NERF Rebelle hands-on: foam arrows and AR for secretly vicious little girls

NERF Rebelle hands-on

Look, we loved what Hasbro did with Lazer Tag last year. But, let’s be honest, that thing was pure testosterone. We’re not saying the ladies couldn’t get down, but the alien-blasting AR solo games weren’t exactly designed with little girls in mind. Rebelle ditches the lasers for NERF arrows and slaps a supposedly female-friendly coat of purple and pink paint on the whole thing. While the blasters still operate without the optional Mission Central App cradle ($15), it’s once you get the whole kit together that things really start to fall into place. The attachment lets you drop in an iPhone (4, 4S or 5) and fire up the free companion app. (And don’t worry Google fans, an Android version of the app along with a universal mount are also in the works.) Rather than focus on solo games and individual competition, the Rebelle Mission Central app encourages kids to form squads and compete not just for supremacy over their friends but also for in-game perks, like accessories for their avatars. Those virtual personas can be completely customized, allowing girls to fully embrace their secret agent fantasies.Of course, you can also document your foam-arrow battles and share them.

The blasters themselves are pretty standard NERF fare and all some basic variation on a crossbow design. The rotating barrel Crossbow ($25) has a pump-action and a rail for installing the cradle, a feature that’s not on some of the smaller models like the pocketable, single-shot Sneak Attackers. The other model currently slated for cradle compatibility is the Heartbreaker Bow ($20), which sticks with a more traditional bow and arrow design and has a dash more wickedness to the design than some of the other blasters. The whole Rebelle line is expected to hit shelves in the fall — so little brothers beware.

Edgar Alvarez contributed to this report.

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R/C Airship: Like a Blimp without the Skin

Many scientists have theorized that the reason the Hindenburg went down in flames was because of the combination of flammable hydrogen gas and paints on the surface of the blimp’s skin. Well you won’t have to worry about either of those with this little R/C toy that’s designed to look like an airship.

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Created by China’s AMAX Toys, the Airship is a remote-controlled flyer that uses a pair of horizontal propellers to lift it into the air. Of course, the only reason this design works is that the Airship itself has no skin. Instead, you see the skeleton of the dirigible – and that’s pretty cool.

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The Airship measures about 11-inches-long, and can fly for about 5 to 6 minutes on a 60 minute charge. I comes with a 3-channel infrared remote – which limits running distance to about 30 feet, and has gyroscopes to help keep it balanced while flying.

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The Airship is available in wholesale quantities from AMAX Toys, but they’re not selling them retail at this point.

That’s It, Slingshots Can’t Possibly Get More Insane Than This Fully Automatic Minigun

Slingshot lover and—let’s face it—borderline maniac (in the best way) Joerg Sprave definitely took things to one extreme when he created an enormous slingshot cannon that fired ridiculous chainsaw halberds. Not to be outdone, even by himself, he’s back at it with another ludicrous invention that goes with speed over size: a fully automatic slingshot mini gun. Really, what could top this? More »

Patriarch Beshara al-Rai Warns Against Syrian Uprising, Likens It To Lebanon Civil War

By Khaled Yacoub Oweis

AMMAN, Feb 10 (Reuters) – The head of Lebanon’s Maronite Church evoked his country’s long civil war to condemn the futility of conflict, on the second day of a controversial visit to Syria’s war-ravaged capital Damascus.

At a Sunday mass broadcast live on Syrian state television, Patriarch Beshara al-Rai appeared to dismiss the revolt against President Bashar al-Assad’s 13-year rule as not worth the bloodshed.

“Everything that is said and demanded in the name of what is called reform and human rights and democracy is not worth the spilt blood of an innocent person,” said the 72-year-old patriarch.

Rai is on the first visit to Syria by a Maronite patriarch since the official independence of Lebanon in 1943. At a celebration in a Damascus church to mark the inauguration of a Syrian Orthodox patriarch, Rai did not refer to Assad directly but likened the 22-month uprising to the 1975-1990 civil war that tore apart neighbouring Lebanon.

“We come during a difficult time while dear Syria is in pain. We lived in Lebanon this deep wound as a result of futile wars,” Rai told the mass.

His visit comes as Christians in the region feel under threat from the rise of fundamentalist Muslim forces. Syria has about 850,000 Christians, about 4.5 percent of the population, of which about 400,000 are Catholics of the Syrian, Greek Melkite, Maronite, Chaldean and Armenian churches.

Few Christians have taken up arms in the war, which broadly pits Assad’s Alawite minority, an offshoot of Shiites Islam, against the Sunni Muslim majority.

Many in the Christian communities feel that the fall of Assad could open the way to Islamist rule in Syria and jeopardise their future.

They point to events in Tunisia, Libya, Egypt and Yemen where popular uprisings strengthened the position of Islamists and provoked fears among liberal Muslims and religious minorities that their rights would be trampled.

CONTROVERSY

But some Christians expressed concern over Rai’s public appearance in Damascus.

Bassam Ishaq, head of the Syriac National Council, a Christian opposition group, said: “Rai publicly supported an illegitimate regime. He could have sent a deputy to attend the inauguration and met himself with the heads of other churches to discuss their fears,” Ishaq told Reuters from Amman.

“Christians can guard their future by playing a part in the revolt and coming out in support of a democratic Syria of equal citizenship,” he added.

Some 60,000 people have been killed in the Syrian uprising, which started as peaceful street demonstrations but turned into war after authorities fired on protesters with live ammunition.

The Alawite minority has dominated power in Syria since the 1960s. Assad’s late father, President Hafez al-Assad, cemented the Alawite grip on power by forging intricate alliances with the Christian ecclesiastical establishment, Sunni clerics and members of the Sunni merchant class in Damascus and Aleppo.

The Soviet-style system banned all political opposition – Hafez al-Assad used ruthless force to crush an Islamist challenge to his rule in the 1980s – but allowed freedom of belief for minority faiths.

Christians played a leading role in the opposition to Assad family rule, but few have supported the revolt.

Lebanese President Michel Sleiman said Rai’s visit must not be interpreted politically, describing it as part of the patriarch’s duty to comfort his flock during upheaval.

But Fares Soueid, an official in the March 14 movement, Lebanon’s largest opposition parliamentary bloc, said Rai did a disservice to Christians by associating them with Assad.

“It is akin to the silence of the Catholic church faced with Nazi atrocities in World War Two,” Souaid said. (Additional reporting by Laila Bassam in Beirut; Editing by Stephen Powell)

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FedEx Pulls Startup Conference Sponsorship Over ‘West Memphis Three’ Speaker

An entrepreneurship conference in Memphis, Tenn., was jeopardized after FedEx revoked its sponsorship to distance itself from one of the speakers, but the event is going ahead as planned today, conference founder Kyle Sandler told The Huffington Post.

The shipping giant was in line to be the largest sponsor of EverywhereElse.co: The Startup Conference, a three-day festival focused on entrepreneurship. On Wednesday, the Memphis-based company officially quit by email, pinpointing the problem as a speaker “polarizing” to the Memphis community, Sandler said by phone.

According to Sandler, the unnamed speaker was Damien Echols, one of the men known as the “West Memphis Three.” Echols and and two others were convicted for the 1993 murders of three cub scouts in West Memphis. They spent 17 years on death row before they were exonerated in 2011 at the conclusion of a high-profile campaign promoting their innocence.

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Horsemeat Scandal Raises Concerns Over Europe’s Food Quality Control

* Processed food market increasingly complex

* Consumers worried about little-regulated industry

* Britain: “This is a conspiracy”

* Lawmaker calls for ban on meat imports from EU

By Tim Castle and Maria Golovnina

LONDON, Feb 10 (Reuters) – As Britons choke on discovering they may have eaten horse that was imported as beef, and ministers blame an “international criminal conspiracy”, this new scandal has exposed the sometimes murky labyrinth by which food reaches Europe’s dinner tables.

Lurid headlines reveal a culinary gulf between distaste for the notion of horsemeat in Britain and its status as a delicacy elsewhere in Europe. But as governments play down the health risks, a greater impact may stem from a shattering of public confidence in EU systems of labelling and quality control introduced after previous threats hit the human food chain.

As details emerge of a complex network of slaughterhouses and middlemen standing between the farm and the supermarkets across Europe, France and Britain have vowed to punish those found responsible for selling horsemeat purporting to be beef.

With DNA tests needed to tell the two kinds of flesh apart, retailers and makers of processed meals complain of being duped by suppliers; one French firm has pointed a finger at Romania.

“This is a conspiracy against the public,” said British farm minister Owen Paterson. “I’ve got an increasing feeling that it is actually a case of an international criminal conspiracy.”

Prime Minister David Cameron has called it “very shocking”.

Adding to concerns are indications that some horsemeat, perfectly edible in itself, may contain a drug known as bute – a common, anti-inflammatory painkiller for sporting horses but banned for animals intended for eventual human consumption.

Britain’s Food Standards Agency said it was checking whether horse carcasses exported from Britain contained phenylbutazone. It said five such animals were sold abroad last year and it had told foreign agencies. French media said the horses went there.

One firm hit by the British horsemeat scandal, frozen foods group Findus, said it was recalling its beef lasagne product after discovering they included horsemeat. Its French supplier, Comigel, said the questionable meat came from EU member Romania.

An EU-wide alert has been sent out and governments debated how to bring the increasingly complex industry under control.

Food experts say globalisation has brought benefits to food supply, with exotic items now available from around the world all year round, but it has also created a system that is so complex it has increased the risks of adulteration, whether by design, to use cheaper inputs, or through neglect of standards.

The “mad cow” crisis, which saw British beef banned in the EU in the 1990s over fears of a degenerative brain disease, left a legacy of tight controls on the identity of European animals, intended to ensure the origins of fresh meat are traceable.

But in meat minced into processed product, while hygiene checks are the norm, testing for something as seemingly basic as which species it came from is complex and not widely undertaken.

Mystery over the contents of a sausage is far from new, but mass production means any problem can escalate rapidly:

“Food adulteration has been going on for as long as it has been prepared, for thousands of years,” said Chris Elliot, a professor working on food safety at Queen’s University Belfast.

“We are at the stage now where whenever this adulteration happens, it tends to happen on a very large scale, extremely well organised.”

REPULSED

Doubts over quality controls in processed food could damage sales across Europe, but the greatest impact of this scandal may be in Britain, where assurances that horsemeat is safe have done little to lessen the disgust felt by many, or suspicions that it reflects another unpopular aspect of membership of the EU bloc.

One leading British lawmaker called for a ban on EU imports.

“Nabbed, stabbed and beaten: wild horses to go in our beef,” ran the headline on Sunday’s mass-selling Sun newspaper over a story alleging cruelty to horses to be slaughtered in Romania.

From Queen Elizabeth downwards, Britons cast themselves as a nation of horse lovers, treating sporting thoroughbreds with no less reverence than human athletes and viewing the species as whole with an affection rivaled only by that for the family dog.

There are only a handful of licensed horse abattoirs in Britain, and these mostly export carcasses to the continent, where Italy leads consumption tables with an unsentimental taste for both horse and donkey; horsemeat also has a niche in the cuisine of France and of many other European nations.

At a Sunday market in north London, where shoppers strolled among rain-soaked stalls selling vegetables, sausage and cheeses direct from the small farms that produce them, many said they would buy fewer frozen ready-meals after the revelations.

That is good news for the likes of Amie Peters, who runs a family beef burger business: “They’ve kept it secret from everyone. It was concealed from the public. That’s not nice,” she said of equine DNA found in supermarket burgers, nodding to her own grill and adding with a smile: “No horsemeat in these.”

Distaste for horsemeat is widely shared across the English-speaking world, although the U.S. Congress in 2011 overturned a five-year-old effective ban on slaughtering horses for food.

TRACING BACK

Tracing processed meat back to its source is difficult in Europe’s complex market, and the path from abattoirs where cows and horses are slaughtered and minced to people’s dinner tables often meanders through a confusing chain of middle companies.

Last week’s problems for Findus came less than a month after British supermarket Tesco and fast food outlet Burger King found horsemeat in beef burgers from Ireland.

