Sponsored
Techradar |
- Twitter hands-over users' info in libel case
- Buying Guide: Best iPhone alarm clock dock under £100
- Review: LG ST600 Smart TV Upgrader
- Review: Panasonic TX-P42GT30B
- In Depth: Like Flight Control? Then you'll love these games
Twitter hands-over users' info in libel case Posted: 29 May 2011 05:03 AM PDT Twitter has bowed to legal pressure and given-up the details of five of its users, as part of a landmark libel case. The social networking site has been ordered to hand-over the details in an attempt to unmask an anonymous tweeter, accused of posting libelous messages about members of South Tyneside council. The order could have implications in the controversy which saw scandal-hit, Premier League footballer Ryan Giggs named on Twitter despite an injunction banning his naming. Giggs' alleged affair with a reality TV star was later revealed in parliament, but his lawyers are believed to be chasing the details of thousands of individual Twitter users who initially breached the court order. Californication Twitter last week insisted that it would not protect its members in the face of legal demands from the authorities, which means the South Tyneside case could aid the efforts of the Welshman's legal team. Lawyers for the councilors who claim to have been libeled by an anonymous poster known only as "Mr Monkey" took their efforts to a California court, which has jurisdiction over Twitter Media lawyer Mark Stephens told Sky News: "Ryan Giggs' lawyers went to the High Court in London which doesn't have jurisdiction over Twitter in California. "Whereas the 9th Circuit court where the Tyneside council went in California does have jurisdiction over Twitter, so Twitter had no alternative but to hand over the material." Be careful what you Tweet, guys. Ill-behaved, rich celebrities are going after your freedom of speech and Twitter isn't going to shield you. |
Buying Guide: Best iPhone alarm clock dock under £100 Posted: 29 May 2011 05:00 AM PDT With so much technology available, it could take over your whole house if you're not careful. Just look at your bedside table - you've probably got an alarm clock there, your iPhone charger wire will be lying around somewhere (if it hasn't fallen down the back) and you may even have a radio. Now wouldn't it be good to do away with all that clutter and replace it with a single sleek bit of kit that does all those jobs? That's where the dock comes in, and we've put five of the best iPhone alarm clock docks through their paces so you can choose your perfect bedside companion. We tested each one for real-world usability, looking at things like how easy it is to find the snooze button when you flail your sleepy arm in its vague direction in the morning. They don't all have identical sets of features, so you won't get a DAB or FM radio in all of them, and others have neat features such as multiple alarms or twin docking ports, so you and your partner can both charge your phones as you sleep and then wake up at different times if needed. But remember that even if the dock you go for doesn't have a radio, there are plenty of apps to give you these abilities on the App Store, so don't let this be a deal-breaker if you think the dock suits you otherwise. Some models also have remote controls, so if you're really lazy you can flip through your music collection without even needing to reach your arm across. And while they're all models that plug into the mains, you need never be worried about missing your alarm if there's a power cut because you can put backup batteries in every single one of them. This means the beeper will still go off, even if there's been a blackout. Sleep tight! How we selected... Having a digital clock by your bed was a must here, as was an alarm to wake you in the morning. But aside from those key features, we went for a range of models, prices and sizes so there would be something to suit everyone's needs, budgets and space constraints. iHome iP88 - £75 Logitech Pure-Fi Express Plus - £65 Memorex Mini Alarm Clock Radio - £45 Sony XDR-DS12iP - £80 XtremeMac Luna SST - £82 Test one: Real life use Being woken up is possibly the least pleasurable part of the day, so you don't want an alarm clock that's going to make your mood worse by being tricky to use. To make sure you get up smiling, we put our docks through rigorous early morning tests. (We are that dedicated.) When you're half asleep, fumbling around looking for a teeny-weeny button to shut the alarm up will only make you cross - you want something big and prominent. All five obliged; our only complaint being with the Logitech's front-mounted dial - hitting it edges the dock backwards until one day you knock