LugeCubes: A binge drinker’s dream come true

(Credit: Quirky)

LugeCubes are water molds for creating stackable cubes of ice 8 inches wide by 8 inch high by 8 inches deep. When stacked together, a channel in the ice created by the molds allows you to pour whiskey vodka Jager fruit punch through the ice and out a …

Star Wars, Mattel mind-controlled toys now shipping

Back at CES in January, there was some hype surrounding some new mind-control products that were due to arrive before the holiday season. Well, two of the more prominent ones, the Star Wars The Force Trainer and Mattel’s Mindflex are now shipping.

While images of youngsters decked out in …

Hands On With The Fujifilm W1 3-D Digital Camera

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Some gadgets just hit the “awesome” button in the deep, lizard part of your brain. At an NVIDIA meeting today, my “awesome” button got smacked hard by the Fujifilm FinePix REAL 3D W1, the world’s first point-and-shoot, consumer 3-D digital camera. It’s expensive, somewhat awkward, and probably impractical. But it’s really cool.
The W1 is a bit of a brick, sure, but who cares? It’s 3-D! The camera is black and glossy, and looks a little like a Sony Cybershot T-series with its big, slide-down shutter cover. It’s much thicker than a Sony T-series (but still easily handheld) and it has – woah now – two lenses on the front. It uses those lenses to take two images, which it merges together into a 3D picture.
The W1 takes both photos and videos in 2D and 3D mode. I took a bunch of 3D photos and recorded a 3D video. The 3D photos come through in .MPO format, a new multiple-image format supported by NVIDIA’s 3D Vision kit ($199), a set of drivers and glasses which turn any monitor into a 3D device. The 3D videos are a pair of streams stored in a standard AVI container; the NVIDIA 3D Vision’s software player knows how to merge them into a 3D movie.

Nikon Coolpix S1000pj: A Point-and-Shoot With a Projector

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You might suspect that executives at tech companies spend a lot of time sitting around, trying to figure out what two pieces of consumer electronics they can cram into a single device. Case in point: the newest iPod nano, which was magically transformed into a pocket camcorder.

For its latest addition to the Coolpix line, Nikon has managed to squeeze in a pico projector. The S1000pj is the world’s first point-and-shoot with a built-in projector. Take a picture or shoot a video with the camera, and you can display it on a nearby wall.

The projector isn’t very powerful, and I can’t imagine the demand for such a hybrid device would be huge, but it’s neat nonetheless. The S1000pj comes out this month at a suggested price of $429. Check out a video of the camera/projector in action, after the jump.

If You Love Your Gadgets, Tear Them Apart

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When Kyle Wiens and his colleagues flew to New Zealand two years ago, they weren’t on vacation. They had a serious mission: to purchase one of the first iPhones and then ruthlessly tear it apart.


Wiens runs iFixit, a tech company that can be described as eccentric, to say the least. The staff of 20 engineers and college interns specializes in disassembling gadgets while documenting the process with photographs and writing. The end result of their work is an unofficial, illustrative instruction guide on taking apart and repairing each gadget. Their stated goal is to help consumers avoid the hefty costs of professional repairs or buying new products.

But it’s also a savvy marketing strategy in an increasingly competitive slice of what the tech industry calls “teardown culture.”

Some other companies, including RapidRepair and iSuppli, run similar businesses taking apart products. Hardware hackers, too, disassemble hardware as a hobby to learn how to tweak their devices into the gadgets of their dreams.

But teardown businesses don’t make money tearing down these gadgets, taking pictures of their insides or offering manuals. Rather, iFixit and RapidRepair both sell the parts for consumers to order and perform their self-repairs. And if customers are too afraid to do their own repairs, RapidRepair offers their professional services for a fee.

Photographing and documenting the teardown process, then, is mostly a marketing tool for these businesses to gain media attention and exposure in an effort to attract customers. IFixit, for instance, regularly sends tech publications (including Wired.com) their teardown observations and free photographs for use in articles.

Playing the “time zone game” with iFixit’s 2007 New Zealand flight gave the crew a head start of 27 hours before the iPhone was released on the U.S. West coast, where Wiens lives. But they still faced a number of challenges.

First, they had never been to New Zealand, so they had no office to work in and knew nobody who could help them. They couldn’t just set up shop in a hotel room, either: They needed lots of space, light and a fast internet connection to upload high-resolution photos documenting their process. Fortunately, the owner of a copy shop was generous enough to offer his facility for their use.

They got to work on the toughest part yet: disassembling a brand new product whose innards nobody, except Apple’s engineers, knew anything about. It turned out the first-generation iPhone didn’t even have screws to get inside. The team was momentarily stumped on just how to take apart the iPhone.

Then — eureka! They found they could pop off the black antenna shield and pry off the metal back.

“That was monstrously difficult,” Wiens said in a phone interview. Surprisingly, his team didn’t break the device, though its metal band was slightly bent after they reassembled it.

Marketing aside, why are geeks so fascinated by looking at the chips, wires, ribbons and glue — the hideous part of a gadget — when the gorgeous part is on the outside?

