
[Via Electronista]
Filed under: Desktops, Media PCs
AOpen rolls out XC Encore OE700 media PC originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Apr 2009 15:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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[Via Electronista]
Filed under: Desktops, Media PCs
AOpen rolls out XC Encore OE700 media PC originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Apr 2009 15:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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A 241 mile range may not sound like much–it’s about average for how far a Ford Mustang or small SUV travels on a single tank of fuel. But for an electric car, it’s pretty astonishing.
Gizmodo reports that a Tesla Roadster has completed the entire, 241-mile-long Rallye Monte Carlo d’Energies Alternatives course without draining its battery. In fact, the report said that the car’s on-board computer estimated that there was 38 miles of range left to go. Along the way, the Roadster beat out an electric (and very cool) RUF Porsche 911, along with several Mitsubishi electric concepts.
To be fair, the race course was no Mille Miglia. The average speed was just 28 mph, with a top speed of 56 mph in one spot. But it shows that an electric car can finally achieve a useful range on a single charge. Of course, it’s also cool that the Roadster also hits 60 mph in 3.9 seconds, but that’s another story.
Neighborhood Electric Vehicles aren’t the most useful cars out there. For example, they’re usually limited to a top speed of about 35 mph and don’t have to meet any federal safety standards. Nonetheless, there’s a small market for them–and interest is certainly growing, as mainstream consumers begin to think about an alternative-fueled future more and more.
ZENN, one of the top NEV manufacturers, hopes to capitalize on this by announcing what amounts to a fire sale. The company has slashed the price of its 2009 all-electric ZENN car to just $9,995, by way of a $4,750 rebate and a (pre-existing) $1,250 federal tax credit, according to AutoblogGreen. That puts it about $2,000 less than the comparable ZAP.
Plus, ZENN estimates that its car costs just under two cents per mile to run, with an “exceptionally small carbon footprint.” I’d still prefer a Vespa. But this is a big step in the right direction. Get one at a ZENN dealer–or a biofuel station–near you.
Not that JVC‘s been avoiding the 3D bandwagon or anything, but it has yet to formally introduce a 3D HDTV to really take advantage of the in-home 3D revolution that 3D backers just swear is right around the bend. The GD-463D10 is a 46-inch LCD HDTV with a native 1,920 x 1080 resolution, 2,000:1 contrast ratio, twin ten-watt speakers and support for three-dee material. We’re also told that the set will come bundled with a pair of polarized glasses when it ships in Japan early next month. The only problem? That ¥700,000 ($6,978) price tag, which seems particularly painful with no real 3D programming to speak of. Yet, of course.
[Via Impress]
Filed under: Displays, HDTV, Home Entertainment
JVC intros 1080p GD-463D10 3D LCD monitor in Japan originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Apr 2009 15:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Well, that’s not a bad start. Despite the fact that we won’t see the all-electric Tesla Model S sedan in production for at least two years, the company has already signed up 711 pre-orders since the official unveiling two weeks ago, Carscoop reports.
That might have something to do with its price, which is just $49,900 after a $7,500 federal tax credit is applied. That sounds like a lot of money. But for anyone who follows the car industry, it’s not bad at all for a cutting-edge electric car that can hit 60 mph in under six seconds, accommodate up to seven passengers, and last anywhere from 160 to 300 miles on a single charge (depending on the battery pack ordered with the car).
The interior also sports a 17-inch touchscreen panel that will come preloaded with Google Maps, Pandora Radio, full broadband access, and (I imagine) whatever else comes out in the next two and a half years that the company thinks is worth putting in the car by then. It doesn’t hurt that it looks great, at least to this writer’s jaded eye.
This is about the closest thing to a Superman suit we’ve seen. Put it on, say its creators, and the motorized Hybrid Assistive Limb can “expand and improve physical capability” up to tenfold in activities such as walking, standing, and climbing stairs.
Through a sensor attached to the skin, “HAL” captures faint biosignals on the skin’s surface that result from messages sent from the brain to muscles when a person attempts to move. A computer analyzes how much power the wearer intends to generate, then calculates the amount of torque needed to put limbs into action.
Especially noteworthy here is that the suit responds to intended motion, rather than actual motion.
“This is what we call a ‘voluntary control system’ that provides movement interpreting the wearer’s intention from the biosignals in advance of the actual movement,” explains Japan’s Cyberdyne, which will soon begin manufacturing the cybernetic suits for about $4,200 apiece, possibly making it the first such wearable device aimed at civilians.
