Tiny, Stick-On Joysticks for Touch Screen Gaming

Joystickers’ Classic stick-on buttons for touch-screen phones. Photo: Joystickers

Check ‘em out: nipples for the iPhone. Or, more accurately, “removable gaming buttons for touch screens”.

We have seen a lot of clever products which add physical, moveable joysticks to touch-screen devices and make many games easier to play, but the Joystickers, as they are called, are about the simplest around. The nubbins stick straight onto the screen and transfer your movements via capacitive rubber.

They work like this: The outer cylinder and base sticks to the glass with a micro suction cup material. This houses the conductive rubber nubbin, which bobs around on an internal spring. Pull down with your thumb and the bottom edge contacts the screen, and so on.

Joystickers also makes a rather nice brush-shaped stylus and a regular pen-tip stylus, but these “Classic” buttons are the coolest thing on offer, and they’re so tiny you could keep them in the little mystery pocket on your jeans. They’re also tiny enough to lose very quickly, but that’s really just your fault for being so careless.

Want some? You’ll need to pitch in over at Kickstarter, where a $40 pledge will buy you a pair of Classics.

Joystickers Classic [Kickstarter. Thanks, Anthony!]

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Motorola Xoom Gets Teardown Treatment

Moto Zoom Teardown.jpg

I seem to remember a time when a new gadget was allowed to exist for a week or so without having someone with a screwdriver go all Alien Autopsy on it with a screwdriver. Those days are long gone, of course, thanks in large part to folks at iFixit.
In this week’s installment, the site got its hands on the Motorola Xoom–the great hope of the Android tablets, which hit shelves this week. First up on the iFixit checklist: an investigation into the “convoluted” process for getting the company to upgrade the thing to 4G.
The discovery: “It looks like the Xoom was specifically designed with this upgrade in mind.” iFixit estimates that the whole process should take a user with the right screwdrivers 10 minutes or less to complete. “Heck, a donkey could probably pull it off in less than two hours.” Fair enough, but with those hooves, using the touchscreen is probably a real pain in the, well, you know.

Hilarious: Microsoft Predicts Your Future

This article was written on November 26, 2006 by CyberNet.

Tales of Zoltar

Microsoft has really out done themselves this time. Out of all the companies in the world leave it to Microsoft to predict your future with Zoltar…and surprisingly they developed it to be very amusing.

You just have to enter in the name of the person that you want it to predict the future for and it will quickly tell you what lies ahead of them. After it predicts the future of the person that you requested it will give you an option to download Windows Live Messenger or to send the fortune to a friend.

If that starts to get boring just leave Zoltar sit there and things will start to happen. I have noticed a boat and limo “driving” along the ground as well as clouds floating in the sky.

I did a quick check to see if this was really made by Microsoft and looking at the WHOIS information it looks legit. Microsoft deserves a little credit for throwing something amusing into the mix of things they have created.

Thanks to the anonymous tipster who sent this in!

Tales of Zoltar Homepage

P.S. I’m going to be a sod farmer according to Zoltar. :D

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Startup Announces Plans to Exclusive Hire Applicants With Asperger’s

aspiritech.png

Huh. Here’s an interesting one. A Chicago-based non-profit startup called Aspiritech (that’s A”Spirit”ech as far as the logo is concerned) has announced that it will be exclusively hiring software testers with Asperger’s Syndrome.

Here’s a quote from the company,

The proof of concept came from Danish company and recent research from Harvard Business School and others showed that the strengths of people with Aspergers and high-functioning autism actually make them superior at software testing. They’re ability to focus, good memory, their high intelligence, their strong technical skills, their ability to detect details and also to stay focused over lengthy periods, really makes them ideal for software testing work. People with Aspergers can become ideal software testers.

According to the theory, the tendency to shy away from social interaction drives people with Asperger’s to the controlled environment of technology. Apparently the children of Silicon Valley employees tend to have the condition at a higher than usual rate.

 

As ZDNet points out, a potential employer is not allowed to ask interviewees about health conditions such as Asperger’s, but most hiring managers are in tune with qualities that may be symptomatic of the syndrome.

Friday Poll: How does Thunderbolt strike you?

The new high-speed data-connection technology promises transfer speeds double those of USB 3.0. Will Thunderbolt affect your gadget-buying habits?

Barnes & Noble updates Nook Android app, promises a Honeycomb version this spring

On the heels of the announcement that it’s grabbed 25 percent of the US e-reader market, Barnes & Noble has decided to give the world a heap of details on its Android developments. First up, we’ve got an updated Android app, and while it’s not exactly a drastic upgrade, version 2.5 has been refreshed with a new library grid view (apparently optimized for 7-inch tablets), a book download progress bar, and a wish list feature. We told you they were rather minor updates, but our guess is that the Nook Honeycomb app that’s being promised for some time this spring will be far more exciting. Yep, it’s a lot of B&N Android, but while we’re on the topic, we’ve got to admit we’re wondering about the whereabouts of that Nook Color app store, which was announced back in October. Look not everyone has taken to rooting, okay? Alright, we’ve totally digressed — hit the gallery below for some screens of the new app or the source link to try it out on your own.

