Monday, March 26, 2012

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How would you change the Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus?
Mar 26th 2012, 02:52

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We're big fans of Samsung's work and the prevailing feeling is that the Galaxy Tab 8.9 is the pinnacle of the family. The original 7-incher was too expensive and ran Android 2.2, so we were delighted to see the revamped edition running Honeycomb and costing a very reasonable $400 (it's even cheaper now). In our review, we couldn't find too much wrong with the device, in fact it's on a par with the 8.9, just a little bit smaller. But you, our friends out there, have had three or four months of constant use with this slate now, so how do you feel about it over the long-term? Does the slightly weaker screen resolution get you down? Do you wish you could make calls from it? Do you long for an S-Pen enabled edition? In a world chock-full of Samsung slates, what would you do to make this one the most desirable?

How would you change the Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus? originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 25 Mar 2012 22:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget Mobile Podcast 131 - 03.25.2012
Mar 26th 2012, 02:13

This week, the Engadget Mobile Podcast is freer than free 4G and now features 1000% more Sascha Segan. So what are you waiting for, really?

Hosts: Myriam Joire (tnkgrl), Brad Molen, Joseph Volpe
Guest: Sascha Segan
Producer: Trent Wolbe
Music: Tycho - Coastal Brake (Ghostly International)

00:01:40 - The iPad Wins Because Android Tablet Apps Suck: An Illustrated Guide
00:10:23 - Android Lacks Focus, and It's a Problem
00:29:42 - New iPad's Screen Hogs Battery Power
00:45:10 - AT&T rolls out Android 4.0 to HTC Vivid, other devices getting ICS in the 'coming months'
00:56:53 - FreedomPop rumored to introduce iPhone case with free WiMAX service
00:58:30 - NetZero launches '4G' wireless service, we go hands-on
01:04:10 - Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 review (Verizon Wireless LTE)
01:15:30 - Verizon updates Revolution with Remote Diagnostics, HTC turns to LogMeIn
01:25:30 - HTC and Sprint ready to show off a new 'collaboration' April 4th, might be the One X
01:32:05 - Nokia to Apple: don't cha wish your nano-SIM was hot like ours?
01:43:00 - Apple's nano-SIM proposal draws fire from Motorola, Nokia, RIM
01:44:50 - Galaxy Note ICS upgrade pushed back to Q2, adds exclusive set of stylus-ready apps (video)
01:49:00 - FCC weighs Dish 4G network and 700MHz interoperability (updated)



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Engadget Mobile Podcast 131 - 03.25.2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 25 Mar 2012 22:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Square's Card Case rechristened 'Pay with Square,' is first to bring geo-fenced hands-free payments to Android
Mar 26th 2012, 01:33

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You might know Square for accepting payments on your smartphone via a cute dongle, but you're probably less familiar with its second offshoot, Card Case -- a separate app that has enabled hands-free and NFC-free payments at over 70,000+ merchants for more than a year now. That effort is getting a complete overhaul today, cumulating in an entire rethink of the app and experience, in addition to its more-apt new title: Pay with Square. The redesigned UI loses its former card and leather-based garnish, opting instead for a simplified list of merchants sorted by distance and relevancy. Also making its debut is a search box, a spiffy map view and the ability to share merchants to friends through text, email or Twitter. We're most excited, though, for feature parity across iPhone and Android, which means formerly iOS-exclusive features like the auto-creation of tabs at pre-approved venues (thanks to iOS 5's geo-fencing APIs) are now present to green little robots everywhere. That's no small feat, as the company's had to roll their own geo-location API to pick up where Google's left off. We're still waiting for the Google Play listing to update, but we'll have a fresh link for you when it does.

Square's Card Case rechristened 'Pay with Square,' is first to bring geo-fenced hands-free payments to Android originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 25 Mar 2012 21:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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