iPod shuffle 3G pumping up the jams a little too hard at the gym?

Seeing as a good number of people pick up iPod shuffles for use while working out, this might be a bit of an issue. An Apple thread discussion has blossomed with reports that the 3rd gen unit’s gone sentient and is maxing out the volume while users are doing cardio. The conjecture is that its volume control-equipped headphones might not be moisture resistant and is having averse reactions to sweat. Of course, we could take the “it’s a feature, not a bug approach” and assume Apple’s simply added a hidden sweat detector to crank it based on the workout intensity. This all may be much ado about nothing, but be sure to do your ears a favor and set the max volume via iTunes before you start your routine, just in case.

[Via iLounge]

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iPod shuffle 3G pumping up the jams a little too hard at the gym? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Apr 2009 15:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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10 Storage Gadgets That Will Help You Lose The Clutter

It’s that time of year again guys—time to clean up and de-clutter. If you obsessively accumulate crap, Spring cleaning can be a daunting task. These gadgets can help you get organized.

[Images via Flickr and BlueQ]

HDMI cables to light up your life

Illuminated HDMI cable (Credit: Donya)

In the enthusiast world of PC modding, there are bright Christmas tree-like computers decorated with glowing neon lights and LED-embedded fans. Perhaps this may have inspired the manufacturer of this unique HDMI cable to integrate ultra-bright LEDs to create a pseudo Philips Ambilight effect.

If blue isn’t …

The 404 313: Where Dennis Crowley snowboards and bikes his way into our hearts

Dennis Crowley, inventor of many things good, including Dodgeball (the social Web tool, not the terrible movie or the gym game Justin and Wilson can’t play because of their thick glasses), joins The 404 today to talk about some interesting stories from the Web and his latest social Web tool, Four Square.

(Credit: Dennis Crowley)

Today, we go a bit back in Web 2.0 history with the first Twitter/Loopt social-networking tool, invented by Mr. Crowley, Dodgeball–from its inception, to its purchase by Google, to its eventual shutdown.

Not to be deterred, Dennis is back at it again with Four Square, another social-networking tool, where users can compete with one another and earn badges and points when they hang at certain places. It’s available for both iPhone/iPod Touch, BlackBerry, and SMS. We encourage you to check it out and report back to us, whether it improves your social life or earns you a “Douchebag Badge.”

Also on today’s show, we get to some voice mails about Buzz Out Loud infringing a little too much on 404-territory. It’s no surprise, given our general awesomeness. In actual stories, we’ve got Justin Yu’s review of the new “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” movie that his “friend” let him watch through a telescope in another room.

We learn through the new Digg Bar that young, white males binge drink. You can thank the U.S. federal budget deficit for that wonderful, no-duh study.

Per usual, send us a voice mail, especially about your social life experiments with Four Square, at 1-866-404-CNET (2638). Or via e-mail, if you’re international, at the404 [at] cnet [dot] com. More guests coming up, including an appearance by Dan the Mantern and Alison Rosen.



EPISODE 313





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Originally posted at the 404

Scientists Create Black Hole Video Demo

NASA_Black_Hole.jpg

Ever wonder what it would look like to get sucked into a black hole in space? Me neither, but scientists have developed a computer simulation that shows what you would see if you were drifting toward a brain-crushing singularity, according to New Scientist.

Two scientists at the University of Colorado in Boulder wrote code based on the equations of Einstein’s general theory of
relativity, which describes gravity as a distortion of space and time, the article said. “They follow the fate of an imaginary observer on an orbit that swoops
down into a giant black hole weighing five million times the mass of the
sun, about the same size as the hole in the center of our own galaxy.”

The report said that the research could eventually help physicists understand what happens to matter and energy in a black hole. For the rest of us, it’s pretty cool to watch. Follow the link to see a short (45-second) video of the sequence, as light from other stars near the hole is swallowed up by the event horizon (the point at which nothing can escape the black hole).

Nintendo DSi on sale in Europe, DSi Shop open for business (video)

Nintendo’s DSi, the youngest of the dual screen triplets, is now available in Europe, priced at £150 (US $222) in UK and €170 elsewhere. As for everyone across the pond, we’ll have to wait until Sunday for the official North America debut, but if you somehow managed to procure one early (hello there!), you can check out the DSi Shop, which has officially flung open its doors for eager buyers. Check out our semi-exciting video of some basic Shop functions after the break.

Continue reading Nintendo DSi on sale in Europe, DSi Shop open for business (video)

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Nintendo DSi on sale in Europe, DSi Shop open for business (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Apr 2009 14:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Report: Toyota to Slash Prius Prices

2010_Toyota_Prius_Silver.jpg

Toyota Motor Corporation has set 2.05 million yen starting price ($20,750) in Japan for its third-generation, 2010 Toyota Prius, putting it on par with the newly released Honda Insight, according to Automotive News. That’s considerably less than originally planned and could signal an upcoming price war when the car goes on sale in the U.S. on May 18th.

Originally, Toyota’s revised Prius was expected to fall in around the $24,000 range, which is roughly what the current model with a similar amount of equipment costs. The report said that a newer, cheaper Prius would prove a tough rival to the Insight, as the Prius gets better mileage, is faster, and is also larger and has more room inside.

