Portable Video

Utilities|Multimedia and Graphics|Games|Network and Internet|Cellphones|Business|Shell and Desktop|Misc. Gadgets|Web Authoring|Programming|Laptops|Networking|Portable Audio|Gaming|Portable Video|Information Management|Digital Cameras|Handhelds|Email Tools|Home Entertainment|Peripherals|Robots|HDTV|CES|Displays|Storage|Desktops|Transportation|Wireless|Household|GPS|Announcements|Blogging|Themes|OS|Developer|Beta|Wearables|Palm Pilot|Media PCs|Office|Security|Tablet PCs|Features|Software|Productivity|Photo|Ask|Podcasts|Design|Search|Meta|VoIP|P2P|Finance|BlueHost|Interviews|InmotionHosting|SeaDVD.com|

Creative announces Zen Mosaic, looks like bad Mondrian

Creative’s got yet another on the way: the Zen Mosaic, which will have a 1.8-inch display, 2, 4, or 8GB capacities, FM tuner, speakers, MP3 / WMA / WAV / Audible codec support, and 32 hours of battery life. They’re apparently starting in Singapore and working their way over, but they shouldn’t top $200 when they’re eventually announced for the US.

[Thanks, Rube]

Read - Announced details on the player [Via EpiZenter]
Read - First hands-on

Chinavasion’s “world’s thinnest” MP4 player just may be accurate in name

Chinavasion isn’t known for offering up cutting-edge gadgetry — far from it, to be honest — but the MP4 player known only as the CVSJ-1304-4GB is actually fairly notable. According to the dodgy specifications, the $39.55 device checks in at just 4.5-millimeters thick, which is certainly thinner than the other so-called “world’s thinnest” DAP. Of course, this may only be true due to the “MP4″ moniker, seeing as most units not created and sold exclusively in China are called “MP3″ players. Semantics aside, the unit also includes a 1.8-inch display with a 160 x 128 resolution, a curious 2.5-millimeter headphone jack, a USB 2.0 port and a rechargeable battery. So, do any of you have a competitor that’s a hair thinner? Our hunch is yes.

[Via PMP Today]

Zune Guy fed up with Zune, seeks to cover up tattoos

Say it ain’t so! America’s most loyal advocate for Microsoft’s Zune is apparently throwing in the towel. Of course, we should warn you that this could very well be a simple ploy for attention, but if the man keeps his word, he will soon be covering his Zune tattoos with… something else. Curiously, he didn’t say whether or not he would be playing the traitor card and picking up some sort of iPod, but considering that more people have seen this guy’s body art in the wild than actual Zunes, the general public should know soon enough. You fought a good fight, Zune Guy, but consider yourself expelled from The Social.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Adobe wastes time/money/effort, gives its Media Player old, new content

adobe media player flashpoint
Adobe just added new video content to its AIR-based Media Player, but it all pretty much sucks in one form or another. The Adobe Media Player is a slick media browser that can play and subscribe to videos from the web, and it also provides somewhat high-resolution content from Adobe’s media partners such as MTVN and Comedy Central.

Despite the fact that the player is very visually appealing and easy to navigate, it’s just not that useful. It’s possible to use any regular, free browser such as Firefox to watch online video content, allowing web-travelers to avoid the installation of an extra app. As a result, the main reason for installing the app (unless you really, really like the subscription feature) is to watch the 25,000 videos provided by Adobe.

And that’s exactly what’s wrong here. Adobe’s video library is still weak, and most good of the good TV shows aren’t full episodes but rather short clips. Furthermore, the full videos Adobe is adding aren’t current TV hits like Lost or Battlestar Galactica. Instead, Adobe partnered with CBS and Sony to add tons of clips and a few movies/episodes from old stuff like Men in Black, Jerry Maguire, The Love Boat, Beverly Hilly 90210, Family Ties, and even The Price is Right. They might as well call the app something to the tune of Adobe Senior TV On Demand.

Sure, Adobe has the money to keep it up and running, but why bother if the company isn’t bringing its best to the table? Why not partner with Hulu and create an official, fully functional Hulu AIR app instead?

Fonts Personified: Ever wondered what Windings would look like?

See more funny videos and funny pictures at CollegeHumor.

Have you ever wondered what Comic Sans, Times New Romans, or Futura fonts would look, sound, and act like if they were people? Yeah, neither have we. But after watching the video above, we can’t believe the thought had never occurred to us. This video from College Humor probably qualifies as the funniest thing we’ve ever seen. At least today.

