How Bad Could It Be? The $100 Arnova 7 Tablet

Make sure your parents don’t mistake this for an iPad at Christmas

You know how the only non-iPod MP3 players that people buy are those $10 pieces of junk in dime stores, or by the checkout in cheap supermarkets? I have a feeling that the tablet market is going the same way.

With all the major players struggling to match the iPad’s aggressively low price, it may be left to junk like the $100 Arnova 7, a seven-inch tablet packed with all the latest tech — if we were living in 2005.

The tablet runs Android 2.2 Froyo, has a whopping 4GB storage, a mystery-meat processor, and an 800×480 pixel screen. The screen is — laughably — resistive, just like the ones we used to enjoy on our tablet PCs back in the day. Data can be gotten onto the machine via USB or microSD card, and you can sit back and relax as you watch movies at up to 720p (not bad, if it works without skipping).

And that’s it. What did you expect for $100? You want to know the battery life? Well, it seems that Arnova is too embarrassed about this to tell us. The product specs give both music and video playback time as “up to hours.”

It would be easy to laugh this off as a toy that nobody will ever buy, but the truth is infinitely sadder. Imagine poor little Johnny waking up excited on Christmas morning, tearing the wrapping paper off what he thinks is an iPad, and finding that his clueless parents have bought him this piece of tat instead.

Arnova 7 [Arnovatech via CrunchGear]

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Samsung Series 3 hands-on

Samsung Series 3 11.6-inch model

We were strolling around the Metropolitan Pavilion, enjoying the sights and sounds of Digital Experience, when, lo and behold, we spotted a pair of unfamiliar laptops gracing the thick black tablecloth at the Samsung booth. What you see above is just one member, the 12.1-inch model to be specific, of the as yet unannounced Series 3 line. These budget friendly lappies are anything but cheap looking or feeling. The entire lineup has followed in the footsteps of the Series 9, opting for soft brushed finishes that are, at the very least, metal-esque. Gone are the shiny plastics that made your notebook look like evidence at a crime scene. At the bottom end is a 15.6-inch model sporting a dual-core AMD A4 CPU and (oddly) a glossy display.

If you want to wipe the reflective sheen from that screen, jump up a notch to the $599 Core i3-sporting version. The 15.6 models reach all the way up to a quad-core Core i7 CPU for $819 and all the Intel varieties pack WiDi (as do the 12.5-inchers). The other sizes (11.6, 12.1, 13.3, and 14 inches) all sport the same premium finishes, solid keyboards, and pleasant touchpads, while being expected to be easy on the wallet. There are still some details to be worked out, and not all specs or prices are finalized but, while we wait for the official PR to roll in, check out our hands-on with the 12.1-inch and 15.6-inch models below.

Samsung Series 3 hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jun 2011 08:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPhone Gun Accessory for Augmented Reality Shooting

Shoot aliens as they invade your home with the AppBlaster

Slot your iPhone into this toy gun and you can blast away at aliens that only you can see, overlaid on top of the scene ahead of you thanks to the magic of augmented reality.

The AppBlaster is a £20 ($32) plastic gun with an iPhone case. Load up the (free) companion game, called Apptoyz Alien Attack and you’re off. The attacking aliens are projected on top of a live view of your bedroom or kitchen, fed in through the iPhone’s camera. Your aim is detected by the iPhone’s gyroscope and you fire by pulling the trigger, linked to a capacitive pad that touches the screen.

To reload, just throw the gun up to your shoulder, and the accelerometers do the rest. It looks like a blast.

The game itself looks cheap and tacky at best, though. My suspicions are also raised by the App Store reviews, too many of which contain the line “Best free app I’ve ever played.” At least it’s free to try before you drop dollars on the gun itself.

Maybe other games will be written for the AppBlaster. I’d love a LaserTag style game where you could actually shoot friends who were also toting the AppBlaster, but that might be too tricky to implement. Still, imagine playing the N64 classic Goldeneye, only in your apartment instead of in a secret underground lair.

AppBlaster [Red5 via Engadget]

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This Is Nokia’s First Windows Phone

We didn’t have to wait for some factory spy or corporate tipster to leak images of Nokia’s first ever Windows Phone 7 handset. Instead, CEO Stephen Elop naïvely asked a crowd not to take pictures of it. They did anyway. More »

Nokia’s first Windows Phone: images and video, codenamed ‘Sea Ray’

Ok, this one’s odd. In fact, we didn’t believe the images until a video just surfaced showing Nokia CEO, Stephen Elop, foolishly asking a crowd of people to “put away their cameras” for the unveiling of something “super confidential,” codenamed “Sea Ray.” Naturally, a few people ignored the plea for “no pictures please” and, indeed, someone leaked what appears to be a Nokia-produced video of the unveiling to the blogosphere. What is it? Why, it’s Nokia’s first Windows Phone. While it looks nearly identical to the just announced N9, the different LED placement on the back (in line with the same 8 megapixel Carl Zeiss lens) confirms it’s a new device as does the additional hardware button (for shutter release, we presume) along the side. And the fact that it’s running Windows Phone 7 Mango seals the deal. See a few more shots and the full uncut video (and relevant snippet) after the break.