Barnes & Noble updates Nook Android app, promises a Honeycomb version this spring originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Feb 2011 08:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAndroid Market (Nook)  | Email this | Comments

New MacBooks Torn Open, Thunderbolt Chip Revealed

Inside the new 15 inch MacBook Pro, complete with Thunderbolt controller

The little pinky nail sized chip you see up there, inside the green square, is almost certainly the controller chip for the new MacBook Pro’s Thunderbolt port. The chip, and its tasty thermal paste topping, were found inside the new MacBooks by the teardown experts at iFixit.

The Thunderbolt (nee Light Peak) controller IC is what enables it to work its multi-protocol, daisy-chaining magic. Without that chip to process the serial data gushing through the copper, Thunderbolt would be little more than a dumb wire.

Other than Thunderbolt and upgrades to the CPU and graphics hardware, the new MacBooks are almost unchanged from the previous incarnation. The battery is the same 77.5 watt-hour model as before, and the case is virtually identical. Changes have been made to the wireless card now has four antennas instead of three, and the RAM is now the same as that used in last year’s 21.5 and 27 inch iMacs. There is also lots of thermal paste smeared around in there, which suggests that things are running hotter than before.

As ever, head to iFixit to see the guts if the new MBP in explicit, closeup detail, and marvel at just how few parts go into this thing.

MacBook Pro 15″ Unibody Early 2011 Teardown [iFixit. Thanks, Miroslav!]

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Crave giveaway: $200 Appitalism gift card

For this week’s Crave giveaway, we’re serving up a $200 gift card to appitalism.com that you can spend on anything available on the site, including apps, music, games, and e-books.

Have A Tip? Send It To Us!

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

If you have a tip then don’t hold back…send it off to tech@cybernetnews.com or use the contact form below! We are very open to any news that you may have found. If you send us tips often just drag this bookmarklet into your bookmarks:

CyberNet Tips

It will automatically fill in the name of the site that you’re on as well as the site’s URL. Can’t get much easier than that!

You cannot have multiple copies of the contact form on the same page.

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Farcical Xoom 4G Upgrade Plan Requires 6-Day Mail-In Operation

Verizon’s Motorola Xoom 4G upgrade guidelines. Image: Droid Life

The Xoom tablet has a respectably fast Verizon 3G connection, but Motorola promises a free upgrade to Verizon’s faster 4G network within a few months.

To do that, however, you’ll need to ship your Xoom back to the manufacturer for more than a week.

It’s not often I laugh out loud when researching a post, but when reading up on the Motorola Xoom 3G to 4G upgrade procedure, I sounded like barking dog. If anyone has ever designed a more convoluted, ridiculous way to rush an unfinished product to market, I have yet to see it. But more on that in a moment.

Of course, you can buy Motorola’s Android 3.0–powered, 3G-enabled Xoom today. The promised upgrade to 4G is now slated for May (officially “90 days after launch”), and the upgrade involves shipping the tablet back to Motorola (also free) and waiting up to six business days (translation: more than a week). This despite the fact that the Xoom is clearly designed for easy upgrades, and the upgrade procedure probably takes no more than 10 minutes.

For customers who are happy to be without their tablets for a while, this is clearly good news: You get a free bump to use faster 4G networks. It’s good for Verizon, too, as you might sign up for a 4G plan (although you don’t have to). But for Motorola it’s plain dumb.

I don’t know how much it costs to pay for two-way shipping, opening up a tablet and replacing a part, but I can bet it isn’t cheap. After all, there’s a reason that replacing gadgets is often cheaper than repairing them. Add to this the fact that Motorola will have cut profit margins to the bone to compete with the iPad, and I can see this stunt losing the company a lot of money.

So why do it? Why not wait until it is ready and launch it in the summer? Two words: iPad 2. The iPad 2 will be here in April, and maybe even as early as next week, at which time many of the Xoom’s “advantages” will disappear. If our guesses are right, the Xoom’s camera and fast processor will no longer be unique, and the only extra will be 4G, aka “the ability to connect to a fast but sparsely deployed data network.” It seems rather obvious that Motorola was absolutely desperate to get its tablet out the door before Apple makes it irrelevant.

So, want to hear about what had me chuckling? Take a look at the “Getting Ready Guide” for the upgrade. Sandwiched in the middle is rather huge section on backing up your data before sending it off to Motorola. It boils down to this: Connect your Xoom via USB, dig down through its file system and then copy (via drag and drop) the files and folders onto your computer.

Then, when your machine is finally returned after surgery, you put it all back again. Just the kind of thing Auntie May will find it dead-easy to do.

And that’s before we even get to encrypting the contents to keep it safe in transit (“If you interrupt the encryption process, you will lose some or all of your data”).

Remind me why nobody is buying Android tablets, again?

Motorola Xoom Upgrade program [Verizon via Droid Life]

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