Page 77 of 258

Droid 2 allegedly explodes in owner’s ear

Droid 2 explosion.

Switched has a strange little story about the Motorola Droid 2. A guy named Aron Embry from Cedar Hill, Texas claims his Droid 2 exploded in his ear, leaving him with a wound that required four stitches.

The story’s a little fishy. When cell phones explode, which is already a sort of rare occurrence, it’s usually the battery. As you can see from the image, Embry’s phone apparently exploded at the speaker, not exactly a volatile part of the phone. Also strange is that any part of the phone would blow up when it’s in open air. Again, when phones typically pop it’s at the battery, and in a pocket or bag, some sort of enclosed space where heat gets trapped around the device.

Embry says he didn’t feel any pain and it wasn’t until he realized he was bleeding that he went to meet his wife Kara, who photographed the damage. I don’t know about you, but my own ears are pretty sensitive, and I’d definitely wonder if I heard a popping noise and looked down to see that my phone had shattered next to my ear.

Verizon graphic designers don’t know Android from the iOS

Verizon Motorola iOS.

See anything strange about the phone in that image? Maybe the fact that it’s a Motorola and yet, for some reason, it’s running Apple’s iOS. I won’t call it anything more than a slip-up by the graphic designer, because that’s probably all it is. It does seem a little strange that the iOS screenshots would be so close at hand.

Source: Engadget

Fighting anti-piracy by moving DNS off “the grid”

Domain name seizure.US authorities made more domain name seizures this month, prompting a bit of a panic among the file-sharing web. While torrent services are mostly associated with illegal content (for good reason), they are also used for all sorts of legitimate tasks.

As such, the growing ease with which the US government has been seizing domains concerns torrent users, to the point that some are ready to fight back. I’m not talking about the courts either. As TorrentFreak reports, a group of enthusiasts has started to develop a P2P-based DNS system that would make domain seizures a whole lot more difficult.

The details get a little technical from there, so I’ll refer you to TorrentFreak to sort through it at your leisure. What’s clear, though, is that technology and those who are passionate about it will continue to stay strides ahead of the people that aim to control the web.

Angry Birds highlights Android device fragmentation

Angry Birds.As cell phones continue to become more and more like what we used to know as a PC, we’ll start to see more of the problems crop up that the PC faced. Chief among, it’s becoming clear, is fragmentation. With the advent of operating systems like Android and Windows Phone 7, handset manufacturers are increasingly under pressure to put out better handsets.

With the iPhone, everyone has the same hardware, and because Apple earns profits from both the hardware and the software and controls the production of both, there’s no real rush to make a new handset. The hardware manufactures for Android and WP7, on the other hand, are in a sort of arms race. Every month it seems there’s a newer, faster Droid on the market. Something with a better camera. Something that runs Flash. Something with more RAM. Something better. That race is leading to a serious fragmentation, at least with Android, and it’s affecting the user experience.

Angry Birds has become one of the most popular games across several mobile platforms, but the developer has struggled to keep its product functional on all Android devices. The developer, Rovio Mobile, said that it will be creating a second version of the game for lower-end Android handsets, citing “severe performance issues.” While this isn’t a huge issue now, imagine two years down the road when there will be ever more hundreds of thousands of apps and a marketplace cluttered with new and old handsets. It will be a mess.

Of course Apple isn’t totally exempt from this issue. Its own handsets have changed significantly year after year, giving way to some high-performance applications that simply won’t run on the original iPhone or even the iPhone 3G. As time wears on, though, I would expect Apple will see significantly less fragmentation than the operating systems with secondary hardware manufacturers. There have been rumors though, that Apple is creating an iPhone “Lite” as well as the current iPhone 4 and a CDMA version of the phone for Verizon. Sounds an awful lot like fragmentation to me.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2026 Gadget Teaser

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