Motorola Krave ZN4’s successor named Inferno, now moving to field trials?

That Motorola Inferno is looking more real than ever for a couple reasons: first, we’ve been able to confirm it with a trusted source of ours, and two, Boy Genius Report has it on good authority that it’s about to start field trials this coming week. In keeping with the pyrotechnic theme pioneered by the Krave ZN4’s “Blaze” codename, it seems the production device may now be called “Torch” — and, somewhere along the course of its R&D evolution, may have lost the translucent cover. Ironically, we really liked the cover on the ZN4 — the touch sensitivity is one of the more trick features we’ve seen on a handset in recent memory — but, you know, we wouldn’t want to question Moto’s infinite wisdom.

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Motorola Krave ZN4’s successor named Inferno, now moving to field trials? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jan 2009 17:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Human error at Google sends the wrong message (Reuters)

Reuters – Google said that for nearly an hour on Saturday, users got an erroneous message when they did searches on many sites, saying, “This site may harm your computer.”

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Human error at Google sends the wrong message
(Reuters)

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Netbook in a suitcase: all the shortcomings of a subnote in a large, inconvenient package

This is true art, friend. The amazing “brotato” (rhymes with potato, in a perfect world) has hacked together netbook components, an ancient keyboard and a 14.2-inch LCD into this classy case, dubbing the project “The Poor Man’s Netbook.” The box is running Windows XP, but he tested it out with Windows 7 and Mac OS X and it performed beautifully, except for the Bluetooth 2.1 module. The box is based on a Mini-ITX Intel D945GCLF2 Dual Core 1.6Ghz Atom motherboard, with 2GB of RAM, a 160GB HDD and 802.11n WiFi — though you’ll have to hunt down an outlet, there’s no battery power here. The best news is that he’s selling the whole conglomeration on eBay, perfect for completing that piece of horrible cyberpunk fiction you’ve been slaving over on your boringtop.

[Thanks, Ryan]

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Netbook in a suitcase: all the shortcomings of a subnote in a large, inconvenient package originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jan 2009 15:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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A frighteningly close look at KDDI au’s Spring 2009 phone lineup

If you live anywhere but Japan and you’re looking to put yourself through that seasonal ritual of torture by getting a good, hard look at everything Japanese carriers have that you can’t, look no further. Engadget Mobile has assembled complete galleries and details on every one of KDDI au’s new models presented as part of its Spring 2009 collection — and yeah, needless to say, there are some whoppers in here. So have a look, read through, and cry softly to yourself for a while; don’t worry, you’re not the only one.

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A frighteningly close look at KDDI au’s Spring 2009 phone lineup originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jan 2009 13:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MSI Wind U120 hits the review bench, short on thrills

Those obsessives over at Laptop Mag wrangled up a new MSI Wind U120 and did the review thing, and while there’s plenty of good here, the wide availability of similarly specced, strongly designed netbooks throws the Wind’s flaws into sharper relief. With the same internals and battery of the original, and yet oddly less battery life, the main improvement here is the more “professional” chassis design. Not a ton to get excited about, but at least the $379 pricetag has a decent edge on other higher-end (in looks, anyways) laptops of this ilk.

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MSI Wind U120 hits the review bench, short on thrills originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jan 2009 12:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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