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New Video Recording Software Captures Any Web Video, DVD, Video Chat and More...
New Replay Video Capture is an easy-to-use, high-quality video recorder program for Windows that records any video from any web site, DVD, video chat, or anything else visible on a PC.
EOps 'high concept' wireless iPod speakers strongly resemble a cheap desk lamp
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Portable Audio, Wireless
We've seen our fair share of iPod speakers around here, and all too often they resemble boom boxes or clock radios (or sometimes both). Now, thanks to the combined efforts of EOps and industrial designer Michael Young, we finally have something that appears equally suited to the home, office and Korova Milk Bar. The i24R3 consists of an iPod dock / 40W subwoofer and two (upgradable to eight) 3-inch 20W satellite speakers, all in a fetching pure gloss white and aluminum casing. The whole shebang can be controlled with the included RF remote, from your iPod / iPhone or from any PC or Mac sporting iTunes and the included Wireless USB dongle. The base accepts a bevy of inputs and outputs, including RCA audio, video and composite video out -- and if that weren't enough, each speaker can be controlled separately using the included motion sensors, allowing hands-off volume and equalizer control. Something like that must be seen to be appreciated, so make sure you check out the video after the break. No price yet, but these guys should be hitting the street in early 2009.[Via Engadget Spanish]
Continue reading EOps "high concept" wireless iPod speakers strongly resemble a cheap desk lampEOps "high concept" wireless iPod speakers strongly resemble a cheap desk lamp originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 10 Nov 2008 12:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Video: Daily Debrief: Father of the iPod steps down
As the man considered the father of Apple's iPod steps down, it becomes clear why the company was eager to hire Mark Papermaster, an IBM chip designer. On this Daily Debrief, CNET's Kara Tsuboi and Tom Krazit discuss the reasoning behind the move and why a consumer product company like Apple would want a guy with server experience heading up their lucrative iPod division.
Bugtraq: A video can crash ANY iphone/ipod and a few libraries.
A video can crash ANY iphone/ipod and a few libraries.
Apple's Greg Joswiak touts iPod touch as the future of handheld gaming
Filed under: Gaming, Portable Audio, Portable Video
We speculated in our review of the new iPod touch that Apple had designs on more than just consumption of music and video, and now an interview with company VP of iPod and iPhone product marketing Greg Joswiak all but confirms that sights are set on the gaming market. In a conversation with T3, Joswiak boasts that the devices are breaking through as a viable alternative to established handhelds (such as the PSP or DS) due mostly in part to competitive software pricing and the company's content delivery system. While much of the interview focuses on iPod sales figures, it does delve into more detailed comparisons of platforms, with Joswiak stating, "The 3D graphic power here [iPod touch] is significantly greater than what you have here [picks up Nintendo DS]. So this allows people to do significantly higher quality games." While it's not unusual to hear Apple's honchos hyping their products like they just skipped across some water to heal a few lepers, it is a new trend to see the company aggressively going after gaming platform mainstays so directly. With Sony and Nintendo just getting up to speed on non-traditional content delivery, Apple may find an edge come holiday season with casual gamers -- the real question is whether the hardcore will bite.[Via Eurogamer]Apple's Greg Joswiak touts iPod touch as the future of handheld gaming originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Nov 2008 10:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
The future of network video: Q&A with Tim Chen of Lanner Electronics
Network video shows potential in a growing range of industries, from surveillance and security, to health care, industrial automation, and transportation. This is largely thanks to the boom in image sensor technology and the ability to capture high-resolution, high-fidelity audio/video. But at the same time the trend to higher quality has put pressure on other elements of the ecosystem, in particular how to effectively cater to the increasing bandwidth demands of these video streams, and how to store, manage and archive cost effectively. Digitimes recently had a chance to talk with Tim Chen, Senior Vice President for Video Communications at Lanner Electronics, about Lanner's move into the network video market and its recent release of a 16-channel all-in-one H.264 video encoding motherboard.
Video of the Day: A new version of iPod 'shuffle'
From the "don't try this at home" file, we offer this bizarre use of a favorite portable personal music device.
In Case You're An Idiot: Canada Wants To Make It Illegal To Play Video Games ...
In the past, we've pointed out how silly it was for various politicians to go about banning very specific actions for drivers. There are a ton of distractions for drivers, and you're never going to successfully outlaw all of them. But it doesn't stop politicians from trying. Earlier this year, we asked for suggestions on what else politicians might try to ban while driving (beyond earlier bills that were put forth in various legislatures trying to ban using a laptop, using OnStar, faxing and (everyone's favorite) having sex while driving.
