BMW’s EfficientDynamics Vision concept car combines the best of all worlds with incredible fuel efficiency, breaktaking performance, and sensational looks. It’s powered by a three-cylinder turbo-diesel engine, lithium polymer batteries, and electric motors front and rear. The BMW Vision gets a U.S. unveiling next week at the Los Angeles Auto Show, Dec. 4-13. The only bad news: The BMW Vision is more vision than production-ready concept car. What you’d most likely see on sale would be the key components such as the drivetrain and battery technology transplanted to a more mainstream body.
Simple gadgets like TVs and mice leave us unperturbed. But there are some things that are just beyond reasoning. We’ve ranked the most impossible technologies on the planet in order of their level of impossibility.
Never before has it been so apparent that a power tower—pretty much the laziest design in the computer industry—is being sold by a design-centric company with neither design nor power.
And I’m not sure that the solution is just a refresh away.
The Mac Pro was once the only viable option for a OS X lover in need of serious horsepower for tasks like editing media. Now, with the new iMac? I think it’s straight up stupid to buy a Mac Pro.
The $2,500 Mac Pro, desperately in need of a refresh, gives you a 2.66GHz Quad-Core Xeon (essentially an i7), 3GB of RAM (triple channel, but seriously?), 640GB hard drive (again, seriously?) and a nominal graphics card. Spend $800 more and you’ll get a another processor and 3GB more RAM.
The $2200, 27-inch iMac obviously includes a screen, plus you get a 2.8GHz Quad-Core (i7), 1TB drive, 4GB of RAM and a nominal graphics card.
But beyond those clock speeds, the Mac Pro’s i7 processor is the more premium Bloomfield edition, while the iMac uses the Lynnfield. (More on those differences here.)
Still, the bottom line is that the iMac’s Lynnfield processor is newer, and it shows in performance.
Macworld benched the new iMacs against the latest Mac Pros. And, you know what? The i7 iMac more than held its own. It basically defeated the 4-core Mac Pro across the board.
And other than a few specific tasks in which the most expensive Mac Pro’s 8 cores proved beneficial (Handbrake, Cinebench, etc), the iMac outperformed the competition or kept things close enough not to be relevant, plus it straight-up won in the eyes of Speedmark 6.
Performance-wise, the base Mac Pro makes no sense at all. The 8-core Mac Pro offers a touch more power, sometimes, and other times (in many day to day tasks) even it is outgunned.
Of course, any Mac Pro still allows multiple internal hard drives, three PCI slots, more FireWire ports (four vs one) and more room for RAM expansion (32GB vs 16GB). But once again, even in the worlds of professional media creation, that’s a pretty questionable upsell, especially with external storage solutions and the fact that most high, high end media pros (like special effects artists) turn to dedicated render farms to do their heavy number crunching anyway.
With the new iMac, Apple has shrunk the Mac-Pro-needing niche even smaller. And I can’t tell anyone with a straight face that a handful of expandability is worth $300-$1100 with no monitor, no matter how deep their pockets are.
Apple needs to reexamine their pricing model. Even with an inevitable processor refresh (i9, anyone?), it’s time for a price drop and/or some free with purchase displays. Just because you’re a pro doesn’t mean you’re a sucker.
Stylophone Beatbox electronic beats machine hands-on
Posted in: Features, hands-on, review, Today's Chili
We’ve seen the pros effortlessly tapping away classic tunes on the Stylophone Beatbox, so naturally we had to give it a shot for our faithful readers. Essentially the Beatbox is a portable electronic musical instrument that activates when the stylus contacts the metallic pad. For us the functions were pretty straight-forward to use — there’s a sliding switch for the three sound packs, a loop tool with record and play controls, a volume dial, a loop playback speed dial and a tuning dial underneath. We dig the loop function, but sometimes the Beatbox struggled to reproduce multiple effects at any instance, which is probably why the famed Brett Domino got help in his video. Another issue was that we had to tap fairly hard to get a response, and while you can isolate the tapping noise by plugging in your headphones, your hands would still quickly grow tired from the rapid beats. Of course, you can always cheat by putting in a sample loop via the “MP3” port, but where’s the fun in that? Enjoy our amateurish electronic beatboxing after the break — just promise you won’t laugh. Deal?
Gallery: Stylophone Beatbox hands-on
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Stylophone Beatbox electronic beats machine hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Nov 2009 15:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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On the heels of a judge’s decision to allow Verizon to continue running commercials that attack AT&T’s 3G network, Apple is reportedly prepping an iPhone ad campaign that defends AT&T’s capabilities.
Apple will kick off the campaign Monday night with two ads that show an iPhone user talking to a friend while simultaneously surfing the phone’s browser for information about movies and restaurants, or accessing e-mail, Engadget reports,
“Can your phone and your network do that?” a voiceover asks at the end.
The ads come several days after a judge denied AT&T’s request to pull several Verizon ads that criticize AT&T’s 3G network. Earlier this month, AT&T sued Verizon, claiming that Verizon’s ads erroneously suggest that customers not connected to AT&T’s network will not be able to use their phones at all. Verizon’s response – the truth hurts.
Recently, AT&T debuted an ad starring actor Luke Wilson, which defended the company’s network.
An AT&T spokesman said that questions about the ads should be directed to Apple. Apple has not yet responded to a request for comment.
Nintendo has made a Black Friday splash by announcing two DSi bundles that will launch on Friday with more than $20 in DSiWare content bundled with the hardware.
ASUS UL30Vt available for pre-order at Amazon
Posted in: amazon, ASUS, laptop, Laptops, PreOrder, Today's Chili, Windows7ASUS UL30Vt available for pre-order at Amazon originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Nov 2009 15:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Google expands the availability of its Google Maps Navigation app to Android 1.6 smartphones, including the T-Mobile G1 and MyTouch 3G. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://www.cnet.com/8301-19736_1-10403725-251.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Android Atlas/a/p
Data Robotics’ new Drobo S storage system comes with a faster computer connection that could make it good for active storage, not just backup. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://news.cnet.com/8301-30685_3-10403663-264.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Deep Tech/a/p
[Thanks, Kingone]
Creative rolls out third gen Vado HD pocket camcorder originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Nov 2009 14:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.