Korg Sound On Sound sneers at multitrack recording, offers unlimited tracks

Multitrack digital recorders might not be front and center of the gadget lover’s mind right now, but slap that “unlimited” modifier in front and all of a sudden interests are piqued and ears prick up. Korg has made official its new Sound On Sound Unlimited Track Recorder, which will do exactly what its name suggests while keeping each overdub separate for future modification or retuning. You’ll be able to fit up to 26 track hours on a 16GB MicroSDHC card and a dedicated guitar input is available alongside mic and line-in ports. Another useful-sounding feature is Sound Stretch, which should allow you to alter speed to between 25 and 150 percent of the original recording without altering pitch. Price is tentatively set at £230 ($375) for a March 2010 release.

Korg Sound On Sound sneers at multitrack recording, offers unlimited tracks originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 04:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Reggie Fils-Aime: Wii users don’t care for Netflix HD

We seriously have to question the sanity of some of these high-ranking corporate types. Reggie Fils-Aime, Nintendo of America boss and fearless orator, has joined Andy Rubin of Google in claiming that his customers do not require a feature so prevalent nowadays that it has become close to a basic standard. While the Xbox 360 and PS3 are capable of streaming full HD movies from Netflix at no extra cost, Reggie has stated his belief that “there really is no loss for the Wii consumer” because “the vast majority” of Netflix streaming content isn’t HD anyway. Reiterating his longstanding, but never adequately explained, hesitance toward HD, Reggie has also claimed that the 26 million Wii console owners out there have voted with their wallets and will be quite happy to continue putt-putting along at standard def. Skip past the break to see him speaking his heresy with a straight face.

Continue reading Reggie Fils-Aime: Wii users don’t care for Netflix HD

Reggie Fils-Aime: Wii users don’t care for Netflix HD originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 03:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NAMM: A Mad Professor of the Stompbox Goes Open Source

ANAHEIM, California — The Willy Wonka of guitar pedal builders is giving away the keys to his kingdom.

Zachary Vex, the mastermind behind the handcrafted and hand-painted Z.Vex line of boutique guitar effect pedals, has decided to release his designs to the public. His newest device, a new pedal called the Inventobox, allows anyone to hack his creations however they choose.

Z.Vex pedals are coveted by collectors for their mystique and funky vibe and as much as their squealing, crunchy and sometimes alien-sounding tones. They run the gamut from fuzz and distortion to wah-wahs and ring modulators. The pedals, with their sparkling, brightly painted cases and bizarre names, are considered high-end curios — they cost between $250 and $500 each.

Even though Vex’s pedal designs win accolades from guitar gods like Dinosaur Jr’s J Mascis and My Bloody Valentine’s Kevin Shields, some customers aren’t totally satisfied with what they get.

“Some people who buy the Fuzz Factory find it too bright,” Vex says, referring to his most popular model, a fuzz pedal for the guitar. “So, I wanted to give them an opportunity to open it up and do whatever they want to it.”

Vex is debuting the hacker-friendly Inventobox here at the National Association of Music Merchants (NAMM) show, the industry’s premiere tradeshow where all the latest gear is trotted out.

The Inventobox will be out in April. It’s basically a DIY hacking kit that lets intrepid Z.Vex fans mess around with his designs, altering the circuits and creating their own variations on his pedals. $400 gets you the Inventobox kit that contains a pedal with a blank circuit board, a set of modules that reproduce three signature Z.Vex sounds — the Fuzz Factory, the Super Hard-On and his Marshall-style tone stack — plus all the wires, tools and spare parts needed to put them together. There’s also a $300 version that comes without the modules so users can build their own circuits.

Pedal enthusiasts are known tinkerers. They gather online at sites like DIYStompboxes and Build Your Own Clone to trade schematics and debate over the finer points of stompbox design.

You can buy a DIY pedal kit for around $80, so at $300, the Z.Vex Inventobox may seem a little rich. But you get a full 16 knobs to twiddle, plus a peek inside the mind of one of the acknowledged masters of high-end stopboxes.

Vex envisions hackers will use the Inventobox, which ships in April, both for tweaking his designs and for developing their own pedals. The modules can be chained together, so people can layer multiple tone circuits on top of one another inside a single pedal.

The Inventobox itself is modular. Multiple units of the 16-knob boxes can be strung together to create pedals with 32, 48 or 64 knobs — or even more.

It also has a built-in work light and a set of braces that prop up the circuit board so you can move the wires around and still be able to switch the pedal on and off.

At some point, Vex’s explanation of everything the Inventobox is capable of went over our heads like a post-graduate Calculus lecture. Rest assured, though, it’s a pedal hacker’s dream come true.

