Sony could show off its long-rumored VR headset at GDC next week
The appearance of Oculus Rift on the scene has done a great deal to increase the potential of VR, but new rumors indicate Sony is going to show off a headset of its own. Sony launched several head mounted displays (including the HMZ-T3W shown above), but so far hasn’t released units with VR capabilities despite years of interest in the technology. Edge-Online cites unnamed developer sources claiming Sony will bring “Oculus Rift-beating” hardware to the Game Developers Conference 2014 next week, along with software developed by one of its first party studios. President of SCE studios Shohei Yushida, senior software engineer Anton Mikhailov and senior director Richard Marks are all scheduled to participate in a “Driving the Future of Innovation” panel where, according to the rumors, the device will be shown off. We’ve seen impressive gaming demos from Oculus including EVE: Valkyrie, but Sony brings significantly more resources and potentially developer support — whatever it shows, we will be on the ground in San Francisco to get our hands and if necessary, faces, on it.
Filed under: Home Entertainment, HD, Sony
Via: Joystiq
Source: Edge-Online, GDC 2014 schedule
Daily Roundup: SXSW wrap-up, touring the Sony Archives in Tokyo and more!
You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.
Touring the Sony Archives in Tokyo
From robot dogs, to Walkman Cassette players, to, yes, a golden guinea pig, Sony’s Archive building outlines 60 years of the company’s history. Read on as Engadget’s Matt Smith travels to Tokyo and visits some of Sony’s most fundamental products during a tour of the facility.
Life in 140 characters or less: My first eight years on Twitter
Back in 2006, Engadget’s Nicole Lee wasn’t sure “tweeting” would ever catch on. The social network’s early days were simple, full of seemingly boring conversations and awkward third-person updates. Much to her surprise, the charm of Twitter prevailed in the test of time.
Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro 8.4 review
Samsung’s new Galaxy Tab Pro 8.4 stands just a little taller that its predecessor, the Galaxy Tab 3, packing a full HD display. And while the Tab Pro 8.4 does have a sleek, premium feel, its seven hour battery life leaves us wanting. But if you’re not worried about power, this $400 tablet is a worthy alternative to the iPad mini.
SXSW 2014 wrap-up: Snoop Dogg, stun copter, Snowden, Mario Kart and more!
SXSW 2014 was full of awesome gear like IBM’s Watson-powered food truck and Chaotic Moon’s stun copter, but today we’re saying farewell. It’s not too late to catch up on the action, though. Check out some of our favorite highlight photos from the event right here.
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Filed under: Misc
Touring the Sony Archives in Tokyo: Walkmans, robot dogs and a golden guinea pig
Sony has had some tough times recently, and while it’s finally started to make some difficult changes in a bid to turn its fortunes around, the Archives building is where the company’s success stories live forever. A fair distance from most of Sony’s high-rise structures in Shinagawa, it’s a well-stocked pantheon to everything that made the electronics maker what it is today. It’s open to the public (as long you make an appointment), and the tour includes a rousing TV presentation from Sony co-founders Masaru Ibuka and Akio Morita, and a walk through 60 years in the electronics business. An AIBO robot will greet you at the door, and if you’ve spent any time around tech, there’s bound to be something here to make you smile — even if it’s just the Billy Joel CD. Our own highlights are right after the gallery.

If anything, the Archives are a little lacking in products from the last few decades. There’s just a single, lonely PlayStation sitting in the 意外 (“unexpected”) section and the company’s phone presence (it started collaborating with Ericsson in 1987 before buying the arm wholly in 2012) is almost nonexistent.

Our tour guide occasionally jumps in with stories and color, even if our group was more than happy to wander off alone and stare at products like a 0.3-megapixel digital camera (the DSC-F1: “Sony’s first!”). We soon reach arguably Sony’s biggest product ever, the Walkman, and hear how many executives at Sony just couldn’t get the appeal of a portable music player — let alone one that didn’t have a record function.
Fortunately, Sony co-chairman Morita got his way. The Sony exec was apparently never quite satisfied with the name, although there must have been something to it. Its Japanese rivals, the Walky, the CassetteBoy and the MiJockey (from Toshiba, Aiwa and Panasonic, respectively) are a little harder to recall. Subsequent Walkman iterations are also display in glass cabinets elsewhere, from the initial model, through those sports yellow versions, into the (less epoch-defining) MP3 iterations.

Sharing shelf-space nearby, you’ll find Sony’s AIBO range, with various prototypes and model numbers. Underneath those, the less well-known QRIO bipedal robot stares out impassively — it never made it to stores.

Back to the main exhibit, there’s also space dedicated to the cassette player’s replacement: Sony’s first compact disc player… with a Billy Joel CD jacket, for any visitors who forgot what CDs were. A few steps farther down, and the aforementioned digital cameras take their place in Sony history, with a brief mention of the now-divorced VAIO PC range. In the center of the Archives, there’s space given to Sony’s transistor radios, professional recording inventions and its TV developments, including plenty of Trinitron sets, which used a new aperture grille to offer finer picture quality. Alongside the boom in color TVs, well, Sony did OK — it even won an Emmy for them, which is encased here with the prize-winning set.

