Linspire Unexpectedly Offers Click ‘N Run For Free

This article was written on August 30, 2006 by CyberNet.

Freespire CNR - Click N Run

A big story just hit the front page of Digg which announced that Linspire, the creators of Freespire, is now offering their Click ‘N Run (CNR) basic service for free. The basic service previously costed $20 and offers makes it easy to install thousands of programs on your Linspire or Freespire system.

When Freespire was released I had a good feeling that it was going to be a great operating system. In my opinion it gives Windows users an easy-to-understand alternative since the need for command line installations are greatly reduced. They also have a Web-based list so that you can see the software that they have available. You’ll find everything from sticky notes all the way to Skype.

Also, looking around I found an installer for setting up XGL in Freespire that someone came up with. I have only seen that it works for nVidia cards but it is a step in the right direction. XGL rocks and it will be really cool when the Linux distributions make it a one-click install option.

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RealNetworks not giving up on RealDVD, plans to appeal court injunction

RealNetworks not giving up on RealDVD, plans to appeal court injunction

RealNetworks found itself on the wrong end of a gavel back in August, receiving a court injunction to stop selling its RealDVD software — curiously flying in the face of an earlier ruling in the favor of Kaleidescape. Perhaps that’s why Real isn’t done fighting yet. Or, perhaps it’s just because it doesn’t want to be put out of business. Either way, the company is set to file an appeal and take the show back to court again. Exactly what the basis of their appeal will be remains to be seen — assuming there is one — but here’s to hoping it’s a little more legally sound than their last defense. We’re not quite ready to give up on Fair Use just yet ourselves.

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RealNetworks not giving up on RealDVD, plans to appeal court injunction originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Oct 2009 07:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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USB Multi-Touch Pad and Numeric Keyboard Mashup

tk-tct005bk_31l

Multi-touch is the new, erm, normal-touch, and everyone is getting in on it. It’s easy to see why — moving your fingers over a flat pad is much easier on the wrists than mice and trackballs (for me at least) and you can invoke a lot of intuitive actions (zoom, scroll, twist) without really thinking about it.

Now Elecom is getting in on the multi-touch game, only with a twist. The TK-TCT005BK is a combination USB touchpad and number pad. Press the familiar “num” button on the top edge and it works just like a numeric keypad. Obviously aimed at laptop owners who lack a separate number pad, the device could also add multi-touch to your desktop PC. And PC it will be. Elecom’s pad only works with Windows . Perhaps that’s what the “BS” button is for. ¥4,200 ($50), available in Japan.

Product page [Elecom via CrunchGear]


NASA LCROSS moon impact in T-minus 15, water discovery expected in T-minus 19 (update: video!)

NASA’s LCROSS (Lunar CRater Observing and Sensing Satellite) mission is coming to a glorious end. The mission launched on June 18, 2009 is just minutes away from making dual-impact on the face of the moon. The first impact sees the Centaur craft hitting the surface at a speed of about 1 mile per second ejecting about 350 tons of debris from a crater about 20-30-meters in diameter and 2- to 4-meters deep. A second Shepherding spacecraft will pass through the debris plume 4 minutes later, collecting and relaying data back to Earth in real-time before meeting its end. With any luck, we’ll know shortly if the moon contains the water-ice theorized by scientists… and cheese. While the obvious use of lunar-based water is to sate the thirst of astronauts, it could also be used be make fuel for off-Earth exploration. Hit the read link for live streaming of the mission from NASA — first impact occurs at 07:31:19 AM EDT.

Update: Impact occurred… are we still here? Data is now being analyzed and NASA is expected to know the facts in about an hour. Post-impact news conference scheduled for 10:00 AM EDT.

Update 2: Video added after the break showing the final minutes before impact. The highlight seems to be the denied high-5 at 5:00 minutes in.

Continue reading NASA LCROSS moon impact in T-minus 15, water discovery expected in T-minus 19 (update: video!)

