Goodwill and Dell Expand Recycling Partnership

Goodwill.jpgRead this before you toss that old notebook in the trash. Goodwill and Dell have added 100 Goodwill donation sites to the Dell Reconnect computer recycling program. That makes it convenient for more than 42 million U.S. homes to drop off computers and other electronics for free. The new collection sites are located in Delaware, Massachusetts, Nebraska, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island. They join the over 2,200 collection sites already in the U.S. and Canada.

Launched in 2004 as a partnership between Goodwill and Dell, the collection sites have diverted more than 170 million pounds of electronic waste from landfills, and they’ve created about 250 green jobs. Goodwill employees manage the collection and disassembly of all donations. For a list of participating locations, check the Dell Reconnect site.

Windows Vista RC2 Download Page Was Temporarily Available

This article was written on October 05, 2006 by CyberNet.

Vista Logo Last night the Windows Vista RC2 download page was temporarily viewable but the download links were still unavailable. Apparently Microsoft didn’t want the world to be able to view the page quite yet because they promptly removed it as the word started to spread.

Paul Thurrott also went on to update his article saying that the build string for RC2 has been bumped to 5744.16384.061003-1945 but they still have plans to ship it tomorrow. That kind of surprised me because the build was just compiled on October 3 which means they would have only less than 3-days to test it, and typically they test it for about a week before releasing it.

Using the new build string that Paul provided and the link to the Vista RC2 download page these should be the direct links to the ISO images. They will probably make the ISO images available before the actual page which means these are the links to watch (assuming they don’t change builds again):

There has also been a lot of fuss over the new “anti-piracy feature” that Microsoft has been talking about. Basically if you don’t activate the computer within 30-days then it will run in reduced-functionality mode. Just like always I’m sure there will be plenty of hackers rushing to be the first one to crack Microsoft’s “top-notch” security mechanisms. I say it will take less than a few days to see cracks floating around and the more Microsoft says how great it is the faster it will probably be done.

Thanks for the tip Jason!

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Oxygen Audio debuts O’Car, O’Dock iPhone car docking accessories

Looking for a bit more integration than your usual iPhone car dock or FM transmitter can provide? Then you might want to consider Oxygen Audio’s new O’Car head unit, which packs a swiveling iPhone dock that’s considerably discreet than some other similar units out there. It’s also, of course, a full-fledged car radio, and it packs a 4x55W amp that Oxygen says delivers “perfect quality sound” to your car’s speakers. If that’s all a bit too much for you, however, Oxygen has also announced the decidedly more standard-looking O’Dock unit that simply mounts on your dash or windshield — check it out after the break. Unfortunately, there’s still no word on pricing or availability for either unit, but we’re assuming those details will be made available at CES next month.

Continue reading Oxygen Audio debuts O’Car, O’Dock iPhone car docking accessories

Oxygen Audio debuts O’Car, O’Dock iPhone car docking accessories originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Dec 2010 01:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How Flipboard Turned Web Noise Into iPad Gold

Evan Doll

Every day from morning to night, Maria Popova hunts for digital gold on the web.

Some of her finds: A neuroscientist explains how brains feel emotion. A lost, unpublished Dr. Seuss manuscript resurfaces. An infographic breaks down the economics of the hamburger.

Under the Twitter handle @brainpicker, Popova shares every nugget she can find with her 37,000 followers. But as interesting as all this content may be, her Twitter.com profile, like everyone else’s, is little more than a pile of plain links and text.

And this is why the Flipboard app for iPad is a godsend for readers, and why we’re excited that Wednesday’s new software update adds several new features. It grabs photos, text or video from links in a Twitter stream like Popova’s and stitches them into a magazine-like layout with neatly arranged panes, lots of white space and beautiful typography.

So when looking at Popova’s Twitter feed on Flipboard, you see part of the burger infographic she mentions, alongside an excerpt from the interview with the neuroscientist and a clip of the lost Dr. Seuss book. Swiping your finger across the iPad screen flips to another page of her content (left goes back chronologically and right takes you forward).

When you launch Flipboard, the main screen displays a grid of nine large tiles, each one representing a section (see picture at top of the post). The Facebook tile loads a Flipboard-ized version of your friends’ status updates; tapping the general Twitter tile shows content from people you follow in the same magazine fashion. You can also add sections for specific Twitter feeds you’d like to read (like @wired), and it’ll do its magic.

The new version of Flipboard that just went live in the App Store adds the ability to magazine-ify content from your Flickr stream, Google feeds and Facebook groups.

It’s all extremely easy to set up; you’ll be flipping around in minutes.

The end result is a visually rich magazine that’s alive — breathing with content posted by people you care about on the internet. (Hell, Flipboard looks so good you’ll start appreciating photos and comments from people you don’t care much about, too.)

If only the web could be this much fun on its own. In fact, a superior browsing experience is exactly what gave rise to Flipboard.

“One of our first thought experiments was, how would you re-imagine a web browser?” said Evan Doll, an ex-Apple engineer and co-founder of Flipboard.

Evan Doll

“We love magazines,” he added. “There’s something great in terms of the graphic design, typography and emphasis on the visual side. And there’s also the fact you have editorial — someone filtering down the new stuff, telling you what’s important, interesting and worthwhile. Both those things we wanted to try to marry with social.”

