Thursday, April 18, 2013

WordPress 2.3 for Android gains Holo interface and menu drawer

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/18/wordpress-goes-to-holowood/

WordPress 23 for Android gains Holo interface and menu drawer

Bloggers have been getting plenty of love on Android as of late, and if WordPress happens to be your platform of choice, you'll be glad to know that your time in the sun has arrived. Similar to Tumblr's recent overhaul, WordPress was just updated with a new Holo interface, and it's really quite the looker. First and foremost, you'll notice that WordPress now looks like a proper Android app, complete with an action bar for tasks such as creating posts and sharing to other apps. With a flick of the thumb, you'll also notice a menu drawer that's accessible from the left-hand side, which replaces the old school dashboard interface that was found in previous versions of WordPress for Android. We can't say the new features will help you overcome writer's block, but at least you'll have something pretty to look at while you ponder your next great post.

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Source: WordPress

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Pantech Vega Iron brings a 5-inch 'zero bezel' display, where zero equals 2.4mm (update)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/18/pantech-vega-iron/

Pantech Vega Iron brings 1080p on a 5inch display with indisputably thin bezels

We've got to admit that we saw some rumors about a "zero bezel" Pantech a few days ago, but ignored them because we had no idea what that meant. Now we do, however, as Pantech has made the 5-inch 1080p 720p phone official, under the solid-sounding name of the Vega Iron. The bezels aren't quite zero, but they are small: just 2.4mm across on each side, which -- for reference -- is roughly half the width on an iPhone 5. This results in a viewable-to-total area ratio of 75.5 percent, which Pantech claims is a world beater. Other specs include a quad-core 1.7GHz Snapdragon 600 processor, in-cell LCD display and Gigabit WiFi. We have no idea if Pantech has penciled the United States into the Vega Iron's release schedule, but the company is certainly trying to make an impression in this hemisphere and a phone like this couldn't hurt.

Update: The rumors were right about everything except the resolution, which now looks to be 720p rather than the big ten-eighty. Thanks to commenters who spotted the error.

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Via: The Droid Guy, Ameblo

Source: Pantech (translated)

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Sigma announces 18-35mm f/1.8 DC HSM zoom, breaks the elusive f/2.0 barrier

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/18/sigma-announces-18-35mm-f-1-8-dc-hsm/

Sigma announces rarest of birds 1835mm f18 zoom

After opening a lot of eyes with its 30mm, F1.4 DC HSM lens, Sigma's just thrown another curve at the photo community with a feat that the major players haven't managed so far: a zoom lens with a fixed, sub f/2.0 aperture. The Sigma 18-35mm f/1.8 DC HSM launched today for Canon APS-C cameras without being on anybody's radar, bringing over double the light than the priciest zooms, which typically top out at f/2.8 -- except for Olympus' $2,300 14-35mm f/2.0 Four Thirds model. The extra third of a stop over that model may not seem like much, but the company said it needed to "solve a variety of technical challenges" to build it in order to minimize distortion and aberration. Sigma's also promising fast autofocus via a hypersonic motor (with full-time manual override) and rubber-coated brass construction. There's no pricing or availability yet, but don't expect it to be cheap (think $2k plus) -- after all, it's the only game in town for now.

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Via: Sony Alpha Rumors

Source: Sigma

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Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Photoshop's Genius Shake Reduction Tool Fixes Blurry Shots Like Magic

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5994904/photoshops-genius-shake-reduction-tool-fixes-blurry-shots-like-magic

Everyone who is not a good photographer is a bad photographer—a condition that's only made worse because we insist on documenting our lives with abysmal smartphone cameras. And of all of the terrible things that ruin photos, blur from shooting at slow shutter speeds is amongst the most common ailments. Photoshop to the rescue!

In advance of Adobe's forthcoming Max conference, the company just released a video previewing an upcoming shake reduction tool that will be added to Photoshop in the future. One click, and boom, it's fixed. On the left you've got before, on the right after:

Photoshop's Genius Shake Reduction Tool Fixes Blurry Shots Like Magic

Not bad!

We don't know much about how the tool works just yet, but we're assuming there's a little more to it than just selecting it under the Filter>Sharpen menu. It can't possibly be as simple as it seems in the video, right? We can't wait to see what else Adobe has in store for us in the coming weeks. [PetaPixel]

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Toshiba KiraBook: Is an Amazing Screen Enough to Make a Computer Great?

