Tag: Digital

Toshiba EXCERIA Memory Card New SDHC / SDXC Memory Card has a New High-Speed ​​Read in 3 Options Study

Toshiba EXCERIA Memory CardToshiba EXCERIA Memory Card ; Toshiba announced the type of memory card SDHC / SDXC EXCERIA series (really similar naming Xperia yah) which offers a transfer rate speeds up to 95 MB / s. The new Toshiba SD Card is compatible with SD Memory Card Ver.3.0 Standard UHS-I and the minimum speed for storage compliant with speed UHS SD speed class 1 and class 10.

Toshiba EXCERIA Memory Card

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Cowon D2 PMP’s tiny C2 occurs stopped in the place

At this point, Cowon D2 (and to a lesser extent, D2 + a) ​​is a bit long in the tooth, and looked as if the clothing is based in Korea to replace a leap backwards alphabet. New C2 disclosed in late April or May start country to give users another alternative to PMP Barebones, boasting 2.6-inch resistive touch panel (320 x 240), composite video output, MicroSD slot, 4 / 8/16GB internal flash memory, USB 2.0 interface, built-in microphone and battery good for up to ten hours of video playback (up to 55 hours when listening to strict defeat for audio). (continue reading…)


Android’s in-app billing makes a dent: Dungeon Defenders free on Android Market


Dungeon Defenders: First Wave cost $3 when it first came out. This week, the iOS version will cost you ninety-nine cents. But if you want to play the Unreal Engine-powered tower defense game today, you can have it for free — developer Trendy Entertainment is now leaning on Android’s new in-app billing system to pay for the whole thing. We can’t give Trendy all the credit, of course, as Glu Mobile’s Gun Bros and Tapulous’ Tap Tap Revenge 4 are doing the same thing, but to our knowledge both of them were free to play from day one. Free-to-play gaming has been a controversial proposition in the console and PC gaming space — most publishers would just like to sell a game once, and call it a day. On phone, however, where apps are expected to be cheap, it could indeed make more sense to charge users for items and upgrades than to have users “buy” the game. Either way, we penny-pinchers are pleased as punch with the idea. PR after the break.



HD3 Slyde Watch Hands-On: What Everyone Wanted The iPod Nano To Be

HD3 Slyde 4 HD3 Slyde Watch Hands On: What Everyone Wanted The iPod Nano To Be

A few month’s ago I get a message from Jorg Hysek Jr. – son of the famous Jorg Hysek – who now runs Hysek’s brand HD3. In excitement, he expressed to me how much I need to see the brand’s new watch collection called “Slyde.” Nothing more, just that. It turns out I was right about the excitement. HD3 was quietly developing Slyde for 2 years before telling anyone, and it must have been hard to keep the awesome concept a secret. The final products won’t be available until about September 2011, but I have an exclusive hands-on introduction of Slyde to share with you.

Slyde is essentially what everyone wanted the fifth generation iPod Nano to be. You know the little square one that everyone turned into a watch due to the clock dial face it has. I wrote about it is here and explained what it needed to do to satisfy the loads of people buying straps for it. The real problem with the Apple iPod Nano is that it wasn’t really meant to be a watch. Battery life sucked and it had just two watch dials. People started to say that Apple would make a fortune if they would just create an app store to make it so that people could upload new watch dials to the Nano – that isn’t likely to happen. (continue reading…)


Akai’s iPad-docking SynthStation 49 and updated app: eyes-on at NAMM 2011

Remember when everything had an iPhone dock? The coming dock revolution will be just like that, but a lot more massive. Akai is showing off a non-functioning version of its SynthStation 49-key MIDI controller at NAMM this weekend, and it’s pretty much the same idea as the smaller iPhone-docking Synthstation25. That said, here you’ve got nine velocity-sensitive MPC pads, a separate transport section, and 1/4-inch outs. And an adjustable iPad dock, which is a funny thing to see on a keyboard. Software-wise, this younger-bigger bro in the family will also support CoreMIDI — and an updated version of Akai’s SynthStation iOS app for the bigger screen, using the added real estate to allow finer, more direct control over the sound, along with a new recording section and simultaneous drum / synth sequencing. Not a bad piece of kit for the pad-centric musician in your life — look for it to splash down this June for $199. Check below the break for video of the unit and a runthrough of the new software.







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