Pic Band Is a Safety Rope for Guitar Picks

the Pic Band solves a very real, pressing problem

The Guitar Pic Band looks about as practical as drilling holes in your contact lenses and stringing them together so you don’t lose them. It takes possibly the simplest accessory in all musicdom and turns it into a complicated, convoluted and proprietary mess. I predict that they’ll sell a ton.

The conceit is this: a guitar pick is easy to drop, and even easier to lose. In the realms of unexplained disappearance, picks are up there with socks, hair-bands and cheerleaders’ virginity.

The Pic Band is like a safety rope for the pick. It comprises a wrist strap and a slightly stiff, flexible band which runs from the wrist to the fingers. Here, it clips onto a proprietary pick, shaped with cut-outs to fit the rest of the device. If you drop the pick, it just dangles within reach.

The starter kit is cheap, with the straps coming in at $13 for both, with a selection of pics included (in various thicknesses). The pics themselves, however, cost $7 for a pack of 6, or $1.17 each. That’s almost five times the price of a normal pick, and you can’t just drop in at the guitar store to “pick” one up.

Pic Band [My Pic Band via Oh Gizmo]

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Chef Sleeves: Disposable iPad Prophylactics

Clearly the chef cooking here is too stupid to be allowed into the kitchen, let alone given an iPad

Why spend 90 cents on a tough, reusable Ziploc bag when you could spend $20 on a pack of 25 disposable plastic film envelopes? That’s the great, great deal offered to you by the folks at Chef Sleeve, who will sell you thin, waterproof pouches for your iPad at “just” 80 cents apiece.

The Chef Sleeve is — as the name suggests — designed to protect your iPad from spills while cooking. Sized perfectly for the tablet, the bag seals the iPad in with a re-closeable sticky strip and lets the magic meat power of your fingers through to operate the touch screen. It’s also good for any other hostile environment, like the beach (as if you could read the screen anyway) or the bathroom.

It looks like a fine product, and the packaging even doubles as wobbly-looking iPad dock. But it is disposable, and this is not only environmentally hostile but bad for your budget. Yes, the sleeves are recyclable, but that still takes a lot of energy to do.

A Ziploc might be a little bulkier, but it will last forever in this task. And if you head to the FedEx store, you could pick up a zip-locking invoice sleeve. There’s one that seems perfectly sized for the iPad, and it’s probably free. It even comes with a sticky back for permanent refrigerator mounting.

Chef Sleeve product page [Chef Sleeve. Thanks, Michael!]

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iDVM Turns Your iPhone Into a Multimeter

The iDVM lets you measure electricity while your boss watches the numbers from a safe distance

The iPhone is set to take over your entire toolbox, and the latest hardware to help its march to total workshop domination is the iDVM, a digital multimeter which uses an iOS devices for its display.

The iDVM creates its own Wi-Fi hotspot to which the iPhone (or iPad) can connect. Thus you can take readings with the multimeter and have the results beamed back as long as you are in range — about 30 yards. That’s not as useless as it sounds: not only will the iDVM log your measurements for later use, it can also call out the numbers to you in its electronic voice.

The developers have missed a trick with the free companion app, though. It looks like a real-life multimeter. This is fine for those who know how to use one, but a barrier for those who have never done so. I’m comfortable with a multimeter, digital or otherwise, but I never found the design particularly intuitive. Still, there are some things you can do that you can’t do with a regular multimeter, like view graphs of your data and export it via e-mail.

Now you can add multimeter to the iPhone oscilloscopes and spirit-levels you already have. Just don’t expect the phone to replace every tool you have. It would make a pretty poor hammer, for instance.

The iDVM will ship on June 1st for $220. The app is available now, and free.

iDVM product page [Red Fish Instruments via Oh Gizmo]

iDVM app page [iTunes]

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Keyboard Puts Lazy iPhones to Work as Keypads

The WOW-Keys keyboard controls computers or iPhones

Your iPhone is so lazy. While you sit at your desk and work hard all day long, tapping at your keyboard and tending the fields of Farmville, your iPhone just lounges in its dock, doing nothing but sip a tasty cocktail of DC power and belching out the odd truncated notification. You should put that sorry, good-for-nothing layabout to work.

And with Compuexpert’s WOW-Keys, you can whip that flabby iPhone back into shape. WOW-Keys is a full-sized QWERTY keyboard with a horizontal iPhone dock over where the number keys would usually be. And that’s the gimmick: While the keyboard is hooked up to your PC or Mac you can use the iPhone as an input device. With separate software (you’ll have to find some in the App Store) you can turn the iPhone into a numerical keypad, a multitouch trackpad, or pretty much anything that there’s an app for. And because the dock charges the iPhone, the batteries won’t go dead while you use it.

