RIM offers free apps to make up for that whole BlackBerry outage thing

RIM co-CEO Mike Lazaridis has already apologized for last week’s widespread BlackBerry outage, but apparently, that wasn’t enough. Today, the manufacturer announced that it’s offering customers a full slate of “premium apps” for free, in the hopes of earning back some of the goodwill it lost following that mysterious blackout. In a statement, the company said the gesture is “an expression of appreciation” for the patience that many BlackBerry users demonstrated during the incident, with Lazaridis adding that his company remains “committed to providing the high standard of reliability” that consumers have come to expect. For now, the company’s offering a total of 12 apps (collectively valued at around $100), including SIMS 3, iSpeech Translator Pro and Shazam Encore among others, though more will be added at a later date. The offer kicks off on Wednesday and will last for a month, so head past the break to see which goodies are up for grabs.

Continue reading RIM offers free apps to make up for that whole BlackBerry outage thing

RIM offers free apps to make up for that whole BlackBerry outage thing originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 Oct 2011 04:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Halo: Anniversary’s Kinect Functionality Is The Bomb. Literally.

So it looks like Halo: anniversary will have some additional goodies to go along with pre-order skull and 3D support. Namely, voice commands via Kinect.

In addition to smack-talking your friends, you’ll be able to make use of some very useful-sounding single-word commands, including ‘reload’, ‘analyze’, which will let players capture elements from the game to review in Halo: Anniversary’s ‘library’, and best of all, ‘grenade’, which will no doubt be the source of endless lulz. Naturally, you’ll need a Kinect to use them, but cool nonetheless.

Via Kotaku.


Does your Android device lack a notification light? Try the NoLed app



With all the advancements in mobile technology it still comes as a huge surprise when a smartphone manufacturer neglects to add a notification light to their device. There are not a whole bunch of phones that are plagued with this dilema but for the ones that are, it’s known to be a pain in the arse.

For some reason Samsung has decided to crank out a few popular mobile devices and at my dismay, they are sans notification LED. I , like many others, own a Samsung device and hate not knowing that I have a message waiting for me unless I activate the screen and check for myself. Sounds like an easy task but when you find yourself checking for messages all day long it gets old real fast.

XDA member, MADMACK, has come up with a solution by using the phone’s display as a notification light. When you receive a message (or anything that you want a notification for) your screen will activate flashing different color dots or icons based on the type of message received. The dots/icons are customizable allowing the user to create different notifications for each type of reminder making it easy, for example, to differentiate between email and text messages. There are many ways to tweak this app from battery conservation to delayed notification, NoLed  gives more options than most factory notification lights.

With over 10,000 downloads from the Android Market and an average rating of 4.4 stars, MADMACK seems to have come up with an acceptable solution for not having a notification light. I have been using it since I got the Samsung Charge and I highly recommend checking it out for yourself.

Join us after the break for more screenshots, download links, and a NoLed explanation from the creator himself.

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Does your Android device lack a notification light? Try the NoLed app

“GT-I9250M” Nexus Prime found in Wi-Fi Alliance Database, possibly heading to Canada


The anticipated hype behind the upcoming Nexus Prime/Galaxy Nexus is climbing and all eye will be on the official reveal of this “pure Android” next week. Although there has been no talk of this Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich device coming to Canada, a tiny – and very unavoidable – hint has shown itself in the Wi-Fi Alliance database. Similar to other Samsung devices that arrived on our shores, the Galaxy S (GT-I9000M) and the Galaxy S II (I9100M), the “GT-I9250M” has surfaced in the database with a certification date of October 13th, 2011. This is this Galaxy Nexus model and “M” could mean that it’s destined for our Canadian carriers.

Hopefully good news will come to us in a few days.

Source: Wi-Fi Alliance (PDF)
Via: Android Police & XDA
(Thanks Jonathan!)

