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TruPrint brings proper printer support to iOS if you brought the jailbreak (video)

AirPrint is great in theory, but in practice your chances of finding a supported printer in the copier room are roughly equivalent to spotting a yellow-eared parrot in the wild. TruPrint boosts those chances dramatically, adding iOS support for “most” printers that are shared on the network. Unfortunately no actual listing of supported models has been provided, but there’s a three day free trial if installed over Cydia so you can try it for yourself — yes, you’ll need to jailbreak first. After that it’s $9.99, which is a bit steep, but if it saves you having to wait in just one line at the airport terminal to print a boarding pass it’s well, well worth it. Continue reading TruPrint brings proper printer support to iOS if you brought the jailbreak (video) TruPrint brings proper printer support to iOS if you brought the jailbreak (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 19:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Apple’s iPad 2 keynote video ready for your viewing delight

Missed Steve Jobs’ surprise reappearance to unveil the iPad 2 this morning — or perhaps, are you an Apple fan who just can’t get enough? Well, it just so happens that Apple taped its latest magic show for you to watch at your leisure. Find it at our source link below, and imagine a time before 9.7-inch tablets hit the gym and slimmed down to just 1.3 pounds light. Oh, and we’ve also got a comprehensive liveblog , if video’s not your style. Apple’s iPad 2 keynote video ready for your viewing delight originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 19:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Supermicro and Fusion-io team up to deliver new SuperServers

Fusion-io ‘s been in the flash memory game for some time, but until now it has been known primarily for screamingly fast PCI Express-mounted flash storage solutions with wallet-crushing prices . Those drives are primarily aimed at the enterprise market, so it seems logical for the company to now enter into an OEM agreement with Supermicro to make NAND Flash servers. The aptly, if not modestly, named SuperServers can perform over 2.2 million sequential I/O operations per second (IOPS) and over 1.4 million random IOPS — for comparison, the OCZ SSDs we saw at CES are an order of magnitude slower in IOPS, and they aren’t exactly sluggish. Supermicro also claims that the new servers speed up enterprise applications by ten times while using only one-tenth of the power. Impressive numbers to be sure, but we shudder to think of how much the SuperServers will cost. A second mortgage for a server’s a sound financial decision, right? PR’s after the break. Continue reading Supermicro and Fusion-io team up to deliver new SuperServers Supermicro and Fusion-io team up to deliver new SuperServers originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 08:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Rolls Royce unveils 102EX, the all-electric Phantom (video)

The word “experimental” isn’t something you’d often apply to a Rolls Royce , a company with a history that dates back to the beginning of the 20th century and clientele that isn’t much younger. However, it does have a history of producing so-called EX cars, experimental models, and the 102EX is the latest — and the most daring. It’s the world’s first fully-electric ultra-luxury car, featuring a hulking 71kWh battery (almost three times the capacity of the Nissan Leaf ) that can be charged in as quickly as eight hours. Inductive charging is also available, like the wireless Tesla Roadster we saw at CES, though Rolls isn’t saying how long that takes. Range is said to be up to 200km, about 125 miles, and the 0 – 60 roll takes somewhere under eight seconds. That’s not bad for a 6,000lb monster. No estimated cost has yet been applied, nor any real intent for production, but if this does start easing off production lines we hope it does so without the tacky glowing hood ornament . The Spirit of Ecstasy looks best when shined by polish, not LEDs. Gallery: Rolls Royce 102EX Phantom Experimental Electric Continue reading Rolls Royce unveils 102EX, the all-electric Phantom (video) Rolls Royce unveils 102EX, the all-electric Phantom (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 12:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Simulated Mars mission simulating return to Earth as we speak, astronauts genuinely overjoyed

We thought the Hundred Year Starship initiative to strand aged astronauts on Mars by 2030 was depressing, and in comparison the European Space Agency’s Mars-500 project is little more than a walk in the park (a very small, confined, and extremely monotonous park). Essentially Bio-Dome re-written to simulate travel to Mars and back (without that lovable scamp Pauly Shore), the project bills itself as “the first full duration simulation of a manned flight to Mars,” with astronauts conducting a 640-day voyage to the red planet and back — all without leaving the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Biomedical Problems (IBMP). Members of the crew “landed” on Mars on February 12th of this year, returning to the craft on February 24th. As we speak, they should be entering into a spiral orbit away from Mars, and with any luck they’ll be back just in time for their ticker-tape parade on November 5th (hopefully that part isn’t a simulation). A joint experiment by the European Space Agency, Russia, and China, the $15 million project studies the complex psychological and technical challenges encountered on long spaceflights. Continue reading Simulated Mars mission simulating return to Earth as we speak, astronauts genuinely overjoyed Simulated Mars mission simulating return to Earth as we speak, astronauts genuinely overjoyed originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 18:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Barnes & Noble licenses Alex e-reader patents from Spring Design, settles dispute

