Logitech introduces ‘simulator-grade’ flight controller

The $299 Flight System G940 will hit stores in September.

(Credit: Logitech)

Flight-sim enthusiasts take note that Logitech has unveiled the $299 Flight System G940 at E3. It’s the company’s first force-feedback flight simulation controller and Logitech says that its design and control were inspired by military and commercial planes and helicopters.

Available in September, the G940 is compatible with most popular PC flight simulators, including Microsoft Flight Simulator X, IL-2 Sturmovik: 1946 and Lock On: Modern Air Combat X-Plane 9. Logitech says the force feedback technology allows you to “control your aircraft with confidence as you feel its movement as well as its reaction to air, turbulence and g-forces.”

Check out the video after the jump:

Vampiric nerdlings will cower at your floating Bluetooth speakers

Sounds like the future…

(Credit: ChinaVasion)

While all those pale suckers are indoors playing around with their videogames, you could be enjoying the summer heat, lounging in a pool and aquadancing to your favorite jams with Elima, a Bluetooth speaker designed to make your summer days even brighter.

This little …

“Samsung Unpacked” event promises a new phone on June 15

It’s not every day that you see a manufacturer include an FCC filing-esque shot of a phone’s innards as an official teaser, but then again, there isn’t much that’s ordinary about the way that Samsung’s promising to reveal its latest model. The “Samsung Unpacked” event kicks off in three cities around the globe — London, Dubai, and Singapore — on June 10, when winners of a competition will start tearing off layers of some magical box, finally reaching the core on the 15th at which point the new model will be revealed to an astonished world. If we were selected to start opening the box on the 10th, mark our words, we’d bust right through to the juicy stuff… which probably explains why we haven’t been selected. Anyhow, pictured here is the rear of the set in x-ray vision, so we’d venture to guess it’s a candybar or a QWERTY slider — but maybe more importantly, what OS is it running?

[Thanks, Nigel]

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“Samsung Unpacked” event promises a new phone on June 15 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 09:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Iomega eGo refresh gets triple-interface design

The Triple Interface Iomega eGo has FireWire 400, FireWire 800, and USB 2.0 ports.

(Credit: Iomega)

Last month we reported on Iomega’s new line of eGo external hard drives. Today, the company sweetens the deal with an even more versatile device: a portable hard drive with FireWire 400, …

Nyko launches Type Pad Pro for Wii, gonzo Zoom Case for DSi

Oh, Nyko — always keeping us on our toes. After showcasing the Wii Pistol Grip at CeBIT, the company is swinging big at E3 with a few new accessories. Starting things off is the abomination you see above, which sure looks an awful lot like some janky knockoff cellphone we peeked back in August. Officially, the Zoom Case for DSi protects your handheld and provides an 8x zoom for magnifying the external camera; never mind the fact that it makes your DSi infinitely less portable. Moving on, there’s the Charge Grip Flex, a accessory for the PSP-2000 and PSP-3000 that sports a built-in rechargeable battery and a bonus gripping surface. For the Xbox 360, there’s the SpeakerCom 360, which enables your parents to hear all those whining tweens brag in fantastically high tones about how they just “pwned you.” Lastly, there’s the Type Pad Pro for Wii, a wireless keypad (via USB) that makes typing in Opera or messaging your pals a heck of a lot simpler. Mum’s the word on pricing and availability right now, but all that should change soon enough.

Continue reading Nyko launches Type Pad Pro for Wii, gonzo Zoom Case for DSi

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Nyko launches Type Pad Pro for Wii, gonzo Zoom Case for DSi originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Fujifilm FinePix S1500 gets reviewed

Fujifilm’s FineFix S1500 got a little lost among the company’s slew of other cameras unveiled back at PMA and CeBIT, but the camera’s now finally moving out on its own, and the folks at Photography Blog have seen fit to give a thorough review. In case you missed it, this one’s a 10-megapixel bridge camera, and packs quite a few impressive features for its $200 street price, including a 12x optical zoom, image stabilization, a decent 2.7-inch LCD, and a full range of manual controls in addition to the usual point-and-shoot options. According to Photography Blog, however, while the S1500 “feels like a lot of camera for the money,” it falls a bit short when it comes to image quality, and things seem to get particularly tricky if you’re shooting in less than ideal conditions. That said, is is just $200, and should still be a nice upgrade for anyone looking to move up from a basic point-and-shoot.

