Amazon Kindle 2 Event: We’re Here!

We’re inside the Morgan Library, where Amazon is unveiling the the Kindle 2 right now. Our liveblog is on fire! [Gizmodo’s Kindle 2 Liveblog]

Steve Wozniak comes to ‘Dancing With The Stars,’ universe quivers

Yes, your greatest / worst dream has come to fruition: Steve Wozniak will be featured on the next season of Dancing With the Stars. There’s not much we can tell you right now about his upcoming moves, though we will be watching with bated breath, quietly hoping for a double Lindy, the Sugarfoot, and Denise Richards being dipped on a Segway.

[Thanks, Ethan]

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Steve Wozniak comes to ‘Dancing With The Stars,’ universe quivers originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Feb 2009 08:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Get a 52-inch Vizio HDTV for $999.99

Here's your chance to score a 52-inch LCD for less than a grand.

(Credit: CompUSA)

You missed your chance to nab a big ol’ TV in time for the Super Bowl, but March Madness is just around the corner (go Spartans!).

Here’s a pretty sweet deal to …

Originally posted at The Cheapskate

Video: iClooly stand gets extra cleepy, iPhone 3G / iPod touch support

It sure took awhile, but the iClooly aluminum stand has finally been updated to fit your second generation iPod touch or iPhone 3G. Set for release on February 18th, the pivoting and rotating stand still costs ¥4,980 in Japan or $47, um, $54 Stateside. While the rising Yen could account for the delay, there’s no way we could possibly explain the motivation for producing the iClooly video posted after the break.

[Via Impress]

Continue reading Video: iClooly stand gets extra cleepy, iPhone 3G / iPod touch support

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Video: iClooly stand gets extra cleepy, iPhone 3G / iPod touch support originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Feb 2009 08:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS’s little netbooks go big-box; Eee PCs expected in Walmart by year’s end

ASUS's little netbooks go big-box; Eee PCs expected in Walmarts by year's end

Last year upstart Acer stole the netbook crown from ASUS, a sales stat that might have been helped by the ability to buy an Aspire One at your local neighborhood Walmart. While you can already pick up an Eee at places like Target and Best Buy, from what we hear at wholesale mixers you’re nothing until you go Supercenter, and that’s just where the company that started the netbook craze wants to go, said to be planning its own push into the biggest of big-box retailers. If this report is correct, expect to be able to pick up a little Eee with your groceries (and shame) sometime in the latter half of this year.

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ASUS’s little netbooks go big-box; Eee PCs expected in Walmart by year’s end originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Feb 2009 07:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How To Turn a Netbook Into a Net Jukebox

_spotifyhelp

A netbook may be too weak and puny for serious computing, but it makes a pretty good jukebox.

Thanks to the massive amount of music available online, a two-pound computer can access and play nearly every song ever recorded by mankind. The trick is getting the software needed to make it convenient to tune into the cloud instead of cramming your tiny hard drive with MP3s. Here’s how to do it.

I decided to turn my piece of junk MSI Wind into a jukebox because it was useless for most other computing tasks. My Wind actually comes with a rather capacious 160GB hard drive, but this project, as you will see, is particularly suited to netbooks of rather more limited storage. And of course, all of this will work for a "normal" computer too.

Here we use a Wind Hackintosh running Mac OS X, but you can just as easily use the stock Windows XP version. In fact, in one sense this will actually work better. The important thing is a net connection.

So, you have iTunes, but only a 4GB SSD drive. That won’t hold much music. It barely even holds my podcast directory. So for this project I will use iTunes solely for podcasts and grab all the rest of our music from the internet, specifically streaming it from the ether rather than engaging in disc-filling downloads.

There are several internet "radio" stations, sites which will let you pick one artist or genre and then compile a playlist for you. Pandora is one, and apparently very good, using as it does a database compiled by real people to select tunes for you. Sadly, it is not available outside the US, and is therefore dead to me over in Spain.

Instead, we chose Last.FM, a British site that is happy to share with our colonial brethren. Last.FM uses computer wizardry to compare your tastes with those of others who listen to the same music. It then builds eerily accurate playlists. You can then stream these playlists via a web browser or better still, pipe them directly into iTunes using the iScrobbler plugin.

IScrobbler not only monitors your iTunes usage and sends the info the the Last.FM servers (thus building your listening profile), it also takes the streams from Last.FM and plays them in iTunes itself. This means you get to use the remote control and keyboard shortcuts you are used to, along with track info displays. It also means that Last.FM is the only streaming service you can use with AirTunes — Apple’s over-the-air music streaming protocol which beams tracks from iTunes over Wi-Fi to an Airport Express (itself hooked up to a stereo).

At least, its the only one that will do this natively. More on that in a moment.

