New Sidekick LX Will Have Exchange Support

new-sk-small.jpgT-Mobile announced their new Sidekick LX today, and I got some hands-on time with it to appreciate the great screen and improved software. You can read about that in my hands-on article on PCMag.com.

But one thing they didn’t demo was the LX’s new, welcome Microsoft Exchange support. Exchange ActiveSync, including e-mail, address book and calendar, will be coming soon, according to T-Mobile. That makes the Sidekick for the first time a truly viable smart phone for people with jobs.

There may still be one snafu, though: the Sidekick’s famously stingy 6MB mailbox. If the new device still only allocates 6MB for email, folks may feel a bit claustrophobic with all their personal and Exchange mail flowing in. That’s something I intend to check out when the new Sidekick arrives here soon.

Faceless Watch Tells the Time – Without a Face

Facelesswatch1


The Faceless Watch will confuse and bamboozle as much as anything from those cryptic horologists at Tokyo Flash. The wrist-band itself is handsome enough, and when I first saw the pictures I though that it was just that — an ironic man-bracelet. But in the side-by-side comparison you can clearly see the digits peeking through the gaps. Press the button and the LEDs glow to tell the time in refreshingly traditional digits.

The LED watch is sadly marked as “coming soon”, and is currently stranded on the product page without a price or shipping date. I want one enough that I have set a calendar reminder for two months in the future when I will return to check up on it, and thence inform you, the stylish and handsome/beautiful reader, of its availability.

Product page [100% via BBG]

Transplant’s Dale Earnhardt Jr. GPS will get you where you’re goin’, good buddy

Transplant's Dale Earnhardt Jr. GPS will get you where you're goin', good buddy

Computerized GPs voices too dispassionate for you? K.I.T.T. too snarky? Mr. T always falling asleep? Maybe what you need is a good ‘ol boy GPS, something with a hint of southern drawl and Wrangler Jeans style. Dale Earnhardt Jr. is the man for the job, providing his voice to a special edition Rightway Spotter GPS from Transplant and ALK Technologies. He’ll give you distances, speak some street names, and even tell you to “park it” when you’re there (watch the video below to feel like you’re actually going somewhere). It’s got custom data for Junior’s favorite hangouts and naturally has all the NASCAR series tracks programmed in, too. For $229 all this can be yours; buy now and they’ll throw in the ability to turn right.

Continue reading Transplant’s Dale Earnhardt Jr. GPS will get you where you’re goin’, good buddy

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Transplant’s Dale Earnhardt Jr. GPS will get you where you’re goin’, good buddy originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Apr 2009 09:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sorry Stereo, But Beatles in Mono Rocks a Lot More

Beatles’ record producer and arranger George Martin—the Fifth Beatle—once said: “You’ve never really heard Sgt Pepper until you’ve heard it in mono.” As it turned out after hours of listening tests, it’s completely true.

The first article I ever got published was an opinion piece on Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. I was 16 at the time and, needless to say, quite naive. I wasn’t very much into non-Beatles music at that age, mainly because I didn’t have much access to it. It wasn’t until the next year that I was able to buy music regularly, having at last my own stereo system. But back then, my music world was all about the Beatles—and crap 90s radio pop. My dad had Sgt Pepper along with the rest of the Beatles’ records and some compilations of classic rock, from Chuck Berry to bloody Kansas, so that was my music world.

I couldn’t stop listening to Sgt Pepper. Non stop, I played it and played it until my ears bleed and then I played it some more. It was the stereo version, not the mono mix, and it has lived with me ever since. Then, a few months ago I read in The Word—a very good British music magazine—that the Beatles in mono are—like George Martin implied—better than the Beatles in stereo. Apparently, the Beatles didn’t give a damn about the stereo mix, only about the mono. In fact, they cared so little that they passed on the stereo mixing sessions: Once the mono was done, they left the building.

So I started looking for them. Finding the actual mono mix in the market was impossible. Not to talk about the fact that I don’t have a turntable anymore. For some reason, the Beatles company didn’t have the mono mixes of the Beatles’ albums available either—they are going to re-release them now, it seems, remastered—so I got into Torrent to hunt them down. I couldn’t find them in the first try. I found a couple of MP3 rips, but I wanted to have FLAC rips of the original vinyls. After some time I gave up, forgetting about the mono Beatles until the Gizmodo’s audio week.

