Study: Single ladies match bachelors on tech toys

Single women rival single men as tech device owners, according to a Forrester Research survey released Thursday.

Obviously to an organization filled with female tech geeks, that “news” was met with bemusement.

But the survey of over 1,000 single adult males and over 1,000 single adult females in …

Originally posted at Planetary Gear

Swarovski Tech is D:lightful

SwarovskiDlight.jpgCrystals and technology: it’s a marriage I’ve been exploring for almost a month. Now Swarovski has knocked it out of the park once again with the D:light, a sparkly bracelet that turns into a digital watch. Just touch a button and this bangle displays the time.

There are two flavors of this essential accessory: the D:light 1003142 is gold and sells for $1,700. The D:light 1003141 is stainless steel and lists for a much more reasonable $1,500. Both have Swiss quartz movements, measure 1 3/8 x 2 1/4 inches, and feature 171 shiny crystals.

Acer’s Mac-like 13-inch Aspire 3935 arrives

A mere week after we saw a truckload of new Acer and Gateway laptops at the company’s New York showcase (well, it was technically in New Jersey…), the first of Acer’s new offerings has arrived in our Labs.

It’s a good one to start out with — …

Tweetlog: Dell Adamo

Dell AdamoMacBook Air killer, it is not. The sleek Dell Adamo (http://tinyurl.com/cyqmrd) delivers lackluster performance and battery scores.

Cheap Geek: Philips MP3 Player, iPhone Car Charger, Jensen HD Radio

PhilipsMP3.jpgHere at Cheap Geek Central, we all have tattoos of Scrooge McDuck. He’s our idol.

1. Some makers of portable music players say you shouldn’t get a screen for $79.99. “Just listen in random order, peons,” they say. (I may have invented the “peons” part.) But the good people at NewEgg.com say no, this tyranny must end. Get a Philips 2GB MP3 player with a 1.8.-inch display for $79.99, they say. The one without the screen is going to sell a billion more units, but this is still a great deal.

2. Speaking of MP3 players, Amazon has a fantastic deal on an iPhone 3G car charger. This simple white charger is only $0.97, which is one of the cheapest deals every to appear in this space. Shipping adds a paltry $2.98 more.

3. Let’s say you want an HD radio for your car. Maybe you love that 3-second delay when switching stations. Well, Amazon has a deal for you. Get a Jensen HD5112 HD radio for $109.07, and it ships for free. The radio also lets you play MP3 and WMA files from CD-R/RW discs, an SD card, or a USB connection.

Acer AspireRevo: the Ion-infused unboxing

We just tore the packaging off of Acer’s new AspireRevo nettop and dove into its Ion-powered goodness. The computer is in many ways a product of NVIDIA’s designs, since the Ion-powered nettop reference platform has been a part of the Ion ecosystem for a while, and this Revo apple doesn’t fall from the NVIDIA tree. Still, Acer had to go ahead and build the thing, and it’s a pretty great package all-in-all. We’re still in the preliminaries — the HDMI didn’t work out of the gate, but after swapping back and forth a few times with the VGA plug we were in business — and we’re playing with a potentially buggy “engineering sample,” but hopefully we’ll be able to pull together some cohesive impressions on the thing, and play a bit of Spore while we’re at it. It’s already obviously the fastest Atom-powered device we’ve played with, and while it still pretty much chokes on Hulu and that whole “multitasking” concept, we’re pretty pleased so far.

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Acer AspireRevo: the Ion-infused unboxing originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Apr 2009 11:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Keyed In: Keyboard Doormats

Enter Key Doormat.gifSpruce up your front porch this spring by adding some peripheral flair to your entryway: Pieter Woudt‘s recycled-rubber keyboard doormats are the perfect way to welcome fellow geeks to your home.

Woudt’s Home and Enter doormats are available at Kikkerland for $30 each.

Giz Explains: The Difference Between $100 and $100,000 Speakers

A speaker system can cost as little as $35. Or as much as $350,000. As a normal person, you probably have just one question about speakers that cost as much a Ferrari: What. The. Hell.

