Engadget Daily: Galaxy Note Edge, hands-on with the Xperia Z3 and more!
Today, we take a look at the Galaxy Note Edge’s bent display, test drive Samsung’s Gear VR headset, go hands-on with the Xperia Z3 and more from IFA 2014! Read on for Engadget’s news highlights from the last 24 hours.
Filed under: Misc
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Toshiba tosses out their Chromebook 2 with 11.5 hour battery on a 13.3-inch HD screen
The Chromebook battles are finally starting to get a little interesting. Over the last few months there have been some pretty interesting Chromebook devices to come from a variety of OEM’s. Lenovo pushed out the N20p convertible and Acer announced the ChromeBook 13 with the NVIDIA Tegra K1. Toshiba is stepping back into the ring with their aptly named Chromebook 2.
- 13.3-inch 16:9 display in either a 1366 x 768p offering or a 1920 x 1080p offering
- Intel Celeron Processor
- 16GB internal storage
- 100GB free Google Drive storage
- 4GB DDR3L or 2GB DDR3 RAM (model dependent)
- 1 HDMI out
- 1 USB 2.0
- 1 YUSB 3.0
- SD/SDHC card slot
- Headphone/mic combo jack
- 802.11ac+agn
- Bluetooth 4.0
- HD Webcam with dual mics
- Skullcandy stero speakers
- 11.5 hours battery life on the 768p version and 9 hours battery life on the 1080p version
Toshiba has the new Chromebook 2 pegged for an October 5th release here in the states with a price tag of $249.99 on the 2GB of RAM 768p version and $329.99 for the 4GB of RAM 1080p version.
Source: Toshiba Press
The post Toshiba tosses out their Chromebook 2 with 11.5 hour battery on a 13.3-inch HD screen appeared first on AndroidSPIN.
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Sony Xperia Z3 headed to T-Mobile this Fall
I am pretty sure my heart just skipped a beat. Maybe it was a mild heart attack from all the coffee I have put down today trying to keep up with all this news. Either way, it would appear that T-Mobile and Sony might have done something right together for once.
Earlier this morning Sony made a flury of announcements about new devices. They unveiled the Xperia Z3, Xperia Z3 Compact, Xperia Z3 Tablet compact and Xperia E3. That is a lot to take in. Honestly, I glanced at them and shuffled them back for later in the day. Mainly because it is very rare, or extremely late in the game, before any of the flagships make it stateside. With that all being said, there is now word from T-Mobile that they will be offering the new Sony Xperia Z3 this fall for consumers.
Now, T-Mobile didn’t offer a specific date or price, but I’ll gladly take one this fall over some time next year after it is irrelevant to carry. This means the earlier news of the PS4 Remote Play will mean a little more here in the states than it did just a bit ago.
Spec wise, on a generic level, you are looking at:
- 5.2-inch 1080 x 1920 display with a 424ppi
- Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 quad-core processor at 2.5GHz
- 3GB of RAM
- 16 and 32 GB internal storage options
- Micro SD card slot
- IP58 water-resistant rated
- 20.7 MP rear camera
- 2.2MP front shooter
- Android 4.4.4
- 3,100 mAh battery with a 16 hour talk time rating
I am not counting Sprint out of the equation just yet. Previous reports did peg a flagship Sony device headed that direction in time for the holidays as well. The T-Mobile page that makes this small, but important, announcement doesn’t make mention that it is an exclusive. We might see the Xperia Z3 hit more than T-Mobile before the year ends.
Source: T-Mobile Via Droid-Life
The post Sony Xperia Z3 headed to T-Mobile this Fall appeared first on AndroidSPIN.
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Daimler nabs two taxi apps, but wants no part of an Uber-like uproar
While Daimler, Mercedes-Benz parent company, announced that it had acquired two ride-hailing apps today, it was clear that it wanted no part of disrupting the taxi industry. The oufit grabbed mytaxi and RideScout to boost its efforts to serve folks who don’t have cars with its limousines, according to Reuters. If you need a quick introduction, mytaxi is a German-based service that hails, tracks and pays for taxis while RideScout is a tool for folks to find both public and private options for arriving on time with offices in Austin, Texas. What the company made perfectly clear is that it wants no part of ruffling the feathers Uber has; however, it does plan to work with taxi operators to get customers where they need to go. Deals were made through a subsidiary Moovel GmbH, and with that outfit, Daimler owns the car2go car-sharing option and the Park2gether service for finding empty spots to stop.
