Samurai Sword Action tour review

After years of living in Japan, the last thing we usually think of is taking a tour of the place. First, most foreign residents don’t want to feel like tourists, and secondly…well…the first one pretty much says it. However, we’ve recently made friends with H.I.S. (a big travel agency here) and they invited us to partake in one of their many Experience Tours, from learning the ropes as a ninja, to making sushi, to taking a samurai class. Basically anything that has to do with knives, plus about a billion other things.

When Tokyo Cooney said he was going to the “Samurai Sword Action” tour we decided to jump on the train, if only to be in a popular YouTube video.

The class is taught by Kill Bill choreographer Tetsuro Shimaguchi who played the Crazy 88’s “#1″, meaning the first guy who gets killed, gutted, and tossed across the room by Uma Thurman. Nice guy, great with a sword (see below).

All in all, the class was surprisingly good, and made me wonder a bit why I didn’t do things like this when I first came to Japan and didn’t know a thing about the place. Who knows, by now it could have been ME getting my butt kicked by a girl in the movies.

What we do is marketing and trend related, meaning that we do lots of tours as well, but instead of showing you how to handle a sword we help you get a grip on the market here. Once you’re finished up with one of our Tokyo Trend Tours, a little samurai action might be just what you need.

tokyo trend tour banner

Sony’s obelisk-inspired CMT-Z100iR iPod dock is full of modernist styling, stars

Sony's obelisk-inspired CMT-Z100iR iPod dock is full of moderist styling, stars

iPod docks come in all shapes and sizes, and while Sony’s last attempt would be hard to miss in most rooms, this latest one is rather more subdued and sophisticated. It’s the CMT-Z100iR, naturally compatible with the iPod, iPod Touch, and iPhone, but also sporting the ability to play CDs through a top-mounted slot-loader. It can even play tunes from other MP3 players through its USB port, if you’re so inclined, and while its pair of 20 watt speakers probably won’t shake the walls, they should suffice for filling your minimalist retreat with the groovy beats of the Future Sound of London. No firm price or availability details yet.

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Sony’s obelisk-inspired CMT-Z100iR iPod dock is full of modernist styling, stars originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 09:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Will you survive Left 4 Dead DLC?

For some time now I’ve only been a two-console owner, the PlayStation 3 and the Nintendo Wii. I received a lot of flack from co-workers and friends for not having an Xbox 360 and was even referred to as a “Sony fanboy.”

Then Valve released Left 4 Dead and …

Originally posted at Digital City Podcast

Casio’s burst-recordin’ EX-FC100 pocket cam reviewed

Casio's burst-recordin' EX-FC100 pocket cam reviewed

It’s not enough for pocket cams to just shoot high-def video any more. Oh no, they have to do something fancy with it, like Casio’s EX-FS10 and EX-FC100, both offering capture at up to 1,000 fps. The latter of those two, with its 5x optical zoom and 9.1 megapixel resolution, has been given the review treatment ahead of its US release, and the little burst-shooter seems to deliver. 30fps stills at 6 megapixels look clear and sharp, while watching the cam switch from 30fps to 210fps video on the fly is still an impressive thing to see — especially when it’s UNLV cheerleaders we’re watching in slow-mo, as embedded below. Low-light photography was not found to be this cam’s strong point, but it rarely is with shooters this size, so if you’re looking for something to capture your own (well-lit) Mythbusters segments with at home, and you have about $400 to spare, this could be your cam. Go team!

Continue reading Casio’s burst-recordin’ EX-FC100 pocket cam reviewed

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Casio’s burst-recordin’ EX-FC100 pocket cam reviewed originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 09:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tweetlog: Samsung LN46A850

SamsungLN46A850.gifWhat’s green and thin and brightly colored? The Samsung LN46A850 (http://tinyurl.com/dzjse6), that’s what. (We would have accepted grass, too.)