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5994908/toshiba-kirabook-is-an-amazing-screen-enough-to-make-a-computer-great

Toshiba KiraBook: Is an Amazing Screen Enough to Make a Computer Great?Toshiba is taking aim at the MacBook Air. We know this not because its new KiraBook ultraportable, with its 13-inch 2560x1440 display, resembles an MBA—it doesn't, really—but because, over and over, Toshiba referenced ways it's better than or on par with a MacBook Air, as reps explained how the company's focus with the Kira revolves around design.

That's even true in places. But it might not be enough. Mainly because of the price.

The Kira is better at nearly everything than any other Toshiba laptop by almost comical margins. That's not as impressive as it might sound, considering Toshiba's been bringing up the middle-rear of the pack lately. Still, Kira is legitimately good. The magnesium frame and aluminum base are sturdy, and the trackpad is big and responsive. The hi-res screen looks great, and it's accentuated by big, beautiful visuals in Windows 8, though it's a little darker than the equally hi-res Chromebook Pixel when examined closely. And while the rounded design might not be as eye-catching as the starker lines of an S7 or Pixel, it at least feels like a valid design decision based on ergonomics, not a screwup.

Yes, it's thin and light. And Toshiba also did a good job of limiting stickers and bloatware. It even comes with free, full versions of Photoshop Elements and Premiere Elements.

The other guts in the Kira are what you'd expect from a high-end ultrabook. All configs start at 8GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD. They'll also have third-gen Ivy Bridge i5 and i7 processors, with upgrades to Intel's next-generation Haswell guts as the new architecture rolls out. It's 2.6 pounds, and 0.7 inches thick. And the Harman Kardon sound, which is traditionally not a big deal for laptops, is just about as loud as the super duper loud Pixel.

Toshiba KiraBook: Is an Amazing Screen Enough to Make a Computer Great?

But it's also clear that "good" is relatively new ground for Toshiba here. The keyboard is improved from other Toshiba laptops, but is still a little rigid, with keys that aren't quite as comfortable to type on as the best out there, like the Pixel's or a MacBook's. The finish on the lid and makes it more comfortable to hold because it doesn't get cold, but it also robs it of the satisfying cool metal feeling of other laptops. It has the effect of making the premium material feel less premium than it really is. The touchscreen version has a black edge-to-edge glass display, but the non-touch has a black plastic bezel that looks downright tacky. And while the hinge is improved—Toshiba increased its imprint from 2mm to 5mm—the lid still wobbles some when poked, which you don't see, really, from the Pixel or a MacBook.

We didn't get a chance to compare the Kira to a retina MacBook Pro, but side-by-side, the screen does hold up to the Pixel's. Text especially looks crisp, and Toshiba has used its first party software (puke, usually, I know, but welcome here) to make the magnification and text scaling options in Windows more easily accessible. That's a start; it was a big issue with the Surface Pro. But the larger problem is still Windows itself. Unlike OS X's quad scaling or even Chrome OS's web-based approach, too many Windows 8 UI elements are either unaffected by magnification or blown up to look fuzzy and terrible. This is something that will hopefully be addressed at some point in the future, but for now, it leaves super hi-res displays on Windows a less than optimal experience. Which is a real shame.

Toshiba KiraBook: Is an Amazing Screen Enough to Make a Computer Great?

Toshiba only has three configurations of the Kira. It'll start at $1,600, and the highest config, with an i7, is $2,000. That's asking a lot. First, it is literally asking for a lot of your money. But more so, it is asking for your trust. To that end, Toshiba's offering two years of complimentary 24-hour phone support for both the computer and Windows 8 in general. But it's still asking for you to jump in with two feet and lots of cash for the first super-high-end laptop Toshiba's made in quite a while. One that's not quite as elegant as it wants to be.

That doesn't mean the Kira sucks. It's a very good laptop. But just like the Vaio T was mostly fine last year, the Kira feels like an amazing first step into making legitimately good computers. It just comes a little late. Other companies have already taken that step, and the second leg almost always feels much more complete than the first.

So, keep your eyes out. This is the first super hi-res Windows 8 laptop that you can buy. And it might end up being the best of the year. But you should probably hold out for similar from companies that have a riper track record on "good."

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