“20% of pizza orders coming from SMS and online” - Papa John

Written by JG Mason on Thursday, December 4th, 2008 in News.

Section: Communications, Smartphones, Mobile, Gadgets / Other, Lifestyle, Web, Web Apps, Websites

papa johns iphone webappGenius.  Why trust the ability of the pizza franchise worker to jot down your order correctly when you can simply SMS your order in and be assured you get mushrooms and meatballs, not anchovies and steak tartar?  Apparently one out of five of us already are and this has forced Papa Johns, pizza purveyor, to start to focus on their new mobile site.

The mobile site is now optimized for the iPhone (boy, what isn’t these days?) and brings pizza, coupons, and directions all in one spot.  Papa John says $1 million in sales has come from mobile devices so far so there is considerable excitement from the Papa Johns team:

“As these devices are getting more powerful browsers, we’re able to take advantage and offer upgraded features and better designs,” said Richard Wise, vice president of operations at wiseOutlook, the company that developed Papa John’s mobile ordering service.

Convenience is big in the pizza business and this trend shows a good application of our devices and technology to advance it even more.

Source [Intomobile]

 

 

Full Story » | Written by JG Mason for Gadgetell. | Comment on this Article »


Brother helps the environment, intros automatic duplex printing printers

Written by Natesh Sood on Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008 in News.

Section: Computers, Desktops, Laptops, Networking, Gadgets / Other, Green, Peripherals, Printers / Scanners

Brother MFC-9450CDN

These days, it’s important that companies try to create more eco-friendly/green products to help out the environment.  Every little bit helps.  The two new printers from Brother do just that.  While they do not have a lot of green features, they will automatically print on both sides of the paper using an automatic duplex feature. 

The first printer, the HL-4040CDN replaces the HL-4040CN.  They have pretty much the same features such like 21ppm printing speeds for black and color ink and prints in maximum quality - 2400x600dpi.  The only new feature in this printer is the aforementioned automatic duplex feature.  Even though it doesn’t seem like duplex printing will do a lot, but it will save a lot of paper if you print out a lot of documents.

The last printer they announced was the MFC-9450CDN, which is an all-in-one printer.  This one isn’t set to replace any pre-existing printers, but is bears many similarities to Brother’s MFC-9440CN.  Likewise with the HL-4040CDN, it prints at 21ppm, copies at 17 per minute, and has a maximum quality of 2400x600dpi.  A nice feature present in this printer is the integrated Ethernet port to use over a network with many computers - great for the office.  In addition, if you directly want to print out documents or pictures, you can do so from either a memory stick or a digital camera by connecting it via USB ports.

Unfortunately, these printers cost a lot - the HL-4040CDN sells for $400, and the MFC-9450CDN sells for $650.  The first printer will be available sometime this month, while the other being available in January. 

Via [Electronista]

Full Story » | Written by Natesh Sood for Gadgetell. | Comment on this Article »


blockbuster ondemand with mediapoint

Missed this one last week. Blockbuster teamed up with 2Wire to introduce the 2Wire MediaPoint digital media player which allows users easy access to on-demand video content via Blockbuster’s ONDEMAND content. For a limited time, customers can get the 2Wire MediaPoint digital media player for free with the advance rental of 25 Blockbuster ONDEMAND titles for $99 dollars.

While it’s certainly easy to compare ONDEMAND to Netflix’s Watch Instantly service, it’s more akin to services from Apple TV and Xbox 360. You pay rental fees on a per title basis for as low as $1.99 each. This also means you can watch newer titles than those typically found on Netflix.

The Mediapoint digital media player connects to your network via Ethernet or Wi-Fi and allows you to fast-forward, rewind, and pause your on-demand video. Movies are streamed at DVD quality for now although the player supports HD video content and can be connected to HDTVs.

I think Blockbuster missed the boat on this one. We don’t need another on-demand video rental service. What we need is an all-in-one subscription based service that lets customers stream on-demand all of the movie titles they want on a flat monthly fee.

[Check it out]

Technorati Tags: ,

HP Photosmart Essential 3.5

Written by kurniawan on Monday, December 1st, 2008 in News.

