Archive for July 5th, 2009

iPhone 3GS. Jailbreak. Mac.

July 5, 2009

Only a couple of days after George Hotz became the first hacker to release a jailbreak app for the iPhone 3GS on Windows, there’s a Mac-compatible version out too. This time, Hotz got some help from two fellow coders to be able to please the Mac folks, but he also made some improvements to the Windows version.

Happy jailbreaking, and in case you didn’t know yet: happy unlocking too.

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Viliv X70 dissected and reviewed ahead of initial pre-order

July 5, 2009

We know what you’re thinking: too much Viliv X70 news at once and you’re liable to go mad as a hatter with excitement. Settle down, and now let’s move on. jkkmobile‘s been playing with the MID for quite some time now, and has posted an epic, 27-minute long review. It’s well worth a gander if you’re considering the device, and ultimately it comes away as a good slate portable with fast 3G (in Finland, at least), a better MID for newcomers than the S5. Not all is great, and some lag issues aside, points get knocked off for the lack of some mouse-like input. If that’s not enough, we’ve also got pics of it torn asunder piece by piece, so you can get a better glimpse at the innards. Want more? Dynamism’s updated its placeholder page to let everyone know of a pre-order special tomorrow, July 6th, where the first 777 customers get a free 1.3GHz upgrade (from 1.2GHz), car kit, leather pouch, and protective film for the screen, and premium model buyers can get an extra battery to boot. Video review after the break, and hit up the read links for everything else.

Read – Review
Read – Dissection
Read – Pre-order page

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Viliv X70 dissected and reviewed ahead of initial pre-order originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Jul 2009 16:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Japan’s Rakuten: Can The Biggest E-Commerce Site You Never Heard Of Become a Threat for Amazon Globally?

July 5, 2009

The term “e-commerce” still lacks a universally valid definition, but even if you just bundle B2B and B2C transactions under it, it’s a multi-trillion dollar business globally. Last year, Nielsen found [PDF] 86% of the global web population made an online purchase already (North America: 92%). For the US alone, B2C sales are expected to grow from $130 billion this year to over $200 billion by 2013 (excluding travel).

In North America, Amazon is the 800-pound gorilla in the B2C arena – by very, very far. After the US launch in 1995, the company quickly established separate websites in Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, China, and Japan. But although Amazon wins in Canada and Europe, things are not going as well in Asia. In China (where Amazon started offering a localized site in 2004), it practically gets destroyed by local player Taobao [CN]. Traffic-wise, Amazon gets dwarfed by a local e-commerce site in Japan, too: Rakuten.

Amazon is active in Japan for a good reason: In its last report [JP, PDF], the Japanese government said the country’s online B2C sector grew by 21.7% to over $55 billion in 2007 on a year-on-year basis. (Note: Statistics from different sources can vary widely because of totally different methods of measurement. The Japanese numbers, for examples, do include travel.)

Now it seems Rakuten wants to take its global plans (laid out numerous times in the past) to the next level, with CEO Hiroshi Mikitani saying just this weekend he wants to see his company generating $1 million in daily sales outside Japan by the end of this year.

This short case study tries to shed light on Rakuten’s background and key success factors, why they win against Amazon in Japan and what efforts they make to go global.

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Palm Pre cameo on Dutch carrier Hi’s website much ado about nothing, says spokesman

July 5, 2009

Alright, move along folks, nothing to see here. Remember that Palm Pre support page that showed up on Dutch provider Hi’s website? Seems like that’d indicative a possible future collaboration, but according to a spokesman for KPN (of which Hi is a part), it’s all a misunderstanding. While not meant for public viewing at this time, the page in question was apparently intended to explain what settings you’d need for using a Hi SIM card, whether you got the device from them or via another provider. Still seems fishy, if you ask us. Of course, he added the company is very interested in the Pre (as if we thought otherwise), but that nothing’s been announced at this time anywhere in Europe. Let’s just hope that rumored UK announcement pans out this week, and maybe the rest of the continent will follow suit.

[Thanks, Wesley]

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Palm Pre cameo on Dutch carrier Hi’s website much ado about nothing, says spokesman originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Jul 2009 14:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Way Too Competitive: Tech Gurus Flock To World Series Of Poker

July 5, 2009

6,000 or so people have congregated at the Rio hotel in Las Vegas for this year’s World Series of Poker to fight for $50 million or so that will be split among the last 10% of players left standing. Among them are a number of tech startup entrepreneurs. We’re tracking four of them, plus any others that pop up.

