Apple patent filing shows off activity monitor for skiers, bikers

Fans of more extreme sports will probably be stoked to hear that Apple just might be developing a device with them in mind. Apple Insider’s discovered a recent patent filing that could possibly signal the development of a monitoring device (much like Nike+) which can detect, track, and display a visual and quantitative measure, for instance, of a skier’s speed and air time. The device looks like it would contain one or more loft sensors (in one photo it is shown installed in a snowboard) and a microprocessor subsystem to determine loft time. There are of course, no guarantees that a product like this will ever see the light of day, but we sure hope so: runner favoritism must end. One more page of the filing after the break.

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Apple patent filing shows off activity monitor for skiers, bikers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Jun 2009 14:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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$128 Blu-ray Player Leads Off Walmart Fathers Day Deals

On Wednesday, we tipped you to some pretty decent deals that Walmart was going to offer for Father’s Day on PC products, with sale prices beginning on June 14.

On Thursday, Walmart officially confirmed our Wednesday report, but also added a number of new categories, with some great new deals. The theme? The man cave, famed in legend as an oasis of testosterone where Dad can relax with a few of his favorite toys. (Car buffs might call this a “garage”.)

For me, the flagship offer is undoubtedly the Magnavox NB500MGX, which Walmart will sell for the bargain-basement price of $128. A quick search of Google Shopping for Blu-ray players turns up models at the $150 price level or above, but not nearly as good as what Walmart offers . And the $398 37-inch Sanyo 720p LCD TV isn’t bad, either. Plus there’s the $199 Palm Pre, although the $99 iPhone 3G might have torpedoed that bargain. But when the stores run out of available stock, so does your luck. That’s it.

Complete deals after the jump.

GPS-fitted shoe helps track Alzheimer’s patients

GTX GPS Alzheimer's shoe(Credit: GTX)

GPS-equipped footwear isn’t new. But the idea of using it to track Alzheimer’s patients, which shoemaker …

Video: dmedia M0 gets the hands-on treatment

This little devil here’s been bouncing around in some form or another for nearly a year, and now it looks like dmedia’s M0 might actually see the light of day sometime soon. The video shows the 4.3-inch touchscreen device running Windows CE and sporting the specs that we’d been clued into many months ago, including: Samsung 533-800MHz CPU, 800 x 480 capacitive touchscreen, and a 5-megapixel camera. No word yet on a price or Stateside release, but we’ll be keeping our eyes peeled. Video after the break.

[Via SlashGear]

Continue reading Video: dmedia M0 gets the hands-on treatment

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Video: dmedia M0 gets the hands-on treatment originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Jun 2009 14:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MacBook Pro 2009 Review

You know those Microsoft laptop hunter spots? Apple may already have responded with TV spots of their own, but these MacBook Pros strike back at Microsoft better than any ad can: by doing.

Apple did two things simultaneously that are usually contradictory; they lowered the price of their entire MacBook Pro line while at the same time bumping up the specs. The 15-inch version now starts at $1699 and caps out at $2299, down from $1999 and $2499. What’s even nicer is that the 13-inch MacBook—which previously didn’t have a Firewire slot or a “nicer” screen—got absorbed into the MacBook Pro family and is now virtually indistinguishable from the rest of the Pro line.

Two other things changed on the build that make the Pros more appealing to regular consumers. The replaceable battery has been swapped for the same type of lithium-polymer internal battery previously found in the 17-inch MacBook Pro, which boosts battery life at the expense of not being able to be changed out in the field. This, for the large majority of people, is a good thing. The batteries last 1000 charge cycles, which at 200/cycles a year, would last you five years. Even if you go through one charge cycle every day, you’ll still make it about three years before you need to take Apple up on the $129 replacement. (The $129 includes shipping, labor and disposal of the old battery.)

In our test, the 13-inch MacBook Pro got 3:31 of battery compared to the 3:46 of the 15-inch MacBook Pro. We used the same metrics as the previous MacBook Pro test—medium brightness, Wi-Fi on, keyboard backlight on low, H.264 movie—and got about an hour more on each machine. That’s a pretty incredible jump just from a change (non-user replaceable battery) that most people won’t notice.

The other interesting swap is the removal of the ExpressCard slot in favor of an SD card slot. According to Apple, there was only a “single digit” amount of customers that used the ExpressCard, whereas tons of people have digital cameras or other devices that use SD. Again, for the vast majority of mainstream customers, this decision was a smart one. And if you really do need ExpressCard, you can still find it on the 17-inch MacBook Pro—which doesn’t have an SD card slot.

Then we have the improved LED-backlit display, which has a 60% greater color gamut than previous version. What this means to you is that even the 13-inch MacBook Pro will have a quality display even though it’s a few hundred dollars cheaper than the 15-inch. The previous 13-inch MacBook, as you saw in our review, had a screen that was obviously inferior to the Pros, and distorted very noticeably as you stepped away or viewed the screen at an angle. Not anymore. From our tests, the 13 and 15 MacBook Pros looked just about identical, and both had superior color performance compared to older machines we had around.

