The Office Kid

officekid.jpg

Urbandaddy: You might want to look into this thing called The Office Kid — an ingenious little kit that gives you all the upside of parenthood, without the pesky downside of having to endure Bob the Builder.

Here’s how it works: you get a prepackaged box full of kid paraphernalia (framed photos, hand-drawn cartoons of “Daddy,” etc.), which you then strew about your cubicle. Then, (and we recommend waiting three to six months before harvesting this strategy’s fruit) when you want to take the afternoon off to catch Inglourious Basterds—tell your boss, with a feeling of complete sadness and despair, that the kid’s got the flu, and produce one of the kit’s doctor’s notes.

It’s Your Kid in a Box [Urbandaddy]

Friday Poll: What do you most want to see in 2010?

An iPhone on Verizon, still-cheaper Netbooks, or Google taking over the government? What would you most like to see in the coming year?

Is The Kindle Amazon’s iPod?

This article was written on August 12, 2008 by CyberNet.

amazon kindle.pngIt looks as though Amazon’s Kindle is going to turn out to be more of a success and a moneymaker than many people ever expected. It will be if what CitiGroup analyst Mark Mahaney says is correct. He says that in 2008, Amazon will sell about 380,000 units which is about double of what he originally said would sell. He also compared this to equal the number of iPods that sold during the first year after they were released. Could the Kindle be Amazon’s iPod?

With more units expected to sell, this means an increase in revenue. Mahoney says that by 2010, if sales continue as expected, the Kindle could generate $1.1 billion which translates out to about 4% of all of Amazon’s business. Earlier this year he estimated weaker revenue of $750 million. In the three months leading up to the holiday season this Winter alone, Mahoney says that about 150,000 Kindle units will ship. Not bad!

Up until the Kindle, other companies who have tried to come out with an e-book reader haven’t had much luck. It looks as though Amazon just might have come up with just the right product to be the king of e-book readers…

Source: Electronista

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10 Things You Must Do With Your New Mac

You got a new Mac for Christmas? Awesome. But don’t let Justin Long’s smarmy face fool you, it doesn’t just give you a warm hug and set itself up. Here are 10 things you need to do pronto:

1. Check Out Snow Leopard’s Interface Tweaks: They’re not life-altering, but Apple’s spiffed up the OS X interface in a couple of ways in Snow Leopard. Notably, there’s Dock Expose (which works like Windows 7’s Aero Peek) to show you all the windows of open app by clicking and holding on its icon in the dock. Also, giant, scalable thumbnail previews.

2. Move All Your Stuff: The funny thing about switching OSes or moving to a new one is that it’s really not hard anymore, since so much of the stuff we do is online. The most complicated gambit for most people, I’d wager, is moving your iTunes library to a new machine—especially going from Windows to Mac—since organizing that stuff (if you’re anal about it like me) takes forever. Luckily, there’s a hack for that. And if you’re going from old Mac to new Mac, well it’s pretty easy to move all your crap with the built-in Migration Assistant.

3. Learn What’s Actually Under the Hood of Snow Leopard: Apple says a lot of the magic of Snow Leopard is actually under the hood, so you can’t see it, like Grand Central Dispatch, which promises in the future to make applications use all of those cores in your machine that much better to become superfaster. Or OpenCL, which uses your graphics card for non-graphics applications to go more fasterer. And there’s a whole bunch of other standards Apple’s real big on too.

4. Don’t Buy MobileMe, Sync Your Stuff With Yahoo or Google: Don’t buy MobileMe. Instead, sync your contacts with Google, straight from Address Book, and use Google Sync to deliver ’em to your phone. Same deal with calendars—use the open standard CalDAV to sync iCal with Google or Yahoo, which is as simple as putting in your account info now. And you can upload photos to Flickr directly from iPhoto. Online storage? That’s free too.

5. Install Windows: Whether you do it through Boot Camp so you can play PC games (’cause gaming on a Mac sucks, at best) or use Parallels or Fusions to virtualize it and run alongside your Mac apps, with Windows 7 being $30 with a valid .edu address, there’s no reason not to. It’s even easier to move your Windows apps and files over that you wanna keep if you’re making the slow transition, with Parallels Switch edition, which has a handy USB transfer tool.

6. Back Up to Any NAS With Time Machine: Time Machine, OS X’s built-in backup, is indispensable. Unfortunately, if you wanna do it over the network, it’s kinda limited, unless you know what you’re doing. After you figure out your network storage of choice (HP’s Windows Home Server with Time Machine compatibility is a damn good option; and for those on a budget, there’s Iomega’s ix2 200), it takes just a few minutes a couple of lines of code in Terminal to get your Time Machine backup going on any NAS you please.

