Tag Archive | "like"

What Android Would Look Like if it Had a Windowed UI [VIDEO]


This image has no alt text

A company called Ixonos was hiding at Mobile World Congress last week and they were showing off their system on top of Android that allows you to work with windows, just like on a desktop PC.

With the windowed UI, you can have multiple applications running at once, and one application doesn’t have to take a backset to another: you can have a video playing in the background while you surf the web in another window.

The windows are resizable, too, and it appears you might even be able to minimize them. It’s not something we’re sure will ever be right for a tablet, but it could be something to look at for netbook OEMs who are looking to use Android for their next product.  Check out the video above. [Engadget]



View full post on Android Phone Fans

Posted in AndroidComments (4)

Do wireless providers like Verizon and AT&T crimp mobile security?


Do wireless providers like Verizon and AT&T crimp mobile security? As adoption of smartphones and tablets explodes, security will become a bigger issue. Mobile security was the topic of a panel discussion involving both AT&T and Verizon at this week’s RSA Conference.




View full post on Macworld

Posted in AppleComments (0)

Will The HTC Flyer Measure Up To Other Tablets Like The Galaxy Tab And Apple iPad?


We can’t help but notice what appears to be an upwards battle with the entry of the HTC Flyer tablet.  Amidst the multiple 10-inch, dual-core Honeycomb running devices, HTC has opted to usher in the 7-inch, single core (although 1.5 GHz) device running Gingerbread instead.  What do you think?  Wise move on HTC’s part?  Check out the pics below for a comparison between all of the devices, courtesy of our friends over at Engadget.  Don’t forget to let us know what you think in the comments below.   Read More…

Will The HTC Flyer Measure Up To Other Tablets Like The Galaxy Tab And Apple iPad?



View full post on Android News, Rumours, and Updates

Posted in AndroidComments (1)

Nokia CEO tells it like it is in leaked internal memo


Nokia CEO tells it like it is in leaked internal memoI wasn’t sure what to think about new Nokia CEO Stephen Elop, but after reading the leaked internal memo on Engadget I have new respect for him and am getting more excited about the future of Nokia. As much as I love my orange Nokia N8, it has felt like we have been living in a weird limbo world since mid-2009 when the rather lame Nokia N97 was released.

We never really knew what the strategy was with the OS as we saw S60 evolving, then Maemo released, then Maemo killed, then MeeGo talked about and after reading what Mr. Elop wrote Nokia may not have known internally where they were headed either.

A couple of quotes from the memo that struck me personally were:

The first iPhone shipped in 2007, and we still don’t have a product that is close to their experience. Android came on the scene just over 2 years ago, and this week they took our leadership position in smartphone volumes. Unbelievable.

I still believe there are several innovations and design elements (penta band radio, USB on-the-go, HDMI out, fantastic aluminum in colors) of the N8 where it does beat the iPhone, but Mr. Elop mentions the experience and that is indeed where Nokia has fallen down.

Many of us have said Nokia has been too slow to change with the times and they invented many of these technologies that Apple has been perfecting so they needed to get off the pot. Mr. Elop acknowledges this so it was nice to see we weren’t just crazy thinking things were too slow. Nokia seemed to move along at their own pace, but it sounds like that is NOT going to happen now with Mr. Elop at the helm.

Nokia will be holding their Capital Markets Day on Friday where Mr. Elop will reveal his future strategy. There are rumors that he might partner with Microsoft and release Windows Phone 7 devices or go with Android in an HTC-like multiple platform approach. As a fan of both Nokia and Windows Phone 7 you know what I would prefer. If Windows Phone 7 is brought to Nokia hardware then get ready to see a LOT more writing here on Nokia Experts as WP7 is my personal preferred platform at this time.

What do you think of the memo and Mr. Elop’s statements?



View full post on Nokia Experts

Posted in NokiaComments (10)

Poll: How Would You Like to Post Your Own Content on AndroidSPIN?


Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post’s poll.


How would you like to speak your mind on our main page? Maybe review an app, or game, or report the news you find relevant to you?

We’re considering a pilot-program enabling you to do just that. You email in posts about whatever you like, of course some guidelines would need to be followed to make sure your post makes it through, and we post it listing you as the writer with hyperlink to your virtual “home”. Let us know what you think.

We here at AndroidSPIN are looking at new ways to help the overall Android community and would like to know if this is something our readers would be interested in. :)

View full post on AndroidSPIN

Posted in AndroidComments (2)

AT&T Still Doesn’t Like Sideloading: Will Not Be Possible on HTC Inspire


The above picture, captured by Android Central, confirms our suspicions: Much as with the Motorola Backflip and several of their other Android offerings, AT&T is not allowing the installing of non-market apps. As those of you with Android phones are probably aware, there is usually an option on the above screen that has the choice to “Allow installation of non-Market applications.” As you can see, this choice is not given on the HTC Inspire. Thankfully, there are other options available to those who are looking to sideload apps. We’re not surprised, but we’re sad to see that AT&T hasn’t reconsidered the limitations they’re putting on their users.

AT&T Still Doesn’t Like Sideloading: Will Not Be Possible on HTC Inspire



View full post on Android News, Rumours, and Updates

Posted in AndroidComments (0)

Motorola i1Q – I Like My Android Rugged


Spotted on the could be horizon, a new Android device for Nextel. Sporting a rugged exterior similar to that of the Motorola i1, it seems we have a industrial Android device. While it seems to be a little outdated running 2.1 and a slow processor, it does have a full physical qwerty keyboard. The biggest thing competing in the industrial field of phones in the outdoor-like workplaces is a blackberry, between the i1 and this I think android can break into that field. What do you think?

Source: Grupoandroid

View full post on AndroidSPIN

Posted in AndroidComments (0)

Like the sport of Curling? Watch CrackBerry-sponsored Team McEwen today at 1pm ET in the Canadian Open finals! (Update: We Won!)


Team McEwen - CrackBerry Curling!
Not familiar with curling? Check out the wikipedia page to learn more.

* Update: Wow. It came down to the final rock in an extra end of play, but we pulled it off. Team McEwen wins their second Grand Slam of the year! * 

Like the sport of curling? If you do, or want to check it out for the first time, be sure to tune into CBC television today at 1pm ET (viewers outside of Canada can watch online) to watch Team McEwen take on Team Howard in the finals of the BDO Canadian Open, which is the third Grand Slam of Curling event this season (where the world’s best curlers from around the world play for $$$ and glory). 

I’m actually the 5th man (alternate player… if one of the boys is sick or has to miss a game I fill in) for Team McEwen and personally sponsored them this year – you gotta love the CB logo on the jerseys and crackberry.com down the pants! And what a year it has been. The team is sitting at the top of the World Curling Tour money list for the 2010/2011 season, and is also ranked #1 in Canada on the CTRS points system which is used to determine which teams will go to the Olympic Trials to duke it out for who gets to play for Canada in next winter Olympics. Team McEwen won the first Grand Slam of the season, lost out in the semi-finals of the 2nd Slam after going undefeated in the round robin, and are undefeated this week leading up to the finals against Howard, who has the homecrowd advantage with the event being held in Ontario. It should be a great game.

If you’re curious to meet the CrackBerry curling team, I’ve posted a couple of Team McEwen videos below (and yes, everybody on the team is a hardcore BlackBerry user and we have a BBM group to keep things in order). As for the question of can I get a curling game for my BlackBerry? the answer is you used to be able to… Curling Challenge was one of the first reviews I ever wrote for CrackBerry back in 2007 when I played it on my 8700. It looks like the game is no longer available though, so it would be great to see a good curling game hit for the PlayBook!

