Touchpads, compared: Apple Magic Trackpad vs. Wacom Bamboo

Thinking about going mouse-free on your iMac? There’s another option: before buying a Magic Trackpad, consider the Wacom Bamboo Touch.

iWave Audio Products are Eco-Chic

iWaveGrassRoots.jpg

Starting tomorrow, you’ll be able to pick up some attractively woody audio accessories, all from the iWave Grass Roots collection. Targeted at the green buyers, iWave’s collection includes headphones, earbuds, and cases, all made from reusable, environmentally friendly, and recyclable materials. Even the egg-crate packaging is recyclable.

Items in the collection include iPhone and iPod cases ($24.99), earbuds ($19.99), and headphones ($29.99). Cheers to iWave for keeping it all affordable. You’ll find the complete collection at Neiman Marcus, Microcenter, FYE, Tekserve, and more. In Europe, they’ll be in Apple Stores.

Amphenol Offers HDMI 1.4 Cables

Amphenol.jpgThose 3D sets have a little more data to send. Cable-maker Amphenol has launched the newest version of its Ultra Series High-Speed Certified HDMI Cable, sold exclusively through Cables on Demand. These cables include a low-loss wire and are optimized for the HDMI version 1.4 bandwidth requirement of 10.2 Gigabits per second.

The company points out that lesser HDMI cables are susceptible to interference and wear, and they sometimes break off inside a TV’s HDMI port. The Ultra Series uses a unique die-cast metal alloy HDMI connector design, and each connector is plated with 24K gold. The cables are available in 1m to 5m lengths, and range from $28.95 to $43.50. 

Hands On: Trevi Laptop Brief

trevi laptop brief.jpg

Swiss Army’s Trevi Laptop Brief ($259 direct) is a classy laptop bag for the business consumer. This bag can fit all your accessories, business materials and gadgets with no problem.

The16-by-12- by-6-inch bag can fit laptops up to 15.4 inches and weighs 4 pounds. The outside of the bag has a slot for quick access to documents. There’s a zippered compartment with multiple slots for PDAs, cell phones, business cards, and more. In the middle is another zippered compartment that houses and protects the laptop with three pockets for accessories. At the back of the bag you’ll find a large zippered pocket and a sleeve which can slide over your luggage. It comes with both handles and a shoulder strap.

If your bag ever gets lost, you can use the Swiss Tracker feature to reunite with it. To utilize this feature, fill out the registration form provided in the bag or online at their Web site. This bag is also airport-security-friendly: It has a buckle in the middle that, when open, allows the bag to lie flat during the x-ray screening process, which should eliminate the need to remove your laptop.

I carried this bag around on my commute to and from work, and it held up well. It protected my laptop, kept it in place, and supplied me with more than enough room for all of my items. The only issue for me is that the bag was uncomfortable to carry after a short distance. I would say this bag is great for the professional who will take it on business trips–but if you’re looking for something to carry daily, this may not be the bag for you.

DIY Wearable Computer Turns You Into a Cyborg

Someday humans and computers will meld to create cyborgs. But instead of waiting for it, Martin Magnusson, a Swedish researcher and entrepreneur, has taken the first step and created a wearable computer that can be slung across the body.

Magnusson has hacked a pair of head-mounted display glasses and combined it with a homebrewed machine based on an open source Beagleboard single computer. Packed into a CD case and slung across the shoulder messenger-bag style, he is ready to roll.

A computer is a window to the virtual world, says Magnusson.

“But as soon as I get up and about, that window closes and I’m stuck within the limits of physical reality,” he says. “Wearable computers make it possible to keep the window open. All the time.”

Magnusson’s idea is interesting though one step short of integrating a machine inside the body. In 2008, a Canadian filmmaker Rob Spence decided to embed a tiny video camera into his prosthetic left eye. Spence, who is still working on the project, hopes to someday record everything around him as he sees it and lifecast it.

For his wearable computer, Magnusson is using a pair of Myvu glasses that slide on like a pair of sunglasses but have a tiny video screen built into the lens.

A Beagleboard running Angstrom Linux and a Plexgear mini USB hub that drives the Bluetooth adapter and display forms the rest of this rather simple machine. Four 2700 mAh AA batteries are used to power the USB hub. Magnusson has used a foldable Nokia keyboard for input and is piping internet connectivity through Bluetooth tethering to an iPhone in his pocket.

Magnusson says he wants to use the wearable computer to “augment” his memory.

“By having my to-do list in the corner of my eye, I always remember the details of my schedule,” he says.

