Capsule Hotels Modernize, Go Cashless with First Cabin

In my years in the countryside before moving to Tokyo, I had nowhere to stay when visiting the Big City. Being young and broke, I would usually sleep in an internet cafe which had private booths, blankets, and sometimes even showers for about $10 a night. If I was feeling particularly generous to myself I’d splurge and stay at a capsule hotel for $30-40, have a nice sauna to relax in, and my own private tube for sleeping. Below are pictures of the first one I ever stayed in:

capsule-hotel-tokyo

Now a company called First Cabin is changing the game and somewhat combining the two concepts with their airline-themed mini hotel in Namba, Osaka. The building contains 111 rooms (only 12 for women) that come in First Class ($50 / 4.2 sq. meter) and Business Class ($40 / 2.5 sq. meter) cabins that are fully equipped with TVs, AC power, Internet access, pajamas, and amenities.

There are also lounge and massage areas for relaxing out of the room, and shower/bath facilities for public bathing as is customary in capsule hotels and other cheap business hotels, but is actually rather nice once you get used to it. Daytime stays are also possible at $8 and $9 per hour.

first-cabin-capsule-hotel-2

First Cabin is also cashless, taking advantage of mobile technology that everyone has on them, and streamlining the process from beginning to end. Reservations can be made through a mobile application which then turns the phone into an RFID key to get customers inside the room areas. Using e-money solutions such as Suica and Edy, the same phone also pays for the room and any purchases made inside such as food and drinks. Thus, it’s possible to reserve a room and stay comfortably without even carrying a wallet.

first cabin capsule hotel in osaka

First Cabin’s debut hotel is in Namba, Osaka, so if you’re in town and in need of a quick nap or overnight stay you can make reservations online and pay by card or cash if need be.

trendpool banner gif

Sony unveiling UMD-less PSP with slide-out buttons at E3?

Whispers of a new or revised PSP have been growing decidedly louder as of late, and now 1UP‘s gotten a ton of new details from what it claims are “sources directly involved with the new system” — our favorite kind of people, actually. Here’s what they were told: UMD is out, replaced instead with options for either 8GB or 16GB of built-in flash memory. Also nixed is any hope of a “PSP-4000,” with Sony opting instead to use a subtitle. Three rumored names include PSP Slide, PSP Flip, and PSP Go!, the latter of which borrows from Sony’s pre-existing Go! brand and suggests there might be a built-in camera à la PSP-3000’s Go!Cam peripheral. The same D-pad, analog nub, and face button configuration remains, but they now slide out from the bottom of the unit (see mockup, pictured). Expected launch is September for Japan and late October / early November for US, and coming with ’em are over 100 classic and new downloadable titles including Gran Turismo Mobile as a headliner. Sony’s supposedly going official with all this during its E3 press conference in early June, and for now they’re opting to give the staple “does not comment on rumors or speculation” response. That’s one mighty intriguing rumor — we can only hope it pans out.

Filed under:

Sony unveiling UMD-less PSP with slide-out buttons at E3? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 23:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

iPhone OS 3.0 beta 4, iTunes 8.2 pre-release now live

Just two weeks after the last revision went up, Apple’s released iPhone OS 3.0 beta 4 to the developer community alongside an iTunes 8.2 pre-release. No word yet on what has / hasn’t been updated, but we do know the new iTunes is required to activate beta 4. More information as we get it.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in!]

Update: We’ve toyed with beta 4 for just a few quick moments now, and naturally, the first thing we had to check out was that previously-empty “Store” settings pane. It’s now populated, and it’s mega-boring; all it does is allow you to sign in and out of your iTunes account, and while signed in, there’s an Account Info button that lets you get booted out to an unstyled web page where you can view and edit your credit card information and the like. On the iTunes 8.2 side of things, we noticed that we were explicitly warned that the app would verify that our phone was activated for use with the beta firmware — we don’t remember seeing that before — and the Gracenote legal mumbo jumbo in the About window now specifically calls out both DVD and Blu-ray metadata, which we’re taking as a promising sign of playback support in the not-too-distant future. Thanks, David!

iPhone OS 3.0 beta 4, iTunes 8.2 pre-release now live originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 22:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Ennova announces USB drive with OLED screen / fingerprint scanner

It’s still a little ways from an actual release, but it looks like the folks at Ennova Direct just couldn’t help themselves from announcing that they’ve received a patent for a newfangled biometric USB flash drive that packs a built-in OLED screen. Even better, that OLED screen apparently actually doubles as the fingerprint scanner, which may not add much extra in terms of security, but should be good for at least a few gee whiz moments. The actual patent, however, isn’t for that bit of convergence, but for the sliding mechanism that covers the screen when it’s closed and pops out the USB connector when it’s open. No word on pricing or capacities just yet, but it looks like the first few drives should be available under the ION Technologies brand sometime in the first quarter of 2010.