For more info on the team, be sure to check out mcewencurling.com and you can also follow us on twitter at @mcewencurling. That’s it. Rock on! Be sure to tune into the game!

read more

CrackBerry.com‘s feed sponsored by ShopCrackBerry.com. Like the sport of Curling? Watch CrackBerry-sponsored Team McEwen today at 1pm ET in the Canadian Open finals! (Update: We Won!)



View full post on CrackBerry.com blogs

Posted in BlackberryComments (0)

Expo Notes: Genre-mixing Legendary Wars looks like a crowd-pleaser


Expo Notes: Genre-mixing Legendary Wars looks like a crowd-pleaser Legendary Wars is a fantasy-themed game uniquely combining many genres that’s been drawing crowds at Expo this week.




View full post on Macworld

Posted in AppleComments (0)

Expo Notes: Genre-mxing Legendary Wars looks like a crowd-pleaser


Expo Notes: Genre-mxing Legendary Wars looks like a crowd-pleaser Legendary Wars is a fantasy-themed game uniquely combining many genres that’s been drawing crowds at Expo this week.




View full post on Macworld

Posted in AppleComments (0)

Cartridge Phone Concept Lets You Switch OSs Like a Video Game


This image has no alt text

Concept phones are a love/hate sort of thing: you love what they bring to the table, but you hate the fact that you might never see it materialize. The latest shows an HTC-made “Cartridge Phone” that would allow you to switch between several operating systems – including Android and Windows Phone 7 – by switching cartridges in and out. In a perfect world, we’d all want that phone. I’m not even sure if it’s technically possible, but licensing issues alone would get in the way. But if someone is able to make a reality out of this, let me know: I’ll be the first in line. [Yanko via Android Community]



View full post on Android Phone Fans

Posted in AndroidComments (15)

Harpy Gnu Deer! … Or Something Like That


new year 2011

Image by Madhavan Muthukaruppan; used under CC Attribution license.

I’d just like to take a moment of your time to wish you a very happy new year on behalf of all of us at GeekDad. We hope you’ve enjoyed reading our blog, and our companion blog GeekMom, over the course of 2010, and hope you continue to enjoy doing so as we strive to continuously improve both in 2011.

I would be remiss in my duties as GeekDad’s managing editor if I didn’t point out a few geeky things about this new year:

1. Today’s date can be written as “1/1/11,” making it the first date since September 9, 1999 that could be written using only one digit. This year has four such dates, more than any other year this century will: today, January 11, November 1 and November 11.

2. 2011 is the first prime-numbered year since 2003, and the last until 2017. Moreover, 2011 and 2017 are sexy primes. As if that weren’t enough, 2011 is also the sum of 11 consecutive prime numbers: 157 + 163 + 167 + 173 + 179 + 181 + 191 + 193 + 197 + 199  + 211.

3. According to the TV show Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, “Judgment Day” will be on April 21 of this year.

View full post on GeekDad

Posted in TechnologyComments (0)

Wireless providers considering charging a premium for services like Facebook, Youtube


Here’s to hoping that this is just another crazy idea to make money that never comes to pass. It seems that Allot Communications and Openet, two companies that call Verizon, AT&T and Vodafone clients, have come up with the brilliant idea for wireless providers to begin charging premiums for things like Facebook, Skype, and YouTube, while leaving carrier services free of charge. Here is a direct quote from a marketing webinar put on by the two companies:

[We use] a number of different methods to accurately identify the application — methods like heuristic analysis, behavioral and historical analysis, deep packet inspection, and a number of other techniques. What’s key is that we have the best application identification available on the market, which means that even applications that are encrypted or use other methods to evade detection will be correctly identified and classified… We essentially feed this real-time information about traffic and application usage into the policy and charging system. Each subscriber has a particular service plan that they sign up for, and they’re as generic or as personalized as the operator wants.

Read More…

Wireless providers considering charging a premium for services like Facebook, Youtube



View full post on Android News, Rumours, and Updates

Posted in AndroidComments (0)

Sounds like @Cyanogen was cooking Gingerbread all night. Success at last!


