Archivo para Mayo, 2011

There are very few choices out there if you like your smartphone with a rugged, manly edge.  As such, handsets like the Pantech Crossover could actually prove a decent seller to the right audience.
Announced by AT&T, the sporty Android device embraces a busy-looking aesthetic that makes for a nice break from the self-same slabs that have come to dominate smartphone

View full post on Latest Cell Phones, iPhone Apps, Android Apps, News & Reviews – Phone Blog

iCON 461 unlocked USB modem

Unlocked 3G modems aren’t something you see everyday. Sure, Zoom has been hawking the dongles for some time, but they’re primarily of the tri-band variety — Nova Media’s iCON 461 does those one better by going quad-band and throwing in GPS for good measure. The globe-trotting “3G surfstick” supports 7.2Mbps HSPA on the 850, 900,1900, and 2100 bands (that would include AT&T here in the ol’ US of A) and can handle EDGE at 850, 900, 1800, and 1900MHz (hello, T-Mo). In addition to a slot for your GSM SIM there’s also a place to stick a microSD card, in case you need someplace to store that leaked copy of David Comes to Life. The iCON 461 comes in two versions: Mac-compatible with launch2net Premium for €179 (about $248), and Windows-friendly with uCan Connect for €149 (roughly $215).

Nova Media’s iCON 461 USB modem is unlocked for globe-trotting commitmentphobes originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 May 2011 15:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple’s  app market dominance isn’t going anywhere anytime soon, according to a new report by research firm research2guidance. Despite an eroding lead thanks the growing popularity of the Android Market and other competing offerings, Apple shows signs of being able to hold on to its download advantage for a while yet.

According to research2guidance, Apple’s App Store actually saw a 2-percent increase in app store market share in the first quarter of 2011, up to 59 percent from 57 percent in 2010. Apple’s share had previously dropped 24 percent since the introduction of Google’s Android Marketplace competitor.

Apple’s ability to stop and even reverse the slide is a good sign that Android will never totally eclipse the iOS platform in terms of worldwide smartphone use, and it’s also a good sign for developers (since iOS remains the best way to make money with mobile applications) and users (since it means new apps will continue to populate the App Store).

Research2guidance estimates that even if Apple’s share erosion continues at the same rate it experienced in the last two years, it will hold on to 40 percent of the market until 2015. And even in that worst-case scenario, two factors will keep the App Store profitable and attractive to users alike.

The first is the lock-in effect of downloaded apps. It’s a subject Kevin has covered before, when he asked what the magic number was before users would consider switching to another mobile platform. Most users felt that spending a certain amount of money would make them unlikely to switch, though that number varied quite a bit depending on the respondent.

App lock-in is helped by the fact that users of Apple’s iPad tablet seem to be “heavy app downloaders,” according to research2guidance. That means they download a lot, a fact aided by the lack of a worthwhile tablet app market competitor. Google’s own Android tablet app store still isn’t very well-stocked, as Kevin has pointed out.

If the recent increase holds true, Apple may be on the verge of reaching an equilibrium with Google, at least as far as apps are concerned, instead of continuing to cede ground. But even if the Android onslaught continues, Apple’s App Store should still be a winner, and looks like it will remain so for the foreseeable future.

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LeAnn Rimes on her honeymoon. (Celebuzz)

Country cutie LeAnn Rimes is becoming an expert at getting a rise out of her 130,000+ Twitter followers.

On March 29, the seriously thin singer, who is currently on her honeymoon in Mexico with Eddie Cibrian, tweeted a series of provocative photos of herself in a blue string bikini, with her ribs clearly visible and hip bones protruding.

Naturally, her legion of Twitter followers chimed in, concerned about shrinking figure, including @AJPatterson1987 who tweeted, “Whoa, you’re scary skinny! Sorry don’t mean to offend but that’s a lot of bones showing through skin…”

MORE PHOTOS: LeAnn Rimes on Her Honeymoon.

Rimes defensively tweeted back: “Those are called abs not bones love,” adding after the fan once again voiced her concern, “Thx but this is my body and I can promise you I’m a healthy girl. I’m just lean. Thx for your concern but no need to be.”

Later, @AJPatterson1987 tweeted to another fan, “Love her and all but I agree, that’s not a good image to project & she’s in severe denial if she thinks that’s muscle!”

This isn’t the first time Rimes has caused alarm by posting bikini shots.

LeAnn Rimes in 2010 and in March 2011. (X17/Radar Online)

In April she took a photograph of her lower half in a yellow bikini with the caption, “First sun!!!!! SPRING!!!”

