The Detonator brings electric biking to bots, looks pretty bomb

Parker Brothers Choppers, responsible for one of several Tron Light Cycle replicas seen recently, is continuing to prove that electric bikes aren’t all weedy-looking augmented pedal-powered affairs. This time, it tackled the Detonator concept created by Daniel Simon, a former VW designer who was also in charge of vehicle design for the Tron remake. Wired reports that the $100,000 bike charges in an hour and has an estimated range of around 80-100 miles on a full battery. According to the operations manager at Parker Brothers Choppers, it’s “not the easiest bike to ride,” though that could have something to do with Simon’s original design, geared for non-human droids able to rotate their legs all the way around. Human riders, on the other hand, would likely face some chafing issues.

The Detonator brings electric biking to bots, looks pretty bomb originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Nov 2011 07:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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App Wakes You When You Reach Your Bus Stop

BusChecker: Helping drunken Londoners get home on time since 2011

Fact 1: When traveling home on the London night bus, its easy to nod off and miss your stop, especially if you are a bartender and go out drinking after work until 3AM. Fact 2: I was this bartender. Fact 3: Once I even managed to spend the whole night on the N73, going back and forth and only waking when the engine sputtered out in the Walthamstow bus garage at 7AM, further from home than when I’d started hours before.

I could probably have done with BusChecker.

BusChecker is an iPhone app which gives live countdowns telling you when your bus will arrive, and also shows the buses on a map, pulling data from Transport for London’s live tracking site. And the latest version will wake you up when you reach your stop.

Just tell it where you want to go, and nod off. Thanks to iOS5’s new region-mapping feature, the low-powered position-monitoring service that lets you use Find My Friends and location based reminders, BusChecker can sound an alarm when you get to your stop.

I could have done with this ten years ago, when I regularly spent hours sleeping on a bus that could have been spent in a bed. Then again, ten years ago I was carrying a Sony Ericsson P800, which had trouble not crashing a plain old maps app.

BusChecker is $3, available now.

BusChecker product page [BusChecker. Thanks,Carl!]

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Ben Heck and pinball legend John Popadiuk to create Zombieland pinball machine

To many, pinball machines are relics of a bygone age of noisy, crowded arcades where people waited in line to get their hand on the flippers. Many a quarter was gobbled up by pinball machines worldwide, as they used to be the staple of the arcade economy. With video gaming having moved to the home, […]

Label outs AT&T 4G LTE version of the Galaxy Tab 10.1 creeping through the FCC

If you’re in the crowd holding out until the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 hit Ma Bell’s 4G network, get ready to pull the trigger. The code-named SGH-I957 rolled through the FCC sporting a label for AT&T’s LTE service on its backside. It appears the carrier will offer the 10.1-inch slate alongside the similarly sized HTC Jetstream. Don’t forget, the latter of the two will set you back seven whole Benjamins… on contract. The AT&T Galaxy Tab should save you a few bills, though, if the pricing is comparable to VZW’s LTE offering.

Label outs AT&T 4G LTE version of the Galaxy Tab 10.1 creeping through the FCC originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Nov 2011 06:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Panasonic’s Evolta robot completes Ironman Triathlon, promptly rehydrates

The world is a happier place today, because a toy-sized robot has just completed a triathlon in Hawaii. After crawling out of the Grand Canyon and walking all the way from Tokyo to Kyoto, Panasonic’s Evolta has finally conquered that Ironman Triathlon — and it did so in impressive fashion. It all began on October 23rd, when the bite-sized bot and its AA rechargeable batteries embarked on the 230 kilometer (142.9 mile) race with the goal of finishing it within 168 hours. The Evolta ended up reaching this objective with time to spare, completing the run-bike-swim combo on October 30th, in just 166 hours and 56 minutes. The robot reportedly celebrated the achievement with a stiff erythropoietin cocktail. Re-live the magic after the break, in the full PR.

Continue reading Panasonic’s Evolta robot completes Ironman Triathlon, promptly rehydrates

Panasonic’s Evolta robot completes Ironman Triathlon, promptly rehydrates originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Nov 2011 05:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon, Netflix ink licensing deals with ABC, add new content for you to munch on

It was a pretty busy day for the Disney-ABC Television Group yesterday, as the company announced a new licensing deal with Amazon, while renewing its pre-existing agreement with Netflix. The Amazon deal will allow Amazon Prime members to access all prior seasons of Grey’s Anatomy, every episode of Lost, and all previous seasons of The Secret Life of the American Teenager, among other series. Amazon expects to add a total of some 13,000 titles to Prime Instant Video by “early next year,” and just in time for the holiday season (as well as the release of the Kindle Fire). The renewal of Netflix’s deal, meanwhile, ensures that the company will continue to offer episodes of shows like Private Practice, Brothers and Sisters, and Ugly Betty, as well as new additions, including Switched at Birth, Kick Buttowski and Alias. Basically, though, it’s just more of the same. But at a time when Netflix is losing customers in the wake of its price hike and Qwikster debacle, maybe stability isn’t such a bad thing. Surf past the break for a pair of dueling PRs.

