screen for this category.

TIRED: Slower than a sedated slug at just about every app despite 1.6-GHz Atom chip and 1-GB RAM (standard $399 model includes just 512-MB RAM). Cartoonish styling. Considerably heavier than advertised (and the Eee PC 900) at 2.6 pounds. Far too buggy to be taken seriously.

Price/maker: $450 (as tested), Sylvania

3 out of 10

Photo courtesy Sylvania

Read our full Sylvania G Netbook review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Think of this 26-inch TV from Samsung as any one of last year's larger models, shrunk down. Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's only 720p, but its bright, detailed picture is impressive and its vivid color is surprisingly accurate for a set this small. It scores surprisingly well in our video-processing tests, even besting many of this year's small models. Sure, this model is a bit challenged in the areas of de-interlacing 24-fps film-based HD sources and removing jaggies from diagonal lines, but then so are many of the 32-inch and smaller TVs we've tested this year. And who really worries about 24 FPS film sources on a 26-incher besides geeks like us? Unlike many small sets, though, the Samsung's noise reduction performs beautifully. We saw good results leaving it in "auto" for all but the crappiest video, and only had to really adjust for our truly hideous NR test clip. Hardcore testing aside, the Samsung's good NR combined with its great picture and color delivered where it matters the most: Our HD and SD test movies looked awesome, as did satellite HDTV and output from our 360. —Chuck Cage

WIRED: Attractive, simple remote-control. Side ports (HDMI, S-Video and composite) make hooking up a 360 or camcorder a breeze. Optical digital audio out -- perfect for tying into that massive dorm-theater sound system.

TIRED: Some video-processing issues. 1366 x 728 native resolution makes it a not-so-great computer monitor unless you're over 40 and want to read without your glasses.

Price/maker: $550, Samsung

7 out of 10

Read our full Samsung LN26A450C1 LCD TV review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The HP TouchSmart IQ506 is an update to last year's all-in-one touchscreen, the TouchSmart IQ770. This year, HP went for a countertop-friendly design by packing all the components into the IQ506's brilliant 22-inch, touch-sensitive display. As a whole, this makes for a much more streamlined and clutter-free presentation compared to its predecessor. In terms of general ease and responsiveness, the IQ506's touchscreen does a marginally good job. Common maneuvers like double taps and click-and-drag highlighting can be pulled off with minimal hassle. Even problem areas like corners were accessible with relatively effortless finger pokes.

Save for a pinch/zoom gesture, however, all the image-rotating fun we were expecting was largely nonexistent. In its defense, leaving notes, creating calendar reminders and a host of other "bulletin board" tasks were a cinch using the TouchSmart dashboard. But even though you can incorporate non-dashboard programs like Firefox into the interface, opening these applications kicks you back out to the Vista desktop. On one hand, the system is a great value when one compares the sticker price to the components, but it's disconcerting that a $1,500 computer lacks the flair and usability of a relatively inexpensive device like the iPhone. We've got our fingers crossed for next year's model.

WIRED: Elegant space-saving design. Speaker bar produces booming lows and clear highs. Bright 22-inch screen hides smudges and fingerprints. Integrated TV tuner adds living room chops. Blazing connectivity via gigabit Ethernet and integrated 802.11b/g/n. 500-GB hard drive offers plenty of room for media storage. Whisper-quiet operation.

TIRED: Not the smoothest touch-based interface. Handoffs between TouchSmart/Vista programs are slow and awkward. Very limited upgrade options. Midrange GPU puts a damper on hardcore gaming. Retractable bezel feels cheap and rickety. Sluggish processor given its all-in-one class. What? No Blu-ray?

Price/maker: $1,500 (as tested), hp.com

6 out of 10

Read our full HP TouchSmart IQ506 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Dubbed the "Boulder," this angular, candy-colored handset is the offspring of the Gadget Lab's crumpled Type-V, Type-S and Type-SL review units. The Boulder isn't another rugged rehash, though. In fact, Casio finally threw a curve by including some fairly useful multimedia features. Welcome additions like music playback, a more powerful (but still lacking) camera, and zippy EV-DO connectivity fatten up this phone's already rock-solid resume. But let's face it -- Casio is extremely late to the party with these commonplace features. Previous pratfalls like the laughably low-res external LCD, and an annoying light show for incoming calls have returned too.

