PlayStation Phone rumours heat up

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We’ve reported on it a few times in the past but it seems that the Playstation phone rumours just won’t go away.

Reuters are reporting that Sony Ericsson could even have a project team put together to develop a Playstation-based phone as early as next month.

In the past there have been stumbling blocks with the development of the Playstation phone due to Sony not allowing Ericsson to use the Playstation brand. It seems though as this might be about to change.

It would definitely make sense for this concept to go ahead, not just because Sony Ericsson has successfully used the Walkman and Cybershot brands successfully in mobile phone handsets in the past, but also because a mobile phone would be the perfect platform for a download-only games platform similar to that of the impending PSP Go.

Related post: PSP Go facing trouble before it’s even released

(via Reuters)

PSP Go facing trouble before it's even released

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There’s trouble a brewing in Playstation land. First off Activision CEO Bobby Kotick says that he is “concerned” with the PS3 and its high costs to both developers and customers and now two games retailers have slammed the PSP Go by stating that there is hardly any demand for the forthcoming handheld.

Chips spokesman Don McCabe event went as far as to say that “he can’t see any justification for stocking it”. Chips has 36 stores nationwide.

Chris Harwood, on behalf of Grainger Games, which operates 21 stores in the UK said that “the PSP just seems to have died as a format” and stated that Grainger Games only sell around five PSPs a week in all of their shops. He expressed apprehension over the PSP Go’s proposed price of £200-£230. “It seems really high,” he said. “The models they’ve got out now are struggling at basically £129.”

Grainger Games and Chips are relatively small fish in the gaming industry but the comments aren’t going to be very welcome at Sony HQ.

Read all about the PSP Go here.

(via bit-tech)

Femtocells – much more than a signal booster

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Femtocells. Get used to that word because you’ll be hearing it a lot more in the future. Vodafone’s release of their signal boosting hub this week is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of what femtocells is capable of.

US company Airvana and Sanjeev Verma, vice president of femtocell business, have just given me a demo of their HubBub femtocells and its ‘party alert’ application.

Basically, the HubBub sits in the house and, as well as solving any coverage issues by providing a stronger network using an existing broadband connection, it can monitor activity in the house.

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Activity such as comings and goings. The scenario they showed me involved two ‘daughters’ arriving home from a day’s shopping only to be joined by a boyfriend and then two other friends. Each time an SMS was sent to my phone to alert me of the arrivals. The HubBub can be programmed to automatically sync and back-up phone contacts, so it knew the names of all of the daughter’s friends. Alerts could have been sent not only by SMS but by email, tweets, Facebook updates and so on.

But if the Vodafone release this week was just the tip of the iceberg then ‘party-alert’ is just, well, the bit below the tip. Femtocells has, in the words of Sanjeev Verma the power to “fundamentally transform the way mobile networks are built and then deployed”.

Not by simply monitoring activity in the house and giving you a good mobile signal but by completely changing the way people deal with their data and networks. For example, Airvana also demonstrated an app whereby photos taken using the daughters’ mobile phones were automatically detected by the HubBub and synced to a PC. These photos could have just as easily been sent to social networking sites, other phones or a photo service such as flickr. No need for cables, no need to sit down and transfer pictures. It was done automatically and it was done quickly due to the large bandwidth femtocells allows for.

And it’s not just photos, femtocells has the potential to manage any digital data. Sanjeev envisages an app store to rival that of Apple’s, where developers will come up with ways of using femtocells to enhance all aspects of digital life – whether that be gaming, music, films or anything else for that matter.

He sees the potential to advertisers as huge, he describes the possibility of “land-grabbing” marketing and promotion. Femtocells will be able to access your phone, your laptop, your netbook, your everything basically. If you are suddenly showing an interest in a new band then femtocells will know. If you suddenly start looking at a lot of car insurance websites then femtocells will know. Obviously you don’t have to allow femtocells to know anything if you don’t want it to. But then you’d miss out on offers or information that you might be really interested in.

Because of the relative cheapness of femtocells – in affect it ceases the need for building and maintaining transmitters for the networks – and the fact that most of the work for femtocell will be done by the ‘smart’ devices that connect to it; phones, computers and so on – the potential for femtocells’ growth is huge.

In the short time expect femtocells to be introduced by more mobile providers to increase signal coverage in the home. In the medium term expect femtocells to promote more family and home based services such as family calling plans and apps like ‘party alert’. In the long term expect femtocells to know everything about you – what you like, who you like and what you’re going to be doing in every aspect of your life. Expect to know all about femtocell sometime soon.

Check out Airvana’s website for more info.

Britain to set up cyber-security centre

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Gordon Brown has announced the creation of a cyber-security operations centre to protect Britain for cyber-attacks. “Just as in the 19th century we had to secure the seas for our national safety and prosperity, and in the 20th century we had to secure the air, in the 21st century we also have to secure our position in cyberspace,” he said.

The team is set to include young computer geeks with questionable pasts. Terrorism Minister Lord Alan West said: “You need youngsters who are actually deep into this stuff. If they’ve been slightly naughty, very often they really enjoying stopping others.”

The aim of the unit will be to protect sensitive systems from spies, thieves, terrorists and other Bond-villains. West has stated that BT’s systems, for example, come under attempted attack at least 1,000 times a day. Jonathan Evans, head of MI5, has warned that both China and Russia are spying on Britain through technology.

In response to this news I’d just like to make it known that I, myself, am somewhat of a computer geek and I do have the required questionable past – I used to copy Amiga games off of my mates. I’d be willing to join the crack team for a £50k salary, company car and Bupa membership.