After fans tweeted their concern, Rimes shot back with a series of tweets, including, “you don’t know me, you have NO idea what I weigh or eat, so why should you have any opinion about my weight?”

Rimes defensively added, “I own that I am healthy and take dang goof care of my body, that’s what I own,” and finally signed off with, “Dear lord! I do not work out too much nor do I starve myself. I’m so over this and moving on.”

What do YOU think?

View full post on Entertainment

Sepp Blatter listens to FIFA general secretary Jerome Valcke during a press conference on May 9, 2011.
Sepp Blatter listens to FIFA general secretary Jerome Valcke during a press conference on May 9, 2011.

For those of you slightly confused or even overwhelmed by the stories emerging from FIFA headquarters in Zurich this week, we understand your pain. Fasten your seatbelts and let us try to tell you what is at stake.

On Wednesday the body which runs world football, FIFA, will vote for its new president. The incumbent Sepp Blatter is favorite to land the job, largely because he’s the only candidate in the race.

But this is the most senior job in world football, so why has an election to a post of such importance attracted fewer candidates than the campaign to become student union treasurer at my local college?

The straightforward answer is because the only other candidate in the race, the Asian football chief Mohamed Bin Hammam, was suspended on Sunday from football activity along with FIFA vice-president Jack Warner.

They are being investigated about allegations that envelopes stuffed with cash were offered to football bosses in the Caribbean earlier this month as Bin Hammam was on the election trail. Meanwhile, Blatter was cleared of wrongdoing and is free to stand.

But the real answer lies much deeper than this. You have to look at the system and not only the men in charge. Yes, we need to sweep through FIFA’s corridors of power with an extremely large broom if we are to effect change, but reform should not stop there.

There is something systemically wrong when an organization which runs the world’s biggest sport and controls millions of dollars in TV revenues and sponsorship permits a small number of individuals to make most of the big decisions.

There is little or no accountability, no evidence of transparency or even fair play. At the vote – the secret vote – to decide where the World Cups in 2018 and 2022 would be staged, most delegates agreed England were favorites for the former and either the U.S. or Australia for the latter.

But logic and the technical quality of those bids did not sway the jury – so what did? One suspects the morals of a saint would be severely tested if afforded the status of FIFA executive committee membership.

These decisions have caused anger and outrage, and unleashed a sea of claim and counterclaim, allegations of corruption and several investigations both inside FIFA and abroad.

But on Monday Blatter boldly announced to the world’s media that there is "no crisis."  This at a time when Blatter has had to explain why he spent $1 million on development projects while on the election trail, and the general secretary Jerome Valcke has had to "clarify" what he meant when he said Qatar "bought" the 2022 World Cup.

He didn’t mean it, he explained, after his comments in an email were leaked by Warner, a temporarily suspended colleague and possibly former friend.

The allegations of corruption against the men running world football have been relentless. In fact, the growing number of accusations of corruption against senior members by fellow senior members and organizations which they represent or do business with has actually become difficult to monitor.

But surely in light of these allegations and the chaos surrounding FIFA, the election should be suspended, at least until the other candidate has finished his suspension, or more time is given for an alternative candidate to emerge? Good question.

But not in FIFA-land, not in the place where due process has been properly observed and there is nothing wrong. Again, they are hiding behind a systemic failure.

We’re way past comparisons with crooked corporations and corrupt councils – FIFA is now unhappily in a farcical league of its own, and all it can do is bury its head in the sand, claim that all is well and ignore the deafening calls for reform.

They have come from many quarters, but FIFA cares little for such disrespectful comment. Politicians from Australia and England – where a sense of fair play is felt so keenly – and the English Football Association are among them. But they’re missing the point. FIFA's elite, and Blatter in particular, have shown they care little for this criticism, saying they are playing by the rules.

Now some of FIFA’s key sponsors have expressed concern about the situation. Never mind the media, politicians and fans, it will be interesting to see how the system reacts to a potential threat to its financial security.

View full post on CNN World Sport

SanDisk has been pumping out press releases all day thanks to Computex-mania, so we shuffled past its stall to see what all the fuss is about. The biggest news is the U100 range of tiny SSDs for ultraportables, which crank data in and out at twice the speed of SanDisk’s previous generation P4 drives. We’re talking 450MB/s reads and 340MB/s writes thanks to the latest SATA III interface, plus a max capacity of 256GB — specs which have already enticed ASUS to use the U100 in its lightweight UX-series notebooks. Mass production is expected in Q3 of this year. Specs table and triple-shot of PR coming up after the break, plus a gallery showing size comparisons of the U100 SSD in its glorious mSATA and Mini mSATA varieties, stacked up against some common objects like a 2.5-inch SSD drive, an HP Veer, and a vaguely goth bracelet.

