Jewel-tone your MacBook with Speck’s latest SeeThru cases

Do you miss your original jewel-toned iBook G3? You can now relive those days without having to own a bulky, slow laptop with Speck’s expanded line of SeeThru hardshell cases for MacBook.

Designed for the latest unibody MacBooks, the SeeThru line once only featured pink, red, and clear versions …

Apple experiments with iTunes Pass: it’s not what you think, and it’s lame

If it seems like Ma and Pops over at the iTunes store are toying with the idea of subscription music, look again. The iTunes Pass is more akin to buying a season of Celebrity Rehab: long-time Depeche Mode fans can put down $18.99 to get everything the band releases between now and the seemingly arbitrary date of June 16, 2009, including the new single, various promotional bits (remixes, videos, etc.) and the Sounds of the Universe album when it’s eventually released. The audio comes in iTunes Plus (256kbps / AAC / no DRM) format, and while Apple doesn’t say exactly what you’ll be getting, the company promises that you won’t wind up paying more for the pass than the value of everything you receive. Of course, what we’d really like to see is this sort of a deal for a band that didn’t peak twenty years ago. In the meantime, we’ll be catching up with Depeche Mode the way nature intended — during the weekly spin of Personal Jesus at 80’s Night.

[Via Tech Digest]

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Apple experiments with iTunes Pass: it’s not what you think, and it’s lame originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Feb 2009 11:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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$750 to $1,000 retail desktops reviewed

In all the excitement of reviewing HP’s new Firebird gaming desktop, we neglected to update our list of Best Buy desktop reviews. We already announced our winner in the ultra-budget category (congratulations, Acer), and last Friday we also wrapped up our $750 to $1,000 review segment. What we …

Microsoft’s SideWinder X8 BlueTrack mouse is sidewinding its way to retail this week

The benefits of BlueTrack over optical or laser mousing technology in gaming situations will probably be debated amongst our children’s children, but if you’ve decided that Microsoft’s latest and greatest is the one for you, the SideWinder X8 gaming mouse hits stores this week. Besides that 13,000fps image processing of BlueTrack and a user-configurable 250 to 4,000 dpi, the mouse is a 2.4GHz wireless number with “virtually no latency” and it includes a play-and-charge cable for upping the juice without dropping the action. It even has a decent hands-on under its belt, so if you’ve been holding out for this one there’s nothing really stopping your unemployed self from heading down to a local big box and plopping down $99 for the privilege.

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Microsoft’s SideWinder X8 BlueTrack mouse is sidewinding its way to retail this week originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Feb 2009 11:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Safari 4 First Impressions

We’ve spent a little bit of time checking out Safari 4 Beta on both Windows and Mac, and here’s what we like (and don’t like) so far:

Windows
On Windows, if you’ve never used Safari but used Chrome or Opera, it’ll actually feel a lot like that, with the overhead tabs, Speed Dial, and even a few Chrome icons. After years of shunning standard Windows UI elements—which seemed especially dicky in a way, given how anal Apple can be about standardized UI themselves—Apple is actually playing nice. It’s got the usual minimize, maximize and exit buttons, standard fonts and even real Windows shortcuts like Ctrl+Tab to cycle through tabs, so it actually mostly feels like it belongs on Windows now. Well, except for placing the X to kill tabs on the left side, which is annoying ’cause on Windows it should be on the right.

I’m still not quite sure how I feel about the pitch black look of the top tabs in Windows when the window is maximized if your default window color is one of the darker shades—yeah, it matches, but I think Chrome’s approach, with blue tabs set down a little bit that are easy to distinguish, works a little better. Overall, I think I prefer the tabs on top, at least in Windows. What I love for sure is that there’s an actual arrow on the right side which you grab to tear off the tab into a new window—which results in a cool little pop-out animation, like it was a squished up sponge or something—because I’m always accidentally tearing off tabs in Firefox when I just wanted to move it down the line.

Speed is actually not incredibly important in a way—loading sites like ESPN, the New York Times and Slate against Firefox 3.0.6 and Chrome 1.0.154, honestly, they’re all pretty damn quick, averaging around 3 seconds, though on super-Javascript heavy pages Safari 4 and Chrome, both based on Webkit, perceptibly edge out Firefox.

Top Sites is pretty slow to load the first time you fire up Safari 4, but then it’s instant. You can’t manually add sites—it’s automagical—and once you delete ’em they’re gone. A star pops up in the top right corner when there’s something new at that page, which is a nice touch. Cover Flow moves smoothly, at first, but can get jerky if trying to move through a ton of sites at once. I hate how it replaces what ever site you’re looking at if you just click the icon—you have to make a icon or middle-click so it does load over whatever you’re lookin’ at.

The smart search bar brings up suggestions from Google much faster than Firefox does, but the actual address bar is nowhere near as brilliant. It only pulls suggestions using the main part of the URL (before .com or .net or whatever), not from anything after a slash, or even the page’s title. For instance, if you start typing “giz” and you’ve been to Gizmodo, it’ll bring up Gizmodo. But typing Safari, even if you’ve been to Apple’s Safari pages, won’t bring up anything since it’s not safari.com. As some have noted, the blue progress is gone, which is annoying, but I didn’t notice it initially if that tells you anything.

