Navigon announces Rand McNally-powered 4300T max and 7300T nav units, less awesome 3300 max

Looks like Navigon’s new relationship with Rand McNally is starting to bear fruit — the company just announced two new GPS units preloaded with McNally Scenic Routes. Both the 4300T max and the 7300T have over 250 pre-programmed routes from Rand McNally’s Best of the Road series, sorted into categories like “weekend getaways” and “regional trips.” The $279 4300 max (pictured) is the more basic of the two, featuring a 4.3-inch 16:9 touchscreen display, 2GB of storage with microSD expansion, Bluetooth, free traffic updates, and the new MyRoutes personalized routing system, while the $399 7300T repackages all that into a slicker “frameless” case and adds in voice-enabled address entry and control. Navigon will only say Q2 for the 7300T, but the 4300T max is due to arrive on March 9 along with the identical but stripped-down 3300, which drops Bluetooth, traffic, and Rand McNally content to get the price down to $199. Check a pic of the 7300T after the break.

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Navigon announces Rand McNally-powered 4300T max and 7300T nav units, less awesome 3300 max originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Mar 2009 07:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Navigon debuts three new GPS and MyRoutes feature

Navigon 7300T

Navigon 7300T

(Credit: Navigon)

On Monday, Navigon introduced three new portable navigation devices: the Navigon 3300 Max, Navigon 4300T, and Navigon 7300T. The trio also includes a new routing feature called Navigon MyRoutes, which aims to provide personalized route recommendations based on your driving habits.

MyRoutes works by recording and …

Originally posted at Miss Direction

Avaak launches home video monitoring system

The Vue is a unique, battery-powered Web cam.

(Credit: Rafe Needleman / CNET Networks)

Avaak is launching its very attractive Vue Web cam system at the Demo 09 conference Monday. It’s designed for home monitoring, like cameras from Panasonic, Logitech, and DLink. The kicker: The Vue cameras are tiny, light, …

A new perspective for 3D films at home

Dolby 3D glasses

Right now anaglyphic glasses (back row) are the only way to watch 3D at home. Dolby hopes to make passive and active glasses (front row) work in living rooms too.

(Credit: Erica Ogg/CNET)

Everyone is raving about the “unblinkingly real” quality of watching the animated “Coraline” in 3D. That …

First Hands On: Touch Book Is Part-Netbook, Part-Tablet

The Always Innovating Touch Book does something I’ve never seen from a netbook: it has a fully detachable keyboard dock and transforms from a standard looking 8.9-inch netbook, to a stand-alone tablet.

Spearheaded by Gregoire Gentil, the man behind the Zonbu Desktop and Laptop, the Touch Book is his latest project, and a promising one at that. Gentil says the Touch Book’s hardware and software are fully open source and ready for modifications. While the device will come preloaded with a custom Touch Book OS, Gentil says this machine is capable of running mobile operating systems such as Android or Windows CE.

The hardware I saw wasn’t quite complete—the software was demoed on a prototype, and the final hardware above were just empty shells to give an idea of the design—so I cant comment too much on how well the end product performs, but I saw enough to consider this thing more than vaporware.

The Touch Book is the first netbook powered by a 600 MHz TI OMAP3 processor (built around ARM technology), 256 MB RAM, 3-axis accelerometer, an 8-gigabyte microSD card for storage and two batteries providing up to 15 hours of usage between charges. The 8.9-inch screen can display resolutions up to 1024×768 and uses a resistive touch panel.There’s also the usual offerings of 802.11b/g/n wi-fi and Bluetooth.

As a standalone tablet, the Touch Book is roughly 9.5″x7″x1″ and weighs about a pound. When docked to the keyboard, it is about 1.4-inches thick and weighs 2 pounds. All of the Touch Book’s guts, except for one of the batteries, are housed in the tablet portion of the device, so that it’s fully functional while detatched from the keyboard.

The chipset fits on a motherboard about the size of an index card, and is heavily optimized to get the best performance out of the hardware. Part of this involves stacking the RAM directly on top of the processor in a package on package configuration. The lid of the touchbook also pops off, so you have easy access to the hardware and it’s two internal USB ports you can use for dongles you dont want hanging off the side of the tablet.

