Both flavors of Garmin-Asus nuvifone coming to AT&T?

Both flavors of Garmin-Asus nuvifone coming to AT&T?

After years of wrong turns, it looks like Garmin-Asus’s nuvifone has finally found its way to a US provider, with two separate sources claiming the nav-enabled handset will be coming to AT&T, and soon. This falls in line with earlier indications that it would be making a slight left turn onto American streets in Q4, and will mark the end of a tortuous journey to retail. Both the G60 with its homemade OS and the Windows Mobile M20 are said to be inbound, meaning you’ll still have a choice to make even if you choose one of these. No confirmation from AT&T just yet, naturally, but we’ll keep you posted.

Read – Garmin-Asus M20 Heading to AT&T
Read – Garmin-Asus G60 Heading to AT&T

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Both flavors of Garmin-Asus nuvifone coming to AT&T? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 07:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Camper Bike: A Home On Three Wheels

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Kevin Cyr’s Camper Bike is “a functioning sculptural piece”, designed to be shown off and to star in Kevin’s own paintings and drawings rather than to actually be slept in, but we love it nonetheless.

The bike, actually modified into a tricycle, carries its home on its back, just like a snail and probably not much faster. But it does solve a problem of bike touring: Where do you sleep? In the old, pre Camper Bike world, you could either carry a tent, sleep under the stars or just bring along a credit card and stay in hotels. Now you can sleep in a real bed, and maybe even use a real toilet.

We say maybe as we’re not sure what’s inside. We suspect that this is, just like the snail’s home, nothing more than a shell. After all, a bed up top in the long section would render the rickety rickshaw dangerously top-heavy, especially on uneven ground. This doesn’t stop us from wanting one, though, if only to freak out other road users. And remember: Always engage the parking brake before sleeping.

Project Page [Kevin Cyr via Designboom and Trackosaurus Rex]


iPhone app helps you care for four-legged friends

I’m not a pet owner anymore (it’s a long and painful story; please don’t ask!), but as I have written about a First Aid app for humans, it’s only fair I write about one designed with animals in mind. (OK, I admit it, secretly I also …

(Almost) 1001 Uses for Old Inner Tubes

rubber-tubes

Don’t throw away your old bike inner tubes: Use them to make something instead. Old, punctured rubber tubes are the secret MacGyver tool lurking in almost everybody’s tool box, and here at the Lab we use them for all kinds of things, including iPod Nano cases and non slip shims for putting bells on bikes.

Over at Instructables, Tommi Potx has taken things even further with a long list of inner-tube hacks in a how-to entitled “Several of 1000 Uses for Old Bicycle Tubes”. Some of them involve his bike, but many are remarkably innovative and have nothing to do with cycling. Our favorites are the Laptop Key (a small square of tube bent into places fills the gap left by a lost key-cap), the Gun Grip (what it says) and the Friction Provider, a grippy-coating for a Zippo lighter to keep it in your pocket, proving that you don’t have to be a health-hippy to ride a bike.

As you may have guessed, Tommi is a former military man, and some of his hacks are rather army-centric (a dog-tag silencer, for instance). But while you might not need everything on his list, it should at least inspire you the next time you’re thinking of spending money at the hardware store. Just stop and think: Can you make it yourself.

Several of 1000 Uses for Old Bicycle Tubes [Instructables]

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Palm’s Colligan rebuffs Steve Jobs’ ‘likely illegal’ plea to stop hiring from Apple

Imagine the scene two years ago, August 2007 to be precise. Palm was busy preparing to launch its Foleo and the OS that would save Palm was still expected to be coming from ACCESS. In fact, things were looking so bad for Palm in August that we penned an intervention letter that then CEO Ed Colligan responded to. Apple, for its part, was still enjoying the glow of the golden halo rising above its iPhone launched just over a month prior with the help of 2% of Palm’s hired workforce, according to Bloomberg. Oh, and Apple had just lost Jon Rubinstein, the man leading its iPod division, to Palm.

Now Bloomberg is reporting that Steve Jobs approached Palm’s Ed Colligan in August 2007 with a proposal to refrain from hiring each other’s staff (read: quit poaching our employees, Ed!). Colligan refused, saying,

Your proposal that we agree that neither company will hire the other’s employees, regardless of the individual’s desires, is not only wrong, it is likely illegal.

Meeeow.

Continue reading Palm’s Colligan rebuffs Steve Jobs’ ‘likely illegal’ plea to stop hiring from Apple

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Palm’s Colligan rebuffs Steve Jobs’ ‘likely illegal’ plea to stop hiring from Apple originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 06:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mitsubishi’s new Blu-ray DVRs have you covered, from super resolution to VHS

Mitsubishi has always tried to take a different tack with its Blu-ray recording DVRs in Japan — see its DVR-BF2000 model for evidence — and we’re sure someone’s glad to see them going the extra mile with these latest three models. The DVR-BZ330 combines a 1TB hard drive with the super resolution upconversion that promises to pull additional information from low res video via its Diamond HD chip. If that bit of video magic isn’t impressive(or believable) there’s always the similar DVR-BZ230 sans-Diamond HD and half the hard drive space, while true back compat freaks should opt for the DVR-BV530 with VHS playback (no recording, we know you had an LP tape you’ve been saving.) Expect these to hit the streets in October from ¥180,000 ($1,915) for the high end DVR-BZ330 to ¥120,000 ($1,270) for the DVR-BV530.

