Oct 18
localcast, PlaceShifting, localcasting, ZeeVee, alcast, ZVBOX, hwyc, features, how would you change, htpc, HowWouldYouChange, internet tv, InternetTv, internet
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
ZeeVee’s ZvBox had a lot of potential on paper — after all, who wouldn’t be enthused about the possibility of bringing internet TV / DVDs / Blu-rays (via your PC’s optical drive) and all sorts of other multimedia to the TV via the coaxial wiring already in your home? Unfortunately, the box was hamstrung by two major issues: a lofty price tag ($499) and less-than-elegant installation. Still, the unit seemed to work well enough in our testing once we got everything up and running, but we never really found a way to justify the cost. Are any of you early adopters feeling the same way? Disagree vehemently? What could ZeeVee do (or have done) in order to make the ZvBox a more compelling purchase? We know you’ve got it in you, so let it all out in comments below.
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Source: Darren Murph
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Oct 08
baltimore, MobileBroadband, mobile broadband, xohm, wwan, 6930-6771, 4930-6862, aspire, acer, broadband, 4g, mobile internet, MobileInternet, wimax, sprint, internet
Filed under: Wireless
Hot on the heels of Lenovo comes Acer, which is somehow claiming “first!11one!” in the US market with WiMAX-enabled laptops. Introduced today in Baltimore in conjunction with the formal unveiling of Sprint’s XOHM network, the Aspire 4930-6862 and Aspire 6930-6771 both include the innate ability to hop on a WiMAX network and surf at 4G speeds. As for specs, the former packs a 14.1-inch WXGA panel, 2GHz Core 2 Duo T7350 CPU, 3GB of RAM, WiFi / WiMAX capability, integrated graphics, a dual-layer DVD writer, 320GB SATA HDD, 5-in-1 card reader, built-in webcam, Windows Vista Premium and an $899.99 sticker. The larger 6930 differs only in the 16-inch 1,366 x 768 resolution panel, as everything else (price included) remains the same. Charm City residents can snatch ‘em up right now at NewEgg and TigerDirect.
[Via DigitalTrends]
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Source: Darren Murph
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Aug 20
in flight internet, In-flightInternet, InFlightInternet, gogo, InFlightWifi, in flight wifi, in-flight internet, In-flightWifi, wifi, internet, aircell, american airlines, in-flight wifi, AmericanAirlines, in-flight
Filed under: Transportation, Wireless
digg_url = ‘http://digg.com/tech_news/American_Airlines_goes_live_with_in_flight_WiFi_service’; At long last, “you are now free to surf the intarwebz while flying.” Okay, so maybe it has been possible in the past, but American Airlines is taking a huge leap forward in the US market today by giving passengers aboard long-haul Boeing 767-200 flights the option to hop online during the trip. The GoGo service, which is being provided by Aircell, will charge customers $12.95 for access to the world wide web, though Reuters points out that VoIP calling is “not available.” Delta, US Airways, et al. — time to get with the program.
[Via Dallas News, thanks Travis]
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Source: Darren Murph
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Aug 19
pakistan, global, idf, 2.3ghz, 3.5ghz, MobileBroadband, mobile broadband, internet, mobile internet, MobileInternet, wimax, intel
Filed under: Wireless
While much of the world rallies around LTE, Intel’s still doing its thang with WiMAX. According to Garth Collier, general manager of WiMax at Intel Asia-Pacific, the outfit is gearing up to “start supporting other markets outside of the US at 2.5GHz and in other spectrum profiles.” As it stands, the Centrino 2 chip package supports a version of the technology that uses the 2.5GHz spectrum, and while Mr. Collier didn’t specify which WiMAX profile would be added in 2009, deductive reasoning leads us to believe that 2.3GHz (used in South Korea) and 3.5GHz (used in Pakistan) are in the cards. Beyond that, details are few and far between, but we’d expect to hear something a bit more solid at the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco.
[Via InfoWorld, image courtesy of CNET]
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Source: Darren Murph
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Jul 01
DigitalBridge Communications, deployment, BreezeMAX, DigitalbridgeCommunications, jackson hole, wyoming, JacksonHole, Alvarion, MobileWimax, MobileInternet, mobile internet, broadband, wimax, mobile broadband, mobile wimax, MobileBroadband, internet
Filed under: Wireless
Bet you didn’t see this one coming. With everyone’s eyes fixed firmly on Sprint’s supposedly forthcoming US WiMAX deployment in Baltimore, Chicago and Washington, DC, DigitalBridge Communications has snuck in to steal a little of the spotlight. As we speak, America’s “first” (um, really?) mobile WiMAX deployment has gone live in Jackson Hole, Wyoming courtesy of Alvarion’s BreezeMAX gear. The firms are hoping that high-brow tourists that come to tackle the black diamonds of Jackson Hole Mountain Resort will also bring their WiMAX-enabled device and / or WiMAX card to send enviable photos back home, but only time will tell if folks find value in the offering. DBC is expected to expand the network’s reach in the area (which currently hits 3,000 homes and businesses), and then “add mobile capabilities throughout its 200,000-household footprint.”
[Image courtesy of TerryDreams]
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Source: Darren Murph
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Jun 24
In-flightWifi, in-flight wifi, plane, airplane, gogo, AmericanAirlines, american airlines, internet, in-flight, wifi, aircraft, aircell, airline
Filed under: Transportation, Wireless
You heard right, folks. American Airlines is planning to open up the world wide web to passengers on board an unspecified round-trip flight from New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport and Los Angeles. The Gogo service, provided via Aircell, will be free for patrons tomorrow, but will eventually run users $12.95 for flights greater than three hours and $9.95 for trips under said threshold. We’re also told that more trials are expected to get going on flights between New York and San Francisco and New York and Miami, though no time frame is given for when the service would escape the beta stage and hit mass implementation. Additionally, the Gogo system is supposed to “prioritize the flow of data so that passengers downloading movies or large documents won’t prevent other passengers from getting their email,” so don’t expect to use that excuse for not sending in those Q2 close reports.
[Via Jaunted]
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Source: Darren Murph
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May 20
Filed under: Transportation
With the ability to surf the web in-car inevitably coming to more and more motorcars, ATX Group, the self-proclaimed “largest independent telematics services provider to the automotive industry,” has announced an initiative with the Connected Vehicle Trade Association to “convene an international work group to address how to safely access internet content through embedded and nomadic devices in vehicles.” Aside from that, it’s also proposing a generic top-level domain — .car — that would presumably dumb down websites for use in the vehicle. Of course, you won’t find us cheering on a movement to generate yet another worthless TLD, but we’d certainly be down with text-to-speech software that read the latest gadget headlines (just an example, is all) aloud as you cruised the freeway.
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Source: Darren Murph
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Apr 18
Filed under: Networking
Screen grabs chronicles the uses (and misuses) of real-world gadgets in today’s movies and TV. Send in your sightings (with screen grab!) to screengrabs at engadget dt com.
Complete internet downtime is no laughing matter, but more frightening still is the prospect that the world’s data flow is completely beheld to a giant, taciturn Linksys WiFi router. South Park clip embedded after the break — we’re still trying to decide whether this trumps the Aqua Teen episode where they meet the Wwwyzzerdd, freakish master of the internet.Continue reading Screen Grabs: giant Linksys WiFi router is The Internet
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Source: Ryan Block
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