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Cell Phones, iPhone, Mobile Software, Downloads, Mobile Phones

VW Launches 2010 GTI Exclusively Via Mobile Phone Game


In an atmosphere of disappearing print magazines, increased TV viewing on the Web, and a tough market for both car buyers and dealers, one of the few successful car companies alive today needs to change the game a bit. So with the introduction of a niche-y hot hatch that isn't even that cheap, Volkswagen hits hard with quick and dirty campaign on everyone's favorite toy -- the iPhone. This morning, Volkswagen became the first auto manufacturer to launch (by launch, we mean advertise) a car solely on the Apple phone. No, it's not an app, but rather, an exclusive, playable, and independent level of iPhone racing game Firement Real Racing, which has already received 70-million downloads since launching back in June.

Available on the iTunes App Store for free, the 'Real Racing GTI' level lets you choose from six different 2010 GTIs and race them on a track laden with VW logos. Unfortunately, it doesn't integrate with the rest of the game, but it does have one killer feature: Players can compete to win one of six limited-edition black GTI MkVI cars, which have special stitching on the floor mats and head rests, carbon-fiber finishes on the doors and mirrors, red calipers on the wheels, and special logos on the front and on the steering wheel (see close-ups of the cars in the slideshow below). In addition, the 2010 GTI's sound system has been upgraded to include full iPod integration (so you can access your full music library on the car's dashboard versus a simple auxiliary connection).

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Cell Phones, Columns, Editor's Picks, BlackBerry, iPhone, Windows Software, Webware, Mobile Software, Mac Software, Reviews, Downloads, Web

Can't Organize? Love to Organize? Either Way, Evernote Can Help.

Switched Download: Evernote

Evernote


What it is:
Evernote is a note-taking tool that lets you store information online and quickly reference it from any Web-connected computer or mobile phone. You can clip parts of Web pages, save text, images, or even hand-written notes. It's a place "in the cloud" to store anything you might need to recall at a later date -- be it a to-do list, meeting notes, Web research, a picture of that wine label you took while on vacation in Napa Valley, or even more sensitive data like difficult-to-remember network keys.

What we like about it: We love that you can use it from pretty much any computer or cell phone. While the Windows and Mac versions let you access and save notes offline to be uploaded the next time you are online, there are also dedicated Evernote apps for iPhone, BlackBerry, Palm's WebOS, and Windows Mobile, not to mention a separate mobile site for cell phones. The regular Web site has a slick interface that easily lets you create and save notes, tag them, and divide them up into separate notebooks. There's also a plug-in that lets you "clip" content from the Web with just one click and then automatically upload it to Evernote. As if all that weren't enough, you can also e-mail or tweet notes to Evernote, where they will automatically be added to your collection.

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Editor's Picks, Windows Software, Reviews, Social Networking

Digsby Merges IM with Social Networks



Digsby


What it does: Digsby is a multi-protocol chat client that connects you with friends on various instant-messaging networks, including Yahoo!, AIM, and Google Talk.

What we like about it:
In addition to supporting nearly every instant-messaging platform on earth (including Facebook Chat), Digsby can also check your e-mail and pull in updates and messages from Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter.

All of Digsby's functions work as advertised. Transferring files to AIM friends was flawless, our Twitter status updated correctly, and we were able to preview Gmail right from the application (though composing message requires opening a browser window). And like any IM client worth its weight in RAM, Digsby organizes chats into a single tabbed window so your desktop is never overrun with conversations.

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Audio/Video, Car Tech, Cell Phones, Computers, TV

Washington, D.C. First to Get Free Mobile TV

D.C. The First to Get Free Mobile TV
Mobile TV has been struggling to get off the ground here in the U.S., despite enjoying widespread success in Asia. Verizon and AT&T have each experimented with a subscription-based solution using a technology called Media-Flo, but neither companies have been able to get much traction in the states. Much of this is due to a lack of support from broadcasters, which have thrown their weight behind a competing technology called MPH (Mobile Pedestrian Handheld) TV.

MPH TV will have soon have its big debut, getting a full deployment in Washington D.C. this summer. According to the Open Mobile Video Coalition, the nation's capital will serve as a perfect test market for the new technology, due in no small part to its abundance of tech-savvy citizens and policy-making politicians. Although there is currently little hardware available to take advantage of the service, a number of companies may soon be jumping onboard. Dell has said it will include MPH tuners in upcoming netbooks, Samsung and LG will be hocking MPH-enabled phones, and Kenwood has said it will develop in-car entertainment systems that make use
of the new technology.

