Touch-Sensitive Jawbone Era Headset Has Serious Face Appeal

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Let’s start with a disclaimer — we don’t know any folks who really wants to wear a Bluetooth headset while they’re talking on their phone. And if we did, we would probably tell them to get over themselves. When we’re walking down the street and see someone rocking the headset as they cruise around, not even on a call, well, we’re not that kind of nerd.

That said, there are times where a headset is unavoidable — especially if you commute in a car. So, as much as you might want to avoid the ‘tooth, you’ve got to deal with it.

Which leads us to Aliph, and its Jawbone line. Ever since the company released its first headset in 2006, it has consistently produced the best-performing, least-annoying models on the market, with audio quality and design that make them a relative pleasure to use.

The company’s latest model is called the Jawbone Era. It improves on previous Jawbone versions, and, yet again, stands as the best headset we’ve ever used.

The same basics are there, including Jawbone’s Noise Assassin technology, which does the best job of noise reduction that we’ve heard on a headset. Even walking down a windy street, the people on the other end of the call reported that we were coming in loud and clear.

There’s also the MyTalk service that Aliph introduced with last year’s Icon model, which allows users to upgrade their headset as new features become available, and install apps that integrate with services like Jott, or Jawbone’s own Thoughts app.

So what’s new? Two big things. First, the Era has a much larger speaker than the Icon, but in the same size space. There’s some clever engineering that lets the speaker occupy the entire diameter of the ear stem. Bigger speaker = better sound, generally, and it certainly does in this case. Switching back and forth between the new Era and the older Icon, it was easy to hear the difference, with the Icon providing much richer audio.

The other big change is that the Icon includes an accelerometer. Which admittedly, sounds a little goofy. The current trend in electronics is to put an accelerometer in everything from your phone to your videogame controller, and it might seem like Jawbone is just hopping on the bandwagon.

But then you go to pair the headset with a phone. Rather than some esoteric button presses to get the headset into pairing mode, you simply shake it four times and you’re good to go. Clever! To answer a call, no need to press the button on the top (although you can if you like). Instead, just tap your finger twice on the headset.

When you talk to folks at Aliph, they clearly are hoping they can turn the headset into a fashion accessory in such a way that you won’t laugh at that guy on the street. We’re not sure that’s ever going to happen. But continuing to come up with cool new products that work terrifically — and bring innovation to a fundamentally dull category — is more than enough for us.

WIRED: Superior audio quality. Eight different fit options should handle about every type of ear. Using touch to control headset is surprisingly compelling, and updates could enable new gestures and interactions. Four different Yves Behar designs trump competition. Included bag helps you keep track of the darn thing.

TIRED: $130 is not cheap for a headset. But if you’re on it a lot, it’s worth it. Slightly heavier than previous model.

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired

iDos Returns To The App Store

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If you have been holding on to the original iDos app that was released last year before being yanked from the App Store you can breath a little easier now that it’s back.

The new version has been updated and simplified and comes with some freeware classics like Wolfenstein 3D and the original Duke Nukem (the awesome 2D version). Adding additional software isn’t as easy as before, but you can still move stuff into the /Apps/iDos/documents folder and run them from there.

Maybe it’s time to dust off the old floppies and find my copy of Renegade BBS. The first BBS completely self contained in a mobile phone, how cool would that be.

tech.nocr.atiDos Returns To The App Store originally appeared on tech.nocr.at on 2011/01/20.

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Motorola Tells Modders To Go Elsewhere

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Android by it’s nature is an open source platform, a platform that is open to anyone and any changes as long as they comply with the Apache 2.0 license. So why have manufacturers like Motorola and HTC spent so much time fighting against people modding or creating their own ROMs? That might be a question that will go unanswered for a while, but today a rep from Motorola spoke out publicly and quite harshly against a custom ROM user on YouTube – leading Motorola to apologize to the Android community by way of their Facebook page.

Motorola has taken some heat from the Android community for including locked bootloaders on their devices. Today, a modder voiced his displeasure with Motorola’s policy via a comment to a YouTube video on Motorola’s channel, somebody using Motorola’s account wrote:

if you want to do? custom roms, then buy elsewhere, we’ll continue with our strategy that is working thanks.

If you have ever spent any time reading YouTube comments then you would know that a comment like that wouldn’t be well received. A number of anti-Motorola discussions started to pop-up like weeds today all over the Internet in response to the YouTube comment which lead Motorola to apologize to the community via their Facebook page.