Yuruppy virtual pet ready to make you feel guilty for not taking good enough care of it

Takara Tomy‘s taking the virtual pet territory most famously inhabited by Bandai’s Tamgotchis to the next level with Yuruppy. Yuruppy’s just like any other fake pet — you need to slave away to keep it alive for seemingly little reward other than the knowledge that it will “live” to “see” another day. This one’s got a touchscreen however, so that you can actually pet your needy little buddy, on top of training and feeding. Fun! Sure, it seems insane to pile fake responsibilities on top of all the actual ones we humans have to deal with… insanely awesome. Regardless, the Yuruppy also comes in kitten and chicken varieties (yeah, we don’t know), and it’ll be $21 when it’s available in Asia, and a deluxe version with a larger screen will run $38.

[Via CNET]

Yuruppy virtual pet ready to make you feel guilty for not taking good enough care of it originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 09:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iMac 2009 Review

Apple may seem different than other companies, but the recession is kicking their ass too. The move they made with the new iMac was the smartest they could make under the circumstances—it’s a great deal.

In this new iMac release, Apple didn’t invest in a radical new design. That sort of thing doesn’t go over in an economic downturn. The case is identical to all other iMacs since August 2007, down to the brushed aluminum body and the occasionally annoying high-gloss screen. What Apple did instead—something they won’t let you forget—is drop the price of the 24″ iMac from $1800 to $1500 while spiking the performance.

The baseline chip used to be a 2.4GHz Core 2 Duo; now it’s a 2.66GHz, with the Nvidia GeForce 9400M integrated graphics now found in almost every other Apple product. iMacs used to come standard with 2GB of RAM, now there’s 4GB in the entry-level 24 incher that I tested, along with a 640GB 3.5″ hard drive.

The 20″ iMac is cheaper at $1200, but doesn’t carry as much value: It comes standard with only 2GB of RAM and a 320GB hard drive. You’d really need to up the RAM to 4GB, so that brings the bill to $1300. At that point, you’re just $75 away from doubling the internal hard-drive capacity. Now, at $1375, you’re a stone’s throw from the other system, the $1500 iMac with its noticeably larger screen—a screen that, mind you, Apple asks $900 for when sold a la carte. (I reviewed with the iMac side-by-side with the 24″ Cinema Display; they’re essentially identical even though iMac is CCFL while the Cinema Display is LED.)

The $1500 model really sits in the sweet spot. Stepping up beyond that may not make much sense either. Apple charges $1000-a thousand dollars!—to swap 4GB of RAM for 8GB. The good news there is that there’s an easy-access RAM-swap hatch, so Apple is almost encouraging you not to buy the extra RAM now, but to upgrade on the open market later when prices drop to sane levels. You can swing a 1TB hard drive for $100 more. However, if you save the $100, you keep the 640GB internal, and have the money for most of a 1TB external too.

People who are serious about gaming or video work do have higher-end iMac choices. There’s a 2.93GHz system for $1800, and you can jump to 3.06GHz for $150 more than that. At those levels, you also get dedicated graphics processors: There’s the basic Nvidia GeForce GT 120 256MB, then the $150-more GeForce GT 130 with 512MB. Another $50 on top of that gets you the ATI Radeon HD 4850 with 512MB. Those choices are good if you know what you’re looking for because, as the good people of iFixit found out, the iMac is not built for the average user to upgrade anything but RAM. Still, for most people—for most uses including anything less than serious gaming—it doesn’t make sense to buy above the $1500 2.66MHz iMac, especially given the performance I’ve seen.

And what have I seen? Well, you can see from these benchmark charts (which I also ran in the Mac Mini review) that the new iMac stays on top the whole time, through batteries of tests, when compared to both the Mac Mini and the far more expensive MacBook Pro (using the same graphics chipset):

Xbench test results

Geekbench test results

In real world testing, I made further discoveries of the iMac’s pre-eminence among its Mac peers. Ripping a 26-track CD in iTunes took just 3 minutes and 50 seconds on the iMac, while it took nearly 10 minutes (OK, 9:45) on the Mini with 2GB of RAM.