A smaller room, off to the side of the main route, houses some of the most interesting stuff, including a prototype electric rice cooker from 1946, whose results varied depending on electricity fluctuations, and an electric cushion so basic (its wires were between reinforced paper) that Sony actually marketed it under a different company, the “Ginza Heating Company.”

Nearby, Sony’s ill-fated premium QUALIA miniature digital camera is laid to rest, replete with a whole business case of lenses and add-ons. There’s also the Chorocco: an adorable toy-sized van that never made it to retail. Intended to inspire creativity within Sony, it was a promotional gadget that “drove” around vinyl records, playing the music out of its built-in speakers.

It’s a sign of the times, but the archive could soon be the only Sony building left in this neighborhood. The company, having housed its HQ here for more than six decades, is reportedly attempting to sell the surrounding buildings and land.
But what about the golden guinea pig? A present to Sony co-founder Ibuka from his employees, it was in response to an article that said Sony was a guinea pig for transistors, and that (in 1958) many companies were now besting them in production volume. In a radio interview years later, Ibuka said in response:
“If the guinea pig spirit means developing innovative ideas and embodying them in new products, then I think this is an admirable spirit.”

Here’s to more guinea pig spirit.
Filed under: Cellphones, Cameras, Home Entertainment, Sony
Sony offering downloadable themes for Xperia smartphones
Sony seems to be one of the few smartphone manufacturers realizing that one user interface is not a good fit for everyone.
With it latest 4.3 Jelly Bean update (yes, not KitKat yet), Sony introduced a new native feature, essentially baking a theme engine right into the Xperia firmware, allowing you to skin your smartphone in a number of styles.
You could always use apps such as Aviate or even launchers like Nova, Apex, Go or ADW Launcher, but this is just for Xperia devices, plus themes skin “up to 280 assets.”
The themes change things as simple as home screen and lock screen wallpaper, down more complicated things such as folders, navigation bar icons, checkboxes, switches, sliders and buttons.
Sony says it will continue adding more themes through Sony Select and Google Play, as well as increase the number of elements and apps that can be skinned with Xperia Themes.
via Sony Mobile blog
The post Sony offering downloadable themes for Xperia smartphones appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Sony Xperia Z2 can be charged wirelessly; Sony to release charging Accessories
Wireless charging is always a nice thing to have available for your smartphone, yet it doesn’t seem to be as widely utilized as some of us might like; I love wireless charging, particularly as I can just place my phone on the charging plate without needing to feel around for my charging cable and then plug it in. Sony, however, may be joining the light side with this iteration of its devices as Clove has listed a wireless charging case and wireless charging plate for the Sony Xperia Z2, suggesting that the Sony Xperia Z2 can be charged wirelessly.
While Clove doesn’t have any product images yet, it says that Sony is going to be offering the WCR12 Wireless Charging cover in black and white for £69.99 as well as the WCH10 Charging Plate which is going to go for £54.99. Much like other manufacturer branded accessories, these ones err on the side of expensive, though we’re anticipating that the charging cover is simply going to enable Qi-wireless charging, which will open the door for you to get a much cheaper charging plate.
What do you think about the Sony Xperia Z2 getting the ability to charge wirelessly? Let us know your opinion in the comments.
Source: Clove via XperiaBlog
Daily Roundup: Titanfall’s secret weapon, Edward Snowden talks encryption, and more!
You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.
A closer look at Titanfall’s not-so-secret weapon: Microsoft’s cloud
Tomorrow, Titanfall’s bringing more computing power to your Xbox One than it can handle, all thanks to Microsoft’s Azure cloud infrastructure. Read on as Engadget’s Timothy Seppala explores the inner workings responsible for the title’s resource-intensive AI technology.
Snowden says encryption and oversight are key to protecting the public from surveillance
Edward Snowden made an appearance at SXSW this morning where he reiterated the importance of end-to-end encryption in protecting user’s private data. What’s more, the whistleblower spoke through a Google Hangout, which passed through seven proxies on its way from Russia.
Shaquille O’Neal talks Fitbit, Google Glass and smartphones at SXSW
Are you a Fitbit user? So is Shaquille O’Neal. We managed to sit down with the NBA superstar at SXSW 2014 and chat about how fitness wearables play a big part in keeping us healthy and active. Click on through to watch the conversation.
Apple releases iOS 7.1 with CarPlay support
Apple unveiled its CarPlay interface last week at the Geneva Auto Show, and now its complimentary iOS 7.1 update is ready for action. In addition to CarPlay functionality, 7.1 brings a lengthy list of bug fixes and and a couple of clever Siri improvements. So head on over to your settings menu and get downloading.
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Filed under: Misc
Sony and Panasonic announce the Archival Disc, a new optical disc standard for long-term storage
