Gadget Rewind 2004: Apple Cinema HD display (30-inch)
It’s our 10th birthday, and to celebrate we’ll be revisiting some of the key devices of the last decade. So please be kind, rewind.
You managed to pick up one of the aluminum G5s or PowerBook G4s back in 2003, but that bubbly polycarbonate Cinema display was ruining the whole look. Enter Apple’s 2004 display refresh. This time the monitors were wrapped in a sexy anodized aluminum skin to harmonize your workstation’s vibe. The line included 20-, 23- and 30-inch models with varying resolutions, but the big boy of the bunch was rocking 2,560 x 1,600 and would vastly increase your screen real estate (and geek cred). Always the salesman, Steve Jobs said, “you can even run two of them side-by-side to get 8 million jaw-dropping pixels.” If you did that, you’d be down about $6,600 (the 30-incher was a wallet-scorching $3,299 at launch), but your digital workspace would look good.
There was little, if any, competition for 30-inch displays at the time. Apple claimed that its model was the “largest LCD ever designed for the personal computer.” And if you wanted to run one of these super-sized displays, you’d have to be in the Apple ecosystem. It would take a Power Mac G5 and an NVIDIA 6800 Ultra DDL graphics card to make that baby purr, but man, that screen was something you could get lost in. It took a little while for the competition to jump in, but Dell wasn’t going to be left out of the massive display party. It announced its own 30-incher called the UltraSharp 3007wfp at CES in 2006 and the media made immediate comparisons between the Dell and Apple offerings. While the 30-inch display niche was still rather bare, there were some high-resolution options if you were cool with a 23-inch form factor. Viewsonic had been offering an eye-bleeding 3,840 x 2,400 resolution model called the VP2290b since 2002, but the price for this degree of crystal clarity lay somewhere around the $7,000 mark.
Did you own a 2004 Apple Cinema HD display (30-inch)? Add it to your Engadget profile as a device you had (or still have) and join the discussion to reminisce or share photos of your device with other like-minded gadget fans.
Filed under: Apple
Steve Jobs Said that Apple Would Not Release a Television
According to a passage from Yukari Kane’s upcoming book Haunted Empire: Apple After Steve Jobs, in 2010, Steve Jobs told Apple executives that the company would not be releasing a television. Business Insider relays the exchange which occurred at Apple’s 2010 “Top 100″ retreat for Apple executive, managers and employees.
The attendees of the Top 100 retreat would hear presentations of Apple’s business and often be exposed to new Apple products. The contents of the meeting are supposed to remain secret. The last day of the meeting, Jobs offered to answer any questions, and someone asked if Apple was going to release a television next.
Yukari says “Jobs didn’t hesitate.” He said, “No.”
“TV is a terrible business. They don’t turn over and the margins suck,” said Jobs. (Unlike iPhones which are wildly profitable and replaced every two years, a TV gets replaced every 8 years, and isn’t all that profitable.)
Jobs reportedly went on to say that he did want to control the living room, but that the current Apple TV set-top-box would remain a hobby until Apple was able to get the the content it needed.
There was apparently some disagreement amongst attendees if Jobs was sincere in his comments. Back in 2003, Jobs had told reporters that he didn’t feel that Apple could add much value to mobile phones. The iPhone was announced four years later. Meanwhile, it’s been three years since this statement, and other reports, including Steve Jobs’ biography attributes comments from Jobs that he had “finally cracked” the difficulties in building an Apple television set. Meanwhile, Tim Cook also has made comments more recently that TV remains an “intense interest” for Apple, though that may refer to enhancing the Apple TV set-top-box experience than releasing a full-scale television.![]()
Inhabitat’s Week in Green: floating skate ramp, foldable electric bicycle and a 3D-printed sneaker
Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week’s most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us — it’s the Week in Green.
The Earth is a mysterious place. Scientists recently discovered a small, rough diamond that reveals the existence of an ocean of water more than 250 miles below the Earth’s surface. But that’s not all: A German company has figured out how to produce super-strong spider silk from genetically modified E. Coli bacteria. Electric vehicles have been picking up steam around the world. Case in point: Norway is set to become the first country in the world with one electric vehicle on the road for every 100 cars.
But politicians in the US are pushing back against electric carmakers. New Jersey made it illegal for Tesla to sell its vehicles directly to consumers last week, ruling that the company must instead sell its cars through a franchise. On the design front, the Eiffel Tower, one of the world’s most iconic landmarks, is set to get a green upgrade as solar, hydraulic and wind power systems are being installed on the tower’s first floor. And pro skateboarder Bob Burnquist made a splash when he and his team debuted an awesome new floating skate ramp in Lake Tahoe.