Related posts:

  1. Samsung exec says Nexus Prime will be available “sooner than you think”
  2. Samsung to unveil the Nexus Prime at CTIA on October 11th?
  3. Samsung and Google postpone the Nexus Prime event

iPhone 4S Test Notes: Data Speed (It’s Slow) [IPhone]

The iPhone 4S is here. One of new, not-so-visible features? A re-spiffed antenna, and stuffed inside the AT&T 4S, new guts that (should) mean faster data speeds. But theoretical max speeds are not real world experiences. So which iPhone is the fastest: AT&T, Sprint or Verizon? And how does the 4S stack up against the most jacked Android phones? More »







RIP Google Buzz [Google Buzz]

Google Buzz, the company’s much maligned foray into social networking that was about as popular as genital herpes, is dying. Oh, you thought it was already dead? Not yet. But that’s probably why Google is killing it. More »







Mobile MMO Star Legends Will Be Google Chrome’s First Multiplayer, 3-D Game

Mobile developer Spacetime Studios has a hit on its hands with Star Legends, the sci-fi-based follow-up to its MMO Pocket Legends. That game has a community of better than 3 million fans, and Star Legends seems to be growing just as fast as its free-to-play mobile predecessor.

Now, players itching for a new (slightly smaller scale) MMO fix who aren’t really into the whole mobile gaming scene will get access to Star Legends for the first time. The game is coming as a native client to Google Chrome, the search company’s free web browser, where players will be able to team up with other players on PC, Mac, Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS. It’ll also be the first 3-D game on the Chrome platform. It’s not available yet, but when it is, you can get it from the Chrome Web App Store.

Star Legends isn’t as robust an MMO as some of the other free-to-play clients out there, but that might be to its credit. It’s totally pick-up-and-play-able, which is nice, and the casual nature makes it fun to spend some time with but not necessarily as insanely time-consuming as, say, World of Warcraft.


The GM College Anti-Bike Campaign

The marketing geniuses at General Motors launched this campaign this week. It’s aimed at convincing college kids already paying exorbitant tuition and living well beyond their means that they can go another $20k in debt and somehow pay the monthly insurance on a sweet new car. You’ll recognize the humiliated cyclist riding an uncool bike from the 80s and a similarly dull helmet because that’s you and me a few years back.

What I adore about this campaign is its boldness. GM makes garbage cars. And you know what? None of us bought them, and then they took our money anyway in the form of a bailout. Here are the fruits of that cash. Luckily the folks at Giant Bicycles have a limber ad department and a sense of humor. They dropped the below great ad the next day. Ahh, it’s nice to have a sense of humor, and it resulted in GM yanking the ads. Too bad about all that money wasted on cars.

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Motorola Xoom Family Edition includes kid-friendly apps, will hit Best Buy Sunday for $379

Just a week after we received a tip that a mysterious big box retailer would be getting a kid-friendly flavor of Motorola’s Xoom tablet, Best Buy has come forth to make things official with the Xoom Family Edition. Everything seems to be in line with what we already knew, including the $40 software bundle — yes, yes Zoodles comes preloaded, as does Asphalt 6 and SIM City Deluxe. And after the kids are done playing, mom and dad can catch up on homework with Quickoffice Pro HD. The Android 3.1-powered tablet includes a rather modest 16GB of storage, and will run you $379 when it hits Best Buy stores on Sunday. Any questions? Jump past the break for the full Moto rundown.

Continue reading Motorola Xoom Family Edition includes kid-friendly apps, will hit Best Buy Sunday for $379

Motorola Xoom Family Edition includes kid-friendly apps, will hit Best Buy Sunday for $379 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Oct 2011 11:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Faster-than-light neutrino puzzle claimed solved by special relativity

(Credit: CERN)

The relativistic motion of clocks on board GPS satellites exactly accounts for the superluminal effect in the OPERA experiment, says  physicist Ronald van Elburg at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands, The Physics arXiv Blog reports.

“From the perspective of the clock, the detector is moving towards the source and consequently the distance travelled by the particles as observed from the clock is shorter,” says van Elburg. By this he means shorter than the distance measured in the reference frame on the ground. The OPERA team overlooks this because it assumes the clocks are on the ground not in orbit.

Van Elburg calculates that it should cause the neutrinos to arrive 32 nanoseconds early. But this must be doubled because the same error occurs at each end of the experiment. So the total correction is 64 nanoseconds, almost exactly what the OPERA team observed.

Ref.: Ronald A.J. van Elburg, Times Of Flight Between A Source And A Detector Observed From A GPS Satellite, arxiv.org/abs/1110.2685:

Regina will host 2013 Grey Cup

Regina will host the 2013 Grey Cup the Saskatchewan Roughriders announced late Thursday afternoon just ahead of a media event in Regina where CFL commissioner Mark Cohon confirmed the news.