Dodobag, a Murse to Hold Your Dodocase

The Dodobag is an elegant bag designed to hold the Dodocase, and elegant case designed to hold your iPad. You read that right. The bag is a bag to carry a case, and it costs $80.

I live in Europe, where as many men as women carry bags, so I already have a closet-full of what you might call “murses”. From what I understand, the American gentleman tends to think carrying a small bag might somehow diminish his masculinity. This is, I presume, where the Dodobag comes in.

Made from black Cordura nylon with a bright-red interior, the bag looks a lot like the case it is made to coddle. Inside is a padded sleeve, offering a little more protection from knocks than does the cardboard and bamboo Dodocase, and there is a handy removable pocket for cables and the like. The shoulder strap is adjustable, and there are D-rings for attaching a cross-strap to stop the bag from flapping like a soon-to-be-extinct bird when you use it on a bike.

Like the Dodocase, the Dodobag is made in San Francisco, this time by Rickshaw Bags. I have a Dodocase, which cost me $60 plus a lot of shipping and duty. I used it for a week before switching to the Apple iPad case, which in turn I toss into any of my bags, including one from Eastpak which looks almost the same as this one and cost a lot less. Still, if you are in the market for an iPad bag, like our own Brian X Chen, then this one should probably be on your list, if only because it looks “manly”.

Dodobag product page [Dodocase]

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Finally, Official iPad and iPhone Cases from Moleskine

At last, Moleskine has come up with its own set of iDevice covers. Since the launch of the iPad, we have seen traditionally-bound covers from Pen & Quill and Dodocase, beautiful, handmade cases which both protect your iDevices and disguise them as old-style notebooks.

Oddly, the official Moleskine covers for the iPad and iPhone (3G and 3GS) are the least Moleskine-like of the lot. Whereas the others do nothing more than put a cover and retaining strap around your gadget, the Moleskine adds a paper notepad and a soft, suede-like lining to the cardboard and faux-leather cover. It also holds the iPad in place with an ugly bezel-covering rectangle, instead of the Dodocase’s elegant, if sometimes slippery, edge-gripping rubber pads.

The paper/iPad combo will surely prove attractive to some, but the added thickness makes things somewhat impractical. The iPhone version is especially encumbered: Look at the picture. So useless does this case render the phone that even Moleskine admits that “the Smartphone Cover is mainly conceived to be used with Bluetooth, headphones or loud speaker.”

The cases are on pre-order at Amazon, but neither launch-date or price have been announced. Our advice? Buy either the Pen & Quill or Dodocase, and sling a regular paper Moleskine in the bag along with it. Or just make your own.

Moleskine Covers for iPhone and iPad [Moleskine]

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Moleskine launching iPhone and iPad cases: how would Hemingway play Angry Birds?

The way we saw it, it was Moleskine vs. the inevitable march of 1s and 0s that would eventually consume us all. No longer (actually, Moleskine already sells a Kindle cover, but we’re temporarily ignoring that for argument’s sake). Moleskine just announced a Digital Covers line of hybrid notebooks that include a pad of regular, “legendary” notebook paper alongside a cozy spot for your i-device of choice. Will this combination (some might say compromise) make you smarter, your prose more concise, your beard more intellectual? Of course it will. But at what cost? Sure, literature survived the decline of penmanship with the emergence of Mark Twain and his typewriter, and Douglas Adams championed the Macintosh to no end, but now that Moleskine has gone and sullied its own reputation we’re finally ready to just go ahead and say it: the novel is dead.

Moleskine launching iPhone and iPad cases: how would Hemingway play Angry Birds? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 01 Oct 2010 18:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Booq Boa iPad Sleeve, Like an Upgrade to Apple’s Own

After testing (and buying) far too many iPad cases, including the famous bamboo Moleskine-alike Dodocase, I finally settled on Apple’s own slimline sleeve. So good is it that I have removed it precisely once since buying it almost a month ago, and that was to show my mother the iPad inside.

Booq’s new Boa folio-style case looks a lot like Apple’s, and adds a few extras. Like the Apple case, the iPad slides into the Boa and is held with its edges enclosed, and with holes for the ports. Both cases also share a sticky-out bumper around the perimeter, although the Boa’s sits at the back, not the center. Booq’s case also folds into a stand for either typing or horizontal display using the same clever tuck-in flap as Apple.

Then things diverge. The Boa is slightly padded, which makes it thicker but more protected than Apple’s case. It also has a couple pockets: a document sleeve on the inside and an iPhone-sized pocket on the front. These, too, could add bulk. Finally, the case has a closing strap to stop it flapping open like dirty uncle Pete’s shorts and accidentally revealing the delicate object within.