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Mitsubishi’s new Blu-ray DVRs have you covered, from super resolution to VHS originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 06:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Padlock Encrypted Hard Drive Secures Data With Keypad

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The most obvious feature of Apricorn’s new Padlock Secure Drive is its drive-encrypting keypad, but the design has a few other touches that make this a rather well-appointed portable USB hard drive.

The drive is encrypted in hardware, meaning that it will still be safe even if somebody pulls it from the enclosure and drops it into another computer. The choice between 128bit and 256 bit encryption lets you match your level of paranoia to the drive, and an admin password can also be set to override the regular code. All this makes the Padlock ideal for taking on the road, but there’s more.

The drive is bus-powered, as all portable drives should be, so there is no power cord to clutter your bag. The USB cable is actually attached and folds away into its own crevice when not in use. The Padlock is also semi-ruggedized with shock proof mounts, so while you still might not want to shake it around when plugged in, when you drop it on the floor rushing between meetings you’ll be less worried.

The prices vary depending on level of encryption and HD size, running from $100 for a 250GB 128 bit model up to $160 for a 500GB 256 bit version. Works with OS X, Windows and Linux.

Product page [Apricorn via Macworld]


Time to drop the Netbook label

Can we all agree on something? There’s no longer a difference between a Netbook and a notebook. Thanks to Netbooks’ move to more features and larger-size screens, the distinction between the two can now be considered little more than marketing speak.

We recently wrote about the fall’s coming battle between Netbooks–a category now 2 years old–and thin and light notebooks with consumer ultra-low voltage (CULV) processors. In theory, the value of a Netbook–with its small keyboard, small screen, and lack of an optical drive–vs. an ultralight laptop with a long battery life and a full-size keyboard for roughly the same price was very low.

But now that we’re actually seeing how PC makers are packaging and selling CULV notebooks (take Dell’s recent introduction of its Inspiron 11z notebook) it’s obvious: Netbooks are nothing more than smaller, cheaper notebooks.

Dell Mini 10 netbook

Dell Inspiron Mini 10 Netbook

(Credit: Dell)

The distinction made some sense early on. The first Netbooks were very small, around 7 or 8 inches, and were used for little more than getting online. They were marketed by smaller brands such as Asus and MSI as super portable, inexpensive notebooks that ran Linux, cutting out much of the cost tacked on with a Windows license. But they didn’t really take off until Microsoft began offering Windows XP specifically for Netbooks, long after it was no longer available on new laptops and desktops.

The big PC makers, understandably, wanted a piece of the action too, but not at the expense of cannibalizing their budget-conscious traditional notebook lines. So Netbooks were sold as a “companion device.” As in, if you keep some of your data “in the cloud” as with e-mail on Yahoo or Gmail or pictures on Facebook or Picasa, and you stream music on a service like Pandora or Last.fm, you can use your regular notebook at home and use something smaller on the road that still affords access to a lot of your stuff.

Arduino binary clock doesn’t care to be useful, just wants to be admired

If there’s one thing we love about DIY projects, it’s the feeling that the outcome is more than the mere sum of its parts. This here binary clock is a prime example, being composed of scrap plastic, some dirt-cheap parts and a homemade Arduino board. And yet, after a few licks of polish and the inevitable LEDs, it looks like a true monument to geekdom, which is only amplified by the fact you can’t even use the thing without being familiar with binary code. But then again, if utility was a standard by which we judged homebrewed projects, we’d have a lot less to talk about.

[Via Make]

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Arduino binary clock doesn’t care to be useful, just wants to be admired originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 05:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ratata: Beautiful Wooden Gun Playset

ratata

There are probably two arguments to make about the Ratata. One is that kids shouldn’t play with guns, not even gun-shaped toys. The other is that kids are going to pretend to shoot each other anyway, and it’s better to do it with a rather lovely set of wooden blocks, out in the sun, than with an XBox controller locked away in a dark musty bedroom.

Ratata, by Tomm Velthuis, comes as a playset; eleven chunks of precision-cut wood in a box. These slot together to make a “full-sized machine gun”. I would have loved this as a kid. As it was I was always disappointed that my toy guns didn’t come apart so I could copy the guys in movies and “strip my piece” in the jungle. In the end, I always did manage to break the toys into pieces, but they would never go back together quite the same way. Available soon.

Product page [By Tomm via Oh Gizmo!]