<![CDATA[Gizmodo: s9]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: s9]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/s9 http://gizmodo.com/tag/s9 <![CDATA[Cowon S9 Curve Goes Blond For Summer]]> The Cowon S9 Curve built an imposing wave of hype on the strength of its looks, which made its underwhelming performance especially disappointing. This softly beautiful white version, though, makes me feel like it's 2008 all over again.


For now, the device is only listed on Cowon's Korean site, and there's no official word regarding when, or if, it'll be released in the US, although I'd point to English language marketing materials and, more convincingly, FCC badging as clues that it eventually will. [Pocketables via Engadget]

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<![CDATA[Cowon S9 Review]]> We all know iPods have taken over the world, but the Cowon S9 looked like the perfect alternative to the iPod touch for those of you who hate Apple, so I ordered one in.

This review has been over a month in the making. Let me explain. While the S9 comes packaged with proprietary PC-only iTunesish software, I planned to mount the S9 like a USB drive and drag and drop my music and videos. While a firmware update and the actual file transfers seemed to go fine, when I started opening folders within the S9 itself (yes, you have to deal with folders), I'd get endless lists of gibberish, often followed by a system freeze that only a hard reset would fix.

I dealt with tech support (who of course had never seen the problem), and it was finally determined that I should get a new one. I was shipped another unit and the same thing happened. I have no doubt that somewhere along the line I was doing something wrong (though it's hard to fathom given the dragging and dropping), but no one could spot it. That's disconcerting.

I was finally shipped an updated, promised-to-be-working S9, and it really did finally work. It plays XviD and WMV movies, but no generic MPEG-1, MPEG-2 or MPEG-4 content (you can forget about h.264). Also, like other players, if the file has too great a resolution, it fails—my high definition .wmv of The Dark Knight just wouldn't play, nor would a high definition XviD that I tested. Music-wise, the S9 plays MP3, WMA, and a bunch of others, but no DRM-free AAC. (Again, possibly an MPEG-4 codec issue.)

On the plus side, audio reproduction seemed good and the system is very quick with video media—I could skip around a one-hour, standard def XviD of Mad Men instantly. And I should add, clips really pop off the S9's 3.3-inch OLED screen with smooth framerate reproduction.

Recording audio with the integrated microphone worked fine—functional but not stellar—which is to be expected: The mic is but a tiny hole in the case. You can also conveniently one-button record the radio, the quality of which is only limited by the generally decent reception. Plus, after bootlegging the radio, you can drag the created WMA files from the S9 right onto your computer's hard drive, no questions asked.
Despite many of these functions being excellent, nothing about the UI is as fluid or intuitive as you'd hope to make the experience fun or fulfilling.

For instance, you want to listen to music, so you click the "Music" icon. Easy! But your music isn't necessarily there. You actually have to follow a green, animated arrow that leads you to a submenu of subfolders. That's where you actually find your content. Once you're within these folders, you can actually skip album to album smoothly (just hitting the track forward button), as the system remembers where your content is and even sets up other virtual folders for organizing by genre or year (depending on your meta data information). But why did we mess with this green arrow garbage? If you know where my music is, just skip the maze of clicks and take me to it.

The problems are beyond mere organization. Following the well-designed home screen, the entire OS is driven by icons that are only identifiable by trial and error. It's frustrating, and I could never just hand this player to one of my parents to use.

It's not just that I'm an Apple fanboy. I loved the Clix—remember the Clix? The Clix was great! Its interface made sense and was pretty to boot. And other devices from Samsung, SanDisk and Creative have had decent showings in spite of the iPod's success. It's just that the S9's interface is alright-looking, but nowhere as quick and convenient to navigate as you'd hope.

But here's the thing—to me, the fatal flaw with the S9 wasn't that strange series of bugs I was able to duplicate on two units, nor was it the confusing directory system. It was that when I held the S9, a pretty decent-looking device, it felt cheap.
It's too light for its size, almost hollow. In the above shot you can see that the S9 is thicker than an iPhone (and way thicker than an iPod touch). And touching a plastic screen (OK, apparently it's glass but it sure as heck feels like plastic) that's not lightning responsive —there's a micro delay after each button press—is simply a second rate experience to the iPhone/iTouch super-responsive glass.
At $240 for 16GB, maybe you thought that the Cowon S9 would be a tempting device to play your Bittorrent collection of movies without conversions. But given limitations with resolutions/format, a disappointing UI and the subpar build, it's hard to know why the S9 makes a solid alternative to the iPod touch. [Cowon]

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<![CDATA[Cowon's S9 Curve PMP Looks Exactly Like it Sounds it Should]]> Cowon's stealing a march on the imminent IFA show by teasing with some info on its new S9 PMP ahead of time: and you know, it's an attractive beastie. The S9 Curve looks to take its name quite literally, having sleek metallic-looking curved edges, and possibly even a curved rear-end if that photo's anything to go by. Inside the case we know there's a 3.3-inch AMOLED touchscreen, capable of 16 million colors, a powerful-seeming 500 MHz CPU, T-DMB, Bluetooth connectivity, media player functions and an electronic dictionary app. It'll also run for 40 hours from just one charge, and has an accelerometer. But there's no info on price or release dates or its storage capacity, as yet. It just looks fab. [PMPToday]