Foibles aside, a lot of the "new" features were actually well integrated into this otherwise hard-knock handset. Tasks like downloading and playing music, mobile messaging and accessing webmail were brisk and painless due to a sensible layout and speedy EV-DO network. Little usability improvements (and smart additions like a waterproof cover for the microSD port) reinforced Casio's obvious commitment to achieving a rugged/user-friendly balance. Casio definitely gets kudos for bringing a tank like the G'zOne into the multimedia era. However, the Boulder is more a patchwork of desirable features, rather than a cohesive marriage of entertainment and durability.

WIRED: Armored cross section where mud meets multimedia. External LCD doubles as wanderlust-friendly e-compass. Awesome camera flash/flashlight combo. Expanded memory via microSD card slot. Solid call quality -- even after 12 rounds of tough love. Included cradle doubles as a travel charger. Also comes in "less-flamboyant" black.

TIRED: Terrible speakerphone quality for both voice and music. Far too expensive. Annoying multicolored lights show signals incoming calls. No file sharing via Bluetooth. Lackluster 1.3-MP camera sucks for both stills and video. Sweet angles still can't hide a brick-ish profile.

Price/maker: $130 (after $50 rebate), Verizon

7 out of 10

Read our full Casio G'zOne Boulder review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Out of the box and straight up to the eye you'll immediately enjoy the D3's spacious and bright viewfinder. The noticeably improved 51-point auto focus system is whip-fast and works in concert with an outstanding 1005-pixel metering sensor that gets it right in the most challenging lighting. Images are beautifully consistent with a wide dynamic range and improved noise-reduction settings that give the pictures a more natural look. To achieve that end, Nikon pulled back on the sharpening levels, leaving the choice of added "crunchiness" to a photographer's post-production predilections.

Nikon's new three-inch high-res LCD is a revelation. If you do take the plunge, be ready to spend a good chunk of time learning the feature set to exploit the D3's capabilities. From resolution to speed, color control, bit-depth and so much more, the D3 is incredibly customizable. Dial it in for lightning-quick 11-fps sports action, superlow-light shooting (ISO up to 25600), handheld or tripod-mounted live view -- you name it, whatever and however you want to shoot, the D3 does it exceptionally well.

WIRED: High ISO shooting is fantastic with relatively low noise at settings up to ISO 3200 and beyond. Live view function the best of the top-end DSLRs. Dual CF card capability.

TIRED: So many functions it could take a lifetime to learn them all. No in-camera dust-reduction system.

Price/maker: $5,000 (body only), Nikon

9 out of 10

Read our full Nikon D3 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The U110 ultralight we received looks striking, with a scarlet paisley-etched aluminum lid paired with a shiny jet-black keyboard area. As soon as you open it up and power it on, you come face to face with one of the U110's most interesting yet unsettling features: VeriFace recognition. After booting up, the webcam embedded in the bezel starts scanning the room. When it finds you, it superimposes disturbing cross hairs on your eyes in an attempt to recognize you and unlock the PC. If you haven't registered your peepers, the system will hang, so you have to shut it down, turn the notebook away and open it up again to get it to boot.

The 11.1-inch display is bright and sharp, though it can look a bit iridescent at close range. The glossy black keys are big and square but the thin membrane beneath the keys is flimsy and deforms as you type. There is a decent set of ports, but the designers couldn't find room for an optical drive. Seriously, we're pretty disappointed. The included external DVD drive looks cool, but you know what would be even cooler? Not needing an external drive at all. For work purposes, the Lenovo is a capable little machine. The U110 excelled in our PCMark tests, far outdistancing most other ultralights. Overall this is a good PC; it just has a few annoyances.

WIRED: Charming good looks will attract the Lenovo faithful who are sick of looking funerary. Excellent business performance will silence office critics of your "red PC (Harumph!)." Delightfully light and slim.

TIRED: The keyboard, though pretty, is pretty flimsy. Terminator-style face recognition will give you the heebie-jeebies and make you torch all your Schwarzenegger flicks (Especially Batman and Robin). External DVD means one more gadget to tote.

