
Imagine a history in which broadcast television programming was not sent directly to television sets. Rather, it was sent to another, more expensive device in the home with a smaller screen. If you paid $40 per month, you could access at best only about 10 percent of the shows you really wanted. These shows were available on demand, but under ideal conditions needed a few minutes before you can start watching them. Furthermore, to watch them in the comfort of your living room, you had to rely on a slow, unreliable connection between the box and the TV set.
This bleak situation characterized the state of much broadband video at the debut of Vudu earlier this year. Vudu’s $400 glossy black box sports a curvy perimeter that is a bit taller than an Apple TV. It delivers instant access to about 5,000 movies (with capacity for double that amount) using a slick and sophisticated combination of local caching and distributed computing. Rent or buy the movie and it starts playing. Vudu just introduced its first high-definition movies — the Bourne movie trilogy, offering the high-definition media-free version of The Bourne Ultimatum for sale for the first time.
The physical version of that movie is available exclusively on HD-DVD, but with Vudu you don’t have to worry about the alliances of studios or video rental chains. The company has struck deals with all major studios and the Vudu device is hundreds of dollars less than dual-format high-definition disc players from Samsung and LG Electronics. On the other hand, nearly all of its content is more of a quality match for the dirt-cheap and universally-supported standard DVD player today.

Word from Sony Japan says that they’ve got a 3.80 firmware update for their hot selling PSP in the chute. Scheduled for release on the 18th, the new code brings the following enhancements:
Together that makes for a decent point update for the holidays, eh?

Here’s a fresh Apple rumor in the run-up to MacWorld: a TomTom GPS module for the iPhone. We just received this supposed photographic “evidence” of said device from a Dutch tipster. Our take? Might be, might not. TomTom is a Dutch company and a righteous, straight-talkin’ Dutchman would never tell such a fib, would he? On the other hand, that device is clearly not in a car heading to Rotterdam. Still, it could be a route demo and that stretch of highway (A13/E19) is a favorite for internal TomTom validation studies. Surely a move towards GPS is a logical next step for Apple — particularly after that little VW concept. And with Apple on the verge of opening the iPhone to third party developers, well, anything goes, eh?

Helio’s warm embrace of YouTube’s wide world of entertainment is nothing new, but it’s getting a whole heck of a lot warmer today with the release of an all-new YouTube app for the Ocean dual slider. Basically, if you can do it from YouTube’s desktop website, you can now do it through the Ocean — instant uploading, ratings, video replies, it’s all here. Check out the full gallery over at Engadget Mobile, or if you’re lucky enough to have an Ocean of your very own, go hook your bad self up, why don’t you?

Not that it comes as a huge surprise given the wide array of devices it already supports, but according to The Register, Orb is apparently set to finally get official with its support of both the iPhone and the iPod touch “in the next few days.” As with other devices, that’ll let you get in a little place-shifting with the aid of the iPhone’s browser, including letting access your music collection via the Orb-powered version of Winamp. On the iPhone, you’ll also have the added benefit of being able to send links to songs in an SMS chat session. Of course, just ’cause it’s not official doesn’t mean you make use of Orb in its current state which, for all we know, could be exactly what’s in store when Orb does make things official.

We first saw Fuji’s Finepix Z100fd back in July, but now that camera-buying season is in full force, PhotographyBlog has taken it out for a review and pronounced it a worthy candidate for your hard-earned cash. Of particular note was the 5X optical zoom, which is better than most other cams in this price range, and the image stabilization and face detection systems, which worked admirably. The camera also drew praise for its slick diagonally-opening lens cover and illuminated Z logo. On the downside, the Z100fd was fairly pokey to store shots and didn’t offer the absolute highest image quality, but those apparently aren’t dealbreakers — the folks at PB say overall, the Z100fd is “a fashion camera that isn’t simply a matter of style over substance.”

We tend not to make a lot of predictions around here, but we’ve totally got odds on TIME magazine’s pick for 2007 Person of the Year (and not just because we’re owned by the same parent-company). Since TIME already named the iPhone both Invention of the Year and, more recently, Gadget of the Year (along with devoting a fawning cover story to it), it seems to us that the obvious path of least resistance for jaded journalists eager to start their holiday vacations is to screw over Gore and go for another easy-bake geek pleaser. Plus, what better symbol to convey the restrictions on political freedoms still so prevalent in the 21st century than the current poster child for walled gardens? Granted, it hasn’t been since 1982 that a piece of electronic equipment took home this prestigious honor (renamed Machine of the Year in deference to the PC), but after lowering its standards so drastically last year by choosing you of all people, well, TIME has shown that almost anything has a shot.

It’s just been a few short weeks since Revo trotted out its Blik WiFi internet radio, but it looks like the company has already outdone itself, with it now introducing the new and improved Blik RadioStation, which packs the same WiFi and FM radio as before, with some DAB functionality thrown in for good measure. That, according to the company, makes it the first such radio to offer all three options in one package, although that distinction also considerably limits its appeal to those not bathed in DAB signals. If that doesn’t preclude you however, you should be able to pick up the radio in your choice of black or white on December 19th for about £150 (or just over $300).
12 Dec
Posted by admin as Audio

Portable speakers always bring with them a few compromises — namely, they either aren’t very portable or they don’t sound very good. Korea’s Xenics now looks to have come up with a solution to that first problem, however, with its new Music Cube speakers able to be disassembled in order to take up as little space as possible in your gadget bag. Unfortunately, it seems that you may want to keep ‘em in there as often as possible, as the company’s choice of designs leaves quite a bit to be desired. There’s also the small matter of that other aforementioned problem, as these speakers pack a mere 1W apiece. On the upside, that means they don’t need an external power adapter, and we assume they won’t set you back too much, although there’s still no official word on pricing or availability.