it over the edge. Another essential feature we wanted was a screen dimmer so we could keep the room dark at night. The Logitech is the only one without a specific dimmer control, though its display darkens when you switch it off. All five have volume controls for the iPod, but we were keen to see buttons on the dock to play, pause and skip tracks - having to unlock your iPhone to jump to the next song is too fiddly. As for using the rest of the buttons and wheels, let's look at each dock in turn, starting with the iHome. Its twin dials are nice in theory, but the way they're set up - a play/pause button for the respective iPods at the centre of each, but only the left dial controlling the volume - is pretty counter-intuitive. The tops of the dials aren't grippy enough either, meaning they slip under your finger, especially if you've got dry skin. It's also missing controls to skip to the next or previous song. The designers of the Sony dock have crammed a whopping 27 buttons onto its two top surfaces, and frankly, that's way too many. While some are easy to find, such as the full iPod controls, others aren't. Less is more, especially early in the morning! Logitech has heeded those words, with just five buttons and a dial to set the alarm or alter the volume. Alright, there are no music controls beyond shuffle and repeat, and it doesn't need lots of buttons because its features are limited, but we still applaud this kind of simplicity. XtremeMac has also done a good job at keeping it simple. The bare minimum of buttons is tempered only by the fact that there's little in the way of divide between them - perhaps a bit too much style over substance - but it's easy enough to use, despite the lack of controls to skip through your songs. XtremeMac also makes two free apps you can install on your iPhone or iPod touch to control the Luna SST from your iOS device when it's docked. We liked the friendly iOS interface, but you don't get much in the way of added features. And then there's the little Memorex, the only one that realises your iPhone or iPod needs to lie down just as much as you do. A little rest supports whatever device you dock. There are full iPod controls, including a superb volume dial, which you also use to alter various settings. For a bedside dock, it's pretty darn close to perfect. Results iHome iP88 - 2/5 Test two: Features Not all alarm clocks are equal, and we've got a really mixed bag here as far as special features go. First and foremost, the wake-up function: how many alarms can you set and how does the dock raise you from your slumber? Well, all but the Logitech can do so using the songs on your iPod or iPhone or their built-in radio (the Sony even has a DAB one). The Sony and XtremeMac docks have two alarms, while the iHome lets you set three. This is useful if you and your partner/sibling/whoever else you share a room with have to get up at different times, but remember you can still set more alarms on your iPhone. Another neat feature of the iHome and Sony is that you can set your alarm to be for all days, weekdays or weekends, so you'll never again be woken up at 7am on Saturday because you forgot to turn the alarm off when you stumbled into bed the night before. All bar the Memorex have mini remote controls, and while this is novel, you're never really going to be so far away from a bedside dock that you can't reach it easily. One thing that drew our eye to the iHome was its twin docking ports, so that you can charge two iOS devices at the same time and be woken by the tunes from either. Also of note here is the XtremeMac's left speaker, which can detach from the unit and be placed elsewhere in your room (perhaps on the other side of the bed). Again, a nice idea, although it does mean the snooze button may no longer be within your reach. You have been warned. As we mentioned previously, all of the clocks here will take backup batteries so you needn't worry about power cuts. The Logitech will even run off its batteries, though you do need six of them. Results iHome iP88 - 4/5 Test three: Audio quality Getting amazing sound isn't the most important consideration when it comes to a bedside speaker dock, but equally you don't want your tunes to sound awful. And they needn't, because there's good stuff here. Strike off the iHome iP88, which sounds flat and a bit tinny - not for the audio aficionados. We weren't expecting much from the Memorex given its small size, but were pleasantly surprised by the detail in the sound. Its sideways-facing speakers also give good stereo separation. It's the same for the XtremeMac, although its sound wasn't the best we've ever heard. The Sony and Logitech are a cut above, the latter