[Photo credit: Thomas Trutschel/Photothek via Getty Images]
Filed under: Transportation
Source: Reuters
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Researchers developing reactor powered by nuclear waste
Nuclear energy could have curbed C02 emissions long ago if not for one problem: the waste is toxic for over 100,000 years. That’s quite a commitment for humanity, but Hitachi thinks it has the answer: burn the spent fuel in small reactors to generate more power. That would produce manageable waste that would be harmless in a mere century or so. Hitachi has been studying such reactors for awhile with GE, and has enlisted MIT, the University of Michigan (U-M) and University of California, Berkeley (UCB) for the next phase. The goal is to re-purpose existing boiling water reactors (RBWRs), so that their turbines, safety systems and other components could be reused. Researchers could then focus on the core tech needed to burn highly refined “transuranium elements,” aka spent nuclear fuel. They’ve enlisted the three schools to jointly analyze the safety and performance of potential core designs, with the aim of eventually building a test reactor. Commercialization is probably decades off, but the way toxic waste is building up, they may want to hustle it along.
Filed under: Science
Via: Gizmag
Source: Hitachi
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Sony tries to stay relevant in the wearables game with its new watch and fitness band
At today’s conference in Berlin, Sony quickly announced two smart devices that happen to fit on your wrist. Both wearables are followups to previous versions: The 229-euro Smartwatch 3, which is a plainly named Android Wear sequel, and the 159-euro SmartBand Talk, which takes last year’s fitness band and adds an e-paper display, mics and speakers. Each device got some face time during Sony’s presser, but were overshadowed by the rest of the company’s mobile lineup, so I spent a little extra time with them both after the show.
Let’s start with the Smartwatch 3, which uses a 1.6-inch square display. Compared to the ZenWatch, Moto 360 or the LG G Watch R, Sony’s new offering isn’t meant to be classy; it comes with a very sporty wristband that hugs the entire perimeter of the device, and unfortunately it just makes the watch look even larger than it already is. Keep this in mind if you’re small-wristed (like I am), because you might constantly worry that it’s going to eat your entire hand for dinner. You can replace the wriststraps, but they aren’t the normal 22mm kind you use on your analog watch; you’ll have to get them through more official channels, and there will be more strap color options beyond black and white sometime after its launch.
There’s no special charging cradle or secret sauce here, so you just need to use your run-of-the-mill micro-USB plug to get it juiced up. And according to Sony, once it’s fully charged, you can expect anywhere from two days of battery life to four days of standby. The sad news: That claim is actually an improvement over most other Android Wear watches, which are lucky to last that long on their best days. With a 420mAh battery, however, it’s really not that much better than the G Watch or Galaxy Live, so I’m curious to see if Sony has some tricks up its sleeves. Additionally, it also has NFC, a waterproof rating of IP68 (just like the Z3 series phones), an ambient light sensor and a physical power key.
And I believe there are a few things that Sony isn’t telling us. The devices on display at IFA are in the infamous retail mode, which means you can’t actually use it in real-life — it just shows the same screenshots over and over. A Vice President for Sony America told me that it may have some bells and whistles that other watches don’t have, but he couldn’t go into any more detail; given earlier rumors that the Smartwatch 3 may have a custom UI of some sort, I certainly won’t be surprised if we see a few more reveals between now and time of launch. Another clue: In its press release, Sony noted that this watch was the first one “specifically designed for the latest Android Wear updates” and would offer software innovation. Nothing like a good mystery!

What we do know is that the Smartwatch 3, in addition to the SmartBand Talk, is compatible with Sony’s Lifelog Android app, which is available in the Play Store. The idea is that it logs various parts of your life, and I’m not just talking about fitness; it’ll also track the music you listen to, the movies you watch, how much deep and shallow sleep you get each night and so on. All of the details will sync with your phone (if you’re away from your device, it’ll initiate the transfer once you’re in range) and displays it in a handy chart and even shows an animated graphic that lets you see where you were and what you were doing at any specific time.