I thought trying it would be interesting for a feature, so I started looking for them again and got 192kbps MP3s, which I compared to the stereo version at the same bit rate. Since Sgt Pepper was my album, I started to listen to its songs in pairs, with my earmuff headphones on.

I was blown away. George Martin was oh so right: The songs do sound different. I was so surprised, that at the beginning I freaked out. “What? What? How? What the fuck?” was in my mind all the time.

When Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band came up, my first impression was that the sound had more thump than the stereo mix. A lot more thump, for a lack of a better word. It was like someone was beating me with a hammer. It was kind of noisy, but it filled my head and pushed me in a way the stereo version didn’t.

Then good old Ringo—my favorite Beatle—came up singing With A Little Help From My Friends. Same effect. It felt weird, but so much better. I kept coming back to the stereo versions for comparison and, before I noticed, I was thinking: “These sounds a lot weaker. These sound artificial.” Gone was the separation of instruments in the right and left channel too, which now feels so artificial. It was artificial, since stereo was a novelty back then: Most people still listened to music in mono and stereo was the “new thing.” As a result, producers overused it, just for the sake of it, like when 3D cinema came out and everything was an excuse to fire arrows and rocks and monsters at the public.

I definitely liked the way the mono version sounded—a lot more, even while I knew the stereo version till the last beat and note. LSD came up: same result. The sound is crisper and nearer. The bass a lot better. Again that special thump, even while this is such a delicate song. Getting Better gets better, and so does the rest, Fixing a Hole, She’s Leaving Home, Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite… I just couldn’t have enough.

But that wasn’t all. In the mono version you can hear stuff that is not in the stereo version. And not just bits, but quite a lot of things. Instruments, notes, even lyrics. Take the reprise version of Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band: It is full of shouting—Lennon going bananas at the end, and other bits at the beginning—that is not in the stereo mix.

Maybe it’s the novelty of listening to a “new” take on something that I know by heart, but I doubt it. As an experience, I like it a lot better. So much that I’m dying to get FLAC versions of good vinyl rips—or the remastered mono versions, as soon as they come out. And while your taste may be different, from now on this is the version I’m keeping in my iPod.


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

Hands-On With the OXO Good Grips Peeler

Goodgrips_peeler1

A peeler is one of the most useful things you can have in the
kitchen. It does, though, have to be a good peeler — the 50¢ piece of
junk from the drugstore will do nothing more than frustrate, cramp your
hand and — if you’re really unlucky — rip chunks out of your fingers.

Buy a good one, though, and you can not only peel soft fruits,
you’ll also be able to skin mangoes and ginger, make potato chips, cut
zucchini into ribbons (drizzle with sesame oil and a little balsamic
vinegar for a fantastic and simple salad) and even shave hard cheeses
like Parmesan or Pecorino. In short, it is one of the handiest things
you can have around.

Good, thankfully, doesn’t mean expensive. I have a Good Grips peeler from OXO, which cost me less than €10 in the fancy uptown store, but can be had for around $8 online. This is my second (the first was years old and still sharp but I lost it). It’s one of the knife style peelers instead of the Y-shaped models, but this is just my preference.

Goodgrips_peeler2

So, what makes it so good? First, as you’ll see here, the blade is sharp. The plastic junk you find in the dime store usually features a stamped blade which is thin enough to force through potato skin, but doesn’t actually cut. This one cuts, to the extent that it will peel a ripe peach or even a tomato.

The angle of the blade is important, too. The sharp edge is on the inside, running around the hole. This cuts both ways, and the edge not cutting rests on the food and keeps the blade going in at the proper, shallow angle. Other peelers often either skim or cut too deep, which is why many people swear off them altogether in favor of a knife (like my mother, who uses a small paring knife for the job, and miraculously still has both thumbs).

Next up, you can see the pointed tip. It’s not sharp enough to hurt, but it will gouge the eyes out of a spud easily. It’s also good for scraping brown spots from peeled apples.

Goodgrips_peeler4

Finally, and the feature that gives this range of cookware its name, is the good grip. It’s rubberized so it’s not slippery when wet, and because it is oversized even the most ham-fisted will find it comfortable for long periods. Squaddies on square-bashing duty should consider this. Those rubber fins are great, too, as they grip more when you press down — although with this blade you’ll never actually need to press very hard.