How Speakers Work
Especially when you consider just how simple the overall mechanism behind a standard speaker is: It moves air. Essentially, what happens in a speaker—loudspeaker, to be technical—is that the alternating current from an amplifier runs to the speaker and through the voice coil (which is just, wait for it, a coil of wire) turning the coil into an electromagnet. That, in turns, creates a magnetic field between it and the permanent magnet in the driver. As the current alternates between positive and negative, the magnets are attracted and repulsed, moving the cone back and forth. Voila, it emits the soothing sounds of Bach or Korn. (Driver diagram from Wikipedia’s unusually exceptional loudspeaker article.)

But that’s probably not quite what you think of when you hear “speaker.” You’re probably thinking of a box with a circle thing and maybe a hole in it. That’s actually a loudspeaker system, and it actually has more than one kind of speaker inside of it, called drivers. That’s because the driver tuned to deliver high frequencies—a tweeter—ain’t so good at delivering bass, which is why you need a woofer or subwoofer (low and lower). And then you’ve got mid-range speakers—for mid-range sounds—in higher-end systems. Your average GENERIC SPEAKER COMPANY set skips this middleman. So generally two or more drivers are stuffed in a box or cabinet, called an enclosure.

Lovely, but that doesn’t explain what separates these $107,000 YG Acoustics Anat Reference II speakers from the $50 Logitech Z-2300s on my desk—which are even THX certified. So, we enlisted some help: Cnet’s Audiophiliac Steve Guttenberg, who lives and breathes speakers ranging from the sensible to the ludicrous, and Paul DiComo and Matt Lyons, speaker guys who came from Polk and are now at Definitive Technology.

If you read our profile of Audiophile Maximo Michael Fremer “Why We Need Audiophiles,” it probably won’t surprise that when initially asked simply, “What the difference between ten dollar speakers and ten thousand dollar speakers?” the Definitive guys’ initial answer was, “Well, it ought to be that they sound better.” Even Steve told us, “You can’t apply a Consumer Reports kind of index to something that’s as subjective as audio quality.”

No, but seriously.

The Goal of a Loudspeaker
A speaker’s ultimate goal is “to sound like reality”—the elusive dragon that every audiophile chases—so on a broad, not-very-useful level, how close it comes to matching that reality is the difference between good and bad, expensive and cheap speakers. To be slightly more technical, the “spec” is clarity: The lower the distortion of the original sound it recreates, the better the speaker. In fact, basically every other spec, every confusing number you read on the side of a box is actually totally meaningless, according to both Steve and the Definitive guys. Steve singles out watts as “one of the more useless specifications ever created.” If you have to look for a number when buying speakers, Steve said one that’s “kind of useful” is sensitivity/efficiency, which would be something like 90dB @ 1 watt, which relates how loud a speaker will play at a given power level.

Three Characteristics
But when pressed, there are a few qualities Paul and Matt from Definitive singled out in amazing speakers—what they call the big three:
• More dynamic range, or simply the ability to play louder without sounding like trash as you crank the volume. With good speakers, you want to keep cranking it up, like accelerating a fast car.
• Better bass. That doesn’t mean louder, “but better.” It’s more melodic, and not muddy—you can actually hear individual notes, an upright acoustic bass being plucked.
• “A very natural timbre.” Timbre is the “tone color” or how natural the sound is—if you played the voice of someone you know on a speaker with excellent timbre, it would sound exactly like them. Or if two different instruments play the same note, you’d be able to tell them apart very easily and cleanly.

Beyond that, what audiophiles are looking for—which Mahoney alludes to in the audiophile profile—is a speaker’s ability to create an image, the picture. That is, its ability to create a sense of three-dimensional sound. The defining problem of designing speakers, say the guys from Definitive, is that “physics is dogmatic.” So every speaker is built around a set of compromises.

