Author: Jeff Morgan (Page 124 of 168)

Want An HDTV For $100? How Bout An Oven Door?

Oven door or is it a TV?Police in San Leandro police busted a man this week who was trying to sell a Sony HDTV in a Wal-Mart parking lot for just $100. As a savvy consumer I’m sure you’re asking…what’s the catch? Well, it’s not a TV. It’s an oven door with some Sony stickers and a bunch of cables crammed into the back.

The perp was called in by an anonymous tipster who said the man tried to sell the TV, claiming he had purchased it for $60 at a flea market. The man was clearly committed to his sale – he packed electronic cables in the back, found some Sony stickers, and even included installation instructions. Though the police didn’t file charges for the attempted sale, they did confiscate the TV. Guess who’s going back to the station to try to play Halo 3?

Source: Oakland Tribune

Headphone Review: Maximo iMetal iP-HS5

The Maximo iMetal iP-HS5.Maximo, who you may recall from my recent review of their iM-590 earbuds, has just released a new earbud product targeted at the smartphone users among you: the iP-HS5. The headphones are of similar make to the iM-590 but Maximo has added an in-line microphone and control button that works with most smartphones on the market today. As with the iM-590, the iP-HS5 produce quality sound and ship with enough accessories to make the headphones a positive experience.

Appearance/Build Quality
I’m going to say “as with the iM-590” a lot in this post, so just get used to it. The products are very similar, and for a lot of good reasons. The packaging is smart as ever, with everything well organized for the consumer to see. Open it up and you’re greeted with all the accessories you’ll need to use the iP-HS5 with the smartphone of your choice.

The headphones ship with a 3.5mm jack installed, but include two 2.5mm adapters for various smartphone wiring configurations. This ensures the product will work with whatever phone you happen to have. For iPhone users, no adapter is required. You also get a 4-foot extension cable, four sets of earbuds, a shirt clip, a carrying case, and a detachable lanyard.

Maximo has again employed their knit cabling, which I’m still not sure I’m a fan of. While it has its benefits, the sound produced if anything rubs along the surface is pretty tough on my ears. Attaching the shirt clip, at the recommendation of a Maximo rep, did improve things significantly.

The included lanyard is also a bit of a puzzler for me. While I understand you might not always want noise reducing earbuds in your ears, wearing them around your neck seems similarly out of the question. The included carrying case can be worn on your belt if you really need a place to store the headphones. For someone like me, the extra use I get from the lanyard isn’t worth the frustration that comes with having so much extra cord. Continue reading »

Zune HD Available For Pre-Order

Zune HD color options.Just a day after the release announcement, Microsoft’s Zune HD is up for pre-order with several major retailers. As was accidentally leaked by Amazon, the new media player will cost $220 for a 16GB and $290 for the 32GB version.

Unfortunately pre-orders can only receive the black or platinum colors. At release consumers will also be able to choose from red, blue, and green with the option to have your Zune engraved with one of 10 different designs called Zune Originals.

As I mentioned yesterday, the price puts some pressure on Apple with their iPod Touch line. The Zune HD not only upgrades with HD video playback, it costs far less than the equivalent in the iPod Touch line.

Palm Wouldn’t Violate Your Privacy, Would They?

The Palm Pre girl looking creepy.Yeah, they would. In a big way. This is something that most of us would probably expect from Apple, but Palm? Palm is supposed to be the anti-Apple (though I’m not sure what an apple’s polar opposite would be). They’re the ones saving us loads of money with Sprint, offering a physical keyboard, bringing multitasking to the masses. They’re also the ones recording your GPS location once a day along with some other personal data.

The privacy breach was first discovered by Joey Hess, a Debian developer who had started to tinker with WebOS a while back. When he noticed his Pre sending data to Palm on a daily basis he wondered, as most of us probably would, just what the phone was sending. Without digging too deep, it turned out to be the following:

{ “errorCode”: 0, “timestamp”: 1249855555954.000000, “latitude”: 36.594108, “longitude”: -82.183260, “horizAccuracy”: 2523, “heading”: 0, “velocity”: 0, “altitude”: 0, “vertAccuracy”: 0 }

Yes, that is his global position at an accuracy similar to Google Maps. The phone was also sending a list of every application Hess had used, along with usage duration for each app. There were also the expected crashlogs and then a file containing every app Hess used, regardless of whether they were Palm approved or not.

Obviously this has some pretty serious implications. No one likes to know that this data is being collected, and while it’s usually safer to assume that someone is gathering this stuff, the fact that Palm is doing it, after all their horn-blowing about the iPhone, is a tough pill to swallow.

Any company willing to do this sort of thing has to know it will be found out and cover its ass accordingly, right? Right. Palm looks drum-tight in their privacy policy, which states this:

Location Based Services. When you use location based services, we will collect, transmit, maintain, process, and use your location and usage data (including both real time geographic information and information that can be used to approximate location) in order to provide location based and related services, and to enhance your device experience.

On first read you might think, “Gee, that once a day collection seems to fall well outside reasonable collection for Location Based Services.” You’d be right, but it’s the second half of the clause where they’ve got you. That part about enhancing your device experience pretty much has you nailed, unless of course you’re able to prove that this collection is doing nothing of the sort. I’m pretty sure you won’t be able to pull that off.

Regardless of clever language, though, it does fall to Palm to alert the user that they are collecting this type of data. That’s why location based applications on smartphones typically ask the user’s permission to access the phone’s location. Not doing so turns your data gathering into one thing: spying. For Palm, it’s spying on a massive scale.

Since the story broke a couple hours ago, Palm has issued the following statement:

Palm takes privacy very seriously, and offers users ways to turn data collecting services on and off. Our privacy policy is like many policies in the industry and includes very detailed language about potential scenarios in which we might use a customer’s information, all toward a goal of offering a great user experience. For instance, when location based services are used, we collect their information to give them relevant local results in Google Maps. We appreciate the trust that users give us with their information, and have no intention to violate that trust.

Odd. I thought collecting that sort of data without letting your customers know was, by definition, a violation of trust. It also seems incredibly convenient to neglect to mention just where your customers can turn off those data collection services.

For a full list of the data Palm is getting from your phone, head to Hess’s website.

Zune HD Coming September 15th

The Zune HD.The guys at Gizmodo got some exclusive pics of the new Zune HD packaging along with word that the device will be available September 15th. That date is a little later than most people expected, but still early enough to get some attention before the holiday season.

As for the packaging, it’s standard fare. A white box with a pic of the device in either the 16GB or 32GB flavors. There’s still no mention of pricing, though it’s expected to be something like $220 for the 16GB and $290 for the 32GB. Those prices were from a leaked Amazon page yesterday. Compare that to the $299/$399 pricetags on the same size iPod Touch and we just might see a few people migrating to the Zune, especially with the added bonus of HD video playback.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2026 Gadget Teaser

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