Wednesday, June 20, 2012

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Dutch court rules in favor of Samsung in 3G patent case against Apple, could lead to compensation
Jun 20th 2012, 13:22

Dutch court rules in favor of Samsung in 3G patent case against Apple, could lead to compensation

Remember that Apple versus Samsung case? You know, the one with the patents? Okay, well while these disputes are not rare, they do occasionally finally get decided upon. A District Court in the Hague, Holland, has ruled that some of Apple's older iPads (versions one and two) and iPhones (3G, 3Gs, and 4) violate one of the Korean firm's 3G patents. This comes after the same court shot down two of Samsung's other patent claims. Today's ruling regards European Patent EP1188269, which protects "Apparatus for encoding a transport format combination indicator for a communications system." Dutch site WebWereld.nl reports that the court ruled that the two tech giants try and reach a compensatory deal. Despite this, Samsung will still have to pay up €800,000 in costs to Apple for the two cases it lost. There is no talk of a sales ban at this time.

Dutch court rules in favor of Samsung in 3G patent case against Apple, could lead to compensation originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 09:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink AllAboutPhones.nl (Dutch)  |  sourceWebWereld.nl  | Email this | Comments

Google I/O 2012 app unveiled for Android, keeps attendees and outsiders looped in
Jun 20th 2012, 13:21

Google IO 2012 app unveiled for Android, keeps attendees and outsiders looped in

Hardly any self-respecting conference can do without a companion app these days and Google has pulled out all the stops with an updated app for I/O 2012. Now available on Google Play, this year's iteration is formatted to work equally well on phones and tablets, and allows users to easily sync events with their calendars and find sessions they're interested in, as well as share them on Google+ or in other apps. The social integration doesn't stop there, as a Google+ stream of the #io2012 hashtag is built right in. The app reaches all the way back to Froyo devices, but there are advanced features like I/O Live session video streams (Honeycomb and above), and automatic synching of schedules / NFC beaming (Android 4.0+). Of course, even if you're just going to observe the event from afar, a few eagle eyed users are already wondering if one of the screenshots (above, left) is giving an early peek at the next version Android, Jelly Bean, due to the oddly styled search box. Whatever the case is, we'll find out for sure June 27th, hit the source link below to grab the app and get ready.

Continue reading Google I/O 2012 app unveiled for Android, keeps attendees and outsiders looped in

Google I/O 2012 app unveiled for Android, keeps attendees and outsiders looped in originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 09:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Android (Google+)  |  sourceGoogle Play  | Email this | Comments

WobbleWorks: flapping ears and robotic dinosaur dreams
Jun 20th 2012, 13:00

DNPWobbleworks

Artisan's Asylum's 30,000-odd square feet were largely uninhabited when we arrived early Wednesday afternoon. No shocker there, really -- the space's president and co-founder Gui Cavalcanti warned us in advance that it wouldn't begin filling up until later that evening, seeing as how a big portion of renters hold down nine-to-fives. They occupy desk jobs during daytime hours in order to support their after-work passions, stopping by the space in the evening hours to produce works that might some day rise above the category of hobby.

The duo behind WobbleWorks are strange cases, however, not simply due to the moving rabbit and dog ears they donned during our interview -- their paying gigs hardly qualify them for the straight-laced, button-down world we've come to associate with the term "day job." In 2011, Max Bogue and Peter Dilworth founded the small toy company aiming to help fund their true passion: robotic dinosaurs.

Continue reading WobbleWorks: flapping ears and robotic dinosaur dreams

WobbleWorks: flapping ears and robotic dinosaur dreams originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gmail.com addresses being rolled out in Germany, 'oogle' deemed too inefficient (video)
Jun 20th 2012, 12:47

Image

Having settled its differences with the German trademark holder, Google can finally bring Teutonic communicators over to gmail.com addresses. As with the other countries that have previously made the switch, your @googlemail.com (or .de) address will remain valid, all you have to do to make the switch is respond to the prompt when it appears in your inbox.

Continue reading Gmail.com addresses being rolled out in Germany, 'oogle' deemed too inefficient (video)

Gmail.com addresses being rolled out in Germany, 'oogle' deemed too inefficient (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 08:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGmail Blog  | Email this | Comments

Samsung Galaxy S III gets SIM unlock option via app
Jun 20th 2012, 12:34

Samsung Galaxy S III gets SIM unlock option via app

Stuck with one carrier with your new superphone? Not for much longer, at least, if you're using the I9300 version of the Galaxy S III and are willing to dabble with some rooting. The app is free, but requires said root access, unlocking your phone baseband and opening up the device to any and all (radio-compatible) SIM cards. Its creator, Supercurio, ensures us that important data is backed-up before the operation, although an automatic restore option isn't yet included in the beta version. Unlock the SIM-swapping potential by hitting up the source below.