Continue reading Amazon, Netflix ink licensing deals with ABC, add new content for you to munch on

Amazon, Netflix ink licensing deals with ABC, add new content for you to munch on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Nov 2011 04:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ask.com’s “Click to Speak” Put to the Test

This article was written on January 04, 2008 by CyberNet.

Ask.com has just added a new and free voice activated directions service to their Mobile site so that users are able to speak their location and then speak their desired destination and receive directions on their mobile phone.  When I first read about it, it seemed like it was Ask.com’s response to GOOG-411, except they were trying to take it a bit further. I decided to put the service ,which is called “Click to Speak” to the test to see if it was something worth using.

The first thing I did on my mobile phone was go to http://m.ask.com. Then I saw the following options:

ask voice

I selected #2 – Directions with voice entry, and then it asked if I wanted to place a call. Placing the call connects you to their service at which point you’re asked to speak your location.  It’ll repeat it back and ask if it’s correct, and which point you say yes or no and then it will move on to your destination.  You can enter in an address or an intersection, it accepts both. While I was entering in my destinations, I noticed that it had a hard time with extra words for a street name like “Avenue” or “Road.” It would ask me to repeat the names of the streets, but without the extras. Once it had my starting and ending points, I was informed that I would be receiving a text message soon.  The call ended, and sure enough, a text message came with my directions.

Problems with the service

While the entire process of entering in an address was fairly simple and easy to use, the directions it gave me weren’t the best. For my example trip, I entered that my starting location was the intersection of Michigan Avenue and Ontario Street in Chicago, Illinois and that I was headed to the intersection of Lincolnway and Duff in Ames, Iowa.  Their estimated time that it would take me to drive this was over 8 hours which I knew wasn’t quite right as I’ve done this drive before.  Then I went to Google and entered the same instructions, and the route they provided said it would take me about 5 hours and 40 minutes which is what I would expect it to take. It appears as though the route that Ask.com calculates for you is chosen based upon miles. The shortest route wins, even if it will take quite a bit longer.

Would I use this service again? Well, to be honest, probably not.  While it’s nice and could perhaps work for shorter distances, the directions it provides for long distances just tacks on too much time.

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Texas Sheriff’s office receives weaponizable drone, alarms local news station

Ready to supersize your favorite RC helicopter and bullseye some perps with an aerial bean bag launcher? The Sheriff’s office in Montgomery County, Texas is, and it’s really freaking out the local news. KPRC Local 2 News feverishly asks if the Sheriff’s new unmanned Shadowhawk helicopter is a safety asset, or a privacy violation — we just think it’s awesome. Built and sold by Vanguard Defense Industries, this wireless whirlybird comes equipped with a remote video camera, an infrared heat-seeking device and an onboard GPS. It’s also capable of carrying weapons, although the Sheriff said that there were no plans to weaponize the UAV. The 50-pound chopper is FAA approved to help track down criminals on the run or assist swat teams in a standoff — a blessing that should keep this police drone from being grounded. Hit the source link below see KPRC‘s local coverage, “Big Brother” freakout and all.

Texas Sheriff’s office receives weaponizable drone, alarms local news station originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Nov 2011 03:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BMW 3 Series gets ‘full-color’ heads-up display

If you’ve been hankering for some HUD action in your next auto, you’ll have one more choice come next spring: the all-new 2012 BMW 3 Series. The launch will mark the first time a heads-up display has made it into Bavaria’s volume seller, after debuting as an optional extra eons ago on its 5 Series. Since then, HUDs of limited hues have permeated München’s high-end, splaying speed and navigation directions in the line of sight of road-going elites everywhere. However, this iteration is “full-color,” which besides pleasing ROY G. BIV fans, makes it “more intuitive,” as the company reasons it’ll aid drivers in recognizing crucial alerts faster. That, or we’re really just a generation away from über cool AR wizardry and movies on our windscreens. Of course, no word on when the 3’s brethren will get the technicolor treatment, but we’re betting it won’t be long, given that’s the dash of a 6 Series you see above. PR, per usual, is after the break.

Continue reading BMW 3 Series gets ‘full-color’ heads-up display

BMW 3 Series gets ‘full-color’ heads-up display originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Nov 2011 02:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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