I seem to recall I said something yesterday along the line of “Don’t be surprised if we see Gingerbread on some devices by the end of the day“.  It looks like I was a few hours out.  Cyanogen has apparently worked through the night and finally has Gingerbread running on his T-mobile G2.  It looks like his success happened at 3am this morning, as you can see from his tweet at that time.

By the end of the day yesterday, another teamdouche member by the name of Chris Soyars, had compile the Gingerbread AOSP source to work on the Google Nexus One and made the following post on his site:

I get the feeling that we are going to see Gingerbread available for download on many devices by the end of the weekend.  It sure would be awesome to have a beta version in the community that we can run on the Google Nexus One and T-Mobile myTouch 4G.  The community developers out there keep our Android experience alive with more updates than snow flakes on the ground outside my house.  Sooner or later the manufacturers, or Google themselves, are going to swoop down and grab some of this amazing talent and add them to their own Android team.  Maybe we’ll even see a CyanogenMOD based phone from a smaller manufacturer.  What about a special community driven edition of a phone from HTC or a Google developer phone.  Sooner or later these guys need to get some serious recognition for the amazing work they do.

Whatever happens, I’m eager to get my hands on a stable version of one of my favorite ROMs for the myTouch 4G; CyanogenMOD from treamdouch or TheOfficial from enomther.

Do you run the early releases on your device?

View full post on AndroidSPIN

Posted in AndroidComments (0)

It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Geekmas


Geekmas 2010

While many of you were hastily disposing of those last few morsels of leftover Thanksgiving turkey, we GeekDads have been toiling away to ensure that you have the happiest of holidays. Unlike Santa’s elves, however, we haven’t been crafting your toys ourselves. Instead we’ve been exploiting mining the goodwill of our media and public relations partners to collect a veritable treasure trove of top-shelf swag.

Yes, for the third triumphant year December will see the proper realization of the world’s most nerdtastic (and totally made up) holiday, Geekmas.

The greatest thing about Geekmas is that it may be celebrated without regard to things like creed or religious affiliation. To enjoy all that the 12 Days of Geekmas have to offer one must merely be willing to keep a keen ear out for our daily mini-podcasts — the famed GeekDad HipTrax Stocking Stuffers — and have a genuine interest in winning wonderfully extravagant prizes.

If you’re an avid fan of music, video games and entertainment technology, then 2010’s 12 Days of Geekmas celebration has much to offer and so little to ask in return. Stay tuned to this very blog throughout the coming weeks to get your name in the proverbial hat to win any of 12 days’ worth of spectacular prize packs. It’s just our little way of saying thank you to the undeniably awesome community that makes GeekDad what it is.

Steve Jobs bless us, every one!

Enhanced by Zemanta

View full post on GeekDad

Posted in TechnologyComments (0)

Docomo: Just Like Darth Vader and the Force, the Galaxy S is Always With You


This image has no alt text

It seems DoComo’s viral marketing campaign featuring Star Wars villain Darth Vader was for the Samsung Galaxy S – exclusively offered by them in Japan. Following an announcement of the device (with a real life Darth Vader on stage), Samsung let loose this promotional video of Vader creepily following people around. The first thing that came to my mind was “so if I buy this phone, creepy men will stalk me?” I’m sure that’s  not the message DoComo was spreading, though. Instead, it sounds like they want you to know that, as your phone is always with you, so is the force. And creepy men with Darth Vader costumes. Just watch the video. [via MobileCrunch]

View full post on Android Phone Fans

Posted in AndroidComments (0)

If you are like the guy in this video, you need the new CrackBerry book!



Sure, this one is a bit of a shameless plug, but it’s pretty funny too so I think we can get away with it! Gary Mazo, co-author of CrackBerry: True Tales of BlackBerry Use & Abuse, had some fun in xtranormal putting this one together. Check out the video above. I think that’s going to be my new pick up line… Show Me Your Barcode! But seriously, if watching this video is like looking in a mirror, or if you know somebody who acts like this all the time, it’s time to pick up the CrackBerry book. You can grab it from amazon or a local bookstore near you!