Price/maker: $1,800 (as tested), Lenovo

7 out of 10

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Read our full Lenovo IdeaPad U110 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Dishing out a hefty helping of HD, the SR12 is a lot of camera, both in your hand and under the hood with its 120-GB hard drive. The upgraded CMOS sensor and Bionz image processor have significantly improved image quality and stomped out even more noise. Sony’s face-detection system, which works snappily for video and the 10.2-megapixel stills, is very effective both up close and at long range. OK, so it makes great video, but what about the controls? For those who fly on manual, the Cam Control Dial is like piloting an F22. Neatly nestled next to the lens, the silver nubbin is a twisty-twirly festival of videographic functionality, providing quick access to manual adjustments of exposure, focus, white balance and aperture.

There’s also an “easy” button on board. A quick tap on the little blue button and all you’ve got to do is point the camera in the right direction to get the good stuff. In spite of all this Sony video goodness, the SR12 has one glaring flaw — terribly difficult Mac integration. To get it working you’ve got to have iMovie '08. Previous versions of iMovie don’t have the capability to natively read the AVCHD codec meaning that you had to convert the video to other formats in order to do any post-production.

WIRED: Excellent AVCHD video quality got better this time around. Extra-wide 3.2-inch touchscreen LCD is a big bonus. Outstanding sound quality.

TIRED: Massive internal hard drive makes it somewhat chunky and a bit of a load to carry. The “easy” button should be bigger and easier to find. And it should be red. Yeah red and all glowy.

$1,400, Sony

8 out of 10

(Photo by Jackson Lynch for Wired.com)

Read our full Sony HDR-SR12 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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With Kensington's Wireless USB Docking Station, the moment you open your Wireless USB (WUSB)-enabled notebook, all your desktop devices are ready to go. We were amazed at how seamless the process is: The station recognized our 20-inch monitor, wireless USB mouse, keyboard and printer. It was as if they were always connected to the notebook. Of course, there are a few gotchas. WUSB is a new standard and some notebooks can't hook up with this docking station. Dell and Lenovo offer a few models, and other companies should be out the gate by this fall.

With its plain, geeky looks, the 11.4-ounce antenna-topped station could get lost in a field of wireless routers. But that's not quite enough to put our Battlestar boxers in a knot: The Kensington Wireless Docking Station is a snap to set up and makes mobile computing, well, mobile and hassle-free. You know, the way it's supposed to be. —Michael S. Lasky

WIRED: Drop-dead, simple setup and instant wireless connection of all desktop peripherals makes moving a notebook to and from the desk a hassle-free, nothing-to-plug-in experience. Small footprint means no great loss of desktop real estate.

TIRED: Still few WUSB-enabled notebooks on the market. Audio handling could be smoother; default requires USB-powered speakers. First generation device is still pricey.

$230, Kensington

7 out of 10

Read our full Kensington Wireless USB Docking Station review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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This standard-definition lightweight shoots better video and has a much smarter feature set than most of its competitors. In fact, JVC knows that YouTubers can't bear missing the latest police beating or Matthew McConaughey shirtless in the grocery store, so the MS100 is lightning-quick on start up. The 35x optical zoom allows you to capture the crushing blows and bothersome blemishes while keeping a safe distance. Plus, the nifty laser-touch LCD makes you feel like a real cinematographer with speedy access to manual features.

While it's nicely appointed, you've got to bridle at a couple things. First, there's no optical image stabilization. But shaky image stabilization aside, the very nature of this camcorder calls into question its usefulness. While neither big nor expensive, there are other, better, ultrasimple run-and-gun camcorders out there. Most are smaller and cheaper, too. With this form factor at this price, the MS100 is kind of stuck in the middle between the svelte flash-based AVCHD camcorders and the shirt-pocket shooters from Flip, Kodak and Creative.

WIRED: 35x optical zoom brings the action right to your doorstep. Superb video quality. Formula 1 start-up speed. Easy to use laser-touch LCD.

TIRED: No optical image stabilization. Lack of Mac compatibility is inexcusable and utterly perplexing. Three hundred and fifty bones for a camera that's made to record for YouTube? The Flip Mino does the same thing for about half the cost.

