Feb 22 2012

Fujitsu readies its ‘final model’ quad-core smartphone for reveal next week

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We laid our hands on Fujitsu’s quad-core prototype at the start of the year, it now looks like the phone’s now ready to show itself outside the confines of a perspex box. Wielding a Tegra 3 chipset, there’s still no official name for the incoming handset, but we’re promised admirable battery life and those increasingly typical (for Japan, at least) water resistant credentials. We’ve also been told that this will be close to — if not the — final model of the handset, so we should get to test out that fingerprint sensor in person. Sure, it’s not the only quad-core device we’re expecting to see at MWC, but we’ll welcome it with open arms — if it does make the journey outside of Japan.

Fujitsu readies its ‘final model’ quad-core smartphone for reveal next week originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Feb 2012 11:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Feb 22 2012

New Nike+ apps and shoes cater to basketball players and training athletes

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Nike Hyperdunk+

Nike just keep building on its Nike+ brand, turning what started life as a glorified pedometer, into a full-fledged workout-tracking platform. Hot on the heels of the FuelBand comes Nike+ Basketball and Nike+ Training, two new experiences with their own dedicated footwear. For ballers, the Hyperdunk+ features a pressure sensor that measures speed, jump height and even abstract concepts like “hustle.” It also features a ego Showcase mode that lets you superimpose workout data over video of you dunking and post it to the web. Nike+ Training, like almost every other workout app or digital accessory, turns getting in shape into a game. The app features a series of drills and challenges meant to improve speed, agility and strength, and your performance can be uploaded to a global leaderboard. The new apps and shoes, including the Hyper Workout+ for Women and the TR 1+ for men, will be available on June 29th in the US, UK, Germany, France and China. Head on after the break for one more image and PR.

Continue reading New Nike+ apps and shoes cater to basketball players and training athletes

New Nike+ apps and shoes cater to basketball players and training athletes originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Feb 2012 11:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Feb 22 2012

Explained: Wi-Fi Direct: what it is and why you should care

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Explained: Wi-Fi Direct: what it is and why you should care

Wi-Fi Direct: everything you need to know

The world is falling out of love with cables, but the Wi-Fi we know and love isn’t always the best way to connect devices.

Wouldn’t it be great if you could effortlessly connect Wi-Fi devices without messing around with access points and lengthy passphrases? That’s what Wi-Fi Direct promises.

Wi-Fi Direct is a proper standard

It comes via the Wi-Fi Alliance, the global industry association in charge of certifying Wi-Fi kit.

Wi-Fi Direct is Wi-Fi without the internet bit

The idea behind Wi-Fi direct is that simple tasks need simple connections. For example, you might want to print from your laptop or smartphone to a wireless printer, or to share images with someone else in the same room, or to transmit video from your phone to your TV. None of these things requires an internet connection, but they do need to connect – to the printer, or to the other person’s hardware, or to the TV. With Wi-Fi Direct, that bit’s easy.

Wi-Fi Direct can have the internet bit too

If you have a Wi-Fi router connected to the internet, you can connect to that too.

Wi-Fi Direct doesn’t need a wireless access point

Wi-Fi Direct devices can connect to each other without having to go through an access point: they can establish ad-hoc networks as and when required, letting you see which devices are available and choose which one you want to connect to. If that sounds very like Bluetooth, that’s because it is.

Wi-Fi Direct uses Wi-Fi Protected Setup

You don’t want any Tom, Dick or Harriet to be able to connect to your stuff – for example, you might not want to see what the neighbours are beaming to their TV on your TV – so Wi-Fi Direct uses Wi-Fi Protected Setup [PDF] and WPA2 to prevent unauthorised connections and keep your communications private. There are two ways to establish a connection: with physical buttons – "press the button on gadget X and then the same one on gadget Y", or with PIN codes.

