Apple said to be charging $10,000 for iTunes LP production, cutting out indie labels

Sure, it may be tough deciding whether to shell out the extra few bucks for a deluxe iTunes LP or not (okay, maybe not that tough), but it looks like that’s nothing compared to what record labels are faced with. While Apple itself of course isn’t saying anything official on the matter, Gizmodo spoke with the owner of one indie record label who got a bit of information after inquiring about the possibility of making some iTunes LPs himself. Apparently, not only is Apple not currently making iTunes LPs available to indie labels at all, but it’s charging the major labels a hefty $10,000 production fee for each one, which no doubt also means they’ll be confined to particularly big sellers unless something big changes.

[Via iLounge]

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Apple said to be charging $10,000 for iTunes LP production, cutting out indie labels originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Oct 2009 16:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tweetie 2 Review: The Best iPhone Twitter App, Period

Tweetie 2 is so far ahead of every other iPhone Twitter app, it’s astounding.

It’s the most polished Twitter app yet, oozing slickness with every swipe. Yet, it’s exploding with new features, and still really fast. It manages to cram in every possible feature you could possibly want in a Twitter app—offline reading!—without feeling too complicated or bloated. Truthfully, it’s a brand new, totally different app from the original, down to the core. If you already own Tweetie and don’t buy Tweetie 2 because you feel like you shouldn’t have to spend another $3, Alyssa Milano, it’s your loss.

Form, Oh Shiny Form

The main Tweetie 2 interface feels just like the original—awesome—with two big differences: The chat bubbles are dead, replaced by a solid stream of tweets, and glowing notification orbs tell you when new tweets, mentions or direct messages are waiting for you. That’s a huge functional leap over the original Tweetie, where you had to click over to each section to see if you had new messages. Plus, the orbs just look cool, like they’re cut off by the bottom of the screen. The one flaw here is that sometimes it doesn’t register you’ve read a message, so you’ll wind up clearing the orb for the same message twice.

How do you refresh? When you hit the top of a timeline and keep pulling down, an arrow pops into sight that tells you to pull down, and as you down, it smoothly spins upward, telling you to release to refresh. It’s simple, but slick. There’s also a search bar up there, so you can look through all the tweets you have pulled up for something that caught your eye.

So Much Function

The greatest new feature in Tweetie 2 is its offline powers. They’re great. Not only does it cache tweets to read offline, but you have other Twitter capabilities, like adding favorites, which are synced up the next time you go back online. A basic drafts manager lets you store and edit tweets to send later.

You can set up virtual push notifications so you can see whenever somebody you follow drops a Tweet bomb, like RealTracyMorgan. (They show up as a text message from 40404, i.e., Twitter.) Sadly, this doesn’t extend to @replies, but it’s for following a particular person (or persons, if you want a lot of messages about tweets). Other new functional awesomeness includes auto-complete for @replying and direct messaging people who have confusing-ass usernames you can’t remember (though you have to go to the user, and then compose a message to them), the ability to link people with address cards, a very pretty nearby tweet search, and integration with multiple services like Instapaper and Tweet Blocker.

Buy It Now

If you’ve never paid for a Twitter app or even if you have, Tweetie 2 is well worth the measly three bucks it costs. It’s fast, it’s got full offline powers and it’s so polished your iPhone will slip out of your hand while you’re using it. It’s not perfect, but it’s the closest yet.

Super smooth UI, gushing with polish and animations


Exceptionally good offline powers


Feature-packed without feeling bloated


No real syncing with desktop app


No real push notifications


[iTunes, Atebits]

Hands (and Stomach) on with Kamens Water Purification Invention

Dean Kamen may be best known for the Segway personal mobility device, but the prolific genius actually holds 440 U.S. and International patents, ranging from the iBOT wheelchair that can climb stairs to the Luke robotic prosthetic arm to a water purification system.

Last night at its annual Breakthrough Awards, Popular Mechanics presented Kamen with a leadership award. I was in attendance, and many of Kamen’s major inventions were on display, including the Segway, the Luke Prosthetic Arm, and a new Coke machine that mixes over 100 different drinks on the fly. I also saw Kamen’s water purification system, the Slingshot.

The Slingshot was actually a working model, so in Kamen’s honor, I decided to drink some of the purified water. According to one report, “Slingshot will work with all kinds of unclean water, even water crawling with microorganisms and parasites, even ocean water, even water that doesn’t come from your tap.” Mmm, yummy.

Please note the color of the original source water, and that I did not fall over dead after drinking the resulting cleaned-up water. More photos from the PM event after the jump.

CNET reviews Psystar’s Snow Leopard-based Open(Q)

It’s been almost exactly a year since we last reviewed a Psystar desktop. During that 12 month gap, Apple’s suit against Psystar has steadily advanced through the court system, Psystar entered into and emerged from bankruptcy, and Apple released a brand-new operating system by way of Mac OS X 10.6.1, …

Celebrity Nerds: Lil’ Wayne’s got a modded Xbox

Celebrity Nerds confirms what you always knew, deep in your heart of hearts: that stars are nerds like us. Send in your own confirmations of this fact right here.

Now, we don’t have photographic evidence of this one, so Wayne, if you happen to be a reader, feel free to snap a pic of yourself with the console. Either way, we have enough proof to proudly classify Lil’ Wayne a… you know, nerd. GTR has published a video of the New Orleans-born rapper having a conversation with KRS-One during which he says he’s got an “Xbox that has every game from A-Z, Atari, Nintendo, pong, movies & even porn.” Whoa. Where can we get one of those? Wayne claims that the Xbox was a gift… but we bet he hacked it himself. Video is embedded after the break.

