CyberNotes: Your Week in Review with Sunday’s Summary

This article was written on December 23, 2007 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Sunday’s Summary

What was going on this week at CyberNet News and Learn Firefox? Here’s your chance to catch-up if you missed something!

Copyright © 2009 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

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Video: Moblin finds a home with the Samsung NC10

Now that Moblin is out in all of its alpha release glory, we’ve been preparing ourselves mentally and physically for the flood of videos we’re sure to receive as folks start installing the OS all over the place. For our inaugural Moblin Movie, the kids over at Laptop Magazine have got it happily running on a Samsung NC10 and — despite booting off a USB thumb drive — the speed of the thing is pretty impressive. WiFi and ethernet did their thing with minimal effort, the mouse and trackpad worked like a charm, and all in all things look swingin’. But don’t take our word for it — catch the video after the break.

Continue reading Video: Moblin finds a home with the Samsung NC10

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Video: Moblin finds a home with the Samsung NC10 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jan 2009 00:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How would you change Nikon’s D3x DSLR?

Look, we fully understand that only a handful of you were willing to force your kid to pay for their own education while you spent that eight grand in savings on the D3x, but for those hardcore enough to do just that, here’s your venting post. This beast of a DSLR has been rumored, teased and taunted for what seems like ages, and now that the 24.5 megapixel shooter is finally making its way out on armored UPS trucks, we’re anxious to see what early adopters are loving / disappointed in. For starters, was it worth the price? If not, why? What could Nikon have tweaked to justify the sticker (if anything)? Get vocal in comments below!

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How would you change Nikon’s D3x DSLR? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jan 2009 22:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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D.I.Y. motion-controlled MP3 player doesn’t need your fancy touch screen

Our anonymous engineer friend over in Ageo, Japan sure loves to make him some gadgets — among his many projects he’s already built a couple other MP3 players, and now he’s back with a tiny, motion controlled device that plays tunes from an SD card. Housed in a set of speakers (switching from stereo to mono when the satellite is unplugged) this thing uses an accelerometer for its interface: the user can skip ahead, skip back, change albums, pause, loop, turn down or crank up the sound by tilting, tapping, or setting the thing down. This is a strictly D.I.Y. affair, so if you want to get your hands on one you’ll have to hit the read link for the parts list, schematics and firmware. Captured on video after the break.

[Via Slashgear]

Continue reading D.I.Y. motion-controlled MP3 player doesn’t need your fancy touch screen

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D.I.Y. motion-controlled MP3 player doesn’t need your fancy touch screen originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jan 2009 20:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Buy this book: Chris Ziegler’s ‘T-Mobile G1 For Dummies’

Look, we don’t normally talk about that wacky old medium — the printed word — but this is a special case. Our very own Chris Ziegler, whom many of us refer to around here as “the modern-day Hemingway,” has just recently put pen to paper (er, finger to keyboard) and written the definitive tome on all things G1. Namely, T-Mobile G1 For Dummies. If you at all care about the state of our nation, world peace, finding the Ark of the Covenant, creating the perfect salsa, or just figuring out how to set the alarm clock on your phone: this is the book for you. In all seriousness, we’re super proud of Chris’ efforts here, and we hope — if you’re totally into the G1, like we know you are — you’ll take a peek at these totally boss pages.

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Buy this book: Chris Ziegler’s ‘T-Mobile G1 For Dummies’ originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jan 2009 19:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Waitrose Giving

waitrosepic.jpg

TrendWatching.com: British grocer Waitrose launched a locally-focused giving program that enlists customers’ help in focusing on issues closer to home. Waitrose’s Community Matters program assigns each store GBP 1,000 each trading month to donate among three local organizations such as community groups, schools or local divisions of national charities. Customers nominate the organizations to benefit, and Waitrose’s local democratic bodies make the final selection. Customers are then offered a token each time they shop that can be inserted in any of three Perspex tubes—one for each of the selected charitable groups. At the end of the month, the pile of tokens donated to each organization is weighed and the beneficiaries receive a corresponding proportion of the cash.

