Tim Conneally

How E3 got its groove back

Two years ago, the Entertainment Software Association decided that its E3 convention was getting too big and too costly to manage. It changed venues, and tightened admission policies to only allow a select group of attendees. Attendance was upwards of 60,000 in 2006, but in 2007 it was limited to 5,000. Unsurprisingly, a number of studios opted to not even go to the next year's E3, as it would only garner a fraction of its former attention.

This year, attendance rules were somewhat slackened to allow 40,000 attendees (including media), and cable video game channel G4 made its coverage of the events available on Justin.tv as live, free (and commercial free) streams. The decision to stream these events for all to see was a wise one, and Justin.tv counted more than five million total impressions for their live streams of the event's opening press conferences.

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Pixel Qi's latest display is not touchscreen

Last year, Pixel Qi appeared at Computex to present its lofty goals of creating a dual-touchscreen notebook for the One Laptop Per Child project that cost as little as $75, including scintillating mockups of its ultimate goal.

One year later, the group has made distinct progress toward...something. At Computex in Taipei this week, Pixel Qi will be showing off its 3Qi display, which is an improvement on the OLPC XO's current screen. They have created a higher efficiency "transflective" screen. This type of screen has a sunlight-readable black and white (reflective) mode that offers an equally high-quality full-color (transmissive) mode.

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Trend Micro's Housecall 7.0 opens in beta

Trend Micro today opened the public beta of Housecall 7.0, the latest iteration of the security company's Web-based malware scanner.

The Housecall 7.0 beta offers a different UI from the current stable version (6.6), and does no longer requires a Java or ActiveX plugin, but instead uses a standalone client that taps into the Trend Micro Smart Protection Network, the company's cloud-based reputability and threat database which the company debuted one year ago.

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Adobe offers free BrowserLab preview

Adobe today continues to flesh out its broadening portfolio of hosted services. Last week, the company unveiled a Web-based slideshow tool called Presentations, which joined the online word processor Buzzword, ConnectNow Web conferencing tool, Share, CreatePDF, and My Files on Acrobat.com.

This morning, Adobe Labs made BrowserLab available as a free preview. The cloud-based service renders Web pages in Internet Explorer, Firefox, and Safari as seen in Windows XP and OS X without the need to have those browsers or operating systems installed on the local computer. This testing tool generates real-time screenshots of the user's chosen page for browser comparison. The page can be rendered in two side-by-side panels, for example, or in an "Onion Skin" view. In this view, there is a slider where each extreme represents a browser/OS combination, one side could represent Internet Explorer 7.0 in XP and the other Safari 3.0 in OSX, and so forth. When the slider is moved, it dissolves the image from one browser into the other, highlighting the exact differences by overlaying them on each other.

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Court slaps injunction on Dish Network 'Time Warp' DVRs in another TiVo victory

Litigation between TiVo and EchoStar over DVR patents in US courts recently entered its third year. In October 2008, EchoStar was ordered to pay TiVo $104 million plus interest for the "Time Warp" technology used in Dish Network's DVRs during the time it was an EchoStar subsidiary.

A subsequent hearing in February of this year in US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas took EchoStar to task for the "software workaround" it implemented to prevent a permanent injunction on Dish Network DVRs. Now, a court has ruled in TiVo's favor yet again, awarding TiVo a permanent injunction on the infringing Dish boxes, along with a further $103 million plus interest. And on top of it all, EchoStar was found to be in contempt of court.

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Nokia N97 to ship this month

Today, Nokia announced that the N97, the newest handset in its flagship N-series, will go on sale in 75 countries this month. The device was first unveiled six months ago complete with its full spec list, and a €550 suggested retail price tag.

The 3.5-inch touchscreen N97 will be the first of Nokia's mobile phones to ship with the Ovi Store app natively installed. Nokia's mobile applications store opened for business last week, but faced harsh criticism for its frequent inaccessibility, and overall lack of captivating content.

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Sony's PSP Go! upstaged by PS3 Motion Controller

A new smaller PlayStation Portable was intended to be Sony's bombshell E3 announcement, but it was defused prematurely by Sony's own online magazine, Qore, which leaked official shots of the device only a matter of days ago. However, Sony's bag of tricks was not exhausted.

