<![CDATA[Gizmodo: 770]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: 770]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/770 http://gizmodo.com/tag/770 <![CDATA[Garmin Rolls Out Nuvi 700 Series Including Nuvi 750, 760 and 770 in US]]> Garmin made a press announcement confirming its Nuvi 700 for the European market, while quietly posting pages about the Nuvi 750, 760 and 770 to its US site with pricing. The premium devices feature 4.3" widescreen displays and will range from $642 to $1071, with FM transmitters and Nuvi travel kits. The gunmetal gray 760 and 770 add Bluetooth and traffic alerts to the equation. The 770's coup de grace is a transatlantic map set, for major roaming.

[Garmin Nuvi 750, Garmin Nuvi 760, Garmin Nuvi 770]

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<![CDATA[Olympus Stylus u770SW: Tough Camera, More Pics]]> We briefly mentioned the Olympus Stylus u770SW point-and-shoot camera in a post last month, but we didn't have very good pictures of it and scant information. A bit more has leaked out about this hardened, waterproof camera that can be taken down to 33 feet underwater, including the fact that has a 7.1-megapixel sensor and 18MB of internal memory.

It's nice and small, too, at just over 3.5 inches wide and weighing 5.5 ounces. We also found out the camera will be available in three colors, the silver color you see here, along with purple and brown. Take a look at a closeup of the back of this upcoming underwater point-and-shooter, after the jump.

u770sw_back.jpg
Olympus still hasn't quoted pricing or release date on this tough mofo. We'll probably get a hands-on at PMA next month.

Update:
The price is $379.99 and it will be released on March 19, 2007. Check it out on this Amazon pre-order page. Thanks, Andy!

Product page (Japanese) [Olympus, via Akihabara News]

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<![CDATA[Olympus Stylus 770 SW Camera: One Tough Mother]]> Oly_stylus770sw.gifThese are some ugly cameras, the photographic equivalent of those Panasonic Toughbooks we kinda like. It's a 7MP camera you can basically beat the crap out of, try drowning, and freezing, without harm. It'll hit depths of 33 feet under water, laugh at drops of nearly 5 feet, and be warm as a kitten in an microwave at 14 degrees Fahrenheit. (But more functional than the Kitten.) What's to explain this camera except that it's got a Wolverine-like healing factor. I just don't see it working any other way. There's little else info on this camera, but we'll update when we know more.

Olympus Stylus 770 SW [DP Review]

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<![CDATA[Nokia 770++: Webcam and WiMax]]>

In my humble opinion, I think the 770 is one of the best portable devices in all the land. It does what its supposed to do and it actually does it better than even UMPCs and tablets. That said, they're improving it slightly in the next iteration by potentially adding a webcam and WiMax. What won't it have? A SIM-card slot. The 770 is supposed to sit somewhere between a PC and a cellphone, so they don't really think the 770 will have cellular connectivity any time soon.

While the cell phone maker is taking a never-say-never stance on the issue of cellular connectivity, it maintains that there are no tablet devices that can connect to mobile networks in the pipeline.

http://news.com.com/2100-1044_3-6086747.html?part=rss [CNET]

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<![CDATA[Google Talk and IM on the Nokia 770]]> With all this talk of UMPCs and Origami, the poor Nokia 770 has gotten lost in the shuffle. Well, have no fear. It's still getting upgrades and you can now use it to make Google Talk calls and IM with your Google buddies. While it's not quite Skype-tastic, it's nice to see they're still working on the product.

Press Release [Nokia]

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<![CDATA[Nokia 770 Hands-On]]>
Just got the 770 here at the ranch and I'm tooling around a bit with it. At first glance, it's a bit bigger than I expected, about 5 inches across. It's very thin and light and very austere—not too many buttons, not too many ports. There's a power port on the bottom, a mini-USB port, a headphone jack and a tiny reset button/hole thing. There are a few face and top buttons and a directional pad. The rest is done through the highly sensitive screen.

770kit.jpgThe screen on this thing is excellent. Quite bright and crisp. The UI is simple, if a little bleak. The icons and design is reminiscent of Nokia's earlier super-smart phones. As this is apparently running Linux, I'd very much like to figure out if I can install a terminal client, but that's for you h/\x0rs to discover.

770monkey.jpg
The on-screen keyboard was very responsive and easy to use. When I've used on-screen keyboards in the past, even on a full-fledged Tablet PC, it's felt haphazard. Instead, what you type is what you get, even if the keys are relatively small. One issue is the handwriting recognition. As you can see from this image, I wrote "I hate monkeys." It didn't quite work.

770keyboard.jpg
I'm going to test the email client to see if I can stop opening the old Powerbook and treat this as my in-home email checkin' device. We shall see.

UPDATE - Getting some pushback from 770 fans about availability and NokiaUSA failing to ship pre-orders. That kind of sucks.

770-side.jpgSide view. It's about half an inch thick.

UPDATE - Austere? WTF's wrong with austere?

