Soundmatters’ foxL v2 portable Bluetooth speaker rocks the suburbs

Soundmatters made a few (sine) waves last year with the introduction of its awfully cute foxL Bluetooth speaker, but for those preoccupied with other matters, there’s nothing wrong with snagging v2 in order to catch up. The pocket-sized (5.6- x 2.2- x 1.4-inches) speaker sports new BT circuitry that allows for 3x better reception than the prior version, and it also automatically pairs and searches for Bluetooth devices. Users can now answer and terminate a call from the speaker itself, and as expected, you’ll also get a bit more volume out of this one compared to the original. The rechargeable battery will keep the jams spinning for five hours on a full charge, and if the international charging prongs weren’t enough, there’s also the option to regenerate over USB. It’s set to ship later this month to jet-setting music junkies for $199, while a wired (read: non-BT) variant will go for $30 less.

Soundmatters’ foxL v2 portable Bluetooth speaker rocks the suburbs originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 11:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Solar MacBook Charger Costs More than MacBook Itself

applejuicz

You’d buy a solar powered charger for your MacBook, right? Save money, save the planet, and all that other hippy stuff the Mac user cares about. How much would you pay for such a thing? $100? $200? Sure, it might be the cost of a couple spare batteries, but you’ll make it back in the end, won’t you?

How about $1,200, or $200 more than the MacBook itself? That’s what Quickertek wants for its new 55 Watt Apple Juicz (ho ho) charger, which can refill a tired Mac’s battery in as little as six hours. You can opt for the less powerful 27 Watt model which will take from eight to 12 hours to complete a recharge, and consequently “only” costs $700.

The solar panels are pretty huge when folded out, measuring around 12 times the size of the computer they are supplying (imagine a 4 x 3 grid of 13” MacBook Pros and you’ll get the idea). If you’re the kind of person who likes to camp for days on end, but can’t go without a computer, we guess this might be for you. On the other hand, $1,200 will buy an awful lot of extension cord.

Product page [Quickertek via


Hands On, Kid Tested: Spinmaster Air Hogs Zero Gravity Laser

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The Spin Master Air Hogs Zero Gravity Laser remote control car ($39.99) s a unique toy: It can be driven on the ground–or tool sideways, along your walls. A fan inside the car enables its wall-gripping ability, and a laser gun provides you with the control.

While the product is targeted to children ages 8 and older, my 6-year-old son and 4-year-old daughter easily got the hang of playing with this car. I helped them install the batteries and charge up the car, which took about 15 minutes. Then I gave them a quick tutorial, and they were on their way.

Clearwire’s WiMAX rollout rolls on: NC, WA, TX, IL and HI get lit

Think LTE is the future? How’s about the present? Clearwire is expanding its national footprint in a big, big way today by announcing WiMAX services in a slew of regions in a smattering of states. Starting today, 4G access can be found in both Honolulu and Maui, Hawaii, which effectively removes the last sane reason to not visit and / or relocate there. In fact, CLEAR is now available to 800,000 citizens of America’s finest state, with service extending 1,759 square miles over Oahu, Maui, and Lanai. Moving on, residents of Charlotte, Greensboro and Raleigh, North Carolina can also buy in, right along with those folks in Dallas/Ft. Worth, San Antonio and Austin, Texas who mistakenly think their BBQ is superior. Closing things out, we’ve got new access throughout the Puget Sound area (including Seattle and King County, Pierce County, Kitsap County, and Snohomish County), not to mention a green light to hop on the 4G superhighway in the Chicago region. If you’re anxious to ditch 3G, you’ll find plans starting at just $30 per month.

Clearwire’s WiMAX rollout rolls on: NC, WA, TX, IL and HI get lit originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 10:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands-On With The Kradle Stand for Kindle: World’s Ugliest Accessory?

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For two days I have been trying to come up with something to like about the Kradle, an oversized, utilitarian stand for the Kindle. At first it seems impossible: Why on earth would you need a stand in the first place? One of the Kindle’s big advantages is that it has no pages and so can be lain down on the table while eating, say, and you don’t have to hold the thing open with one hand while shoveling caviar and foie gras (my usual breakfast) into your mouth with the other.