Generation G [TrendWatching.com]

First taste of iLife ’09: iPhoto’s face recognition

Jasmine posted her brief sneak peek at iLife ’09 yesterday with a slideshow, and it’s pretty clear that major improvements have come to Apple’s suite of lifestyle applications, most notably iPhoto ’09, iMovie ’09, and Garageband ’09. And since I’m an amateur photography nerd with aspirations of rock stardom, I’m most interested in iPhoto and Garageband, though the new iMovie may be enough for me to whip out my Flip camcorder and record more than just dogs riding on skateboards. And of course iWeb ’09 has a few updates too. I’ve just gotten through the iPhoto ’09 face recognition hurdle, and am just starting on the rest of the iLife suite. So here’s an in-depth look at the facial recognition bit of iPhoto, with more to come later.

iPhoto ’09

Lets start with the belle of the ball, iPhoto ’09. Why do I say that? Because the new Faces and Places feature on iPhoto ’09 was definitely one of the biggest news out of Phil Schiller’s Macworld keynote. While iPhoto ’08 introduced Events, which lets you group photos based on the dates they were taken, iPhoto ’09 introduced three new features that got the Mac community buzzing — facial recognition, geo-tagging, and social network support. For the facial recognition, you don’t have to tag every single photo you have with a name and a face; the idea is that iPhoto ’09 will be smart enough to do the facial recognition for you. But only after you do the necessary legwork to make it all happen.

Assuming you don’t have photos in your iPhoto library already, you’ll have import them. Me, I have around 3,500 photos sitting in my Aperture library on the laptop, and that’s not even counting the over 10,000 photos I have in my external hard drive at home. So if you’re a big photography dork like me, it’ll take some time for all the photos to import over. Once that happens, you can immediately start identifying faces and names. Sometimes iPhoto will be smart enough to detect faces for you, and sometimes not. If it does detect a face for you, it’ll display a square over what it thinks is a face, with a placeholder name “unknown face” underneath it. If it doesn’t detect a face, you’ll have to hit the “Add Missing Face” button on the bottom left, select the face, and add a name. Once you identify a face with a name, you can go to the Faces corkboard, select a face, and iPhoto ’09 will scout out your entire library to find photos with a similar face. Once it does, it’s up to you to go through the results to confirm or not confirm if the photos really do show that person. This is how the facial recognition training works.

The tiger's ear is a face? Really?

The tiger's ear is a face? Really?

(Credit: Nicole Lee/CBS Interactive)

Kyocera consolidates handset businesses, cuts 360 jobs in the process

It’s only been a year since Kyocera snapped up Sanyo’s cellphone business in a bid to expand its mobile empire, but it looks like the company is already being forced to reorganize its handset businesses into something leaner and, it hopes, meaner. The biggest shake-up comes in the company’s U.S. offices, which will now be focused exclusively sales, support, and business development, leaving all the handset design to be done at its Kyocera Wireless and Sanyo Telecom units in Japan, which themselves will be further consolidated in an effort to “enhance the efficiency and competitiveness of the combined global handset business,” according to company President Rodney Lanthorne. All of that will result in the loss of some 360 jobs, most of which will come from Kyocera’s operations in San Diego and Chatsworth, California, as well as its subsidiary in Bangalore, India.

[Via Phone Scoop]

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Kyocera consolidates handset businesses, cuts 360 jobs in the process originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jan 2009 18:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Week in iPhone Apps: Place Your Bets

This Sunday, your phone can help you gamble. It can also let you become a carjacker for one brief moment, and bring you closer to the lovely Ben Gibbard. To the Store.

Payback: It’s no Chinatown Wars, but Payback is a solid GTA-clone for the iPhone. Lots of guns, lots of driving, and really, really solid graphically. I prefer my iPhone games more on the play-for-2-minutes puzzle side, but Payback has a neat auto-save feature that lets you pick up right where you left off once your sandwich is ready and it’s time to stop playing.

Office Pool: This guy kind of priced himself out of the market, since, well, a paper and pencil works pretty well for this too, but if you want to create and track your illegal box pool on your iPhone, $5 will do that for you.

Death Cab For Cutie: Surprise iPhone-loving Trent Reznor didn’t beat those emo weenies Death Cab For Cutie to the iPhone app game, but this is still pretty cool. The free app links you up to ten free streaming songs, news, tour dates, videos, and of course the chance to buy stuff. Pretty nice design. If you still heart Ben Gibbard’s dulcet honeyvoice, this is for you. Free.

