England Gets NYC-Reject Bike Racks

y-stand

Last year, the results of the New York CityRacks Design Competition were announced. The winner? Woking, in leafy Surrey, England. While New Yorkers get a fragile, ugly and hard-to-use steering-wheel-shaped rack, the rather prettier and much more functional Y-Rack (a losing entry in the contest) is being installed on English streets.

Just take a look at the picture and decide which you would be happier locking your ride to: The useless, circular rack that looks like a quick kick would snap it off at the root, or the handsome, thick y-shaped rack, a sturdy looking design that looks like it could even accommodate four bikes.

On a related note, I’m in NYC right now and I have been checking out the bikes. You guys need to learn to use a lock. Do you really think that locking a fixie to a railing using a single D-lock around the seat-stem is secure? If you do, you deserve to have your bike stolen. Just sayin’ is all.

Product page [Y-Stand via Core77]
CityRacks Design Competition [NYCityracks]
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Metal Detecting Sandals: Find Buried Treasure with Your Feet

Metal-Detecting-SandalsIt’s a shame I didn’t have these unusual sandals with me at the beach over the weekend. I might  have found some spare change!

Hammacher Schlemmer today added to its catalog The Metal Detecting Sandals ($59.95), wearable metal detectors that let you find buried treasure with your feet. The Metal Detecting Sandals, according to a press release, have a “copper coil built into the right sandal–powered by a battery pack that straps to your calf by an elastic band.” The sandals use what’s called “beat frequency oscillation technology” in order to create a magnetic field. The 9V battery pack  then alerts the wearer of metal up to 2 feet underfoot via flashing red LED lights and either a vibration or an audible buzz.

Providing up to 6 hours of use on a single charge, the sandals have PVC uppers, non-skid soles, and polyurethane foam footbeds; they are available in two unisex sizes.

ExpressCard 2.0 standard finally finalized, faster than ever

A final spec has been promised for over a year now, but the PCMCIA folks have just now finally settled on the long-awaited ExpressCard 2.0 standard which, among other things, incorporates the new SuperSpeed USB spec to allow for faster transfer rates. In real world use, that should translate to transfer rates up to 5Gbps, or roughly 10 times faster than the previous ExpressCard 1.2 standard. Otherwise, you can naturally expect full backwards compatibility with existing ExpressCards and, as PCMCIA hopes, even more products using the format in the future now that it has all that extra bandwidth, although it seems Apple didn’t get that memo.

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ExpressCard 2.0 standard finally finalized, faster than ever originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Jun 2009 14:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands On: The Ultra-Thin Acer Aspire Timeline AS3810T (6415)

acer3810t.jpg
I took the Acer Aspire Timeline AS3810T (6415), recently reviewed by our laptop expert Cisco Cheng, for a spin and found it to be an affordable, ultra-thin laptop that can handle most tasks the average user could throw at it.

On the outside, the AS3810T is an attractive gray color with an aluminum-and-plastic frame. It may not be as tough as a MacBook Pro (I’ve accidentally dropped mine off of any type of furniture you could imagine, and it still manages to work fine), but for its $900 price tag, the system is built very well.

The only thing really missing from the machine is an optical drive, sacrificed for the sake of portability. For most users, however, this is far from being a deal-breaker, especially considering the built-in multifunction card reader and three USB ports.

Stuck Mars Rover Images Itself

NASA_Mars_Spirit_Underside.jpg

When in doubt, take a picture? NASA’s Spirit rover has taken photographs of its underside in order to help engineers figure out the best way to free the stuck rover, according to Space.com. The rover is currently buried up to its hubcaps, with the problem being that if someone gives it the wrong command–such as flooring it, which admittedly did work once before–the rover could end up even more stuck.