$350, JVC

6 out of 10

(Photo: Jackson Lynch/Wired.com)

Read our full JVC Everio GZ-MS100 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Through some loophole, wormhole or deal with the devil, Gateway has produced a massive desktop replacement that's fast, good and cheap. How fast, you ask? Fast enough to go toe-to-toe with -- and school -- a $4,800 Alienware Area 51 m15x: In our Quake 4 test, the Gateway posted a score of 167.8 fps to the m15x's 167.2. This is partially because the Gateway's 512-MB Nvidia Geforce 9800M is running the show. The FX also has Olympic endurance for larger-class notebooks, going 2 hours, 23 minutes to play a DVD.

And that brings us to the cheap part. The Gateway is just $1,400 -- more than three times less than the Alienware and hundreds (and more hundreds) less than most other desktop replacement machines. Sure, it lacks the latest processor (it's got a 2.27-GHz Core Duo), but it has a whopping 4 GB of RAM to help it attack processing tasks and a spacious 200 GB of drive space for your stuff. The big bummer here is the missing Blu-ray drive, which is what is likely keeping this thing so affordable.

WIRED: Some of the best gaming performance ever recorded on a PC. Long battery life for a desktop replacement. Comfy and solid keyboard withstands heavy hands. Multimedia controls and slide volume look cool without glowing too brightly.

TIRED: No Blu-ray is a letdown for HD-heads, and you can't configure your PC to include the drive. The battery sticks out a bit in the back, and the power brick is monstrous. Power lights on the front, unlike the multimedia controls, are too bright.

Price/maker: $1,400 (as tested), Gateway

8 out of 10

Read our full Gateway P-7811FX Notebook review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Alienware prides itself on its tower rigs and desktop replacements, but several of its earlier forays in to the mid-size laptops were disastrous; the branding was intact but the performance wasn't. Not so with the m15x. This 15.4-incher is plenty portable, yet it has all the gaming trappings and the performance to back it up.

From the unboxing onward, you can tell that you are paying for the experience as well as the hardware. A baseball cap with an alien head on it, an extra battery, VGA-to-DVI adapter, FireWire adapter and entertainment remote show that Alienware will risk no dissatisfied customers due to lackluster goodies. With specs that include a 2.8-GHz Intel Core 2 Extreme processor, 3 GB of RAM, and a 512-MB nVidia GeForce 8800M GTX, the m15x performs impressively, but not out of this world. It all comes down to the loot; this is a luxury item and there are far more affordable PCs with comparable performance.

WIRED: Tip-top business and gaming performance. Lots of included extras for gaming elitists. The solid and handsome design will please gamers, and cool lighting effects will titillate geeks.

TIRED: Exorbitant price that only a space tourist could pay without wincing. For all the expense, it's not the very best gaming PC. Dual batteries take a long time to charge up. The Blu-ray drive must be removed to accommodate the secondary battery.

Price/maker: $4,880 (as tested), Alienware

6 out of 10

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

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The Archos 605 WiFi is a damn fine portable media player. Now it’s slightly mo' better due to this new GPS accessory, which for $130 adds full-bore street navigation that's on par with a Garmin or TomTom system. Well, a low-end Garmin or TomTom from a few years ago, anyway: This lackluster accessory does not have many of the bells and whistles of modern nav systems, and the one it does have -- real-time traffic updates -- works only in Europe.

On the plus side, the software locks in satellite signals faster than NORAD. However, it navigates like a base commander heading home from the officer's club. On several occasions the GPS tried to route us totally out of the way instead of continuing on the road right in front of us. To make matters worse, the software doesn't announce street names, only directions. The GPS Car Holder would look pretty good if this were, say, 2003. And it does get you where you're going, if not always by the fastest or most logical route. At $130, it's a decent deal for current owners, but definitely behind the GPS times.

WIRED: Cheaper than a standalone GPS, at least if you already own an Archos 605. High-resolution screen makes maps look mighty purty. Lightning-fast satellite lock.

TIRED: The 605 can’t navigate without the car holder, so you can’t go on walkabout. Doesn’t say street names. Requires you to move to Europe if you want traffic features. You have to manually restart the GPS app every time you power on the 605.

Price/maker: $130, Archos

5 out of 10

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Read our full Archos 605 WiFi GPS Car Holder review.

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As one of six new Fujitsu offerings equipped with Intel's Centrino 2, the Lifebook A6120 more than makes up for its dull exterior with features that will have prettier laptops quaking in their neoprene sleeves. Opposite its no frills glossy shell resides a gorgeous 15.4-inch LCD capable of brightening even the darkest depths of Mordor.