The short film also raises some serious issues though, like who the heck comes up with the names for these fonts? And has anybody ever used wingdings for anything? Why exactly is that font taking up space in Windows?

[via Gizmodo]

Cowon’s 5-inch P5 touchscreen media player brings the haptic happy sauce

Cowon just loosed raw PMP sex into the marketplace with its new P5 media player. We’re talking 800 x 480 pixels spread across a 5-inch touchscreen display featuring Cowon’s Widget Haptic UI riding a 700MHz RMI Alchemy AU1250 processor. The P5 packs standard USB and USB-host jacks, T-DMB broadcast TV, FM radio, Bluetooth, TV-out (component, S-Video, and composite), stereo speakers, and up to 80GB of storage in a 138.8 x 88.5 x 20.0-mm slab of “Luxury Hairline Metal” (which sounds like brushed aluminum to us). It comes pre-installed with a Win CE Internet browser (a clumsy WiFi dongle can be added via the USB jack), MS Office document viewer, electronic dictionary, and support for AVI, ASF, WMV, MPG, OGM, DivX, Xvid, MPEG4, WMV9, MP3, WMA, AC3 media formats with a battery capable of about 9-hours of video or 14-hours of straight audio. No price announced but the P5 should hit Korean hands on the 29th of July in choice of black, red, or platinum.

Gallery: Cowon’s 5-inch P5 touchscreen media player brings the haptic happy sauce

[Via PMP Today and I4U]

Gemei gets saucy with the touchscreen X780 PMP

It was inevitable. We just knew Gemei couldn’t hold its own forever, and now it seems the resistance to copying other interfaces has finally failed. The all-too-familiar X780 comes equipped with a 3-inch 400 x 280 resolution display, 4GB of internal memory, a miniSD expansion slot, FM tuner, built-in microphone, TV output and an unspecified emulator for gaming it up. As expected, this thing can handle just about every format known to man including WMA, APE, FLAC, MP3, WAV, ASF, MPEG, AVI, FLV, VOD, PNG, JPG, etc. No one’s talking about pricing just yet, but we have a feeling it’ll be somewhere between cheap and really cheap.

[Via PMPToday]

Make your movies mobile with DVD Catalyst Free

DVD Catalyst
Want to watch your DVD collection on your iPod, iPhone, PSP, Smartphone, PDA, or Zune? DVD Catalyst is a simple Windows application that can rip a 2 hour movie from your DVD and apply video compression so that the file fits on your portable device’s storage card and still looks halfway decent on your mobile screen.

DVD Catalyst offers one-click DVD ripping and encoding. Just launch the program, select your portable device, slide a DVD into your disc drive, and click the little green button. The program will choose the best resolution, bit rate, and other settings for you.

Up until recently, only a commercial version of DVD Catalyst was available. But now there’s a free version with a limited feature set. If you want advanced features like the ability to set 2-pass conversions, split videos into multiple parts, or adjust the volume and framerates, you might want to shell out $15 to $20 for a full version. But if you’re looking for a quick and easy way to cram a few dozen DVD movies on your iPod, DVD Catalyst Free might be all you need.

[via Palm InfoCenter]

Creative ZEN X-Fi reviewed, but mostly just taken apart

Not a ton’s changed with Creative’s ZEN X-Fi — which we all well know at this point — so for right now we’re just paying closer attention to its innards all broken out like a science fair project. Careful, the teardown link below contains graphic representations of disrobed consumer electronics.

[Thanks, Josh and Mindy]

Read - Zen X-Fi teardown
Read - Anything But iPod’s review
Read - Pocketables review

Amazon to launch streaming video service today

Amazon Unbox
Amazon is expected to launch a streaming video service today that will either compliment or replace the company’s Amazon Unbox download store. The New York Times reports that Amazon Video on Demand will let users begin watching movies the instant they click they place an order. It’s not clear from the article, but it sounds like the new service is browser-based, whereas Amazon Unbox requires users to download and install Windows-only software.

About 40,000 films and movies from all the major studios will be available for rental or purchase. If you’ve purchased a title, it will be stored in your Amazon account, allowing you to watch the movie or TV show from any computer.

Amazon is also working with hardware makers including Sony to provide access to the video store on television sets and set top boxes.

The service will only be available to a limited number of users today, with a wider rollout scheduled soon. If you visit the Amazon Unbox landing page, you’ll notice a little button on the right side of the screen asking you to sign up for a beta. We’re betting that this is how you get early access.

  • Categories

  • Meta

  • Sponsors