An even nicer picture is painted by the benchmarks. This is the first time the 15-inch has gone up over 3GHz (the CTO version), and the entire line has the ability to handle 8GB of RAM. We didn’t test this 8GB configuration, but we’re pretty eager to see how much faster it makes us in our daily work.

Both sets of scores are on par with the changes in specs on the new machines. Since the CPUs have been bumped up, the scores have risen to match. It also makes sense that the 2.53GHz 15-inch just about ties the 2.53GHz 13-inch from this year. The only weird drop is in the Integer section of Geekbench, where both machines this year have dropped. A change in Geekbench? A change in 10.5.7? We’re not sure. But these are some good numbers nonetheless.

Although the removable latch has been exchanged for a screwed in panel, you can still get to the hard drive and RAM by removing ten screws and gently lifting off the back. The entire process should take you less than 10 minutes.

The 13-inch MacBook also has one fewer audio port, instead opting for a single audio port that supports digital in and out. If you need simultaneous in and out and don’t want to go up to a 15-inch MacBook Pro, you can use a $29 USB audio adapter instead.

So is there anything bad to say about the new MacBook Pro line? No, not really. It’s cheaper, faster, has more consumer-friendly features and now even has a 13-inch option for people who need slightly more portability. Those people who were waiting for the second-iteration version of a new hardware design (a pretty smart rule to follow with Apple products in general) before upgrading can safely do so now—and get a better deal in the process. [MacBook Pros]

It’s cheaper, faster and has a nicer screen


SD card slot more useful than ExpressCard for vast majority of customers


MacBook Pro line now has a 13-inch option


Built-in battery means increased battery size, and that means about an hour longer battery life

iriver P35 WiFi PMP gets bumped up to 32GB

We may still be waiting for iriver’s WiFi-packing P35 PMP to make its first official appearance ’round these parts, but it looks like folks in Korea are now already getting upgrades to the player, with iriver recently rolling out a new 32GB model. That’ll run you 488,000 South Korean won (or about $389) which, as you might expect, will get you a player that’s otherwise identical to the previous model, including the same 4.3-inch WQVGA display, a built-in DMB TV tuner, a microSD card slot for additional storage, and iriver’s trademark Spinn controls, to name a few features. No word if this particular model will be making an appearance when the line makes its US debut this fall but, if it does, you can be sure iriver will have already moved on to bigger and better things in Korea.

[Via SlashGear]

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iriver P35 WiFi PMP gets bumped up to 32GB originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Jun 2009 13:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPhone Game Tests Your Seed-Spitting Skills

3616730075_be7eaf18ffHere’s a fun time waster for when you’re bored at work: iSeedSpit, an iPhone game that simulates the experience of spitting watermelon seeds.

To “spit,” you blow into the iPhone microphone, and the seed travels at a distance depending on your respiratory rigor. In the end you get a measurement; you get three tries for a high score.

Fun! Just make sure to keep a bowl of soup in your cubicle for when your boss hears your sporadic exhales — so you can pretend you were blowing on it to cool it down.

iSeedSpit is $2 in the App Store.

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(Thanks, Heidi!)


Archos teases new touch PMP

Photo of the Archos 3 portable media player.

The Archos 3.

With about as much fanfare as a prison release, a new Archos touch-screen MP3 player made an appearance on the manufacturer’s Web site this morning, along with a handful of product specs.

The product page shows off a new pocket-size MP3 player called the Archos 3, …

LG’s Netflix-friendly 47LH50 and 50PS80 NetCast HDTVs now shipping in America

Without a doubt, the next big thing in the world of HDTVs is internet capabilities. With Toshiba just shipping its own web-enabled sets this week, LG Electronics is making sure it doesn’t fall too far behind by floating a few of its own NetCast models out to the open market. Originally unveiled at CES, these HDTVs are the first from the company with built-in Netflix streaming support, and if you’re curious about model numbers, it’s the 47-inch 47LH50 LCD HDTV and the 50-inch 50PS80 plasma that are available today. LG tells us that the 42-inch 42LH50 LCD and 60-inch 60PS80 plasma should hit later this summer, but if you’re looking to buy now, you’ll have to pony up $1,999 for the 47LH50 or 50PS80.

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LG’s Netflix-friendly 47LH50 and 50PS80 NetCast HDTVs now shipping in America originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Jun 2009 13:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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App Turns iPhone into Star Trek Communicator

star-trek-iphone

The Star Trek communicator was arguably the original cellphone, and clearly the model for Motorola’s Startac (even the name was a thinly disguised homage). The iPhone, in turn, is obviously the closest thing us 21st century humans have to the technology of the future. It fits, then, that there should be an application which turns your iPhone into its future counterpart.

And of course, there is. The $0.99 application looks just like the prop from the original series, and consists of the same useless flashing lights. The sounds are pretty much dead on, and the very best part, guaranteed to make you smile, is that you can “open” the “lid” with a flick of your wrist. If you’re running this on an iPhone, you can actually dial numbers from within the app using a custom, retro dial-pad (the iPod Touch, obviously, can’t do this).

Beam me up, Scotty!

Product page [iTunes]