ASUS TOUGH 7-inch Honeycomb tablet lands in Japan ready for some corporate abuse

Not content with offering up merely modular Android tablets, ASUS has revealed a new seven-inch tablet that's water and dust resistant -- perfect for a spot of bath-time browsing or... desert rallying. The ASUS TOUGH-ETBW11AA has a rubberized bezel and strips across the back, contributing to the substantial 22.2mm profile, but that hefty frame can survive drops from the heady height of 76cm. Aside from its tough-guy credentials, there's a 1280 x 800 screen, five megapixel camera, Tegra 2 dual-core 1GHz processor, WiMAX connection and the staple WiFi, Bluetooth, and GPS medley. It comes with 16GB of well-protected storage, but there's room for more via microSD. For those seeking a slate that'll survive the bumps and scrapes of the business world -- and not look ridiculous -- it'll be available to enterprise customers of Japanese carrier KDDI this November. No news yet on whether it'll canoe its way across from the Land of the Rising Sun, but we can give you a few more photos of the rough and tumble tablet after the break.
[Image credit: Keitai Watch]



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Motorola Xoom 4G LTE upgrade process begins tomorrow, new tablets on sale October 13th


Verizon's dangled a 4G LTE upgrade carrot in the noses of the Xoom-adopting hordes from the start. Now, it appears the carrier's ready to make good on that promise. Starting tomorrow, current owners of Motorola's Honeycomb tab can visit a dedicated VZW site for a step-by-step guide through the upgrade process. If you were amongst the eager few who signed up for alerts, the company's going to prioritize you and send out a notification via email. The entire swap-out should take up to six business days, returning a freshly enhanced LTE-enabled slate free-of-charge. As for the rest of you Xoom-less onlookers, Big Red's going to be offering up the updated tablets this October 13th for $499 on a new two-year service contract. Jump past the break to parse through the official presser.
MOTOROLA XOOM 4G LTE UPGRADE AVAILABLE TOMORROW


Upgrade to Add the Speed of the Largest 4G LTE Network in America

BASKING RIDGE, N.J. – Verizon Wireless and Motorola Mobility, Inc. (NYSE: MMI), today announced the Motorola XOOM 4G LTE upgrade will be available for existing Motorola XOOM customers beginning tomorrow. The Motorola XOOM 4G LTE will be available in Verizon Wireless Communications Stores and online at www.verizonwireless.com beginning Oct. 13 for $499.99 with a new two-year contract.

Starting tomorrow, Motorola XOOM customers can visit www.verizonwireless.com/Xoom4GLTEupgrade for complete instructions and to begin the 4G LTE upgrade process. Customers who signed up for email alerts will receive an email notification with instructions tomorrow. Customers should expect to get their updated Motorola XOOM with 4G LTE back in approximately six business days. The 4G LTE upgrade is free of charge and customers do not have to change their current data plan when upgrading to 4G LTE. Customers are encouraged to back up any personal information prior to shipping.



Faster speeds and connections enhance the Motorola XOOM experience, allowing customers to download songs in seconds and movies in minutes. Customers should expect average download speeds of 5 to 12 Mbps and upload speeds of 2 to 5 Mbps in 4G LTE mobile broadband coverage areas. When customers travel outside of a 4G LTE coverage area, the Motorola XOOM automatically connects to the Verizon Wireless 3G network, enabling customers to stay connected from coast to coast.



Key features:

· 10.1-inch widescreen HD display

· 32 GB built-in storage (actual formatted capacity is less), with microSD card slot supporting additional 32 GB

· Android™ 3.2 Honeycomb – supports Google™ Mobile Services including Gmail™, YouTube™, Google Talk™, Google Search™, Google Maps™, Google Movies™, Google Books™ and Android Market™

· Dual-core 1 GHz processor

· Adobe® Flash® 10- enabling the delivery of rich Flash based web content including videos, casual games and applications

· 2-megapixel front-facing camera for video chats over 4G LTE, 3G and WiFi

· 5-megapixel rear-facing camera with LED flash

· Wi-Fi networks are generally short ranged and provide wireless Internet access to localized public areas (often called hotspots) such as airports, hotels, and coffee shops.