OXO has a newer version available, called the Pro Swivel Peeler. The business-end is all zinc, and the main advantage is that you can change blades, like a razor. At $12, it’s still not expensive, but as my blade has never dulled, I don’t see the need. Is a review of a fruit peeler absurd? Perhaps, but if you make sure you have good basic tools in your kitchen (hint: you don’t need that Porsche coffee maker) then cooking will be easier and a whole lot more fun.

Product page [OXO]

Peeler as movie star [Objectified/Underwire]

Hilco / Gordon Brothers acquires Polaroid brand, assets and dignity

After filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy (again) in December of last year, Polaroid may have just made its last shakeable memory. Today, the Federal Bankruptcy court for the district of Minnesota has approved a motion for “substantially all the assets of Polaroid, including the Polaroid brand, intellectual property, inventory and other assets,” to be acquired by Hilco Consumer Capital and Gordon Brothers Brands. If those names sound familiar, have a cookie on us. You see, this very same joint venture picked up The Sharper Image around this time last year, and while it’s still unclear what these suits plan to do with the 72 year-old name, we are told that it doesn’t plan on shelving it anytime soon. In fact, it’s hoping to “partner with a number of global institutions in the ongoing development of the Polaroid brand.” Personally, we would’ve used “revival” rather than “development,” but we’ll refrain from bursting any bubbles here.

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Hilco / Gordon Brothers acquires Polaroid brand, assets and dignity originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Apr 2009 08:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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GM proposes standardized plug for electric vehicles

Say what you will about General Motors (okay, so maybe you should say it under your breath), but there’s no denying the brilliance of this idea. On the company’s FastLane blog, one Gery Kissel explains that engineers and suits will be meeting up next week to discuss the standardization of common components that will hopefully be installed in forthcoming electric vehicles. Notably, the SAE J1772 Task Force will be responsible for designing a plug that links each plug-in vehicle to an “ecosystem,” ensuring that drivers can pull into any charging station from Key West to Neah Bay and see a socket that fits their ride. Specifically, the group is being charged with defining a “common electric vehicle conductive charging system architecture for all major automakers in North America,” but it remains to be seen if said standard can be hammered out before the Volt’s not-to-be-missed 2010 introduction.

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GM proposes standardized plug for electric vehicles originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Apr 2009 08:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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$30 MoGo Mouse stows away inside your notebook

The MoGo Mouse BT stows away in a PC Card slot for easy carrying and charging.

(Credit: Newton Peripherals)

Show of hands: who likes notebook touch pads? Thought so. That’s why a mouse is essential gear. Of course, it’s one more thing to remember to bring along, one …

Originally posted at The Cheapskate

Special Edition Advent Children PlayStation 3 unboxed in all its matte glory

There’s a lot to love about the special edition 160GB Final Fantasy VII Advent Children Complete Cloud Black PlayStation 3 bundle that was unleashed this week in Japan — a fancy Strife Wolf emblem, a copy of Advent Children Complete on Blu-ray, and a Final Fantasy XIII demo you can’t play anywhere else — but perhaps our favorite part is the console’s matte finish. For us, a smudge-resistant PS3 is well worth the 49,980 yen (US $505) price of admission. 1UP has the unboxing, hit up the read link for more pics.

[Via Joystiq]

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Special Edition Advent Children PlayStation 3 unboxed in all its matte glory originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Apr 2009 07:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IPhone Nano Already Available in China

Hiphone_nano_01

This trio of beauties shows China’s forward-thinking vision of the iPhone Nano. Named the "HiPhone Nano", this mongrel knock-off combines the worst of all worlds.

The HiPhone Nano is a tri-band GSM clam-shell which actually packs a few features that the full-sized, authentic model doesn’t. You get a sub-sized 1.3MP camera, but it does record video. There is also support for MMS (something Apple will have taken three iterations of iPhone to get right), a microSD card slot, handwriting recognition (yes, it has a touch screen when opened, below), an MP3 player (and recorder) and a stylus.

The price? A fantastically optimistic $400, with an instant reduction to a still rather steep $125. Available now in red, gold or silver.

Product page [chinagrabber via Cult of Mac and Ubergizmo]

See Also:

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