As far as software goes, the OS is based around the Open Embedded Linux platform, but fully customized for the Touch Book hardware. As such, the Touch Book has the power to handle full screen video, and render OpenGL 3D graphics. Gentil says the Touch Book can run some of the same games found on the iPhone and plans to offer them in the future.

The Touch Book UI design depends on what configuration the hardware is in. When docked to the keyboard, the Touch Book uses a standard, cursor-based UI that looks like other Linux desktops. However, when in tablet mode, it uses a custom-designed, touch-based UI. The touch UI is based around spherical icons that rotate in a circular fashion as you swipe to the next one. Content is divided into three categories: web, apps and settings.

On the apps side, Touch Book will ship with both Firefox and Fennec (Mobile Firefox), games that will make use of the accelerometer, plus various sorts of web and productivity apps, such as word processor and spreadsheet-type programs.

Always Innovating plans to start shipping the Touch Book in late May or early June, priced at $300 for the tablet alone, or $400 for the tablet and keyboard dock combination. Pre-ordering will begin next week, and you can order the Touch Book in either red or dark grey colors. Gentil says he would also like to release future iterations that include support for GPS and 3G mobile broadband. [Always Innovating]

NEW TOUCHBOOK COMBINES NETBOOK AND TOUCHSCREEN TABLET; PROVIDES THREE TIMES THE BATTERY LIFE AT UNDER TWO POUNDS

PALM DESERT, Calif. March 2, 2009: Always Innovating today unveiled the Touch Book, a versatile new device that works as both a netbook and a tablet thanks to a detachable keyboard and a 3D touchscreen user interface. The Touch Book, previewed at DEMO 09, weighs less than two pounds as a netbook and has a battery life of 10 to 15 hours – three times longer than most netbooks.

“The Touch Book is perfect for these tough economic times because you can use it in so many ways,” said Gregoire Gentil, founder of Always Innovating and creator of the Touch Book. “You can use it as a netbook computer, a hand-held game device, or a video player. You can even reverse the keyboard to prop it up on a table in an inverted ‘V’. Finally, because it is magnetic, you can remove the keyboard and put the tablet on the fridge to serve as a kitchen computer or digital frame.”

The Touch Book combines the best of open source software and open hardware with a sleek industrial design by designer Fred Bould. The innovative design includes internal USB plugs. “I hate having dongles hanging from my laptop – I often end up disconnecting them accidentally – so we opted to put the USB inside,” said Gentil.

The Touch Book is the first netbook featuring an ARM processor from Texas Instruments, resulting in outstanding battery life, and a fan less, heat-and-noise-free system.

According to Chris Shipley, executive producer of the DEMO Conferences, the Touch Book’s innovative architecture and industrial design earned it a spot on the DEMO conference stage. “The longer battery life is a boon to netbook users. But the Touch Book’s versatility – its ability to function as a netbook as well as a standalone touchscreen tablet – makes it a breakthrough product,” said Shipley

The Touch Book is expected to ship in late spring and will start at $299. Advance orders can be placed at http://www.alwaysinnovating.com/store/.

Hack Turns MacBook into iMac, Kinda

Desktop_hack

Desks can get messy, and if you are hooking up a laptop to a host of desktop peripherals, it can get messier still. One answer is a clutter-reducing basket slung beneath the desk. Another much more dangerous solution was created by Matt Lumpkin, a man so cavalier that he drove screws into the back of his monitor.

This rather elegant hack takes a standard, wire-mesh office file holder and fixes it to the back of the monitor. You then drop in the notebook, hook up the cables and – if you don’t look too closely around the back – you have converted your MacBook into an iMac. Matt actually avoided any real danger of piercing his screen with a screw by picking a monitor which already had mounting holes for a VESA stand.

As you can see, the rats nest of cables is still there, but at least it is out of sight. Better still, Matt reports that the MacBook actually runs cooler than it did when on the desktop — the wire mesh means that air can run freely over every surface, comfortably convecting away the heat.

MacBook/iMac Rack Hack [Instructables via Life Hacker]

Sigma Bumps UK Lens Price by $11,400

Lowres200500mm_f28_ex_dg

The Brits are getting shafted again. We’ve reported many times already about the drop in value of the Great British Pound against, well, against pretty much every currency, and the knock-on effect of increased gadget prices.