On a related note, last weekend CBC in Canada ran a documentary called Are We Digital Dummies? that tackled the information overload we experience these days and our resulting behaviors. Yours truly popped up in the documentary a couple times, and both the CrackBerry site and the CrackBerry book got some nice plugs! If you’re in Canada and missed the documentary, you can watch it online at the link below. It’s a really well done and really interesting piece. Makes you think. 

Learn more/puchase CrackBerry: True Tales of BlackBerry Use & Abuse
Watch CBC Doc Zone’s Are We Digital Dummies documentary

CrackBerry.com‘s feed sponsored by ShopCrackBerry.com. If you are like the guy in this video, you need the new CrackBerry book!



View full post on CrackBerry.com blogs

Posted in BlackberryComments (0)

WDTV Live Hub Is Like Methadone for Media Junkies


Hello, my name is John, and I am addicted to movies. My drug of choice is DVDs, especially since my local cineplex isn’t exactly fighting to screen an Eric Rohmer retrospective or hosting a Godzillathon. Sometimes I find myself ordering a bunch of kung fu classics from a Hong Kongbased website at 2 a.m. I need help.

Help that is, with my massive DVD binder cases and slew of ripped files scattered across multiple computers. It can take me 20 minutes just to find the flick I want to watch, if I can find it at all. Did I mention I’d also like to cut my insane cable bill?

Thankfully, Western Digital’s new WDTV Live Hub has arrived to try to save me from myself. The latest of WD’s media streamers, the WDTV Live Hub faces an onslaught of buzz about AppleTV and GoogleTV, but it manages to organize and stream digital entertainment without much hassle. And unlike its competition, the Live Hub also includes a 1-terabyte storage drive for cramming in enough content for most users.

Like most media streamers, the WDTV is simple to navigate and responds to commands quickly. Some pretty-detailed setup options will have you tweaking everything to your liking, down to customizing subtitle style and font size. AV geeks will like the basic remote-admin features: Just type in the IP address into a web browser, and you can perform some basic functions like configure iTunes streaming and set up internet media sources.

There’s even a virtual remote for the PC that looks just like the WDTV remote. Click a button with your mouse and you can control pretty much any WDTV function. It’s pretty slick.

While there is a wicked-simple setup guide included in the box, you’ll have to go to WD’s website to download the full manual. Cables aren’t included either, so add buying HDMI and ethernet cables to your list. Once I had everything plugged in, the WDTV instantly saw all my network shared folders, and bam — all of my content was aggregated in one place.

You can set the WDTV to automatically sync with attached USB storage and even remotely shared network folders, for easy aggregation of your flicks and tunes. If you have a large collection of videos and music (guilty!), you’ll fill up the 1-tearabyte internal hard drive pretty quickly. But you can plug in a USB drive for more capacity, and it easily streams from any local network source too, so your storage options are essentially unlimited.

One not-so-small criticism is that the WDTV makes you choose your media source before browsing, instead of indexing everything in one central place. So, you’ve got to pick between the built-in hard drive, attached USB storage and any network devices with shared folders. Can’t remember where you saved that folder of party pictures? You’re out of luck, especially because the search feature doesn’t scan across multiple devices.

It’s not a dealbreaker, but it would be icing on the cake if you could browse and search all media in one central location, regardless of where it’s stored. To slightly offset the search limitations, you can add music and movies to a queue as well as set favorites, so they’re easily found again.

Compared to the WDTV Live Plus we reviewed back in October, the WDTV Live Hub is a massive step forward. The boxy chassis has been upgraded to a slimmer, better-looking box.

And while it takes a while to begin streaming, WD seems to have addressed video-stuttering issues with better caching, at least I didn’t notice any, using a hard-wired ethernet connection. Local network streams were very quick to start, but online Netflix streams took a good 20 seconds to begin.

