Archive for February 22nd, 2008

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With seven days left in the month to announce the iPhone SDK, BusinessWeek is reporting that they’ve got it from a reliable source that it’s going to be late by between a week to three. Yes, it would absolutely suck — but there’s always Ziphone.

 

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If we didn’t know better, we’d say Samsung really wants to develop some type of hybrid gaming / phone device. One need only look back on the plethora of patent applications from the electronics-maker to realize that something game-related is going on over at HQ. Whatever the case may be, the Korean company has applied for another iteration of device, this time taking a more modular approach to the layout of buttons and screen. In this new configuration, a RAZR-like clamshell would actually house a swiveling screen which allows the unit to flip open, thus placing the display squarely between two “wings.” The resulting arrangement would be a symmetrical device that would encourage a more familiar hand position for gamers. Of course, like those other designs, these are just images on paper — though it does spark the imagination considerably.

[Via Unwired View]

 

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Callers, your worst nightmare is coming true… maybe. According to a report, a group of hackers at the Black Hat conference in Washington D.C. claim that they’re able to hack GSM calls with equipment costing about $1,000. If you believe the team (and we’re inclined to at least have a listen), they can decrypt GSM phone conversations and text messages on a network using inexpensive tools called field programmable gate arrays. Until now, the cost of the technology required to hack GSM transmissions has been prohibitively expensive for all but your government and large-scale snooping operations, but that’s beginning to change. Not only can this technique allow access to calls, but some of the tech demonstrated at the conference might also enable a user to pinpoint a phone’s distance from the surveillance hardware, and find out what type of device is being used. There was no mention of CDMA hacking, so you might want to move over to Sprint for all your seedy activities. Er, we mean stay on Sprint.

 

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Now that the GSM Palm Centro has finally landed on AT&T, it’s time to check in with the reviewers to see if the EDGE-only model is still worth the $99 — and for the most part, it seems like it is. Everyone agrees with us that the green keys are funky-fresh, and old as it is, Palm’s Garnet OS is still functional and fast enough to make using the thing relatively pain-free, and it seems like the drop from Sprint’s EV-DO to AT&T’s EDGE isn’t a major hit — after all, you’re still using Blazer. All in all, it looks like the Centro is basically the same on AT&T as it is on Sprint: a solid low-end smartphone at an attractive price.

Read - Laptop: “AT&T customers looking for an easy-to-use smart phone should be satisfied.”
Read - TreoCentral: “There are more powerful smartphones out there, but few are as cheap, easy to use, and fun as this little guy.”
Read - MobileTechReview: “For those who don’t need everything… the Centro is worth a look.”

 

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Well, goodness, try saying that five times fast. T-Mobile has officially unveiled its rather longwinded “HotSpot @Home Talk Forever Home Phone” plan add-on for folks that aren’t quite ready to put their landlines out to pasture quite yet, though there’s a catch: much like the original, it’s beginning life as a trial in just a couple of test markets. Lucky folks in Seattle and Dallas will be able to march into their local T-Mobile outlet and pick up the long-rumored WRTU54G for $49.99 on contract, at which point $10 a month tacked onto their T-Mobile bill will allow them to jack in their old-school landline phones and get unlimited domestic calling. In the event they need a landline phone (o rly?) or are looking to upgrade their 70’s vintage AT&T Slimline, stores will also be offering this lovely DECT system from VTech to complete the package. There’s no word just yet on when we might see the hardware outside the test markets, but with landline popularity waning the way it is, we’d suggest they get a move on.

 

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Just when you think you’ve seen the iPhone perform its last magic trick (making you eggs benedict, solving the inverse Galois problem, a brief appearance on Dancing With the Stars) something like this comes along to make your jaw drop just a little bit more. Touchpad for the iPhone is built on top of VNsea, but instead of allowing you to navigate your desktop on the device, it becomes what is essentially a wireless, remote trackpad, which gives you direct access to your system as if you were using a mouse or touch device for input. It sounds interesting in description, but looks amazing in execution — check the video after the break to see what it does, then go get the app loaded up and try it yourself.

Continue reading Touchpad turns your iPhone into a remote trackpad

 

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