How Thunderbolt Could Hook Up Notebooks With Powerful Peripherals

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Thunderbolt Ports


Thunderbolt ports are the same shape as Mini DisplayPort ports, and are backward-compatible with monitor cables that use that standard. Image courtesy Apple.

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Intel’s new high-speed port technology is called Thunderbolt. But what is it, exactly?

Think of Thunderbolt (formerly code named “Light Peak”) as two cables in one. One is a fast PCI Express cable for transferring data, and the other is DisplayPort, for driving an external display.

A Thunderbolt cable is capable of delivering data between a computer and a peripheral (say, an external hard drive) at 10 Gbps in either direction, Intel claims. That’s fast enough to transfer a full-length HD movie in under 30 seconds.

It’s also 12 times faster than FireWire 800 and 20 times faster than USB 2.0, according to Apple.

Because a ThunderBolt connector is also a DisplayPort connection, that means a single port on a notebook — such as the new MacBook Pros, which have Thunderbolt ports — can connect to an external monitor, which in turn can connect to storage devices via PCI Express. We call this “daisy-chaining” devices.

In theory, the monitor could also connect to a keyboard, mouse, additional displays and even a gigabit ethernet connection, with all the data for those peripherals going through the single Thunderbolt cable connecting the monitor and the notebook. The makers of these hardware devices simply need to add a small Intel chip to decode the Thunderbolt signal into its PCI Express and DisplayPort signals.

“All Thunderbolt technology devices share a common connector, and let individuals simply daisy-chain their devices one after another, connected by electrical or optical cables,” Intel’s press release states.

In short, a monitor could become a hub for PCIe peripherals to which you can easily dock your notebook with a single cable connection. For that to work, of course, you’ll need a Thunderbolt-compatible monitor — and none currently exist.

Fortunately for Mac users, Thunderbolt plugs have the same shape as the Mini DisplayPort connectors in all recent Macs, and it’s compatible with them, so you can plug an older monitor into a new Thunderbolt port (even using a DVI, HDMI or VGA adapter) and it will still work. You won’t have a data channel, but the video connection will function.

In the longer term, the speed of the PCI Express bus makes it possible for a variety of devices to be connected through simple, external cables rather than internal expansion cards, greatly increasing the expandability of notebooks and even netbooks. Video-capture devices, RAID arrays and who knows what will all be easy to add simply by plugging in a Thunderbolt port.

For now, Apple is the only company we know of offering Thunderbolt-compatible gadgets. Intel lists several other partners who will be using the standard, including storage makers LaCie and Western Digital, and says it is working with other companies to bring the technology to “computers, displays, storage devices, audio/video devices, cameras, docking stations and more.”


Clip-On Mantis Lamp is Almost Embarrassingly Versatile

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Remember that kid at your high-school who could do pretty much anything he set his mind to? It didn’t matter if it was sports or acting or math, he mastered them all without even trying. You and I hated him, but the girls loved him. If that kid were a lamp, he’d be the Mantis.

The Mantis is from the crowd-sourcing design shop Quirky, and is almost ridiculously versatile. In fact, its rage of uses is so wide that I had no choice but to include every shot from the press pack in the gallery above. Go ahead and click through. I’ll wait.

Done? I told you it did a lot. The Mantis comes in two parts, a battery powered LED lamp and a clip, into which the torpedo shaped light slides. The clip clips anywhere: to the base of your iMac or other monitor, to the top of your laptop screen, to a cupboard door or to a bed headboard. And because the lamp can twist in its clip, you could even angle it down to illuminate your Kindle.

But there’s more. Once removed from its clip, the Mantis isn’t left naked. It has its own flip-out stand with rubberized tips which let it stand up on your desk like a long-necked seal, balancing on its outstretched flippers. From this position it can cast the light from its 11 LEDs down onto any badly-lit task you may be performing, for up to 30 hours on a pair of AAs.

A quick reminder of how Quirky works. The design of a new product is presented to the community, and is honed by committee. This sounds terrible, but almost always turns out well. Pre-orders are then gathered until the threshold is met and the production lines rumble into life. The Mantis will cost you $30 ($27 right now) and needs 1,500 orders to flip the switch at the factory. What are you waiting for?

Mantis product page [Quirky. Thanks, Tiffany!]

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Dodocase’s Bookback Covers iPad in Leathery Skin

Dodocase’s Bookback skin for the iPad

On of my biggest complaints in yesterday’s iPad 2 wish-list was that the back of the current iPad is just too slippery. It never feels secure in the hand, and if you tuck it under your arm or prop it on the arm of a couch, you’re looking at imminent disaster.