Playing Quake 4 with framerate counter turned on also revealed hidden power. While the Mac Mini kept up with the action and detail by dropping frames—45fps average, down to 20fps during heavy fighting—the iMac mostly maintained a smooth 60fps, dipping into the 50s when things got rough.

No matter what your level of PC knowledge is, you realize that there are faster, beefier desktop systems. Apple itself has the $2500-and-up Mac Pro (with similar graphics card options and much more serious core processors), and if you really know what you’re doing, you can build or customize your own system anyway. In the Windows world, the options are almost limitless. Because of all of those other options, the number of people who will be ordering up an iMac for over $1800 will probably be small.

It also makes buying a Mini—and the necessary peripherals—less justifiable. The message, heard loud and clear in this time of financial strife, is that $1500 will get you a system that would have cost well over $2000 not long ago, and that spending less than that will mean compromises that might not hold you over for long enough. I know some of you think $1500 is too much money for a computer, and I can respect that. But for people with the right kind of budget, the new entry-level 24″ iMac is a smart buy. [Product Page]

In Summary
Low-end specifications have been notably boosted

Price has decreased—$300 per configuration—in spite of performance bumps

Very difficult to upgrade by hand, except for adding RAM

The included keyboard is trimmed down to its barest key set, but you can ask for one with a number pad at no extra cost

$1500 for the 24″ might still be considered pricey by some potential buyers, and the $1200 model doesn’t present as much value

Screen glare can be annoying, and the screen and back are easily smudged (see gallery)

Dance Dance Remote Control adds a few steps to your TV experience

Crazy us, we thought that a remote control was meant to keep you on the couch — it does seem rather counter-intuitive to build one that makes you leave your seat and jump around within arm’s reach of the TV set. But when this guy saw an over-sized novelty remote at Brookstone, he knew that he had to have it. Not only that, but he had to best it — by fashioning a controller for Windows Media Center so large that one would need an entire appendage to get any use out of the thing. Our intrepid modder achieved his goal by stitching together two PS2 Dance Dance Revolution mats, a PS2-to-PC controller converter box, and some homebrew source code. What can we say about this one? Well, it certainly does seem to work… but we’ll be sticking to the tried and true, thank you very much. Video after the break.

[Via Hacked Gadgets]

Continue reading Dance Dance Remote Control adds a few steps to your TV experience

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Dance Dance Remote Control adds a few steps to your TV experience originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 08:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hulu returns to boxee via RSS feed support, in flies App Box and Auto Update

Before we get you all excited, we’ll quote boxee‘s ending of its announcement before anything else: “This is a bleeding edge release, not for the faint of heart since it didn’t go through much testing.” If you’re the brave type, you’re going to want to install the latest version of boxee this instance, as it not only brings back Hulu (in a sense), but it also throws in a boxee application market (App Box) and a much-needed Auto Update feature that will inform you automatically of future builds. So, you’re hungry for more on that Hulu bit, right? This version of the application brings along a built-in RSS reader optimized for video, and obviously, it fully supports Hulu’s public RSS feeds. Needless to say, we’re loving the direction this little app is going, so make sure you give it a go and report back with any praises or complaints.

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Hulu returns to boxee via RSS feed support, in flies App Box and Auto Update originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 08:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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dLAN Audio World streams audio over HomePlug

We’ve never been huge fans of HomePlug — 5GHz WiFi is our preferred obscure networking tech — but the new dLAN Audio system from Arkados and devolo AG might have us reconsidering. The various dLAN components all simply plug into power outlets and connect to each other, instantly creating a whole-house audio streaming system. Arkados and devolo are hyping iPod compatibility, but we don’t care about sources, really — we just want to see how crazy speaker and radio designs can get when both power and signal are coming from one plug. Sadly, there are no pics, pricing, or availability yet, but we’ll keep our eyes peeled.

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dLAN Audio World streams audio over HomePlug originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Mar 2009 08:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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