[Via OLED-Display.net]

Filed under: ,

Ennova announces USB drive with OLED screen / fingerprint scanner originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 21:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Vinyl record iPod touch app gives you the spins

Vinyl has been on the verge of a big-time comeback for ages now (and for some of us, it never ceased to be the format of choice anyway), so we’re pretty happy to see that even the land of zany iPhone / iPod apps is no longer immune to its charms. The spinning vinyl app by Theodore Watson makes use of the iPod touch’s accelerometer to control the speed that the “record” is played at. The video (which is after the break) might make you a little sick when you watch it, but it sounds great. Analog rules, doesn’t it?

[Via Make]

Continue reading Vinyl record iPod touch app gives you the spins

Filed under:

Vinyl record iPod touch app gives you the spins originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 20:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Canon PowerShot A2000 IS: User-friendly, if not exciting

Readily available for less than $170 is the Canon PowerShot A2000 IS. Released late in 2008, it’s a 10-megapixel camera with a 6x optical zoom and a 3-inch LCD (sorry, no viewfinder).

It’s small enough to fit in a jacket pocket or small bag, but because it runs …

DIY spring reverb from cassette player brings noise, nostalgia

Back when we were growing up, we had three cassette players all our own (one in the bedroom, one in the playroom for dancing, and one kept by the back door for travelling) which were tiny, pink, and had the audio quality of of a GBV record cranked thorough a baseball park sound system — but still, many of us have at least one cassette player laying around the house, sad and disused. Make has posted a project by Leadtowill which puts an old cassette radio player’s parts to use by removing the motor, adding an input to the amp part of the circuit, and adding a spring to convert the speaker to a driver. The end result is a spring reverb, which he plans on augmenting further by repurposing the radio as a white noise generator. Us? Well, we still use our tape player for the occasional outdoor rollerskating / baton routine so we’ll leave this one to the pros. Hit the read link to check out the very cool photo set.

[Via Make]

Filed under: ,

DIY spring reverb from cassette player brings noise, nostalgia originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 19:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Game Booster pumps up your system

(Credit: Screenshot by Dong Ngo/CNET)

Normally, I am very skeptical of software that claims to make your computer faster or increase the speed of your connection to the Internet. I’ve never seen any of them actually deliver.

So when I came across Game Booster, released by IObit on Monday, I thought, “Ah! Another useless piece of junk. It won’t boost anything!” Curiosity made me try it anyway. And I have to admit that I was wrong, though not entirely.

First off, the app works. It improve your games’ performance by turning off other software and services that would otherwise run in the background the whole time. This helps free up the system resources, making them available for the game you are about to play.

The application is very simple. Once launched, it gives you a list of services running and software running in the background that it deems unnecessary for gaming. There’s also a big button labeled “Switch to Gaming Mode.” Pressing this button will stop everything on the list, making the system even more ready for the real action.

Once you are done with the gaming, you can click on the same button–now labeled “Back to Normal Mode”–and Game Booster will restart all the services it stopped earlier to bring the computer back to normal operating status.

Video: NASA’s next-gen space suit back on track


It seems like only yesterday that we were hearing about Paragon’s designs for greenhouses on the lunar surface (but that’s because it was yesterday). Now we’ve been hepped to the fact that the company is teaming up with Oceaneering International to overhaul NASA’s space suit. The last that we heard, the project had been scuttled altogether, but you know how quickly things can be unscuttled when the White House changes hands. The Constellation Space Suit System (CSSS) will be designed in a modular fashion, so that the same suit can be used by the astronaut for all the different aspects of his / her mission. You can look forward to the stylish debut of these bad boys on the new Orion spaceship, currently planned to launch in 2015. According to Engineering TV, this will be the first major space suit redesign in over forty years. Can we make a suggestion? Please don’t do anything to that iconic NASA logo — some things never go out of style. Video after the break.

Continue reading Video: NASA’s next-gen space suit back on track

Filed under:

Video: NASA’s next-gen space suit back on track originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 18:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

iBUYPOWER’s Core i7-powered LAN Warrior makes other SFF rigs weep

See that, Shuttle? Yeah, that’s your worst nightmare. iBUYPOWER has just shocked the small form factor (SFF) world with a new rig that’s potent enough to act as your standalone gaming machine. Equipped with a menacing look, a carry handle and room for two full-sized dual slot video cards, the aptly titled LAN Warrior caters to no one outside of the enthusiast niche. For the crowd willing to shell out for the latest and greatest, they’ll find a Core i7 CPU (920, 940 and 965 Extreme available, up to five ventilation fans, an optional liquid cooling system, ASUS’ Rampage II Gene X58 motherboard, up to 12GB of DDR3 memory, twin GeForce GTX 295 / Radeon 4870 x2 GPUs, four internal 3.5-inch bays, up to 6TB of HDD space, up to two Blu-ray writers, gigabit Ethernet, 802.11n WiFi and a planet-killing 1000-watt power supply. Amazingly, the starting tag on this one is just $999, and it’s available now from the outfit’s website. Full release is after the break.

Continue reading iBUYPOWER’s Core i7-powered LAN Warrior makes other SFF rigs weep

Filed under: ,

iBUYPOWER’s Core i7-powered LAN Warrior makes other SFF rigs weep originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 18:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments