Gals Archive

  • Video: WinPho 7 Transitions and 3D prowess shown in emulator

    Video: WinPho 7 Transitions and 3D prowess shown in emulator

    This is just a quick one, but I wanted to show you guys n gals the pretty transitions that are being worked into WinPho 7. Although we've already had a quick peek at the interface, Mobility Digest have chopped out the boring bits from a recent (45 minute) video of a Channel 9 presentation, to present the juicy, 2-minute, emulator-driven, let's-get-a-quick-taste-of-WinPho-7-apps video, shown after the fold.

    Full Story

  • Video Review: Yeti USB Microphone

    Video Review: Yeti USB Microphone

    Review: The Yeti from Blue Microphones is a $150 USB microphone with four recording settings, zero-latency audio monitoring via a built-in headphone jack, and a 48 kHz sampling rate at 16 bits. The mic itself is solidly built – and by “solid” I mean that the combined weight of the microphone and stand is almost 3.5 pounds [...]

    Full Story

  • Thank you for reading MobileCrunch, folks.

    Thank you for reading MobileCrunch, folks.

    We don’t get a chance to do this very often, but I wanted to start this lovely Monday morning off with something I’ve wanted to say for a while: Thanks for reading us, everyone. MobileCrunch launched in September of 2006. Around mid-2008, we changed things up a bit – and we’ve seen monumental growth ever [...]

    Full Story

  • Giganews crosses the 400-day binary retention mark (but won’t stop there)

    Giganews crosses the 400-day binary retention mark (but won’t stop there)

    Six months ago, Giganews announced that it would expand its server capacity to 365 days of retention. It passed that barrier some time ago, and just yesterday reached the magical 400-day mark. In plain English, that means if someone posted Some File to alt.binaries.boneless back in July, 2008, you should be able to find it on Giganews' servers. And to think, back in my early days of Usenet use (2001ish), I was putting up with two days retention.

    Full Story

  • Seiko Epson’s inkjet tech brings big-screen OLED TVs closer to reality

    Seiko Epson’s inkjet tech brings big-screen OLED TVs closer to reality


    We know it's been burning on your mind everyday since December 6th, 2007: "What on Earth are those guys and gals over at Seiko Epson doing now that they've killed production of RPTVs?" At long last, we've located an answer. According to a prideful new release from the outfit, it has developed a new inkjet technology that will enable the "uniform deposition of organic material in the production of large-screen OLED TVs." For what seems like years now, manufacturers have teased us with 37-inch OLED HDTVs, but they've skirted around questions relating to "price" and "release." Now, the last remaining excuse seems to have been vaporized, so if we don't see a market-ready big-screen OLED at CES 2010... well, let's just say the knee-capping club is dying for a reason to reunite.

    [Via Akihabara News]

    Filed under: ,

    Seiko Epson's inkjet tech brings big-screen OLED TVs closer to reality originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 May 2009 10:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

    Full Story