The company was formed by Sankai Yoshiyuki, a professor at the University of Tsukuba who is heading up research on HAL, which he says has the advantages of both robot and cyborg. Yoshiyuki says he was inspired by reading Isaac Asimov’s “I Robot” as a child.
…
HP MediaSmart Server
(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)
Back in November of 2007, we took a close look at the HP MediaSmart Server ex475, a glorified network-attached storage drive that gathers, organizes, and streams your media content over a network.
The Server also gives users open access to their content from …
Somewhere along the way, audiophiles became as obsessed with look as with sound quality. So set aside for a minute your ears and your skepticism: Here are the world’s most beautiful-looking audio devices.
The ClearAudio Statement: At $100,000 the ClearAudio Statement, seen above, is everything that is wrong with the audiophile culture, combined into one four-foot, 770lb, variously suspended, NASA-electronics-adorned turntable (check out a full-length shot here). But it’s a design triumph, coaxing a polished, demure aesthetic out of what should by all means be an ostentatious CNC-machined mess.
Speak-er: Spawned by a playful concept that nobody honestly expected to get made, the Speak-er isn’t fancy, powerful or technologically impressive. It’s a dead-simple desktop speaker in a fantastic shell, which opens up a slew of design possibilities for your office, room, or live-action comic book troupe.
Sonnance Freewheeler: Continuing the simple-but-perfect theme, the Sonnance Freewheeler is a wireless speaker disc, about the size of a car’s wheel and able to run for about 8 hours on a full charge. It’s also $21,000, but that neither here nor there, “here” being “within the range of you to buy” and “there” being “at all worth it, even if it was.” But, pretty!
BeoSound 5: It’s somehow heartening to see so much design go into a remote control. That’s what the BeoSound 5 is: a 1024×768 screen with a brushed aluminum control wheel that serves solely as an interface for the BeoMaster 5, a giant B&O media server.
Montegiro Lusso Turntable: Apparently designed in the Towers of Hanoi tradition, this conical turntable is adorned with enough expensive-sounding features for even the most
credulous discerning audiophile. It’s just under $50,000, but really, you can’t put a price on tying a room together, can you?
Sony Sountina: So, it’s a speaker in a glass stick, but it’s also one of the rare speakers that would work in virtually any setting. As a bonus, it can be illuminated in blue, amber or purple light, though I think it looks best without any at all.
V-Moda Vibe Earphones/Headsets: This is one of the few items on this list that people actually buy, and with good reason. They’re capable (though not outstanding) earphones, on which V-Moda has shown extreme attention to design. The corrugated bodies, Mont Blanc-esque pen-tip wire accessories and (sometimes) fabric wire casings make for the most stylish earbphones on the market today.
Harman Kardon Soundsticks: You’ve seen this at Apple Store and Best Buys for years, but they’re due some credit: they bring a stunning transparent aesthetic to mainstream buyers, perfectly complementing a generation of Apple hardware while being generally gorgeous enough to be appealing to the PC crowd too. You’d still be hard-pressed to find a lovelier set of speakers for under $200.
Opera Sonora Speakers: Every once in a while, questionably scientific theories of audiophilia result in extremely handsome products. That’s the story of the Opera Sonora line of speakers. The theory: Bolting little speaker driver on to the back of tonewood—the same stuff used in high-end violins—will provide a rich, warm sound. The result: Speakers that look like they were designed by a reanimated Antonio Stradivari, with a sound—well, not many people have actually heard them yet.
Sony Qualia 010: Priced at over $2500, slapped with a painfully pretentious name and jinxed forever to be rejected by mainstream-averse audiophiles, these futuristic headphones were doomed from the start. But whatever, these are subtly good-looking cans, blending in for day-to-day use but revealing meticulous design and construction on close examination. (Image from Head-fi)
We’ve been made privy to some Sprint planning documentation that implies that the carrier is looking to get all its Pre ducks in a row by May 16, which would suggest that there’s no way in hell it’s launching any earlier than that. Ultimately, that could mean we’re looking at a launch on the 17th — a Sunday, as Sprint launches often are — or any time after that, but since Palm continues to reaffirm its first half commitment, we’d say that we’re now down to a window between 5/17 and 6/30. Awesome.
Filed under: Cellphones
Palm Pre launching no earlier than May 16 according to leaked doc? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Apr 2009 14:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Canon's new Rebel T1i SLR
(Credit: Canon USA)
Thus far, SLR camera sales have been a bright spot in the camera market, but analyst firm IDC expects the recession will hit the higher-end models, too.
Worldwide camera shipments are expected to drop 6 percent to 129 million units …
Originally posted at Underexposed