LG Eclipse 4G LTE has been spotted in wild. Folks from BriefMobile managed to find the Now Network’s new devices and show offs the full inside look on the device
See the original article here:
LG Eclipse 4G LTE Spotted in Wild
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LG Eclipse 4G LTE has been spotted in wild. Folks from BriefMobile managed to find the Now Network’s new devices and show offs the full inside look on the device
See the original article here:
LG Eclipse 4G LTE Spotted in Wild
We all know that Android 1.6 isn’t getting any newer , but it’s now clear that customers pining for the I’m Watch will need to dig deeply and muster a final bit of tolerance. According to the Italian smartwatch creator, it’s made a few changes to the device, primarily to allow for greater application compatibility — hopefully this means something other than a stale Donut. As for delivery, the company will send out 300 I’m Watches by June 15th and will then use the next month to solicit feedback and conduct final tests
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I’m Watch creator explains order fulfillment process, offers 15 percent discount for your patience
While there’s already plenty of excitement around other quad-core Android phones , LG will join the party soon when its Optimus 4X HD launches in a few European countries next month. Germany, Sweden, Great Britain, Italy and Poland are all on deck in June, where this latest Optimus variant will bring a 4.7-inch 720p HD IPS LCD, Tegra 3 CPU (benchmarked and seen in white here ) and 2,150mAh battery coupled with Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich.
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LG lines up Optimus 4X HD for launch in Germany, Sweden, Great Britain, Italy and Poland
European Union countries already had a data roaming cutoff law in place to prevent bill shock after your next Balearic vacation, but the price of the data in question should get much cheaper very soon.
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Europe votes to cap data roaming prices, will make it cheaper to tweet from Ibiza
Sony Xperia S has made its way to the international users out there. While US still waiting for their turns with the Sony Xperia Ion. There’s no official word yet from Sony themselves, however a member at Droid Matters spotted an advertisement in his Gmail inbox which claimed that the device will be launched on June.
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[Rumor] Sony Xperia Ion To Be Launch On June
Here’s another interesting tidbit from today’s HP event in Shanghai : according to Kevin Frost, Vice President and General Manager of Consumer Notebooks Business Unit, 15-inch is currently the most popular laptop screen size in the US, while the folks in China prefer 14-inch offerings.
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HP’s most popular laptop screen sizes: 15-inch in the US, 14-inch in China
HTC One X’s American version is now available via AT&T. The device should be shipped right now and stored in AT&T’s retail stores.
Some AT&T customers has begin to received their pre-order on HTC One X. According to AndroidCommunity, a small number of users at Android Forum has reported to received their devices.
Continued here:
HTC One X Shipped Earlier To Some AT&T Customers
It’s not quite a trip around the world , but a trek that Norway’s Zero team recently undertook in a pair of hydrogen-fueled cars is certainly an impressive enough feat in its own right. Late last month, they drove two Hyundai Ix35 FCEVs from Oslo to Monte Carlo (admittedly one of the easier ways to technically “cross Europe”), relying solely on the existing hydrogen refueling infrastructure — that’s as opposed to other trips that brought along fuel trucks as backup
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Norway’s Zero team crosses Europe in hydrogen cars without a backup
The hottest tech news of the day in Europe will undoubtedly be the next Galaxy phone , launching tonight in London . Music fans on that side of the pond woke up to another surprise, however, with the launch of Rdio’s online streaming service in France and the UK . Pricing starts at £4.99 (about $8) per month for unlimited web streaming, jumping to £9.99 (roughly $16) when you add mobile support.
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Rdio grows its European presence, hits France and the UK starting at £4.99 per month

May 19, 2012 By Sally Hendrix
Hot off the heels of the One X and EVO 4G LTE spending some prolonged time at customs , now another member of HTC’s sensational family appears to be feeling the rigorous effects of the ITC.

May 19, 2012 By clark
Accuracy is generally an important consideration in computer chips, but a team of researchers led by Rice University are touting a new “inexact” chip (dubbed PCMOS) that they say could lead to as much as a fifteen-fold increase in efficiency. Their latest work, which won a best paper award at a recent ACM conference, builds on years of research in the field from the university, and is already moving far beyond the lab — some inexact hardware is being used in the “i-slate” educational tablet developed by the Rice-NTU Institute for Sustainable and Applied Infodynamics, 50,000 of which are expected to wind up in India’s Mahabubnagar school district over the next three years.

May 19, 2012 By clark
While the main thing that would make Raspberry Pi’s diminutive $25 / $35 Linux setups better would be if we could get our hands on them faster , the team behind it is already working on improvements like this prototype camera seen above.

May 19, 2012 By Peter Yung
If you found yourself longing for the minor tweaks Samsung made to the Galaxy Tab 10.1 in Germany earlier this year, you may be in luck: Apple’s filed for a preliminary injunction against the slate stateside.

May 19, 2012 By Peter Yung
Let’s face it, whether you’re down at the laundromat or feeding the meter on a busy street, you can never find enough quarters when you need’em. Know what effectively sidesteps that lack of foresight? NFC , that’s what

May 19, 2012 By Joe Plumber
We here at Engadget tend to spend a lot of way too much time poring over the latest FCC filings, be it on the net or directly on the ol’ Federal Communications Commission’s site. Since we couldn’t possibly (want to) cover all the stuff that goes down there individually, we’ve gathered up an exhaustive listing of every phone and / or tablet getting the stamp of approval over the last week. Enjoy! Continue reading FCC Fridays: May 18, 2012 FCC Fridays: May 18, 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 May 2012 23:52:00 EDT

May 19, 2012 By Ray Kaario
Ready for your latest tour through the dense and meandering wording of patent applications ? Well, dig in, because it’s Microsoft’s turn to confuse lawyers the world over with this latest USPTO doc, submitted in November of 2010. The filing describes a computer-based program that would, essentially, analyze a primary device’s installed applications, cross-reference it with a different device and then either migrate that software batch or suggest similar apps to download on a secondary unit
May 19, 2012 By Ray Kaario
Having spent a little time with it, we’re impressed with how much capability the engineers managed to pack into the Canon SX150 , at such an affordable price. As you’d expect given the bargain-basement ~$179 street, it’s not without its limitations, but considering what you get, it’s pretty amazing: A capable, well-built 14-megapixel digital camera with an optically stabilized 12x zoom lens and a good assortment of features

May 19, 2012 By steven
There’s been hints of it coming as early as February , but we now have a smoking gun at the FCC: the Galaxy S III is coming to T-Mobile. A Samsung SGH-T999 has popped up at the agency sporting newly added 1,700MHz AWS support that’s the telltale sign of a T-Mobile device, along with the T999 name itself (the T989 is the network’s Galaxy S II ). It also totes 850MHz and 1,900MHz WCDMA bands being used for HSPA+ data rather than just voice, a clue that the phone is ready for refarmed GSM spectrum

May 18, 2012 By Peter Yung
Sony must stay on top of Android updates for its tablets to remain relevant to consumers. (Credit: Sony) One must wonder why Sony cannot get out of the habit of playing a fragmented and behind-the-curve Android release schedule for its devices.
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