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iPod, iPhone, Mobile Software

DailyFinance iPhone App Dazzles With Design, Features

Do you find the iPhone's stock widget a bit anemic on features? Tired of shuffling through multiple apps for finance news, stock reports, and keeping track of personal portfolios? Then we highly suggest you download the just released DailyFinance (iTunes link) app. This one-stop application culls the best features of various finance apps, and presents them in an exceptionally handsome interface on par with some of the best we've seen on the iPhone/iPod Touch.

In terms of features, DailyFinance presents a plethora of financial information ranging from general market changes to currency adjustments to commodity prices. Best of all, all the stats are updated in real time, giving you a live view of the world markets in flux. You can, of course, drill down further and view highly detailed facts and figures for any given stock. For instance, a quick search for Apple's stock (AAPL) immediately shows today's low and high price (as well as yesterday's), the company's volume and market cap, and current earnings.

Switching over to the News tab shows any AAPL-related news stories aggregated from over 3,000 sources, and clicking on one opens the corresponding news story within the app itself rather than launching the Safari browser, providing a seamless user experience. Each stock also has a Charts tab that produces an easy-to-read graph of a stock's performance over a set amount of time, from one day up to five years. Even these charts show a fine attention to detail, with lows and highs marked by red and green lines on the x-axis, giving you an easy color-based way to analyze a stock's overall trend.

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Sony Reader Gets 500,000 New Book Titles From Google


It's a good time to be a Sony Reader owner.

Google has just made 500,000 titles from its massive public-domain book collection accessible to users of Sony's popular e-book reader. This is the first time Google has made these resources available to such a device, effectively pushing Sony's Reader past Amazon's Kindle (which offers about 240,000 titles) in terms of books available for the device.

All of the public-domain titles were published before 1923, but include many classics of fiction and non-fiction. It's a big day for literature lovers everywhere, since you can now finally unfetter H.P. Lovecraft's "The Call of Cthulhu" from the Google-hosted PDF version and take it with you in the new Electronic Publication Format (EPUB). Your move, Amazon. [From: thestreet]


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Cell Phones, Google, Webware

Google Voice Launches Today


Google has a vast catalog of wonderful, or at least potentially wonderful, applications. Unfortunately, for every top-notch, constantly-updating product like Gmail or Google Docs, there are plenty of others languishing in desperate need of attention, like Google Talk. But if there was one product that we thought most desperately needed attention, it was GrandCentral.

GrandCentral was an online phone service Google purchased a couple of years ago. Users signed up and received a free phone number. Calls to this number could be set to ring any of your pre-existing phones, like a home or cell phone, and new numbers could be added as needed. This meant that, in theory, your GrandCentral number would be the last phone number you'd ever need to give out. But, the service went largely untouched after Google bought it. Today, Google is finally trying to make good on the promise of the service by launching Google Voice.

Google Voice is essentially GrandCentral by another name, but with some new, very welcome features. It seems that Google Voice is designed to work with your Google Contacts (though we're still waiting for access to the service to confirm this), so there should be no need to create a separate address book. Using groups created in Contacts, you will be able to set your Google Voice number to send different callers to different phones (for example, when a coworker calls, your office line and cell phone will ring, but not your home phone).

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Computers, Windows Software, Mac Software

Best Free Screensavers for Your Computer


We know we told you to ditch them just a few short days ago, but we miss screensavers already.

The days of flying toasters and text crawls (with the name of your crush scrolling across the screen) are behind us. Instead of watching an armada of winged cooking appliances zoom across the screen of our idle computers, most of us stick with the power saving blank screen these days.

But you can add a little spice to your computer's down time by downloading any of the free screensavers still floating around the Web. URLesque collected 15 of the best, and we strongly suggest you follow the read link and check out the list. Just in case, we hand-selected our five favorites and put them in the gallery below. Enjoy! [From: Urlesque]



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Computers

Online Game Recreates Heroic Hudson River Plane Landing


Naturally, you've heard the story of US Air Flight 1549, which was successfully crash-landed into the Hudson by a dedicated and amazing crew. That crew got its 15 minutes of fame at the opening ceremonies before Super Bowl XLIII, but now you can play the hero yourself in a free, Web-based Flash game that lets you re-create the challenging landing.