HP Photosmart Essential 3.5
HP Photosmart Essential makes it fast, fun and easy to organize, edit, print, share, and enjoy your photos - all in one place.
Create and print beautiful photo books in your own home using HP Photosmart Essential 2.5 (more…)

SlashGear Week in Review - Week 48 2008

Written by Chris Davies on Sunday, November 30th, 2008 in News.

It’s been a shorter working week what with Thanksgiving on Thursday, and much of the gadget news has been around what offers, bargains and discounts were on offer at cash-strapped retailers. SlashGear has done its bit to ease your present picking pickle, with the 2008 Holiday Gift Guide. We’ve also had reviews of Sony’s VAIO LV and VAIO RT all-in-one PCs; will you be lucky enough to find one of these monster media machines under your tree next month?

Sony-VAIO-VGC-RT150Y-9

Elsewhere, rumors have been ramping up about Microsoft’s possible entrance to the consumer cellphone market. According to the latest sources, an NVIDIA Tegra-based device blending Zune media capabilities and Sidekick messaging expertize is already in the offing. Codenamed ‘Pink’, there’s even talk of it making an appearance at CES 2009.

Something else finally hitting the stands at the start of next year is the Garmin nuvifone, the sat-nav company’s GPS-heavy touchscreen cellphone. Captivating when we first saw it, many months ago, has delay after delay robbed the nuvifone of its charm? Until then, we’ll sate ourselves with the Samsung Omnia SCH-i910, fresh to Verizon and reviewed by our good selves here.

Dell has done its bit to push higher-capacity solid-state storage into buyers’ reach, with the arrival of a $100 32GB SSD option on the Inspiron Mini 9 netbook. Meanwhile, Verizon pushed out a BlackBerry Storm OS update that, it’s hoped, will begin to change the tide of opinion claiming the touchscreen handset needed a few more trips through quality control before it was fit for public consumption. If you’ve got a Storm yourself, let us know how you get on with the new firmware.

sleek_audio_wireless_02-480x370In other reviews, Sleek Audio’s SA6 in-ear headphones only got better with the cord-snipping W-1 Kleer wireless system, while we found that Apple has tweaked the MacBook Air into what could be the finest ultraportable notebook on the market. We also revealed that SlashGear will be one of your fifty chances to win in the HP Magic giveaway: over $6,000 of top tech toys that would put an end to your desperate Christmas shopping.


Relevant Entries on SlashGear


Sony VAIO LV all-in-one PC review

Written by Vincent Nguyen on Friday, November 28th, 2008 in News.

When first announced back in September, the Sony VAIO LV-series was described as a High-Definition PC/TV.  That blurring of distinctions between computer and entertainment gives a good idea of how the company envisages their all-in-one slotting into your lifestyle; a relatively rare HMDI input, allowing external sources to use the LV as a 1080p-capable display, helps single the system out even further.  Are TV tuners, Blu-ray and Dolby Digital surround sound enough to let the VAIO LV replace your current HDTV?

sony-vaio-lv-3-480x427

The specs set the LV off to a good start, with up to a 3.16GHz Intel Core Duo E8500 processor, 4GB of RAM and 1TB of 7,200rpm SATA storage available.  Graphics are courtesy of up to an NVIDIA GeForce 9300M GS video card with 256MB of memory, and all but the base model has a Blu-ray drive, with the top-end LV supporting both Blu-ray playback and burning.  Crowing glory, however, is the 24-inch widescreen XBRITE-HiColor display, running at 1920 x 1200 full 1080p High-Definition.

sony-vaio-lv-6-480x271

sony-vaio-lv-9-270x479

Connectivity includes gigabit Ethernet, WiFi b/g/n, Bluetooth with A2DP, five USB 2.0 ports, S-Video, iLink Firewire, HMDI input, S/PDIF and headphone outputs, A/V and line/microphone

inputs.  There are also dual NTSC/ATSC TV tuners, with two RF aerial inputs.  Sony includes not only a low-profile wireless keyboard and mouse, but also a remote control.  On the LV itself there are a small number of controls: separate PC and Display on/off buttons, HDMI source selection, volume, wireless on/off, keyboard/mouse connect and webcam angle adjust control.  The webcam is mounted above the display and 1.3-megapixel resolution; it supports software face tracking and has an integrated microphone.