[Thanks, Advil and Zeban]

Continue reading Nokia’s first Windows Phone: images and video, codenamed ‘Sea Ray’

Nokia’s first Windows Phone: images and video, codenamed ‘Sea Ray’ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jun 2011 08:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Leica Readying Mirrorless Camera for 2012

A replica of a really, really old Leica. Photo John Vance

Leica is working on its own mirrorless compact camera range, and it will be launched at Photokina in 2012. The news comes from Leica CEO Alfred Schopf, who spoke to UK magazine Amateur Photographer during an interview yesterday.

Schopf was circumspect, but told AP that the cameras would have sensors at APS-C sized or bigger, and most likely feature a built-in electronic viewfinder. He also made the point that its the lens, not the camera which is important. “Our philosophy is that the best lenses will lead to better images,” he said. Leica chairman Andreas Kaufmann, also present, added that “Sensors are becoming a commodity, like film was. It’s happening now. APS you can buy rather cheaply.”

Of course, you can get a small, mirrorless body with Leica lenses now if you buy a Micro Four Thirds camera. What I’d love to see, but probably never will, is a cut-down version of the M9. The same lens-mount, the same rangefinder focussing and the same (presumably commodity) sensor, only in a less-solid body that doesn’t cost $7,000. Because if Leica just makes a Lumix GF1 with a red dot and a $2,000 price-tag, I’ll stick with the one I’ve already got.

Leica to Launch ‘Compact System Camera’ at Photokina 2012 [Amateur Photographer]

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Pioneer’s AppRadio delivers iPhone integration, automotive and audio bliss for $400

We knew Pioneer’s AppRadio car stereo was coming to cozy up with our iPhones, but we didn’t know how much its iOS integration capabilities would cost, until now. Turns out 400 bucks buys you one, and it’s picked up some new capabilities since we got handsy with the device last month. In addition to letting you listen to tunes stored on your iPhone, access Google Maps, and make calls, the AppRadio now has access to your iPhone’s contacts, calendar, videos, and photos as well. Unfortunately, there’s still only four other apps (Rdio, Pandora, MotionX-GPS Drive, and INRIX) available, though Pioneer says more are coming. With a name like AppRadio they ought to get here soon, as in immediately. Peep the PR after the break for the full monty.

Continue reading Pioneer’s AppRadio delivers iPhone integration, automotive and audio bliss for $400

Pioneer’s AppRadio delivers iPhone integration, automotive and audio bliss for $400 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jun 2011 07:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pentax Q. Mirrorless, Interchangeable Lenses, Tiny Sensor

Despite its pro looks, the Pentax Q uses a tiny digicam sensor

Pentax has gotten into the mirrorless camera game with the Q system. It seems most of the work has gone into designing the new lens mount, as the rest of the specs are competent but fairly ordinary. That said, it looks like Pentax has come up with a solid (literally) entry into the hot mirrorless market, with one exception: the sensor.

The first Q-series camera has a 12.4 megapixel sensor, measuring 0.43 -inches on the diagonal. That’s no bigger than what you’d find in a decent point-and-shoot. It will at least shoot bursts of 5fps and up to ISO 6,400, and can capture video at up to 1080p.

The LCD is a pedestrian 460,000 dots, and the flash pops up on a rather long, fragile-looking arm. There are lots of machanical controls, including a very handy dial on the front. The four positions can be assigned to various functions, but the available functions are only for tweaking the in-camera special effects. A real waste.

There are also five lenses in the lineup. In 35mm equivalent, they are as follows: an ƒ1.9 47mm prime, a 27.5-83 zoom, 35mm and 100mm “toy” lenses (think Lomo) and a 160-degree fisheye. There will also be an optional optical viewfinder.

But that sensor cripples the system. Why would you go for this over a Canon G12 or other compact camera when the sensor is about the same size? Especially as the kit (with the 50mm equivalent) will cost $800 when this launches in the fall. I’d say you’re much better off buying into the Micro Four Thirds system, where you can choose between all shapes and sizes of body, beginning in the same price range.

Pentax Q [Pentax via BJP]

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How to Make a Clock Run for 10,000 Years

Jeff Bezos

Billionaire Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos has a long-term plan: to build a clock that runs for 10,000 years. (Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com)

High on a rocky ridge in the desert, nestled among the brush, is the topmost part of a clock that has been ticking for thousands of years.

It looks out over the ruins of a spaceport, built by a rich man whose name was forgotten long ago.

Most of the clock is deep inside the mountain, below the ridgeline. To get there, you hike for days through the heat; the only sounds are the buzzing of flies and the whisper of the occasional breeze. You climb up through the brush, then pass through a hidden door into the darkness and silence of the clock chamber. Far above your head, in the darkness, a massive pendulum swings slowly back and forth, making the clock tick once every 10 seconds.