Now, though, Sigma has bumped a lens price by £8,000, or around $11,400 in today’s money. To be sure, this isn’t a cheap $200 that has suddenly rocketed in price — the 200-500mm f/2.8 APO EX DG HSM was already a stunning $16,000 ($22,800) at launch. Still, a 50% price hike is huge, resulting in an MSRP of £24,000 ($34,200)

We haven’t covered this rather specialist lens before so, to save you having to Google it, here are some fun facts: The lens weighs 15.7 Kg (34.6 lbs) and has so much glass inside that it needs its own internal battery pack (rechargeable) to focus it. The lens even has its own LCD display to show you the current focal length and focus distance.

LENS PRICE ROCKETS £8,000 IN ONE MONTH (UPDATE) [Amateur Photographer]

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D_skins: Contraceptive Covers for Optical Disks

Dskin

D_skin is a protective cover for DVDs, a scratch guard for optical media. Unlike the hard to apply, sticky film protectors you are familiar with, the d_skin clips on and can therefore be replaced when you scratch it.

There is, however, a problem. The d_skin cost more than the DVDs it protects. At $12 for a five-pack, they come in at around ten times the price of DVD-R blanks. Of course, if you buy pre-recorded DVDs, in the form of movies and video games, the price ratio of this replaceable prophylactic improves. But the product site pushes this as a cover for your regular, home made media, even touting the fact that you can burn a disc with the skin in place.

The real problem is optical media in general, though. DVDs are low capacity, expensive and easy to damage. There are two reasons we still have them — DRM and poor bandwidth. The former is due to shortsighted paranoia on the part of content producers, the latter is due to greed on the part of the cable and internet providers, who insist on capping and slowing data on their networks.

So, if you haven’t already backed up your Xbox games onto a hard drive somewhere, you might want to grab some of these. OR, you know, learn to hack and just burn them to another blank DVD — it’ll be cheaper.

Product page [d-skin via Core77]

Researchers look to coffee stains for improved TV screen coating

While there’s plenty of discoveries that no doubt wouldn’t have been possible without coffee, few have been as directly influenced as this latest fit of inspiration from Ivan Vakarelski of the Institute of Chemical and Engineering Sciences in Singapore, who apparently saw the future of TV screens in a coffee stain. More specifically, he was intrigued by the way a coffee spill dried into a circular stain, which, as New Scientist notes, is effectively caused by coffee granules being “assembled” by the varying evaporation and convection rates in the fluid. That process, Vakarelski thought, could be replicated artificially to create a better coating for LCD and plasma screens, and he and his colleagues were ultimately able to do just that with a suspension of gold particles that were left to dry on a glass plate covered with closely packed latex microspheres. According to Vakarelski, the resulting network of gold nanoparticles is “finer than spider’s silk,” and potentially even more conductive than the ITO coatings commonly used today. Of course, it’s still a long ways from actually be used on LCDs, although the researchers have already created coatings a few square centimeters in size, and say they plan to increase that “tenfold” as soon as possible.

[Via New Scientist]

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Researchers look to coffee stains for improved TV screen coating originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Mar 2009 06:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gigabyte lays out new mice and keyboards for CeBIT debut

We already knew that Gigabyte was planning a few netbook launches here in Hannover, but now we’re receiving word that a number of new mice and keyboards should also be on display. First up is the GM-M8000 laser gaming mouse, which boasts a 4,000dpi sensor, a scaling-designated switching button, five other programmable buttons, an ergonomic design and a trio of profiles for storing different macro settings for different titles or users. Next up is the GM-M7800S wireless critter (pictured above), which tops out at 1,600dpi resolution but sports a leather coating along with Swarovski crystals. Closing things off are the multimedia-centric GK-K6800 and ultrathin GK-K7100 keyboards, both of which are blessed with copious amounts of hotkeys and an appropriately placed Shift button. Mum’s the word on price, but hopefully we’ll learn more once CeBIT opens its doors. Full release is after the break.

Continue reading Gigabyte lays out new mice and keyboards for CeBIT debut

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Gigabyte lays out new mice and keyboards for CeBIT debut originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Mar 2009 05:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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