[Via Joystiq]

Continue reading Celebrity Nerds: Lil’ Wayne’s got a modded Xbox

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Celebrity Nerds: Lil’ Wayne’s got a modded Xbox originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Oct 2009 15:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Powermat wireless device chargers finally available

Powermat
(Credit:
Powermat

Powermat has been touting its wireless chargers for a while now–ever since CES 2009, quite frankly–but now they’re finally available for you, the consumer, to purchase.

The Powermat is a one-pad, one-plug system (pictured above right) that charges all your gadgets in one place without wires. …

NSF awards Harvard $10 million for robot bees (video)

When we heard that the National Science Foundation awarded $10 million to Harvard to make a swarm of robot bees, our first thought was: “We could do it for half the price.” Then we remembered that the university has been down this path before, including its robot fly program (whatever happened to that thing?) and might be the better choice after all. What does the NSF and Harvard hope to get for all that time and money? Aside from insight into such areas as distributed intelligence, robotic flight, and energy storage, a swarm of these bad boys could be tasked to do anything from battlefield spying to pollination (which might be necessary, with the way that real bees are vanishing at such an alarming rate). The RoboBee project is slated to run for the next five years. Video after the break.

[Via Switched]

Continue reading NSF awards Harvard $10 million for robot bees (video)

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NSF awards Harvard $10 million for robot bees (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Oct 2009 15:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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7 Gadgets That Fulfill All Of Your Sad Emotional Needs

Adam’s disturbing adventure with the Fleshlight (NSFW) this week got me thinking about the flipside of sex with machines. What about our emotional needs?

German designer Stefan Ulrich’s Funktionide is like a body pillow best friend (or lover as this video suggests).

Based on EAP-technology “Funktionide” is a concept for an emotional robot that substitutes human contact. In a future where technology will play a huge part in our lives it is very likely that some day it will shift from satisfying our basic functional needs to include our emotional needs as well.

Can a man love a blob made from plastics? Rosanne Barr was married more than once, so I suppose anything can happen. [Project Page]
Let’s say you actually have a flesh and blood “girlfriend,” but you met on the internet, she has never seen a real picture of you and she barely speaks English. Mutsugoto can break down all of those physical and geographic barriers to create a genuine intimate experience with light.

the device was designed to communicate intimacy and to offer an alternative to text and e-mail messaging. While lying on their beds miles away from each other, the couples wear touch-activated rings visible to a camera mounted above them. A computer vision system tracks the movement of the ring as one of the device’s users passes it across their own body, or bed. At the same time these strokes are transmitted to and projected in beams of light on the body of their partner. The lines change color if they cross.

Plus, this way she won’t feel how fat you are.
Experience Twitter on a more personal, emotional level with this DIY Guardian robot.

Meet the Guardian Robot: This friendly little fellow stands on your desk and monitors your Twitter feed for “happy” and “sad” posts by your friends on your Twitter feed. But unlike conventional alert systems, this robot encourages you to interact with the posts it finds.

For example, when it finds a “happy” post, the Guardian Robot raises its head and arm in triumph. It holds the pose until you give it a “high five” by pushing the switch in its raised hand. Once you do that, the robot pass the high five on to your buddy via a reply Tweet.

Likewise, when the Guardian Robot comes across a sad Tweet, it lowers its head in despair. You cheer it up by giving it a hug, which it will forward on with another reply Tweet.

[Link]
Lonely people often turn to pets to fill the void, but not everyone is cut out for the responsibility. Perfect Petzzz offer a solution with a robot that looks and breathes like a real dog or cat during a slumber that is interrupted only by an on/off switch or the death of a D battery. It’s all of the fun of owning a dog that’s in a coma without all of the hassle. [Perfect Petzzz via Link]
Tired of coming home to an empty house every night? The Expected Curtain makes it appear from the outside as though you have several friends just hanging out in your home, enjoying a motionless staring contest for hours and hours on end. [Link]
One of the saddest products on this list has to be the girlfriend pillow. But look at the guy in the photo—he seems content with a soft, uni-breasted torso. Plus he has the option of picking up a lap pillow for more intimate moments. Also available in a boyfriend version.
Thanks to 64 strategically located actuators, this jacket from Philips reacts with scenes from movies—heightening your emotional reaction. For example, it might hug you repeatedly during a Lifetime movie or pulse like a heartbeat during a tense scene in a horror flick. [Link]

Glucogrip monitors glucose levels, resembles iPhone

The Glucogrip measures blood glucose levels in style.

(Credit:
Giulio Sbarigia

Blood glucose monitoring has improved greatly in recent years, with devices getting smaller, cheaper, and faster–a good thing, since almost 8 percent of Americans are diabetic, according to some estimates, and are encouraged to monitor their blood glucose levels …

Originally posted at News – Health Tech

Panasonic Lumix GF1 reviewed

The typical Micro Four Thirds review seems to come down to a matter of tradeoffs — size and convenience for a bit of a drop from the image quality and performance of a real DSLR. The GF1 doesn’t break that trend, but it has some pretty nice things to offer for the inquisitive interchangeable lens shopper. The most notable feature when put up against its direct competition, the E-P1, is the GF1’s built-in pop-up flash, and the primary drawback of both of these cams versus their regular Micro Four Thirds counterparts is the lack of an eye-level viewfinder, though the GF1 does offer a pricey hot-shoe mounted approximation. As for images PhotographyBLOG says the camera gets “almost everything right,” and video doesn’t look bad neither — a couple samples are after the break. The camera is no ultra-compact, but it seems another good proof for the existence of Micro Four Thirds as a DSLR alternative.

Continue reading Panasonic Lumix GF1 reviewed

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Panasonic Lumix GF1 reviewed originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Oct 2009 14:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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