Data plans:

· Motorola XOOM customers will have the option to choose one of the following mobile broadband data plans:

o $30 monthly access for 2GB monthly allowance

o $50 monthly access for 5GB monthly allowance

o $80 monthly access for 10GB monthly allowance
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iOS App Picks 28 Sep 2011

In this episode of the iOS App Picks we demonstrate five applications in 30 seconds each. These apps will keep you entertained, help you from leaving anything behind on your next trip, and watch free movies and TV shows. To download these apps directly to your iPhone, just click on the title of the application and the iTunes software will automatically launch to the app in the AppStore. If you have the free Google Search app installed on your iPhone just snap a picture of the QR-Code using Google Goggles or any other QR-Code scanner that will launch the App Store on your iPhone.


Crackle – A free application

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Crackle is a free service, sponsored by commercials, which stream popular movies and television shows. Watch your favorite shows on the go over a cellular or Wi-Fi connection. The videos are quick to load and playback may be resumed at any time. Add movies and shows to your queue to watch later.

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Where’s My Water? – No Lite and $0.99 full version

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Where’s My Water? Is a very addictive puzzle game that is both simple to play and challenging at the same time. The object of the game is to drill through barricades made of dirt to get the water to Swampy, the gator that lives in the sewers. Avoid toxic waste and growing vines. Collect all three rubber ducks to earn extra points and in some levels there are hidden items in the dirt.

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WebMD – A free application

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Search through conditions, symptoms, and medications with WebMD. This free medical reference will give you up to date information about almost anything relating to health and wellbeing. The first aid button will help in an emergency by giving detailed instructions on how to treat the injury or condition before seeking medical assistance.

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My Secret Folder – No lite and $0.99 full version

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Keep you photos private with My Secret Folder. This camouflaged app looks like any other folder on youriOS device. Open up the My Secret Folder and you will need to input a password to gain access to the photos inside. This app will even alert you when there was an attempted break-in.

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Packing Pro – No Lite and $2.99 full version

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Leaving something behind on a business trip or vacation can sometimes be devastating. With Packing Pro you will not have to worry anymore. This app has more items to check off than most would ever need to bring with them, but it is nice to have the option. Add your own items and create your own customized lists.

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Sprint Puts The Kibosh On Buggy LG Optimus S Gingerbread Update

Two weeks ago we told you how Sprint users were finally about to get some Gingerbread for their LG Optimus S handsets, just a few weeks after the update became available for the international Optimus One. Things were looking good, and we noted "assuming nothing goes wrong and forces it to halt distribution, it should hit nearly every subscriber with an Optimus S within about ten days." Oh, how we should have knocked on wood! It turns out that the update has been wreaking havoc on the Optimus S, breaking so much functionality that Sprint's withdrawn the update.

Sprint acknowledges the problem on its forums, promising that it and LG were working on diagnosing the issues and assuring users that the halt on the update's distribution is only temporary; once things are worked out, the Optimus S will finish getting Gingerbread.

So, what's going wrong? Oh, just a few small problems like an inability to get online, your PC not recognizing the phone when plugged-in over USB, refusal to recognize the presence of microSD cards, and finding itself in a state where it will no longer recharge while powered-on, eventually running the battery down to nothing. Predictive text is also turning-up broken, but compared to the rest of these issues, it seems positively minor. There are some suggested fixes for these individual issues, but no word on when an update addressing all of them may become available. 
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Samsung Stratosphere Hardware Specs Leaked

We've been expecting the Samsung Stratosphere to make its way to Verizon with a little LTE action, but besides that 4G connectivity, the phone's capabilities have been largely unknown to us. We had been expecting something upper-mid-tier-ish, and it looks like we weren't too far off; a leaked Verizon spec sheet details the Stratosphere's components while identifying it as mid-tier piece of hardware.

According to the leak, the Stratosphere will have a 1GHz processor (we're assuming single-core), 512MB of RAM, and 4GB of internal flash storage (a 4GB microSD brings total storage up to 8GB). The QWERTY slider will feature a four-inch WVGA Super AMOLED screen, a five-megapixel main camera, and a 1.3-megapixel front-facer. It will arrive with Gingerbread and TouchWiz installed, and support mobile hotspot mode with up to eight devices when connected over LTE.