NASA LCROSS moon impact in T-minus 15, water discovery expected in T-minus 19 (update: video!) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Oct 2009 07:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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gCubik shows off its good side, and every other while it’s at it (video)

Remember gCubik? It’s been a few months, but to recap, it’s a cube developed by researchers from NICT that features textured surfaces that present you a different view on the “internal” image based on viewing angle, giving the illusion something is physically in the box. Theoretically, at least — it’s pretty low-resolution and in the early stages of development. We stumbled upon the device at the CEATEC showfloor this week and decided to snap some video while there. There were moments when the effect was lost, and getting too close completely blurred what we saw to the point of incomprehension, but again, this shows a whole heap of potential that’s fascinating to us. See it for yourself after the break.

Continue reading gCubik shows off its good side, and every other while it’s at it (video)

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gCubik shows off its good side, and every other while it’s at it (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Oct 2009 06:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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$200 Matte Screen Replacement for 13″ MacBook Pro

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We’re sure that it’s a quirk of the site’s ordering service, but TechRestore’s new option to replace your MacBook Pro’s glossy display with a matte one is listed as a “repair.”

For many, that’s just what it is. The glossy-only option on the 13” annoyed many because of excessive reflectivity, although it does bring some punchy colors, and deeper blacks than you can get with a matte screen. It also has the rather excellent glass cover that runs right to the edge of the entire top lid, and protects the screen as well as adding stiffness and an easy-to-clean coating.

TechRestore’s process costs $200. Send in your MacBook and it will rip out the screen and replace it with a matte one, and because the screen no longer has the glass panel, you also get a matte-black bezel, complete with holes for the iSight camera and LEDs. It takes just 24 hours, and TechRestore will hold on to your old screen, too — not that you’ll be needing it anyway.

The one advantage we see over the Apple-provided option (other than the fact that Apple only offers a matte screen on the 15” and 12” models) is that you get a black instead of a silver bezel. But the loss of that stiffening glass panel is a worry, plus Apple’s option is just $50.

Product page [TechRestore via Rob Galbraith]


A Brief History of Sinclair and Its Five Most Interesting Gadgets

You may remember Clive Sinclair as the inventor of the pocket calculator, but you may not realize that his company still exists. In fact, Sinclair released a super-compact, folding “A-Bike” only a few years ago. It still lives!

Truth be told, seeing an image of the Sinclair Sovereign on Boing Boing Gadgets this morning sparked a wave of nostalgia among those of us here who are old enough to remember the nutty little company. For those of you who are unfamiliar, allow me get you up to speed.

Clive Sinclair is one of those obsessive tinkerers that has his hand in various and seemingly unrelated kinds of gadgetry. Kind of like a predecessor of the James Dyson types we hear a lot about today. As mentioned earlier, Sinclair developed the first pocket calculators starting with the Executive model in 1972, but he also single-handedly launched the personal computer industry in England with his ZX Spectrum ten years later. The Spectrum ran on a 3.5 MHz Zilog Z80A CPU, with 16K-49KB of RAM and eye popping 256×192 resolution. Not powerful by any stretch of the imagination, but it was affordable and easy to operate which made it attractive to a mass audience. Eventually, it earned Sinclair a fortune and a knighthood from the Queen for his service to British industry.

Sinclair’s obsession with making gadgets smaller extended to several other product categories including mini TVs like the MTV-1, radios and, most recently, electric vehicles like the underwater SeaScooter for divers and the ill-fated cross between a Segway and a scooter that was the C5.

Perhaps the only thing more interesting than his inventions is Clive Sinclair the man. Not surprisingly, he is a brilliant mathematician who has spent part of his later years using this skill to become a champion poker player. Sinclair is also a member of the British chapter of Mensa, serving as chairman of directors for the organization from 1980 to 1997. His Wikipedia article even claims that he doesn’t use the internet despite being a major figure in the history of computing. I suppose that means he probably wont read this, but I still want to acknowledge him and his [ongoing] work.

