Ears-On With V-Moda Remix Remote Headphones

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V-Moda’s cellphone-compatible earbuds annoyed me the second I squeezed them into my ear canals. Then, bit by bit, they grew on me, until now they’re the favorite set of headphones I’ve been testing in Gadget Lab’s Spanish bureau.

The Remix Remotes are noise-isolating earbuds, the kind that cut down on external sound by sealing your ears with their silicone O-rings. They also have the three-button inline remote that’s getting more common, and include a microphone in the torpedo shaped pod. Paired with iPods and iPhones, you can make calls, voice-control your device, skip, play, pause and change volume. The specs are good, and the product is well-made. So what was the problem?

First, I have never liked this style of earbud. Drilling the silicon plugs into your ears until you gag is uncomfortable and inconvenient. Next was the boom that accompanies such a tight fit, with every touch of the cable sending shockwaves deep into my cochlea. Third, the controller, while easy to use, always seemed to disappear down my shirt front. It might not be fair to blame all this on the earbuds, but even so, as the week wore on, these annoyances disappeared, one by one.

First, V-Moda puts an extra-large set of silicon plugs in the kit. Once I switched to these, the buds became comfy, and I didn’t need to drive them into my brain to keep them in place. When this was fixed, the boom seemed to disappear, too, and this (along with the disappearing remote) was fixed by a small clip that hooks the cable to a collar. This is, sadly, detachable, and I detached it permanently somewhere in the city, never to be found again.

The remote itself sits on the center cord, where it splits off to the ears. If you’re used to the Apple ‘buds that put the switch on the right cord by your cheek, the fumbling to find this one can be off-putting. You get used to it, though, and the advantage is that the little torpedo is always in the same place, regardless of which way you wear the ‘buds.

Speaking of right and left, it is almost impossible to tell which is which. L and R are engraved in tiny lettering under the silicon covers. V-Moda does give you two sets of plugs, in gray and in black. Use one of each and you have color-coded earphones.

A couple more points: The metal construction doesn’t drag on your ears, and the Kevlar-reinforced cables feel pretty strong. The plug itself, covered in gold, has the cable angled at 45 degrees, which is nothing new. What I really like, though, is the metal stud on the back. This lets you push the plug in without pressing on any essential parts.

On to the sound. The Remix Remotes don’t sound as good as similarly-priced over-the-head phones, but that’s sort of not the point. With their solid construction, tangle-resistant wires, a handy remote and comfortable ‘buds, these are the headphones you’ll usually take out with you. They sound way better than Apple’s stock earbuds, too, with a decent attempt at making a stereo picture and full tones for the human voice (they’re great for podcast listening). If you want to listen to lossless jazz recordings, these aren’t for you. If you want something (fairly) affordable that you’ll use, and that will last awhile, then go ahead. You won’t be wowed, nor will you be disappointed. $100.

Remix Remote [V-Moda]


Make It: iPhone Guitar Connection Kit

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Soon after yesterday’s post on the PRS Guitarbud, an apparently noisy, badly made cable for connecting your guitar to your iPhone, I got a mail from Gadget Lab reader Paul Stidworthy. Paul makes RiotFX, a $5 “multi-effects processor app” for the iPhone, and is concerned that people using his application get the best sound possible. To this end, he has posted a guide to making your own cable. It may not be cheaper than the PRS cable, but it should be a lot better, and you may find you have almost everything you need lying around the house.

First, you need a cable that splits a jack to three RCA phono plugs. It needs to have the ground on the right ring of the jack, so the easiest thing to do is buy a good-quality iPod AV cable. Then you put on an RCA-to-mono jack adapter (for the guitar) and an RCA-to-female-minijack adapter for the headphones. If you like, you can stop there, and you’ll have something that will work great for around $10 to $15. Or you can fancy things up a little more with an impedance matcher. Paul explains:

Using an impedance matcher with your cable has a number of benefits. It presents the guitar with a higher impedance load than the iPhone does, which improves the sound and makes the tone and volume pots behave better (for example, you might notice that if you don’t use an impedance matcher, adjusting the tone pot has little effect).

It also isolates the guitar circuit from the iPhone input – the iPhone is sensitive to changes in the DC resistance of the circuit, and using an impedance matcher eliminates these problems.

In this case, you’ll be out around £25 ($37) for parts, but you’ll have the best setup you could get. Assembly is dead simple, involving daisy-chaining the pieces together (Paul has a full guide up on the RiotFX site). Paul recommends doing things this way as it “will give you a much better experience than the Guitarbud” He gives a few pointers to good brands to use, and you can pick up the RiotFX software to test your cable out for $5.

