Windows 8 on ARM: Everything You Need To Know [Windows 8]

Up until late last week Windows 8 on ARM was a complete mystery. We know the product existed, that it would launch at some point in the future, and it would sport the Metro interface Microsoft has been showing off for almost a year now. The silence on just about everything else had led many to wonder if Microsoft was further behind on the ARM version than they were letting on, but this week they finally opened up the information floodgates. That might sound like a bit of an exaggeration, but 9000 words is a bit more than we were expecting. It makes for an interesting read, but let’s be honest here, most of you just want the CliffsNotes right? More »


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Windows 8 on ARM: Everything You Need To Know [Windows 8]

Sony raised price of Whitney Houston albums after death

At The Guardian, Josh Halliday writes about Sony’s rush to profit from Whitney Houston’s death.

Sony Music has come under fire after it increased the price of a Whitney Houston album on Apple’s iTunes Store hours after the singer was found dead.

The music giant is understood to have lifted the wholesale price of Houston’s greatest hits album, The Ultimate Collection, at about 4am California time on Sunday. This meant that the iTunes retail price of the album automatically increased from £4.99 to £7.99.

The clockwork regularity of Sony PR disasters is really something. It’s as if a Division of Unbridled Cynicism lurks deep in the bowels of its vast workforce, issuing Spite Directives to ensure an ingeniously varied drumbeat of fail.


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Sony raised price of Whitney Houston albums after death

What the iPad 3 Looks Like


redletterdave writes “If you were expecting a radically different-looking tablet from the iPad 2, prepare for a minor letdown. In the same way Apple upgraded the iPhone 4 into the iPhone 4S, the exterior of the iPad 3 mirrors that of the iPad 2, despite completely renovated and upgraded innards. iLab Factory reportedly provided Sharp with the necessary parts to build the high-resolution iPad 3 display, and in a company blog post, various iPad 3 components are displayed alongside those of the iPad 2 for quick comparison. In addition to a new camera mount that will reportedly match or improve upon the 8-megapixel camera system in the iPhone 4S, the post also revealed that the iPad 3 will be approximately 1 mm thicker than its predecessor to house Apple’s upgraded components, including a bigger battery, an improved camera, and a dual-LED lit system to make the 2048 x 1536 display even brighter.”


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What the iPad 3 Looks Like

Google makes ‘next gen personal communications device,’ is testing it in employee abodes

We first heard about Google’s foray into home-based hardware late last week, when it asked the FCC for Special Temporary Authority (STA) to have employees test an “entertainment device” in their homes (as opposed to a lab). According to the New York Times and Wall Street Journal, it’s rumored to be a Sonos-like device related to the Android@Home Tungsten hub we saw at Google I/O last year. It appears, however, that’s not all Google’s got in store, as some information has trickled out about another Google-branded gadget. Apparently, it’s a “next generation personal communication device,” and Mountain View has asked the FCC for another STA to test 102 of them in the same cities as the aforementioned entertainment box: Mountain View, LA, New York and Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Why? Well, Google wants to track its Bluetooth performance and evaluate “the throughput and stability of the home WiFi networks that will support the device” in a real-world setting. Other details about the device are scant, but we do know that testing on this second Google-made gadget is ongoing through July 15th, so here’s hoping we can get a glimpse of one between now and then. Check out the FCC docs for both devices at the source below, and feel free to sound off on what you think Google’s got in store in the comments after.

Google makes ‘next gen personal communications device,’ is testing it in employee abodes originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Feb 2012 01:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Penguin halts over-the-air Kindle borrowing again, this time it’s serious

Penguin already signaled it’d stop providing newer titles to OverDrive’s lending service, but apart from a temporary interruption last year, Kindle borrowing of older books has escaped largely unscathed. That’s no longer the case: as of this month, Penguin says that “eBooks loaned for reading on Kindle devices will need to be downloaded to a computer then transferred to the device over USB.” Why add the extra hassle, compared to direct wireless transfer via Amazon’s servers? According to Infodocket, Penguin has simply indicated that this form of distribution breached the terms of its agreement with OverDrive. However, the American Library Association (ALA) has a more developed explanation of what’s going on in this nascent industry. It says that publishers are worried about the lack of “friction” involved in eBook lending, compared to the effort required to visit a physical library. This, the ALA thinks, is leading to fears that readers will borrow more and buy less. So, perhaps the wireless delivery of borrowed titles to Kindles was just too easy for Penguin’s liking?

Penguin halts over-the-air Kindle borrowing again, this time it’s serious originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Feb 2012 06:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Electronista, MocoNews | sourceInfodocket, ALA | Email this | Comments

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Penguin halts over-the-air Kindle borrowing again, this time it’s serious