Archie’s Grobag, Like a Bag-of-Holding For Bikes

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The “Rosie” hip-pouch from Archie’s Grobags might be the most utility-dense bikers’ bag we have yet seen. Archie is a London-based fixed-gear rider as well as a cycle-bag designer (and sewer, we believe). And this bag shows the fixsters’ obsession with hanging nothing from either the frame or the rider’s body – it lets you carry just about everything you’d need for a day out.

Once looped onto your belt, you can load up the inside with cellphone, cash, a spare tube, tire levers, a multi-tool and any other (small and thin) items. On the outside you get a pair of Velcro loops for a pump and another couple of webbing straps on which to hang your lock (although the U-lock in the picture looks like one of those awful, lightweight and easy-to-break aluminum kinds). There’s even a place to clip a rear light, keeping one more thing off the frame.

The bags are £45 (around $70) each. Archie’s site is down right now, but you can check out the full set of photos at Pedal Consumption.

Product page [Archie’s Grobags via Pedal Consumption]

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Magnet Powered Bike Lamps Light Up the Night

At the risk of trading in national stereotypes, pretty much all you need to know about the efficiency of the Magtenlight is that it comes from Germany, the most efficient country in the world (except for, ironically, the inefficient capital Berlin). This efficiency seems to carry over to magnet-powered bicycle lamps.

The Magtenlight works like the Reelight, which we have previously covered. Instead of batteries or a dynamo, the lights both use spoke-mounted magnets which generate electricity as they pass the lamps themselves. Unlike the Reelight, the Magtenlight actually looks bright enough, and instead of sitting down on the hub where it is hard to see, the LED part of the Magtenlight is connected by a cable and can be clamped up high.

The extra brightness comes from having enough magnets. While the Reelight comes with a stingy two per wheel, the Magtenlight has 32. These are distributed across four segments which form a complete ring, giving constant power. Magtenlight says the lights give out 15 Lux. The Reelight site gives no rating, but a peek at the Magtenlight video tells us that these lights are way brighter than the Reelights I have on my bike.

A full set of front and back lights isn’t cheap at $86, but you’ll never have to buy batteries, or even recharge them, ever again.

Product page [Magtenlight. Thanks, Michael!]

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IPod Touch 3G Cases Already On Sale

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We might like to assume that iPod case manufacturers exist solely to tip us off to new iPod designs, but they actually make cases for people to buy. And sometimes their enthusiasm spills over into the real world. This armband and case combo for the 3rd generation iPod Touch was spotted in a Best Buy in Texas, complete with a peep-hole for the as yet non-existent camera

While the drip of leaked shots before an Apple event gives us a glimpse of the future, this is the first time we recall that a case has shipped before the iPod itself. It is especially good fun as the company that makes it isn’t some backwater outfit but DLO, an iPod manufacturer whose work has been seen on Gadget Lab many times before (although this case doesn’t yet appear on the DLO site.)

We’re pretty certain that Apple will release the updated, camera-totin’ Touch pretty soon. Perhaps not before Christmas, but certainly within a few months.

Leaked 3rd Gen iPod Touch Cases (with Camera Holes) For Sale in U.S. [Mac Rumors]


Rumor: Apple to Ship Multitouch Mice With New iMacs Soon

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Apple may soon introduce a mouse featuring multitouch technology, like that seen in its iPhones, iPods and MacBook trackpads.

Sporting a touch-sensitive housing, the new mouse will do away with the roller ball on the current Mighty Mouse (pictured above), sources told AppleInsider. The rumored multitouch mouse might apply the inertia feedback seen in iPods and iPhones, whereas scrolling speed accelerates or decelerates in response to how the user touches the surface.

Presumably an Apple multitouch mouse would function similarly to the unibody MacBook trackpads, which detect multitouch gestures. On new MacBooks, tapping the trackpad with two fingers triggers a right-click function, for example; this rumored multitouch mouse might copy this behavior. Also, for a mouse, we would expect a multitouch gesture to replace scrolling in different directions, and perhaps there will be special gestures that trigger Exposé commands as well.

Apple’s new mouse may be released with new iMacs, AppleInsider’s sources said. The popular iMac desktops were last refreshed in March, and Apple typically upgrades them every seven months. That would suggest new iMacs — perhaps packaged with multitouch mice — will hit stores very soon.

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Photo: stopthegears/Flickr


Ears-On with iFrogz Timbre Earbuds and Microphone

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We’ve been playing with (and listening to) iFrogz $50 Timbre headphones for a few weeks now. The earbud-style cans come with an in-line mic and switch which lets you make calls on the iPhone and Blackberry, and to remote control the iPhone and several iPod models. The short form: They do the job, but build quality is poor and they’re unlikely to last even as long as the Apple-supplied ‘buds that come in the box.