Samsung Galaxy S III gets SIM unlock option via app originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 08:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGoogle Play  | Email this | Comments

Bug-zapping lightsaber built in minutes, ready to fry pests
Jun 20th 2012, 12:19

Bug-zapping lightsaber built in minutes, ready to fry pests

Simulated Jedi training not passing muster? Something more firmly grounded in reality might fit the bill. Hack a Day's bug zapping lightsaber, for instance, is suitably real -- and what it lacks in actual lasers it makes up for in insect annihilation. As the amalgamation of a Star Wars toy and an electrified bug racket, the zapper saber isn't exactly a looker -- two layers of metal mesh wrap awkwardly around the toy's telescoping blade, secured only by electrical tape and the sheer will of the force. All told, the contraption was constructed in roughly 20 minutes and Hack a Day reckons that more elaborate ones can be crafted with a tad more time and materials. Head past the break to catch the build process in motion.

Continue reading Bug-zapping lightsaber built in minutes, ready to fry pests

Bug-zapping lightsaber built in minutes, ready to fry pests originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 08:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceHack a Day  | Email this | Comments

Acer Aspire Timeline Ultra M5 Ultrabooks with Kepler graphics coming to the US for $680-plus
Jun 20th 2012, 12:00

Acer Aspire Timeline Ultra M5 Ultrabooks with Kepler graphics coming to the US for $680plus

We spotted Acer's new Aspire Timeline Ultra M5 laptops at Computex earlier this month, and though we already knew some key specs (NVIDIA's Kepler-based graphics, for example), these Ultrabooks hadn't yet been announced for the US market. Today that changes, as Acer just revealed full specs and pricing details for those of us here in the states.

The Aspire Timeline Ultra M5, available with 14- and 15-inch screens, lives up to its Ultrabook classification with a 0.81-inch thick profile and up to eight hours of battery life. As we noted previously, the M5 maintains some of the Aspire M3's design cues, including the chiclet keyboard, 1366 x 768 display and thin silhouette. At the same time, it ups the premium quotient with aluminum alloy done up in a brushed-metal finish. All models include a DVD drive and 500GB of storage plus a 20GB SSD.

The base configuration will feature a second-gen (read: Sandy Bridge) Intel processor clocked at 1.5GHz, but higher-level options step up to an Ivy Bridge CPU clocked as high as 2.6GHz. The 14-inch version weighs 4.3 pounds and starts at $680 with Intel HD Graphics 4000 but is also available with an NVIDIA GeForce GT640M LE GPU for $780. The $830 15.6-inch M5 features an edge-to-edge screen, along with that same NVIDIA chip, but it weighs a heftier 5.07 pounds. The Aspire Timeline Ultra M5 Series will ship at the end of June -- in the meantime, check out the photos and press info below.

Continue reading Acer Aspire Timeline Ultra M5 Ultrabooks with Kepler graphics coming to the US for $680-plus

Acer Aspire Timeline Ultra M5 Ultrabooks with Kepler graphics coming to the US for $680-plus originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New Swype update brings 'four kinds of keyboard', sync-able voice-text dictionaries
Jun 20th 2012, 12:00

New Swype update brings four kinds of keyboardIf it's one thing Android does right, it's the sheer range of keyboard apps and skins available -- something its competitors haven't quite latched on to just yet. While SwiftKey has charmed us with its latest iteration, Swype's also been in the testing labs and it wants to show you what it's been up to. The new version packs the same next-word prediction from Nuance's XT9 heritage and a new voice-text dictionary sync feature will add new words to both speech and text databases. You can even get the app to crawl around your emails and texts for some extra (familiar) personalization. The latest version can now download over 55 languages, while Nuance has crystallized all of its know-how into a four-in-one keyboard. This includes the typical letter-to-letter swiping that the keyboard cut its teeth on, a more typical predictive text input run through XT9, integrated dictation through a Dragon button and the simple (but slower) fingertip input, where you can trace each individual letter. You can find the beta version of Swype's latest at the source link below. Take it for a test-drive and let us know if it's enough to nudge SwiftKey out of favor.

(Update: The beta version hasn't gone live just yet. We're expecting it launch soon.)

Continue reading New Swype update brings 'four kinds of keyboard', sync-able voice-text dictionaries

New Swype update brings 'four kinds of keyboard', sync-able voice-text dictionaries originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSwype Beta  | Email this | Comments

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