Aiming to offer a long-term storage option in disc form, Sony and Panasonic have announced the new Archival Disc format that will store between 300GB and 1TB per disc. The companies are bigging up the non-HDD form factor for its hardiness to temperature and humidity. They’re also promising “inter-generational compatibility” between different formats as the standard matures — but we’ll believe it when we see it. While the initial team-up was signed back in July last year, the current roadmap suggests we’ll see the first 300GB discs from Summer 2015. Storage upgrades will follow, in line with signal processing improvements, with high linear density processing (which all sounds good) supposedly set to offer up to a magical one terabyte of space per disc. We’ll just go ahead and throw away all these Blu-rays.
Filed under: Misc, Peripherals, Storage, Science, Sony
Source: Sony
Daily Roundup: Samsung’s Milk Music, a stun gun-equipped drone and more!
You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.
Hands-on with Samsung’s Milk Music internet radio service
Samsung’s getting its own piece of the internet radio pie with Milk. Milk Music, to be exact. The company’s new adless music service brings a unique, Slacker-powered way to explore online radio. The catch? It’s only available for Galaxy devices.
Punching sharks with an Oculus Rift and Leap Motion controller
By combining an Oculus Rift, Leap Motion controller and a little know-how, folks at Chaotic Moon studios developed SharkPunch. A game where you… punch sharks. And though it may be humorous, the company sees big potential for 3D-immersive tech in the education industry.
Hewlett Packard unveils the $170 HP 8 tablet
Two weeks after Mobile World Congress, Hewlett Packard quietly released its $170 HP 8 tablet: an 8-inch budget tablet with a (relatively) low res display and mediocre internals. Though, if screen size isn’t an issue, you might consider last year’s similarly-priced Slate 7.
This drone packs 80,000 volts of stun power
Drones can deliver pizza, dance in synchronous fashion, and now they can electrocute people too. Dubbed the Chaotic Unmanned Personal Intercept Drone, or CUPID for short, this aircraft can deliver 80,000 volts of stopping power directly into your skin.
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Filed under: Misc
Greetings, from Joystiq
My Dearest Friends at Engadget,
With this letter I have enclosed a large, slightly frayed chunk of styrofoam that we all thought resembled the prominent “t” in the Engadget logo – you know, the one wearing the cute Wi-Fi hat. We have no use for this item here at Joystiq, so we thought you might hoist it above your reeking desk-beds, or use it in another story about 3D printers.
Assuming this part of my missive isn’t covered in little white bits, I’d love for you to once again consider my proposal for publishing select content from Joystiq, your sibling website that covers the video game industry in a more granular fashion than your folks do. We review everything in the spectrum between indie and AAA, find the best in the worst games, stream upcoming releases twice a week, and have no qualms about making an MIT professor talk about massively multiplayer Pokémon. That does not happen twice a week, but we can work on it.
Of course, the last thing I want to do is inundate your loyal audience with gaming detritus that they already know, so we’ll pick the most relevant and comprehensive articles for Engadget. How’s this one to start? “How many megapixels was the camera in BioShock? The answer will shock you.”
Kind regards,
Ludwig Kietzmann, Editor-in-Chief of Joystiq
P.S. Please do not publish this letter verbatim.
—
Hello LUDWIG KIETZMANN,
We regret to inform you that delivery to the following recipient failed permanently:
ENGADGET STAFF
Technical details of permanent failure:
Google tried to deliver your message, but it was rejected for being “too game-y.” We recommend fewer references to goombas and headshots to avoid this error in the future. The error that the server returned was: 1UP LOL 1337 No relaying allowed – psmtp (state 13).
That said, we’d, uh, love to have you over some time. Not sure when we’re available just yet, but we’ll get back to you really soon. In the meantime, why not just drop those hot Joystiq pieces directly on Engadget so we don’t have to surf all the way over. Surfing is tiring. Uh oh … we’ve dropped the facade, haven’t we?
Filed under: Announcements, Gaming, Meta, Software, HD, Sony, Microsoft, Nintendo
Sony’s upcoming Alpha 7 and 7R updates will speed up your photo shoots
Sony’s Alpha 7 cameras shook up the photography world by offering full-frame shooting in a small body, but they also have their fair share of quirks, such as slow startup times and sub-par JPEG images. Some of those problems may vanish very soon, though, as Sony plans to roll out big firmware updates for both the Alpha 7 and 7R on March 19th. The two cameras should start faster, and they’ll also get a nebulous “image quality improvement” — hopefully, that means better JPEG output. The upgrade will also unlock more features when using the PlayMemories Mobile app to control either camera, and there’s better support for a recent 70-200mm telephoto lens. We’re not seeing any attempts to speed up the Alphas’ sometimes pokey autofocusing, but the updates should still help early adopters who’ve had live with some noticeable flaws for the past few months.
Via: Engadget Chinese (translated)
Source: Sony Japan (translated)