The Timbre phones are made of wood, and this is supposed to give them a warm, full sound. It doesn’t. Even after some use to wear them in, the earbuds sound harsh and the music seems to rush along. This last might sound odd, but somehow speakers and headphones can affect the timing and feel of music, and the Timbres make every track sound like it can’t wait to finish.

These wooden cases cause another problem, too. Barely minutes into using them, the rubber grommets which guide the cables into the buds had come loose. On both sides. You can push them back in but it is a fix that lasts minutes at best, so I gave up. I expect the joints inside to come loose pretty soon.

The other end of the bud is a little better. I can never find in-canal earbuds that fit me — they either fall out or make me gag as they nestle against my eardrum. The answer appears to let your ear-holes wax up a bit and then the rubber coated buds slide in and stick. Gross, but the only way I could get a fit, even with the different-sized grommets that come in the box.

Further down the wire we come to the blob of a control, housed in rubber with a pinhole for the mic. There is a switch in there which will play, pause, skip tracks and answer phone-calls. It works the same way as the Apple earbuds, and you’ll have to study some Morse-code to use them (this is Apple’s fault, of course, not iFrogz’). The switch lacks a volume control, sadly, which means pulling your iPod out of your pocket to turn things up or down.

After hearing the low-volume, low quality output of the headphones, I wasn’t expecting much from the mic, but it actually sounds great. A test Skype call to the Lady showed them to be loud and clear, and she could hear me very well. A test recording using the iPod Touch’s Voice Memo application had led me to think that the recording was a little quiet, but ironically it recorded great — it was just the playback that was bad.

A mixed result. If the headphones hadn’t fallen apart so readily, and if they didn’t make the music sound like you were listening through a telephone, they might be worth the $50. As it is, only the microphone is worth recommending.

Product page [iFrogz]


GPS Add-On Case For iPod Touch

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The iPod Touch is a great device, especially for those who don’t want to drop $70-plus per month on a cellphone contract. Sure, it still doesn’t have a camera, but most of us have a camera anyway, whether a proper point and shoot or a terrible cellphone-cam. The same can’t be said about GPS. If only there were a way to add GPS to the iPod Touch…

Wait. There is! The “GPS Navigation & Battery Cradle for iPod Touch” is a slim case which slides onto the Touch and gives it a GPS unit. The best part is that it not only works with the mapping application from the unit’s maker, Dual Electronics (free with the cradle), but will provide GPS information to any application, meaning that all those cycle-computer apps you were itching to try out will now work.

The unit itself also contains a battery to save on iPod power-drain, and a bigger speaker so you can actually hear turn-by-turn directions. It even comes with a car mount and cigarette-lighter power cable in the box. In fact, the only thing missing right now is the price: while the shipping date – November – has been decided, the cost has not.

So far, we’re totally digging the deep hardware hooks put into the iPhone OS v.3, and the fact that it allows this kind of add-on. When Apple finally adds a camera to the Touch, and this GPS unit perhaps also gets a compass, it’ll truly be a phone-less iPhone.

Company page [Dual. Thanks, Joanna!]


Official: TomTom iPhone Car-Kit Will Cost $120, Hardware Only

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After several smoke-signals went up across the internet, and false claims that the hardware price would include the software, TomTom’s iPhone GPS unit has finally got an official price: $120, or €100, plus another $100 for the software:

TomTom announces today that the TomTom car kit for the iPhone will have a recommended retail price of EUR 99.99 or USD 119.95.

The TomTom car kit will be available this October and will be sold separately from the TomTom app. It will be compatible with the iPhone 2G, 3G and 3GS.

And that’s it. We still don’t know when the GPS-boosting box will actually show up in stores, but at least we can budget for it now. And we think that this will be the future for GPS devices, especially as more and more phones are shipping with GPS built-in. After all, who takes two boxes into the car when you can get away with just one?

Press release [TomTom]

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Tapstick Case Adds Buttons to Buttonless iPod Shuffle

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We love Apple’s minimalist ethic, and usually it means not just cleaner lines, but an easier-to-use gadget, like the iPhone. But sometimes Apple just goes too far. Exhibit A. The third-gen iPod Shuffle. Its buttonless design means that you have to either use Apple’s own earbuds or search out a pair of ultra-rare third-party headphones. Even then, you’ll need to learn the Shuffle’s proprietary version of Morse Code to tap out coded instructions, again all with a single button.

Which brings us to a product from Scosche, the splashproof Tapstick. It is a case for the Shuffle which adds buttons. This should be ridiculous, and in another universe we would rightly poke fun, but the fact is that Apple’s insane simplification makes this a genuinely useful stick of plastic. The buttons mimic those on the Shuffle’s ‘buds, so you’ll still have to learn the tappity-tap instructions, but one you have the case you can buy any headphones you like.

Better, the diminutive size of the Shuffle means that even when encased in polycarbonate, it is still tiny. It’ll cost you $30, or the same as a pair of replacement Apple earbuds.

Product page [Scosche. Thanks, Mark!]


Hips-On With Fabric Horse Superhero Utility Belt

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Before we start this review, I want to say two things. One, I bought this utility belt right after writing about it at the beginning of August. I liked it then, and I like it now that I have used it. While there are a few niggles, this will be less of a review and more of a how-to. Second, I know that this color scheme makes it look like a carpenter’s tool-belt. Thanks to everyone who keeps pointing that out.

The belt is made for cyclists, and every part of the design shows this. The most obvious is the U-Lock holder on the back, which fits a Kryptonite Evo Mini, although as the belts are made to order you can specify another size. The Superhero is the full-sized nerd-belt (there is also a half-belt with less pockets), and is made from nylon or canvas sections mounted onto an old car seatbelt (we love the idea of dead cars resurrected as bike accessories). The whole thing is secured by Velcro, letting you adjust the size to fit over different clothes very quickly.

The Velcro feels odd at first. Because you can load up the Superhero with so much weight, it’s a little nerve-wracking not to have a proper clasp. In practice, the long wide strips are more than equal to a full load, and better, there is no buckle to dig into you.

So, the build-quality is fine, and worth the $120. What you all want to know is how does it work, and what do all those hooks and pockets do? I shall tell you.


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At the back, you have the aforementioned lock-holster. If you’re the type that can’t spoil the lines of your bike with a lock-bracket, the holster is the most comfortable way to carry your lock. It slides in and out with a shove and a tug, and when you’re on the bike you can’t feel it. The rear position means that it often feels as if it might catch on the seat, but in practice mine never has.

Next around are a pair of elastic loops. I haven’t worked out a use for these yet (they’d hold a wrench, but that will fit elsewhere and be less dangly), so suggestions are welcome. Alongside these loops is a metal hook, onto which you can clip keys. One advantage of a belt for carrying your gear is that, when seated, it doesn’t jiggle much and you don’t feel any weight. This means the keys are silent on the bike, although you’ll jangle like a spinster kindergarten teacher’s ears when you start walking.

Then we come to the first pocket, which sits just behind the right hip, and can be left gaping open to carry a can of beer or cocktail shaker, or closed with a press-stud. This model is the Relaxed Superhero – Rust, which is made from waxed canvas and is floppier than the nylon, and also unpadded. Other belts have a zipper here. The open hole also works great for holding gloves or a cap, or anything you might toss in there.

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Next to this is a Velcro-closing pocket that will fit a multi-tool or a cellphone. In fact, it’ll fit a cellphone, an iPod Touch and an iPod Nano, all at once. Being at the front right, it’s very easy to get to, even while riding. Finally, for this side at least, we get to the money pocket, which will hold a few notes and coins. The Superhero effectively closes off your pants pockets, so this is useful, if a little bit of a squeeze for the fingers. Because this pocket is sewn top and bottom, there is also space to squeeze an iPod Nano in behind it.

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On the other side is a solitary pocket, but it makes up for its rarity with size. The zippered pouch looks like a whole fanny-pack on its own, and can fit a lot of gear inside. This could be a home for your toolkit: it’ll hold an inner-tube, multi-tool, 15mm wrench, patch kit, as well as a wallet. There’s also a small patch pocket at the back, where you could slide credit cards, a slim phone or an iPod, or cash money. You’d also get a mini-pump in here, but you don’t need to as right next door is a…

Pump loop. This is simply two pieces of Velcro that will wrap and secure a pump, and it is probably the dorkiest feature of all. It is also damn useful, as you don’t have to squeeze an awkward tube in anywhere else.

That’s it. As you can see, it looks great on, once you’ve got past the utilitarian construction-site aesthetic. I have even worn it off the bike, and it drew a mixture of looks, from curiosity to pity. And that was from people I saw walking towards me: God knows what the people behind me thought when they saw a bike pump hanging from my butt.

Product page [Fabric Horse]

Photos: Charlie Sorrel
Model: The Lady
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Wacom Tablets Get Multi-Touch, Gestures

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Input tablet maker Wacom has just updated its Bamboo line to accept multi-touch gestures from fingers as well as the more traditional pressure-sensitive pen. There are three main models — pen only, touch-only, and one with everything.

If you have used a recent MacBook or an iPhone, then you’ll instantly be at home. Pinch to zoom, double-finger swipes and right-clicking are supported, as are rotate and scroll. You still get the pen in most of the boxes, along with a set of customizable hard keys.

For the tech-curious, the new tablets have 512 pressure levels in the pen tip and the active area of the tablet is 5.8 x 3.6 inches, and all lose the in-pack mouse (for obvious reasons). The Touch and the Pen models are both $70, and the Pen & Touch is $100. Also, if you were thinking of buying Photoshop Elements 7 for the same price, get a tablet instead — Elements comes in the box.

Product page [Wacom]

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