7. Make It Play Nice With PCs On Your Network: If you get a NAS, you obviously don’t have to worry about moving crap back and forth directly between your Macs and PCs, but if you want a method that will work every single time, this is how to do it. It’s progressively easier with newer versions of Windows—stuff seems to just work more often.

8. Forget Apple TV, Stream to Your Xbox or PS3: If you’ve already got an Xbox 360 or PS3 (who doesn’t?) there’s no reason to bother with another media streamer, even if you’re ditching Windows. The programs Connect 360 and Rivet will stream music, movies and photos from your Mac to your Xbox for $20. For the PS3, there’s MediaLink, from the guys who make Connect 360, which does pretty much the same deal, but with slightly better integration with iTunes and iPhoto. The P2P app Vuze—which is free—also streams videos to Xbox 360 and PS3 from any OS it runs on, but obviously it’s a little less feature-rich.

9. Download the Best Free Software: At first, there seems to be less freeware on a Mac, but you just need to know where to look. Lifehacker’s essential free apps has you covered on everything from the best IM app (Adium) to better disc burning (Burn) to video playback (VLC, of course).

10. Remote Control It: Sure, you could shell out for MobileMe to use Back to My Mac—except, you shouldn’t—but why bother when you do the same thing and remote control your computer from anywhere with VNC? An afternoon and you’re done.

That’s it from us. Share your own tips and tricks in the comments, and Merry Christmas!

10 Things You Must Do With Your New Windows 7 PC

If you got a new Windows 7 laptop for Christmas, you are truly in luck. But here are 10 things you need to get the most out of it.

1. Take a Spin Around the New Interface: Still glassy, glossy and damn near glittery, the Windows 7 interface is actually a major progression for Microsoft: It’s not just easy to use, it’s a whole new paradigm with the revamped taskbar and Aero Peek making multitasking with multiple windows more natural than ever.

2. Turn Off Everything You Don’t Need: While Windows 7 is missing some odd things, like a mail application, the flip side is that you can turn off pretty much every major feature you don’t want. Internet Exploder 8? Gone. Windows Media Player? Poof. And if you’re used to tweaking the crap out of Windows, you still can—a lot of the old tricks, like for manipulating context menus, still work.

3. Move All Your Crap from Your Old Machine: Windows 7 actually has pretty decent built-in powers for moving all your crap from your old and busted PC to your new pride and joy, though you need to download Windows Easy Transfer separately onto XP if you’re pulling stuff from that.

4. Master All of the New Keyboard Shortcuts: Why deal with flipping around a mouse or scribbling on a trackpad when you do the same thing in a tenth of a second with a keyboard combo? The Start key (oh sorry, Windows key), which I’ve always neglected as a useless monotasker, is supremely useful in Windows 7, as the underpinning for a metric ton of keyboard shortcuts.

5. Get It to Play Nice With All of Your Gadgets: The good news about Windows 7 is that, unlike Vista, most of your gear that worked with your computer a couple years ago with Windows should still work. And newer gear interacts with Windows in a fancy new way with a big ol’ splash graphic and easy access to all the stuff you’d wanna do with it. While even simple things, like adding a second monitor, are more straightforward now, here’s a device-by-device breakdown on getting everything to touch Windows 7 appropriately.

6. Share Stuff With Your Other Computers, ‘Cause It’s Easier Now: The networking UI hasn’t just gotten a facelift to make it more accessible, it’s actually easier to use with HomeGroups—join a HomeGroup, and all of the stuff you want to share with other computers spreads like herpes to the rest of the HomeGroup, no arduous networking required. Also, network in general—like with Macs—seems to just work better with Windows 7.

7. Stream Your Music and Videos Everywhere: Connecting your PC to a TV sounds so 1999. Well, you might not know this, but your Windows 7 PC is a badass music and video streamer, DVR, photo viewer, video aggregator and everything else you’d want out of a multimedia box, all thanks to Windows Media Center. The living room PC is legit now. Not to mention Play To, which beams music (and video and photos) to any compatible device on your network, no setup required (really!). All it takes it a right-click, and those Sonos speakers on the other side of your house will magically start yelling the Yeah Yeah Yeahs.

8. Upgrade Your Netbook to Windows 7 Home Premium: If you got a Windows 7 netbook, there’s a good chance you got stuck with the artificially gimped out Starter edition, which sucks. The cheapest way to fix this is to buy Windows 7 for $30 using a valid .edu email address, then follow our guide to installing Windows 7 on any netbook.

9. Set Up Some Network Storage: A fresh computer is a fresh start—meaning it’s a perfect time to start a new life with fully networked storage for backup, especially if you’re using your machine as a DVR with Windows Media Center. (But skip on faster drives.) One awesome option? A Windows Home Server machine, which can do backups and stream out media to all of your computers.