being our favourite. The sound is full-bodied and the bass deep and well-defined - we'd listen to it all day. Results iHome iP88 - 2/5 And the best iPhone alarm clock dock is... Memorex Mini Alarm Clock Radio £45 This cute and unassuming little unit does the job near enough perfectly Had this been about sound alone, the Logitech would have won, with the Sony not far behind. But these docks aren't meant to rock your party or be the soundtrack to your cooking - they're to wake you up with a smile every morning. Not that we ignored sound quality altogether, but we focused on usability. That's why we discounted the Sony - great and feature-packed though it is - as being too complex for a bedside dock. The Logitech hit the other extreme of not quite packing in enough features, especially the lack of iPod controls or using your music as the alarm. We liked the iHome because of the twin docks and triple alarms, but it wasn't as easy to use as the Memorex, the sound quality was inferior and the whole thing just felt a bit cheap despite its relatively high price. The XtremeMac Luna SST is well-made and as far as features go, it's pretty good; the only thing that really lets it down is audio quality. The Memorex does pump out much better sound than the XtremeMac, but there are other reasons we love it, too. Its controls strike the perfect balance between too little and too much, and the volume dial is excellent. If only the rear-mounted dimmer switch was slightly more accessible and the music controls had raised dots on them, this would be inching towards a five-star rating. A second alarm would be nice too, but as we said, it's not a deal-breaker since you can set more on your iOS device. We also love the Memorex's diminutive footprint. Bedside tables are often pretty small, and this is by far the least space-hungry of the five (although if you detach the XtremeMac's second speaker, the remaining unit is only marginally bigger). And just in case you hadn't noticed, it's also the cheapest by a long way. |
Review: LG ST600 Smart TV Upgrader Posted: 29 May 2011 04:00 AM PDT The LG ST600 Smart TV upgrader is a little black box that functions as a means of enjoying the multimedia functionality offered by LG's current 'Smart TV' Connected TV platform on any TV with an HDMI. Its compact (11cm x 11cm) minimal stylings should fit in nicely with most black TVs. It has no onboard storage, instead it gives you a USB port on the right-hand side (next to a 'Reset' button) in which to connect drives of your own on top of DLNA networking functionality. At the rear sits an HDMI, an optical S/PDIF with AC3 support, and an Ethernet port. A small but serviceable 'Magic' remote control is well laid out with buttons catering for most key functions and doubles up as a touchpad for mouse-style control of the included web browser, though this is not quite as responsive as we'd like. If you have an iPod Touch/iPhone or Android phone you can download a free LG Remote app that includes a QWERTY keyboard from the relevant online 'stores'. The metallic-look hi-res menus falter occasionally in their use of English, but have a clean Apple-like finish to them as well as being sensibly organised. Adding to the slickness is the fact that artwork for any files you have is pulled from the web where available. Wi-Fi is built in, so need to shell out extra for a dongle and getting it working with our Virgin-issued wireless-n Netgear router was simply a matter of holding in the latter's WPS button and selecting 'Dynamic IP' in the options. The ST600 will play a healthy range of media formats with slideshows for photos and four levels of speed offered for video navigation. It handled most in our library with the exception of one MKV HD video clip, though picture performance was better via Ethernet than streamed wirelessly. VoD offerings comprise YouTube, BBC iPlayer and rentable movies from Acetrax and you can browse photos on Picasa and listen to internet radio via Vtuner. While it benefits from HD streaming and the big-screen interface, iPlayer video proved slow to load and navigate on our test sample. In addition, an LG app store promises games, entertainment and news but very few 'freebies' are included (Facebook and Twitter are surprisingly absent). You also get a selection of games from Accedo. Gripes aside, the ST600 is one of the better value products of its type, and manages to make armchair web browsing less of a chore than on similar products |
