VW Microbus Returns As iPad-equipped EV

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The iconic Volkswagen Microbus is being reimagined. As an electric vehicle.

At the Geneva Motor Show, VW unveiled a brand new concept that brings the van, which debuted in the 1950s, to the modern day. The concept is completely electric, with a motor that puts out 85 kW of power and 199 lb.-ft of torque. VW is also claiming that the new bus has a range of 186.4 miles on a single charge and that it can go from 0 to 62 mph in 11.5 seconds, with a top speed of 87 miles per hour.

The Microbus is clearly aimed (or will be if it ever makes it to production) at a younger audience, with a sleek design and a removable iPad in the center console, which controls the onboard entertainment system. Hit the jump for a closer look, including a glimpse into the six-seat interior.

Bing Beating Yahoo Internationally for First Time

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I’m sure whether this qualifies as a good sign for Microsoft or a bad sign for Yahoo–the truth likely lies somewhere between the two. According to new numbers from StatCounter, Bing has managed to overtake Yahoo in global traffic numbers, for the first time, ever. Microsoft hit 4.37 of global search engine traffic in February. Yahoo was at 3.93.

Yahoo still maintains a slim lead in the U.S., beating out Bing 9.74 to 9.03 percent. Of course, it’s not as though there’s a huge difference between the two, these days. Yahoo’s search is powered by Bing in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, Brazil, and Australia.
Google, meanwhile, is still dominating the field in its native country at 79.63 percent of traffic. The number’s even largely globally, with the site pulling in 89.94 percent. That number is actually down slightly from 90.11 percent in January, marking the first time since August 2009 that the search giant has dipped below 90 percent. 

Force Dynamics 401cr test drive (video)

If you’re old enough to have spent any time in an arcade, surely at some point you splurged an extra couple of quarters to play a game in a seat that moved a bit, shook a bit, made some feeble attempt at making you feel like you’re really in the game. Kid’s play, that stuff (quite literally), but just like people don’t stop gaming as they get older so too such motion simulation tech doesn’t have to stay for kiddies. Enter Force Dynamics and enter the 401cr: a full-bore motion simulator that can not only generate over a G of acceleration but can spin you right ’round as many times as you like. We took it for a quite a few spins indeed, plus more than one crash, and we think you’ll want to check them out the video below.

Continue reading Force Dynamics 401cr test drive (video)

Force Dynamics 401cr test drive (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Mar 2011 12:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AMD compares upcoming Llano Fusion APU with Intel Core i7, puts the heat on Sandy Bridge (video)

So far, AMD’s new Fusion chips have been all about the low-end, whether you’re talking in terms of price, performance or power consumption, but the company has a vision for its future that has these new Accelerated Processing Units dominating every segment of the market. In order to do that, AMD will need to overcome Intel’s latest generation of mainstream processors, the Core 2011 family we’re more familiar with under the Sandy Bridge codename. Before you rush past the break and watch AMD’s own comparison between said Intel hardware and the forthcoming quad-core Llano APU, be aware that processor performance can rarely be generalized from a single test alone and the one we’re witnessing is specifically geared to highlight the Fusion chip’s strengths. All that said, the workload demonstrated by AMD — a 3D game, HD video playback (plus post-processing on the Llano rig), Excel calculations, and some 3D modeling, all running simultaneously — is handled most impressively by the A8-3510MX APU, which even manages to use less power than Intel’s 2GHz Core i7-2630QM. See the video after the break.

[Thanks, Vygantas]

Continue reading AMD compares upcoming Llano Fusion APU with Intel Core i7, puts the heat on Sandy Bridge (video)

AMD compares upcoming Llano Fusion APU with Intel Core i7, puts the heat on Sandy Bridge (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Mar 2011 12:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Steve Jobs Appearing at Tomorrow’s Apple Event – Rumor

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We’ve pretty much got the whole iPad 2 thing figured out by now, right? Steve Jobs, it seems, is the real mystery surrounding tomorrow’s Apple event in San Francisco. Will he show? Will he skip? Will he be making a cameo via FaceTime, when the company shows off the built-in camera we’re all expecting on the new tablet? Is there any validity to that sensationalistic report from The National Enquirer?
The rumor just ahead of the event has Jobs showing up at the event in the flesh, in spite of his much publicized sick leave. Word comes, not surprisingly, from anonymous sources first reported on an Italian site called setteB.IT, of all places. The site (via Google Translate) calls this insight “reassuring information.”
At the moment, we’ll have to chalk it up to wishful thinking. 

