This Week’s Best Apps [Video]

In this week’s app roundup: HDR Video, ported to the iPhone; iWork, shrunkified; Coca Cola, documented; Sports pictures, sent to your phone; 3G and Wi-Fi connection, checked; videos, time machined; ideas, connected; puzzles, hardest ever and much, much more. More »







BlackBerry Mobile Conferencing app now available to download


RIM has officially released a free app for users in Canada and the States called “BlackBerry Mobile Conferencing”. The app integrates with your calendar in your BlackBerry and lets easily schedule and join a conference call. A reminder notification will pop up when a conference is starting but if you loose the connection RIM has built in the ability to rejoin the call with one-click.

Get it here in the BlackBerry App World.

Related posts:

  1. LinkedIn for BlackBerry now available for download
  2. OS 6.0.0.534 for the MTS BlackBerry Bold 9780 now available for download
  3. Twitter for BlackBerry now available to download

UV levels extra high this summer

Ultraviolet rays that can cause sunburn and skin cancer are at unusually high levels in Canada this year, due to record ozone loss above the Arctic this past winter, Environment Canada warns.

BlackBerry Torch 2 preview! (video)

We’ve already seen the BlackBerry Torch 2 in photos courtesy of Mr. Blurrycam, but a little birdie from Negri Electronics was kind enough to send over a pre-release device for us to get under our own glass for a little photo shoot. Though it has a virtually identical form factor to the original, the Torch 2 bumps the specs in almost every department from the camera to the RAM. Oh, and it’s running the next-gen BB OS 7 — which is really OS 6.1, and still lacks any QNX DNA. Read on past the break for a full preview of this yet-to-be-announced slider, and some glorious HD video if the beautious shots aren’t enough to whet your BBM-hungry appetites.

Continue reading BlackBerry Torch 2 preview! (video)

BlackBerry Torch 2 preview! (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Jun 2011 15:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Google Search Now Recognizes When You’re Looking for Images [In Brief]

Default results for Google Search have been updated to show users more images up front when it appears that they’re actually looking for images. If a user types “pictures of monkeys,” “monkey photos,” “monkey imagery,” or something similar, a grid-layout block of Google Images results for monkeys will take the entire top section of the search results. [The Official Google Search Blog] More »







Internet TV used by 1 in 10 Canadians

Only about one in 10 plugged-in Canadians are viewing internet content on their televisions but the trend could soon
“grow rapidly” since it’s finally becoming easy to do, suggests a new report.

Microsoft sells 55 million Xbox 360 consoles, claims that’s console history

If you work for Sony you might want go watch TV right now — there’s something on Discovery about ostriches and sand. Meanwhile, Microsoft just let us know that it’s sold 55 million Xbox 360s globally, which is very probably enough to maintain its lead over the PS3. Moreover, 360 sales in the US are still accelerating six years into its life-cycle, thanks largely to updates like Kinect — and Microsoft boasts that “no other console in history can make that claim.” Huzzah. Now, we’re not ones to snatch the pen from the victor’s hand, but remember: this claim is based on US stats, whereas the PS3 has generally been doing better in other regions. What’s more, neither the Wii nor the PS3 has yet reached its sixth birthday, so the story isn’t over. Nevertheless, the chart after the break does make Microsoft’s performance look damn impressive. Why is it that when you’re down, life just keeps on kicking?

Continue reading Microsoft sells 55 million Xbox 360 consoles, claims that’s console history

Microsoft sells 55 million Xbox 360 consoles, claims that’s console history originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Jun 2011 13:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceMajor Nelson  | Email this | Comments

Archos puttin’ on the Ritz for its Generation 9 Honeycomb tablets, coming June 23

We were expecting some news out Archos this month and sure enough, here it is. The company has just announced that it will unveil its new Generation 9 Honeycomb tablets at a Paris event, on June 23rd. The company’s third Android slate, as you may recall, was originally expected to launch at September’s IFA trade show, but that date was later pushed up — meaning we’ll be able to catch a glimpse of its shiny 1.6GHz ARM A9 dual-core chip and so-called “revolutionary” 3G modem in just a few weeks. Archos certainly seems to have high expectations for the device, as well, having scheduled its debut at no less a prestigious venue than the Ritz Hotel. We’ll be there (in our finest threads) to cover the event as it unfolds.

[Thanks, Marien]

Archos puttin’ on the Ritz for its Generation 9 Honeycomb tablets, coming June 23 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Jun 2011 11:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceArchosLounge.net  | Email this | Comments

Honeycomb on Oak Trail gets benchmarked on prototype Compal tablet, numbers ensue

Honeycomb on Oak Trail gets first benchmarks on prototype Compal tablet, numbers result

We know that Intel is gunning for ARM with its Oak Trail platform, and indeed there were a few early tablets at Computex following that very path to Honeycomb. The question on everyone’s minds, of course, is how well this dual-core 1.5GHz platform can compare to the Tegra 2 competition. If you believe the results from a suite of tests that tweakers.net ran on a prototype Compal unit, then the answer is “not very well.” On benchmarks like CaffeineMark, Linpak, and Quadrant the platform was largely left in the dust by ARM competition with bigger biceps, but the Oak Trail machine did clean the floor with everyone else on the SunSpider browser benchmark. What does it all mean? Not a heck of a lot at this point, we’re afraid. It’s far too early to be drawing performance conclusions about a platform based on a prototype fresh out of the fabricator, and we have our doubts that these benchmark apps are optimized for the new platform — so don’t give up on ‘ol x86 just yet.

Honeycomb on Oak Trail gets benchmarked on prototype Compal tablet, numbers ensue originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Jun 2011 09:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcetweakers.net  | Email this | Comments