Mad Scientist Chef Grant Achatz Anti-Griddlin’ at Alinea

You may not be able to spend hundreds on a meal at foodie mecca Alinea. But you can watch Grant Achatz pulverize, vaporize and atomize other people’s plates—streamed live last night… Update: Recorded video embedded below

What you can’t see in this footage is that despite how sterile the oft-speechless, stainless steel kitchen may look, the smells that fill the room are nothing short of wondrous. Just how these chefs resist consuming every plate they create is beyond my comprehension.

Thanks to Logitech, MonoPrice and of course Justin.tv for helping make this broadcast possible. Please excuse any video hiccups, audio issues or momentary connection drops—it is, after all, live.

Zune HD pamphlet discloses HD movies coming to Zune marketplace


With TV shows, music video, and video podcasts already proliferating the Zune marketplace, it was really only a matter of time before Microsoft dipped its toes into HD movies — not to mention kind of a logical step since Xbox Live was getting its movie section Zune-branded. BostonPocketPC writer Steven Hughes has uploaded pictures of an alleged pamphlet handed out at Best Buy’s Zune HD showings that, among other things, make reference to finding Zune Marketplace content including HD movies. Ban on HDTV Media Center recordings notwithstanding, things are looking up for Zune 4.0 software. And here we thought Apple was late to the party with its movie service.

[Via Zunited]
Read – Pamphlet pics
Read – BostonPocketPC

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Zune HD pamphlet discloses HD movies coming to Zune marketplace originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Aug 2009 20:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Xbox 360 ‘Super Elite’ with 250GB HDD glimpsed in South African retail ad

So much for secrecy. South African Xbox 360 distributor Comztek has told local gaming news site XboxGaming.co.za that the a 250GB “Super Elite” model is due there in October. Additionally, the Forza 3 bundle we saw heading to Germany is also en route to SA, retailing for R4,999 (US $646), or around the same price as the Elite before its recent global price cut. South African retailer BT Games has apparently also posted a flier in honor of the launch (pictured), offering a R500 discount on the Super Elite (non-Forza 3 bundle, presumably) with the trade-in of a slimline PlayStation 2, totaling R4,199 (US $541) post-discount, or a 120GB Elite for R2,999 after the same trade-in rebate. Let’s hope the folks in Redmond have as much of a sense of humor about leaks as Sony does.

[Via Joystiq]

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Xbox 360 ‘Super Elite’ with 250GB HDD glimpsed in South African retail ad originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Aug 2009 19:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New E- and S-Series Walkmans pop up at CNET

Apparently, Disney does not have a problem with this.

(Credit: Donald Bell/CNET)

Yes, it’s true: I’ve managed to get my grubby little mitts on Sony’s new E- and S-Series Walkman MP3 players. How, you ask? I will never share my secrets…NEVER! OK, dramatics aside, it …

Originally posted at MP3 Insider

TUAW’s iPhone app: it’s alive

If you love TUAW, iPhones, and apps (and let’s be honest… you do), then today should be filled with wonderment and excitement. Why you ask? Because our homeboys and girls over at The Unofficial Apple Weblog have released their very own iPhone app — and it’s pretty darn slick. If you know what’s good for you, you’ll get to downloading it right now. It’s what Steve Jobs would want you to do.

Read – TUAW’s post on the app
Read – iTunes link

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TUAW’s iPhone app: it’s alive originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Aug 2009 18:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Japanese create teddy bear robot nurse

Nurse robot Riba, from a Reuters video on YouTube

(Credit: Video screenshot by Tim Hornyak/CNET)

Japanese researchers have created a robot nurse that can lift elderly patients from wheelchairs and beds. Naturally, it looks like a giant teddy bear.

Riba, short for Robot for Interactive Body Assistance, was developed …

Study finds Kindle more eco-friendly than actual books, maybe

A mass-produced piece of plastic and electronics more environmentally-friendly than a simple book? Possibly, at least according to a new study released by the Cleantech Group. While the group found that the Kindle‘s upfront environmental impact was indeed fairly significant, they also found that the numbers can change dramatically over the course of the device’s lifecycle — depending largely on the users’ reading habits, of course. More specifically, they say that the Kindle can produce a potential savings of 1,074 kg of CO2 if it replaces three books a month for four years, or a whopping 26,098 kg of CO2 if the Kindle DX is used to its fullest capacity. They also found that the Kindle would still break even if it replaced just 22.5 books over its lifespan, although they’re quick to point out that its impact can turn to a negative if folks continue to buy books and print periodicals in addition to e-books and don’t recycle them.

