MacBook Pro 17-inch unibody unboxing and hands-on

Now this is more like it. Our favorite dude in the world (AKA the FedEx guy) just dropped this slab of nasty Apple magic on our doorstep. Not only is this system kitted out with a 256GB SSD, 8GB of RAM, and a 2.93GHz CPU, but the screen is — yes — anti-glare. We’re actually kind of stoked to put this one through its paces and see just exactly what it feels like (since we’ve already seen the other two new unibody models). And of course, we’re very eager to know just how robust that non-removable battery really is. So we’ll be covering the 17-incher a little more in-depth in the coming days, but for now, get a load of the unboxing.

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MacBook Pro 17-inch unibody unboxing and hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Feb 2009 10:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Five More Crazy Bike Mods

Trolley_bike

Yesterday we brought you a gallery of home-modded bikes and asked you if you knew of anything crazier. The post was so popular, and we got so many great suggestions, that we decided to go again. The only disappointing part? Of the mountain of suggestions as to the true nature of the "Pizza Bike", none were plausible, despite being very funny. One more thing — far too many of you suggested that it might be a condom carrier. What’s wrong with you guys?

Photo Credit: TheThompsonFive/Flickr

Pub Bike

Pedalpubatgabbys

One of the reasons I ride a bike is so that I can roll back from the pub and not lose my drivers license (although in Germany, oddly, you can lose your car license for being drunk in charge of a bike).

This monster takes it slightly further, putting the pub on the bike. The PedalPub holds 16 people, although only ten of them have to pedal while the others relax. The original is Dutch, but we picked up on the Minnesota version as it was pointed out to us in the comments and also because it highlights an interesting Minnesota law.

According to the PedalPub site, Minnesota State law was amended to allow passengers to drink while pedaling. Here’s the exception:

a vehicle that is operated for commercial purposes in a manner similar to a bicycle as defined in section 169.01, subdivision 51, with five or more passengers who provide pedal power to the drive train of the vehicle

Product page [PedalPub] 


The Poppa Chop

Poppa_chop3

Far too dangerous looking to be practical, the Popa Chop is a chopper built to wheelie. Made by Gadget Lab reader Macbaen, the bike balances on the back wheels of two kids’ cycles. As you can imagine, its almost impossible to steer. In fact, it ended up "attracted to the tree across the street".

Poppa Chop [Macbaenchunk]

The Schloooong Bike

Theschlooongbike

This ridiculous example of bike hacking is brought to you by the Rat Patrol. It’s classed as a Limo Bike, but lacks any frills. The stretch-cycle is, as you’d expect, dangerous — under the listing for Most Memorable Ride we find the following: "Ones where critical bits didn’t fall off!"

Sadly, the Schlooooong Bike is out of action — it was actually stolen, presumably by someone with a sense of humor.

Schlooooong Bike [Rat Patrol]

The Aquaduct

Aquaductjpg

Not a homemade mod, but fantastic nonetheless. The Aquaduct is designed for developing countries where water is both far away and dirty. You cycle the empty bike to the well or river, load it up and, on the return journey the water is pumped by pedal-power through a carbon filter and ends up in the top tank.

The design is still a concept (we first covered it a year ago, but if there’s anything we know about the developing world is that the people are very inventive hardware hackers. Hopefully somebody will build their own.

Aquaduct blog [Aquaduct]

Water Bike Pitches Pedal Powered Purification [Gadget Lab]

Sport Utility Bicycle

169664785_f407c1928ajpg

Here’s another ute, this time fashioned from two bike frames and one shopping cart. Don’t overload it, though. The maker, called TheThompsonFive, tells us how it rides:

Yeah it’s heavy, but it rides pretty good. The only problem I’m having is that the basket has quite a bit of flex in it, which is a little unsettling going around bumpy turns. I may have to work out some cross bracing. I wonder if they will let me take it into the supermarket.

Photo credit: TheThompsonFive/Flickr

Seagate drops patent suit against SSD maker STEC, runs home crying

Well, that was pretty anticlimactic. Seagate, which filed suit against SSD-maker STEC back in April — claiming the company infringed on four of its patents for SSD interfaces — in March after talking quite a sizeable game about similar possible actions against the big boys (Intel and Samsung), has just dropped the claim. Seagate said that the case against STEC was “no longer worth pursuing” because economic conditions are now so bad that STEC isn’t really selling many of the SSDs in question. That all sounds a little like saying “Monopoly stinks, let’s play something else” when you’re losing so bad you only have Baltic Avenue left, but maybe that’s just us.

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Seagate drops patent suit against SSD maker STEC, runs home crying originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Feb 2009 10:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony’s OLED Walkman priced and dated… in the UK

We know, there’s only so much an American can glean from UK prices, but there’s still excitement in the air from seeing Sony’s OLED-packin’ touchscreen Walkman up for pre-order at Amazon UK. The X Series is ready for ordering in 16GB (NWZ-X1050B) and 32GB (NWZ-X1060B) flavors, with both expected to be dispatched between a fortnight and five weeks. As for pricing? Try £214 ($308) for the little guy and £283 ($407) for the big brother. All of a sudden, Cowon’s OLED-equipped S9 isn’t looking like such a bad alternative, eh?