Building a Guitar Cable for your iPhone and iPod Touch [Riotmode. Thanks, Paul!]

RiotFX [Riotmode]

RiotFX [iTunes]


MiFi Update Adds Movie and Music Streaming

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Today Novatel, the people behind the miraculous little MiFi personal hotspot, announced Novadrive, a cloud storage service for MiFi owners. Boring. What it didn’t announce is way better: an update to the MiFi which adds media streaming to the iPod Touch or any other connected device.

The update, demoed at the CTIA show and which will be available for many current MiFi models, lets users stream music and movies over Wi-Fi via the DLNA (Digital Living Network Alliance) protocol to any DLNA-equipped device, including TV-sets. This combines with a not often mentioned feature of the MiFi, its microSD card slot. Load up a 32GB card with movies and media and you have just doubled the capacity of your iPhone, and as the MiFi acts as a USB mass storage device when plugged into a computer, even iTunes-haters can load it up.

The MiFi gets better and better, not just for connectivity but for extra tweaks like this. And with the launch of the Wi-Fi-only iPad in little over a week, having your own internet connection is starting to look quite attractive.

Next-Gen MiFis Stream Videos and Music to iPhone and iPod Touch [Laptop Mag]

See Also:


Guitarbud Hooks Axe to iPhone

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The Guitarbud from PRS is little more than a cable that takes the output from the jack of an electric guitar and splits it to headphones and an iPhone. But this simple accessory, if done right, could offer almost endless possibilities for guitarists.

It all depends on which app you pump the sound into. The built-in voice-memo recorder will do if all you want is to record your music and mail it off to friends, but there turns out to be a slew of purpose-made guitar apps in the iTunes Store, from multi-track recorders to PRS’ own JamAmp software which lets you play along, via an amp-simulator, with backing tracks. In short, if you are a guitarist and you have an iPhone, you should probably have something like a Guitarbud.

Something like the Guitarbud, but not the actual Guitarbud itself. The problem start with the price: $30 for a splitter cable is clearly too much. Then there is the quality. Buyer reviews over at the Musician’s Friend store are almost unanimously bad, citing poor build quality (”it feels like it’s the $2 cord that you get when you buy a cheap guitar package”), crackling, non-shielded audio and problems getting anything other than a weak signal into the phone.

It’s a shame, as the possibilities are exciting, especially with the added power and size of the upcoming iPad. Based on the reviews, we’d hold off right now, and maybe even concoct our own solution from better hardware. But the idea of this little widget is enough to make me think about taking up the guitar again.

Guitarbud [PRS via Mac OSx86]

See Also:


EcoCHARGE Wall-Wart: Slim On Power, Slim On Looks

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I’ll admit it: I’m obsessed with power cables and wall-warts of all kinds. Maybe its because nobody made a good one yet, so nowhere can I buy a power-brick that will fit neatly into a strip without crowding out others, that will charge USB devices and switch off when it isn’t needed. I shall keep looking until I find it.

The EcoCHARGE gets pretty close. Its narrow body slots in between bigger, greedier bricks and its tail trails away to either a mini or micro USB plug. A hatch on the block itself swings aside to allow a full-sized USB cable to be plugged in. The “Eco” part of the name comes from the device’s low power draw, and the fact that it switches off completely once charging has done, eliminating vampire draw like AT&T’s Zero Charger. Well, almost. Weirdly, the indicator LED appears to activate when the unit is *not* charging: “When the LED is off, the EcoCHARGE is active”. Still, it wins by pulling one tenth the power of an Energy Star compliant charger.

The EcoCHARGE costs $30 for both mini or micro USB flavors, with an iPhone/iPod version coming in April. Given that you can just plug your iPhone into the USB port, this future iPhone-specific version seems less useful.

EcoCHARGE [Ventev. Thanks, Anna!]


Gluvi: A $10 Condom for Remote Controls

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We get both weird and wonderful submissions to our Gadget Lab tips hotline, all of which we enjoy. Then we get something like the Gluvi, and it makes me doubt not just the world of gadgets, but the future of humanity itself. The Gluvi is a small plastic bag into which you slip a remote control. It costs $10, and would seem to be an overpriced cover to protect the remote from spills. It isn’t. Instead, it is designed to protect you, the user, from dirty, unhygienic sticks of plastic.

It works like this: You are Howard Hughes, so scared of germs around you that you use tissues to pick up anything. Given your various paranoias, it is inexplicable that you visit a hotel, but you do so anyway. When you arrive, it strikes you that “most hotels do not require their maids to clean TV remotes” and that you could be exposed to “diseases found on hotel remotes such as the H1N1 virus, cold virus, herpes, hepititas [sic], etc.” (I swear I am not making this up).