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<![CDATA[Nokia 770 Unpacked]]>
Although Nokia has been telling us we'd have to wait for the new Nokia 770 Internet tablet, it looks like folks in Europe are already getting product. The device, a linux-based terminal that is WiFi enabled, is not a phone. Let me repeat that. It is not a cellphone, even though it's being made by Nokia. It is dedicated solely to web browsing and e-mail and it is really, really fine looking. It's also got Internet radio, a news reader, file manager and media players — and my guess is that we will be seeing it here in the US real soon. From what I've been told, it should run around $300.

A New Product Category [Internet Table Talk]

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<![CDATA[Nokia Moves Back Internet Tablet]]> I love this product. Been waiting for it all year. And now, sniffle it looks like my wait will be even longer. I saw the Nokia 770 Internet Tablet at early spring's CEDIA in New Orleans and was told the 770 would be released by Q3 this year. Bud sadly, it looks like Q4 is the new release date and we're expecting right before Xmas time.

Nokia 770 Internet Tablet Release Date Postponed [Portable Gadgets]

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<![CDATA[Airtime]]>

Embracing The Mobile Hacker Ethic


By Carlo Longino

As mobile phones become more powerful and pervasive, it was inevitable that they'd spawn the same kind of homebrew hacking culture as computers and the Internet. While the locked-down nature of cell phones and the closemindedness of wireless carriers has stunted that culture's growth, a few developments are afoot that promise to give a big boost to DIY mobile programming. Whereas programmers must typically pick up platform-specific skills to develop for mobile, a number of ways for independent and casual developers and even enthusiasts to use skills they've already got—or can relatively easily learn—to build applications.

First is Nokia's release of the Python programming language for its Series 60 smartphone environment.

The port of Python is a full implementation with a high degree of portability from the desktop environment, opening mobile development to a whole new class of programmers—which was its primary goal, says Erik Smartt, the program manager of Python for Series 60. "By choosing a developer-friendly, easy-to-learn language, Nokia is making it possible for casual developers to tinker with their mobile phones and innovate without the typical investment costs for embedded system development," he says. "Bringing a language like Python to Nokia devices changes the rules on who can create applications."nyctraffic.jpg

While Series 60's Symbian OS underpinnings allow for pretty robust programming in C++ or Java, Python offers a much simpler way to develop applications with much quicker results, encouraging users to tinker and play around. "If people are going to innovate, they need to feel comfortable rapidly proofing new ideas and throwing away code when something doesn't work," Smartt says. "That's less likely to happen if application development takes months. With Python for Series 60, it should be possible to produce a simple proof-of-concept application in an afternoon."

One such application was a simple "Traffic Cam Proof of Concept" app, that was orginally built in 45 minutes. It's since been refined to include traffic cameras from cities all over the globe, all added quite easily—an app for London cams, for instance, was built over somebody's lunch break.

The traffic camera application was built to demonstrate the rapid development possible with Python in response to the quick development time for a New York City traffic cam viewer that won a developers' contest for content made in Flash Lite — another tool, like Python, that is mainstreaming mobile development. Flash Lite is already available on more than 40 handset models in Japan, and can be downloaded for Symbian devices. It's also starting to appear on several manufacturers' devices in Europe and North America as well.

flashlite.jpgFlash Lite applications can be built with the same version of Flash MX that's used to build Web applications, and it includes a variety of templates to facilitate design for different handsets. One difference between Flash Lite and Python that's readily apparent is the rich graphics available with Flash. Python extends the group of potential mobile developers, but Flash Lite also allows designers into the mix.

A quick look at the Flash Lite Exchange, where people can upload their applications, shows some of the different ideas people have had: there's a lot of slick games and animations, but also a lot of small applications (think widgets) that highlight the potential of Flash Lite to become quite pervasive once it's on a lot of handsets.

Python and Flash are just the beginning of mobile companies embracing the hacker ethic to expand the functionality and coolness of their devices. There are cracks emerging in the standard mobile industry mindset that innovation has to come from the top down as companies realize that by opening development up to as wide a range of developers as possible will they harness the most innovation. Another example on the horizon is the Nokia 770 internet appliance, which runs an open-source Linux platform called Maemo. The device isn't even yet available, but quite a community has already rallied around it and generated several applications.770again.jpg

There's been a fairly seismic shift of semantics, if nothing else, over the last few years where "hacker" has dropped a lot of its negative connotations, and companies are looking to take advantage of people's capacity to use devices in new and unimagined ways. As Nokia's Smartt puts it, "If you can make a device that's fun to hack on, people will. And the more people tinker with a device and produce killer applications, the more the value of the device increases to people who own it."

Carlo Longino is a writer and analyst that follows the mobile industry. He's co-editor of MobHappy, and also an analyst for Techdirt. He can be reached at carlo@mobhappy.com.

Resources:
Python for Series 60
Macromedia Flash Lite
Nokia 770
maemo.org

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