We apologize for the feedback we provided regarding our bootloader policy. The response does not reflect the views of Motorola.

We are working closely with our partners to offer a bootloader solution that will enable developers to use our devices as a development platform while still protecting our users’ interests. More detailed information will follow as we get closer to availability.

A Tiger’s stripes never change and neither will Motorola’s. I’m sure we will never see them “enable developers to use our devices as a development platform” or see “More detailed information”. I stand behind the fact that companies who use open source software in a commercial product should allow it to be open and free, not locked down.

tech.nocr.atMotorola Tells Modders To Go Elsewhere originally appeared on tech.nocr.at on 2011/01/19.

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Kensington’s PowerLift Backup-Up Battery

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I was just talking to someone from Steam TV Networks about the need for a sturdy dock that can hold up a tablet or phone, something that keeps the device propped up when using it to watch video. Kensington has release just such an item built for the iPhone.

Kensington’s new PowerLift is a sturdy dock that also contains a 1,200 mAh lithium-ion polymer backup battery. This bulky yet small unit is perfect for those long flights; prop it up on the fold out tray and you can enjoy countless hours of media goodness. 20 additional hours of music playback, 5 additional hours of video and even an extra hour and a half of FaceTime.

The unit also has a built in USB cable, perfect cable management, and it has some LEDs to let you know where the charging level is at. Its up for pre-order on Kensington’s site and will run you about $50.

tech.nocr.atKensington’s PowerLift Backup-Up Battery originally appeared on tech.nocr.at on 2011/01/19.

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$249.99 For The 3DS Starting March 27th

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If you have been holding back placing a pre-order for Nintendo’s upcoming 3DS then you will be happy to know that Nintendo has finally announced that the upcoming 3DS will be hitting North American shelves on March 27th and will run you $249.99.

The unit will be available in Aqua Blue and Cosmo Black and by June there should be about 30 titles for the unit including an updated version of PilotWings, Nintendogs+Cats, a new Kid Icarus and of course a 3D version of the Nintendo mainstay Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time.

tech.nocr.at$249.99 For The 3DS Starting March 27th originally appeared on tech.nocr.at on 2011/01/19.

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Want To Top Apple’s All-Time Top Paid Apps List? Sell A Ton Of Apps — Or Do This

Last night, we pointed out that as a part of their countdown to 10 billion app downloads, Apple actually revealed the top all-time app downloads for paid iPhone apps, free iPhone apps, paid iPad apps, and free iPad apps. The top results seemed pretty straightforward, with a few oddities here or there. And there may be a good reason for such oddities. The system appears pretty easy to game.

Well, technically, it’s probably not really “gaming” the system. At least not yet. It just appears that Apple is being a little sloppy in populating their lists. After speaking to a few top app developers, it seems that Apple is counting total download numbers in aggregate, regardless of if an app switched between being free and paid.

In other words, to boost yourself on the top paid app lists, all you would have to do is go free for all but one of the days, then switch to paid, and all those downloads would be counted towards your total as a paid app, it seems.

Obviously, free apps tend to be downloaded more than paid ones. So if you had a popular app and went free, then went back to paid, this could be a great way to jack your stats.

And several apps have done this switch from time to time (though we’re not saying they did it to jack their stats — they probably didn’t know that Apple would rank this way — instead it was just a nice offer to customers). Top apps like Traffic Rush and a few of the Tap Tap Revenge games are good examples of this.

One developer we spoke to, John Casasanta of TapTapTap, said that he found the numbers fishy because they’ve done multiple apps and Apple’s rankings don’t line up with their actual separated numbers. But if you take into account free and paid downloads for one app, things begin to align.

We’ve reached out to Apple about the issue, and will update if we hear back. In the meantime, be a bit wary of some of the top paid apps on that list — they may not be making as much money as it may seem given their position.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Google Voice Is About To Take Off: Number Porting Coming Soon For $20

We’ve been huge fans of Google Voice for quite a while now — it makes screening calls and managing multiple phones a breeze — but there’s always been a huge thorn in its side: it didn’t allow people to port their existing phone numbers over. In other words, in order to take advantage of all of Google Voice’s benefits, you’d have to get a new phone number. Now, after years of waiting, that’s finally changing: Google has quietly enabled number porting for Google Voice.

Update: Google tells us that this is currently just a test available to some users and is not rolling out to everyone yet. However, it seems likely that a wide scale launch is coming soon.