After watching dozens of videos, overall playback quality was razor sharp, with true-to-life motion and sparkling audio fidelity. As always however, video quality is still largely dependent on the speed of your local network and internet connections, as well as how the file was encoded in the first place.

The remote has gotten an upgrade as well, with some customizable shortcut buttons, 0–9 alphanumeric keypad, and even a mute button. It’s actually a pretty good remote compared to the quality of most “included in the box” remotes. As a side note, you can also connect a USB keyboard to make typing in searches easier. I even got my wireless keyboard to work.

Unfortunately, if you want to cut your cable bill, this WDTV Live box can’t quite do it. It does serve up a handful of the better online services: Netflix, Youtube, Blockbuster, Live 365 radio, Pandora and Mediafly.

However, you’re out of luck if you like Hulu, and many of the better Mediafly channels are audio-only. For now at least, there is a massive gap between all the content available on cable, what you can view on a PC web browser, and what you’re limited to on a media streamer.

The WDTV Live Hub will keep you entertained as long as you’re aware of its limitations, but I’m probably asking too much from a pretty simple box. If you’re looking for something more robust, build or buy a home theater PC.

For the rest of us, the WDTV Live Hub bridges the gaps among computer, TV and internet — and does it well. It kicks tail if you’ve already got a large media collection, and while it won’t actually tidy up your digital clutter, it will at least motivate you to organize your media. At least it did in my case.

And if it can save me from digital-entertainment ennui, it can certainly save you.

WIRED It’s a streamer! It’s a server! Robust format support. USB keyboard compatible. Extremely easy to set up, especially remote-admin features. A/V quality is sharper than Carl Sagan’s intellect. Simple and responsive interface. 1080p resolution: Suck it, AppleTV.

TIRED You can only search and browse for content on one device at a time. Cables and full manual not included. No built-in Wi-Fi and no Hulu support? We no like. Online streams can be slow to start. Some features can get buried in backwater sections of menu. Want to cut your cable bill? Ha, not with this.

See Also:

View full post on Product Reviews | Wired.com

Posted in Product ReviewsComments (0)

Chrome 9 Preview Looks a Lot Like Chrome 8


Chrome logoUsers of the Chrome Dev channel may have noticed that the version number has been updated to Chrome 9. The latest release keeps with Chrome’s frantic development pace, but, so far, brings little in the way of actual changes.

If you’d like to try out the latest and greatest, you can switch the Chrome dev channel following Google’s instructions.

Chrome 9 has a few enhancements to Chrome’s JavaScript engine and improves the still not-enabled-by-default hardware acceleration for Windows. But most of the rest of the changes listed in the changelog are small enough to leave you wondering why this release deserves a full version number bump.

Of course Google has always been a bit different when it comes to releasing software. Betas are seemingly perpetual, “open” means, well, nothing really and version numbers are just something that happen on a timetable, with little or no bearing on features or improvements.

Some have suggested that Chrome is chasing IE, which will be at version 9 next year. That seems unlikely, given that most people neither know nor have any interest in their browsers’ version number (most people it seems don’t even know what a web browser is, let alone what a version number might be).

But if that were the case, then Chrome is aiming low. We want to see Chrome reach the illustrious level of Emacs — currently shipping version 23.

See Also:

View full post on Webmonkey

Posted in TechnologyComments (0)

Jobs: We don’t want to be like Nokia


Jobs: We don’t want to be like Nokia
Apple is aimed exclusively at competing in the high-end smartphone market, not in a larger arena, according to CEO Steve Jobs. The executive made a rare appearance during Apple’s Q4 results call, where he specifically compared the iPhone against Nokia’s output. Apple is not trying to mimic Nokia, he said, which leads global cellphone sales with cheaper devices. “We don’t know how to make a great …

Read more on MacNN

Posted in NokiaComments (0)

Disparity in loadshedding schedule WE, the residents of Johair Street, would like to bring to the notice of the MD …


Disparity in loadshedding schedule WE, the residents of Johair Street, would like to bring to the notice of the MD …
Naved had been banned from playing cricket for a year. -AP Photo KARACHI : The Pakistan Cricket Board has lifted a one-year ban from medium fast bowler Rana Naved and has allowed him to play cricket again.