The real reason for this how-to article is Spotify, a new music service which is so good it made me dedicate a whole computer to it. Spotify is being called a "celestial jukebox". It is essentially an iTunes-like piece of software with a quite ridiculous amount of music in it, all accessed via your internet connection:

In the future we aim to have all the worlds music available, however, we are currently in beta and are updating our catalogue so it’s possible that you won’t be able to find some of your favorite artists or tracks.

This is the Holy Grail of online music — every track ever made accessible all the time. Better still, Spotify is free in its ad-supported version, and an ad-free premium version costs €10 per month. I’d probably sign up for this but the ads are so unobtrusive there seems no point.

Spotify has all of the big labels signed up, plus some indies: Universal, Sony, BMG, EMI Music, Warner Music, Merlin, The Orchard and Bonnier Amigo. The catch? The free service is invite only and available in UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Finland, Norway and Sweden. Sorry US! For once you get left out, although you can get the paid version at any time.

The Spotify software is simple and fast. Faster even than iTunes. The music is piped over the wire in the the open source Ogg Vorbis q5 codec, running at 160 kbps, and it is all managed by P2P, much the same as BitTorrent, to keep the mothership’s bandwidth costs down.

Next, you need to hook your netbook up to a stereo. With Windows XP, just plug a stereo cable into the mic socket. With a Wind running OS X, you’ll need to do some hacking. Better, as this is so far completely free, is to buy Rogue Amoeba’s Airfoil, a piece of software (Windows and OS X) which will stream sound from any application and send it to an Airport Express. This is my setup, and it means that the netbook can be anywhere in the apartment and stream music to the big speakers over my Wi-Fi network.

The best thing about this is that you don’t need a remote control — a netbook is so tiny it is a remote control. Even if you don’t have an Airport Express hooked up to your stereo, Airfoil can stream to another computer on the network and take command of its speakers. It’s neat and costs just $25.

There are surely many other ways to get music from the web to your speakers, but the netbook is particularly convenient, especially as you can have an almost infinite library at your fingertips. Any further recommendations should, of course, go in the comments.

Product page
[Spotify]
Product page [Last.FM]
Product page [Airfoil]

See Also:

Report: Amazon scares up Stephen King for Kindle

When Amazon.com hosts its anticipated Monday morning e-book event, one of the highlights could be an exclusive deal for the Kindle with horror story master Stephen King.

Amazon Kindle

The Amazon event, taking place at the Morgan Library and Museum in New York, is widely expected to feature the unveiling of a next-generation Kindle e-book reader. …

Originally posted at News – Digital Media

Video: HP’s MIE Linux distro runs just fine on Acer’s Aspire One

Video: HP's MIE Linux distro runs just fine on Acer's Aspire One

Just last Friday HP finally released the installer for MIE, its clever and clean version of Ubuntu, and, though we warned about running it on anything but a Mini 1000, Dan from Dan’s Web threw caution (and whatever was currently installed on his netbook) to the wind and tried it on an Aspire One. Straight out of the box the OS and UI overlay seem to work quite well, as shown on the video below, missing only an audio driver but having WiFi and even Bluetooth. He suspects things will function just as well on other netbooks (since there’s so much hardware overlap between them), but as always your compatibility may vary. To get in on the action you’ll need the 900KB installer from HP, the 900MB image the installer will download, and a 2GB thumb drive to boot. If you have the necessary bytes, bits, and bravado, be our guest and let us know how it goes.

Continue reading Video: HP’s MIE Linux distro runs just fine on Acer’s Aspire One

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Video: HP’s MIE Linux distro runs just fine on Acer’s Aspire One originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Feb 2009 07:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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WSJ: Kindle 2 launching today with Stephen King exclusive

The Wall Street Journal just weighed in on today’s Amazon press event with two nuggets of information. First, they state as fact that Amazon.com will announce a new version of its Kindle e-book reader. Additionally, Amazon is expected to announce an exclusive new work available only on the Kindle from best-selling author and be-spectacled weirdo, Stephen King. According to the WSJ, “a Kindle-like device” could play a role in the story. Oh Stephen, don’t you know that they’re all going to laugh at you? Find out all the details later today with our live Kindle launch coverage.

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WSJ: Kindle 2 launching today with Stephen King exclusive originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Feb 2009 07:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cardboard Chair is Both Package and Product

Fys1

This is a chair without packaging. Or, perhaps, it is a package without a chair? The "Finish Your Self" chair, from David Graas, is designed to be cut free of its surrounding cardboard, Airfix-kit style, and simply slot together. It’s actually tiny, designed for use by children, and costs a rather steep €69 ($89) but once you have one, it’s pretty easy to give the kids a pile of old cardboard and a box-cutter and they can build you a whole dining-room suite.

Product page [Apart Design via Lovely Packaging]
Designer page [David Graas]