Vaporware – How Machines Will Always Disappoint Us

There’s a principle in psychology that says promising something and then taking it away is a bigger disappointment than not knowing about it in the first place. Vaporware is the epitome of this for gadgetheads.

This Gear Diary diary on the Keyport brought back feelings of anger and frustration. If you don’t remember, the Keyport was a device that took in six of your keys—custom made—and allowed you to individually *snickt* them out like a switchblade or Swiss Army Knife. Fantastic idea; shit execution.

The company’s been showing off their “product” since 2007, and even showed pictures and video of the manufacturing process—a process that’s so sophisticated they’re able to charge $300 for a set. What did they do with all those $300 pre-orders? Not delivering a product, that’s what. In fact, they refunded people’s money in 2008, but then didn’t get around to returning their keys. Why? We have no idea. After Gear Diary’s post went up, a Keyport rep got ahold of him and promised that his keys would be returned and that actual products would be shipping some time between now and the heat death of the universe. Sounds doubtful.

But that’s not the only disappointment we’ve had in the last few years. There was the Palm Foleo, which was actually an interesting idea (an Netbook-like device that connected to your Palm) that may have been slightly too early for its time. It came before the Netbook craze, and died an unseemly death from people who wanted no part of it and shamed Palm into ditching its development. But what of the people who did? The Pre doesn’t have enough drying power to soak up those tears, but might be a better choice, market-wise, in the end.

Then there are the things that have been vaporware so much that people stopped caring. Was anybody actually surprised that Duke Nukem Forever was canned because the company ran out of money before their employees were able to switch rendering engines yet another time? Saddened, yes, but surprised? And how about the Phantom game console? They finally managed to deliver the keyboard + mouse part of their product, and even that was like pushing a mattress through a moonroof.

Are we conditioned, as tech lovers, to be accustomed to being let down? Did we care that the $10 Indian laptop turned out to be just something stupid? Or that the $100 laptop idea brought up years ago still hasn’t materialized? Or how about a decently-powered laptop that will let you get eight hours of work done? Where’s that?

I think we’re just so used to our gadgets disappointing us that we’ll take what we can get. We don’t really care that Microsoft hasn’t gotten around to placing all those promised features of Longhorn—which was stripped down to become Vista—into Windows 7. We’re just happy they’re getting the OS delivered on time. On time! We’re grading one of the world’s largest software companies on a scale we use to grade Kindergarteners.

Machines Behaving Deadly: A week exploring the sometimes difficult relationship between man and technology.

HP Recalls Notebooks with Overheating Batteries

Hewlett-Packard and its Compaq division said Thursday that the company would recall approximately 70,000 notebook PCs because of a risk that the battery could overheat.

Two reports of those lithium-ion batteries overheating were supplied to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission and Health Canada, which is overseeing the recall. Minor property damage was recorded.

 The affected models were sold between August 2007 through March 2008. Models that can contain a recalled
battery include:

HP Recalls Overheating Batteries

hp-0514HP has issued a recall for some 70,000 notebook batteries for computers that were sold between August 2007 and March 2008.

The recalled lithium-ion batteries can overheat and pose a fire and burn hazard to consumers, said the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. A complete list of the models that have been affected by the recall can be found here.

So far the Commission and HP have had two reports of batteries that  “overheated and ruptured resulting in flame and fire that caused minor property damage.”  However, no one was reported injured.

HP’s latest recall brings back memories of exploding Sony batteries about three years ago that affected companies such as Dell. Sony ultimately recalled more than 10 million batteries.

It is not clear who the manufacturer of the  batteries involved in the latest recall are as HP hasn’t disclosed it. Instead the company has offered a free replacement battery to affected consumers.

[via Electronista]

Photo: (Jonno Witts/Flickr)


Apple OS X Update Gives Battery Boost to Hackintoshes

Here’s a rather odd little tidbit regarding Apple’s latest update to OS X. While it doesn’t bring many  new features to the Mac, consisting as it does of mostly bug-fixes, OS X 10.5.7 apparently gives a significant boost to battery-life on hackintoshes. Reports from the MSI Wind forums are claiming a boost up to 33%, from 3 hr 45 min to a shade over five hours, using a six-cell 4400 mAh battery.

The writer,  Dalton63841, has tested this to make sure it’s not just over-optimistic reporting by the OS. Another poster is also seeing a boost from three and a half to four and a half hours.