'Hero on the Hudson' was created quickly by Orb Games Limited, supposedly to "remind everyone about this miraculous event," but we're also thinking that selling a few more advertisements was also on people's minds. Either way, the 1.5 million plays the game has received in its first week is serious Internet traffic.

The game was deliberately made to be ridiculously simple (it actually took us three tries to crash), but if you still want to give it a shot, just start clicking above! [From: Gadling and Propeller]

Do you play games online?



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Computers

Match.com Launches Free Dating Site

Match.com Launches Free Dating Site
It's kind of amazing to us that pay-for Internet dating sites have survived at all. Between MySpace, Facebook, Craigslist, and the myriad of free straightforward dating sites (like Plentyoffish, OkCupid, and Mingle2), that Match.com and eHarmony are still going is quite surprising.

Match.com is hedging its bets in the deflating economy by unveiling its new free dating service, Down to Earth. Being new on the scene, Down to Earth doesn't have the user base that Match.com has, but it does offer a RealRatings system to keep members honest. After meeting a person, you'll be able to rank their profile and photos on a scale of one star (she stole this photo from Playboy) to five stars (his nose hair really is that long) based on its accuracy.

We can't help but feel the writing is on the wall for pay-for dating services, but then again we assumed they would have bitten the dust long ago. And you know what they say, "when you assume..." [From: WalletPop]

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Computers

Teacher Confiscates Linux Discs, Claims There is No Free Software



Let us just say that we hate IM-speak and Webby abbreviations, but being that this is a family-friendly publication, a simple "WTF" will have to suffice for our reaction on this one.

Our minds are really blown by this:

A middle school teacher, Karen, had a mini-meltdown when she spotted a student showing off the capabilities of his Linux-powered laptop and handing out Linux discs provided by HeliOS, a organization dedicated to putting low-cost, Linux-powered PC in the hands of under-privileged children. She confiscated the CDs and set out to make sure the evil man behind this free software was prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

When she landed on Ken Starks, founder of HeliOS, she sent him a tersely worded e-mail. Here are some of the absurd highlights:
"I am not sure what you are doing is legal. No software is free and spreading that misconception is harmful."

"I will research this as time allows and I want to assure you, if you are doing anything illegal, I will pursue charges as the law allows."

"I admire your attempts in getting computers in the hands of disadvantaged people but putting Linux on these machines is holding our kids back."

"I am sure if you contacted Microsoft, they would be more than happy to supply you with copies of an older version of Windows and that way, your computers would actually be of service to those receiving them..."

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Computers, iPhone

McDonald's to Offer Free Wi-Fi?

free wi-fi at mcdonald's

As we've often lamented, there simply isn't enough free or open Wi-Fi access in public spaces anymore. It's rare that you'll find a hot-spot that either doesn't require a password or some kind of fee to access it, making the prevalent use of Wi-Fi-enabled laptops, MP3 players, smart phones, and other wireless devices somewhat difficult (we wouldn't care, except that certain gadgets, such as the MacBook Air, actually require the availability of a much-hyped Wi-Fi hotspot to connect, at least without an adapter).

So we were happy when we heard that AT&T just bought public-Wi-Fi provider Wayport, which operates about 20,000 wireless hotspots in airports, hotels (Marriott, Wyndham, Four Seasons) and restaurants (McDonald's). Why? Because, as Mashable points out, many avid laptop users are hoping that AT&T will offer the same deal to McDonald's customers that it offers to Starbucks customers, which is two hours of free Wi-Fi per day to anyone with an AT&T iPhone or BlackBerry, a Starbucks Card, a T-Mobile Wi-Fi-enabled phone or T-Mobile Hotspot account, or AT&T broadband service at home. (McDonald's already offers free wireless access to the Zune Marketplace for Microsoft Zune owners.)

Presumably that means that McDonald's might soon be offering a prepaid buyer's card along the lines of the Starbucks Card (which only needs to be used once a month to keep the free stuff going). Many of the blogs out there seem to think free Wi-Fi at McDonald's is a good thing, but we don't know the last time we wanted to mix our greasy Big-Mac-and-French-Fry-smeared hands and our pristine laptops (not to mention fingerprint-prone iPhone touchscreens).