Battery life and performance are equally impressive. The new 2.26-GHz CPU more than did the job when it came to photo editing, gaming and pretty much every other benchmark we threw at it. What's more, we squeezed a respectable four and a half hours of battery life under normal usage out of A6120. In fact, after playing with the Lifebook for a week, we were hard pressed to find anything significant to complain about. Would Fujitsu be well served by spending a little more time and effort on design and shrinking down that plump chassis? Sure. But this reviewer is more than happy to overlook a 1.7-inch waistline as long as it hides enough goodies.

WIRED: Great bang/buck ratio. The A6120 starts at only $1,150 and jumps but $200 for a Radeon HD 3470 card and Blu-ray drive. Sharp, beautiful screen is one of the brightest we've seen on a laptop. Screw the chicklet-style keys found on other notebooks: Fujitsu's old school keyboard provides near perfect "clickiness" (to borrow a term from designer Amar Sagoo).

TIRED: Small trackpad makes for a less than thrilling multitouch experience. Runs consistently hot -- don't rest it on your lap for long or risk a scorched crotch. While certainly not ugly, design is blander than a plate of lima beans.

Price/maker: $1,350 (as tested), Fujitsu

8 out of 10

Read our full Fujitsu Lifebook A6120 review.

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GeTac clearly had utilitarian users in mind with the E-100, which makes for a bit of a mixed bag when it comes to function. On the bright side, this surprisingly light ultramobile PC is military certified to withstand splashes of water, dust, humidity, shock and even freezing temperatures. Even common vulnerabilities like exposed ethernet and USB ports have been sidestepped with a bevy of watertight rubber stoppers. In fact, my review unit was able to smoothly stream South Park episodes while taking repeated tumbles down a flight of stairs.

But it was when I looked under the hood that I found kinks in the armor. Mission-critical applications like Office ran at a reasonable clip in a number of bumpy environments, but for the E-100's price I was expecting a little more "oomph." The 100-GB shock-resistant ATA hard drive and 1 GB of RAM tilt the balance a little bit, but honestly, even the unassuming Eee PC comes stock with Intel's newer Atom chips. Mediocre specs aside, this rough and tumble UMPC performs solidly in a number of harsh environments and boasts a host of connectivity options.

WIRED: Rock-solid construction, ergonomics and field performance. Responsive 8.4-inch touchscreen looks phenomenal in direct sunlight. Web ready with 802.11b/g, gigabit ethernet and SIM card slot. Waterproof combination SmartCard/PCMCIA slot. Decent battery life at 3.5 hours (WiFi on). 100-GB hard drive has its own heater for cycling up in freezing conditions.

TIRED: Too little processing given the amount of buck. Near three grand price tag? Seriously? No option for a solid state drive?! Recessed USB and headphone jacks are a hassle to plug into. Tinny speaker is more of an afterthought. Lose the stylus and you're S.O.L. Looks that only a FedEx driver could love.

Price/maker: $2,880 as tested, GeTac

6 out of 10

Read our full GeTac E-100 review.

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Most of the new mini-laptops look like toys, educational tools or lab experiments in miniaturization, but the MSI Wind is an actual PC. Packing the latest 1.6-GHz Atom processor and a roomy 80-GB drive, the Wind boasts some legit PC cred. Yes, your iPod probably has more drive space, but 80 gigs was plenty not so long ago, and it's not like you're going to be producing HD video on this thing; it's more of an internet lapdog than a laptop.

The 10-inch widescreen can display most fixed-width webpages comfortably, and its keyboard is large enough to house decent-size keys so you can type easily without resorting to Homer's dialing wand. While even some larger laptops are short on ports, the Wind finds room for three USBs, an SD slot and a display connector (take note, MacBook Air!). Of course, it's not perfect. We would have loved to see a DVD burner included, and with all its ports, a mini FireWire would be welcome. Also, don't expect high-end performance from the unit or hearty battery life from its slim, three-cell battery. But if you want a cheap and tiny companion for uploading pictures during a Malaysian jungle trek, or just a little buddy to hang out with you on the couch for IMDB searches, it's pretty hard to be against the Wind.

WIRED: Grown-up looks (as opposed to "I want to sit at the big kids' table" found in other netbooks). Full keyboard and the largest screen among mini-notes. Plenty of ports to plug away at. 2.3-pound weight and rounded edges make it simple to pack and lug.