To get a better look, Spirit took images of its belly on June 2nd (Sol 1925). Scientists utilized the rover’s microscopic imager instrument, which is mounted on the end of her robotic arm, according to the report. Project scientists tested out the operation using the other rover, Opportunity, which is currently exploring the opposite side of the red planet. (If it looks a little blurry, that’s because the camera was designed to focus on targets only a few centimeters away.)
The next step is for scientists to figure out whether a small mound, showing in some of the photos, is in fact touching the rover–and whether it is a rock or more of the same soft soil, according to Steve Squyres, lead scientist for the Mars Exploration Rover Project. The report said that a rock would mean more risk for any emergency maneuvers. (Image credit: NASA/JPL/USGS)

ASUS: “Our goal is to provide products that are better than Apple’s”

ASUS might have launched the netbook era with the original Eee PC and followed up on that with wave after wave of successfully more innovative designs like the Seashell, but that’s not enough for vice chairman Jonathan Tsang, who says the company’s goal is “to provide products that are better than Apple’s.” No pulling punches here! According to Tsang, ASUS spends very little on marketing, instead preferring to spend the majority of its budget in engineering products so innovative consumers are forced to take notice. We don’t know if that strategy will actually work — especially since true competition with Apple would have to involve software, not just hardware — but we will say that it’s clear ASUS is doing everything it can to drive the industry forward, not just lying back and copying rivals like MSI and Acer. That’s all thought-provoking enough, but there’s more: Tsang also says ASUS has a motion-controlled game console that provides better tracking than the Wii sitting on the shelf because content deals are “complicated.” Same with an ebook reader. “We don’t have the chicken, so cannot have the egg.” Well damn — and we really like eggs, too. Hit the read link for the full interview.

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ASUS: “Our goal is to provide products that are better than Apple’s” originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Jun 2009 13:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why E-Books Are Stuck in a Black-and-White World

e-ink-color-reader

Electronic book readers may be the future of publishing, but in one important respect, they’re still stuck in 1950: Almost every e-book reader on the market has a black-and-white display. Most can’t display more than a handful of different shades of gray.

That’s why display makers are racing to bring color to the world of e-books. Their goal is to make Gray’s Anatomy and its more than 1,200 full-color illustrations as interesting as the next Dan Brown novel.

The hitch is that color e-ink technologies aren’t anywhere near ready for prime time. Amazon chief Jeff Bezos recently told shareholders that a Kindle with a color screen is “multiple years” away.

“There’s no doubt color displays can offer much more compared to black and white, which is why we are working on it,” says Sri Peruvemba, vice president of marketing for E Ink. “And so far we have hit all the milestones that we had set for ourselves.” Last week E Ink was acquired by Taiwanese company Prime View International for $215 million.

E-book readers have become the hottest consumer products of the year. Since the first e-reader was introduced by Sony in 2006, and particularly since the introduction of Amazon.com’s popular Kindle in 2008, demand for e-readers has taken off. More than 1 million black-and-white displays have been sold so far, says E Ink, whose black-and-white displays power most of the e-readers on the market. And there are more than 15 e-reader models currently available or in the works.

With the exception of the Flepia, though, almost all e-readers are monochromatic. So what’s the technological holdup? To understand that, you first have to understand how E Ink’s black-and-white displays work. Electronic ink, pioneered by the company, is composed of millions of microcapsules. Each microcapsule has positively charged white particles and negatively charged black particles suspended in a clear fluid. When a positive electric field is applied, the black particles are attracted to the top and become visible to the user. That makes that area appear black. The reverse is also true: A negative electric field draws white particles to the top, making the area appear lighter. For an electronic display, the ink is printed on a sheet of plastic film, and a layer of circuitry is laminated to it to drive the ink.

For a color display, E Ink needs to put a color filter on top of its black-and-white display. A color filter usually has four sub-pixels — red, green, blue and white — that are combined to create each full-color pixel. That also means reduced brightness of display.

“With four sub-pixels, we get only a fourth of the area that we use today in the black-and-white displays. That means the resolution of the black and white display needs to get higher for the color filter to be effective,” says Peruvemba. A 6-inch E Ink black-and-white display has a SVGA resolution of 800 x 600 pixels. To put a color filter on top would require the underlying display to have almost double the existing resolution.