Vex says he intends to eventually publish each of his designs for free on the internet, giving away the schematics and the instructions on how to assemble the circuits for every last one of his signature pedals. He is also creating an iPhone app that will let you purchase new pedal modules as they become available and view the published schematics.

“I’m going to be giving away all my secrets,” he says. “People are already hacking my pedals anyway, posting my designs on the various forums. So, I don’t care what they do to them.”

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NAMM: Korg’s Wavedrum Adds New Beat to Your Next Hippie Jam

ANAHEIM, California — All you trustafarians have a cool new tech gadget to show off at your next drum circle.

The original Korg Wavedrum was released in 1994, but Korg has updated the old favorite for the 21st century. The company is showing off its new version of the device at the NAMM Show industry exhibition here. It’s available now for about $600.

The synthetic drum pad is about the size of a fat frisbee. It’s small and light enough to sit in your lap, where you can play it with your hands, or you can mount it on a regular drum stand and tap on it with drumsticks, mallets or brushes. A set of controls along the top lets you dial in literally thousands of percussion sounds, both natural and synthetic — the demo unit I played at the Korg expo booth came with a double-sided sheet listing all the sounds in tiny, 10-point type.

The Wavedrum is most impressive when it’s mimicking common hand drums. Turn it into a djembe or conga and the different parts of the “skin” respond as you’d expect a real drum to. The drum head has a satisfying spring to it, and you can bend the pitch by pressing down on the head while you beat it. Just like a real drum, the rim makes different noises when you hit it in different places.

I also tried it with sticks, assigning a snare sound to the skin and a kick drum sound to the rim. In this mode, it produced a natural bleed like a true cocktail drum kit — a hard hit on the kick drum makes the snare reverberate, and vice versa.

When you move into synthetic territory, it gets a little silly. The Wavedrum lets you blend melodic synths sounds in with your natural drum textures, so it sounds like a robot is singing along to your beats. There are truly wacked settings that are entirely synthetic-sounding, as well, so you can play Moog-like basslines by striking different areas of the skin. You can also play along to about 100 built-in techno grooves and patterns.

The Wavedrum is less elegant when it tries to mock more esoteric percussion sounds. I tried the settings for caxixi (a Brazilian shaker), some different tambourines, a Balinese gamelan and an African balafon. All of them sounded pretty cheesy. You’re better off sticking to the basics.

The Wavedrum requires an amp and a power source, obviously, so it won’t be replacing the real drum you carry to the park on Sundays. But it’s a pretty wicked electronic instrument. If you bring this thing to Burning Man, I bet everyone would want to try it. Don’t forget your hand sanitizer.

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NAMM: This Ain’t Your Brother’s Portastudio

ANAHEIM, California — The Tascam 424 Portastudio, an old machine from the 1980s which enabled musicians to overdub multiple tracks onto regular cassette tapes, was an essential piece of gear for just about every guitar player or budding songwriter.

Now Tascam has injected new life into the bedroom studio with the new Tascam DP-008. The all-digital eight track, which the company is showing off at the NAMM Show here this week, is the big brother to Tascam’s four-track DP-004 that arrived in 2009.

The Portastudio line has traditionally filled the “sketchpad” niche — a tool for workshopping songs before moving on to a real studio or a more versatile environment like ProTools. True to form, Tascam has kept things simple, but it has also given this little box (which sells for about $300) enough trimmings to serve as the hub of a true home studio.

The DP-008 has jacks for plugging in a guitar or any line-level instrument, like a synth or a computer, as well as XLR inputs that provide phantom power, so you can record with just about any microphones. It also has a pair of decent-sounding mics built in, so if you’re strapped for cash, you can just set it on the table in front of you and sing or strum into it. You can record up to two tracks at once, so you can record one person in stereo, or two people can lay down two parts at once. Full bands wanting to record more than two parts simultaneously will have to compensate.

The whole interface is mostly controlled by an array of small buttons which can get a bit confusing to navigate (Tascams have always taken a bit of time to learn), but the addition of a jog wheel makes cueing up songs simple enough.

The little box doesn’t have the practice-friendly features of other Tascam products, like the ability to assign loops you can jam over. Also, unlike most other Tascam recorders, the DP-008 won’t record MP3, only 16-bit CD-quality audio. However, it uses SD cards, so you can just swap in a new card if you have more ideas than storage.

There are some tools to give your home recordings extra polish, like built-in reverb and a seven-stage EQ. There’s also a footswitch jack that controls punch-ins, so you can record overdubs on the fly by stomping your foot.

And maybe the best feature: it takes AA batteries — leave the wall wart at home and carry the DP-008 to the practice space, the roof, the forest or wherever you need to go to summon the spirits.