Posted: 29 May 2011 03:30 AM PDT The GT30 range is Panasonic's secret weapon in its continuing war with 3D LED TV vendors. The Panasonic TX-P42GT30B is more affordable than the brand's headline VT30 models yet shares much the same technology, this set oozes enticing functionality. With both Freeview HD and Freesat HD (DVB-S/S2) tuners, it takes just 17 seconds to tune in the standard Freesat channel assortment. More adventurous viewers can journey outside this environment by selecting the TV's 'Other Satellite' tuning menu. From here you can tune via other presets selecting from Astra2/Eurobird, Astra 1, Hot Bird or 'Any Satellite' and filtering FTA or pay channels. We opted to tune in the free stuff on Astra2/Eurobird. This took about 18 minutes but garnered 329 FTA TV channels and 80 radio stations. The downside is that there's no EPG data to accompany this. You can only select as many or as few as you want and shunt them into a scrollable channel listing. The set also provides a manual tuning option, wherein you can specify frequency, polarisation and symbol rate. DiSEqC, however, isn't supported. Net gain A wide range of network functionality includes Panasonic's new online VIERA Connect IPTV portal with access to the BBC iPlayer, YouTube, Daily Motion, Ustream, Daily Motion, Shoutcast, Skype and Picasa and others. There are also social media apps for Facebook or Twitter, plus a growing selection of games within its apps market. Alternatively, you can stream media across your own home network from PC or NAS and access content from the brand's 2011 DIGA DVD and Blu-ray recorders. File compatibility is generous. There's network streaming support for AVC HD, AVIs and MKV-wrapped content, as well as MP3, AAC and WMA music files. High-end picture performance 2D picture quality is excellent. Black levels are profound and colour reproduction is bold yet believable. We also noted that the 3D crosstalk that was evident on last year's models has all but vanished from this season's screens. The TX-P42GT30 exhibits next to no double-imaging, even on 3D Blu-rays with known problem sequences. Still, we must confess to being slightly confounded by Panasonic's decision not to bundle any 3D glasses with the set (its active shutter specs cost around £110). If you're after a cheap PVR option the set allows you to timeshift and record onto a USB-connected hard drive. Having a single tuner brings obvious recording restrictions – once you've started to record one programme you can't switch to another – but the system works well enough. Verdict Overall, this 42-inch screen is extremely impressive from both a feature and picture perspective. If you're looking for a 'smart' 3D TV with superior performance it is definitely one to shortlist. |
In Depth: Like Flight Control? Then you'll love these games Posted: 29 May 2011 03:00 AM PDT Part of the reason Flight Control has been a massive hit is because it offered something entirely suited to touchscreens, rather than try to force control conventions from traditional consoles onto an iOS game. The path-drawing concept that underpins the entire game, with you guiding aircraft to runways and helipads, is intuitive for newcomers, but the game also quickly ramps up the challenge to ensure hardcore gamers aren't left bored. As with any iOS game that spends a number of months troubling the charts and goes on to sell millions, plenty of brazen copycats subsequently appeared. But when it comes to path-drawing games, some of the better efforts inspired by Firemint's classic extend Flight Control's core gameplay in interesting ways or mash up path-drawing with other genres to create something fresh. That said, if you're a Flight Control nut and have an iPad, Firemint's own Flight Control HD (£2.99, iPad) should be your first port of call. Unlike most 'HD' games, Flight Control HD doesn't merely provide an iPad-sized version of an iPhone title - although you do get suitably chunky versions of the original five iPhone maps, which are quite a bit easier to play on the bigger screen. However, if you're the kind of person who's a Flight Control master, lazily scoring into the thousands of points while simultaneously watching television, the HD maps will wipe away your complacency. They dump two airfields on each map, hugely increasing the complexity and overlap of flight paths. And while great local multiplayer over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth (even with Flight Control on iPhone or iPod touch) is included, there's also a fab splitscreen two-player 'versus' mode. If maritime action is more your thing, Harbour Master (£1.19 for iPhone, Harbour Master HD for iPad free with IAP levels) takes the Flight Control concept and drops it into the water. Instead of guiding planes to land, you help ships to dock. What ensures the game isn't an out-and-out Flight Control clone is the addition of cargo. In Flight Control, planes that land disappear, clearing the runway; but in Harbour Master, cargo must be unloaded, and the boats then need guiding off-screen. This creates a more demanding game from a strategic standpoint, since you need to take into account boat speeds, unload times and also dock/cargo colour-matching. 