TIRED: Lack of a DVD is understandable, but it still makes us cry a little. Hard drive sometimes makes mysterious swallowing sounds. Two-hour battery life is OK, but three would be better.

$500, MSI Mobile

8 out of 10

Photo: Jon Snyder/ Wired.com

Read our full MSI Wind U100 review.

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Behold, the new Eee Box! Like the rest of the Eee bloodline, these varicolored desktop boxes are small, cheap and adorable (think AppleTV or Mac Mini). Intel's 1.6-GHz Atom processor, up to 2 GBs of memory, four USB ports, an SD card slot, 802.11n and Bluetooth are plenty for the Eee Box to hit that elusive "good enough" mark with aplomb. Once again, you'll get your choice of running either Linux or Windows XP.

Then there's the size. While it does have a slightly larger overall footprint, it's much trimmer than the Mac Mini. Not only will this elegant 8.5 x 7 x 1-inch box fit anywhere, but you also have the choice of mounting it directly to the back of any extra monitor you happen to have lying around. To be clear, the Eee Box is not for sweaty frag fests or heavy-duty HD video decoding. But if you have a hankering for a killer kitchen PC or just an über-cheap second or third home PC that runs Linux or XP, it simply can't be beat.

WIRED: Small, lightweight and cuter than a bowlful of kittens. More than enough processing power for everyday computing. Cheaper than an ounce of Da Kine bud. The option of running Splashtop for preboot access to Skype, web browsing and IM clients.

TIRED: Where's the optical drive? No HDMI output, which actually doesn't matter much because there's also no hardware to decode acceleration. By itself, the Atom processor can barely handle 720p H.264 streams, dashing our hopes of this being the ultimate home-streaming box.

$300 as tested, Asus

8 out of 10

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Read our full Asus Eee Box review.

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Iomega's own $190 solution for a filled DVR is a 500-GB drive that plays nice with two DVRs in particular: Scientific Atlanta's 80-GB standard definition 8300 and the more recent 160-GB 8300-HD model. We tested the drive out on the latter model and found it more or less did what it promised. It even worked with a neighbor's Series 3 TiVo, which (to its credit) is known for being something of an eSATA slut.

Setup in both instances was quick and painless, and involved simply turning off the DVR, plugging in the Iomega drive, and then turning everything back on again. Voila, no more having to choose between Emmanuelle: The Art of Love and the latest episode of Mad Men.

WIRED: Reasonably priced. Your grandmother could probably set it up. Instantly adds an additional 300 hours of SD TV, or 60 hours of HD content.

TIRED: Only one way to connect the drive to a DVR (that would be eSATA). Limited compatibility, although Iomega claims the drive will work with future SA eSATA-enabled DVRs. No way of controlling what gets stored on the expander drive and what gets stored on the DVR. Transporting DVR'd content to your computer is verboten, and plugging the drive into a computer will automatically reformat it.

$190, Iomega

6 out of 10

Read our full Iomega DVR Expander Drive review.

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The Samsung U900, aka Soul, aka Magical Touch, doesn't really have any supernatural abilities. What it does have is a tiny, touch-sensitive OLED nav-pad that is one of the coolest, most efficient touch interfaces we've seen on a handset. The small display (situated below the main 2.2-inch QVGA screen) features icons that morph based on whatever application is currently on the screen. Switch to camera mode and controls for snapping pictures. Toggle to the music player and buttons for fast-forward, rewind, pause and play pop up.

The big selling point is the phone's pocketability. The picture quality and dynamic range could be better (LED flash, we're talking about you), but at 0.5-inches thick and 7 ounces, this slider is more svelte than just about every 5-MP cam we've tested. Ultimately, our biggest complaint is that you cannot use the camera without sliding open the phone first. This design protects the lens from dust bunnies and pocket grime, yes, but shooting with a fully open device was a tad awkward at times.

WIRED: External microSD slot makes it a cinch to swap cards on the fly. Bluetooth (+A2DP). Competent image-editing suite. Video editor allows you to layer additional audio tracks. Decent facial detection. Haptic feedback can be tweaked to three different levels of intensity or switched-off entirely.

