Mon February 06 2006
Round-up on Palm buyout rumors
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11:00 AM by Alexander Turcic in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
OK, first of all there is the question of whether Palm needs to be sold: probably not, but a shot of energy, vision and cajones in the management team wouldn't go a miss and this shareholder action may be the boot in the backside that they need. Bottom line is that this question can get kicked back and forth for a long time to come, what's more its an emotive area so don't expect a consensus soon. If the buyout rumors pan out, I would hope to see an influx of genuinely cool Treo successors for us and our children. Related: Palm stock surges after takeover chatter, Major Palm investor urges sale of the company |
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TCPMP V0.71j released
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10:30 AM by Alexander Turcic in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
Download the test version from here. |
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Sun February 05 2006
Sat February 04 2006
As E Ink approaches the performance of newspaper
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08:16 PM by Alexander Turcic in E-Book General | News
I stumbled upon one interesting comment made by Ben Bederson, director of the Human-Computer Interaction Lab at the University of Maryland, who argues that the Sony Reader display is narrower and shorter than the ideals for easy reading, "which means the viewer will be navigating too much with the eye from line to line, and with the machine from page to page." It's obvious Mr Bederson has never tried to read a full-length e-book on a PDA. Meanwhile, The Times sounds a lot more enthusiastic: Because each virtual page of the display contains slightly fewer words than a normal page, the speed of each "turn" must be fast or the flow of reading is broken too easily. A turn that took a second made an earlier version [the Sony Librie] unusable. The half-second that it now takes to update a page feels about right. The first three pages of Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code took only a second or so longer to read than using the paperback version. The "killer application" of the Reader is probably more on the software side. The latest device has none of the restrictions that dragged down earlier versions. It is more open in what files it will handle and can store indefinitely about 100 books on a £30 memory chip. Related links: Sony's new e-book reader officially announced, Sony Reader vs. iRex Iliad e-book reader, Poll: Which e-reader would you choose? |
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iSilo V4.31 beta 1 released
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08:12 AM by Alexander Turcic in Archive | iSilo/X
The beta of iSilo can be downloaded from here and of iSiloX from here. You don't know iSilo? Check out this thread for more information. |
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Fri February 03 2006
Libraries express DRM concerns
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08:06 PM by Bob Russell in E-Book General | News
Here are some of their concerns: The British Library writes that "excessive control on access to information [using DRM technologies]"... "will fundamentally threaten the longstanding and accepted concepts of fair dealing and library privilege and undermine, or even prevent, legitimate public good access." (via Slashdot ) |
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More Treo 700p/800p rumors - The excitement builds!
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07:15 PM by Bob Russell in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
There are some pictures that clearly show a Sprint phone this time. Could it be that this one is being released first by Sprint, who just finished a prime advertising product placement in the tv show 24? If their data plan stays reasonably priced (based on customer comments, it's currently a bargain at about $15/month unlimited data for the Treo 650), this is great news for people hoping to stay connected for web browsing, email and messaging without breaking the bank. Rumored [700p] specs include: * EVDO (high speed data connectivity) Check out these sites for more information: Now those are some specs that will get you excited, even if they are just rumors for now! (Thanks Sammy at Palm Addict for the hot tip!) Update: Be sure not to miss Justin's post on this topic (like I did!) |
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Sunrise XP alpha 4 released
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12:58 PM by Laurens in Archive | Sunrise
This release removes support for non-Western language encodings. There were several problems with the encoding library I was using for alpha 3 that I could not resolve due to technical and legal issues. I will reimplement encoding support in a future, post-v2.0 release. Don't expect anything for the next few months, though. I'm too far ahead in v2.0 development to retrofit this functionality at this stage. On a brighter note, this release fixes some bugs and adds some minor features. I will post more info later.
See the full change log for more information. This also includes a roadmap for future releases. |
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While we're fervently waiting for the next major version of the multimedia player TCPMP, Picard keeps on adding new features and bugfixes in the current test version. Changelog for version V0.71j:
Sun reporter Frank D. Roylance confirms what we knew all along, namely that E Ink technology is ready for take-off. In his article
Libraries may become an unexpected ally in the fight against oppressive DRM. The same problems faced by consumers that have DRM schemes imposed on them are also problems for libraries, but on a bigger scale. A BBC 
Usually, I'm pleased to announce a new Sunrise XP alpha, but in this case I'm not.
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