Selasa, 22 Februari 2011

Urbanears releases colorful new spring and summer 2011 collection

Urbanears releases a new collection of stylish basic headphones in trendy colors for Spring and Summer.

Fashionable headphone company Urbanears has just released its spring and summer 2011 collection, and it’s full of classic headphone styles in enviable on-trend colors. If you are a color nerd (we know you’re out there) and anxiously await Pantone’s color of the year each January, these are certainly the headphones for you. The brand prides itself on making quality headphones in interesting and fun colors that are stylish enough to wear in public as part of your personal style aesthetic. We are all about stylish tech accessories, especially if they come with equally awesome specs. The Plattan (the full-sized headphones pictured above) uses a handmade 40mm driver unit and even comes with a “zound plug” that enables your friend to plug into whatever tunes you are blasting. The headphones ($40-$60) are also available in an earbud style and a lightweight on-ear style.

Some of the colors introduced for the Spring/Summer 2011 collection include Canary (above top), Pistacchio (above), and Orange (below). Other new colors include Lavender, Teal, Smoke, and Tomato. This is the third collection Urbanears has released, and the new collection means that older colors will be discontinued. Check out the whole collection here.

Solio Solar Charger uses clean energy to charge your phone, iPod

This compact solar charger by Solio offers enough power to charge your phone or iPod with solar power alone.

For those who are addicted to their smartphones and iPods, but want to keep their carbon footprint on the smaller side, this pocket-sized device from Solio can definitely help. The device runs on solar energy that can be stored in its internal rechargeable battery. The Solio Solar Charger ($100) retains enough energy to charge a phone or iPod twice when the device is fully charged. All you need is some sunshine and you have an extra power source when you’re on the go. The three pieces fan out to catch sun rays when you are harvesting power. The charger comes with several adapter tips to ensure that you can charge almost any small device with your harvested solar power. It is also a carbon-neutral product made from recycled and recyclable materials. We think this would be a useful device to throw in your bag for everyday use, but it could also be helpful for outdoor activities like long hikes or camping trips.

Senin, 21 Februari 2011

Sprint looking to embrace LTE 4G technology?

Sprint already has WiMax 4G service up and running, but at Mobile World Congress the company indicated its looking very seriously at LTE.

Sprint has been offering 4G mobile broadband service via WiMax in selected markets for a few years now, and while the company (and partner Clearwire) are still struggling to find the money to roll out WiMax service to major markets, they have succeeded in bringing WiMax options to major chunks of the U.S. population, particularly in 2010. However, while WiMax may have enabled Sprint to be first to market with 4G services, the company may not be sticking with it: in comments at this week’s Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, a Sprint executive indicated the company is getting ready to pull the trigger on building out its own LTE 4G network, perhaps as a complement to Clearwire’s existing 4G service.

Speaking withPC World, Sprint senior VP of networks Bob Azzi indicated Sprint’s own spectrum holdings enable it to offer LTE 4G services, but don’t enable the company to support WiMax. Right now, Sprint WiMax service is offered through Clearwire, which has extensive spectrum licenses in the WiMax-friendly 2.5 GHz range. Sprint’s own licenses, conversely, are in the 1900 Mhz and 800 MHz band, which could be leverages to provide LTE but not WiMax.

Clearwire has been struggling to find cash to continue its WiMax build-out, recently rolling out a $1.1 billion debt offering to fund operations after laying off a significant portion of its staff in late 2010. Azzi indicated Sprint intends to remain a WiMax partner with Clearwire in markets where WiMax is already operational.

However, but rather than continuing to invest in Clearwire’s network, Sprint may be looking to leverage its own spectrum licenses to roll out LTE 4G service in additional markets. To support LTE service seamlessly, Sprint would probably have to offer tri-band phones that can support both WiMax and LTE service—and Azzi specifically mentioned triband LTE phones with an additional WiMax radio “velcoed on.” It’s not clear how quickly Sprint could introduce LTE service; thePC World article implies the process would be as simple as installing new hardware and software at existing Sprint facilities.

WiMax and LTE technologies have many similarities, and Clearwire itself has announced it was testing layering LTE service on its existing WiMax network last summer. An ability to offer LTE service in addition to WiMax might help Clearwire’s bottom line: it could presumably lease LTE capacity not only to Sprint, but to other carriers looking to offer LTE service.

Google may debut new music service with Honeycomb

The iTunes shackles may be loosened, as Google could potentially be introducing its own music service with Honeycomb at the end of February.

google music

Hot on the heels of announcing its Apple publishing competitor One Pass, Google will also go head to head with iTunes with a new music content provider. According to Motorola CEO Sanjay Jha, Google’s new music service may be wrapped into the Honeycomb OS.

“If you look at Google Mobile services [via Android] today, there’s a video service, there’s a music service – that is, there will be a music service,” Jha reported to The Guardian at Mobile World Congress. It’s been awhile since any talk of a Google music streaming service was discussed, although it’s apparently been in development. Yesterday’s One Pass announcement lends further credibility to the idea that Google is clearly ready to challenge Apple’s hold over the content provider-publisher relationship, and iTunes is part of this.

Billboard also recently released the names of executives believed to be working on Google Music, which includes the likes of VP of engineering Andy Rubin. According to the report, Rubin has personally been in touch with music industry execs and spoken about the service, which would also offer an online store. A music streaming service has allegedly been in the works at Google for awhile, and would defer from the traditional syncing function in favor of cloud storage. The Motorola Xoom should debut at the end of this month, and anyone willing to pony up the hefty pricetag will find out first hand if Honeycomb includes a Google music application.

From the sounds of it, Google really is preparing to take on Apple’s publishing product on all fronts. But seeing as the proposed Google Music service will be packaged with Honeycomb, the rivalry will only play out in the tablet arena for the time being. Sony and Rhapsody have already expressed their, shall we call it displeasure, with Apple – and the company’s new subscription plan isn’t making it any friends. If there were ever a time to challenge iTunes, now is it.

Libya inspired by Egyptian revolution, uses social media in midst of protests

Facebook, Twitter, and the Internet itself continue to mold the new face of revolution in the Middle East, as Libya begins it's own Web-assisted protests.

libya

Google executive Wael Ghonim is still making the rounds, telling the world how he used a Facebook account to aid the Egyption uprising. And before he’s through, we will similar events unfold in Libya.

As tensions in the region increase and social media continues to play a significant role in the escalation, Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi has cautioned his citizens to hinder their Facebook use. Activist groups have been using the social network as well as Twitter to call for reform and support the efforts of Egypt’s own digital revolutionaries.

While he’s a ruthless dictator, Gaddafi is also a larger political presence than many of his Middle Eastern colleagues. He’s internationally well-known and one of a handful of Middle Eastern rules with significant ties globally. After a simple hint of political reform hit Facebook earlier this week, rallies supporting Gaddafi began. But if his reputation is as solid as the Libyan government would have us believe, it seems preemptive for him to issue a warning to those using Facebook.

Has Facebook become so powerful that a dictator is threatened by what it’s capable of? If not, then they should be. Activists who were using Facebook to inspire revolution or call for Gaddafi’s resignation have already been arrested and Libyan authorities are attempting to downplay the demonstrations. One government figure who requested anonymity told CNN on February 16, “There is nothing serious here. These are just young people fighting each other.”

According to Twitter, there are plenty of serious things going on. The site is ablaze with tweets reporting that Libya’s “Day of Rage” has resulted in anarchy. “#Qaddafi is at war with #Libya as we speak, helicopters, troops, thugs, security & foreign mercenaries all against unarmed protestors #Feb17,” writes ShababLibya. There are also multiple reports of injured and murdered protestors at the hands of Libyan security forces. Some reports are saying the death toll has risen to 19. While the Middle East and northern Africa are rife with protests in the wake of Egypt’s revolution, public dissent is a rarity in Libya. So where did it come from?

Al Jazeera explains that anonymous activists have been using Facebook and Twitter to organize today’s protests. One particular group demanding a “Day of Anger” reached nearly 10,000 members by Wednesday.

While Libyan citizens are following in Egypt’s steps, so too is its government. “Social media sites were reportedly blocked for several hours” last night. According to reports from Bloomberg and CNN, the government is using SMS to threaten its own citizens. A message reading, “From Libya’s youths to anyone who dares to cross any of the four red lines come and face us in any street on the group of our below country,” was send out cell phones earlier today. Some sources report that texting and Internet connection have been intermittently unavailable.

Libya could easily find itself in the Internet blackout that Egypt previously experienced, but something tells us its citizens are heading into a more difficult battle. It’s a significantly more powerful country with deeper pockets. Technology may have inspired and led this Libyan uprising, but it’s apparently also being used to quell it. The government not only has to ability to send mass warnings to the pockets of its citizens, but it can just as easily isolate them and everything happening in their streets from the outside world.

Sony brings music streaming iTunes challenger to U.S.

Sony prepares to debut streaming iTunes competitor Music Unlimited powered by Qrirocity in the United States.

qrirocity

As app developers bridle over Apple’s introduction of a subscription service earlier this week, Sony and several of its music industry partners are preparing to bring their streaming iTunes competitor Music Unlimited powered by Qrirocity (maybe you guys should cut that down to “Music Unlimited”?) to the United States. The plan is to debut the service in nine more countries before the end of 2011, Bloomberg reports.

Accessing the Music Unlimited website from the U.S. currently opens up a “Sorry, this service is not available in your country/region” page, but an FAQ indicates that users will be able to sign in using their existing PlayStation Network account. Music Unlimited launched in September 2010, and is currently available in the United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Germany, Italy and Spain. A U.S. introduction was hinted at last week, along with the implication from a Sony exec that the broadened availability could see an eventual removal of the company’s music catalog from Apple’s iTunes.

Music Unlimited brings Sony Music Entertainment together with Universal Music Group, EMI Music and Warner Music Group Corp. to offer more than 6 million songs, as well as (according to the FAQ) streaming SD, HD and 3D movie rentals that come with a 30-day watch window. The service is available on multiple devices, including PlayStation 3, Blu-ray players, Bravia televisions and PCs, and a subscription costs $3.99 per month. In a surprising move, Sony also revealed plans to support assorted iDevices “and other mobile products” later this year, though no comment was offered on how or if Apple’s new subscription policies.

The new policy gives the iOS developer a 30 percent cut of all in-app subscription sales and requires the addition of a Subscribe button to all relevant App Store products. Apps are also no longer allowed to link out to web-based store pages, as Kindle does with Amazon. Consumers can still make their purchases outside the app of course; the difference now is that the app won’t be able to send you directly where you need to go.

Sigma Tumbler recasts the mighty Solo cup in glass

Still love those red plastic cups you carried around in college? The Sigma Tumbler brings it back with a touch more class.

Glassware company Anchor Hocking has taken that classic little plastic Solo cup and turned it into legitimate, everyday drinking glasses. The Sigma Tumbler ($28 for set of 12) is a slightly classier interpretation of what was probably your favorite drinking vessel at college parties. If you’d like to reminisce without looking like you are actually still in college, drop a few bucks on these large tumblers to add some humor to your kitchen. The glasses are almost as cheap as the red plastic cups themselves, so what do you have to lose? The glasses come in a set of 12, hold 18 ounces (perfect size for large water glasses) and are dishwasher safe.