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<![CDATA[Lenovo's S9 and S10 Both Pass FCC Certification Just In Time]]> The Lilliputian IdeaPads from Lenovo are coming, as we know, and now they're a little closer, having passed through the FCC's certification process. This is the final regulatory hurdle the IdeaPad S9 and S10 faced before going on sale in the US and comes just in time, as the duo of subnotebooks are expected to hit shelves next month. [Engadget via SlashGear]

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<![CDATA[Specs and Prices for Lenovo's Ideapad S9 Lite Notebook Hits Web]]> Lenovo recently went official with details on the upcoming Ideapad S10 ultra-portable notebook, and now there's data on a little brother version, the S9 Lite. The S9 will have a slightly smaller screen, at 8.9-inches, with a 300-kilopixel webcam, 512MB of RAM and a 4GB SSD. It's got the same Atom N270 and 945 GSE chipset, though, so it sounds very much like its bigger S10 brother, and comes with Linux and a "multitouch function" trackpad. In three colors, the diminutive PC will cost you $370 upon launch in Hong Kong. [UMPCFever via Engadget]

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<![CDATA[ROKR Z6: Motorola New Music Phone Won't Make Elvis Proud]]>

Old rockers never die. Unless you played for Thin Lizzy. Or Lynyrd Skynyrd. Or bought an original ROKR, the music phone that defined how music phones should never ever be done. If you bought one of those, you probably were dead already or wanted to get shot after a few minutes with it.

Motorola wants to change this (again) with the ROKR Z6, including 64MB of RAM inside and up to 2GB memory expansion slot, Windows Media Player sync and USB 2.0 High Speed connection in a 16mm thick slider phone with dedicated playback keys. Have they finally got it? More information after the jump.

ROKR Z6 Specs

Thin, narrow slider with a multi-modal design and rich colors, materials and finish
2.0 megapixel camera
Supports a variety of audio formats such as MP3, AAC, AAC+, WMA and other popular formats
3.5mm headset jack connection, and a dedicated lock switch
Bluetooth stereo support of Advanced Audio Distribution profile (A2DP) and Audio Video Remote Control Profile (AVRCP)
Internal memory and up to 2 GB of microSD* removable memory for extra storage for music, pictures and other media
USB 2.0 high speed connectivity for fast file transfers and data access
Video capture and playback
CDMA 800/1900, CDMA 1X/ EV-DO, 1900 Mhz receive diversity
Display: 2.0" QVGA with vivid colors
Browser: WAP2.0
BREW: 3.1.4
Messaging via MMS, SMS
Mobile Phone Tools support for PC synch of phonebook, contacts, and media
Integrated Bluetoothâ„¢ Class 2 wireless technology for hands-free connectivity

In other words, nothing new under the sun. Motorola claims their connectivity is better than the competition, transferring a song in 2 to 3 seconds. Whether that's Led Zep's "Stairway to Heaven" or The Sex Pistols' "God Save The Queen" is yet to be known. They are also selling the ROKR S9, a Bluetooth stereo headset that matches the phone styling.

Hopefully, the software will really be better than the previous generations. Otherwise, they don't stand a chance against the Samsungs and Sony Ericssons of this world.

Product page [Motorola]

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<![CDATA[Motorola S9 Bluetooth Headphones are Light, Discreet]]> Like my favorite adult entertainers, the Motorola S9 are very small, lightweight, comfortable and discreet in every fashion imaginable. These Bluetooth stereo headphones can sync up with your MP3 player or cellphone and allows for listening to music or receiving and making calls. Other notable features include integrated touch-controls for navigating through music or making/receiving calls and water-resistance. I would assume the controls are on the backside of the headphones, but it makes me wonder if navigating through music or making/receiving calls would be awkward to do. The S9 headphones will be hitting sometime in the first half of this year.

Motorola S9 Bluetooth Headphones won't weigh you down [Gizmodiva]

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<![CDATA[Nikon Coolpix S9 Reviewed (Verdict: Slim But Satisfying)]]> Announced back in August, this updated Nikon Coolpix S9 is an ultra-slim point-and-shoot for people who want something quick and easy on the go.

Some good news: it's relatively cheap, looks sexy, has an entirely non-protruding lens, a 2.5-inch viewer, decent shutter lag, average flash performance and pretty decent image quality. The bad news is that the battery sucks—you only get around 100 shots from a full charge. Also, there's no optical viewfinder, so you better like using that LCD screen.

Long story short, the Coolpix S9 is a good camera for the people who want a small shooter to carry around "just to have a camera", but not so good for people who want to fiddle with settings to get the best shot.

Nikon Coolpix S9 Digital Camera Review [Nikon Coolpix S9 Digital Camera Review]

Bonus cock pic taken by the Nikon S9 after the jump.

nikoncock.jpg

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