It’s quite simple: By peering into these gadget’s “souls,” you learn their secrets. A teardown of the new iPhone 3GS (the top photo in this article), for example, revealed the handset has an underclocked processor, presumably to preserve its battery life. And when iFixit disassembled the iPod Touch released in September 2008 (shown above), the company found a hidden bonus: an apparently unused Bluetooth chip, whose functionality Apple would later unlock in summer of 2009.

Aaron Vronko, CEO of RapidRepair, added that teardowns serve as a check on a company’s claims. Apple’s Steve Jobs, for example, recently said the latest (third-generation) iPod Touch lacks a camera because the gadget’s focus is gaming. However, iFixit’s teardown of the new iPod Touch found a small compartment that would be perfect for a camera.

“I don’t believe Steve’s explanation,” Vronko said. “I think in six months tops we’ll see an iPod Touch with a camera.”

The more interesting facet of looking inside is the opportunity to see forward, Vronko said.

“Teardowns give us insights on what’s coming up on technology and what kind of technologies people are choosing to integrate,” Vronko said. “It’s cool to see first hand the progression of design.”

A clear observation from teardowns is they keep getting more difficult, as gadgets progressively become smaller, more complex and more tightly packed with components.

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Andrew Bookholt, a Cal Poly student studying mechanical engineering and an iFixit intern, flew to Newark to pick up a fifth-generation iPod Nano for teardown. He described the process of tearing down the camera-equipped iPod Nano as “a pain.” Copious amounts of glue held together the miniature device, and the click wheel was not removable and had to be popped out. It was so hard, in fact, Bookholt broke the Nano on his first attempt.

But Bookholt’s hard work (and iFixit’s money) was worth it, because the Nano’s guts spilled some fascinating hints on what’s to come.

“Apple is integrating everything more and more toward the iPhone-sized computer that will do everything,” Bookholt said. “I think they’re just going to shrink everything down, and maybe eventually have a Nano have all the capabilities of an iPhone, plus more. The trend is going toward an all-in-one device that has a lot of functions.”

IFixit’s Wiens has been taking apart gadgets for six years, and he said his favorite observation is the inadvertent harmony between rivals such as Apple and Microsoft. The two are fierce competitors, Wiens said, but once you look inside their gadgets, many of them are made by the same people. The Zune HD and the iPhone, for example, were both made by Foxconn, a major manufacturer in China.

“You’ve got these arch nemesis devices, and they’re the culmination of years of effort by Microsoft and Apple,” Wiens said. “But they’re being assembled and shipped out of China by the same company. At the same time you know the product managers at Apple and Microsoft hate each other’s guts.”

Click through to the next pages for more photos of naked gadgets (all SFW, or safe for work, unless your coworkers are easily shocked by wanton destruction of consumer electronics).


INQ Mini 3G review

The INQ Mini 3G is quite the intriguing little phone. It has the dimensions and outward appearance of a standard issue featurephone, yet aims to provide the multifunctional utility of the bulkier QWERTY keyboard-sporting smartphones that now roam these lands. With deep integration of Facebook, Twitter and Skype, it’s designed to be a do-it-all social networking device, so we thought we’d run a few status updates through it to see if the latest spin on an award-winning heritage lives up to its billing. Make the short journey to Engadget Mobile, via the read link below, to find out.

INQ Mini 3G review originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Sep 2009 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands-On Video: Nokia N900

The new Nokia N900 smartphone has passionate fans, as you can see from the comments on our hands-on article from two-weeks ago when it was released. The N900 is a Linux-powered smartphone that’s a descendant of Nokia’s awkward “Internet tablets,” but arrives in a thoroughly pocketable size and shape, with a great Web browser and an open-source community raring to program for it. We got a few minutes with a Nokia rep who did a live demo of the device last night. Watch the video below to see the N900 in action.

Friday Poll: Which gadget will Microsoft try next?



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Zune HD

The Zune HD: …

Palm’s App Catalog getting paid apps on September 24?

Digital Daily’s stumbled across a leaked document apparently addressed to webOS devs that shows a timeline for bringing paid apps to the webOS App Catalog, and one date in particular stands out: September 24 for go-live. The infrastructure’s been in beta for a while now, giving everyone some time to get up to speed on the process and iron out the bugs, but for end users, the launch will likely happen in concert with the webOS 1.2 update we’ve been expecting this month and a redesigned Catalog app designed to support payments. Now, how long before we’ve got a bazillion-dollar I Am Rich app in there?

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Palm’s App Catalog getting paid apps on September 24? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Sep 2009 13:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Ericsson XPERIA X2 to launch in France within two months?

According to the French (who we’d like to take this opportunity to thank for Histoire de Melody Nelson), the WinMo 6.5-packin’ Xperia X2 (which we got our hot little hands on about two weeks ago) will be hitting store shelves in France “within two months” from now. The cited price, some €600 (about $880) doesn’t take carrier subsidies into account, so we’ll keep our eyes peeled for that bit of information. We’re looking forward to seeing how that new OS handles itself outside of the realm of preproduction, although the resistive touchscreen nature of the device doesn’t give us much hope. Salut!

[Via OLED Display]

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Sony Ericsson XPERIA X2 to launch in France within two months? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Sep 2009 13:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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