For me, the Apple iPad case is pretty much perfect. I don’t care about its dirt-attracting abilities, and prefer its slimline, skin-like profile to more protective padding. But in taking the best points of the Apple case and slightly adding to them, along with using high-quality Napa leather and something called “Twylon”, the folks at Booq have come up with a nice upgrade. It isn’t cheap, though: the Boa can be had in a range of manly, neutral colors for $90, or in a ballistic nylon version for $50. Available now.

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Booq Boa product page [Booq. Thanks, Brad!]

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Wooden Notebook Case: High-Class or Shop-Class?

Over at Gizmodo, Kat Hannaford has this to say about the kind of person who might by this wooden notebook case:

You know that eccentric uncle, who sits surrounded by leather-bound books in his study, drinking whisky? That’s how I imagine these laptop cases smell..

When I read this, my hair prickled on my neck. I am that eccentric uncle, and I sit in my “study” surrounded by old books and dusty gadgets, sipping whisky. The synchronicities then pile up in a Jungian whirlwind: When I was in school, we made pencil-cases in shop-class (called “woodwork” in dusty old 1970s England) that were just smaller versions of this heavy, over-protective laptop case. Plywood, front and back? Check. Varnish chosen to make the wood look as cheap as possible? Check. Leather-lined interior and rare-earth magnets to hold it closed?

Actually, no. We were on a budget, and I believe the only way I knew to make a magnet as strong as these was to wrap a wire around a nail and hook it up to a transformer (which I did do, and often). But those aren’t the only differences. The wooden pencil-boxes we made cost pocket-money. These boxes, just as ugly as mine, top out at a pocket-stripping $350 for the 17-incher. I obviously can’t afford that. All my spare cash goes on whisky.

MacBook Pro cases [Rainer Spehl via Kat Hannaford]

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Etch A Sketch iPad Case

Here’s how to make some cash: Take one Etch A Sketch ($18), rip out its guts and call it an iPad case. Now, sell it for $39. You just made $21, and you still have a snuff of magnetic-dust left over.

This is what case-maker Headcase is up to, kinda. The Etch A Sketch iPad case is officially licensed from the Ohio Art Company, but it is made to fit the iPad, which is roughly an inch smaller than the Etch A Sketch in length and width, and half an inch thinner. You also get cutouts for the home button and the ambient light sensor (not that the sensor really works so well anyway).

There are more holes around the sides and underneath you’ll discover a pair of kickstands to make typing a little easier. Given that the white knobs on the front do nothing, taking this setup to the coffee-shop and getting some writing done is probably the most fun you can have with this toy. And it is a toy. Take another look at the back (click the thumbnail with the big Apple logo in it, below) and you’ll see it is just as veined and plasticky as any kids’ toy of today.

Still, it’s hard not to love it: It is an Etch A Sketch, after all.

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Etch A Sketch iPad case [Headcase via TUAW]

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$13 Add-On Turns iPhone into Leica

For just $13, you can have your own Leica camera. Petapixel will sell you a pair of stickers for your iPhone 4 which will turn it, magically, into a rangefinder camera worth many thousands of dollars. Or at least, it wil make it look like one.

For trademark-infringement reasons, the sticker set has no Leica logos, but it’s pretty clear from the big red dot that the Leica Look-Alike Skin for the iPhone 4 is inspired by the legendary German camera. There’s even a sticker for the front of the iPhone, although that might be taking things a little to far. The peel-off vinyl panels will also protect the phone from scratches, and may even fool the less perceptive that you’re a lot richer than you are. Available now.

Leica Look-Alike Skin for the iPhone 4 [Petapixel]

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Seidio Unveils Innocase Rugged for Droid X

Innocase Rugged - Droid XThere are more iPhone cases on the market than anyone really needs, but if you have an Android phone, and recent studies show that the likelihood you do is growing all the time, you’ll probably want a case to protect your investment too. Seidio has long been known for its wide variety of cases that support dozens of manufacturers, and now they’ve released the new Innocase Rugged for the Motorola Droid X, one of the first high-impact cases for Motorola’s new flagship Android phone.

The Innocase Rugged comes with a screen protector to keep your Droid X’s display safe from scratches and cracks.  Once the screen protector is applied, you can attach the Rugged Skin and Rugged Skeleton, the two parts that make up the case. The Skin covers the ports completely, and covers buttons with soft molding that allows you to continue to use them even while covered. The Skin also has a flexible camera cover that keeps dirt and dust out of the lens when not in use but slides open when you want to take photos or video. The Skeleton fits snugly over the skin and serves as a rigid plastic outer shell that protects your Droid X from falls and jolts. The Innocase Rugged can be purchased as a combo with a holster now for $49.95 retail.  