The wedding is generating a lot of buzz. Apple last week named Flipboard as the best iPad app of the year. That same week, the startup announced partnerships with major media outlets including The Washington Post, Bon Appetit and the San Francisco Chronicle.

The Flipboard team is only a year old, and it has already received $10 million in funding from stars like Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey and actor Ashton Kutcher.

That’s a good thing, but it also means that Flipboard is going to have to make money — not easy for an app that’s free in the iTunes App Store.

Doll says the team is still hatching a plan to rake in cash, which could involve embedding advertisements into Flipboard pages or splitting micropayments with content creators. And it’s not just creators, but also prolific content sharers like Popova that Flipboard would like to help earn money.

“She should be able to do that as her full-time job,” Doll said of Popova. “She’s a one-woman magazine.”

Flipboard download link [iTunes]

Price: Free

Category: Media

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Iconic Stand for your iPhone can put any logo to good, unauthorized use

Iconic Stand is seemingly still a concept, but an interesting one for sure. Korean-designed iPhone stands, they’re made of birch and have a serious natural feel to them. The makers have seen fit to design the stands with various famous logos for properties such as Twitter, Facebook, and Blogger built right into them. And while a nice little iPhone stand (which will apparently hold your phone whether it’s nude or Bumper-wearing) with an iconic logo on it sounds pretty neat to us, we can’t imagine these are actually… you know… licensed. Another example is after the break, hit up the source for a plethora of images.

Continue reading Iconic Stand for your iPhone can put any logo to good, unauthorized use

Iconic Stand for your iPhone can put any logo to good, unauthorized use originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Dec 2010 00:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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SpaceNavigator Mouse Designed With Google Earth In Mind

This article was written on November 28, 2006 by CyberNet.

SpaceNavigator Mouse The SpaceNavigator mouse is truly the first of its kind. What makes it so special? It isn’t your typical 5-button mouse that has a scroll-wheel for easy navigation your Word documents. Instead it is designed to navigate 3D programs with ease by offering a unique design that controls the X, Y, and Z-axis.

It was created by a Logitech company called 3Dconnexion and from the sounds of it the primary focus of the mouse was to make navigating Google Earth and SketchUp effortless. Here are the features that the SpaceNavigator has to offer:

Why Choose SpaceNavigator

  • Powerful Navigation at entry-level price
  • Fly through Google Earth and 100+ 3D programs
  • Manipulate models in Google SketchUp
  • Powerful navigation for 3D visualization programs
  • Ideal for 3D designers, students, artists and enthusiasts

Suggested Retail Price

  • SpaceNavigator SE $99
    (commercial use license & full support)
  • SpaceNavigator PE $59
    (non-commercial use license & online support only)

Everyone says that $59 for this mouse is really cheap but I have a hard time stomaching that seeing that I use Google Earth every few weeks. If it somehow worked as a normal mouse as well it might be cool but getting a mouse that is 3D-application specific wouldn’t fit my needs. Of course the $59 price tag is really just for the casual users because anyone that does use Google Earth all of the time is probably doing it for a career…and will have to fork out $99!

How smooth is the navigation in Google Earth when using this mouse? Checkout this video from the SpaceNavigator review on Ogle Earth:

Looks pretty nice, huh? Do you think it is worth the money though?

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Gesture-controlled robot arm enables civilization’s most meta high five

This video, criminally, doesn’t actually show any high fives, but we’re sure the students at the University of Tsukuba have sustained endless LOLs over the past few months, pushing their gesture-driven robot arm system to the limits of human-robot high five interaction. The system itself is relatively simple: it uses two cameras to track a hand’s movements, including specific finger gestures, which are then processed and translated into robotic movement in real time. The end result is basically the world’s most elaborate claw machine game, as demonstrated above.

Gesture-controlled robot arm enables civilization’s most meta high five originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 23:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Best Buy nabs exclusive Rock Band 3 Squier Stratocaster

If you’re in the market for a new Rock Band axe, it looks like you’ll be heading to Best Buy very, very soon. That’s right, the Rock Band 3 Squier Stratocaster is seemingly a BB exclusive. The $280 peripheral, which requires the MIDI PRO-Adapter to function, will hit shelves on March 1st. Until then, we’ll just have to be happy with the Mustang Pro.

Best Buy nabs exclusive Rock Band 3 Squier Stratocaster originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 22:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG’s Optimus 2X is first dual-core smartphone

LG releases the Optimus 2X, the first phone with a dual-core Tegra 2 processor.

Originally posted at Android Atlas

Early Venue Pro adopters get free Bluetooth headsets, the infinitely rewarding lesson of patience

Still bummed to be waiting for your Venue Pro? Dell’s amended its December 14th shipping update — henceforth known as (this time only, and then never again) as “VP Day” — to let yearning customers know that, if they had ordered the device before that day, a present was coming in due course. Nay, not a present, a Thank You in the form of a free Plantronics Explorer 240 Bluetooth headset. That’s shipping in four to six weeks, excusing any ironic bouts of delay of its own. Let’s just hope it doesn’t beat your Windows Phone 7 device to the doorstep.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Early Venue Pro adopters get free Bluetooth headsets, the infinitely rewarding lesson of patience originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 22:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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