ASUS Eee PC 1015B and 1215B hands-on

Okay, picture an ASUS Eee PC 1015. Got it? Good — now picture it with AMD Fusion internals. Boom: the 1015B is born. We spied versions in both white and black trim here at CeBIT, promising 1080p output in your choice of 1.2GHz single-core and 1GHz dual-core APUs, both with ATI Radeon HD 6250 graphics, 1GB of RAM (expandable to 2), and Bluetooth 3.0 along with 802.11b/g/n WiFi. If you’re looking for something a little beefier, ASUS has a Fusion remake of the 1215, too — the 1215B — with many of the same features but the added benefit of a larger 12.1-inch WXGA LCD, an optional 1.6GHz AMD E350 dual-core processor, and up to 4GB of RAM. No word on when these will be in retail channels, but by all appearances, these are production or very-near-production models on display here at the show, so we imagine they’ll be popping up any time now.

ASUS Eee PC 1015B and 1215B hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Mar 2011 11:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Giant Underground Chamber Discovered On the Moon [Video]

Back in 2009, the Japanese Space Agency JAXA announced moon hole deep enough to contain a small human base. Now, the Indian Space Research Organization has discovered a “giant underground chamber” near the Moon’s equator, in the Oceanus Procellarum area. More »

Xtreamer Ultra HTPC hands-on — and Prodigy eyes-on

First, the good news: Xtreamer has its lovely little Ultra HTPC out and hooked up here at CeBIT. Now, the bad: the considerably more beautiful Prodigy streamer is under lock and key, and they won’t be doing any demos. Ah, well — may as well make the best of the situation, right? In brief, the Ultra might be the baddest little HTPC we’ve seen here at the show — Xtreamer seems to have nailed the equation with the small size and the price point. It doesn’t look cheap, either; we imagine it’s a little overbuilt-looking with those faux heat sink fins for some living rooms, but you can plug in an IR extender and bury the actual box in a cabinet if you like. The company’s staying very media platform-agnostic, shipping with Boxee and XBMC among others on a 2GB USB flash drive that houses the entire operating system. And at a shipping price of €200 (about $277), it puts the hurt on the Boxee Box. Look for it in early April.

Turning our attention to the Prodigy, this thing is seriously gorgeous for one reason: a large curved sheet of metal covering the top and sides. Functionality is another matter entirely, though, and as we mentioned before, Xtreamer isn’t demoing it here. On paper, at least, it should take care of business thanks to USB 3.0 and AirPlay support along with an internal 3.5-inch hard drive bay — and the company is currently taking pre-orders for €50 (about $69), which seems dirt cheap for what you’re getting. Like the Ultra, Xtreamer expects to ship it in early April.

Xtreamer Ultra HTPC hands-on — and Prodigy eyes-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Mar 2011 11:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pit-In: A Drive-In Desk for Bikes

The Pit-In is a drive-in desk for bikes

Imagine, if you will, cycling to work. Imagine further that you ride straight into the cargo elevator and clank your way slowly up to the office, sitting astride your ride. Now, as the doors whirr open, you still don’t dismount. Instead, you ride past your astonished, jealous and frankly awed co-workers straight to your desk. Still you are in the saddle, and — dammit — you’re going to stay there.

You brake, skidding the rear wheel across the cheap nylon carpet, and enter the cubicle. In there, you roll easily into your Pit-In desk, sliding the front wheel through the large slot. You place your feet firmly on each of the two raised platforms, lift your hands from the handlebars to your keyboard and relax onto the yielding leather surface of your Brooks saddle, ready to start the day.

This dream could be reality if you could somehow secure a copy of the Pit-In from the Store Muu design studio, a desk made to be used while sitting on your bike. Made from plywood and measuring 71×90x115cm, the Pit-In probably won’t find its way into your office, but it would make a pretty cool outdoor table at a bike-themed bar.

I think its fantastic, and I’m thinking of making my own, if only as a way to trick the Lady into letting me keep my bike in the apartment. Bonus: at 1 meter 15cm high, it could double as a great standing desk.

Pit-In [Store Muu via Book of Joe]

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Google Street View Goes Where Cars Can’t

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In its attempt to map the world up close and personal, Google has been pedaling its Trike all around the world, taking Street View to places it has never been before. It recently added images of these previously reachable places to Street View in Google Maps.

Introduced in 2009, the Trike is a modified bicycle outfitted with Street View equipment that someone literally needs to pedal around, up, and down paths and sidewalks. With the Trike, Google is able to collect imagery from places its Google car can’t go, such as Champs-Elysées in Paris and Times Square in New York City.

If you’re jealous of the images from the gardens at the San Diego Art Institute and other locations that were previously off limits to the Google Street View cams, don’t be. Goggle offers a solution on its blog: If you are the owner of a private property and would to make your location available for users to explore in Street View, you can invite the world to explore your property through its partner program. So you’ll be able to get your own little garden on the map.

Check out a video of the Trike in action after the jump.