This is David Sacks’ third WSOP. Sacks, a former PayPal exec and the CEO of Geni/Yammer, walked away with nothing two years ago. Last year he took home $25k in prize money, and twittered every hand. This year he’s way up after the first day, with $91k in chips. That likely puts him in the top 10% of players. He is twittering summaries of his play at @davidsacks. You can see his player card here with last year’s results.

Jason Calacanis (Mahalo founder) is playing today for the first time. He’s been sponsored by FullTiltPoker (they paid his $10k buy in) and looks absolutely ridiculous. Look for his twitters later this afternoon.

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Since March, Internet Explorer Lost 11.4 Percent Share To Firefox, Safari, And Chrome

July 5, 2009

The new browser wars on on. More than a decade after Microsoft killed off Netscape with Internet Explorer, competition in the browser market has never been stronger. Just last week, Mozilla released Firefox 3.5, which has now been downloaded nearly 14 million times. Earlier in June, Apple released Safari 4. In March, Microsoft introduced Internet Explorer 8, and Google came out with a speedier beta of its Chrome browser.

Some early data is coming in showing relative market share and how fast people are upgrading. If you look at the chart above from Statcounter, it indicates that since March Internet Explorer has lost 11.4 percent market share to other browsers.

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Verizon-branded Samsung Glyde 2 becomes star in Blurrycam photoshoot

July 5, 2009

Samsung’s launch of the Glyde was, well, far less than stellar — but hey, second time’s a charm, right? Shots have surfaced from HowardForums of what’s apparently the Glyde 2 / u960. Looks like we’ve got a more expansive keyboard that makes better use of space on the bottom slide out, some TouchWiz action on the screen, and unsurprisingly a nice, big Verizon logo just above the screen. Nope, we don’t have a release date or official confirmation of any sorts, so for now just hang tight on the farthest edge of your seat and feel free to browse the other shots of the device in the gallery below.

[Via Phone Arena]

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Verizon-branded Samsung Glyde 2 becomes star in Blurrycam photoshoot originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Jul 2009 12:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony nabs patent for everyday object motion detection: the fragile glass of your TV won’t know what hit it

July 5, 2009

All we’ve got to say is that they’d better be selling seats to the first living room demonstration of this tech when somebody gets cute and grabs a real baseball bat for a demo. Sony has filed a patent for technology using the PlayStation Eye which can detect regular objects in 3D space and file them away in a database for later use in gameplay. Naturally, the camera already does object motion detection of a sort with the blocky embedded codes on Eye of Judgement cards, but this seems to be taking that tech to a new level, and would imply that you won’t necessarily need to be waggling that goofy ball-on-a-stick controller that Sony demoed at E3 for all upcoming motion control titles for the PS3. But for some reason we’re sure we should be scared of whatever combination it does turn out to be.

[Via Joystiq]

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Sony nabs patent for everyday object motion detection: the fragile glass of your TV won’t know what hit it originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Jul 2009 10:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cherry, The Mobile Operator That Doesn’t Care Whether You’re On Wi-Fi Or Not

July 5, 2009

The chances of me being genuinely amazed at something I see a Belgian tech company achieve are rather slim. But occasionally, it happens. Last week I went to local entrepreneur meetup BetaGroup and saw five startups pitch their stuff to the 200-person audience.

The last one to get its five minutes of fame was Cherry, a new mobile operator that promised to “revolutionize the telecom world”. Needless to say, I was as curious as I was skeptical.

Then the company’s CEO got up on stage, introduced himself, took out his Nokia smartphone, called some random guy in the audience and had him call him back on his phone afterwards. Projecting his mobile phone screen on a bigger screen for everyone to see, he demonstrated how he didn’t need to launch an application and just browsed his contact list to call the other person. Standard functionality, sure, but the cool part of it was the fact that the phone was lacking the presence of a SIM card, which is supposed to identify you as a subscriber of a telephony service.

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iriver E200 lands in the wild, might not have been worth the wait

July 5, 2009

Sure, we know that whenever we hear the word “aluminum” we’re supposed to go all weak in the knees, but iriver hasn’t really astounded us with this materials-tweaked rehash of the E100. Still, the OLED screen on the upcoming E200 has been bumped to 2.8-inches, so that’s kind of nice, and while the capacitive touch buttons aren’t a big win over the original rocker, at least the chassis seems thinner now. Check out the read link for some purported press shots that manage to be quite a bit more flattering.

[Via PMP Today]

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iriver E200 lands in the wild, might not have been worth the wait originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Jul 2009 04:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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