Scosche Announces showTIME A/V Output for iPod

Scosche_showTIME_iPod.jpg

Scosche, the mobile electronics and iPod accessory company, announced that the showTIME A/V output solution for iPods and iPhones has hit store shelves. The showTIME is a six-foot A/V output cable that can display any video stored on an iPhone or iPod through any display with RCA inputs.

The showTIME features tapered metal RCA connectors and lists for $39.99. It works with all recent iPod, iPod nano, and iPod touch devices as well as the iPhone and iPhone 3G (check the site for a complete list). Earlier this month, the company introduced a slew of iPod and iPhone accessories at CES; we also posted a hands-on report on the Scosche passPORT dock connector (not to be confused with the ESCORT Passport radar detector series, which also uses plenty of capital letters unnecessarily.)

Google launches Measurement Lab to monitor the tubes, expose meddling

There’s not exactly a lack of internet measurement tools out there, but there’s none quite as ambitious as the new Measurement Lab (or M-Lab) just launched by Google, along with a little help from the New America Foundation’s Open Technology Institute and the PlanetLab Consortium. While it’s apparently just now getting up to speed, the tool will eventually let individuals and researchers of all sorts poke and prod the internet to their heart’s content, measuring performance, and exposing attempts by telecoms to meddle with network traffic and clamp down on things like BitTorrent or Skype. Those efforts will be facilitated by 36 servers in 12 locations across the U.S. and Europe that Google will be opening up early this year, and all data collected using M-Lab will be made publicly available for other researchers to expand upon. Complete details are available at the link below, although Google seems to be having some bandwidth troubles of its own with the M-Lab site at the moment.

[Via InformationWeek]

Filed under:

Google launches Measurement Lab to monitor the tubes, expose meddling originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Jan 2009 14:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Hacked Road Sign Warns of Zombies Ahead

Caution_Zombies_Ahead_Road_Sign.jpg

Commuters on the road in Austin were in for an interesting surprise yesterday morning, as hackers took over two road signs and changed the usual traffic-related messages to warn of zombies instead, according to Austin News. A city spokesperson said in the report the hacked messages were only up for a few hours—and that someone had to cut a padlock and break into a password-protected computer inside in order to change the messages.

“Even though this may seem amusing to a lot of people, this is really serious, and it is a crime,” said Austin Public Works spokesperson Sara Hartley in the report. “And you can be indicted for it, and we want to make sure our traffic on the roadways stays safe.”

“I thought it was pretty funny,” said University of Texas sophomore Jane Shin, who saw the signs on Lamar Boulevard, in the article. “We wondered who did it.”

Paint made in Japan blocks Wi-Fi

Wi-Fi-blocking paint(Credit: New Launches)

This might be unneighborly, since it’d mean that your nosy neighbors can’t piggyback off your wireless connection anymore.

But for the price of a can of house paint, this may very well be one of the most cost-effective ways to secure your office wireless network …

Toshiba plans to release fuel cell-based battery charger by end of March

Toshiba’s finally ready to enter the fuel cell market, or at least it’s saying as much. The company announced this week that it’ll release a direct methanol fuel cell-based (DMFC) battery charger this fiscal quarter, before the end of March. Toshiba also said it’ll launch DMFC packs for cellphones and laptops in the following fiscal year that begins in April. Details are pretty scant at the moment, and given the technology’s past track record, we wouldn’t be surprised if it missed the upcoming deadline. Here’s hoping our skepticism is unfounded.

Filed under:

Toshiba plans to release fuel cell-based battery charger by end of March originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Jan 2009 14:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Virgin Mobile Helio Ocean 2 unboxed, scheduled for launch with Britney Spears

It looks like the world had better (finally) get ready for Virgin Mobile’s Helio Ocean 2 — not only have unboxing shots of the long-awaited set surfaced today, a Virgin press release hyping the company’s sponsorship of Britney Spears’ Circus tour casually mentions that it’ll be launched alongside Brit’s big comeback. “Select fans” will be given Ocean 2s to capture and share images and videos from each show using the phone’s blogging, email, and social networking features, so we’re guessing that means we’ll be seeing a launch before the tour kicks off in March — and with units out in the wild already, it could be as soon as a couple weeks on February 12. Check all the unboxing shots at the read link — it looks pretty slick, even if it is way late to the game.

[Via unwired view and Heliocity]

Read – Unboxing photos
Read – Virgin Circus press release

Filed under:

Virgin Mobile Helio Ocean 2 unboxed, scheduled for launch with Britney Spears originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Jan 2009 14:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Seemingly real Windows Mobile 6.5 screenshots trickle out of leaky internet faucet

A fine fellow over at the xda dev forum has posted some screenshots of what is purportedly Windows Mobile 6.5 — and well… they look plausibly real. They’re pretty Zune-ish (though maybe slightly less so than the last ones we saw), and also pretty good looking. There’s still no info on when we can expect 6.5, though rumors have it that it’ll be at MWC. Check some more photos (including the honeycomb app launcher and IE mobile) after the break. Hey Grey Crowned Crane, how’re you doing?