How To Pick A Kindle Case

Cole Haan Leather Cover for Kindle 3. Photo from Amazon.com

Q: I love my new Kindle 3, but I’m always worried that I’m going to knock a cup of coffee on it, or that my son will use it as a Frisbee. Are there any good cases you would recommend? — Anxious in Akron

A: Akron, I’m in much the same situation with my own Kindle. The device itself seems sturdy enough, but I always have this irrational fear that the beautiful but curiously-static screensavers of famous authors are staring at me, or through me, with their cold, dead E Ink eyes, beckoning me to read their books. Unfortunately, all of the Kindle cases I’ve seen and tried have some serious drawbacks.

Let’s start with the cases available from the Amazon Store. Most of the cases they sell are still for the second-generation Kindle, which won’t fit your device; you just have to ignore those entirely. In the left-hand sidebar you can pick your Kindle model, and you’ll only see relevant results.

Amazon Lighted Leather Cover, from Amazon.com

Amazon itself makes two cases for the Kindle that are basically identical: they’re both leather and come in a range of colors, with a microsuede interior and straps and hinges to keep your reader from sliding around or worse, out. The basic model is $35; add an on-board light, and the whole package costs $60.

Now, when the Kindle cost $400, springing $35-$60 for a decent-quality case and $50 for a two-year warranty had a kind of logic to it. But I don’t remember the woman from the new Kindle poolside ad leaning over and saying: “It’s a Kindle. $139. I paid about as much for the case and the warranty on it.” That would be a really stupid commercial.

Even my friends who love their Kindle cases and want to wrap their beloved e-readers in the best have problems with Amazon’s cases. Everyone agrees that the light on the $60 case can be useful, especially outdoors at dusk and occasionally in bed at nighttime. Everyone also agrees that it adds a lot of weight to the overall package, turning the light-as-a-feather e-reader into a clumsy hardcover.

That leaves you with two options: go for broke with a high-end case, or actually be broke and find something cheap and easy. The Cole Haan Hand-Stained Pebble-Grained Leather Kindle Case costs $99, and has a great rep carried over from its much-loved Kindle 2 cases. But Amazon reviewers complain that Cole Haan skimped on strength and quality to get its case out in time for the Kindle 3 launch.

Apparently the Kindle 2 case had an extra patch of leather strengthening the spine, that added extra protection and made the Kindle in the Cole Haan case feel like a high-quality book. The company’s Kindle 3 case is just one-ply, making the spine less stiff and more likely to wear with use. At other price points, that might be forgivable, but $100 is enough to nudge loyal users into the angry zone.

The longer the Kindle 3 is out, the more manufacturers begin releasing cases for it. Belkin has a line of sleeves available on the Amazon store now that I don’t think were there when I started researching this last week. In particular, many companies are starting to sell sleeves, not cases, that cost around $20.

However, if you’re plan to go this route, the best tip of all comes from Instpaper’s Marco Arment. In his first look at the Kindle 3, he notes how the Kindle 3’s rubberized back (as opposed to the earlier version’s slick aluminum) and slightly-smaller size makes it the first iteration to be comfortably used without a case. As for a sleeve, his solution is ingenious:

Photo credit/permission courtesy Marco Arment at Marco.org

A standard 6×10 bubble envelope — the size you’d use for shipping a DVD in a case — actually makes a decent low-budget Kindle 3 slipcase. And if your goal is to just throw it in a bag and have basic scratch protection until you remove it for use, it’s a pretty good solution.

Not bad at all. Next thing you know, those envelopes will be available in nano-patterned Naugahyde for $19.95.

In time, the marketplace will catch up, prices will (I have to believe) start to come down, and we’ll get more variety and usability out of our Kindle 3 cases. In the meantime, give one of these a whirl, preferably without putting down hard money first. If they don’t work for you, you can always go back to barebacking it.

P.S.: If you’ve hacked together your own Kindle/e-Reader/tablet case solution. I’d love to read about it in the comments. Share the love!

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Clever Kensington Case Uses Credit-Card Kick-Stand

Kensington’s PowerGuard Battery Case for the iPhone 4 would be just another ho-hum Mophie-alike design if it weren’t for one very clever little tweak. Around back there is a slot in the plastic, into which you slide a credit card to make an instant kickstand. It is placed smartly, too, so it will support the iPhone in either landscape or portrait orientations.

The case actually comes with a card, so you don’t have to risk your own, and the whole thing is actually rather slim and clean-looking, adopting the iPhone 4’s own squared-off lines instead of the swooping curves normal for external battery packs. It will add four hours of talk-time (or five hours of video or 22 hours audio) to the iPhone’s life, charges via microUSB and has a volume control button, just like Apple’s own bumper case. And given that simple cases can sell for $40 or more, the battery-totin’, kickstand-convertin’ Kensington’s $60 seems reasonable. Available for pre-order now.

Kensington PowerGuard Battery Case with Card Stand [Kensington via OhGizmo]

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