Meanwhile, SanDisk hasn’t forgotten about our desperate need for faster tablets. The company has doubled the speed of its existing iNAND embedded flash modules, and is also releasing a brand new SATA III drive, the i100, specifically for this form factor. The i100 maxes out at 128GB and achieves a significantly slower write speed (160MB/s) than the U100, but it has same impressive read speed (450MB/s) — which should mean nippier tablets in the not-too-distant future.

Continue reading SanDisk outs faster U100 and i100 SSDs for ultra-portables and tablets, we go hands-on

SanDisk outs faster U100 and i100 SSDs for ultra-portables and tablets, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 May 2011 09:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSanDisk  | Email this | Comments

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The United States has a set of expectations  that it wants Pakistan’s government to meet, Secretary of State of  Hillary Clinton said ahead of her short trip to Islamabad  last week, the kind of language Washington has frequently employed to bring its conflicted partner in the war against militant Islam to heel, each time  there has been a crisis. Clinton didn’t elaborate, saying only at the end of her meetings in Islamabad that she expected Pakistan to take decisive steps in the days ahead.

But on Monday, Pakistan’s The News reported that the military was preparing to launch an air and ground offensive against militants in North Waziristan, a demand that the United States has repeatedly made over the last two years. It said the decision was taken during discussions that Clinton and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of State Admiral Mike Mullen had with Pakistani government and military leaders.

North Waziristan is a redoubt of the Haqqani network, the most powerful of the insurgent groups in eastern Afghanistan and in and around Kabul where it has carried out a wave of bombings against civilians as well as foreign forces. Pakistan has held off going into the forbidding mountains saying it needed to consolidate its operations in southern Waziristan following the offensive there in 2009.

But in the wake of the international opprobrium Pakistan’s military has come under following the killing of Osama bin Laden deep inside Pakistan, its space for manouevre has become less.  The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month U.S. officials as saying  they hoped to use Islamabad’s embarrassment over failing to find bin Laden—he was killed in a house a short distance from the country’s elite military academy—to press for tougher Pakistani action against the Haqqanis and other militant groups that are focused on attacking U.S. forces in neighboring Afghanistan.

It puts the Pakistani military in a spot , as has happened so often since it reluctantly joined the U.S.-led war on al  Qaeda and the Taliban following the Sept 11, 2001 attacks. The Haqqanis are long seen as a  prized asset  of  the Inter-Services Intelligence, the Pakistani spy agency, beginning from the 1980s when it along with the CIA – ironically-  funded them to fight the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Jalaluddin Haqqani, the family patriarch, acquired legendary status among supporters for his exploits against the Red Army.  Like the Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Punjabi group focused on fighting Indian forces in Kashmir and elsewhere in India, the Haqqanis have never carried out an attack on Pakistani soil.

An offensive against them in their Waziristan base carries the risk of a backlash that the Pakistani military is already facing from other militant groups it once nurtured like the members of the Pakistani Taliban. They turned against the state following the army’s operation to clean up the Red Mosque in Islamabad, and today, the Pakistan Taliban are at the forefront of the campaign against the military, claiming responsibility for some of the biggest attacks including the daring raid on the Karachi naval base attack last week to avenge bin Laden’s death.

Indeed, the military either by its incompetence or having been outmanoeuvred by its U.S. partner, faces a double backlash. While the rest of the world suspects it to have had a role in hiding bin laden all these years and so the U.S. kept it out of the May 2 raid to kill him in his lair,  the militants operating inside Pakistan believe the military had a role in his killing. They have turned their wrath on the state, and more than any other country,Pakistan has become the main battleground for attacks to avenge the al Qaeda leader’s death.

Further out, by pushing the Pakistan military to sever links with the Haqqanis,  the United States is hitting at one of the central planks of the Pakistani strategy to retain influence in Afghanistan as the end game builds up. Pakistan saw the Haqqanis as part of a future power structure in Afghanistan with their influence in the east, and as recent as this month, an ISI official told the Wall Street Journal  the group could one day be a   ”force for peace” in Afghanistan.

Launching an attack against them is almost certainly going to deprive the ISI of one of its biggest strategic assets. One escape door, as has happened so often in this troubleed relationship with the CIA, is that the core Haqqani network may not be in North Waziristan anymore, which has been targeted heavily by U.S. drones over the past two years. In any case repeated talk of an impending operation may have led the network to move its forces to other parts of the Pakistani northwest.

