Cella Energy says its hydrogen microbeads could fuel your car, cost $1.50 per gallon

Cella Energy says its hydrogen microbeads could fuel your car, cost $1.50 per gallon

Your average hydrogen-powered car is a marvel of modern science — fuel cell sifting electrons out of pure H2 and emitting nothing but water — powered by big, heavy, high-pressure tanks of gas. Cella Energy is here to ditch the tank, having first developed a means of storing hydrogen in microfibers that could greatly simplify the design of these vehicles. But, perhaps even more impressive is a “synthetic fuel” the company is working on which is, essentially, pure hydrogen captured into microbeads. You know, like the kind that float in your shampoo and give your hair that extra lustre, but explosive. According to Cella these beads can be poured into the gas tank of a car with an internal combustion engine (presumably suspended in some sort of liquid) and, with no modification, that car will run just fine. Best news is that this concoction costs just $1.50 per gallon — or will, eventually. Supposedly. Maybe?

Cella Energy says its hydrogen microbeads could fuel your car, cost $1.50 per gallon originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Jan 2011 19:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Penske delivers first electric Smart ForTwo

To kick off the second phase of its electric vehicle program, Penske Automotive Group Chairman Roger Penske and Smart USA President Jill Lajdzia personally delivered a Smart ForTwo Electric Drive to a customer in Maryland.

Originally posted at The Car Tech blog

Moovida’s new media center software has great looks, so-so personality

With Microsoft planning a move away from the HTPC space and a shift to Windows Media Center embedded products, perhaps the gang at Moovida is looking to take Redmond’s place in the home theater geek segment. The company has unleashed a beautiful new media browsing UI called ‘Immersed’ that’s powered by a 3D game engine, a fact which makes its media center brethren look dowdy in comparison. There is a steep price to pay for this digital eye candy, however, as the current version lacks the ability to stream content — so no Netflix, Hulu, or YouTube for you. Moovida’s software also packs an underlying desktop-optimized UI, ‘Core’, that provides automated media backup and cataloging, syncs your music and video with peripherals, and plays any non-DRM content known to man. Presently in beta, Moovida promises greater functionality in future releases and we can only hope that means streaming capability is coming soon, as in immediately.

Moovida’s new media center software has great looks, so-so personality originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Jan 2011 19:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CyberNotes: Best Xbox 360 Case Mods

This article was written on July 24, 2006 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Million Dollar Monday

Some people like to trick out their cars with a fancy paint job and an expensive set of wheels. Others like to trick out their Xbox 360′s similarly with a fancy case modification complete with LED lights and more. Whatever you’re trickin’ out, most likely it will cost you a buck, or two, or more. It probably won’t be cheap, but in the end you’ll have some well deserved bragging rights (and maybe even an ego too) when done right! This article will point out some of the coolest Xbox 360 case modifications we’ve come across. We’ll let the pictures do most of the talking with this one and we’d love to hear which ones are your favorites. They’ll be numbered for easing referencing. They’re not ranked in any kind of order, just listed. They’re all pretty unqiue although some more than others! Check it out’..

UPDATE: Don’t forget to checkout the Best Xbox 360 Case Mods, Part 2

–Number 1–

Xbox 1

–Number 2–

Xbox 2

–Number 3–

Xbox 3

–Number 4–

Xbox 4

–Number 5–

Xbox 5

–Number 6–

Xbox 6

–Number 7–

Xbox 7

–Number 8–

Xbox 8

–Number 9–

Xbox 9

–Number 10–

Xbox 10

From LED lights to chrome and paint, some Xbox 360 owners have no doubt put some dedicated time and long hours into trickin’ out their cases! We found these tricked out cases from the forums at xbox-scene.com and xboxhackz.com.

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How Angry Birds Is Becoming the Next Super Mario

Rovio CEO Mikael Hed (left) and Rovio "Mighty Eagle" Peter Vesterbacka (right) have cracked the App Store code. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

You can’t go a day without hearing someone mention Angry Birds.

Fans on Twitter share pictures of cakes they decorated with the Angry Birds characters. On YouTube, parents post videos of their kids playing Angry Birds in real life. Even talk show hosts like Conan O’Brien can’t resist cracking a joke about the game every night.

The game’s creator Rovio on Friday announced a new game, Angry Birds Rio, based on a movie made by Fox. (See teaser images below.)

The game is so ubiquitous it’s almost obnoxious. Some tech observers previously dubbed Angry Birds the new Pac-Man, but that wasn’t enough for the game’s makers.

“What we’re doing is we’re building out the Angry Birds world,” said Peter Vesterbacka, whose business card title reads “Mighty Eagle” of Rovio. “Pac-Man is only one game. Mario is a better benchmark.”

Rovio announced a new Angry Birds game based on a movie made by Fox. The game is due out March on multiple game platforms. Image courtesy of Rovio

Angry Birds first appeared in Apple’s iPhone App Store in December 2009. Since then, the game has expanded to multiple devices, including the iPad, Android phones and the Sony PlayStation Portable, amassing over 75 million downloads to date, according to Rovio. The majority of sales comes from the App Store, where Angry Birds has consistently ranked a best seller.