33rd Division (£1.19, iPhone) and Lion Pride (59p for iPhone, £1.79 for Lion Pride HUGE for iPad) also ramp up the strategic aspect of pathdrawing. The former largely resembles a simplified stealth game, with you helping tiny soldiers to sneak past enemy defences and reach the other side of the screen. (This seems a fairly odd way to win a war, but there you go.) The line of sight for each enemy is prominently displayed, and so the game is about planning a route that won't get you spotted, or tapping your guy to make him lie down should he stray too close to someone with a big, dangerous gun. Lion Pride has more depth, and tasks you with controlling a pride of lions stalking their territory and ambushing prey. It's strange to play a game that's essentially a hybrid of Flight Control and a TV show by David Attenborough, but it works. In early levels, you get to grips with how the lions move about, targeting and killing easy (read: slow) prey, but in later levels your lions must work as a group, sending tasty four-legged treats into ambush situations. Lion Pride might not be the fastest nor the most exciting entry in the genre, but it's certainly one of the most interesting, and worth buying if you fancy something different (or have a thing for really big cats with sharp teeth). Getting back to more action-oriented fare, Axe in Face (59p, iPhone) has Red Beard the Viking defending his daffodil patch against his horticulturally challenged chums in a game that might just take a few liberties with historical accuracy. Paths you draw determine the route of Red Beard's very sharp axe, mostly sending it through the necks of unfortunate cartoon Vikings. It's a great mash-up of castle defence and pathdrawing that you won't put down until all 32 levels are beaten. Super 7 (59p, universal) is also something of a mash-up, albeit with a maths game. Your aim is to combine numbered shapes as they float around the screen, by drawing paths that connect them 'magnetically'. A combination totalling seven vanishes, but should a combination hit eight or higher, your game is over, something hastened by the arrival of negative numbers and multipliers. Like Axe In Face, Super 7 is a bargain at 59p, and although it's great on the iPhone, it works particularly well on the iPad's larger screen. Although the majority of path-drawing games are essentially twitch-based and reaction-oriented, albeit with a bit of forward planning, some reverse this dynamic. DrawRace (£1.79, iPhone) is an innovative take on a top-down racer, but instead of you directly controlling a car as you would in Micro Machines, you instead draw a path before the race begins. The speed and direction of your car in the subsequent race is based on the speed with which you drew the path and the sharpness of the turns you created - if they were too sharp, the car skids, losing valuable time. Once tracks are unlocked (by beating computer opponents), you can battle players online. There's also a local multi-player mode for racing friends. DrawRace isn't nearly as intuitive as the likes of Flight Control, though - it takes plenty of practice before you master how to defeat opponents in later races. Trainyard (59p, iPhone) and SteamBirds (£1.19 for iPhone, £1.79 for iPad as SteamBirds HD) also bring a distinctly strategic and considered approach to path drawing. The former is really a puzzle game, and the paths are train tracks, rigidly sticking to a grid, with you attempting to send the trains from station to station. Initially, you think you'll breeze through, but you soon find yourself battling puzzles and burning brain cells when tasked with combining trains to 'mix' their colours, or laying switchable sections of track. (Also, while Trainyard is not a universal app, we noticed that it uses high-res graphics in 2x mode when installed on the iPad - a nice touch.) Finally, SteamBirds resembles a steampunk turn-based version of Flight Control, with you drawing paths to bring down German aircraft in an alternate World War II. It's tough and compelling, and while it's still path-drawing in the sky, it and the other games showcased here show how a single simple idea can give birth to a number of great games when developers are willing to take a risk rather than get out their photocopiers. |
You are subscribed to email updates from techradar To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
No comments:
Post a Comment