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Study finds Kindle more eco-friendly than actual books, maybe originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Aug 2009 17:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apartment Guide releases Android app

Apartment Guide for Android makes it easy to locate apartments while on the go.

(Credit: ApartmentGuide.com)

As a young bachelor, I’m no stranger to apartment hunting. Normally, I do my research online, make a list of apartments, and head out in my car to visit the listings. This …

Originally posted at Android Atlas

Nokia N900 now giving Germany and Italy a way to pre-order

Now that Nokia’s Maemo-powered N900 is looking mighty nice and official, the company’s Germany and Italian arms have no problem going ahead and taking your hard-earned Euros in exchange for a pre-order. Both sites are actually listing it for €599 (US $860), or €99 more than what we heard yesterday. A pretty huge discrepancy, to be sure, but it’s not unlike Nokia to have a flagship phone fluctuate in price. That October release date is a ways off, but if you’re absolutely convinced this must be in your pocket by Halloween, you know where to go.

[Via Slashgear]

Read – Nokia Germany
Read – Nokia Italy

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Nokia N900 now giving Germany and Italy a way to pre-order originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Aug 2009 17:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Thunderbird 2 vs. Outlook 2007: Who Will Wear the Crown?

This article was written on January 13, 2007 by CyberNet.

Outlook 2007 With the consumer release of Office 2007 nearly two-weeks away, there are some details that are emerging that might keep you away from using the popular email client that has been around for a long time: Outlook. The newest version is fancied up to look pretty and I have actually been playing around with the last Beta release for a few weeks now. There are a lot of really nice features that it has, especially since everything is in such a tightly integrated package. However, there is also something that I didn’t realize.

Campaign Monitor has pointed out that Outlook 2007 switched from using Internet Explorer as its rendering engine to using Microsoft Word. Anyone that has used Microsoft Word for the simplest HTML tasks knows how bad it is at generating HTML…it is really one of the ugliest things a Web developer will ever see. Application’s like Dreamweaver even have built-in tools to help clean-up the Microsoft Word HTML, which demonstrates just how bad it really is.

Here is a list of things that’s “new” in Outlook 2007:

  1. No background images – Background images in divs and table cells are gone.
  2. Poor background color support – Give a div or table cell a background color, add some text to it and the background color displays fine. Nest another table or div inside though and the background color vanishes.
  3. No support for float or position – Completely breaking any CSS based layouts right from the word go. Tables only.
  4. Shocking box model support – Very poor support for padding and margin, and you thought IE5 was bad!

This quote from the site really sums it up well:

Imagine for a second that the new version of IE7 killed off the majority of CSS support and only allowed table based layouts. The web design world would be up in arms! Well, that’s exactly what the new version of Outlook does to email designers.

I have had the pleasure of designing email templates for several businesses, and fortunately for me I created them using tables without any background images. I had thought about doing the designs using CSS, but I wanted to make sure that I would use something that almost all email providers would be able to render properly. I have checked the email templates that I created and they all seem to display properly, but for anyone who has already stepped into the CSS realm I’m sure there will be a lot of frustration.

I found this article via the Firefox Extension’s Guru Blog (who also mentioned it in the forum) and he brought up a good point. He said:

Granted right now Thunderbird is not as feature packed as Outlook. But Thunderbird 2 will be adding several new features such as the new message alert indicator, message tags and may be even tabs. Thunderbird 2 will also render incoming HTML e-mails via Firefox.

Since Thunderbird (version 2 Beta 1 available here) does use Firefox to render emails, is this going to be the next big push by Web developers? I haven’t met a single Web developer who has said the they prefer to design websites for Internet Explorer of Firefox because it is easier, and will email templates be the next big complaint? There are a lot of newsletters and weekly updates that I receive who use CSS for their formatting, and these people are probably going to be frustrated beyond belief with having to change their templates to use tables.

Mozilla Thunderbird might not have as many features, but I think it will be quickly catching up. It can already manage your emails, contact list, and with the help of an add-on (called Lightning) it can also handle your calendar. Outlook also manages your tasks/to-do lists which can be done with the ReminderFox extension in Thunderbird. The only other thing that I can think of which Outlook has is a note-taking application, and the QuickNote extension for Thunderbird should be able to add that feature.

So that just goes to show that Thunderbird might eventually take the reigns in the personal information management world, but hopefully an office productivity suite like OpenOffice.org will start to bundle it with their existing software. I would have to imagine that it would help out Thunderbird’s market share quite a bit.

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