OS is one flavor or another of Windows Vista - Home Premium on the lower-end models, Ultimate on the higher-end - all with Media Center support.  That means pausing and recording live TV, including over-the-air HD channels, and scheduled recordings, all through a lounge-friendly GUI that also gives access to music and online content.  As well as that, Sony add their usual array of VAIO apps - here including the “Click to Disc Editor”, “Movie Story”, “MusicBox”, “Media plus streaming” and more - together with trials of Microsoft Office 2007 and OneCare.  Happily the bloatware for which the company had become known for has been dramatically reduced.

BENCHMARKS

While the LV would make a perfectly pleasing desktop PC - with 24-inches of high-resolution screen ample for just about any application you could think of - it’s true home is in front of your sofa.  The integrated dual 5.5W stereo speakers do a passable job, but for best results we’d recommend hooking up a full surround system.  Do that, and the LV comes into its own: the XBRITE display is a typical Sony triumph, with deep blacks, minimal motion smear and crisp, bright colors.  Vista comes in for plenty of (often justified) criticism, but its Media Center functionality is straightforward and intuitive to use.  The Sony remote manages to be both comprehensive but not overwhelming, and the keyboard (which feels a little plasticy) has an integrated trackpad for surfing the web from your lap.

Plug another video source, such as a PS3; into the LV’s HDMI input and instead of a Vista PC you’re now looking at a high-definition display.  Copyright reasons mean Sony won’t allow you to use both the PC and the HDMI input at the same time, so you have to switch between them, but all the aspects that made the VAIO such a good PC monitor make it an equally good standalone screen.  We can’t help but be disappointed by the inability to have, say, a PS3 window onscreen at the same time as a Word document, though.

sony-vaio-lv-4-270x479

Sony has obviously used some of their HDTV knowledge with the LV’s physical design.  Unlike many all-in-one PCs, the power supply is integrated; go for wireless networking, stick with the integrated speakers and the cordless peripherals and you’ve got a one-cable system.  A standard VESA mounting plate means suspending the LV on the wall or, even, on a poseable arm is straightforward, and with the slot-load optical drive hidden on the right-hand side you could easily mistake it for a standard TV.  Overall, we’re fans both of the LV-series design and its  construction: plastics and other materials used in the main unit are of high quality.

So could you - should you - replace your HDTV with the VAIO LV?  A lot of it will come down to room size: 24-inches is big for a monitor, but small for an HDTV.  The same display that looks impressive on your desk or, even better, mounted on the wall in your study, looks overwhelmed on a TV stand in all but the smallest of rooms.  Yes, you can connect to a bigger screen, but that then leaves you with two high-definition options in close proximity, which seems a bit like overkill.

On the other hand, keeping the LV-series PC as a bedroom set - where the size might be more typical - is a tremendous waste of a very capable computer.  No, the VAIO LV makes most sense in a den or games room, serving duty both as your everyday PC and, when the workday is done, the display for some impromptu gaming.

As for the price, there’s another argument.  While the range starts at $1,699.99, that gets you a mere 320GB of storage and a DVD burner; the former will quickly fill if you use the Media Center functionality, while the latter doesn’t do justice to the LV’s screen.  Instead, you’re looking at $1,899.99 for the 500GB model with Blu-ray player or, if you’re serious about high-def media editing, $2,799.99 for the 1TB version with Blu-ray burner.  That’s a whole lot of money, and it would buy you a decent standalone PC and an HDTV certainly larger than 24-inches.

That said, we’ve still a soft spot for the Sony VAIO LV-series.  It’s undoubtedly well designed, well constructed and well specified, and if space is an issue but 1080p a must then it’s well worth considering.  Mainstream users will likely find they get more for their money - including more interconnecting cables - if they spread it out to separate components, but those who pick the LV are unlikely to be disappointed.

Related: Sony Vaio RT Review - Top Tier All-in-One Multimedia PC

Unboxing Sony VAIO LV

Click here to view the embedded video. sony-vaio-lv-1-150x100 sony-vaio-lv-2-150x100 sony-vaio-lv-3-150x100 sony-vaio-lv-4-150x100 sony-vaio-lv-5-150x100 sony-vaio-lv-6-150x100 sony-vaio-lv-7-150x100 sony-vaio-lv-8-150x100 sony-vaio-lv-9-150x100 sony-vaio-lv-10-150x100

Relevant Entries on SlashGear


GenevaSound Home Theater

Written by Johan on Friday, November 28th, 2008 in News.