French officials tracing the contamination of the Findus beef lasagne said a Luxembourg factory had been supplied by the French firm Poujol, which had bought the meat frozen from a Cypriot trader, who in turn had subcontracted the order to a Dutch trader supplied by a Romanian abattoir.

However, Comigel, a frozen foods producer based in eastern France, told a newspaper it had bought the meat from another French company, supplied from a Romanian abattoir.

In Romania, officials said one of the two Romanian abattoirs suspected to have provided horsemeat had been cleared of all suspicion: “I believe that, even though the investigation isn’t finished, that everything left the country properly and officially,” Constantin Savu of Romania’s food safety authority was quoted as saying by state news agency Agerpres on Sunday.

“I find it hard to believe that such errors could exist.”

In France, six big retailers said they were recalling lasagne and other products suspected to be mislabelled.

Britain’s Paterson summoned leading food retailers and representatives of food processors to an emergency meeting at his office at the weekend to discuss the crisis.

Anne McIntosh, who chairs the parliamentary food and environment committee, called for a temporary import ban on processed and frozen meats from the other 26 EU states.

“My concern is that consumer confidence will have collapsed across the European Union,” McIntosh, from Cameron’s Conservative party, told the BBC on Sunday.

“We seem to be no clearer as to what the source of this contamination is, or whether the supply was ever destined for human consumption. Is this a fraud of such a massive scale that it should never have entered the human food chains?” (Additional reporting by Luiza Ilie in Bucharest and Leigh Thomas in Paris; Writing by Maria Golovnina; Editing by Alastair Macdonald)

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PLUGG Radio Asks You to Shove a Cork in It

If you’ve ever been asked to shut up, you probably are familiar with the phrase “stick/shove/stuff/put a cork in it.” Now there’s a radio concept which wants you to do just that.

plugg radio

Designed by Skrekkøgle, the PLUGG radio is a basic digital radio with one unique feature – it’s turned off by shoving a cork into it, and removing the cork turns it on.

I assume you’ll still need to use normal controls for changing volume or stations, but the cork power switch is pretty clever. That is, until you lose the cork.

[via Fan the Fire]

Check Out This Exclusive Look At the New Justice League Statue "The Kiss"

At Toy Fair 2013, DC’s got all kinds of goodies ready to promote the upcoming film Man of Steel. And they’re letting out just a little tease in the form of an exclusive image of the new, never-before-seen Justice League statue “The Kiss.” Prices and availability for this and other upcoming statues have yet to be announced, but we’ll have more info for you when we hit the show floor on Monday. In the meantime, enjoy the tease. More »

IRL: Mailbox, Behringer iNuke Boom Junior and the Fujifilm X-E1

Welcome to IRL, an ongoing feature where we talk about the gadgets, apps and toys we’re using in real life and take a second look at products that already got the formal review treatment.

You may have heard that a little app called Mailbox launched a few days ago. You may have also heard it’s the greatest thing since sliced bread. As it turns out, Darren hates it. Fortunately, it’s not all doom and gloom this week: Jason’s impressed with the miniaturized iNuke Boom Junior speaker, and Philip is just happy to answer questions about his new camera.

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Finger Trap Handbags: You’ll Be Stuck with This Purchase

Chinese finger traps are probably the bane of many children’s (and android’s) existences. Of course, it’s not much of a scare or prank once you figure out how to get your fingers out of the trap, but the trauma (“I’m going to be stuck like this forever!”) remains.

Picking up on how finger traps work is designer James Piatt, who managed to work its mechanism into a series of ladies’ handbags.

chinese finger trap bags The result? His Finger Trap line of handbags, which requires at least one trapped finger to ‘hold’ the bag. The full-sized version is best carried with three fingers trapped in the handles (or shall I say, finger-dles?) It comes with a shoulder strap, in case you’d prefer to have full use of your bag finger while you’re carrying it.

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This here is the mini version of the Finger Trap bag:

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It’s definitely an unusual design inspired by an equally unusual puzzle. They don’t come cheap, either. The full-sized Finger Trap bag costs $725(USD), while the mini one retails for $125.

[via Laughing Squid]