Full search history seems like the crowning navigational jewel here. It actually searches the text of websites you’ve visited, and even with fifty or so pages in my history so far, it’s really fast and works well. I just wish it made it more clear where on the page the text was located before you click, and how many instances there were, though otherwise the use of Cover Flow is nice.

It gobbles resources in Windows: With 14 tabs open, it ate over 400MB of RAM.

Overall, I think it’s a lot more Windows-friendly than the initial Windows versions of Safari, and its excellent performance (if your system can stand up to its resource consumption) actually makes it worth taking a look at again if you didn’t like it originally (I sure as hell didn’t). It doesn’t have the Mr. Fantastic-style extendability of Firefox and it’s not quite as stripped down as Chrome, but it tries to balance between feature rich and clean, and doesn’t do a bad job.


Mac
Despite its Windows improvements, the new UI does look much better on OS X overall—the new tabs on top look works really well, I think, though its break with a more standard OS X layout might vastly annoy some people. Also History and Cover Flow look and feel more natural on Mac too.

Another Mac perk: Multitouch zooming, which lets you manipulate the new full-page zoom with iPhone pinch gestures. It’s not silky smooth, but definitely slick—it’s actually a lot like browsing a page on the iPhone, especially if you’re using two-finger scroll to pan and stuff.

Speed difference between Safari 4 and Firefox is a bit more noticeable in OS X. It doesn’t kill Firefox, but there’s definitely a difference. Cover Flow runs more smoothly, from what I’m seeing, without the jerkiness I got on Windows sometimes, though full history search isn’t any quicker—but that’s still plenty fast. It does use resources more efficiently in OS X than in Windows: Those same 14 tabs only ate about 230MB of memory.

While it’s hard to speak to stability yet and whether or not you should use it as your main browser, it seems okay so far and the new features and UI make it worth grabbing, even if you wanna hang on to a more stable build of Safari or Firefox in the meantime.

Kogan promises Linux netbook in “weeks,” we have our doubts

Ruslan Kogan, the Australian who built up our hopes only to let them down recently with his make believe Agora, is back with more outlandish promises, and for whatever reason, we think he actually expects us to just believe him this time. During a recent interview, Kogan noted that he would like to be taking orders for a Linux-based netbook that he designs and specs in as little as “two to two and a half weeks.” He’s expecting to sell the 10-inch machines for around $529 to $539, which will buy you an Intel Atom processor, 160GB of HDD space, 1GB of RAM and a decent amount of magical pixie dust, we imagine. In related news, Kogan’s also hoping to have OLED TVs out within just a few months and region-free BD decks shortly thereafter. See, our skepticism isn’t that unwarranted, now is it?

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Kogan promises Linux netbook in “weeks,” we have our doubts originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Feb 2009 10:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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QA: What Happens If My Automaker Goes Bankrupt?

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Should you buy a car from an automaker facing bankruptcy? What if you’re looking at a car loaded with technology features? Here’s a Q&A:

Q: Why are some automakers on the verge of bankruptcy?
A: They’re the ones (typically) making the cars few buyers want, or they have cloudy product plans for the future. And they’re paying the penalty for sweet union contracts that never imagined there’d times like this.

Q: Like American automakers? Like Chrysler?
A: Like Chrysler specificially. A lot of people in the industry think Chrysler’s a goner. Chrysler has brand equity in the Jeep name and a lot of people still like their minivans and pickups. But there’s not a whole lot more.

Mini microphone spruces up voice recording possibilities on iPhone / iPods

Not that this is the very first microphone designed to function with Apple’s iPhone or anything, but it’s certainly amongst the cheapest and most universal that we’ve seen. The Mini Microphone reportedly plays nice with the iPhone 3G, iPod touch and iPod nano, giving ’em all that extra special voice recording oomph that’s so badly needed. The best part(s)? It’s only $14.99, and it’s barely bigger than a valve stem cover to boot.

[Thanks, Junior]

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Mini microphone spruces up voice recording possibilities on iPhone / iPods originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Feb 2009 10:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Macbook Pro 17 inch Unboxing

Fresh out of the box.JPG

It’s been delayed for over two months now, but the new MBP 17s are slowly trickling into retail stores, for those who have been waiting patiently. Ours arrived this morning, and we thought it’d be nice to put up some unboxing pics for your viewing pleasure. We also have the Apple Macbook Pro 15-inch and the 13-inch in-house, which makes for some nice side-by-side action.

Check out the pics after the jump.

$100 EyeClops Mini Projector announced for untatered tots

We knew it was coming, and sure enough Jakks Pacific just introduced its EyeClops Mini Projector for a penny shy of $100. Still light on specs, we can tell you that the palm-sized, LED projector features built-in speakers and up to 10 hours of operation off an unspecified number of D batteries when away from the mains. As to the quality, well, you typically get what you pay for and this pup is targeting a demographic of ages 8 and above — ’nuff said. Look for it to ship sometime in the Fall.

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$100 EyeClops Mini Projector announced for untatered tots originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Feb 2009 10:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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