The SmartBand Talk improves upon its predecessor by adding a mic, a couple of speakers, an altimeter for tracking hikes and climbs, and a battery-sipping e-paper display (the first SmartBand had no display at all). Thanks to this, the tiny 70mAh battery should last you up to 3 days, according to Sony. It charges in less than hour, apparently, so its time plugged in will hopefully be just a tiny blip in your lifelog instead of a major disruption. (If you’re using it to monitor sleep, however, just make sure it’s not going to power off on you in the middle of the night.) And much like the Smartwatch 3 and Z3 devices, the band is waterproof.
The display itself shows things like the time, music you’re playing and fitness activities like steps taken. It’s activated via accelerometer, so it changes screens when you move your wrist around. There’s also a volume button for your speakers if or when you want to make calls, and another button that changes the screen to preset panels that you can customize through your phone app.
Sony was one of the earliest manufacturers to come out with a smartwatch, but now that everyone else is joining the party, it’s tough to stay relevant. The watch is a tad on the expensive side, so whatever mysteries it holds needs to be unique enough to turn heads; the band is a great improvement over the previous version, thanks to its display, but I’m concerned that the inclusion of mic and speakers raised the price of the band a little too high. As always, we reserve our final opinions for the reviews, so be on the lookout for those sometime later this fall.
Filed under: Wearables, Mobile, Sony
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Digg brings its Twitter news fixation to its RSS reader and iOS app

Last month, Digg tried to very subtly reinvent itself with the launch of a feature called Digg Deeper. The concept was simple enough: Deeper would surface stories based on what your Twitter pals were all talking about, so you’d have a better sense of the news of the moment. There was just one caveat, though. You see, at the time, it was only open to members of News.me (the startup the new Digg team slaved away on first). We’re down with rewarding loyalty, but now Deeper is expanding in a big way — the feature has been baked into the Digg Reader proper, and now also lives in an updated version of the Digg iOS app you can download right now. Oh, and the team’s launching a new daily digest email that’ll encapsulate all your Twitter friends’ shared stories and blast them into your inbox (as if it wasn’t cluttered enough). Digg’s little social experiment seems to have paid off, but the thing to remember is that it’s still just a start. After all, there’s still no support for social channels beyond Twitter (like a less clickbait-y Facebook, for instance) and no word on when Google’s faithful will get a chance to sift through all that new news on their Android devices.
Source: Digg Blog
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PS4 Remote Play coming to Sony Xperia Z3, Z3 Compact and Z3 Tablet Compact
I think I need some more coffee. Boy has it been a big day of news. Sony put out quite a large chunk with a new SmartWatch 3 and SmartBand Talk, not to mention a plethora of devices that we have yet to get to. Mixed in the blizzard of information circling the web is some news about PS4 Remote Play.
As you might expect, this is Sony’s way to bring your Playstation 4 games from the TV in the living room to your Sony device in the back bedroom. Sony will be offering up a simple game control mount accessory that will let you attach your Xperia Z3 to your current DUALSHOCK 4 controller for a pop up playing experience. Much like the Moga controllers do. Sony is quick to mention that this function is available on the new Xperia Z3, Z3 Compact and Z3 Tablet Compact and that you will need a Playstation 4, DUALSHOCK 4 controller, a Sony Entertainment Network account and high-speed internet. If you have a PS4 then you should have everything except the newly announced devices that aren’t available yet anyways.
Sony may bring this functionality to previous Xperia devices, which would be nice since the U.S. doesn’t have a very big saturation of Xperia devices to begin with. Game streaming isn’t all that new, NVIDIA has been doing it with PC games to the Shield for some time. AP points out that the Wii U does this through their tablet remote thingy they have. While I haven’t given it much time yet, Limelight offers game streaming from your PC to a plethora of Android devices, while not perfect, it works. The PS Vita has had this ability for quite sometime.
There doesn’t seem to be a price tag for the controller adapter for your phone. That information should come out closer to the launch of the new Xperia Z3 line in a few months.
Via Android Police
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