[Via Gadgetmix]

Continue reading Seemingly real Windows Mobile 6.5 screenshots trickle out of leaky internet faucet

Seemingly real Windows Mobile 6.5 screenshots trickle out of leaky internet faucet originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Jan 2009 14:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

What a $5 GarageBand Artist Lesson Actually Includes

While iLife ’09‘s GarageBand comes bundled with 9 free lessons on guitar and piano, Artist Lessons, with famous musicians, cost $5 a pop to download. So what does that money actually get you?

It should be noted that no Artist Lessons come free with iLife ’09. So if you want Sting to teach you the way of the guitar (and I mean, who doesn’t?), you’ll need to purchase his lesson through the GarageBand Store. That’s not actually synonymous with the iTunes Store, as it works completely through GarageBand (which redirects you to the web). iTunes never actually enters the picture.

The downloads are sizable. Sting is 600MB, which shouldn’t be so surprising as multiple angles of high resolution video appear in two stitched-together 16×9 frames (32×9). (Unfortunately, there’s no angle for Sting’s butt.)

And my favorite part about the GarageBand store might be that it’s not “Roxanne” that you are downloading. It’s “Sting” that you are downloading. I’ve got you now, Sting!
The basic Artist Lesson comes in three parts: Learn Song, Play Song and Story. With Sting, you get two versions of Roxanne to learn (beginner and advanced levels). Through Learn Song, Sting gives you a brief rundown of each chord. Play Song is just a straight play-through of the song itself. And then the Story is just Sting talking about his inspiration behind the music, as if Sting could ever just talk.
In terms of actual time spent, that’s:

Learn Song
Beginner Lesson: 8 minutes
Advanced Lesson: 4 1/2 minutes

Play Song
Beginner Song: 3 minutes
Advanced Song: 3 minutes

Story
The Story: 5 minutes

Glancing at this lesson outline, you see that it’s not super long. The whole thing is about 24 minutes in all—if you go through basic and advanced levels. But what Apple did to expand this content is within GarageBand’s new Learn to Play interface. Some very well-thought options really stretch the lesson’s value beyond Sting’s charm.

Whether you want to look at realtime frets on a virtual guitar or just follow along with various notations (simple chords, chord grid, and TAB), you can really get in there and match the lesson to your training preferences.

Then you can do some other neat things to expand the content through integrated Practice Tools, including changing the playback speed so you can take your time with the chords (this option ditches Sting’s melodious vocals), work with a metronome, loop passages like the refrain or record your audio straight to the timeline to play back and remind you that, no, you are not Sting.
So is it worth $5? It depends on your perspective. A song runs $1 on iTunes (which most of us consider decent) while a 2-hour movie is $10+. Technically, this is just 24 minutes of content. But given its clean presentation and the real replay value, at your own pace, alongside a celebrity to make it all a little sexier, I’m going with yes.

I was pretty certain the Artist Lessons were just a cheap and trendy Apple gimmick when announced at the Macworld. But there’s some real love in GarageBand’s Learn to Play interface that is well-suited for celebrities to show up and teach you to jam. Apple hasn’t committed to just how many Artist Lessons they will release moving forward, but if they can develop a reasonably sized library of musicians/music, I could see the platform growing into something very, very interesting.

Flexible Displays Get Fresh Funding Of $50 Million

Stainless_steel_foil_display_3

Flexible displays that can be rolled up and stuck into the back pocket of your Levis were one the most exciting technology breakthroughs we saw last year.

As the idea marches towards reality, funding for it is on the rise. The U.S. Army bankrolled much of the initial research on the technology in 2004. Now it is pouring in another $50 million to support the Arizona State University’s Flexible Display Center, which has been doing a lot of research in the area.

Flexible electronic displays, which have long been in the realm of films like Minority Report and the James Bond franchise, may soon show up in a new generation of portable devices including
e-readers and e-maps. Major consumer electronics companies including LG, Samsung and HP showed prototypes of flexible displays last year and industry experts say the displays could come to market in the next three years.

The U.S. Army’s support could help accelerate that. The Army has committed to sponsoring an additional five years of research and development at the Flexible Display Center. So far, nearly $100 million has gone into the efforts to creating a viable flexible display technology.

So far the Flexible Display Center has developed a six-inch wafer-scale and 370×470 mm display-scale manufacturing pilot lines and related toolsets, it says.

See also:
Flexible Displays Closer to Reality, Thanks to U.S. Army
Top Technology Breakthroughs of 2008

Negroponte raps about OLPC 2: ‘designed as if we were Google’

Well, our interest was certainly piqued by that OLPC XO-2 mockup that surfaced yesterday, and now the Guardian is saying that the hardware development will take place open source. This is certainly fitting with the company’s idealistic ethos, and it’ll be interesting to see what other companies bring to the table as the reportedly $75 dual-screen device gets closer to real reality. “The XO-1 was really designed as if we were Apple,” Nicholas Negroponte says in the interview. “The XO-2 will be designed as if we were Google – we’ll want people to copy it. We’ll make the constituent parts available. We’ll try and get it out there using the exact opposite approach that we did with the XO-1.” He let a few details slip too, saying that it will be dual touchscreen, with one of the displays featuring a touch-sensitive, force-feedback, haptic keyboard. When asked how he feels about the possibility that other companies might profit from all this hard work developing the laptop of tomorrow? “I wouldn’t complain.” Class act, that one. Bravo.

[Via Make]

Filed under:

Negroponte raps about OLPC 2: ‘designed as if we were Google’ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Jan 2009 13:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments