Nintendo 3DS Coming In Light Blue, Gloss Pink To Japan This March

Nintendo 3DS Coming In Light Blue, Gloss Pink To Japan This March

Nintendo is always announcing new colors for its video game systems, especially its Nintendo 3DS. Just last month, Nintendo introduced a blue Nintendo 3DS bundled with a digital copy of Fire Emblem Awakening. The 3DS also has some cool Fire Emblem branding on it, which we’re sure fans of the popular RPG series were drooling over.

Two new Nintendo 3DS colors are being introduced today, but will only be available in Japan for the time being. If you’ve been looking for a 3DS to be covered in either Light Blue or Gloss Pink, then you’re in luck as those are the exact two colors Nintendo is announcing today. Both variations will come with double the space as a 4GB SD card will be included, instead of the standard 2GB SD card. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Stranger Gifts A Player With Starcraft 2: Heart Of The Swarm In An Act Of Kindness, Real Racing 3 Launches On iOS And Android, Adopts Freemium Model,

Buy your ticket for the new Titanic (no iPads, thanks)

Icebergs be damned.

(Credit: Clive Palmer)

Tempting fate is a very human pastime. We know it will all end badly sooner or later, so why not see whether we can skirt the edge of disaster and experience how it feels?

Such an impulse will surely drive many to book an early ticket on Titanic II.

No, this is not another Donald Trump project. It is, instead, the idea of Clive Palmer, an Australian mining tycoon known for his dreamy qualities.

He once suggested that Greenpeace was funded by the CIA. He erected a 26-foot Tyrannosaurus Rex at his Coolum golf course, home of this year’s (but not next year’s) Australian PGA Championship.

So the idea of a new Titanic seems entirely sensible.

As USA Today reports, Palmer showed off the plans for the new ship this week and promised it would be a “full-scale re-creation.”

He also insisted that “the Titanic II will be the ship where dreams come true.”

This is the height of salesmanship for the successor to an original that offered more than its fair share of customer disappointm… [Read more]

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The 404 1,216: Where we 3D print our way out of the friendzone (podcast)

(Credit: Weiyi Li @art.yale.edu)

Leaked from today’s 404 episode:

“Friendzone” added to Oxford dictionary.

Makerlove is an online community of 3D-printed adult toys.

– New app turns your iPhone into a mobile urine lab.

– It was bound to happen: Dongiverse lets you print 3D sex toys.

– Boston frat starts Indiegogo campaign for transsexual brother.

– Oleg Berg’s YouTube and Soundcloud pages rework the keys of classic songs, for better or worse. Exhibit the creepiness of “Hey Jude” in minor.

Ep. 1216: Where we 3D print our way out of the friendzone

Episode … [Read more]

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HP will focus on the tablet market

HP is planning on shifting its attention from the PC industry to the tablet industry. It has already started on this transition by announcing its new HP Slate 7 tablet, a $169 budget tablet that will definitely catch the eyes of consumers, and also make it a decent competitor to Amazon’s line of 7-inch Kindle tablets. While it is $10 more than the cheapest 7-inch Kindle Fire, it does have the benefit of running Android 4.1 Jelly Bean.

HP will focus on tablets

HP’s CEO, Meg Whitman, stated at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference, that, “We’re shifting resources from PCs to tablets. The market moved very fast to tablets and smartphones, and we’ve got to now manage that transition.” HP did try to get into the tablet market with its HP Touchpad, but unfortunately the tablet did not achieve the success that HP wanted. Its original price tag of $499 and $599 deterred many users from buying the tablet and sent them straight to the similarly priced Android tablets and iPads. Thus began the $99 HP Touchpad firesale that benefited a lot of people (myself included).

Seeing how many people wanted affordable tablets, and how many HP Touchpad owners quickly installed CyanogenMod’s ROM as soon as it was available, HP most likely figured out that their next move should be an affordable, Android tablet. HP’s main focus isn’t just budget tablets however, they do plan on releasing high-end Android tablets, and even Windows 8 tablets in the future.

HP may have a good chance at making a comeback with tablets. Not only just with its budget HP Slate 7, but also with its possible high-end tablets. If they do make a Windows 8 tablet, or an Android tablet with a NVIDIA Tegra 4 processor, they have a shot at being a major competitor in the tablet market. That is, if they’re able to competitively price their tablets this time around. Are you excited to see what tablets HP will have to offer?

[via CNET]


HP will focus on the tablet market is written by Brian Sin & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Don’t expect Android and Chrome OS to merge any time soon

Android and Chrome OS: Google’s split attention between two overlapping platforms has long come in for criticism, but rumors of a merge in time for the Chromebook Pixel failed to pan out. Then again, is the world ready for a $1,300 Chromebook, no matter whether it runs Android or Chrome OS? Perhaps not, Google’s director of Android user experience, Matias Duarte, says, but there’s more in Pixel’s prescience of the touchscreen future, he argues.

chromebook_pixel

Pixel’s appeal on a purely hardware basis is undeniable: it’s a beautifully designed notebook, with an incredibly high resolution touchscreen and the same crisp lines that we liked from Google’s first Cr-48 Chromebook. However, its huge price puts Chrome OS up against full notebooks from Apple, Sony, and others, despite the relative limitations of the cloud-centric platform, a completely different market from earlier, highly affordable Chromebooks.

“Pixel shows the boundaries between types of computing blurring”

For Duarte, however, Pixel’s success won’t solely be measured by pure sales. “I think that Pixel is really exciting, because I think that Pixel shows the way that the boundaries between the different types of computing are blurring” he explained to us. “I think it’s great that the Chrome team is doing that, I think it’s great that the Chrome team is allowing Google to get into people’s lives with touchscreens on a desktop form-factor.”

That’s not a point of view shared by everybody in the industry, and in fact it puts Duarte and Google in the same camp as Microsoft and its hardware partners, rather than with Apple. Steve Jobs memorably decried the usability of touch notebooks, and Tim Cook has since made similar arguments, that reaching across a keyboard to tap at a display simply isn’t ergonomically satisfying.

Duarte disagrees, saying that despite what the MacBook makers think, users themselves are asking for a touchscreen approach. “I think that’s a real trend, that touch on laptops and on desktop form-factors is the way that people want to interact with computers” he says. “I think every screen should be a touchscreen in the future, regardless if it has a keyboard or not.”

Despite the overlap, then, between Android – which has touch at its heart – and Chrome OS – designed for more traditional form-factors – the two platforms still have a future as independent projects. According to Duarte, that will be the case for as long as it makes functional sense: the two OSes converging, perhaps, on a commonality of features as Google develops them.

“Google is excellent at diversifying, and experimenting” he told us. “And I think what Chrome OS does well – they’re getting better at, and it’s being reflected in what Android does well in succession – Chrome on Android is the best browser we’ve ever had, and we would not be at that level without the Chrome team doing the work that they do, without the Chrome OS team learning the things that they do, and learning to understand, for example, how to work on touchscreens.”

“Ultimately, still, the two platforms meet different needs”

Meanwhile, what was originally a smartphone, and then a tablet, OS has been gaining more functionality to bring it in line with a desktop platform, though Duarte says that it’s still not quite there year. “Of course Android has also been evolving, and I think it’s terrific the way that we are gaining capabilities on a day-by-day basis” he said. “For example in Jelly Bean we announced multi-user support, and that opens up a range of use-cases, but ultimately, still, the two platforms meet different needs.”

That also means Android playing more readily with accessories and other devices, as it continues its trend toward being the one “OS for humanity” as Duarte himself described it. “One of the things that was great that we did in Honeycomb, was we included much better support for peripherals” the designer said. “So if you go hook up your Nexus 10 to a Bluetooth keyboard, or even a Bluetooth trackpad, you’ll find you have a much better experience with that.”

Despite the convergence that has already happened, Duarte points out however, neither Android nor Chrome OS are at the point where they satisfy the overall needs of all users. “Until we have one solution for Google that can really capture everything, it makes sense for us to continue to develop two platforms” he explained. Exactly how long that development will take is unclear, but it may take some time before Chrome OS – or a flavor of it – achieves the same market dominance as Android enjoys.


Don’t expect Android and Chrome OS to merge any time soon is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Is This Multi-Purpose Pasta Tool a Kitchen Saviour or Scourge?

Sometimes a multi-tasking kitchen tool can go too far, taking on so many tasks that it sucks at everything it tries to do. The Chef2 spoon appeared to strike a nice balance between spatula and tong duties. But this multifunction pasta prepper from Sagaform? It might be stretching itself too thin. More »

BallCam Football Captures Rotating Video To Create Steady Images

BallCam Football Captures Rotating Video To Create Steady Images

We know when it comes to photographers and videographers, getting the perfect angle at the perfect time is what drives them when they’re trying to capture their subject. But if someone wanted to capture video from something throwable, let’s say a football, the only way that may work is if you strap a camera to the football. Now, you could just buy the BallCam.

BallCam is exactly what it sounds like as it’s a football that’s been equipped with a camera inside of it, which means you’ll always get that spinning shot of being thrown from one person to another that you’ve always been looking for. But researchers have made it possible for the footage to be not as nauseating as you think it would be. (more…)

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Feel like Spidey in a real-life spider-sense suit

One test of SpiderSense involved library navigation.

(Credit: Lance Long, EVL)

If Peter Parker’s spider-sense ranks high on your list of coveted superpowers, you may experience a strange tingling sensation at news of a suit that alerts the wearer to the presence of nearby objects.

Victor Mateevitsi, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Illinois’ Electronic Visualization Laboratory in Chicago, is the main man behind SpiderSense, a “wearable device that projects the wearer’s near environment on the skin and allows for directional awareness of objects around him” in much the same way Spider-Man can detect danger without the benefit of sight.

SpiderSense from the front and the back. Hopefully future versions will be slightly more fashionable.

(Credit: Lance Long, EVL)

The suit — which is for better or worse far less pec-revealing than Spidey’s getup — consists of 11 sensor modules positioned for 360-degree coverage. Each sensor module houses an ultrasonic range finder and a … [Read more]

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Coinstar adding PayPal ATM functionality to select kiosks

If you’ve ever had a ton of coins that you need to cash in for dollar bills, you might have used a Coinstar machine at one time or another. They’re about to get a lot more useful because the company just announced that they’re adding PayPal ATM functionality to select machines across the US, starting with Texas, California, and Ohio locations.

PayPallogo-580x201

PayPal members will be able to go up to a Coinstar kiosk and deposit money into their PayPal account, or withdrawal money as well. Users will also be able to transfer money to another PayPal account. This is great news, since PayPal is online-only, and it allows users to make transactions if they’re not near a computer or don’t have their phone on them.

Of course, though, Coinstar will charge PayPal users fees for using its services, just like any ATM would. Coinstar’s standard coin-counting fee of 9.8% will apply when adding coins to a PayPal account. When deposting or withdrawing paper money, a $3 fee applies for transactions up to $300, and a $6 fee applies for transactions over $300.

Customers will also be limited to adding up to $500 per month. As of right now, PayPal functionality at Coinstar kiosks has begun rolling out several locations across California, Texas, and Ohio, with more locations to be added throughout the year. As for a complete rollout to all Coinstar kiosks, it’s not yet said if that will happen or not, but it seems the company has seen a positive response so far with the few locations they already have available.


Coinstar adding PayPal ATM functionality to select kiosks is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

PS4 Live Stream Drew 8 Million Viewers On Ustream

PS4 Live Stream Drew 8 Million Viewers On Ustream

Only a few hundred people were allowed inside of the Hammerstein last week during Sony’s PlayStation 4 unveiling, which means if you wanted to hear first-hand news, you probably watched the livestream provided by Ustream. The stream didn’t go without a few hitches as we experienced the audio going in and out from time to time, but overall, it was an acceptable experience. But just how many people tuned into Sony’s big PlayStation 4 reveal?

According to Ustream’s CEO Brad Hunstable who spoke to Engadget, the live-streaming video service counted around eight million people tuning into Sony’s PlayStation 4 event, with one million concurrent views at its peak. During the two hour event, the average viewer stuck around for one hour, which is three times as long as the normal Ustream viewer only sticks around a live stream for 20 minutes. (more…)

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