Flash 10.1 to Offer Full Mobile Flash Support with HD Video

If you ingest Android, WebOS, Windows Mobile, Blackberry or Symbian, you module be unbelievably bright to center that Adobe is updating Flash to 10.1 with some enthusiastic features, including FULL Flash hold on your device.

If you ingest iPhone, sorry. No advancement to inform there.

So here’s what Flash 10.1 module effect to offer: flooded Flash with GPU pace so that you crapper endeavor YouTube videos in HD. It module add in hold for accelerometers, multitouch, and gestures. It module also impact for Netbooks as well.

Does this mean you’ll be flourishing to check Hulu on your ambulatory device? Yes, yes it does. On every field smartphone OS eliminate one.

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There’s exclusive digit clean example of information here, and that’s the inactivity time; patch betas module be achievement discover this assemblage for WinMo and WebOS, flooded rollout won’t be attractive locate until mid-2010. Android and Symbian betas module be primeval incoming year.

But still, we’re unbelievably bright to center how much meliorate the ambulatory internet participate module be effort in the rattling nearby future.

And it’s digit more checkmark for some smartphone likewise the iPhone.

via Adobe

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Acer AspireRevo: the Ion-infused unboxing

We just tore the packaging off of Acer’s new AspireRevo nettop and dove into its Ion-powered goodness. The computer is in many ways a product of NVIDIA’s designs, since the Ion-powered nettop reference platform has been a part of the Ion ecosystem for a while, and this Revo apple doesn’t fall from the NVIDIA tree. Still, Acer had to go ahead and build the thing, and it’s a pretty great package all-in-all. We’re still in the preliminaries — the HDMI didn’t work out of the gate, but after swapping back and forth a few times with the VGA plug we were in business — and we’re playing with a potentially buggy “engineering sample,” but hopefully we’ll be able to pull together some cohesive impressions on the thing, and play a bit of Spore while we’re at it. It’s already obviously the fastest Atom-powered device we’ve played with, and while it still pretty much chokes on Hulu and that whole “multitasking” concept, we’re pretty pleased so far.
Gallery: Acer Apire Revo: the Ion-infused unboxing

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Moxi’s spring updates brings PlayOn, DLNA and a little home automation

In Digeo’s latest move into the consumer DVR market it is rolling out first big update since the launch only a few months ago. The list of additions is pretty nice, but our most anticipated feature, the Moxi-mate, is still just “coming soon.” Although all the new features are interesting, the most notable is the DLNA certification which allows your Moxi to play all kinds of media from your PC, including from a PlayOn server. What’s even better is that Digeo is actually throwing in the PlayOn software — famous for its Hulu and Netflix support — for free with the update, which $40 normally. The other new Moxi features users will have access to within the next few days is an expansion of Moxi Net outside its walled garden, as well as a few new home automation tricks that’ll let you take advantage of Z-Wave lights and various IP cameras — also configured via Moxi Net. Believe it or not though, there is actually more, but rather than go on and on covering the Flickr improvements and Rhapsody support, we’ll just provide the entire release after the break.

Gallery: Moxi’s spring update
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Cable companies work to bring new online content to pay-TV subscribers

In an effort to maintain relevancy during a time when online TV viewing is on the rise, a number of big name cable companies are looking to throw in online companion packages to sweeten the pay-TV equation. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that top cable providers (namely Comcast and TWC) and TV networks are looking to assemble a large swath of online programming — some of which has been previously unavailable — and deliver it only to subscribers. As it stands, loads of shows are available right now for free via Hulu and broadcast websites, but some channels without online portals can only be caught via cable. From what we’re gathering, it seems that these operators could be working to bring some of that content to the web, essentially providing a means to tune into a Comcast or TWC lineup without having to be in front of the set-top-box.

Update: Due to some quotes taken out of context, we have revamped our story above to show a clearer picture of the cable companies’ intentions.

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PlayOn media server is out of beta, 14 days to decide if Netflix

PlayOn’s media server software — capable of streaming Internet video from YouTube, Hulu, CBS, Netflix, CNN, ESPN and others to your PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 or other DLNA compliant hardware via a PC — is finally out of beta. Going official means the trial period resets to 14 days for all users, keeping it after that will require $29.99. So tell us, now that Netflix streaming is implemented, bugs have been stomped and Wii support on the way, is it worth the one time payment to keep this service?
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Neuros adds Wiimote support to the LINK


The Neuros LINK set-top was already plenty interesting when it was just a $300 riff on a storageless HTPC capable of full-screen Hulu and YouTube playback, but now that the company’s gone and added experimental Wiimote support, we might just be smitten. It’ll take some work to hook Ninty’s stick to your LINK, but once you do content is just an arm-flail away. Video after the break.

[Thanks, Joe]
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Intel, Adobe plan a chicken in every pot, Flash on every HDTV


Intel’s been talking up the CE 3100 (née Canmore) processor for quite some time now, and with Adobe as its newest partner — late again Yahoo? — pushing HD Flash streams to Internet connected TV’s and set-top boxes. Frankly, we’ve already gotten quite used to YouTube and other online video access in the living room, but with the first Flash Lite-enabled system-on-a-chip due by mid-2009 and everyone and their mom watching TV on Hulu this could be the push that takes online video to the TV mainstream. Still, Intel must know that only Flash support so 2008, we’ll be expecting more widgets to come.
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