Air Video Streams Your Videos to Your iPhone with Minimal Effort, Is Incredible [Downloads]

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 17-02-2010-05-2008

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Windows/Mac + iPhone/iPod touch: Not only do videos take up a ton of space on space-constrained devices, but converting videos for the iPhone gets painful quickly. Air Video streams videos straight to your iPhone, converting them on-the-fly if they’re incompatible.

The app is actually an iPhone app plus a PC/Mac app that acts as a server. You can use any videos on your computer, whether they are in iTunes or not—and, if you prefer, you can also add video playlists from iTunes to the list of sources. Once you get the server app running on your desktop, you can start streaming over your home network immediately. Streaming over the internet from outside your home, though, only takes a few more seconds—in the server app, go to the “Remote” tab and check Enable Access from Internet (see below). The app will give you a server PIN that you can type in when you go to add a source on your iPhone or iPod touch—note that your router at home needs a public IP address and support UPnP or NAT-PMP protocols, which shouldn’t be a problem for most people.

As if that weren’t cool (or easy) enough, if you have some videos that can’t be played directly on the iPhone, you can convert them using Air Video as you watch it (as long as you’re running firmware 3.0 and have a fairly powerful computer back at home). If you prefer, you can also convert the file offline and watch it later.

Air Video is a free download for the iPhone and iPod touch, although the free version only shows you a few videos at a time, at random, from your folders. If you have a large video library you want to share, or don’t feel like clicking on the folder multiple times waiting for the video you want to be on the list, there’s a $2.99 pro version available as well.

Air Video [Official Site]


Acronym’s PMP-loving jacket keeps your earbuds safe, murders your bank account

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 14-02-2010-05-2008

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Sure, the Acronym GT-J14 won’t even charge your iPhone, but at first glance we loved the idea: take a stylish GORE-TEX jacket and throw in a couple slick features aimed at the eager urban technophile, including a so-called Gravity Pocket (accessible by a zipper on your forearm, contents can be dropped directly into your hand using a draw string — demonstrated about 2:25 into the video after the break) and our personal favorite, a magnet that holds your headphones in place while you take that important phone call. We were feeling pretty good about this one, that is, until we finally tracked it down: azitastore.com lists it for €735 (yes, that’s around $1,068). This is clearly only for those of you who put the word “disposable” in “income.” Looks like we’re going to have to find another way to keep our Lady Gaga headphones safe and secure, after all…

[Via Gadget Review]

Continue reading Acronym’s PMP-loving jacket keeps your earbuds safe, murders your bank account

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Acronym’s PMP-loving jacket keeps your earbuds safe, murders your bank account originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 02 Oct 2009 15:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Originally posted 2009-10-02 18:26:17. Republished by Old Post Promoter

Philips Cam, Muse and Ariaz mark a renaissance for the boring PMP

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 13-01-2010-05-2008

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This is soon enough to market that it’s hard to blame the iPod nano specifically for its appearance, but either way it seems that the Philips Cam is the newest member to the oh-so-small club of MP3 / camera combos. The new player is joined in its life of crime by the new Muse and Ariaz, which at last offer a higher-end aspect to Philips‘ long-lackluster PMP lineup. The Cam does up a 1.8-inch screen, 8GB of storage and a 2 megapixel camera for $100, but the Muse has a full 3.2-inches of touchscreen, 16GB of flash, SD expansion and HDMI out for a mere $50 more. The Ariaz finds a simpler calling, with a 2.4-inch LCD, HDMI, 8GB and an $80 tag. We’ll have to play with these to see if they’re worth taking home from Walmart, but we’re glad to see Philips is trying to stay in the game — we can’t all be lucky enough to be Zune HD owners.

Philips Cam, Muse and Ariaz mark a renaissance for the boring PMP originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Jan 2010 16:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Viliv N5 MID set to debut at CES

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 23-12-2009-05-2008

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We’ve already gotten up close with the S10 Blade that Viliv is promising to show off at CES, but this invitation is the first we’ve heard of the company’s N5 mobile internet device, which is also slated to debut at the show. As you can see above, this one is a clamshell MID, and packs a 4.8-inch multitouch display, a fully QWERTY keyboard, and 3G, WiFi, and GPS capabilities. Also on track for an official launch: the dual-boot Windows CE / Android Viliv P3, and the Windows CE-based, 1080p video-playing HD5 PMP.

Viliv N5 MID set to debut at CES originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Dec 2009 15:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cowon V5 HD PMP turns up in ad ahead of launch

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 07-12-2009-05-2008

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We’re not quite sure if this is an actual teaser ad or one that just slipped out ahead of the proper launch, but it looks like the brief commercial after the break is the first anyone has seen of Cowon’s new V5 HD PMP. Unfortunately, the ad doesn’t offer much in the way of actual details, although it does appear that the PMP boasts a reasonably large touchscreen, which may or may not actually be HD. Head on past the break to check all 18 seconds of it for yourself.

Continue reading Cowon V5 HD PMP turns up in ad ahead of launch

Cowon V5 HD PMP turns up in ad ahead of launch originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 Dec 2009 16:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Yinlips YDP800 projector PMP teases your wallet with video

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 06-12-2009-05-2008

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We’re not sure what’s taken so long, but the Yinlips YDP800 pico projector PMP is finally available to the US, courtesy of online store Ownta. The good folks have released a demo video of the projector in action — not quite at the maximum 80-inch picture that Yinlips boasts, but hey, we’ve just about done it before on another pico projector. For around $270 including delivery this feature-packed PMP seems to give a good run for your money, especially when compared to the $299 WowWee Cinemin Swivel. No sign of any sample pictures or videos from the 1.3 megapixel camera yet, so for now just enjoy the video after the break.