The color filters also block a large amount of light, making the displays look dull and washed out, says Young. “The challenge is to balance the color output of the filter with the amount of light blocked by it,” he says. The good news? When E Ink figures it out, its black-and-white displays will be better than ever, says Young.

E Ink says it is on track for large scale production of color displays at the end of next year. At the recent DisplayWeek conference in San Antonio, Texas, E Ink showed off prototypes of its color screen. Meanwhile, E Ink rival Kent Displays has already seen its color screen included in the Fujistu’s Flepia, the only color e-reader available today. The Flepia is for sale in Japan only.

Other contenders in the race for color e-reader displays include Pixel Qi, the startup founded by former One Laptop Per Child project CTO Mary Lou Jepsen, and Qualcomm. Qualcomm could improve its existing line of low power displays called Mirasol and introduce a color version next year.

There’s a caveat. E-readers with color displays can’t match up to the standards set by LCD and now OLED displays. “Color displays for e-readers doesn’t have anywhere the contrast ratio of LCDs or OLED,” says Barry Young, managing director of the OLED association. “For color electrophoretic displays, the contrast is down to about 20 to 1, while for LCDs it is in the 1,000s to 1 and for OLEDs is 10,000s to 1 range.”

“People don’t like color screens that are dark,” says Raj Apte, manager of prototype devices and circuits for PARC, formerly known as Xerox PARC, “and so far, the displays for e-readers we have seen lack the brightness that makes color screens attractive.”

E Ink’s rivals are facing their own challenges. Kent’s color screens are based on cholesteric LCDs (liquid cyrstals where the molecules are arranged with their axes parallel to each other in one layer and then are displaced a little for each following layer to give them a helix-like structure.) The advantage with cholesteric LCDs is that they consume much lower power than traditional LCDS and are bistable — which means they can retain their image even when the power is lost. These LCDs stack red, green and blue films to create a color display. The trade-off for them is the refresh rate, says Young.

“It operates in three stages, so we are looking at a refresh rate of probably a second for a page compared to say a Kindle 2’s 250 milliseconds,” he says.

The stacking process also raises questions of whether Kent’s displays can be thinner than its competitors. “Thickness is just an engineering issue that can be solved with the use of the right substrate,” says Asad Hussain, vice president of technology for Kent Displays.

A problem that won’t go away as easily will be in convincing e-reader makers to choose Kent Displays over rival E Ink, which has proven its mettle. A 16-year-old private company, Kent has been showing demos of its color screens for years. But so far, other than Fujitsu, it hasn’t found any takers, at least none announced publicly.

Hussain blames the reluctance of e-reader manufacturers to introduce color displays. “Right now black-and-white displays have momentum and though everyone wants color, no one is willing to make the shift.”

Check out our detailed comparison of how the four color e-reader display technologies

colore-ereaders-table

See also:

Photo: E Ink color screen prototype/E Ink


Apple Should Learn a Few Things From the Zune Software Upgrades

Do you remember how Microsoft gave first-gen Zune users all the features that could be properly implemented via software update? Apple should be doing this for the iPhone 3G.

Let’s look at what’s new in the iPhone 3GS. Magnetometer for the compass, an improved camera, video recording, voice control, faster processor, faster 3G and and a 32GB storage bump. Obviously, we’re not talking about the hardware stuff (processor, camera, etc.), but the software things like voice control and video recording? That could easily have been ported to the 3G.

Apple’s official reason was that the iPhone 3G doesn’t have enough power to run those two features. Really? They’re saying that on-the-fly voice control (albeit one that doesn’t just match what you say to a pre-recorded sample on your voice) can’t be done on the iPhone 3G? You mean the same feature that’s been available for Windows Mobile FIVE phones for about half a decade now? This can’t be done with the iPhone 3G’s processor?

And there’s the question of video recording. Check out the video below.

