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If there’s one thing we could always use more of, it’s Stewie. Thankfully, Google has inked out a deal with Twentieth Century Fox to bring Family guy as well as 600 other titles to Google Play and YouTube. We’re not exactly sure when they will start appearing in the Google Play Store, but we know they will first launch in the U.S. and then make their way to other markets.

Motorola’s new lineup of RAZRs has me wondering if they’ll be changing their name to Gillette in the not so distant future (yea, I know, horrible joke). Motorola has unveiled yet another RAZR, only this one sports a 2.0GHz Intel Atom processor. They’re calling it the RAZR i (get it, i for Intel), and aside from the Intel processor, it’s nearly identical to the RAZR M.

[Update: Currently the WiiMote App cannot connect to devices running Android 4.2 but the developer is looking into a fix.]

My biggest gripe with trying to play console quality games on a mobile device has to do with on-screen controls. No matter how accustomed to them I become, they just don’t offer the same precision and/or experience as do physical controllers. I find playing FPS games with on-screen controls to be close to unbearable. Maybe I’m just old school, but give me a controller over onscreen controls any day.

With HTC’s New York event right around the corner, the rumors are flying from every direction. They all seem to point to a 5-inch device that appears to be making its way to Verizon. The top two possible names at this point are DROID Incredible X or HTC One X 5. I personally prefer the first.

The Kindle Fire HD has received the ritualistic iFixit teardown, exposing all of its innards as well as giving us an idea of what to expect should it need to be fixed. Despite having the LCD fused to the front glass and plastic frame, the Kindle Fire HD scored reasonably well on iFixit’s repairability scale. In fact, the Kindle Fire HD score a 7 out of 10, the same score handed down to the Nexus 7 and only 1 point below the original Kindle Fire.

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