TIRED: Bundled proprietary ear buds sound duller than Ben Stein. No Xenon flash. No GPS. No WiFi. Lower-res video clips. Proprietary headphone jack positioned on the side = hard to pocket when phones are plugged in. Noticeable screen glare when outdoors.

$400, Samsung

7 out of 10

Photo: Issac Brekken/Wired.com

Read our full Samsung SGH-U900 Soul "Magical Touch" review.

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The biggest selling point of the new Sidekick is supposed to be the customizable "skins" you can order to replace the solid-color ones (we opted for jet black). But apart from flashy aesthetics, the pocket-friendly 2008 is 0.4-inches shorter and 0.9-ounces lighter than the pricier LX. It also packs features that were sorely missed with the tragically minimalist iD. Most notably, a 2.0-megapixel camera that can also capture video clips (albeit crappy ones).

Though the 2.6-inch WQVGA swivel screen’s received a slight -- and necessary -- boost in pixels (400 x 240), the resolution’s still not fantastic. And neither is Bluetooth. We found data transfers not only paused the media player (annoying), but afterward, we had to go back and manually un-pause whatever track was playing (doubly annoying). For the price, though the 2008 is a solid option compared to the LX -- but only if you live and die by instant messaging and you don't mind being seen with Paris Hilton's device of choice in public.

WIRED: Spacious, comfy QWERTY. 3.5-mm headphone jack. Surprisingly loud, radically clear music player. Wide screen excellent for web browsing. Solid battery life. Quick video recording/sharing. Comes with two skins (we got black and iridescent lime). Bluetooth with A2DP (great to have, even if it does disrupt tunes).

TIRED: Screen retains more fingerprints than the Feds. No flash. No WiFi. Mike captures poor sound when recording video. Only 20-second video clips. Only 512-MB microSD card included. Apps are mostly in the $2.99+ range (except for the janky free Calculator). No 3-G.

Price/maker: $150 (with 2-year contract), T-Mobile

6 out of 10

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Read our full Sidekick review.

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Cyclists know it's plum foolish to roll around on two wheels sans helmet, but it can be just as dangerous to bike about at night without a light. A good headlight affixed to your handlebars is just the thing to help cut through the murk and get you to your destination safely. Here we pit two of the top dogs on the market against each other and see which comes out on top. —Eric Smillie

Planet Bike Blaze

This one-watt LED cannon goes the extra mile, and we don't just mean it shoots light a ridiculous distance. Due in no small part to its particularly aggressive blinking mode, accurately called superflash, it didn’t just help us catch drivers' attentions; it had them anxiously craning their necks to check whether we were trying to pull them over. Drawing on only two AA batteries, this baby cuts down on weight but its CREE XR-E diode, coupled with a specially engineered Fraen lens, still pumps out the brightest light of all the lamps we tested -- enough to bounce off signs, license plates, and other reflective materials up to four blocks away, giving us plenty of time to make an impression. All we have to worry about now is whether some cop-hating, GTA IV-overdosing motorist trying to run us down.

WIRED: Recessed switch only works if pressed firmly, which means it won’t turn on in your bag while you jostle your way to the bar, leaving you in the dark at closing time. Planet Bike spends 25 percent of its profits on bike advocacy.

TIRED: The brightness and reduced weight come at a price: 20 hours of battery life in blinking mode, and only seven on high. Though it installs without the use of a tool, the handlebar bracket is tricky to tighten and slips easily.

$50, Planet Bike

8 out of 10

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While not the sharpest bulb on our handlebars, the WhiteLite HP AA is in it for the long haul. Don’t get us wrong -- just like other 1-watt LED headlamps, this portable, all-in one lamp is more than a glorified blinky. When engineering this light, Topeak got all snippy, cutting the cords to one of its external power-pack lights and reengineered it to accept three AA batteries.

Its widely diffused beam covers plenty of surface area and earned our trust by helping us dodge nasty potholes and tree roots on unlit paths. But where this guy really shines is in perseverance, by lasting 30 hours on high and a whopping 120 on flash.

WIRED: The mounting bracket screws tight with a finger knob and adjusts five degrees left and right to get a straight aim even on angled handlebars, although it does require an Allen key to tighten. Little red LED signals when batteries are low.

TIRED: Blinks come slowly and lack urgency in flashing mode. Pushing the rear on/off push button can rotate the mount and mess up the light angle. Sound like a small problem? It won't be when you look up just in time to face plant into the bumper of a lifted pickup.