And honestly, with the price of Quarter Pounders (not to mention Venti Lattes) lately, we're just as keen to pony up the $7.95- $21.95 a month fee for Boingo Wireless, which gives us unlimited access to not only Wayport and Boingo-affiliated wireless hotspots around the world, but also those of T-Mobile and AT&T.

After all, who actually plans to go to McDonald's? Isn't it usually a spontaneous, reckless binge that you fully regret later? And while we're on the subject, would you rather work or surf the Web in McDonald's or Starbucks? Do tell! [From: Mashable and AOL Money & Finance]

Cameras, Mac Software

'Poladroid' Adds Vintage Polaroid Look to Your Photos

Shake it like a... well, you know. Since switching to digital, we've often missed the look and feel of prints from our old Polaroid cameras. Sure, you can boot up Photoshop and employ a set of filters and level adjustments to achieve the Polaroid look with the washed out colors and white borders, or you can check out the new Poladroid software.

Once you open the app, drag your photos onto the Polaroid camera icon, and you'll hear that familiar Polaroid click sound. A mini print will pop up on your screen that will lack a recognizable image, just like the real thing. Over time, the picture bleeds into the frame -- it takes about a minute or two to see a fully developed image (an x appears on the bottom of the image once it's ready). Double click on the prints at any time to save the Poladroidized images to your desktop.

It's a great concept, but the execution still needs some work. The software is slow (yes, the original Polaroid took time to develop, which is part of the charm, but the software seemed to cause our computer to hang several times), and the novelty of the interface wears off after the first few picture developments. Looking to apply the effect to a lot of your photos? It's going to take awhile.

We threw a couple of photos we had sitting around onto the app, and added the results below -- check out flickr to see more results from around the Web. For now, the software is Mac only, but a Windows app is apparently in development. Still, despite the sluggish feel, the pictures often turn out sufficiently vintage, and the app is definitely worth the free download. [From: TUAW]

Computers

New OpenOffice 3.0 Does Everything Microsoft Office Does -- For Free

Free OpenOffice 3.0 Releasing TodayWhen it comes to productivity software, it's hard to cover all the bases better than Microsoft's Office suite. It handles writing letters, tracking numbers in spreadsheets, making presentations, and even creating simple databases for archiving large amounts of data. It's the worldwide standard -- but it isn't cheap. A full copy with all the bells and whistles can set you back nearly $700 (unless you're a student, in which case hellooooo discount), a pretty big ask when the competition does all that too and does it for free. OpenOffice.org is that competition, and a new release, 3.0, is set to release today.

OpenOffice.org includes five separate applications for handling written documents, spreadsheets, presentations, drawings, and databases. The new release provides some usability enhancements for all the tools, adds some support for more languages, fixes a slew of bugs, and, perhaps most importantly, adds the ability to read in files produced by Microsoft's latest Office: 2007. That means this free online software sets up nicely against the decidedly not-so-free alternative, giving those who lack the funds, or who are just looking for something different, a legal and comprehensive alternative. Hey, even the launch party for the release is free and open to anyone -- anyone who happens to be in Paris on Monday night, that is. [From: Yahoo!]

Audio/Video, Computers, TV, iPhone

YouTube Starts Streaming Full-Length TV Shows

In its short, three-year Full CBS Episodes Coming to YouTubehistory, YouTube has used its short-form videos to build itself into the biggest player in the online video world. Strictly 10-minutes-or-less had been the rule for video length. But recently, the site has been straying away from that limitation, and now is fully taking a step toward lengthier content, by signing a deal with CBS to stream full episodes of TV shows on the site.

YouTube's full-length CBS offerings launched over the weekend. Shows include classic series like 'MacGyver' and 'Start Trek' as well as edited versions of racier shows such as 'Californication' and 'Dexter from CBS-owned premium channel Showtime. YouTube has been having problems of late selling ads on its shorter videos, which is presumably one of the reasons why it's made the switch to show more advertiser-friendly long-form content.

We took a quick look and the quality of the video is high. Plus, you can watch this stuff on cell phones and iPhones (for free), which makes it a bit more attractive than, say, a site like NBC's Hulu, which is inaccessible to most cell phones. [From: YouTube via The New York Times]

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CNET provides the latest tech news, unbiased reviews, videos, podcasts, software, and downloads, making tech products easy to find, understand and use.

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