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Fujifilm FinePix S1500 gets reviewed originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 08:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: ECS T800 netbook brings us to our knees with Android on 1GHz OMAP3

This is quite possibly a better Vaio P… you know, if it actually worked. This non-functional stunner of a prototype is sitting pretty at Computex, an event where OEMs (like Sony, HP, and Dell) shop from the latest ODM (like Foxconn and Compal) designs before tweaking for retail launch. Instead of taking chances with Vista overpowering an Intel Atom processor, however, the ECS T800 on display at Computex is destined to run Android on your choice of 800MHz OMAP3 3440 or 1GHz OMAP3 3450 TI processors. It measures in at 246 x 121 x 20-mm / 800-grams (1.76-pounds) and packs an 8.1-inch display, 512MB of memory, a 2.5-inch hard disk or SSD, and a pair of internal Mini-PCIe slots for WWAN cards. Regarding ports, we’re looking at 2x USB 2.0, a 4-in-1 card reader, and an audio jack for your headset. Hey ODMs, we’re interested (even if the case for Android on a netbook hasn’t been clearly defined) especially if it can be offered for $99 or less through a subsidized carrier agreement. So who’s going to bite first, huh? Maybe you Dell now that your Mini 9 netbook has been discontinued. Video after the break.

Continue reading Video: ECS T800 netbook brings us to our knees with Android on 1GHz OMAP3

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Video: ECS T800 netbook brings us to our knees with Android on 1GHz OMAP3 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 08:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Acer to sell Android phones, Netbooks

Acer announced on Tuesday a version of its Aspire One Netbook that will run the Android operating system.

The manufacturer made the announcement at the Computex show in Taiwan, promising a release for the Android-based Netbook in the third quarter. Android was originally intended as a platform for smartphones, but …

Fujitsu brings M2010 netbook to North America, packs in few surprises

You know the basic rundown by heart by now, and Fujitsu doesn’t stray far from the 10-inch netbook script with its newish M2010 “mini-notebook.” The big “killer” features on display here include standard Bluetooth, three USB ports, a 50 second Windows XP start up time and a digital microphone. The $450 pricetag includes a 3 cell battery rated at 2.5 hours of computing, and you can nab a 6 cell to double your pleasure for $129. Fujitsu is aiming this one at educational markets, and is touting some beefed up build quality for handling the wear and tear, but we’re not sure there’s anything here that justifies the pricetag or the totally average weight and thickness. The single configuration should be available now online and at select retailers.

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Fujitsu brings M2010 netbook to North America, packs in few surprises originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wrists-On With Casio’s Old-School Calculator Watch

casio-1

This is my new watch, acquired after an experiment in riding a fixed-gear bike whilst drunk resulted in the loss and/or theft of my old, twin-dialled watch.

Faced with buying a replacement, my geek-genes immediately kicked in and I picked up something I first yearned for as a d20-rolling, miniature-painting, ZX Spectrum-programming schoolboy: The Casio Calculator Watch. This is, according to the almost inch-thick instruction manual, the DBC-32. It cost me €35.

So, how is it? In short, it’s a fragile piece of junk, but I love it.

As you can see from the pictures, the watch, although barely a few days old, has already received some dings: both the the glass and to the bezel down below the keypad. The metal itself, chosen because it looked both classier and tougher than the plastic models, has more in common with a foil cupcake casing than actual metal. This has the advantage of making the watch very light, but the disadvantage of bruising as easily as a haemophiliac in a mosh-pit. In fact, the “brushed metal” finish is already well on its way to becoming a “scarred metal” finish.

But it’s all made up for in the functionality, right? Well, sort of. Apart from the obvious calculator mode, you also get a stopwatch (itself infinitely less useful day-to-day than a countdown timer), dual time, an alarm and a rather quaint “database” for storing “up to” 25 phone numbers. I didn’t buy this watch for any of these additions — I got it purely for the aesthetic — which is probably just as well. Modern interfaces, touch interfaces especially, have spoiled us. I still have the muscle memory from my digital watch-wearing school days to control this but faced with anything harder than switching on the backlight I reach in my pocket for my iPod Touch.

And about that light. You can set it to come on automatically when you tilt the watch to look at the screen. But there is a rather tiresome safety measure — if you choose the auto mode, it actually switches off after six hours to save on batteries. This is, of course, admitting that the function doesn’t work properly to begin with.

I tested the calculator. 2+2. The answer? Inexplicably, 2+2=1, until you realize that the plus and the division signs are rendered so as to be almost identical. I tried again and achieved the more usual answer of four. There’s a rumor on the street of an Orwell Edition which gives the answer five, although this is unsubstantiated.

Do I recommend this watch? Not really. I’d spring a little more and go for a more sturdy model, one which is perhaps water resistant, too. But it looks good, and despite the flaws it works perfectly as a timepiece. The final joke, though, is visible in tiny letters above the watch’s screen. Look closely and you’ll see the legend “10 Year Battery”. As if there would still be anything left to power in a decade’s time. $70.

Product page [Casio]