Wi-Fi Direct knows what’s nearby

Wi-Fi Direct includes two potentially useful things: Wi-Fi Direct Device Discovery and Service Discovery. Your device doesn’t just know there are devices available; if developers have enabled it, your device will know what kind of devices are nearby and what’s on offer – so for example if you’re trying to display an image, you’ll only see devices that you can beam images to; if you want to print, you’ll only see devices that are or that are connected to printers. Crucially this can happen before you connect, so you don’t waste any time trying to connect so something that doesn’t do what you want it to do.

Wi-Fi Direct uses the same silicon

Manufacturers don’t need to add extra radios to their kit: the idea is to have Wi-Fi Direct as part of the standard Wi-Fi radio. It’s backwards compatible too, so you don’t need to throw out your old Wi-Fi-enabled kit.

Wi-Fi Direct is part of DLNA, and Android too

In November, the Digital Living Network Alliance (DLNA) announced that it was including Wi-Fi Direct in its interoperability guidelines, and Google has added Wi-Fi Direct support to Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich (for example it’s in the Samsung Galaxy Nexus’s networking options). DLNA says it "expects DLNA Certified and Wi-Fi Certified Wi-Fi Direct smartphones to grow strongly through 2016." That could be an awful lot of smartphones.

YouTube : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=je2lWjfpywQ




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Feb 22 2012

Metal Gear Solid 5 to be a next-gen console title?

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Metal Gear Solid 5 to be a next-gen console title?

A new job listing has appeared for a yet announced Metal Gear Solid sequel – most likely to be Metal Gear Solid 5 - which hints that the next game in the franchise is being made for next-gen consoles.

The listing on Konami Japan’s website is short but packed with speculative information which has lead many to believe that Kojima Productions is looking for new employees to work on a title for the PS4 and the Xbox 720 – as well as for PC gamers.

Platform agnostic

"Kojima Productions will be returning to the GDC Career Pavilion (March 6-9) to search for skillful engineers, artists, and game creators including: Project engineers for the latest Metal Gear Solid targeted for high-end consoles and PC, engineers to help develop next-gen game engine technology for use with the FOX Engine," reads the job spec.

Although no specific platforms are mentioned it does seem a little strange that the job doesn’t say PS3 or Xbox 360, rather going with the term "high-end consoles".

And given that the posting suggests that any game being made is in its initial stages, it looks as if MSG5 won’t be around for a good few years, which would mean there’s plenty of time for Sony and Microsoft to get their new consoles out.

As for the Fox Engine, this was revealed back in June 2011 and is based on new technology which allows devs to create games for myriad platforms quicker and easier.




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Feb 22 2012

Flash roadmap reveals new features, improved GPU support, lack of retirement plans

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Flash

Flash for mobile may just be a spectator at its own wake at this point, but the desktop browser plug-in is still alive and (reasonably) well. In fact, Adobe has a host of plans for its flagship multimedia platform, as outlined in its 2012 roadmap. It all starts with 11.2, which should be landing sooner, rather than later, with support for right and left mouse clicks, multithreaded video decoding and improved GPU acceleration support. That will be followed by Cyril and Dolores, which will also expand the list of hardware-accelerated video cards, as well as improve overall performance and add a few welcome tweaks, like supporting keyboard input in full screen mode. Finally, in 2013, we’ll see the debut of Flash Next — a completely overhauled platform with major updates to the runtime core and ActionScript language that are designed to “meet the needs of developers over the next five to 10 years.” Check out the source for full details but, be warned — it’s PDF only.

Flash roadmap reveals new features, improved GPU support, lack of retirement plans originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Feb 2012 10:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Feb 22 2012

Verizon 4G LTE outage hitting parts of the US

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Experiencing some issues downloading those expense reports via your Verizon LTE device this morning? You’re not alone. We’ve received reports of data outages in Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Phoenix, Pennsylvania and Ohio. We’ve reached out to VZW to find out what the issue is, and as soon as and we know more we’ll post it right here. For now, let us know if your LTE is letting you down in the comments below.

Verizon 4G LTE outage hitting parts of the US originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Feb 2012 09:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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