This was taken on the iPhone 3G with the Cycorder Cydia jailbreak app. As in, you can do this right now if you jailbreak your phone and install the app. And this is a jailbreak app that doesn’t have as great access to the phone as Apple’s own internal team with their first-party video libraries. The 7-15FPS of Cydia isn’t as good as the 30FPS of Apple’s own recording on the 3GS, but it’s not bad either. It’s something.

So yeah, we’re not asking for the impossible here. We just want for Apple to let actual hardware upgrades be the reason for people to upgrade to the 3GS, not for them to have arbitrary software distinctions to separate their products. [Gizmodo’s WWDC Coverage and Roundup]

ExpressCard 2.0 Will Be Ten Times Faster

expresscard2No sooner does Apple drop the MacBook Pro’s ExpressCard slot than the ExpressCard organization itself announces a big upgrade to version 2. The ExpressCard Standard 2.0 has one key difference: speed.

How much faster? Ten times faster, according to the specifications. Transfer tops out at 5Gbps, meaning that anything that needs to shift lots of data will benefit, including video transfer, eSata adapters for external hard drives and anything using the upcoming USB 3.0 spec. In short, it turns the pedestrian slot in the side of many computers into a speedy and useful accessory.

Will we ever  see this in a portable Mac? Given that Apple seems to be playing musical chairs with ports specs, killing off FireWire only to resurrect it just months later, for instance, it’s quite possible that this slot will make it into future revisions. Then again, this announcement from the ExpressCard people is only the finalization of the spec itself: We’ll have to wait a while for actual products to ship. By then, we’ll probably be buying MacBooks hewn from solid blocks of adamantium using lightsabers.

Press release [ExpressCard Org via Slashgear]


iPhone OS 3.0 Now Available in Torrent—Tested, It Works

You can get it now. Just fire up your favorite Torrent client and look for iPhone OS 3.0 7a341. Everyone can install this, not just developers. Here’s how it works:

Note: The image is called iPhone1,2_3.0_7A341_Restore.ipsw. It should be 230.1MB

Warning: Do this at your own risk

2:29 PM • I’m downloading it as I write these lines. Will tell you how the install goes in a few minutes.

2:43 PM • It’s here. Installing right now. Remember to synchronize your iPhone first, just in case something goes wrong. That way you can go back to your last version.

2:46 PM • Press the alt (Mac) or shift (PC) and click on the restore button. Then select the disk image from your torrent download folder.

2:58 PM • Still at it after sync. All seems good. Would it work?

3:00 PM • Optional dork thing: Play the Back to the Future main theme to make it more exciting.

3:05 PM • “Verifying iPhone software now.” (After Back to the Future you can play the Death Star Trench Run.)

3:06 PM • Bar is almost at half now in the iPhone. (Stay on target.)

3:07 PM • “Restoring iPhone firmware…” and iPhone bar at half.

3:09 PM • Still restoring iPhone firmware, but iPhone progress bar now at three quarters. (Dork playlist still going on. Now the Contact main theme is playing.)

3:11 PM • It’s done. It’s restarting right now!

3:12 PM • iPhone is up and it has re-appeared in iTunes. (Celebrating with Kim Deal singing Gigantic)

3:13 PM • iTunes is now restoring all my data. (you did synched before, right?)

3:14 PM • Almost there.

3:15 PM • Success! Data is now restored (that was fast! Usually it takes a long more).

3:15 PM • Another bar has appeared in the iPhone. Must be cleaning up something.

3:16 PM • OK, it’s done. It has my setting now but is synchronizing, for some reason.

3:17 PM • Ah, it’s now copying my address book, contacts, bookmarks, and applications. Guess the restore process is now different and that’s why it is so fast.

3:21 PM • Still updating applications. Now installing “Rolando.” Did I ever say how much I love Rolando?

3:22 PM • Now (re)installing SkyBurger while the Stones play Can’t You Hear Me Knocking.

3:24 PM • iTunes is now copying songs. Going to cancel the song sync.

3:27 PM • Success! It works great. Just wrote an email in landscape mode.

7a341 is the golden master, the WWDC’09 build that Apple will distribute next week— if nothing extraordinary happens. It works great, so download and enjoy.