So, as journalist and top expert on the insurgency in the Pakistani northwest, Rahimullah Yusufzai, wrote in Newsline last week,  the Pakistan militarymay well go into North Waziristan but their immediate target will be the Pakistani Taliban which have found sanctuary there following the operations in the south. As for the Haqqanis, the military will likely argue that they are not based in North Waziristan and that its fighters and head, Commander Sirajuddin Haqqani, the son of Jalaluddin, are all fighting across the border in Afghanistan

But America is “obsessed” with the Haqqanis, and it won’t be satisfied, Yusufzai says.

 There is not much likelihood that the US and Pakistan will be able to narrow down their differences regarding the endgame of the Afghan conflict. One should, therefore, expect more of the same with the CIA and the ISI playing games to outwit each other. And the raid on Osama’s compound in Abbottabad has made it clear that the US is not afraid to play bigger games on Pakistani soil, no matter the embarrassment to their coalition partner at home or abroad.

View full post on Global News Journal

Tesla has announced plans to stop the production of their Roadster model by the end of 2011. The details were secured from a filing of motor maker with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.


Tesla Roadster _6
Tesla Roadster _1
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Tesla Roadster _5

This strategy has taken the motor world by surprise as Tesla’s Model S won’t be hitting market until mid-2012 s was earlier revealed. Tesla seems confident about surviving the tough competition with their remaining stock of Roadsters through out  their year-and-a-half long manufacturing process.

The other details availed from the filing reveal the company’s idea to introduce a Model X concept later this year. Though not many details are known about the concept, we guess this crossover will incorporate the functionality of a minivan with the consumer appeal of a sports-utility vehicle.

The Model X concept is expected to launch the production model in 2014.

(Via WCF)

 

View full post on Car Blog | Breaking Motoring News Daily

Apple will unveil Mac OS X Lion, iOS 5 and iCloud at WWDC 2011 next week, beginning with a keynote address on Monday, June 6 at 10 a.m. PDT, which will be presented by CEO Steve Jobs and other Apple executives. The company revealed its plans via official press release Tuesday morning.

OS X Lion is version 10.7 of Apple’s desktop operating system for its Mac line of computers. Lion was introduced last October at a media event, and introduced a developer preview of the new OS in February 2011. Lion borrows many elements from Apple iOS, which powers its mobile devices.

iOS 5 is the next generation of Apple’s mobile OS, which powers its iPhone, the iPad and the iPod touch. Little is known about what Apple will include in iOS 5, but there is some recent speculation that a revamped notification system and widgets, which provide live updating information on the device’s home screen, will be included.

Finally, iCloud is the now-confirmed product name of Apple’s suite of cloud services. Om broke the news of the iCloud branding back when he received a tip that Apple had registered the iCloud.com domain name. iCloud is expected to include elements of Apple’s current MobileMe offering, which provides mail, calendar and contact syncing, and also might include a cloud music storage and syncing service.

Sounds like an exciting lineup, even without any hardware announcements. What are you most looking forward to seeing?

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Apple issued a new support document over the weekend that promises a fix for white, unibody MacBook affected by a problem with peeling rubber on the bottom case. Affected units are now eligible for free repairs, for up to two years from the original purchase date.

The MacBooks displaying the problem are said by Apple to have shipped between October 2009 and April 2011, and the problem is described as “the rubber surface on some MacBooks [separating] from the bottom case of the system.” Customers who qualify (Apple will check your serial number to see if you’re in the affected crop) can get their bottom case replaced free of charge either at an Apple Retail Store or at an Apple Authorized Service Provider. Customers also have the option of ordering a replacement kit online, which includes a new bottom case, a Phillips head screwdriver, screws and instructions.

MacBook owners should not that Apple is also offering refunds for customers who’ve already paid for a repair due to the issue described above, and that anyone who thinks they’re eligible for getting some money back should contact Apple directly.

It’s not clear how widespread the problem is exactly. A search at the Apple Support Communities site turned up numerous threads related to the issue (at least six by my count), but it’s not a problem that has attracted the spotlight as much as the reported signal attenuation issues with the iPhone 4, for example. Apple says in its note that customers who aren’t seeing problems shouldn’t take any action, even if they purchased their MacBooks during this time, so it’s possible only a small subset of product was affected.

Anyone seeing their MacBook’s bottom rubber cover separating from the case?

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