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Droid more valuable than Nexus One or iPhone 3GS according to iSuppli

Ah, here we go again: another report from iSuppli breaking down the bill of materials (BOM) for one of our favorite smartphones. This time it’s the Droid / Milestone under scrutiny, Motorola’s beefcake slider that currently sells for $560 month-to-month on Verizon ($199 on contract). According to iSuppli’s analysis, Droid brings a $187.75 bill of materials that breaks down into $179.11 worth of components and $8.64 in manufacturing costs. Naturally, the BOM does not include licensing fees, software costs, accessories, or the massive outlay this device has received in advertising support. Nevertheless, it makes for interesting apples-to-apples fodder when comparing costs with the Nexus One ($174.15 in materials only), iPhone 3GS ($178.96 materials and manufacturing), and original Palm Pre ($138 materials and manufacturing). The single most expensive component on the Droid is the 16GB removable microSD card ($35) bundled with the Droid. And after a controversial MOTO report that demonstrated a lackluster capacitive touchscreen on the Droid, it’s interesting to compare the Droid’s 3.7-inch TFT LCD ($17.75) and capacitive touchscreen overlay ($17.50) with that of the iPhone 3GS ($19.25 spent on a smaller 3.5-inch LCD and cheaper $16 touchscreen overlay) and Nexus One (whopping $23.50 for 3.7-inch AM-OLED display and $17.50 for the touchscreen assembly). Rounding out the top-end costs are the Droid’s 5 megapixel autofocus CMOS sensor ($14.25), Qualcomm baseband processor / RF chip ($14.04), and TI application processor ($12.90).

Droid more valuable than Nexus One or iPhone 3GS according to iSuppli originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 03:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel profits recover to $2.3 billion in Q4 2009, company describes it as 875 percent jump

Yo Intel, when your 2008 fourth quarter was one of the worst you ever recorded, it’s slightly, just slightly, facetious to go trumpeting an 875 percent improvement in your 2009 fortunes. The self-appointed chipmaking rock star has clocked up $10.6 billion in revenues for the last quarter, which filters down to $2.3 billion in pure, unadulterated, mother-loving profit. That’s good and indeed technically nearly nine times what the company achieved in the same period the previous year — we’d just appreciate this to be represented as the recovery it is, rather than some major leap forward in the face of a global financial meltdown. Either way, the Santa Clara checkbook is now well and truly balanced, even if it would’ve looked fatter still but for the small matter of a $1.25 billion settlement reflected in last quarter’s results.

Intel profits recover to $2.3 billion in Q4 2009, company describes it as 875 percent jump originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 02:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bikousui: Instant Herbal Water

Bikousui (微香水) is the easy way to enjoy a fresh blend of healing herbal water while out and about.

Using Japanese natural water from the Japan Alps and a variety of therapeutic herbs, you take off the herbal tea bag on the side of the bottle and pop it in the water. Put the cap back on and wait for around five minutes. You will see the water transform into a healing pinkish color. Voilà!

bikousui

These kinds of drinks do an amazing job of transferring to an ordinary product a touch of luxury, earned from the sense of satisfaction the consumers gets from creating something themselves, from taking part in the brewing process no matter how essentially trivial. Bikousui gives you a fresh, just-made taste no matter where you are — a homey drink for a mobile population. Of course, the added emotional value the consumer receives also lets the manufacturer charge more.

Produced by Daishizen Seikatsukan in Gunma, this neat little soothing beverage reminds us of the instant bottled Kyoto green tea we reported about in 2008.

Unfortunately it is only really available online or through stores in Nagano and Gunma. Apparently there is one place in Tokyo selling Daishizen products in Suminari-ku (Aroma House Kurumi).

Take your choice from ten types of herbal blends. You can buy a bottle for around 150 JPY ($1.60).

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1983 review of Sony’s first-ever CD player unearthed: hindsight’s a beautiful thing

Here’s a little bit of color for you. The gang at Retro Thing have brought our attention to a republished 1983 Stereophile review of the Sony CDP-101, the first-ever CD player. The results were that the audio quality was promising but not stellar, and the $1,000 (!) cost of entry for the device made it even less alluring. Knowing how history unfolded, we can’t help but chuckle a bit at the worry that CDs would in the near-term become obsolete by another physical disc medium, but hey, we can’t blame them for not being psychic. Just think, one day our own reviews will be discovered for the future to laugh about — paying over $500 for a device that doesn’t do multitouch on its native apps? What’s up with that? Find yourself 15 to 30 minutes of quiet time and hit up the source link for a blast from the past.

1983 review of Sony’s first-ever CD player unearthed: hindsight’s a beautiful thing originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 01:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Time to take another look at Seesmic for BlackBerry

Seesmic adds a slew of previously lacking features to its Twitter app for BlackBerry. It’s time to take another gander. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://download.cnet.com/8301-2007_4-10435664-12.html” class=”origPostedBlog”The Download Blog/a/p