Considering all that, Verizon's mid-tier assessment sounds pretty spot-on to us. Look for it to arrive in early next month, possibly on October 6. 
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Sprint Posts Overview Video For LG Marquee

We only first heard of the LG Marquee earlier this month, after a Radio Shack video gave away its existence with a brief cameo. It sure looked like an Optimus Black, and it didn't take long before we were able to match the Black's model number to the Marquee. Just days later – all of this spanning a mere week – Sprint formally announced the smartphone with a planned October 2 launch. With under a week to go, Sprint has uploaded an overview of the phone to YouTube, giving you one last preview before it hits retail.

After going over the Marquee's hardware layout, detailing the placement of all buttons and ports, Sprint touches on what you can accomplish with the handset's software. Ultimately, there's nothing to that end that's unique to the Marquee, but Sprint nevertheless brings up some interesting points worth considering, like how the higher-than-average 2-megapixel front-facing camera makes the phone well-suited for video chat using an app such as Qik.

Because this is a render, we don't get to appreciate how great the four-inch IPS NOVA display is supposed to look; you'll just have to wait until Sunday in order to check it out for yourself.

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Ice Cream Sandwich First Look? (Video)

Ice Cream Sandwich First Look? (Video)
If a lucky eBayer is to be believed, he bought a Nexus S, and ended up with an Ice Cream Sandwich.

Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS for short) is Google's next version of Android that is rumored to be combining smartphone and tablet features back into one "trunk" operating system. It's also the alleged reason Android Honeycomb hasn't been released to the AOSP -- for fear that custom ROM builders would release the tablet version of theAndroid OS to the smartphone platform.

This lucky shopper received his Nexus S and apparently got ICS as the operating system, notGingerbread (2.3) like all the other Nexus S owners have. He took a two minute video walking through various aspects of the "new" operating system. Here are some of the things we caught in the video:

- Running a 3.x Kernel (others are around 2.6)
- Honeycomb-like lockscreen
- Honeycomb-like dialog boxes and color scheme
- Honeycomb-like Google search bar and voice-input button on the homescreen
- Honeycomb-like icons (specifically the "settings" icon)
- Honeycomb-like Recent Apps list with titles and thumbnails
- Honeycomb-like Settings screens
- Honeycomb-like horizontally paginated app drawer

Is it really Ice Cream Sandwich, or just a very elaborate, and very elegant theme? Watch the video and you be the judge. Let us know what you think in the comments!
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Telstra HTC 4G Revealed as HTC Holiday, Coming First Half 201

We've seen the HTC Holiday, now known as the HTC Raider 4G, being put through the paces onAT&T's fledgling LTE network, and more recently learned of its planned debut in South Korea. Telstra in Australia had revealed that it would be getting an LTE model of its own, called simply the HTC 4G, and now that phone has been revealed to be a Holiday as well.

A shot of the Telstra HTC 4G shows it pulling down a decent 19Mbps in a speed test, not quite as fast as what we've seen the phone do on AT&T, but it did manage to eclipse those AT&T figures in regards to upload performance. In both cases, though, we should really wait and see how the phones perform on an LTE network congested with users before drawing conclusions.

The release date for the HTC 4G is extremely loose at the moment, with Telstra not committing to anything more definite than sometime in the first half of next year. At that rate, it's likely we'll see the Raider 4G hit AT&T in the US well in advance.
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Top 5 Pocketnow Requested Features For Apple's iPhone 5

With Apple’s next generation iPhone just a week away, many of us have speculated over what will be included on the device. Rumors have done a good job in showing us what the device may look like, but even when Gizmodo leaked the iPhone 4, there was more to the device than met the eye.

The iPhone 5 has quite a challenge this time around. When the iPhone 4 was released, there were still no dual-core processors in the market. Devices usually had to be big and thick to offer improved specs and functionality, and screen resolution was still on the WVGA arena. Today, dual-core processors are a common deal in the high-end Smartphone line-up. The Samsung Galaxy S II has proven that thin is not an excuse to keep the device powerful, and qHD has become the standard in an Android world that already rumors HD in the Horizon.

That said, we’ve decided to compile our Top 5 most requested features for the next generation iPhone, which we all wish, changes things all over again.