Called the PSP Go!, or as Sony Computer Entertainment's President and CEO Kaz Hirai called it, "The worst kept secret of E3," it is a 50% smaller, 40% lighter version of the PlayStation Portable. Equipped with 16 GB of internal storage expandable with m2 memory, no optical (UMD) drive, and built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity, it bears a staggering resemblance to Sony's Mylo in size and form.

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New Wii gaming concept could literally put you to sleep

Nintendo's current approach to video gaming isn't in supplying the most powerful hardware or the most massive gaming worlds. It's about thinking outside the box. The company successfully took gaming out of the controller and into the space around the gamer, and started a trend in the gaming industry. With this approach, Nintendo went from being on the trailing edge of gaming technology in the fifth and sixth generation consoles to the pinnacle of innovation in the seventh.

Nintendo President Satoru Iwata continues to inspect the video game industry, looking for new approaches to the same business. At the company's E3 presentation today, Iwata gave the public a look at what could be next for Nintendo, an "entirely different way of thinking about games."

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Acer shakes hands with Android

Acer could have an Android-based netbook ready as early as the third quarter of this year, according to statements from the company's Global President for IT Products, Jim Wong.

At a conference at the Computex trade show in Taipei, Taiwan, Wong expressed confidence in Android and its "incredibly fast wireless connection to the Internet," saying that since the OS has become more common, it has a growing network of developers supporting it.

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Microsoft's 'One More Thing:' Full game downloads

After two hours of exclusive game premiers and announcements regarding Microsoft's Xbox Live platform, Microsoft pulled its own version of Apple's trademark "One More Thing" announcement, or the footnote that trumps the entire presentation.

In August, Xbox Live subscribers will be able to buy and download full Xbox 360 titles with real money (not Xbox 360 points). The service will premiere with 30 games to start with and will add new titles weekly that will coincide with retail release. Unlike Xbox Live Arcade and WiiWare, these will be "disc-sized" games, and not games designed specifically for download.

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Spielberg endorses Xbox 360 motion controller

Microsoft's E3 keynote packed a lot of rumor confirmations into its celebrity-filled presentation this morning. Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Olivia and Dhani Harrison, and Yoko Ono appeared for Beatles Rock Band; and Tony Hawk discussed the new skateboard controller for Ride, but those titles aren't exclusive to Microsoft's console, and the real power in today's keynote came in the news unique to the 360.

Microsoft is working on a camera-based controller While it has been rumored for several months, Microsoft managed to make its "controller-free controller" look so exciting that legendary Hollywood director Steven Spielberg actually came out on stage to talk about how cool it is.

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Panasonic debuts Tiny HD with portable Blu-ray

The Portable Blu-ray viewer/player that Panasonic showed off in its CES keynote this year was officially announced today, and will be available this month for $799.95.

Panasonic's DMP-B15 utilizes the same technologies as the company's full-sized Blu-ray players, so it can be used as a standalone player, or as a component in a home theater setup. It includes support for BD Live and Viera Cast functionality, which requires an Ethernet connection and opens the device to Amazon's Video on Demand, YouTube, Picasa Web albums, and more as services are added.

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Adobe shoots for simplicity with new Flash Builder, Catalyst betas

UK to get Xbox 360 IPTV, again

British Television broadcaster Sky is reportedly working to offer both live and on-demand IPTV programming through Xbox Live in the UK. The BBC reports that it will be similar to Sky Player, a piece of PC/Mac software that allows subscribers to consume Sky IPTV anywhere they have an Internet connection.

But the project sounds much more like one presumed to still be in testing from Sky competitor BT. In 2008, British Telecom announced that its BT Vision service, based upon Microsoft Mediaroom, would bring IPTV to the Xbox 360. However, no completed product has yet been revealed. Exactly one year later at CES 2009, the trials were reported to be ongoing.

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Don't panic: Verizon will get Palm Pre, too

The pairing of Sprint and Palm for the launch of the Pre was romantic. Don't laugh, you thought it too. Erstwhile smartphone leader Palm put its best hope for survival in the underdog wireless carrier who, without the Pre, has no ultra-competitive exclusive touchphone. Both companies have endured declining market share, and together they could take on the world and get some of it back.

Well that romance is over, and it ended a little more than a week before the Pre even hit consumer availability. Lowell McAdam, President and CEO of Verizon Wireless, yesterday announced that his company will offer the Pre "in the next six months."

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