Size
To put that in some concrete—rather than seemingly religious—terms, you can’t have a small speaker that sounds good. So one defining quality of six-figure speakers is that they are large. They have bigger woofers and tweeters. More surface area means better sound. There are also simply more drivers—every driver you add is like when you add another string to a guitar, to create a better-nuanced sound. So, for instance, a $300 speaker from a “quality manufacturer” you’ll get a 5 1/4-inch woofer and a 1-inch tweeter. A $3000 pair of speakers might have two 5 1/4 mid-range drivers and then a 10-inch woofer.

Build Quality
Build quality is the other thing. A “dead box,” or an enclosure that doesn’t create any sounds of its own—since that’s distortion—is key and something that costs a lot of money. You just want sound from the drivers themselves. The quality of the woofer and tweeter themselves, obviously, comes into play—their ability to handle more power, since that’s what translates into volume.

At the extreme end, Steve says, they can just handle more power without breaking—as the copper wire inside heats up, it can deform or melt, and the driver gets messed up. Pricey speakers don’t do that. In terms of exotic materials or construction, Steve mentioned ribbon tweeters, which are only in the highest-end speaker systems—they’re “literally a piece of aluminum foil that’s suspended between magnets that vibrates back and forth” producing excellent clarity. Better speakers also have intricate dividing networks to make sure the right signals go to the right place—they get more complicated as the price goes up.

Dollar Figures
So how much do you have to spend to get a good system in the eyes (ears?) of an audiophile? Definitive recommends $1000 for a home-theater component setup. (In other words, don’t buy a home theater in a box.) You can also get a pretty decent pair of “neutral, natural sounding” speakers for $300—they “won’t knock your ass” and won’t be great as some things, but they’ll be alright. There’s no magic one-size-fits-all speaker system, however. It depends on the room and the situation. (If your couch is against a wall, skip the 7.1 surround, says Steve.) Heavier speakers tend to sound better than lighter ones, though that’s not an absolute.

But what’s the upper limit? Well, there isn’t any. Paul from Definitive said he heard these $65,000 Krell Modulari Duo last month and “was mezmerized.” It’s like wine to oenophiles, Paul said. As Steve puts it most simply: “To people who are into it, it’s worth it.”

Still something you still wanna know? Send any questions about speakers, KoRn or John Mahoney’s secret Britney shame to tips@gizmodo.com, with “Giz Explains” in the subject line. Big thanks to Steve from Cnet and Paul and Matt from Definitive Technology!


Listening Test: It’s music tech week at Gizmodo.

Public rage stalls Time Warner trials of consumption-based internet

Time Warner’s new data capping broadband scheme was never expected to win any popularity contests, and the details of its plans are so frustrating, that this probably should not come as a surprise. Regardless, it looks like the company’s plan to further roll out testing of the consumption-based billing method has been foiled, or at least stalled, because it couldn’t find enough customers to participate in the testing. TWC had planned to test in several locations, including San Antonio and Austin, Texas, but the response has apparently been so negative, and there were so many complaints, that the company has “delayed” the trials until October. So… maybe if we keep moaning about it the plan will be abandoned altogether? Here’s to hoping, anyway.

[Via The Register]

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Public rage stalls Time Warner trials of consumption-based internet originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Apr 2009 11:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Garmin Launches Ultra-Thin 5-inch GPS Device

Garmin_nuvi_1490T.jpg

Garmin has launched the nüvi 1490T, an ultra-thin nav unit with a 5-inch touchscreen. It includes free, lifetime, NAVTEQ-powered traffic alerts, plus a lane assist mode with junction view for navigating tough, unfamiliar intersections with multiple choices.

The 1490T also displays road signs and big arrows to indicate which path to follow. The device also supports multi-point routing for up to 10 routes, along with a time zone transition feature and a speed limit indicator for the current road.

Finally, the 1490T’s ecoRoute mode lets you choose the one that uses the least amount of fuel, as well as the usual options for fastest, shortest, and other choices. Most of the features I listed (with the exception of traffic alerts) aren’t yet available on cell phone GPS products, so at least they go a ways toward justifying the $499 Garmin wants for the 1490T. Look for it in stores beginning in July.