Engadget Podcast 140 – 04.03.2009

Do you love people talking? Do you love technology? Then you’re in the right place, friend. Welcome — yes, welcome one and all to the Engadget Podcast! This week, you get to hear the coolest set of cats this side of the junkyard pontificating on the week’s top stories. Listen as Josh, Paul, and Nilay dish about Palm’s SDK happenings, marvel at the HTC Snap, relive a Dell unboxing, and get crazy on Sling for some questionable business practices. If you don’t enjoy this podcast, you may not be listening to it closely enough.

Hosts: Joshua Topolsky, Nilay Patel, Paul Miller
Producer: Trent Wolbe
Song: 8BN – Push It

00:03:10 – Palm announces webOS SDK availability, Palm OS emulation for Pre, new cloud services
00:11:08 – Pandora, Amazon, other third-party apps demoed on Palm Pre
00:36:44 – HTC Snap hands-on
00:43:25 – Samsung Mondi WiMAX hands-on with video
00:52:37 – Dell Studio XPS 13 unboxing and hands-on
01:01:50 – Older Slingboxes won’t work with SlingPlayer for iPhone

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Engadget Podcast 140 – 04.03.2009 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Apr 2009 14:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Peek Pronto Lightning Review: Simple Email Faster

Peek Pronto is the faster version of the original Peek, an incredibly stripped down slab of screen and keyboard that does one thing—email—but aims to do it simpler than anyone else.

Hardware
It’s boxy, whimsical minimalism done right. Its unfussy shape and the front’s bubbly keys are friendly and inviting. But its chrome back, and its slimness—thinner than the BlackBerry Curve 8900, the thinnest BlackBerry you can buy—infuse it with the sufficient gadget allure.

The screen is bright—a little dimmer than blinding Curve 8900 screen—and just large and crisp enough to make a text-only device nice to use—a mite higher resolution would always be better, but everything’s clear and readable. The markedly ugly themes are actually the screen’s real undoing.

Whether or not you’ll like the keyboard is largely a matter of taste—I’m usually not fan of chiclet-style keyboards that sacrifice button surface area for spacing between the keys, but even though I don’t particularly like typing on the Peek, my pinpoint accuracy consistently astounds me. I think that this is because the strike point on the keys is deceptively larger than it appears to be, and the way the keys are shaped prevents half-misses from becoming whole misses. They’re are easier to press than on the original Peek—since this is by no means a squishy keyboard, frequent users of the original who didn’t wear iron gauntlets must be afflicted with crippling arthritis by now. The rubber coating is a perfect consistency—not too sticky for your nubs, but you won’t slip off either.

Your primary method of navigation is the scroll wheel, a throwback to the old-school BlackBerry days. Which, in theory is fine, since you’re merely navigating in cardinal directions, not across a plane (like with a trackball) but in practice, I miss the speed of a trackball. Also, considering you have to use it as a button a lot—to bring up the menus that you use to do anything, it’s a bit too thin, making it a harder than necessary target. The back button, which sits just below it, could use some steroids too—obviously, it shouldn’t be too easy to hit, but it should be easier to mash without accidentally hitting the scrollwheel too.

Software and Experience
It’s a simple, minimal experience. I get that. But why does it have to be ugly too? The three color schemes—Slate, Tangerine and Spring are seriously gross. BlackBerry’s latest OS makes a text-oriented screen look pretty snazzy, for the most part—especially in media menus—so I know the Peek guys can do better.

Starting up really is easy: Enter your email account info and name and go. (Yes, you can do multiple, up to five.) And for the people Peek is aimed at, that’s how it should be. When you power up, it takes you directly your inbox. It took a couple minutes before mail started pouring in, but everything flowed in perfectly.

So, the big thing about the Pronto over the past Peek model, as far as the average user is concerned, is that the UI is less sluggish, it uses Push for email, so all of your email arrives automagically, and you get unlimited text messages.

Push indeed seems to works just fine—not much more to say about it than that. Text message implementation is a bit messy—it’s essentially an email converted into a text message, so it’s not a very clean solution, with headers and stuff to wade through on the Peek.

I didn’t spend a whole lot of time with the original Peek, so I can’t say how much faster precisely the Pronto moves—BoingBoing’s Rob and others have complained about its sluggishness—but for the most part, it’s fast enough. Some things are slower than they should be—deleting an email takes about three seconds, though deleting a whole bunch (hold shift and scroll down) takes about four.

While the Pronto adds Exchange support, it still lacks, for instance, IMAP and custom folders. The tricky thing about critiquing something like the Peek, which wears its minimalist monofunctionalism as a badge, is finding the line between missing feature (custom folders) and pointed omission (IMAP?). What exactly should it add? If it keeps adding features, when does it move beyond itself?

Should You Peek?
The Peek Pronto is $80 for the hardware plus $20 a month for the service that rides on T-Mobile’s service. It’s a bit much on the monthly end—$10 would make it immensely more attractive. If you have to ask why you would buy it when you could get a BlackBerry, whose data plan isn’t much more than that, this probably isn’t for you. It doesn’t organize your email (much less your life), browse the web or do anything else but let you—wait for it—peek at your email and execute only the most essential and defining functions of email. It does this pretty well, for the most part.

I can’t imagine someone who really wanted email on the go would want something this simple from the outset. But if I wanted to a ditch a full-featured device to more completely untether myself from the world when I get away from my desk, but can’t give it up completely, Peek would be a solid form of Nicorette. [Peek]

Friday Poll: Attack of the QWERTY phones



CNET News Poll

The QWERTY question
What will a preponderance of QWERTY keyboards on cell phones lead to?

BlackBerry Thumb Syndrome will be renamed Thumb Syndrome
T9 phones …