Fullbrowser: One of the more interesting new browsers now that developers can re-skin Safari is Fullscreen, which removes the title bar for normal browsing and overlays a nice translucent bar when you need it. And, it’s free.

This Week’s App New On Giz:

iPhone 2.2.1 Update Available Now, Fixes Bugs

iPhone 2.2.1 Pwnage Jailbreak Is Here

Air Photo Adds Wi-Fi Printing to the iPhone

114 Apps Apple Won’t Be Approving for the App Store Anytime Soon (Photoshop contest – beautiful stuff here).

$999.99 iPhone App MyCentrl Hooks You Up With Other Dumb Rich People

Face Double iPhone App Tells You Who Your Celebrity Twin Is

Apple Can’t Stand the Sight of Boobs or Booty

Sirius Satellite Radio iPhone App Could Come Within a Week

Dollar Origami iPhone App Instructs How to Properly Fold a Bill

Rowmote Brings Apple’s Front Row Remote to the iPhone (Unofficially)

This list is in no way definitive. If you’ve spotted a great app that hit the store this week, give us a heads up or, better yet, your firsthand impressions in the comments. And for even more apps: see our previous weekly roundups here, and check out our original iPhone App Review Marathon. Have a good weekend everybody.

First Look: MSI’s Second Wind Blows Away Its Predecessor

Msi_1

Here at Gadget Lab we’ve been blessed with an early test unit of the
MSI Wind U120 — the successor to the popular MSI Wind netbook. Our
first impressions? We like it plenty. The improvements from the first
model are very minor, but they make a significant difference on
something as small as a netbook.

Here’s a rundown of the MSI Wind U120’s features, accompanied by beautiful photography courtesy of Wired.com’s Jonathan Snyder.

Bigger, Better Trackpad

Msi_5

First and foremost—the trackpad (above). Almost everybody complained about the
crappy trackpad on the first Wind, and MSI listened. The Wind U120’s
improved trackpad is about two centimeters wider than the previous one,
and you’d be amazed at how much easier it is to mouse around with that
tiny addition in space. Also, the texture of the trackpad is a bit
grainy, which makes navigating less of a slippery experience than it
was on the previous model’s. Third and most important—the Wind U120 has
two silver buttons accompanying the trackpad, which beats the living
bejeezus out of the clunky, single mouse button on the original Wind.


Professional Makeover

Msi_3

Other than that, MSI completely reworked the Wind’s exterior, ditching
the original model’s cute, rounded aesthetic for a more professional
design with sharper edges and a mixture of black and white (above). More
serious this new netbook looks and feels indeed, which business users
should appreciate.

Spiffy Vents

Msi_4

The case is composed of a higher quality, sturdier
plastic compared with the first Wind. MSI also redesigned the heat
vents to, well, look like heat vents (above). The last model’s sorry excuse
for heat vents were five punched-out square holes, lined with cheap,
holey aluminum.


Same Ol’ Netbook Performance

Msi_6

As for computing performance, we saw no improvement. And we didn’t
expect any, since the Wind U120 contains the same guts as its
forefather. The test unit shipped with a copy of Windows XP, which operates
about as well as you’d expect an 8-year-old operating system to. (Read:
Like a piece of sh*t. We look forward to hacking this baby to run Mac
OS X.) Anyhow, we streamed some Hulu videos and they played back just
fine. Audio from the puny speakers sounds tinny, awful and barely
audible, just like on the first Wind. We recommend plugging into the headphone port (above), as
we generally do with every netbook.


Spacey Keyboard

Msi_2_2

The keyboard (above) hasn’t changed at all: It’s plenty roomy, but some might
have a problem with the three keys to the left of the "Shift" key (<
> ? ) because they’re smaller than the rest, which is a little
awkward.

Business or Casual?

 

Msi_8_2

With all that said, I personally still prefer the more casual look of
the original Wind (above and below)—but I treat my netbook as the computer I use to
"unwind" at home (i.e., web surfing, chatting and listening to music).

Msi_9

We’ll provide a full review after a bit more tinkering around and running benchmarks. Stay tuned, Gadget Labbers!

See Also:

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

(Thanks, Maren — for getting this thing in!)