Here’s a statement from Google:

“We’re continually testing new features to enhance the user experience. For a limited amount of time, we’re making the Google Voice number porting process available to users. We don’t have any additional details to share at this time, but plan to offer this feature to all users in the near future.”

The feature was first noticed by Engadget, and I’m seeing it in my Google Voice account as well. The process appears to be fairly straightforward (and yet terrifying at the same time): tell Google your existing cell phone number, agree to some strongly worded warnings, pay $20, and you should be in business. You can see screenshots of the process below.

Oh, about those warnings. Transferring your number to Google Voice isn’t exactly painless — depending on your current carrier agreement you may have to deal with some steep early termination fees (ETFs) that can run hundreds of dollars. That means you should think twice about doing this (as the warnings make clear). And all of you who are about to buy shiny new Verizon iPhones may want to consider doing so under a new phone number, so that you can transfer your existing number to Google Voice.

This could be a turning point for the service. Up until now many people have only been able to take advantage of a limited set of Google Voice’s features (namely, voicemail) because they didn’t have a way to port their ‘real’ phone numbers over. Google Voice supports deep integration with Android, and comes pre-installed on stock Android builds, so plenty of people are going to be exposed to it, too.

I’ve been using Google Voice with my primary phone for over a year now, after the team offered to port my phone number over to the service (I was under the impression that it would be released for ‘everyone else’ much sooner than this). My experience has generally been quite positive, save for a series of downtime issues a couple months ago.



YouTube Rolls Out Its New Homepage To Everyone

YouTube started experimenting with a new homepage last month, amping up its recommendation features so it would suggest new content you’re interested in. Today it has rolled out that experiemental homepage to all users. YouTube product manager Brian Glick tells us that the decision was made primarily because of positive user feedback, “Over 100,000 people filled out a survey, and most thought that the homepage is better now. Millions of people opted in, now we’re just putting it out to all the rest.”

The whole thrust here seems to be increasing the recommendation aspect of the site for users who are logged in Their solution is bringing more of the videos you interact with to the fore. Says Glick, “What we’re trying to turn the homepage into a destination to go to when you don’t know what you want to watch.  Now you personalized list of content that’s waiting for you.”

YouTube includes a list of the new features on the previous experiment page, I’ve broken them down below.

Combined list


Don’t miss a video

Delete anything and “grey out”

Help me re-find stuff I just watched

Easy inbox

YouTube has removed some of the less popular impersonal features like “Videos Being Watched Now” and moved the “Spotlight” and “Featured Videos” sections over to the right side. This is part of an effort to make the left side of the homepage more personal to the users.

Glick says that the new features are meant to hit three different dimensions of personalization: “Things you’ve told YouTube you like,””Videos your friends have shared,” and “Videos YouTube thinks you like.” The new homepage focuses on serving up videos your friends have liked, channels you’re subscribed to and other things YouTube recommends based on your taste. The operative term here is YOU.

“It’s part of our broader focus on how we can bridge the gap of going from 15 minutes a day to five hours a day” Glick explains, referring to how people usually spend 5 hours on television versus 15 minutes on YouTube. “We want to make this personalized experience follow you anywhere where there is a screen.”

Information provided by CrunchBase


Is Apple Poised To Take Social Seriously In iOS With “Media Stream” And “Find My Friends”?

Another day, another iOS beta. This time, 9to5mac has dug into the latest iOS 4.3 beta and found something rather interesting: hints of a would-be new feature to be called “Media Stream”. While the details are obviously pretty scant at this point, early speculation points to a more social version of iOS.

9to5mac notes that inside the code for Media Stream is also a reference to something called “Photo Streams”, which is something other users may be able to subscribe to. What other users? Well, presumably your friends. 9to5mac is putting two-and-two together, tying these hints to the recently found “Find My Friends” feature in the first iOS 4.3 beta.

Each of these new features appear to be also tied to MobileMe, which also suggests that Apple could begin using the cloud for this new social stuff (if it is, in fact, social stuff). While there was no word about it during their latest earnings call yesterday, Apple had previously said that their massive North Carolina-based datacenter was set to come online at the end of 2010. Assuming that happened, new cloud-based services could be on the way shortly.

Much of the speculation that has been around an “iTunes in the cloud“, but it’s possible that Apple could do a smaller-scale, more personal cloud experience first. If that’s the case, something like a picture streaming/sharing service could make sense. But the name “Media Stream” also implies other media beyond pictures. Might music and videos be shared in the same way as well? Could Apple take a page from Microsoft and create a Kin Studio-like experience for iOS devices?