Big car companies aren’t the only ones innovating with electric cars; in the Chinese city of Zhengzhou, one man built a tiny electric Lamborghini out of $815 worth of stainless steel and batteries to take his grandson to school. One of the world’s most famous luxury car companies is greening up its image: Last week, Rolls-Royce announced plans to create a plug-in hybrid vehicle within the next three years. In two-wheeled transportation news, the company Revolights is raising money to produce the first integrated brake light for bicycles. Designer Dan Gestoso Rivers created a beautiful IKEA-inspired bicycle that can be assembled with a single Allen wrench. And Inhabitat took a look at the clever GiBike, a full-size electric bicycle that can fold up to fit in any apartment.
Of all the man-made impacts on the environment, noise pollution is perhaps the least discussed — but it can have a powerful effect on our health. In response to the problem, Blue Forest designed the Quiet Treehouse, a cocoon-like structure that will be donated to The Chestnut Tree House Children’s Hospice in West Sussex. In other architecture news, a design team in Vietnam created a beautiful vegetable nursery from bamboo and more than 2,000 plastic bottles. The Chilean design firm Smiljan Radic has been selected to build a temporary structure that looks like a giant boulder propped up on four large stones for the 14th Serpentine Gallery Pavilion in London. An up-and-coming architecture student named Tyler Short has designed an incredible shading system that rotates in three directions in accordance with sun’s position. And a Barcelona-based artist group created one of the world’s most unexpected public art installations by inflating enormous balloons inside buildings to transform them into mind-boggling works of art.
Solar panels will soon be much more accessible for American consumers: Best Buy and SolarCity just announced a new partnership to sell off-the-shelf photovoltaic systems. In other science and tech news, one company has produced a compact LED phototherapy device that can treat jaundice in infants. A new company called Isidore Electronics Recycling is giving ex-cons in Los Angeles another shot while diverting e-waste from landfills. The Open Source Beehive project aims to put the power to fight colony collapse disorder in the hands of everyday people. Not only does the project offer kits for building your own backyard beehive, but it also gives scientists new tools to monitor global bee health. And in wearable tech news, Recreus has produced a 3D-printed sneaker that is flexible enough to fold up and fit in your pocket.
Who said the Galaxy S3 was dead? Here’s the Samsung Galaxy S3 Slim in all its low spec Glory
While most of the world is now awaiting the retail release of the Samsung Galaxy S5, Samsung continues to pad out the rest of its device line-up, this time with the Samsung Galaxy S3 Slim, a low specification model which presumably looks a lot like the original Galaxy S3 but has very little similar on the inside. As far as I can tell from the dimensions given on the product page, the S3 Slim is actually a little thicker than the original S3 at 9.7mm compared to 8.6mm; Samsung marketing strikes again it seems.
The S3 Slim is going to be packing a quad-core processor clocked at 1.2GHz with 1GB RAM, 8GB storage and a 2,100mAh battery. It will also feature a 8MP rear camera and VGA front camera, as well as a 4.5-inch 960×450 resolution display. Unfortunately, the S3 Slim is going to be launched with Android 4.2 so there are not really any benefits to this device over the original S3, though the device appears to be targeted for a Brazilian audience so far; no word on whether other regions will see the device as well.
What do you think about device releases like the Samsung Galaxy S3 Slim? Let us know your opinion in the comments.
Source: Samsung via Phones Review
Project Aria, Amazon’s rumoured first smartphone, is still on its Way
We’ve heard whispers of an Amazon-branded smartphone for some time now but nothing has ever eventuated from those rumours. According to TheInformation though, there’s still a chance that this device might be happening in the near future. The news stems from a report that says Amazon is developing the smartphone under the name Project Aria and is planning to launch a device in the U.S., Latin America, Europe, and Asia later this year.
The report goes on to say that such an Amazon smartphone would be running Amazon’s own forked version of Android that we’re familiar with on the Kindle tablets. While Android purists will scoff at this eventuality, people who have already bought into Amazon’s ecosystem and extensive Amazon appstore might just jump at the chance to add a Amazon smartphone to that family.
Who would be interested in getting an Amazon smartphone? Do you think Project Aria is ever going to see the light of day? Let us know what you think in the comments.
Source: TheInformation via Phone Arena
[LEAK] Images of the Oppo Find 7 and its retail packaging leak out ahead of its Announcement
The Oppo Find 7 is turning out to be quite an intriguing device ahead of its March 19th announcement; touting two variants with different display resolutions, one of which will have a 2K display, a Snapdragon 800 processor and 13MP camera. This much was revealed in an entry in the red dot 21 design database, though we’ve yet to see the device in the flesh. As luck would have it, images of the Oppo Find 7 have leaked out showing not only the device itself, but its retail packaging as well.