It’s entirely possible that the OS update contains better power management for the Mac. What is surprising, though, is that it is having such an impact on these hackintoshes, which are notoriously bad for battery usage when running OS X. Needless to say, I’m grabbing the huge (729MB) update for my Wind right now. With its monster nine-cell battery, I’m hoping to get around ten hours of use out of it. I’ll let you know how it goes.

10.5.7 Battery Life [MSI Wind Forums]


Hands-On with MSI’s Monstrous Nine-Cell Netbook Battery

Ninecell7_2

One of the major complaints about netbooks, especially the early ones, concerns the battery life. A three cell battery gives barely an hour and a half on the MSI wind, for example (although this can be improved by not installing Mac OS X on it).

The second wave of netbooks usually sport six-cell batteries, giving a life much closer to that of the regular-sized notebooks we use. And then there is the freak-show: nine-cellers so big in both physical dimensions and battery life that the market is distinctly specialist. Who on earth would buy one of these monstrosities? Me, of course.

After over a month of waiting, I finally got the call from the computer store this week. I ordered the nine-cell after concluding that my hackintosh was almost useless as it was. Even leaving it in sleep mode would kill the battery in a day or two, meaning that I was constantly tethered to a wall wart. And if I’m not taking it on the road, why the hell would I use this tiny cramped device instead of my spacious MacBook?

Ninecell4

The battery was expensive, coming in at almost a third of the price
of the machine. It cost €114.84, or around $150. I could have ordered
online but I figured I’d rather order from the store in case things go
wrong. An exploding battery isn’t something that’s fun to deal with.

You do, though, get your money’s worth. Look at the size of that
thing! The guy in the store laughed when he saw it, although when the
machine booted into OS X he shut up a little. Oddly, the extra inch of
height makes the netbook easier to use, if not to slip in a bag. The
wedge-angle brings the keyboard up to a similar angle you get using a
laptop stand, and the extra air underneath means the fan spins ip less
often and further improves battery life.

Ninecell6

And what life! The unit came 75% full and showed that it had five
hours of remaining charge. Macs are dynamic in determining how much
time you have left — it goes up and down depending on how hard you are
using the machine. But in normal use I’m getting a good six hours.
Normal use here means streaming Spotify music to an Airport Express and
reading web pages. Watching movies would shrink that time, but —
watching the number — not by much.

Picture_3

Talking of numbers, here are the specs. The battery is a nine-cell
model from MSI itself, named MS-N011. According to my system profiler
(and the excellent application Coconut Battery), the capacity is 6600
mAh, or rather it was. The maximum has already shrunken to 6482 mAh.

Ninecell9

You may have noticed one other oddity — the color. After waiting a month, I wasn’t going to complain that it didn’t match, and I’m hoping that by wearing black pants and putting it on my lap, the monstrous carbuncle will disappear. That won’t help with carrying it, though. The weight isn’t bad, but the Wind is now L-shaped when closed, which doesn’t make it easy to slip into a man purse. Stlil despite these problems, I love it. I still need a 3G USB dongle to make it truly useful outside (blogging from the beach, for instance), but as a photo-shoot companion it’s a winner.

There is one final irony, though. At 3.2 pounds, it weighs almost as much as my MacBook, at 4.5 pounds.

See Also:

Belkin Unveils iPhone and USB Car Chargers

Belkin_Micro_Auto_Charger.jpgBelkin announced two new car chargers for the iPod, iPhone, and other USB-compatible devices. The Micro Auto Charger (pictured) is a compact design that can sit flush on a car’s dashboard, and can charge devices at up to 1 amp–which is necessary for the iPhone and some GPS units. The Micro Auto Charger costs $14.99 and will be available in early May. There will also be a $19.99 package that includes a three-foot iPhone and iPod charge cable.

The Dual Auto Charger, meanwhile, features two USB ports for charging an iPod on one side and a BlackBerry or other USB device on the other side simultaneously. One port charges at 1 amp–for the iPhone–while the other works at 500 milliamps, which is compatible with iPods and other cell phones aside from the iPhone. The Dual Auto Charger lists for $29.99, includes one iPod charge cable, and is available now.