Check out photos of his gear:

The innards of the homebrewed machine are glued to a CD case. The CD case is slung across the shoulder by attaching it to a strap using velcro.

Here’s what the homebrewed computer looks like.

See Also:

Photos: Susanna Nilsson


Stealth Computer debuts paperback-sized LPC-100 mini PC

Stealth Computer is certainly no stranger to tiny PCs, but it’s now produced its smallest one to date in the form of the LPC-100. Measuring roughly the same size as a thick paperback novel, this one weighs in at just 1.2 pounds, and packs your choice of Core 2 Duo or Dual Core Celeron processors, an Intel GM45 mobile chipset with integrated graphics, up to 4GB of DDR3 memory, a max 500GB hard drive, and a rugged aluminum chassis that should hold up to life beyond the desktop. Unfortunately, all that doesn’t exactly come cheap — look for configurations to start at $995. Full press release after the break.

Continue reading Stealth Computer debuts paperback-sized LPC-100 mini PC

Stealth Computer debuts paperback-sized LPC-100 mini PC originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jul 2010 15:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nexus One blasts off to 28,000 feet, looks slightly worse for wear (video)

Your average satellite these days is roughly on par in terms of size with your average living room, give or take, and so naturally the cost of lofting one into orbit is, if you’ll pardon the phrase, sky high. Despite that, many offer less processing power a mobile processor like Snapdragon. The obvious solution? Chuck a smartphone into orbit and revel in the savings. That’s the idea behind the PhoneSat, helped along by the Mavericks Civilian Space Foundation, which strapped a Nexus One into a rocket with 1,000lbs of thrust and threw it up to 28,000 feet to see how it copes with the immense stress of riding into space. Of course, 28,000 feet isn’t quite space (NASA would have run out of astronaut badges long ago), but the G-forces and temperature cycles felt during this short trip are comparable to a one-way voyage to orbit. The first such launch didn’t go so well, with the rocket suffering a ballistic return — coming in like a projectile without a ‘chute. The shattered remains of that are shown above. But, the second flight was rather more successful, and the video results can be seen below — captured by the phone itself.

Update: Matt Reyes, one of the folks behind the launch, wrote in to let us know of another article here on the project, including more details on the history of the team and the various hardware beyond the N1 payload. Matt, along with project members Chris Boshuizen and Will Marshall, are NASA engineers, helped by Ryan Hickman at Google, which probably helps to explain how they were able to get from the photo above to the successful launch below in just one iteration.

[Photo credit: Steve Jurvetson]

Continue reading Nexus One blasts off to 28,000 feet, looks slightly worse for wear (video)

Nexus One blasts off to 28,000 feet, looks slightly worse for wear (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jul 2010 14:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The 404 634: Where Michael Showalter… (podcast)




Comedian Michael Showalter featured on today's episode of The 404 Podcast!

(Credit:
Sarah Tew)

We had a longer show title in mind when we asked Michael to help us think of …


Originally posted at The 404 Podcast

Best Buy partners with Clearwire, will Connect customers to 4G

Best Buy partners with Clearwire to Connect customers to 4GWhen we first heard through the grapevine that Best Buy was launching its own branded wireless data service, Connect, rumor had it that 4G was going to be baked right in there. We’d later learn that was just wishful thinking, but today’s announcement of a partnership with Clearwire makes it instead simply look premature. Starting sometime next year, Best Buy Connect will offer 4G wireless data over Clearwire’s WiMAX network — and that’s all the two are saying about this partnership right now. We’re hoping prices for these next-gen data plans stay with their current levels, $30 monthly for 250MB up to $60 for 5GB, but all that extra bandwidth might just make those caps feel even tighter.

Continue reading Best Buy partners with Clearwire, will Connect customers to 4G

Best Buy partners with Clearwire, will Connect customers to 4G originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jul 2010 14:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Canon EOS 60D turns up in DxO’s optics modules roadmap

We’ve heard some Canon EOS 60D rumors before, but this one might just be the most convincing yet — the as-yet-unannounced camera recently turned up in a roadmap that wasn’t leaked but actually posted on the site of optics module manufacturer DxO. As you might have guessed, all mentions of the camera have now been removed from the site, but what was there before seemed to indicate that the 60D would be turning up in November or December (or, at least, DxO’s modules supporting it would be). Of course, there’s no details on the camera itself, but if that launch date is accurate it would line up nicely for an announcement at Photokina in September.

Canon EOS 60D turns up in DxO’s optics modules roadmap originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jul 2010 13:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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