But you came prepared. You pull out the prophylactic (or “Portable Sanitary Solution”) which is “easy to use, slip on and off” and cover the foul, disease-ridden device. But what of the Gluvi itself? Surely that, too, will get dirty as you travel? No matter. The website suggests you use solvents.

Unbelievably, it gets worse. What do you think this overpriced freezer-bag might be made of? If you guessed “easy grip, stylish yoga inspired reflexology material”, you would be, inevitably, correct.

And on: There are two models available. The Hotel Gluvi for travelers we already covered, and the Custom Gluvi, “designed to fit your home cable TV remotes” and protect the actual device from gunk. Yes, we finally get to the part where I make the joke about keeping the remote clean whilst watching “late night” movies. And to finish, there is actually a recommended by link on the store page. Who is this benevolent endorser? Amazingly, it’s the Working Mother blog.

Gluvi Remote Protector [Gluvi. Thanks, Andrea!]


Hermaphrodite USB Cords Stack to Infinity

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Buying USB cables is like buying plastic shopping bags: both normally come free with a purchase (and both end up stuffed into the back of a cupboard or drawer). But Gonglue Jiang’s USB cable concept design would actually get me to part with some cash.

The cables solve the problem of overloaded USB ports without resorting to a messy hub. Each plug is both male and female, letting it both give and receive USB data and power. The hermaphroditic cords can be daisy-chained, letting you stack several plugs together for some hot multiple gadget-on-port action.

The only limit we see is that of power, just the same as when you use a non-powered hub to hook up too many devices to one port. Other than that, this design is so good we’d like to see it incorporated into every USB cable out there. That way we could go back to not paying for them.

Running Out Of USB Ports? [Yanko]


Jill-e Clutch Bag: Tote Your Compact Camera in Style

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Jill-e makes camera bags for girls. Or rather, it makes camera bags that aren’t the dorky nylon utility packs everybody else makes. The bags combine designer-purse style looks (patent leather, chain straps and fancy detailing) with a practical, padded interior. The triple advantage is that the ladies can have a bag that goes with their outfit, protects their gear and doesn’t attract the eyes of a bag-snatcher.

The latest bag is this clutch, a red leather purse with a silky interior to keep compact cameras comfy. The snap-shut clutch has adjustable pads inside to fit your camera, and the production version, due in the Summer, will have credit-card slots inside the top section. Best of all, it comes in at a distinctly camera-pouch price, not a designer handbag price: $25. And boys, if you’re jealous, don’t be. Jill-e also makes the Jack line for the stylish gentleman about town.

Jill-e Clutch [Photography Bay]

Photo credit [Photography Bay]


Simplest and Best? The MoviePeg iPhone Stand

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This is the MoviePeg, and it’s the simplest gadget you’ll see this week, and possibly, like, ever. The MoviePeg is no more than a little plastic rectangle with a notch cut from one side. This notch matches the thickness and radius of your iPhone’s edge, and forms a snug stand.

We love it. You can use it as a kind of tripod to keep the iPhone completely vertical for photos, or prop the phone at almost any angle both in portrait and landscape mode, for watching movies, reading, turning the phone into an alarm clock, pretty much anything that doesn’t require laying the iPhone on its back.

Could you make your own? Sure, but at £5 (it’s made in the UK) or around $10 shipped to the US, why bother? I was filling out my credit card details before I remembered I don’t have an iPhone (seriously), so I hope an iPod Touch version comes soon.

Simple, effective and colorful. Did we mention the colors? Holy spectrum! I’ll take the pink one.

MoviePeg [Movie Peg via ]


Idapt Gadget Dock Charges Almost Anything

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Idapt’s new i4 is a charging dock for pretty much all of your gadgets. Like the company’s previous stations, the dock reduces cable-clutter, but this time it does it in shiny, piano-black style.

The hot-looking dock plugs into the mains and sits on your desk or night-stand. In the top are three virgin sockets, into which you can insert various “tips”. These are analogous to the dock inserts in Apple’s universal dock, only they also carry circuitry and connectors for various devices. If you have a vanilla USB-powered gadget, there’s a hole for that, too, hidden down at the side.

The tips fit most kinds of cellphone, the Nintendo DS, the PSP, the iPhone, all sizes of USB and one is even a charger for AA and AAA batteries. It even has an off-switch so you don’t have to yank the cord from the wall. The only problem might be the price. At $60, the i4 isn’t bad, but you’ll need to buy tips, either at around $15 each or in packs which start at $40 for 4.

The i4 also comes in white, available in May.

IDAPT Unveils i4 Universal Charging Solution [Max Borges. Thanks, Valerie!]

Idapt store [Idapt]