Logitech Revue Google TV box hits the FCC

It may not be reaching consumers until sometime this Fall, but Logitech’s Google TV companion box, the Revue, has recently landed in a few important hands: the FCC’s. Not much in the way of surprises with this one, but we do at least get a glimpse of the device’s internals (check out a shot after the break), and the mystery of the FCC label has been solved at last. Of course, if it’s information and excitement you’re after, you can always check out our hands-on from Google IO.

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Logitech Revue Google TV box hits the FCC originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Jul 2010 11:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NASA successfully tests autonomous lunar lander navigation system, codename GENIE (video)

Robonaut2 may have fantastic biceps, but raw muscle won’t put a man humanoid on the moon — that takes rockets. Rockets like the one in this RR-1 prototype lander, recently outfitted with a Guidance Embedded Navigator Integration Environment (GENIE) system to let the craft safely descend to the lunar surface. On June 23rd, NASA and partner Armadillo Aerospace put the system to the test, hoping it could figure out the complex algorithms necessary to process volumes of data from the laser altimeter, GPS and inertial sensors, and quickly enough to steer the rocket engine accordingly… but the machine performed like a charm. See its first solo flight in an inspiring, flame-filled video after the break, and skip to 4:12 for the good stuff.

Continue reading NASA successfully tests autonomous lunar lander navigation system, codename GENIE (video)

NASA successfully tests autonomous lunar lander navigation system, codename GENIE (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 03 Jul 2010 21:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IBM Tells Employees ‘Switch to Firefox’

IBM firefoxFirefox commands enough market share to make it the world’s second most popular browser, but Internet Explorer has always kept a significant lead thanks to its presence in the enterprise market. Microsoft is very good at making things easy for large businesses, and Mozilla showed little interest in approaching that market until 2007. But Mozilla’s efforts to improve deploying and managing Firefox on a large scale, and the increasing importance of being “standard compliant” might finally be swaying some businesses away from the in-built Windows browser.

IBM is the latest (and possibly largest) company yet to ditch IE for the little open source browser that could. The company plans to pre-load it and make it the default browser on all new computers issued to employees and is strongly encouraging staff to use it on systems already in circulation. IBM’s vice president of Linux and open source software, Bob Sutor, called Firefox the “gold standard” for open source Web browsers and lauded Mozilla’s commitment to open standards in a blog post announcing the change in IT policy at the company. He also credited Firefox with “reinvigorating” the browser market, something you only need to look to IE8, IE9, Chrome and Safari to see the evidence of. [From: Ars Technica]

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IBM Tells Employees ‘Switch to Firefox’ originally appeared on Switched on Fri, 02 Jul 2010 09:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Facebook adds face detection, still can’t identify books

Facebook adds face detection, still can't identify booksOver 100 million photos are uploaded to Facebook every day, making the social networking site something of a clearinghouse for random holiday snaps. Of course, those holiday snaps quite often contain people, and its in tagging those people that the whole process of adding photos to Facebook slows down a bit — finding faces, drawing boxes, typing names, etc. Those first two steps are now in the process of being automated thanks to recent Facebook acquisition Divvyshot. Facebook will now identify faces in your photos after you upload them, automatically, just like any ‘ol cheap compact shooter can do. Sadly it won’t identify who that face is yet (you still need to type in a name), but this simple addition should make tagging much, much easier. However, we’re still waiting for Google Street View’s auto face blurring technology to make an appearance before we start uploading the greatest moments from our last vacation.

Facebook adds face detection, still can’t identify books originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 02 Jul 2010 08:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft set to launch Arc multi-touch mouse?

Microsoft could be set to announce a multi-touch mouse in the coming weeks.

Company officials registered arctouchmouse.com on Tuesday March 30 this year and several European retailers have begun publishing listings for a “Microsoft Arc Touch Mouse”. Blogger Long Zheng spotted the details and notes that the new mouse could be…

Futurama critiques modern gadget and social media obsession using 1950s technology (video)

Like gadgets? Ever stand in line for one or over-consume just to slake your obsession? Yeah, us too. Then prepare for a humorous yet brutal look at yourselves, and the impact of your lifestyle, in the newest Futurama episode that aired tonight on Comedy Central television. We suggest curling up into a protective fetal position before clicking through for the video scraps.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

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Futurama critiques modern gadget and social media obsession using 1950s technology (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 02 Jul 2010 01:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Jokinen heads back to Calgary

The Calgary Flames signed the enigmatic player they traded away in February, with centre Olli Jokinen getting a reported two-year deal worth $6 million.

Toshiba Libretto W100 preview

The Toshiba Libretto W100 made a guest appearance on the Engadget Show last week, and since we got to spend a bit more time with the dualscreen laptop we thought it was only right to release some more impressions into the ether. We also got confirmation from Toshiba that the somewhat-of-a-concept-PC will be hitting retail channels in August, including Amazon, and will cost $1,100. It may be one of the only dualscreen tablets on the market, but no matter how you break it down that price seems a little outrageous. But you wouldn’t make up your mind before reading some further impressions and watching a close up video of the screens working in tandem, would you? Well then, we’ll see you after the break.

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Toshiba Libretto W100 preview originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Jul 2010 14:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP / Palm buyout officially complete — get ready for webOS printers

It’s only been a couple short months since HP announced its intentions to buy Palm, but apparently all the investors are happy and the lawyers are rich, because the two companies have just announced that the $1.2b transaction is official and the buyout is complete — Palm is now part of HP. Yes, it’s the end of an era — Palm’s been a part of the tech landscape in one confounding way or another since 1992 — but it’s also the start of what could potentially be a webOS renaissance, as HP plans to use Palm’s ideas and OS on everything from smartphones (phew) to tablets to even printers. We still don’t know exactly how Palm’s people and structure will be folded into HP, or what exact role CEO Jon Rubinstein will play, but Palm’s already lost some important people, and managing that transition while still keeping the product roadmaps on course will be the next great challenge for these two companies. Here’s to the best — now how about some of that rumored new hardware?

P.S.- Now that things are official, we can’t help but wonder about the fate of the HP Slate — there have been rumors of its death since the buyout was announced, and HP’s gone from crowing about it to total radio silence. We honestly don’t know one way or another, but we’d sure love to find out.

HP / Palm buyout officially complete — get ready for webOS printers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Jul 2010 10:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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