But I tried. I investigated every one of my normal reading positions and after that I went through yet more in my head. First, though, the Kradle itself.

The Kradle is fashioned from ABS plastic, either in an anonymous dark gray or a beige the color of a prosthetic limb. It weighs almost nothing, and feels like it should last forever. It is also one of the ugliest accessories I have ever seen, more like the molded interior of a gadget’s box rather than the gadget itself. The Kradle is all angles, every one of which is perfectly designed to hold both the Kindle and to offend your eyes. In short, the Kradle will probably never leave the house.

Once you get it out of the box (and finish reading the model number, the company URL and the proud “patent pending” boast so prominently molded into the top) you see three slots, and a collection of stick-on feet. These pads come in two types, felt or silicone rubber. After pushing the Kradle across the kitchen table and hearing the screeching scrawk of plastic on wood, I put the felt feet in right away and enjoyed sliding-silence — a blessed relief. Thus neutralized, the Kradle was ready for action. You have a choice of three slots, two of which are right next to each other and confusingly offer the same angle of 75º, or “15º from vertical” (it turns out that one is to hold you Kindle’s cover) and one that holds the e-reader almost flat (15º from horizontal). By cleverly propping the Kindle cover in it’s slot, you can also lean the Kindle against that for a 45º angle, too.

Silicone pads inside the slots hold the Kindle steady. When you press the page-turn buttons, though, you’ll want to squeeze them — a single-finger push flexes the Kindle’s body alarmingly, as it is held only by the base. This is worse in the almost-flat position as it is tricky to get your fingers between Kindle and stand.

All in all, though, it works just fine, holding your Kindle at a jaunty angle. But the problem remains: Why? I actually managed to come up with a few uses, although none that cannot be replicated by things already lying around. First, it could be a useful prop for hands-free reading when cooking. The trouble here is that the Kindle will go to sleep and you’ll have to touch it with greasy fingers to re-display the recipe. Also, a Kindle next to a cooking pot is probably a bad idea.

Next, reading at the table. Again, it does this fine, but no better than just laying it flat on the same table. On your lap? Nope. Not stable. Cafe? Bar? C’mon. It’s dorky enough reading an e-book in public without adding to the embarrassment, plus this takes up the room of a couple more Kindles in your bag.

Actually, there is one place that it could be handy: The stand has a hole where you can thread the USB cable. The problem is that it is extremely fiddly to get the cable through. It’s a shame. The device is well made and does its job just fine. It’s just that it’s a job that doesn’t need doing, especially not if it’s this ugly while it does it. $20.

Product page [Kradle]


Nokia Suing Samsung, LG, Others Over Price Fixing

Nokia last week launched a major lawsuit against Samsung, LG, AU Optronics, and a handful of other LCD manufacturers over charges of price-fixing. The claims follow a similar LCD pricefixing suit filed last month by AT&T.

“The liquid-crystal displays were incorporated into Nokia mobile wireless handsets,” Nokia wrote in its suit. “[The companies] artificially inflated the price of liquid crystal displays ultimately incorporated into LCD products purchased by Nokia, causing Nokia to pay higher prices.”

Nokia also filed a similar suit in the UK.

VIA’s Mobile-ITX platform is half as big as Pico-ITX, still full of heart

VIA’s Pico-ITX platform took things to an entirely new level a few years back, and now the company is introducing an even smaller variant for even more minuscule applications. The Mobile-ITX specification measures in at just 6cm x 6cm, or right around 50 percent as large as the aforementioned Pico-ITX form factor. Aimed specifically at next-generation embedded devices that are barely visible to the naked eye, Mobile-ITX employs a modularized design that includes a CPU module card and an I/O carrier board. We’re told that CPU modules based on the Mobile-ITX form factor integrate “core CPU, chipset and memory functionality and I/O that includes the CRT, DVP and TTL display support, HD Audio, IDE, USB 2.0, as well as PCI Express, SMBus, GPIO, LPC, SDIO and PS2 signals,” and the 5-watt power usage means that these are well suited for always-on systems. Look for the first commercial Mobile-ITX-based CPU module to ship in Q1 2010.