You can now tack on one more footnote to the end of the Alex e-reader story — Spring Design has finally settled its longstanding dispute with Barnes & Noble , and granted the company a “non-exclusive, paid-up royalty free license for the entire portfolio of Spring Design patents and patent applications.” Terms of the settlement are otherwise confidential, with Barnes & Noble only saying that it is “pleased to add Spring Design’s patents and patent applications as a complementary addition to our rapidly growing digital portfolio.” Head on past the break for the short and sweet official press release. Continue reading Barnes & Noble licenses Alex e-reader patents from Spring Design, settles dispute Barnes & Noble licenses Alex e-reader patents from Spring Design, settles dispute originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 17:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Barnes & Noble licenses Alex e-reader patents from Spring Design, settles dispute

You can now tack on one more footnote to the end of the Alex e-reader story — Spring Design has finally settled its longstanding dispute with Barnes & Noble , and granted the company a “non-exclusive, paid-up royalty free license for the entire portfolio of Spring Design patents and patent applications.” Terms of the settlement are otherwise confidential, with Barnes & Noble only saying that it is “pleased to add Spring Design’s patents and patent applications as a complementary addition to our rapidly growing digital portfolio.” Head on past the break for the short and sweet official press release. Continue reading Barnes & Noble licenses Alex e-reader patents from Spring Design, settles dispute Barnes & Noble licenses Alex e-reader patents from Spring Design, settles dispute originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 17:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT (video)

Though there are bigger multitouch screens out there — and ones that can support more simultaneous touch points — 3M’s brand new C3266PW is the company’s largest, said to be suited for industrial-strength installations with multiple simultaneous users (the company is quick to note that the ultra-wide 178-degree viewing angle along both axes is great for that, since folks can crowd around and start touching). The company demoed the new unit here at CeBIT in two ways: three of them in a row on a “cascade table” with one high, one slanted, and one low, and another separate unit mounted on a solo kiosk at roughly eye level. The table’s set up as a multi-display Windows box running a tech demo with maps, images, and videos that can be flicked between screens, pinched, and zoomed; the kiosk, meanwhile, is running a rudimentary flight simulator designed to demonstrate all ten points of multitouch capability at once with a finger-based aircraft control scheme (not the way you’d really design a game, but a good demo nonetheless). 3M points out that touch response — the amount of time that it takes the screen to actually recognize that it’s been touched — is an issue in the industry, and it’s not something that we really think about as users; if a gesture is laggy, we just assume the processor isn’t up to the task or the software sucks. The C3266PW is rated at a relatively brisk 12ms recognition time, and while the company has other products with even quicker ratings, we definitely noticed the lack of lag as we played around (of course, the computers powering the displays have plenty to do with that). We’ve come to associate good capacitive displays with glossy glass and resistive with matte, but that’s really not a fair assessment — this one has a non-glare “anti-stiction coating” that, as its name implies, makes your fingers glide like butter. It might not be great for a phone, but it works well for a display of this size that’s probably going to be used in public installations and potentially handled by hundreds of people a day. Follow the break for 3M’s press release and video of both setups! Gallery: 3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT Continue reading 3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT (video) 3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 17:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT (video)

Though there are bigger multitouch screens out there — and ones that can support more simultaneous touch points — 3M’s brand new C3266PW is the company’s largest, said to be suited for industrial-strength installations with multiple simultaneous users (the company is quick to note that the ultra-wide 178-degree viewing angle along both axes is great for that, since folks can crowd around and start touching). The company demoed the new unit here at CeBIT in two ways: three of them in a row on a “cascade table” with one high, one slanted, and one low, and another separate unit mounted on a solo kiosk at roughly eye level. The table’s set up as a multi-display Windows box running a tech demo with maps, images, and videos that can be flicked between screens, pinched, and zoomed; the kiosk, meanwhile, is running a rudimentary flight simulator designed to demonstrate all ten points of multitouch capability at once with a finger-based aircraft control scheme (not the way you’d really design a game, but a good demo nonetheless). 3M points out that touch response — the amount of time that it takes the screen to actually recognize that it’s been touched — is an issue in the industry, and it’s not something that we really think about as users; if a gesture is laggy, we just assume the processor isn’t up to the task or the software sucks. The C3266PW is rated at a relatively brisk 12ms recognition time, and while the company has other products with even quicker ratings, we definitely noticed the lack of lag as we played around (of course, the computers powering the displays have plenty to do with that). We’ve come to associate good capacitive displays with glossy glass and resistive with matte, but that’s really not a fair assessment — this one has a non-glare “anti-stiction coating” that, as its name implies, makes your fingers glide like butter. It might not be great for a phone, but it works well for a display of this size that’s probably going to be used in public installations and potentially handled by hundreds of people a day. Follow the break for 3M’s press release and video of both setups! Gallery: 3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT Continue reading 3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT (video) 3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 17:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Motorola Xoom returns to PC World UK, this time at £500, promises April 9th delivery

Maybe PC World is trying to sneak the bad news in under the cover of the iPad 2 launch , but it’s returned Motorola’s Xoom tablet to its pre-order systems with a far less pleasing price than before:

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