‘In the year 4000, you’ll go see this clock and you’ll wonder, “Why on Earth did they build this?”‘ — Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos

No one knows who built it, or why. They built it well, and even now it keeps perfect time. All we know of these strange people is that they were obsessed with the future.

Why else would they build something that had no purpose except to mark time for thousands of years?

The rich man is Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, and he has indeed started construction on a clock that he hopes will run for 10,000 years.

For Bezos, the founder of Amazon.com, the clock is not just the ultimate prestige timepiece. It’s a symbol of the power of long-term thinking. His hope is that building it will change the way humanity thinks about time, encouraging our distant descendants to take a longer view than we have.

For starters, Bezos himself is taking a far, far longer view than most Fortune 500 CEOs.

“Over the lifetime of this clock, the United States won’t exist,” Bezos tells me. “Whole civilizations will rise and fall. New systems of government will be invented. You can’t imagine the world — no one can — that we’re trying to get this clock to pass through.”

To help achieve his mission of fostering long-term thinking, Bezos last week launched a website to publicize his clock. People who want to visit the clock once it’s ready can put their names on a waiting list on the site — although they’ll have to be prepared to wait, as the clock won’t be complete for years.

It’s a monumental undertaking that Bezos and the crew of people designing and building the clock repeatedly compare to the Egyptian pyramids. And as with the pharaohs, it takes a certain amount of ego — even hubris — to consider building such a monument. But it’s also an unparalleled engineering problem, challenging its makers to think about how to keep a machine intact, operational and accurate over a time span longer than most human-made objects have even existed.

Consider this: 10,000 years ago, our ancestors had barely begun making the transition from hunting and gathering to simple agriculture, and had just figured out how to cultivate gourds to use as bottles. What if those people had built a machine, set it in motion, and it was still running today? Would we understand how to use it? What would it tell us about them?

And would it change the way we think about our own future?

The idea for the clock has been around since Danny Hillis first proposed it in WIRED magazine in 1995. Since then, Hillis and others have built prototypes and created a nonprofit, the Long Now Foundation, to work on the clock and promote long-term thinking. But nobody actually started building a full-scale 10,000-year clock until Bezos put up a small portion — $42 million, he says — of his fortune.

Last year, contractors started machining components, such as a trio of 8-foot stainless steel gears and the Geneva wheels that will ring the chimes. Meanwhile, computers at Jet Propulsion Laboratories have spent months calculating the sun’s position in the sky at noon every day for the next 10,000 years, data that the clock will use to correct itself. This year, excavation began on the Texas desert site where the clock will be installed deep underground.

And just last month, the Smithsonian agreed to let the Long Now Foundation install a 10,000-year clock in one of its Washington museums, once they can find someone to fund it.

It seems that the time for millennium clocks has arrived.

The Project

Making a clock that will run for 10 millennia is no small undertaking. In Texas, the builders have started drilling a horizontal access tunnel into the base of the ridge where the clock will live. They’ll drill a pilot hole, 500 feet straight down from the top of the ridge, until it meets the access tunnel. Then they’ll bring a 12-foot-7-inch bit into the bottom and drill it back up, carving out a tall vertical shaft as it goes.

Afterwards, they’ll install a movable platform holding a 2.5-ton robot arm with a stonecutting saw mounted on the end. It will start carving a spiral staircase into the vertical shaft, from the top down, one step at a time.

The clock, with massive metal gears, a huge stone weight, and a precise, titanium escapement inside a protective quartz box, will go deep into the shaft. A few years from now, the makers will set it in motion.

Some day, thousands of years in the future, when Bezos and Amazon and even the United States are nothing more than memories, or less even than that, people may discover this clock, still ticking, and scratch their heads.

Bezos says, “In the year 4000, you’ll go see this clock and you’ll wonder, ‘Why on Earth did they build this?’”

The answer, he hopes, will lead you to think more profoundly about the distant future and your effects on it.

Here are some of the people who are creating the most temporally ambitious mechanical engineering project in human history.


Bike Takeout Basket Carries Beer, Burritos

The Takeout Basket is perfectly sized to carry a six-pack

If you live in Portland, you do everything on your bike. You take the kids to school. You do the weekly shop. You even bike down to the gas station to fill up a gas can and bring it home to juice your car. And of course you go to the liquor store to pick up some beer.

This last just got a little easier with Portland Design Works’s Takeout Basket, a small alloy rack that you clamp to your handlebars. The basket measures 155mm x 255mm x 105mm. That’s big enough for “a six pack of bottles, five burritos, three chinchillas or an extra layer of clothing,” according to the blurb. It weighs 500 grams, or 1.1 pounds.

The Takeout Basket also comes with a waterproof rolltop bag for times when you don’t need to carry a six-pack with you (those times will, of course, be rare), and clamps to any handlebar between 25.4 and 31.8mm in diameter. There’s even a slot at the front to hold a D-lock.

This is a nice, modern take on the handlebar basket, and the bag and lock holder are great additions. I’d totally put one of these onto the handlebars of my otherwise sparsely decorated single-speed bike. If only it came in a color other than black. $120.

Takeout Basket product page [Portland Design Works via EcoVelo]