GenevaSound Home Theater

Let’s upgrade our home theater system with the GenevaSound Home Theater. Priced at $4,000, it is actually the all-in-one electronic-furniture hybrid that offers a sleek piano-lacquered wooden cabinet that houses a 700-watt amplifier, 7 speakers, a 12-inch subwoofer, CD player, FM tuner, and an iPod/ iPhone docking station. [Product Page]

Philips HTS6515 review

Written by Ian Morris on Thursday, November 27th, 2008 in News.

Using Ambisound on the HTS6515 was Philips' way of creating an illusion of surround sound from just two speaker units. Well we've tested this piece and we can confirm that the depth of sound we got exceeded our expectations. In terms of picture quality, we'd go so far as to say it's some of the most impressive upscaling we’ve seen from an all-in-one unit like this

Combine it all with the GenevaSound Home Theater

Written by flung on Monday, November 24th, 2008 in News.

XXL_Black_iPod_TV_Logo_large

If you’re like me then you probably spent a good deal of time putting together your home theater system and then finding it a good home in a rack of some sort. However, there are many of you who want something like this but don’t want to deal with the aspect of putting everything together – let alone finding a piece of furniture that’s ideal for the entire setup. Enter the GenevaSound Home Theater system – an all-in-one system combining audio components with a beautiful piece of furniture made out of one streamlined sideboard of thick, distortion free, hand-lacquered wood.

The GenevaSound Home Theater consists of the following:

  • All-digital 700 watt amplifier
  • Seven speakers and 12 inch subwoofer
  • CD player
  • Radio receiver
  • iPod/iPhone dock
  • Space for cable box, game console, DVD deck

Your TV set (which is NOT included of course) can be placed either on top of the GenevaSound Home Theater or wall mounted. All this integration comes at a pretty penny – $3999 worth.

[Check it out via BornRich]

Technorati Tags:

SlashGear Week in Review - Week 47 2008

Written by Chris Davies on Sunday, November 23rd, 2008 in News.

blackberry-verizon-storm-p2-6-vn-480x270Most anticipated news this week was the launch of the BlackBerry Storm on Verizon Wireless, RIM’s first touchscreen handset.  If you’re at all considering the Storm then make sure to check out our two part super-review: part one is here, part two is here.

Meanwhile, Apple released firmware 2.2 for the iPhone, bringing with it Street View and over-the-air podcast downloads among other things.  Check out the full details of the upgrade here.  That release was followed in short order by QuickPwn for v2.2.  What the new firmware didn’t include was MMS messaging, but that might be arriving sooner rather than later if Mobispine have their way.

Microsoft launched the New Xbox Experience this week, but the update was mildly soured by the sudden disappearance of hundreds of Sony Pictures movies from Netflix.  Sony Pictures maintain it’s not an Xbox 360-specific problem, merely one of licencing, but if our commentors are anything to go by their protests are falling on deaf - or doubtful - ears.

ASUS’ Eee Top ET1602 had its official launch in Taiwan on Thursday, a 15.6-inch touchscreen desktop.  It’s the first of a range of similar all-in-one nettops, according to company CEO Jerry Shen, which they’ll need if they’re to compete with MSI’s just-revealed Wind Neton machines.

nanovision_mimo_displays_07-480x359

We’ve had a few exclusive unboxings this week, with Sleek Audio’s W-1 Wireless headphones adapter, the Nanovision MIMO UM-710 and UM-730 USB displays and Apple’s new late-2008 model MacBook Air all dropping into the SlashGear postbox.  We also took a hands-on look at HP’s Touchsmart tx2 multitouch Tablet PC.

Meanwhile in reviews the HP Mini 1000 netbook, those cute Nanovision displays and Samsung’s Behold all got put through their paces.  Finally we looked at HP’s xw6600 and xw4600 workstations and came away impressed: if you’d like to win the latter machine, make sure you check out our SlashGear HP workstation giveaway!  Good luck!


Relevant Entries on SlashGear




Site Navigation