10. Remote Control It From Anywhere with VNC: While diving deep into the system and futzing with your network at the same time, you might as well set up a VNC server so you can control your computer from anywhere, whether it’s to pull files or schedule downloads.

That’s it from us. Share your own tips and tricks in the comments, and Merry Christmas!

Datel claims new Action Replay works on PSP Go, we hope cautiously

Now this is interesting. Datel, which is well known for enabling all sorts of hacks on varying consoles, seems to have just introduced a refreshed version of its Action Replay PSP. What’s new, you ask? Why, PSP Go support, of course! In the item description, we’re told that those using this on Sony’s UMD-less portable console will have to install it directly on the inbuilt memory, but one of two things has to happen (in theory, anyway) for that claim to be true. The first is that Datel is now an official Sony partner, which is about as likely as you getting a Foleo for Christmas. The other is that Datel found a way to run unencrypted code on the PSP Go, and if that’s the case, we’ve got an idea that the homebrew junkies in the crowd will be all over this in search of further exploits. Hop on past the break for a promo video, and if you’re down with shelling out funds for something that may or may not work as advertised, it’s all yours for $24.99.

[Thanks, Bill]

Continue reading Datel claims new Action Replay works on PSP Go, we hope cautiously

Datel claims new Action Replay works on PSP Go, we hope cautiously originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 08:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDatel  | Email this | Comments

ASUS ECleaner is ready to rumble with the Roomba

Judging by the comparative explosion of robo vacuum releases this month, you might think 2010 is all set to be the year of the automated floor sanitizer. Augmenting that impression is ASUS, who has now made its heavyweight presence known with the newly announced ECleaner, to be released under the AGAiT brand. This new bot comes with a UV light for disinfection, a fragrance slot, the usual photo sensor to prevent it from falling off a cliff, and naturally a remote control for the hands-on househusband. The biggest attraction though — beyond that killer paintjob — is likely to be the $150 price tag, which significantly undercuts most of what’s out on the market right now. Video of the little spherical hipster lies after the break.

Continue reading ASUS ECleaner is ready to rumble with the Roomba

ASUS ECleaner is ready to rumble with the Roomba originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 06:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Engadget Chinese  |  sourceWired  | Email this | Comments

Samsung’s 14MP CL80 packs integrated WiFi, 3.7-inch AMOLED touchscreen

It’s not impossible to find a camera with integrated WiFi out there, but your choices are unquestionably limited. Thankfully for those in the market for such a device, it seems as if Samsung is gearing up to release quite the formidable opponent. Without so much as an official press release, the CL80 has emerged on the outfit’s website packing a 14 megapixel sensor, optical image stabilization, a 3.7-inch AMOLED touchscreen (capacitive with haptic feedback), a 720p movie mode (H.264), microSD expansion slot (groan…), USB 2.0 connectivity and an above-average 7x optical zoom. The Instant Upload feature enables users to upload their shots to Facebook, Flickr, Photobox or Picasa, and for those who prefer to capture motion clips, it’ll also shoot your videos to YouTube when a hotspot is found. Nary a word has been spoken regarding price or release, but we’re going out on a limb here and surmising that much more information will be revealed at CES.

Continue reading Samsung’s 14MP CL80 packs integrated WiFi, 3.7-inch AMOLED touchscreen

Samsung’s 14MP CL80 packs integrated WiFi, 3.7-inch AMOLED touchscreen originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 04:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Photo Rumors  |  sourceSamsung  | Email this | Comments

Japanese Gadgets for Christmas on CNN

CNN decided to pop in a couple of weeks ago to interview us about our ideas for the best Japanese gadgets/goods for Christmas this year. Japan Trend Shop offered up some products to demo, and Sven was clearly more than happy to show off the Oppai Pillow.

japan-gadgets-christmas-cnn

The longer I’m here, the less I see these products as “wacky“, and actually would lean towards “innovative” as a key word. Yes, many products are novelties that you can’t imagine people buying, but you’d be surprised! Two years ago I wrote up these karaoke pills and featured them on Attack of the Show, and still see them in many shops catering to the partying, karaoke crowd. Whether it’s an Oppai Pillow or Samurai Umbrella, there are distinct cultural and market trends within each item that tell you a little more about people and the products in their lives.

The story also made its way onto CNNGo featuring a picture of me looking red-eyed and awkward. Some things never change!

Merry Christmas from everyone at CScout Japan, and we’ll see you in the New Year!

New Android phone? Start with these free apps

If you’re staring at your new Android phone not knowing which apps to try first, hit up our list before you download anything else. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://download.cnet.com/8301-2007_4-10421851-12.html” class=”origPostedBlog”The Download Blog/a/p