5. – A Dual-Core, or even Quad-Core CPU
A5ss


For all of you that are still using iOS 4.x, things must look all right. Sadly, for those of us that are already using the beta releases of iOS 5, things can get sluggish at times. Surely it isn’t fair to judge Apple for an un-released operating system, but the purpose of the beta is to test if something works well or not. So far, many of us feel it can work better. A Dual-Core A5 chip is a given for the next generation iPhone. The biggest question we ask ourselves is if Dual-Core is enough for such a competing market. Apple is in no rush to be the king of the spec kingdom, but they don’t like to be so far behind either. They proved how bold they could be with the unexpected release of the Retina Display in the iPhone 4, so hopefully they could surprise us with something better than the Dual-Core A5 chip too.

4. More Storage

iPhone4 64gb


If iCloud and iTunes Match weren’t already in beta testing, this would top our list. Apple has definitely worked around the storage limitations of their devices through the cloud, but the challenge gets bigger as they continue evolving iOS. Some of us believe that they remain comfortable with the fact that competitors are still having a hard time in fitting 32GB of built-in storage on their devices, but the real problem lies on the Apps being released recently. Rage HD, FIFA 12 and other games currently use as much as 1GB of storage. Even if many relied on iTunes Match to stream their music libraries, carriers are no longer offeringunlimited data plans. Cloud storage without unlimited data is like planning a long family trip and leaving without enough fuel to reach your destination. More storage is the best way to go.

3. A larger, but thinner design

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Lots of people have forgotten that before Apple released the first generation iPhone, the average smartphone sported a 2.4inch display. Back in those days, 3.5 inches was massive, but sadly those standards change. The iPhone 4 feels great in the hand, and Apple has done a great job in making iOS comfortable enough to handle on a small screen. Sadly developers always struggle in offering a productive experience to the end user when everything they build in their apps has to be crammed into a small screen. Less is always more in lots of cases, but I’d consider less cramming on a screen to be better. As games continue to evolve, it’s hard to handle the touch controls we’re all obligated to use on a slate device, if a good part of the screen is covered by our fingers.

Apple could easily push a 4inch display and still retain their Retina Display brand if you do the math. Better yet, a larger design allows for them to fit a bigger battery, and you and I know that’s a killer feature in a device where you can’t easily swap it.

2. One device to rule all carriers

sprint verizon guy iphone 554x300


Apple has shown everybody that there is a way to rebel against carriers and get away with it. Release a device that’s good enough to make people go crazy over, and carriers will go crazy over it as well. The only thing that Apple hasn’t quite figured out is how to make a device usable on all the carriers. Even if my iPhone is free of all the AT&T bloat ware that other smartphones offer, I still can’t decide to switch to Verizon and keep my same phone. If Apple were able push one iPhone that works on all carriers, they’d rule the market. Obviously that device would have to be such a dramatic leap forward that carriers won’t complain about that part.

And before we get to the Number 1 request, let’s go through a good item that didn’t fit in the list:

Better Cameras
Even though Windows Phone 7 and Android defeat the iPhone in many areas, I still can’t leave my iPhone 4 at home because of the camera. I think we can all agree that there is still no real competition in the market. The problem is that this is only the deal for the back camera. The front facing camera will allow you to take a self-portrait, but at the grainiest expense tolerable. Our own recent leaks show Apple already testing an 8 megapixel back camera for the device, but let’s hope they at least fit an iPhone 3GS sensor to the front camera.

And last but not least:

1. LTE

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People may debate whether it’s worth it for Apple to adopt LTE when the country barely supports it, but the best way to make your device future-proof is to prepare it for that future. LTE is what we all dream about and are willing to pay for. Speeds that drive consumption, which in turn benefits both carriers and obviously the manufacturer. HSPA+ may be 4G for some Marketing experts looking to push their current limitations, but you and I know that 4G means either LTE or WiMAX. If Apple was able to figure out a way to offer LTE without compromising the device’s daily performance, they’d have an immediate winner. And we’re talking about the Win-Win scenario all of us like. We enjoy the speeds, carriers enjoy the consumption and Apple enjoys the sales. How hard can it be?

What are your Top 5 requests? Leave us a comment bellow and share the things that you feel we left out.
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