Read more on Dawn

Posted in NokiaComments (0)

Nokia Exec: Smartphone Makers Using Android is Like Peeing Your Pants to Stay Warm


Nokia Exec: Smartphone Makers Using Android is Like Peeing Your Pants to Stay Warm
Exiting Nokia exec guns for Android

Read more on AnandTech

Posted in NokiaComments (0)

Nokia exec: Using Android like ‘peeing in your pants’ for warmth


Nokia exec: Using Android like ‘peeing in your pants’ for warmth
Nokia’s Anssi Vanjoki’s point seems to be that there is little long-term profit to gain for manufacturers who use Android.

Read more on CNET

Posted in NokiaComments (0)

Talk Like a Pirate with The Unsinkable Walker Bean


The Unsinkable Walker Bean
Are you celebrating Talk Like a Pirate Day today? Here’s some fun pirate-based reading for you and your kids, as well as fun activity kit to get everyone in the mood. First, download the Walker Bean Pirate Kit and print it out, and your kids will have some pirate-themed word searches, hidden pictures, and complete-the-monster drawings. Plus there’s some fun stuff like the design-your-own pirate flag, an eye patch to cut out and wear, and making a treasure map of your neighborhood.

The activity kit is courtesy of Aaron Renier, the author and illustrator of The Unsinkable Walker Bean, a recently released comic book about pirates, monsters, and a mysterious pearl skull that everyone seems to be after. I first met Renier years ago at a tiny comics convention in Portland, Oregon, and picked up a copy of Spiral Bound, which is still one of my favorites. Spiral Bound featured talking animals, wonderful contraptions, and a mysterious monster at the bottom of a lake. Renier’s latest still includes the wonderful contraptions and some underwater beasts, but trades in the talking animals for sailors and pirates.

Walker Bean is a kid who has grown up on his grandfather’s tales of the evil Merwitch sisters and the destruction of Atlantis. They’re great tales, but of course nobody believed they were actually true. When Walker’s grandfather shows up with an unexplainable ailment, he admonishes Walker to take this pearl skull and return it to the Merwitches, or face dire consequences. But returning the skull isn’t an easy task—Walker stows away on a ship, is captured by pirates, and everyone seems to have their own designs for the skull.

The book is full of swashbuckling adventure and is a lot of fun, though it’s not an all-ages book the way Spiral Bound was. This one is recommended for ages 9 and up, partly for the reading level of the text but probably also because the lobster-bodied Merwitch sisters are pretty creepy. Still, once my daughter is a little bit older I’ll definitely share this one with her—I really enjoyed it and I think she would too. Walker is a fun hero—he’s just a kid so there are a lot of things he’s simply unable to do on his own, but he’s pretty clever and comes up with an ingenious scheme to trick an entire ship full of pirates. I hadn’t realized until the end of the book that this is only the first in a series, though it concludes on an ending note so it stands pretty well on its own.

The Unsinkable Walker Bean retails for $13.99 and is published by First Second Books. For more about Aaron Renier, visit his website, and follow this link to read an excerpt from the book.

Wired: Pirates, seafaring adventure, giant monsters, ingenious inventions, drawn by the talented Aaron Renier.

Tired: The pearl skull might give you flashbacks to the last Indiana Jones movie.

Disclosure: First Second Books provided a copy of the book for review.

Related Links:

Arrrrrr You Ready for International Talk Like a Pirate Day?

Comic-Con Round-Up for Tweens and Teens

7 Comics Off the Beaten Path

View full post on GeekDad

Posted in TechnologyComments (0)

Advert
TechAlps on Facebook