VIA’s Mobile-ITX platform is half as big as Pico-ITX, still full of heart originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 10:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Aviary: Edit and Create Images on the Fly

This article was written on March 03, 2008 by CyberNet.

Thanks to Max, we received an invite to try out Aviary. It’s a suite of web-based applications for “people who create.” When I say a suite of applications, I mean it.  In all, they offer (well, eventually they’ll offer) 18 different applications that each have their own purpose and function. “From image editing to typography to music to 3D to video, we have a tool for artists of all genres” their site reads. At this point they only have the Phoenix application available which is their take on a web-based image editor, so we decided to put it to the test.

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Phoenix allows you to start from scratch and create an image or load an existing file to edit as you please. By starting from scratch, you get to decide the width and height you want the image to be and you can also select a background color. Phoenix is no Photoshop, but they do have quite a few great features which include:

  • Create Layers (this is a must for most image editors)
  • View history (as you would in other photo editing programs)
  • Filters (like blur, emboss, etc)
  • Transform option to distort, transform, rotate, and flip an image
  • and much more…

My first impression was that it looked like a nice and clean desktop application. They really did a great job with the design and interface. The menus they offer are exactly what you’d expect from any desktop application which makes it natural to use. While most online image editors are enough to satisfy only the basic users, Phoenix has enough features to satisfy semi-pro users.

aviary

Now, as we mentioned, Phoenix is only one of 18 different applications that make-up Aviary. At this time, the others aren’t available, but they have listed all of them and what they will do. Here what we’ll see in the future (all apps are named after birds to go along with their “Aviary” theme):

  • Toucan -color swatches and palettes creator
  • Peacock – computer algorithm-based pattern generator
  • Raven – vector editor
  • Hummingbird – 3D Modeler and skinner
  • Myna – audio editor
  • Roc – music generator
  • Starling – video editor
  • Owl – desktop publishing layout editor
  • Penguin – word processing software geared towards creative writers
  • Pigeon – painting simulator
  • Tern – terrain generator
  • Horus – font editor
  • Woodpecker – smart image resizer using seam carving
  • Rookery – a free unlimited distributed file system network that anyone can connect to and store data in.  It also powers their file search engine
  • Hawk – digital content marketplace
  • Crane – custom image product creator
  • Eagle – a smart online application that can identify complex data about an image based on the pixel patterns

One of the first things I noticed when I signed in to the service is that it has a social side to it if you want. You can save your favorite artists and share your images.

Five Invites to Give Away!

The team over at Aviary has a lot of work ahead of them, but it could potentially be amazing once they’re done.  At this time, it is available on an invite-only basis. We have five invites to give away so be one of the first five people to comment and you’ll receive an invite! Just be sure to include your email address in the proper field when you leave your comment otherwise we will not be able to get an invite sent to you.

Thanks for the tip and invite Max!

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iriver Story unsheathed, still looks remarkably like a Kindle

If you’re pro-ebook readers but anti-Amazon censorship, here’s a decent alternative for your cashola. The Story reader from iriver has been undressed for our entertainment and rightfully praised for its trendy eco-friendly packaging. It’s not an altogether unique device, but with an 800 x 600 E Ink display, support for ePUB, PDF, Word, PowerPoint, Excel and even Ogg / WMA file formats, it’s at least versatile enough. Hit the read link to try and spot the other differences between this and Amazon’s record-breaking piece of authoritarian hardware. Go on — it’s a real rush, we promise.

iriver Story unsheathed, still looks remarkably like a Kindle originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 09:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tweet and Print with TweetBookz

Let your tweets exist in real world! TweetBookz allows you to create and order high quality books of your tweets. Soft and hard cover versions are available in four unique designs. The books have full color covers and inside pages of black and white. Each one stands 5.5 inches high and 8.5 inches wide and features up to 200 of your tweets, one per page, starting from the most recent. You can chose to remove any tweets you don’t want included. All tweets are printed in America on 100% recycled paper.