Battery Powered Battery Charger

3397670599_39f2a3fdfe_o
Behold! The battery-powered battery charger, which belongs to the family containing the solar-powered flashlight and, of course, dehydrated water (handy for those long desert trips)

This fake packaging is dead on. We think it has been ‘shopped together by Flickr member Alex Dumitru, an “Internet Marketer” in Romania, who posted the image. What we know for sure is that this was an entry on the rather odd Kuvaton gallery, a mixture of weird photos and Photoshoppery. And like the best fakes, there is a hint of reality in there — who wouldn’t like to quickly juice a few AAs from a nine-volt cell in an emergency?

batterypoweredbattery_charger [Sandossu/Flickr via Oh Gizmo!]

External Battery Promises 16 Hours for MacBook Air

Another_mba_battery_320
According to the press surrounding its launch, the MacBook Air is useless, a crippled computer with just one USB port, no optical drive, a high price tag and — above all — a battery that can’t be switched out. According to customers, however, it is a slim and lightweight Mac, easy to carry anywhere and popular. I see them all the time in coffee shops.

For most people, the only time a computer will be used away from a power outlet for any significant amount of time is on a long-haul flight, which doesn’t happen often (if you are a frequent-flying businessman, buy a regular MacBook). If you are in the tiny minority that wants the lightest Mac possible and yet also wants to carry around extra batteries, you can now buy the QuickerTek external pack for the MacBook Air, which promises you an astonishing 16 hours of use. It plugs into the power socket on the Mac and the Mac acts just like it was plugged in, showing 100% charge for up 10 hours before it starts to use its own internal battery. That’s 10 hours of uncertainty as to the charge you have left, as the QuickerTek pack has no charge indicator.

And about that charge. It is listed as 6-10 hours, which means six. The problem is that the 16 hour claim includes the MacBook Air battery, listed at a rather optimistic six hours as well. In the real world you can expect around three hours under a light load. Taking QuickerTek’s word for efficacy of its own pack, we’ll add another six. That’s 9 altogether, which isn’t bad, but far from the 16 claimed.

The battery pack will cost a rather steep $350, and you’ll have to spring for a modified magsafe charger to charge it (another $100) or send your own off to be tweaked ($25). Expensive? Yes, but cheaper than upgrading to business class where you could just plug the thing in.

Product page [QuickerTek via TUAW]

Hybrid Wind Runs for More Than a Day on a Single Charge

Wind_vs_wind

We had a feeling that MSI’s second Wind, the hybrid drive-toting U115, would sport a better battery life than its predecessor, but we didn’t think it would be quite so spectacular.

Because the U115 features both a traditional hard drive along with a solid state drive, it can use the low-power SSD for often accessed system operations and keep the juice-sucking HD spun down most of the time. over at the German site, Eee-PC.de, writer Johannes loaded up the Wind with a third-party nine-cell battery and fired up the  testing software “Battery Eater” and left it to run. The test began one evening and ran all night and day, finally finishing 25:04:16 later.

The Battery Eater test is one that sits there and sips power — the netbook was doing nothing that it would do in real life other than sitting on a desk. But still, that’s more than a day’s worth of use. Compare this to Laptop Mag’s more intensive test on the nine-cell, carried out in a seedy Vegas hotel room in January. That test pushes the machine far harder, running Wi-Fi and loading a selection of 60 web-pages on a cycle until the battery dies. The result? 10 hours 32 minutes. For normal use, then, you’re looking at something in between.

Is anyone else having flashbacks to the early nineties and five-hour cellphone battery life? The days where you had to carry the charger wherever you went? I don’t miss them. and I won’t miss them this time around, either.

MSI Wind U115 with 9 cell battery in Idle: 25:04 hours!
[Eee-PC via Lilliputing]

Photo: nDevilTV/Flickr

See Also:

MIT’s quick charging batteries could revolutionize the world, maybe

Okay, so maybe the headline is a tad on the sensational side, but seriously, this has sensational written all over it. A team of brilliant MIT engineers have conjured up a beltway of sorts that allows for “rapid transit of electrical energy through a well-known battery material,” something that could usher in smaller and lighter cells that could recharge in moments versus hours. There’s even talk that this technology could be adapted for use in automobiles, and honestly, it doesn’t take an electrical engineer to understand how rapid charge / discharge batteries could “induce lifestyle changes.” Hey, laptop battery makers — could you guys look into getting these ready to go in machines by CES 2010? That’d be swell, thanks.

[Via BBC, thanks Simon]

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MIT’s quick charging batteries could revolutionize the world, maybe originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Mar 2009 09:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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