You can also use the keyboard to input text into the iPhone, making it double handy. In this mode, the function keys become iPhone control keys and let you control music, volume, switch the display on and off (although you can’t adjust brightness) and switch to the search or home screens.

Depending on the quality of the keyboard itself, the WOW-Keys could be a great way to both clear your desk of several other gadgets, while throwing in some extras functions. The WOW-Keys will ship on May 24th for $100.

And one more thing: The website carries a very weird badge on the main product page. It’s a blue rosette that reads “When Harry Met Sally”. WTF?

WOW-Keys product page [Compuexpert via Mashable]

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Turtle Pens With ‘Turtle Head’ Technology

Is that a turtle head peeking out of your pocket or are you just pleased to see me?

The Turtle Pen is worth a mention for its nib-retraction mechanism, dubbed the “Turtle Head”. And yes, that’s exactly what you think it is: the business end of the pen squeezes itself out through the tight sphincter that is the end of the pen’s barrel.

Instead of pressing a button on the top of the pen, a method that has worked perfectly well for years, you pull the two halves of the pen apart and twist. When the halves spring back together, the “Turtle Head” pops out.

This probably isn’t any more efficient in terms of space or mechanics compared to the old way, but it looks neat, and offers a brand new way for you to annoy other attendees in office meetings in addition to those old staples, the “clickety-click” and the “spin-the-pen-in-the-fingers” (not to mention my favorite, the jiggle-your-damned-leg-under-the-table).

The Turtle Pens come in a range of barrel colors with different nibs, and cost £33.50, or $56 each. Unfortunately, some models have sold out, so it might be a tough job holding your excitement in. Just don’t relax. Not even for a second.

Turtle Pens product page [Turtle Pens]

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The $150 Bottle Cage for Cycling Samurai

This $150 stainless-steel bottle cage is vanishingly rare. And that’s probably a good thing

This scrappy-looking bottle cage comes from Mr. Iribe, an apparently mythical Keirin track-frame builder in Japan. When he is not busy making bikes for the Samurai, “he makes a few bottle cages as well”, says the blurb on Compass Bicycles’ (Seattle) website. These hand-made cages are so good, it seems, that they are worth $150 apiece.

So what do you get for your money? The Iribe Bottle Cage is made from stainless-steel tubing, with the sections silver-brazed together. Compass says that stainless steel is poorly suited to fillet-brazing, so Mr. Iribe first wraps the joints with strips of steel first. This, combined with the un-plated finish and what looks like a spring from a ballpen, results in an accessory that looks like it was hacked together by a somebody during an emergency.

Compass’s writer would disagree, saying that the cage “reminds me of a Samurai sword: a piece of art that provides exceptional function.”

The cage is light, though, at just 36 grams, or 1.27 ounces. I just weighed the first cheap aluminum and plastic bottle cage I pulled from my bike-spares bin and it weighs in at 60 grams. Of course, once you add in a liter of water, which weighs 1000 grams (on top of the weight of the bottle itself), then that 24 gram difference looks vanishingly small.

And my bottle cage cost like $5, not $150.

Iribe Bottle Cage [Compass Bicycles via BSNYC]

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Fingers-On with iVisor iPad Screen Protector

The matte iVisor cuts down on reflections, but also lowers contrast. Photo Charlie Sorrel

I keep going back to the iPad 2 page at the Apple Store and hovering my mouse pointer over the “buy” button. I have even ordered one, waited a couple weeks and then canceled it. Why? Because it’s hard to justify spending €800 ($1,100) on a 64GB 3G iPad 2 when I already have a 64GB 3G iPad 1 right here.

Sure I want the camera, and the slimmer body plus faster processor are certainly nice, but what I really like is that you can use iPad case-free, with the Smart Cover to protect the screen. So I was very happy to try out the iVisor from Moshi, a screen-protector for the iPad which lets me toss my fat, ugly, slow iPad into a bag, naked as the day it was born.

Unlike other covers, the iVisor doesn’t trap bubbles. This is because it doesn’t actually stick to the screen. Instead, it comes with a sticky black bezel. This secures the protector in place, and also means that the cover is removable, cleanable and reusable.

For the test, I used the matte version, which should cut out reflections on the screen. In practice, it just diffuses these reflections while at the same time diffusing any ambient light, which decreases contrast. And when you have the iPad in front of you, fine detail at the edges of the screen blurs slightly. Unless you really hate glossy screens, I’d advise using the clear version.

Application was very easy. Use the included microfiber cloth to polish away dust and smears, remove the protector from its cardboard sleeve and peel off the backing. Line the hole up over the home button and then just kind of let go. It almost places itself. The iPad 1 version has another cut out for the useless ambient light sensor, and the iPad 2 version has another for the camera.

In use, the protector disappears. It feels a little softer than the glass screen of course, but you get used to it. Despite not being sticky, the panel sits flat on the screen at all times. The cover is also much more slippery than the glass, making finger gestures easier but also — oddly — making the iPad easier to grip when carrying it around.

I have liberated my iPad from its rubbery Apple case. Using this always felt like the equivalent of putting a supermodel in a wetsuit. I am now (mostly) happy to put the iPad alone into a bag with other gadgets, but I’m keeping it away from keys until I’m really, really sure I won’t sell it to buy an iPad 2.

If you’re in the market for a screen protector, this one is definitely worth a look. The only downside is that it costs $30. Then again, you’d probably have to go through at least $30 of regular sticky screen protectors before you got one on without the bubbles.

iVisor product page [Moshi]

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Cobra Tags: Find Lost Keys With Your Android Phone

The Cobra Tag helps you find lost keys with your Android phone (hint: look behind the sofa)

Ever wish you could Google your car keys? Well, keep wishing, as that day hasn’t come yet. But the Cobra Tag is the next best thing, and may stop you losing those keys in the first place.

The tag can be attached to keys, a bag, or pretty much anything that is easy to lose or to forget. It then talks to your Android phone via Bluetooth and from there can do one of several things. You can set the app — called Phone Halo — to sound an alarm when the tag goes out of range. If this sounds annoying, then the app can also grab your location when the tag’s signal blinks out, so when you realize you have lost something at least you’ll know where you left it. This will be less useful if you left it on a train.

Finally, both the tag and the phone can be used to find each other if in range. Press the button on one and the other will bleep.

The Cobra Tag costs $60 and the app is free. The maker of the Phone Halo app also sells an uglier tag for $30, and an iOS version of the app should be out in the summer.

And if you don’t want to spend $60 just to find your misplaced keys. Try checking the pocket of the jacket you were wearing yesterday. No, the other one. That’s it! You’re welcome.

Cobra Tag product page [Cobra]

Phone Halo product page [Phone Halo]

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Lawyer Bait: Steve Jobs in Carbonite iPhone Case

Steve Jobs in Carbonite is a lawsuit waiting to happen

Woof! Woof! Yapyapyap! What’s that I hear? Why, it’s the sound of Apple siccing its legal attack dogs on yet another fun-loving accessory maker. The latest entry on the Apple Deathwatch list is this Steve Jobs in Carbonite iPhone case, which may also draw attention from George Lucas’ legal team.

Made from flexible but hard plastic (and not actual carbonite — maybe a class action lawsuit too?) the case snaps on to an iPhone 4, 3G or 3GS (there are two models) and makes it look as if the Apple CEO is struggling to get free before being frozen and shipped off to Jabba the Hutt (Steve Ballmer?).

If you want one, go get it now. The case has actually been on sale since March 21st, but now that it is getting more attention, it’ll probably be gone pretty soon. $35.

Steve Jobs in Carbonite [Burb / Society 6 via TUAW]

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Engrain Wooden Keyboard Wants to Be Touched

The Engrain keyboard is as individual as the fingerprints that touch it

After sticking seemingly endless textured objects onto the tops of keycaps, designer Michael Roopenian came up with this gorgeous wooden keyboard, called the Engrain. The idea is that — apart from looking damn hot — the individually textured keys make touch typing easier. As each and every key feels different to your fingers, you will always know exactly where your hands are.

The texture was achieved by sandblasting a single plank of wood so its natural grain became more pronounced, and then painstakingly chopping the individual keycaps out and laser-etching the lettering onto them.

This proof-of-concept model has the keycaps glued to the keys of an Apple aluminum keyboard, a suitably cold and minimal contrast to the warm wood, kind of like cold ice cream and hot apple pie. I imagine a purpose built version, without the double height keys, may be easier to actually type on.

Roopenian’s Engrain is likely to remain forever a one-off. A shame, as I could totally see one of them under my iMac screen, sat on my chipped old marble-topped desk.

Engrain Keyboard project page [Coroflot via Twitter]

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