Apple took a pretty half-hearted step towards social with Ping last year. Have they learned from their mistakes there? And can they afford to go it alone in social, or would they try to partner with Facebook and/or Twitter on it?

Or maybe Media Stream will actually be meant to directly compete with the streaming media service Google has stated they will build into upcoming versions of Android?

At this point, who knows what Apple is cooking up here. 9to5mac seems to think all of this stuff won’t see the light of day until iOS 5. This goes along with earlier news that the new multi-touch gestures in the iOS betas weren’t meant for iOS 4.3 at all, but a later version (likely iOS 5).

iOS 5 hasn’t been announced or acknowledged by Apple, but assuming they keep on their same yearly timetable, a roadmap for it should be unveiled sometime before their WWDC event in June.

Information provided by CrunchBase


US, China Compare Clean Tech, Environmental Concerns at the Whitehouse

Today, President Barack Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao revealed, at a press conference in Washington D.C., conclusions from their latest round of meetings that have taken place this week at the White House. The two world leaders have met eight times since Obama took office.

Excerpts from their speeches relating to environmental issues follow below. A full transcript of today’s press conference is available at Whitehouse.gov.

In their respective speeches, President Obama addressed the environment many times, while President Hu barely touched upon these issues directly. Instead, Hu highlighted his country’s willingness to be more collaborative and open in its handling of environmental and related trade issues.

Aside from other humanitarian, economic and geo-political security goals, the presidents said their countries’ wished and plan to: spur innovation and production of clean tech and energy; reduce pollution and curb climate change; and generally keep the flow of exports, including clean-tech related products, between the two nations robust and fair.


President Obama noted:


    The U.S. is now exporting “more than $100 billion a year in goods and services to China, which supports more than half a million American jobs.”

    This week, the U.S. and China “completed dozens of deals that will increase U.S. exports by more than $45 billion”

    China’s investment in the U.S. increased by several billion dollars through deals announced this week that deal with: machinery, software, aviation and agriculture.

    China’s new U.S. deals will support an estimated 235,000 American jobs, many in manufacturing.

    As China proposed at the Nuclear Security Summit in 2010, with U.S. blessings, the country will establish a nuclear “center of excellence,” to help “secure the world’s vulnerable nuclear materials.”

    The U.S. will cooperate with China on science and technology initiatives to advance agriculture and industry, including: a U.S.-China clean energy research center; joint ventures in wind power, smart grids and cleaner coal.

    The U.S. wants to ensure that the “government procurement process in China is open and fair to American businesses,” especially vis a vis intellectual property protection.

    Steve Ballmer of Microsoft pointed out to Obama and Hu, this week, that an estimated one customer of every 10 in China is actually paying for Microsoft products.

    The U.S. and China are the two largest energy consumers and emitters of greenhouses gases, in the world.

    Both Obama and Hu agree their countries have the “responsibility to combat climate change by building on the progress at Copenhagen and Cancun, and showing the way to a clean energy future.”



President Hu noted:

    The U.S. and China “agree[d] to strengthen consultation and coordination on major issues that concern peace and development in the Asia-Pacific region and in the world,” including: the Korean Peninsula, the Iranian nuclear issue, climate change and others.

    China and the United States will…promote denuclearization of the Korean peninsula in Northeast Asia.

    Each year China and the U.S. have about 3 million people traveling between the two countries. (Each day, about 7,000 to 8,000 will be traveling between China and the United States.)

    China plans to “work with the United States and other countries to effectively address global challenges, such as meeting the climate challenge, energy and resource security, food security, public health security and serious natural disasters.”


LivingSocial Hits A Million Amazon Gift Cards Sold, $20 Million In Card Value

LivingSocial has been offering $10 off any $20 Amazon purchase since 5 am this morning and it’s been a boon huge for the daily deals company, which Amazon has astutely invested $175 million in. Now the extremely popular deal has just crossed over the one million mark, with 12 hours to go. LivingSocial tells us that there are currently 99.4K vouchers being sold each hour, 2k vouchers being sold each minute and 85 vouchers being sold each second.

Already this has beat the Groupon/Gap deal which ended in $11 million worth of Groupons sold, and it’s still got a half a day left.

CenterNetworks is keeping an impressively vigilant track of the deal’s milestones, here.

Information provided by CrunchBase


PicPlz Pretties Up Android App And Begins Accepting (Beta) API Applications

Last week, we noted that mobile photo-sharing app PicPlz rolled out a bunch of improvements to their app in an effort to better compete with rival Instagram. Sadly, that new polish was only for their iPhone app at the time. But today brings good news for Android fans: the same features! And there’s a bonus too: PicPlz is now accepting applications for access to their API.