The latest is up in Canada, where a bill on driver distractions includes a ban on playing portable video game systems. While my first thought was whether or not this means it would still be legal to hook up a console gaming system and play it, that thought was quickly erased by the most basic question of all: who doesn't already recognize that you should not be playing a handheld video game while driving? I mean, if we're going to start banning totally theoretical dangerous driving activities, I'd like to throw juggling while driving onto the list. That's gotta be distracting. We must ban it. To save our children, of course.
Of course, to highlight how ridiculous this law is, it says it's okay for you to change stations on the radio while driving -- but you would be fined for skipping a song on your iPod. Why the distinction? Who knows. Reporters, sensing the ridiculousness of the situation, questioned a supporter of the new bill, asking him if it would be illegal to change songs on your iPod if the iPod were taped to the dash, like a radio. His response? "I would have to look at that one," while then noting "the proposed law is fairly general with details to come." Ah, so let's rush into passing a law, and then we'll work out the details of what the law actually means later?Permalink | Comments | Email This Story
Apple deals: iPod shuffle, Nano, Touch, more
Currently the Apple store is offering a variety of refurbished iPods and peripherals. At the bottom of the iPod pricing scale is the 1GB iPod shuffle for $39 and the 2GB model for $59, both come in silver, blue, green and purple. Next up is the 8GB iPod nano for $99 in silver, blue, green, black or pink. The iPod classic is priced at $169 for the 80GB model and $249 for the 160GB model, both co...
Logic3 intros i-Station Rotate iPod / iPhone dock
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Portable Audio, Portable Video
It sure is tough for iPod docks to stand out from the pack these days, but it looks like Logic3 has found one fairly unique way to get its new i-Station Rotate unit noticed, with it packing a rotating mechanism that will let you adjust your iPod or iPhone to suit your screen format. Other than that, it looks to be a fairly standard speaker dock, with it boasting a whopping 10W of total output power, a video output for some larger screen viewing, a 3.5mm line-in jack to accommodate your non-Apple devices, a remote control, and accommodations for four AA batteries to let you take it on the road. You won't be able to get your hands on this one until January, however, when it'll set you back $130.
Logic3 intros i-Station Rotate iPod / iPhone dock originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 Nov 2008 14:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
The up-to-the-nanosecond 7th edition of iPod: The Missing Manual
Got a new iPod? The up-to-the-nanosecond 7th edition of iPod: The Missing Manual can help you get your new iPod (Classic, Nano, or Shuffle) out of the box and into your ears in 15 minutes. On the first pages, "you'll learn a bit about your particular iPod model and how to get it whistling sweet tunes in your ear in a minimal amount of time," notes author J.D. Biersdorfer, who also pens the technology Q & A column for the New York Times. "If you want more information on in-depth iPodding or getting the most out iTunes, you can find that stuff in chapters farther down to road." Browse the book now.
ASUS AIR3 iPod speaker system / internet radio hits the FCC
Filed under: Peripherals, Portable Audio
While the iPod sound system boat has already sailed (numerous times), there's always a minor boom in copycats when the holiday season draws near. Thankfully, ASUS' latest contribution to the over-saturated market is one with a differentiating factor, as the AIR3 tunes into internet radio stations as well. According to the posted user's guide in the FCC, the unit can play nice with dock-connecting iPods, stream WiFi radio stations and play back music from any other DAP via the 3.5-millimeter auxiliary jack. You'll also find a 128 x 64 resolution FSTN graphics display, S-Video / composite video outputs, an Ethernet jack and a total of four drivers to kick out the jams. An obligatory remote is also bundled in, though there's obviously no indication of a price tag or release date in those absolutely riveting FCC documents.ASUS AIR3 iPod speaker system / internet radio hits the FCC originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 09 Nov 2008 18:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Extreme Makeover: Photos Realistically Embedded Within Videos
Stanford artificial intelligence researchers have developed software that makes it easy to reach inside an existing video and place a photo on the wall so realistically that it looks like it was there from the beginning. The photo is not pasted on top of the existing video, but embedded in it. It works for videos as well; you can play a video on a wall inside your video.
Optoma iPod mini-projector due for Apple Japan
Optoma today said it has struck a deal with Apple Japan to launch its version of Texas Instruments' DLP Pico projector in the country under the PK-101 name. The pocket-sized unit will support both the headphone jack-mounted video output of the fifth-generation iPod but will come with a Dock Connector kit that handles video from iPhones and all video-capable iPods that support TV out, creating a p...
Video Search SEO Expert Gregory Markel to Speak at Pubcon
Gregory Markel, Founder/President of Infuse Creative and video search marketing pioneer, will speak on video search engine optimization SEO and marketing strategies for YouTube, Google, Yahoo! video, MySpace video and others at the 2008 Pubcon Webmaster World, 11:30am PST, Tuesday, November 11. (PRWeb Nov 11, 2008)
Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/video-search-seo/marketing-strategy/prweb1601342.htm
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