And as if by magic, today I got a pitch from the Dodo people, behind the famous Moleskine-like Dodocase for the iPad. The new product is a simple rear skin for the iPad, and also the iPhone, which is made from the exact same leather-like material that covers the Dodocase itself.

The skins are called Bookbacks, and come as self adhesive, reusable skins, debossed with a name and logo in black or red. They only offer scratch protection for the aluminum rear panel — you’ll need a proper case if you plan to sling your iPad in a bag — but for improving the feel and grippiness of the iPad, the Bookbacks look ideal.

They’re not too pricy, either. The iPad version is $20, and the little iPhone model is just $9.

Bookback product page [Dodocase. Thanks, Abby!]

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MacDec Tea-Tray Holds Keyboard and Trackpad

Thodio, maker of the Furby-like portable iBox speaker, will now sell you a €100 tea-tray customized to hold an Apple keyboard and trackpad. The MacDec trays, in wood ($138) or acrylic ($165), are carved or machined with hollows that hold the keyboard and pad in a laptop-style T-shape, for use on the lap or the desk. They also use neodymium magnets to keep the peripherals in place, although last time I looked, aluminum wasn’t a material that stuck to magnets.

It’s a fairly useful product, if expensive, but the purpose of this post is to wonder why these things exist. The one obvious use case is the media-center Mac, but how many of those are there really?

There has been a recent flurry of these holders, in the T-shape seen here and also in a more usual side-by-side configuration (Twelve South’s MagicWand), so somebody sees this as a popular market. I prefer the laptop layout, as I don’t have to move my hand to control a cursor. I also find it incredibly comfortable to type with the tiny Apple aluminum keyboard on my lap whilst in a easy chair or on the floor, sending text to my iPad. But so far, for computer use at least, these various products don’t quite work, however well made they may be.

Any ideas? I have no answer, other than that this is a non-problem that doesn’t need to be sold. Maybe there are a ton of media-center Macs out there after all? Suggestions, if you have them, in the comments.

MacDec product page [Thodio]

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$750 Bike ‘Computer’ Little More Than an iPhone Case

The trouble with using your iPhone as a bike computer is that it is vulnerable to rain, salty road spray and even the occasional unexpected drop onto the asphalt. What you need is a waterproof and shock-resistant mount so your phone survives long enough to call an ambulance when you fall off yourself.

That mount is the iBike Dash. It’s a case and computer in one, and like many bike accessories, it has a price that bears almost no relation to what you get. There are two models. The plain Dash encases your iPhone (3, 3GS or 4) and allows it to hook up to a variety of (optional) inputs: heart rate monitor, cadence sensor, and also speed input from a magnet on the wheel. The Dash + Power adds a power meter and actually includes the sensors in the box. The models cost $300 and $750, respectively.

The oddest part of the product page is that it keeps touting the touch-screen, the GPS and the powerful computer inside. It takes some digging to find out that these are all supplied by your phone.

The cases also come with a companion app, called iBike (free in the app store). It gives GPS tracking, as well as access to all the metering functions of the iBike units. It’s not the prettiest cycling computer app out there, but it looks like it does the job, and offers lots of customization.

But really, it comes down to the ridiculous prices of those waterproof bike mounts. Sure, they offer a connection between phone and sensors, but is an interface dongle really worth $300, let alone $750?

iBike Dash [iBike Sports]

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The Pocket Stand, an iPad Stand and Amplifier

The Pocket Stand x 2. Photo: Mike Paek

Another day, another awesome Kickstarter project. This time, the proposal up on the America’s Next Top Gadget stage is the Pocket Stand, a tiny support and amplifier for the iPad.

The stand is a tiny, clip-on widget that will hold the iPad in the three familiar positions: Upright in horizontal and vertical orientations, and down on the desk with a tilt for easy typing. This is the same as any number of other products.

The gimmick here is the amplifier, courtesy of a passive horn speaker built into the body of the stand. It takes the iPad’s puny output and guides it through an acoustic cavity, letting it relax, stretch and decompress. At the other end, the sound emerges refreshed and 7-10dB louder. A video shows the difference.

The design, by Mike Paek and Sam Chan, has been through many 3D printed prototypes to hone and tune the sound. Amazingly, the result looks a lot like a human ear. The Pocket Stand is made of a skid-proof “rubber-like” polymer, and will be injection molded. It will cost $20.

As ever with Kickstarter, you need to pledge some money to get the project started, and you’ll be charged only if it reaches its $15,000 goal.

I like this widget, but what really sold me on this pitch is the video, embedded at the top of this post. It’s the first Kickstarter video I have seen with outtakes included at the end. Nice touch.

The Pocket Stand – iPad Amplifier & Stand [Kickstarter. Thanks, Mike!]


Artists Keep Hands Clean with Tablet-Friendly Brush Stylus

Beret-wearing, work shy layabout “artists” rejoice! Now you can swap expansive and messy paint and canvas for an expensive and tidy iPad and brush-shaped stylus. Well, the iPad part is expensive. The Nomad brush stylus is just $24, or around the same price as a rubber, nubbin-tipped pen stylus.

As an object, the brush is beautiful. A walnut and carbon shaft gives way to a brush made with a mixture of synthetic and natural fibers, and the bristles seem to have been shortened since we saw the prototype last month. The Nomad also has specs — or at least as many specs as a brush can have. It weighs 0.2 ounces, or 5.7 grams, and measures 7.5 inches long by a quarter of an inch wide, or 19 x 0.6 centimeters.

Like any capacitive touch-screen stylus, it requires no power, as it is merely a replacement for your finger. And the bristles won’t change the on-screen paint at all — that’s taken care of by software. But given how much easier my aluminum Alupen stylus makes drawing and writing, just the feel of the Nomad alone should be worth the cash. The brush will work with any tablet or phone with a capacitive screen.

Nomad brush product page [Nomad Brush. Thanks, anonymous Nomad person!]

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500mm iPhone Lens for Grungy Close-Ups

Given that a cellphone case can easily run to $35, the iPhone Telephoto Lens is something of a bargain, combining as it does both a long, long lens, a case to hang it on, a mini-tripod to keep things steady, and a micro-fiber cloth to polish everything up.

It works like this: You slip the iPhone into the case (where it can be left, should you be a case kind of person) and then clip the lens on, over the iPhone’s existing lens-hole. Photojojo, which sell the kit, says that it gives the equivalent view of a 500mm lens on a 35mm camera.

Focus is manual — yes, there’s actually a focus ring. And while the quality isn’t great (you can check the sample shots on the product page), it’s a lot better than you’d get from a digital zoom. In fact, considering that almost every iPhone photo these days is destined for a thorough grungifying in either Instagram or Hipstamatic, the soft, not-so-sharp images should be perfect.

Also: Amazing for peeping-toms.

The iPhone Telephoto Lens kit is, as I said, $35, and comes in two models, one for iPhone 3 and one for iPhone 4.

The iPhone Telephoto Lens product page [Photojojo]

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Tiny Plug-In WALdok Turns iPods Into Boomboxes

It seems like every time I see cool new gadget these days, I click the link and end up at Kickstarter. Is it really possible that individuals are coming up with better ideas, and getting them to the market faster, than big corporations with big R^D budgets? It seems so.

Today on the Gadget Lab Kickstarter Showcase is the WALdok. As a combination of plug-in charger, speaker and iDevice dock, it was impossible that I not write about it. So here goes:

The WALdok is a speaker that plugs straight into the wall. Up on top is a 40-pin dock connector, so the iPod or iPhone can charge as it plays you its sweet music. This also powers the speaker, which consists of a big 40mm driver and a bass chamber behind it.

While it works with any dock-connected iDevice, it looks coolest with the latest Nano, turning nit into the world’s smallest (and cutest) boom-box. The WALdok, by Hern Kim, is designed to be small but still offer a better sound than the tinny alternatives on the market.

The Kickstarter goal is $30,000, and Kim is up to $4,000 already. If you want a WALdok, you’l need to throw in a minimum of $59.

WALdok [Kickstarter]

WALdok product page [WALdok]

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New Apple Peel Case Makes iPod Look Like iPhone 4

Remember the Peel? It’s a case for the iPod Touch which adds a vibrator, mic, speaker and cell-radio, turning the iPod into a phone. No? Don’t worry. You may have blanked it from your memory, your eyes and brain scarred by its utilitarian ugliness. The Peel looked like it was carved an old truck tire by a Linux UI designer with the tremors.

Enter Peel v2 a product that could have come out of Apple’s own design lab. In fact it sort of did: The new Peel is a complete rip-off of the iPhone 4, right down to volume buttons on the side.

It’s a little thicker than the iPhone 4, and the teaser on Peel-maker Yosion’s site doesn’t yet state which iPod Touch the case will fit. Still, if you are going to go for this clunky solution instead of just buying a phone already, then at least you won’t look like you’re holding a spare auto-part up to your ear when you use it.

Price and availability, along with almost everything else, remains undisclosed.

Latest pictures apple II 520 [Yosion]

Photos of Peel 2 [Yoison forum via Mobile Mag. Thanks, Fabrizio!]

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