PicPlz has more about the new features for Android users here. Here’s the main gist of the update:

  • Live thumbnail preview of your picture with different filters applied.
  • Fixed rare crash on sign up
  • Fixed issue with notifications not clearing from status bar
  • Camera view no longer turns screen brightness to 100%
  • Fixed issue with camera not properly detecting the flash state on start-up
  • Other misc bug fixes

They also promise more speed improvements in the next iteration. The Android version is key for them because it is one way they definitely distinguish themselves from Instagram — which is still iPhone-only.

The API, meanwhile, is another way they can potentially distinguish themselves — at least for a bit. Those interested are asked to sign up for the PicPlz API beta here.

Instagram caused a bit of a stink when they pulled third-party access to their data a couple weeks ago. This wasn’t meant to be a hostile act, they simply want developers to wait to use their data until they have a proper API that can scale. ”We’re testing it internally and with selected partners at this time,” they tells us.

The race is on.


How Sonos Got It Right: Up Close With A Survivor


John MacFarlane had a dream: to send music from one box to every room in the house. In 2002, the only way to do this – sanely – was to run speaker wire from room to room, creating an install headache or a rats nest of wires. Instead, his company, Sonos, succeeded at sending the audio wirelessly, a feat that has been replicated many times but has never resulted in a product as successful and popular as the Sonos Multi-Room Music System.

There’s a dirty secret in gadget start-ups: they fail. Constantly and catastrophically. Unlike web or web service start-ups, gadget start-ups require R&D, manufacturing, and distribution. The Gizmondo, the most famous of all flame-outs, involved unkept promises, horrible hardware, and an exec with organized crime ties wrapping a Ferrari Enzo around a light pole.

Making hardware is hard. It takes time, and MacFarlane and his team took three years to finally launch the ZonePlayer 100 and remote control. During this time multiple vendors tried and failed to ship similar products. However, thanks to a unique design aesthetic, some nice software, and a lot of luck, Sonos survived and is now thriving.

Read more…


After A Fateful Tweet, 60mo Raises Series A From Lightbank, Yo


Last October, finance-tracking startup 60mo sent a tweet to Lightbank that read: “Hey @lightbank, we should chat sometime. Mid-westerners gotta stick together, yo.

Three months later, Lightbank has its response: “fo sho”.

Today, 60mo is announcing that it’s closed a Series A funding round led by Lightbank. Exact details of the deal aren’t being disclosed, but we’re told it’s “in the range of a million dollars”. And yes, that tweet was actually the first time the two organizations communicated with each other.

60mo, which we’ve covered before, is an online service that helps businesses manage their finances by importing data from QuickBooks, FreshBooks, and a variety of financial institutions like Bank of America, Chase, and American Express. Once the data is in the system, you can use 60mo to create financial projections, manage your business’s budget and share the data with your accountant or investors — it’s sort of like a Mint for businesses.

Since we last wrote about them, 60mo has launched a new design, and they’ve also adjusted their pricing. The service initially started at $19 a month — that’s now jumped to $29 a month, but 60mo has introduced a new free option, albeit with limited functionality (you can only connect with one bank account or credit card). There’s also a new 30 day trial available.

Lightbank is an investment firm founded by Eric Lefkofsky and Brad Keywell — both of whom also cofounded Groupon, among other companies.

Another competitor in this space is inDinero.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Come Get Your Tickets To The 2010 Crunchies Awards After Party!

Tickets to the 2010 Crunchies Awards are officially sold out. However, if you still would like to be a part of Friday night’s event, we have decided to release tickets to the After Party!

The After Party will be located in San Francisco at the Exploratorium on January 21st from 9pm PST – 11:30pm PST. Come celebrate the results of the 2010 Crunchies Awards with us in style. There will be a fully-hosted bar, amazing finger food, and a gaming room. ELEW will be serenading us all night long with his Rockjazz renditions of hits from Coldplay, The Killers, and more. Red Bull talent DJ Platurn and internet dance sensation, the Oakland TURF Dancers, are also set to round out the evening’s lineup.

Don’t miss this opportunity to be a part of the best night of the year. We are offering only a small number of After Party tickets to a few lucky people. Be sure to get your tickets ASAP.

For directions to the Exploratorium, please visit here.

For tickets to the After Party, go here.