Made by the creators of Ice Age, Rio will release in theaters April 15. Image courtesy of Rovio

Angry Birds accentuates the business opportunity unlocked by the iTunes App Store, Apple’s digital-distribution platform for selling third-party apps for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch. Launched in summer of 2008, the App Store’s friction-free business model proved to be a new digital frontier where software programmers big and small had an opportunity to make serious money, whereas before, hobbyist coders were no match to major game studios and their colossal marketing budgets.

In the App Store, some programmers have netted hundreds of thousands of dollars in sales with clever games, software utilities and DIY social marketing. Apple recently announced that iOS customers surpassed 10 billion app downloads.

But Angry Birds was not a small-team effort, nor was its success a lucky strike. Based in Finland, the Rovio game studio that makes Angry Birds has 40 employees and expects to expand to 100 by the end of this year.

Angry Birds was actually the studio’s 52nd published game, and its 16th originally created game, according to Mikael Hed, Rovio’s CEO. He said the game’s success was carefully engineered with physics-based gameplay that made it easy to learn, while creating depth for advanced players in later stages. Add to that very cute characters and sounds, and a polished design, and you have a big hit.


Gadget Lab Podcast: Sony’s Next-Generation Portable, Verizon iPhone and Macworld

          

This week’s episode of the Gadget Lab podcast packs a healthy mix of mobile goodies.

We take a quick look at Sony’s new version of the PlayStation Portable, dubbed the Next-Generation Portable. It’s equipped with an OLED display, two touch panels and a cartridge reader, similar to the Nintendo DS. Most interestingly, it features a quad-core Cortex A9 processor — a hell of a lot of power for a portable gaming device, which makes me wonder about the battery life.

I segue into the upcoming Verizon iPhone and just how much it will cost compared with the AT&T iPhone. The monthly prices aren’t very different, though AT&T’s tethering plan is a bit worse in terms of value.

Nothing is quite worse in value, however, than an accessory I saw at Macworld Expo that converts your iPhone into a pseudo landline. That’s just kind of a sad invention.

We close the podcast goofing off with Bebot, a music-synthesizer robot app for iPhone and a cutesy iPad game called Max Adventure.

Like the show? You can also get the Gadget Lab video podcast via iTunes, or if you don’t want to be distracted by our unholy on-camera talent, check out the Gadget Lab audio podcast. Prefer RSS? You can subscribe to the Gadget Lab video or audio podcast feeds

Or listen to the audio here:

Gadget Lab audio podcast #101

http://downloads.wired.com/podcasts/assets/gadgetlabaudio/GadgetLabAudio00101.mp3


Watch Pro Bowl practice through Michael Vick’s eyes — and his ContourHD 1080p helmet cam

This weekend’s NFL Pro Bowl might be one of the more useless spectacles in American sport, but since there’s nothing at stake, the NFC coaches allowed Michael Vick to strap a ContourHD 1080p camera to his helmet during practice — and the resulting few moments of footage are pretty awesome, if you’re a football fan. We gave the 1080p a pretty decent review, and it certainly delivers here: you get to watch Vick break the huddle, fire off a pass to Jason Witten, hand off to Adrian Peterson, and run a play-action to Witten, all the while exchanging some friendly banter with Matt Ryan and Drew Brees. It might actually be more interesting than the Pro Bowl itself, actually. Now if only the NFL would let Aaron Rodgers wear one of these during the Packers’ inevitable Super Bowl victory, we’d be happy as clams.

Update: We hate to remind everyone, but this is a gadget blog, and as such we like to keep the conversation on topic and geared towards that. Since most people can’t seem to stay on topic, we’re closing threads on this one.

Watch Pro Bowl practice through Michael Vick’s eyes — and his ContourHD 1080p helmet cam originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Jan 2011 18:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Awesome: Angry Birds Fanfic Exists

Angry Birds Peace Treaty
This is the first I’ve seen of this, though it might be part of a larger movement (fingers-crossed). If not, hopefully it’s a sign of things to come. 
A sample,
Red Breast and I watched as Yellow Wing was flung toward the fortifications; the horror that we had once felt now replaced by a dull, shell-shocked emotional aching.
It’s from a rather dismal take on the casual game called “For Hate’s Sake” (“It strikes me as the Moby Dick of the modern generation; a tale of an obsession with vengeance so deep that it no longer considers the cost,” says the author). 
For all of the prospective Angry Birds fan fiction writers out there, might I recommend starting with Angry Birds Seasons, for ample fodder. (Seriously, how did all of those bats get in that pumpkin in the first place?)

Educational Games We Want on Our iPhone

oregon trail iphone.png
When we heard news that Where in the World is Carmen San Diego, and Oregon Trail are coming to Facebook, we couldn’t help but get a bit nostalgic–that’s really the whole point, right? Well, besides teaching a whole new generation about the importance of rationing buffalo meat before fording a river.
So we asked the PCMag staff to continue the trip down memory lane by picking out a long-lost edutainment favorite they’d love to have on their iPhone. After the jump, check out their picks–and a few titles that, much to our delight, have already made their way onto the popular smartphone. 

Verizon introduces VZ Navigator Version X, with 3D maps

Verizon has a new turn-by-turn navigation app with 3D maps.

Originally posted at Dialed In