[Via OLED-Display]

Read – 32GB Walkman

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Sony’s OLED Walkman priced and dated… in the UK originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Feb 2009 09:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Jeff Bezos chats up the Kindle 2 with Jon Stewart

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos showed up at Jon Stewart’s pad the other day to discuss the Kindle 2, and Jon seemed fairly unimpressed. They were just finally getting into a groove when Bezos dropped the price bomb, and then their fleeting segment was over. It’s embedded after the break. Amazon VP Ian Freed has also been chatting up the device, but in a more technical nature. On designing the Kindle he reiterates the “invisibility” design ethic surrounding the device, about making it “disappear” for the user. They also improved the cellular modem for improved reception, and also fended off features like a color screen that would shorten battery life, up the price and cause the device to generate more heat and make its presence known. As far as text to speech goes, he thinks it’s good for short stretches of reading, and notes that it covers the vast majority of titles that aren’t available in an audio format, but didn’t speak specifically to the possible infringement of author rights.

Read – Jeff Bezos on The Daily Show
Read – Designing the Kindle 2

Continue reading Jeff Bezos chats up the Kindle 2 with Jon Stewart

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Jeff Bezos chats up the Kindle 2 with Jon Stewart originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Feb 2009 09:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New Olympus DSLR Puts Joke Features in Serious Camera

Olympus_e620

Olympus has announced its new DSLR, the E-620, which sits somewhere in the middle of the compay’s lineup. It’s certainly not aimed at the pro, but it has a rather odd mix of features that could appeal to the more advanced amateur.

First, and best, is the flip-out LCD, which finally makes live-view a useful DSLR feature. At 2.7", it’s a little smaller than what we’re used to finding on better cameras, but the flip is oustanding — from sneaky shots of people in the street to floor level pictures without having to lay belly-down, this could be enough to sell the E-620 to many people.

The novelty continues with the in-camera Art-Filters, a bunch of cheesy effects which can be applied to your photographs while they are still inside the box. I’ve honestly never seen the point of this even in cheap cameras, but in a mid-range DSLR it seems frivolous. A DSLR user is serious about taking photos, and so any tweaks are likely to be done back at the computer. Here’s a sampling: Pop Art, Grainy Black and White, and Pin Hole. Classy stuff.

Better is the in-body image stabilization, which will steady the shakes of any lens you put on there, a sensor cleaning function and wireless flash control. Everything else is pretty standard, from face recognition to "Shadow Adjustment Technology" which compresses contrast to keep details in the shadows and highlights.

All in, it’s a solid if rather dull new camera. Available May for an estimated $700.

Press release [DP Review]

Further signs point to an international Kindle

Further signs point to an international KindleIf last night’s unveiling of a suspiciously SIM-shaped blank space on the Kindle 2’s circuit board wasn’t enough proof for you that our little reader is set for a big international journey, this might just be the ticket. Lab126, the company that developed the Kindle — which also happens to be owned by Amazon — has posted a job listing for a “Wireless Software (Firmware) Manager” with “competency in 3G wireless technology (HSPA, EVDO),” experience in “working with one or more 3G wireless chipset solutions and Linux-based devices,” and who doesn’t mind engaging in a little overseas travel themselves. Granted, this could be in regards to some other wireless, Linux-powered mobile device under development by the company, but we’ll let you draw your own conclusions. Oh, and if you’re a globetrotting wireless guru you’d better hurry up and get that resume in — haven’t you heard we’re in a recession?

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Further signs point to an international Kindle originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Feb 2009 08:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Drumstick Pencils Could Ruin Your Life

Drumpencils

I hate drums. Since my good for nothing yoga-hippy housemate shipped his drumkit out things have actually gotten worse — now every surface in the apartment is a drum, and he plays them continually when he is not at work. Which, as he is too lazy to find a job, means all frickin’ day long.

So hopefully he won’t be reading this post, as these drumstick/pencil hybrids would make my life hell. The $7 sticks have one bulbous end on which he could tap out annoying rhythms, rat-a-tat, all day long and at the other end he’d find a pencil, ideal for writing out cleaning rotas and other passive aggressive notes.

For those of you more fortunate in their living arrangements, or perhaps if you have kids, these can be picked up from the maker, Suck UK, or from Amazon.

Product page [Suck UK via Book of Joe]

Acer’s Aspire One trims the fat, upcoming slimmer model pictured

Acer's Aspire One trims the fat, upcoming slimmer model pictured

At just over an inch thick it’s hard to think of a little laptop like Acer’s Aspire One as being chubby — but that doesn’t stop us from looking longingly at other, skinnier options in the pipeline. Apparently aware of our wandering eye, Acer is set to release a thinner model that, according to speculation, will buck the netbook storage trend by being SSD-only. Beyond that little is known about this streamlined portable, but you can be sure we’ll be keeping an eye out for more info — between fleeting glances at other hot arrivals, of course.

[Thanks, Chris]

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Acer’s Aspire One trims the fat, upcoming slimmer model pictured originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Feb 2009 08:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel launches shapely new CPUs for slim new laptops

Intel launches shapely new CPUs for slim new laptopsToday’s laptops are slim and trim (with some notable exceptions), and as smaller cases demand smaller components Intel is doing its best to keep up, announcing two new CPUs specifically designed for the “ultra-thin” notebooks. They are the 1.6GHz Core 2 Duo SU9600 and 1.4GHz Core 2 Solo SU3500, both joining its existing line of consumer ultra low voltage (CULV) chips to create three tiers of efficient and dainty processors: Celeron, single-core, and dual-core. No word on where these chips will be first making an appearance, but we can think of one upcoming lithe lappy in which they’d be right at home.

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Intel launches shapely new CPUs for slim new laptops originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Feb 2009 07:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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