(via Fox News)

Dyson reveals world's fastest ever motor

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Normally, we wouldn’t bother reporting about the release of a hand-held vacuum cleaner. They’re just not that exciting. But James Dyson – the man who revolutionised the vacuum cleaner and washing machine industries – has claimed that the DC 31’s motor is the “fastest motor in the world, by a long stretch”.

104,000 revolutions per minute make the motor ten times faster than the one found in a Boeing 747 and five times quicker than an F1 car’s motor. I bet the plane and the F1 car could still beat the vacuum cleaner in a race though.

Dyson has stated that the DC 31 is just the first of a long line of products that will include the new motor. He said: “It’s radical. It’s completely different technology. We are the only company in the world producing a switched reluctance motor.”

Get your Dyson DC 31 here. It’s £129.99. Or £149.99 for the Animal version.

(via The Telegraph)

Packard Bell release first AMD based netbook

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You may recall last month we told you that Packard Bell is back. We told you all about some of their new range including the netbooks dot m and dot s.

Well now they’ve gone and announced another netbook, the strangely named dot m/a. The dot m/a is the first netbook to come with an AMD processor – the single-core 1.2GHz Athlon 64 L110. That’s all great. Except it’s not really a netbook. It’s a small, entry-level notebook.

The specs support my argument – the screen is 11.6-inch with a resolution of 1366×768. It’s got a graphics card – the ATI Radeon X1270 and it weighs 1.25kg. That’s a bit too hefty for a netbook in my opinion.

Packard Bell even state that they keyboard is “as large as a regular notebook”. Err, that’s because it is a regular notebook.

Ok, so we’ve established it’s not exactly a netbook but what has it got going for it? Well, for £349, it’s not a bad budget option if you’re after a fairly compact notebook.

It’s got a 160GB hard-drive with 1GB of RAM – both of which are expandable to double their current size. It has a multi-gesture touch pad including pinch and flick for you iPhone fans and it’s got a 5-in-1 memory card reader. Like other Packard Bell releases it comes complete with Adobe Photoshop elements pre-installed. Bluetooth and 3G can be added at an extra cost.

It’s pre-loaded with Vista so presumably it would qualify for a free upgrade to Windows 7, according to the statement released by Microsoft yesterday. It’s available in black or red and with a three or six-cell battery. The six-cell should give four hours of battery life.

It’s out next month – get one direct from Packard Bell. Just don’t expect to receive a netbook.

Freeview HD gets launch date

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The launch date for Freeview HD has been revealed as 2nd December. That is the date in which Multiplex B – the multiplex that is being utilised for HD transmissions goes live at the Winter Hill transmitter. Put simply, this means that Freeview HD will be available to the Winter Hill areas of Liverpool and Manchester.

The plan is to increase the Freeview HD transmissions in the first half of next year. The Crystal Palace transmitter, which covers much of London, may also be upgraded in December – even though the proposed date for this, according to Ofcom, is 2012.

Graham Plumb, head of distribution technology at the BBC stated that Ofcom’s dates were merely a “backstop contingency”.

Earlier this month we told you how Five had been added to the Freeview HD line-up alongside the BBC, ITV and Channel 4. Users will need a HD Freeview box to receive the channels as the HD content will not be decoded by existing Freeview equipment. Some TVs, such as the Sony W4000 and the Loewe Connect, already have the hardware in order to do this though, without the need for a box.

(via BBC blog)

Onkyo launches two home cinema receivers

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Japanese company Onkyo has today announced the release of two new home cinema receivers – the TX-SR707 and the TX-NR807.

Both units are 7.2-channel receivers and are THX-certified. They both feature six HDMI inputs – which should more than cover most home setups, Audyssey DSX and Dolby Pro Logic IIz decoding, 1080p video upscaling, four dedicated DSP modes which will be useful for hard-core gamers and ultra-low jitter Burr-Brown 192kHz/24-bit DAC.

The TX-NR807 is also internet enabled allowing for firmware updates and, more importantly, it’s equipped to stream audio and internet radio such as Last.fm.

The units are available from the end of July and are priced at £700 for the TX-SR707 and £800 for the TX-NR807.

Onkyo

The Pentax Optio W80 "adventure" camera

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Are you more of a Bruce Parry than a Bruce Forsyth? Do you prefer to spend your holidays clinging to an overhanging cliff face rather than clinging to the bar after one too many sangrias? Do you prefer to pitch your tent in the middle of an Arctic storm rather than sleeping in a 4* hotel room?

If so, the Pentax Optio W80 point and shoot camera could be the perfect companion for your travels. This is one hell of a tough camera, you see. This camera is “adventure proof”:

– Coldproof: Perfect for skiing or snowboarding as it can stand temperatures as low as minus 10°C.
– Waterproof: Not just from the rain either, you can use this camera to take images and videos up to 5m deep.
-Dustproof: Not just great for dirty houses, this will also come in handy on desert safari.
-Shockproof – Drop this baby from a metre and it won’t feel a thing. Drop it from higher than that and who knows? It’s only shockproof from a metre so don’t push your luck.

It’s not only a durable little blighter, it’s also got the spec that an ardent traveller is going to need to get good shots. For starters it’s 12.1-megapixels with a 5x optical zoom. It can also capture video in HD with a widescreen resolution of 1280×720 at 30fps.

The 2.5-inch LCD screen will display crystal clear images even in bright sunlight and there’s also built in face detection for up to 32 faces with smile capture and blink detection.

This camera looks very impressive. I want one already. I want one even more now I know that it comes in three colours including Gunmetal Grey. Gunmetal Grey sounds like the hardest colour ever. Can colours be hard? I bet Gunmetal Grey could kick any other colour’s arse.

It’s out in July in the States for $300, expect a UK release not long after with a price between £200 and £250.

(via Engadget)