The 8 bit Spectrum was released in 1982 and was the British equivalent of the C64. It spawned hardware and software, like the Commodore, but looks a hell of a lot better.
This pocketable TV didn’t actually fit in pockets, but was an insane attempt to do what was impractical at the time with the day’s modern tech. Took 10 years to develop and the screen was 2 inches big. A child of the 70s. [Giz]
Sinclair’s first calculator—and one of the world’s first pocket sized models—is almost as gorgeous as the famous Dieter Ram’s designed Braun now mimed in the iPhone UI. The model had a fatal flaw which caused it to fuse in the on position. Oops. [Sinclair Planet]
The C5, much like the Segway, was meant to revolutionize the way we transport ourselves in meatspace. It bombed, being little more than an electric tricycle. [Planet Sinclair]
The last product released by Sinclair is a bicycle that folds up more compactly than even other folding bikes. Weighs under 15 pounds and folds up in seconds. [a-bike]

Bayer’s ‘Media Facade’ redefines building-vertising

You may think that once you’ve seen one building turned into a massive billboard you’ve seem them all, but that would mean you probably haven’t seen the so-called “Media Facade” now adorning Bayer’s former HQ in Leverkusen, Germany. Built by ag4 media facade GmbH and GKD AG, the massive display apparently consists of 5.6 milion LEDs that cover the entire 17,500 square meters of the building, and which can be lit up at will to pump out gigantic advertisements worthy of any science fiction movie. You’ll note this is the former Bayer headquarters — it seems that the promise of ’round the clock ads visible for miles around saved the building from the wrecking ball. Head on past the break for a video of it in action, and a second showing the facade being constructed.

[Thanks, Gerrit]

Continue reading Bayer’s ‘Media Facade’ redefines building-vertising

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Bayer’s ‘Media Facade’ redefines building-vertising originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Oct 2009 05:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Archie’s Grobag, Like a Bag-of-Holding For Bikes

archies_grobags_rosie_hip_pouch

The “Rosie” hip-pouch from Archie’s Grobags might be the most utility-dense bikers’ bag we have yet seen. Archie is a London-based fixed-gear rider as well as a cycle-bag designer (and sewer, we believe). And this bag shows the fixsters’ obsession with hanging nothing from either the frame or the rider’s body – it lets you carry just about everything you’d need for a day out.

Once looped onto your belt, you can load up the inside with cellphone, cash, a spare tube, tire levers, a multi-tool and any other (small and thin) items. On the outside you get a pair of Velcro loops for a pump and another couple of webbing straps on which to hang your lock (although the U-lock in the picture looks like one of those awful, lightweight and easy-to-break aluminum kinds). There’s even a place to clip a rear light, keeping one more thing off the frame.

The bags are £45 (around $70) each. Archie’s site is down right now, but you can check out the full set of photos at Pedal Consumption.

Product page [Archie’s Grobags via Pedal Consumption]

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CEATEC 2009

All right, so you’ve all seen the news and the footage of the gesture-controlled TV and the muRata robot. Yes? Well, the thousands who descended on CEATEC 2009 did indeed crowd around the big stages to see a very tiny white robotic cyclist, or lined up patiently to see the 3D TVs (including one which did not require using special glasses).

ceatec-2009

However, we were also impressed by some other devices that may have escaped the TV cameras. Our favorites were a bunch of neat mobile developments from Fujitsu and Zenrin みんなのナビ (”everyone’s navigation”), that is used on the Sony PSP. Zenrin’s navi utilizes the uber-popular PSP console and adds the GPS devices we love to use on our phones and in our cars. Perfect for those gaming salarymen you always see zipping through station thoroughfares glued to their Playstations.

CEATEC-MINANONAVI

The photo transfer system developed by ALPS also seemed very practical. It was a two-way transfer system that allowed photos taken with your mobile to be sent to your PC, TV or other device simply by touching the panel of their product. And, vice versa, data could be transferred from the same devices back to the mobile.

The human-shaped ultra thin digital signage from 3M also might just change the face of in-store displays. And, with all the potential for 2D females, it might satisfy all those geeks’ fantasies as well.

CEATEC-3M

A recurring feature in the products on display was interactivity, especially through touch or movement. There were gesture-controlled screens, alongside an arsenal of mobiles with touch interfaces. Schools may see electronic blackboards soon and our homes will feel sci-fi with all those 3D TVs (for those with enough money). Many major brands like Sony and Panasonic also proudly advertised green and low-emission domestic products.

Of course, we continue to give a more detailed analysis of the technology and product trends evident at CEATEC in our Mobile Trendpool.