$60, Topeak

7 out of 10

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The E71 looks more like a Blackberry Killer, but don’t be fooled: This great white hope gives the iPhone a run for its money in a lot of different areas (yes, really). Despite its obvious lack of an oversize touchscreen interface, Nokia wins points for a remarkably trim profile (10mm vs. 12.3mm), decent 3.2-megapixel camera (instead of 2.0), and the fact it's not tied to any carrier (yet). Setting up Nokia's Mail for Exchange program required no IT help or time. QuickOffice let us create, edit and send Word/Excel/PowerPoint files on the fly while we browsed PDFs with Adobe Acrobat Reader.

The E71 is stocked with enough apps and goodies to keep even the most overworked road warrior on the ball, but it didn't feel too "business" due to two separate customizable home screens. One is designed to house all of your work apps while the other is geared more toward entertainment with programs for audio, video and gaming. The phone's 2.36-inch, 320 x 240 QVGA display is only slightly smaller than the iPod classic's, and though the resolution can't top the iPhone's, with 15 fps, the E71 is still solid for YouTube clips. Oh, and did we mention the E71's got battery life for days? Yes, literally, three of them.

WIRED: Up to 8 GB in an easy-to-access, external microSD slot. Quick and seamless OS. GPS, 3G, WiFi, Bluetooth (you name it, it's basically got it). Vivid screen (even in direct sunlight). Textured stainless steel backing prevents slippage. Relatively lightweight (127 grams = six grams lighter than iPhone). Hit any letter on the QWERTY pad and predictive text calls up that section of your address book.

TIRED: No standard 3.5-mm headphone jack. 3.2-megapixel camera's optics could be better. LED flash could be way better. N-Gage gaming platform not available. Screen's wide, but not wide enough to do a feature-length film justice. For $500, you could get two 8-GB, 3-G JesusPhones (with $100 left over to put toward AT&T's data plan).

$500 (unlocked), Nokia

9 out of 10

Photo: Max Buck/Wired.com

Read our full Nokia E71 review.

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The laser erases the tracks of acne

The hassle of acne are not limited to the acute phase. In the most severe forms it is not uncommon that, perhaps for the delay in treatment, you have permanent injuries. In general they are scars, areas of atrophic skin. You can of course intervene so invasive, relying when necessary also to plastic surgery. Today is proposed even less invasive alternative to dermabrasion. These are the areas concerned in the light emitted by a particular type of neodymium YAG laser (with a wavelength of 1064-nm). The purpose of the application does not remove the skin is atrophic, but send heat to the layers immediately below the dermis, and thus it causes damage, not visible externally, which forces the cells of the dermis to implement the mechanisms of repair, particularly the formation of collagen. This mechanism, called remodeling, is the same on which the dermabrasion, but in this case we limit the inconvenience to the patient (including pain). 

 

A cycle of five applications 

The treatment, based on five subsequent applications, has now been put to the test in 11 patients who had mild atrophic scars media entity on the face. The audit was conducted with very sophisticated methods, which have helped to quantify the improvement. Through a series of images of skin taken from different angles, the researchers have reconstructed a three-dimensional visualization of the skin in order to objectively evaluate the roughness. In patients treated, there was an improvement of the skin surface are half of the treatment cycle, a reduction of roughness equal to 8, 9%. After a month of the end of the five applications of the laser compared to the condition of departure was more than 23%. Between the end of the first month and the third notes the most obvious improvement (31.6%). From that moment on, the regeneration of the skin slows down and six months after you stop, but the improvement is substantial: about 40%. Obviously, after this period, the processes of regeneration induced heat from the laser stops. 

 

Less disruption in public 

The laser is not the only means which can be used to deliver heat in a targeted way: have been tried also other light sources different, as are radio waves. However, this is the first study in which they were shown the positive results and has also been able to determine the size. It's was also confirmed the safety of the procedure, side effects were very limited and it was just localized erythema, petechiae small punctiform pain or content. The great advantage of this non-ablative treatment, without removal of tissue, is its greater acceptability: the patient should not be medicated and the skin has a virtually normal appearance, which does not interfere with life. If the point of departure is not too disfiguring, this seems a decidedly advantageous.