Continue reading Yinlips YDP800 projector PMP teases your wallet with video

Yinlips YDP800 projector PMP teases your wallet with video originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Dec 2009 05:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Do Android & WebOS need iPod touch clones?

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General, Twitter | Posted on 25-11-2009-05-2008

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Dan Frommer’s post this morning over at Silicon Alley Insider suggests that one of the missing pieces from the competitive pie, as far as Google and Palm’s mobile OS offerings are concerned, is a 3G-free & contractless device. Something, perhaps, like the iPod touch. Absent a way for consumers and developers to buy into the platform without the burden of a monthly cellphone contract, he argues, the two players are unlikely to build the critical mass of apps and app purchasers that would grant vitality and staying power in the face of the Apple/App Store ecosystem.

It’s easy to see that the touch provides a great boost to the App Store juggernaut; about one-third of the 50 million-plus iPhone OS devices are estimated to be iPod touch units, and all those owners are potential app and music customers. Certainly there’s an audience for Android (if not WebOS, which is more telephony-centric to my mind) on a disconnected gadget?

Unfortunately, Frommer’s analysis is missing two key pieces of market data. Number one, as was adroitly pointed out by Joachim on Sunday’s talkcast, there already is a contract-free developer handheld for Android, available for $399 from the Android Market… exactly what he proposes in the last paragraph of his story. There’s also the new Archos 5 Internet Tablet, a consumer-grade, contract-free and phoneless Android tablet, ready for the eager Android personal media player buyers to snap up. (The equivalent contract-free Pre is a stark $899, and there is no 3G-less WebOS device that I can find.) Update: A commenter notes the Creative Zii Egg, another impending Android PMP that looks astonishingly like an Apple product.

That’s where we come to the second market truth that Frommer missed, and it’s a harsh one: Nobody knows, and nobody cares. Even a guy writing about this precise topic had no idea — and apparently couldn’t quickly discover from a casual search — that these devices were already out in the field, despite frequent coverage of the Archos device on Engadget and elsewhere over the past few months. If there’s any starker evidence that the market for non-phone Android and WebOS devices simply doesn’t exist yet, I can’t imagine what it would be.

Part of the reason for the iPod touch’s success is that it clearly combined two already-successful products: the iPhone and the iPod. The ‘elevator pitch’ for the device (“It’s an iPhone but with Wi-Fi instead of the phone”) is simple and straightforward. Unfortunately for Android, there really isn’t a dynamic personal media player market anymore that supports a phoneless entrant… it got eaten by the iPod.

I do think it would be healthy for the iPhone and for the portable OS market in general if developers and customers had more contract-free options on the other platforms. Still, the retroactive wish-fulfillment of Frommer’s post doesn’t bode well. “Oh, they already have that? Gosh.”

TUAWDo Android & WebOS need iPod touch clones? originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 25 Nov 2009 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hallods F43 MP4 player packs a 4.3-inch 720p screen, outed in Japan

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 15-11-2009-05-2008

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Looks like the wait for a real HD PMP is finally over: Hallods of Japan has just released their F43 MP4 player featuring a 4.3-inch 1280×720 screen, easily beating other sub-5-inch, 480p screens found on big names like the Archos 5 and Viewsonic’s VPD400. Under that sharp screen is 8GB of internal storage and a hot-swappable microSD slot, along with a battery life of about four hours and ten hours for video and music, respectively. Like many PMPs out there the F43 supports videos encoded in MPEG4, FLV, RMVB and DivX-WVGA. Sure, there’s the ironic lack of HDMI output, but for ¥16,800 ($188) this is still a pretty good deal. Let’s just hope Hallods will send them over to the US soon.

[Via i4u]

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Hallods F43 MP4 player packs a 4.3-inch 720p screen, outed in Japan originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 Nov 2009 20:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Archos 9 PMP sneaks into the FCC, gets dissected when caught

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 14-11-2009-05-2008

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Archos has already made it abundantly clear that its Windows 7-based Archos 9 media player is US-bound, but just in case you were worried over legalities, this FCC filing should crank your stress level down a notch. Best of all, this particular entry includes external and internal photographs, meaning that the camera-toting employees within the deep, dark FCC labs are actually credited with handling the (admittedly messy) dissection. Shocking pixels await you in the read link, so make sure you go in fully prepared.

[Via jkkmobile]

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Archos 9 PMP sneaks into the FCC, gets dissected when caught originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 Nov 2009 09:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Creative working on Zii-based MediaBook with color touchscreen, e-book slant

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 01-11-2009-05-2008

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What’s an e-book without the e-ink? So very much, according to Creative, who just dropped word of an upcoming “MediaBook” device (which will undoubtedly look nothing like this mockup above). It sounds a bit more like a PMP to us, with “video, pictures, text and services,” and a “media-rich experience” on the table, but Creative is also apparently working with publishers for content, with an obvious emphasis in Singapore sources, where Creative already does e-learning work. There’s no word of what it’ll look like, but it’ll be a large touchscreen of some sort, so it sounds like we’ve got another slate on our hand. Any differentiation might come from having Zii under the hood and Creative’s own particular approach to content for this device, but there’s not really enough to get excited about at this point.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

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Creative working on Zii-based MediaBook with color touchscreen, e-book slant originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 01 Nov 2009 02:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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