Well, this was probably bound to happen someday, but we still can’t not sniffle a bit… the Treo Pro seems to have disappeared from Palm.com. The site has of course been mainly trafficking Palm’s webOS devices — the Pre and Pixi — as of late, but until very recently, it still listed its last non-webOS device, the Window Mobile Treo Pro, a much older phone first outed in August of 2008. If you’re hell bent, of course, there are still plenty of places to get one of these bad boys, so we’re not going to sound the death knell yet — but it will be missed.
Filed under: Cellphones
Treo Pro up and vanishes from Palm website originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jan 2010 18:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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January 22 2010 by
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Motorola has asked US regulators to stop Blackberry owners, Research in Motion, from sales in the US.
In a rather disappointing example of “your mileage may vary,” market research firm Northstream has put TeliaSonera’s shiny new LTE network — the world’s first to go commercial — to the test, coming away with some disappointing conclusions. The bottom line is that they never managed to go above about 12Mbps downstream, a pretty wild figure considering that Ericsson is in the process of rolling out 84 purely theoretical megabits per second right now using plain old HSPA+ for 3 Scandinavia. The bright side is that they managed a fat 5Mbps on the upstream and experienced consistently lower latency than on the area’s 3G networks; in fact, the firm ended up coming away with a glowing impression of the service, assuming (probably accurately) that this is just the first baby step in finding out what LTE is really capable of. And hey, some lucky jerks are getting over 42Mbps down, so it’s a crap shoot anyway.
Not so fast: testing finds world’s first LTE network isn’t very 4G-ish originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jan 2010 18:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Didier Stevens comes on the show to talk about PDF hacking! Chicken Corn Noodles are a valid PDF document Full Show Notes Direct Audio Download Hosts: Larry “HaxorTheMatrix” Pesce, Paul “PaulDotCom” Asadoorian, John Strand, Mick Douglas, Carlos “Dark0perator” Perez Audio…

One of our favorite iPhone games is Touchgrind. Sure, we’re terrible at it, but at least we feel like we’re accomplishing something “totally street” and “badass” with the multitouch input that the iPhone allows. Well, Illusion Labs is looking at bringing some of that magic to the Mac. They’ve got a demo up of the game running in a jumbo manner on a multi-finger-friendly MacBook. It looks pretty much like a straight port at this point, but hopefully the added horsepower and screen size of the Mac can make this into something a bit more magical — and maybe even trick us into thinking we’re decent fingerboardists, if only for a moment. Right now this is just a tech demo, and there are no firm plans of a release. From the noodlings of Illusion Labs’ Twitter account, it looks like they also wouldn’t mind porting it to an “iSlate” if the opportunity presented itself. Hear that, Cupertino? You might be able to get someone to build an app for this mythical device! Big sigh of relief, we’re sure. Video is after the break.
Continue reading Illusion Labs shows off multitouch ‘Touchgrind’ gaming demo on a MacBook
Illusion Labs shows off multitouch ‘Touchgrind’ gaming demo on a MacBook originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jan 2010 17:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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