It’s been noted by Phone Arena that the packaging for the Find 7 is exactly the same as the Oppo N1 released late last year, but for the rest of us that didn’t get the N1, the packaging does look very intriguing and refreshing. The leaked photos of the Find 7 look pretty much exactly what was shown last week, except in white. We also get a sneak peek of the UI planned for the Find 7 and it looks like it’s pretty heavily skinned; no CyanogenMod influence this time it seems. You can check out the rest of the leaked images down below:
Only a few days more before the Find 7 is announced: are you excited to hear more about Oppo’s new flagship device? Let us know your thoughts on the device in the comments below.
Source: IT168 via Phone Arena
Lego Cubestormer robot solves Rubik’s Cube in less time than it takes to read this headline

Until yesterday, the world record for fastest time in solving a Rubik’s Cube was 5.27 seconds, which was set in the fall of 2011 by a Lego robot named Cubestormer 2. Thanks to the machine’s successor (aptly named Cubestormer 3), the time to beat is now 3.253 seconds. The robot, which is the third in a series of automatons designed solely for the purpose of solving the Rubik’s Cube ASAP, is powered by an octa-core Samsung Galaxy S4; it’s got four high-performance ARM Cortex-A15 cores and four lower-intensity Cortex-A7 cores running the show, each one managing its own Lego Mindstorms actuator.
Essentially, the phone is responsible for analyzing how the cube is arranged, outlining the steps necessary to solve it, and then instructing the robot what to do. We can’t help but wonder how different the end result would be if a high-end Snapdragon, Intel, NVIDIA or Apple chipset had been used, but we’ll leave it up to the brilliant minds of designers David Gilday and Mike Dobson to tackle that challenge with the Cubestormer 4 when the time is right. And in case you want a reference point as you watch the video below, the fastest human time is 5.55 seconds. (We’d be happy if we could solve it in less than 10 minutes.)
Filed under: Cellphones, Robots, Wireless, Mobile, Samsung
Via: Gizmodo
Source: BusinessWire
Court rules that Pandora won’t pay higher royalties to songwriters
Pandora has been fighting tooth and nail against potential songwriting royalty increases, and it appears that this tenacity is largely paying off. A court has ruled that the streaming radio service should pay the same 1.85 percent royalty rate that it has paid for years, resisting both Pandora’s call for 1.7 percent (like traditional radio) and the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers’ (ASCAP) demand for 3 percent. Details of the ruling are under a court seal, so the motivations behind the decision aren’t yet clear. However, ASCAP is more than a little upset by its loss; it sees the verdict as proof that full-scale licensing reform is necessary to “reflect the realities” of modern music. Whether or not that’s true, the Society may have inadvertently sabotaged its own case. It pointed to iTunes Radio’s higher royalty rate as a model for fair compensation, but Apple is willing to make little to no profit from its music services — ASCAP may have unintentionally suggested that its proposal wasn’t realistic.
Filed under: Cellphones, Internet, Mobile
Via: Billboard
Source: ASCAP
Court rules that Pandora won’t pay higher royalties to songwriters
Pandora has been fighting tooth and nail against potential songwriting royalty increases, and it appears that this tenacity is largely paying off. A court has ruled that the streaming radio service should pay the same 1.85 percent royalty rate that it has paid for years, resisting both Pandora’s call for 1.7 percent (like traditional radio) and the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers’ (ASCAP) demand for 3 percent. Details of the ruling are under a court seal, so the motivations behind the decision aren’t yet clear. However, ASCAP is more than a little upset by its loss; it sees the verdict as proof that full-scale licensing reform is necessary to “reflect the realities” of modern music. Whether or not that’s true, the Society may have inadvertently sabotaged its own case. It pointed to iTunes Radio’s higher royalty rate as a model for fair compensation, but Apple is willing to make little to no profit from its music services — ASCAP may have unintentionally suggested that its proposal wasn’t realistic.
Filed under: Cellphones, Internet, Mobile
Via: Billboard
Source: ASCAP
Torrent front end Popcorn Time made streaming movies free and easy, so of course it’s gone
For about four days “Popcorn Time” lived, opening an easy-access door to streaming movies via torrents, but now it’s gone. Aggregating info from APIs (YIFY for torrents, OpenSubtitles for subs and TheMovieDB for metadata) its developers quickly pushed out open source apps for Linux, OS X and Windows. The team explained that it’s meant to be as easy as using Netflix, and insisted no legal problems were incoming because it didn’t host any content locally or charge anything. Whether Hollywood studios agreed (doubtful) won’t be known, as a “Goodbye” statement on the Popcorn Time website says the project is over “because we need to move on with our lives.” If this sounds like a dream setup however, all is not lost — TorrentFreak has heard from the YTS movie torrent site that it’s picking up the baton and expects to release an installer “shortly.”
Filed under: Home Entertainment, HD
Source: TechCrunch, Popcorn Time (1), (2), TorrentFreak

















