Berg Little Printer teases Instagram-esque photo tweak

Berg’s whimsical Little Printer has been hacked to support photos, though the new direct messaging feature won’t be present in the first generation of the unusual desktop gizmo. Part of a side-project by a member of the Berg team, the app update adds a camera feature to the currently text-only smartphone software, allowing users to append a photo to their wirelessly-beamed message.

Those messages are then printed out by the Little Printer, complete with a monochrome version of the image. The app has a number of filters, intended to help people get the clearest final result given the limitations of the printer itself, but don’t be expecting anything up to even Instagram level of clarity.

Still, it’s a neat tweak, and a sign that the Berg team hasn’t stopped evolving the Little Printer even though it’s now up for preorder and nearing shipping stage. The last update we saw was integration with Foursquare, Google, and other sites, extending the number of data sources for printed text messages.

Unfortunately, Berg says it’s “not sure when or if we’ll launch this,” with the only certainty being that it definitely won’t be in version one as the team doesn’t have time to integrate it properly. The Little Printer is up for preorder now, priced at £199 or $259, with shipping expected in mid-October.


Berg Little Printer teases Instagram-esque photo tweak is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Doctor Who sonic screwdriver toothbrush prevents time traveling gingivitis

I know a lot of people who really like Doctor Who. I’ve tried watching the show on more than a few occasions. I just can’t do it. The show is too cheesy for me. I know that is sort of the point of the franchise. If you’re a huge fan of Doctor Who, we have the perfect toothbrush for you.

This is an officially licensed Doctor Who sonic screwdriver toothbrush. I know the design of the sonic screwdriver tends to change as often as the title character of the series. Someone with more Who knowledge than me will have to let us know which doc the sonic screwdriver design would go with.

The toothbrush sells for about $20 and is electric getting power from a single AA battery. It doesn’t appear that it has any of the spinning and swirling motions some of the fancy electric toothbrushes from other manufacturers offer. It appears to be an old school electric toothbrush that simply vibrates.

You can purchase the toothbrush over at Firebox, and it comes with an extra head. Once you wear out both heads, you’ll need to purchase a brand-new one since the odds of finding a head that fits in your local store are slim. The handle measures 3 cm wide by 3 cm deep by 14.5 cm high and adds an additional 1 cm wide by 1 cm deep by 6 cm tall.

[via CNet]


Doctor Who sonic screwdriver toothbrush prevents time traveling gingivitis is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


FAA Forms Study Group to Examine Expanded Use of Gadgets on Aircraft

Back in March of this year, we mentioned that the FAA had agreed to re-examining restrictions on gadgets during commercial aircraft flights. The FAA announced this week that it has formed a government-industry group to study the use of certain consumer electronics devices during flights. This could mean that you no longer have to stow your electronic devices during certain stages of commercial flights.

faa ipad 1

The new group will investigate which new technologies passengers will be allowed to use during flight and when it’s safe for passengers to use them. The good news is that the FAA apparently isn’t considering allowing voice calls to be made during flights. This is good news because if voice calls were allowed I think airlines would need more air marshals to prevent beat downs on overly chatty passengers.

I’m sure we can count on still having to turn our devices off when the aircraft is taking off, if for no other reason than to provide fewer distractions to passengers so they’ll pay attention to the program the flight attendants put on about safety. The group is soliciting input from the public as long as the suggestions have nothing to do with making voice calls using cell phones acceptable during flights.

[via TheNextWeb]


What the heck is IFA? (And why should I care?)

Stand by, tech hounds: gadgets incoming. Samsung, HTC and others are readying for the big tech show of Q3, Berlin’s IFA, the European rival to CES and for those of us addicted to our grown-up toys, a chance to see the phones, tablets and smart TVs we’ll be coveting over the next few months. Plenty to get excited about, then, particularly with IFA 2012 expected to be the biggest in the show’s history. So, what’s in store?

IFA – the “Internationale Funkausstellung Berlin” – dates back to 1924, differing from its Las Vegas counterpart in opening up its doors to the public rather than keeping the tasty tech treats solely for the journalists. It’s had some high-profile visitors, too: perhaps most famously Albert Einstein, who opened the 7th show back in 1930.

These days, the attendees we’re most interested in are the tech companies themselves. Samsung stole the show last year, revealing its segment-creating Galaxy Note “phablet” along with new smart TVs and even giving bada a shot in the arm (though the momentum for the homespun OS has flagged in the intervening months). The company is expected to make another big splash this year, with talk of the Galaxy Note 2 increasing the screen size, keeping the stylus, but making the overall device more pocketable.

HTC, meanwhile, likely has some surprises in store for IFA 2012. The company has struggled in 2012, and while 2011 saw only a pair of little-loved Windows Phone handsets revealed, it’s almost certain to be Android taking the stage this time around (anything running Windows Phone 8 will have to wait a few weeks for Microsoft to released the smartphone platform officially).

IFA isn’t just about phones and tablets, though; its widely-spread halls contain everything from TVs through home entertainment equipment, robotics and even white goods like dishwashers. We’re not likely to be distracted by the latest in refrigerator tech – well, not unless it’s running Android – but smart TV and Google TV in particular could make a resurgence, with Toshiba, Sony, LG and Samsung all likely to bring new sets along.

There’s also the chance for some legal wrangling to spice up the displays. Apple vs. Samsung might have reached a billion dollar conclusion in US courts this past week, but a year ago it was the Cupertino company forcing Samsung’s new Galaxy Tab 7.7 from the demo stands mere hours after it had been officially announced that made headlines. Germany has become a hotbed of patent arguments in the past 18 months, and you can bet Apple’s lawyers will be watching Samsung’s announcements closely to see whether there’s a rug to be pulled away from under their South Korean rivals.

Meanwhile, the shadow of the new iPhone (and rumors of an iPad mini) is on the horizon, and anything launched this coming week will inevitably be compared to what little we know of the iPhone 5 (and, indeed, how it holds up to the best-selling iPhone 4S). That’s not to mention Nokia’s next big hurrah with Windows Phone, hoping to gather up some of the momentum shed by Samsung after its courtroom struggles.

Since this is Europe we’re talking about, there’s a healthy splash of weird to the proceedings. IFA’s fixation is the eponymous “Miss IFA”, a red-wigged young woman rolled out to make announcements and pose awkwardly next to new gadgets. We’ll be trying to muster at least a little of her enthusiasm ourselves, though perhaps in a slightly more discerning way.

SlashGear is headed off to cover all of the big IFA 2012 news this coming week, so stay glued to the IFA Hub for all the announcements, gadgets and legal furore you need to know about!


What the heck is IFA? (And why should I care?) is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Star Wars Wampa Ice Scraper Mitt is winter genius

Did you ever wonder what became of the hand Luke chopped off that Wampa that wanted to eat him on the icy planet of Hoth? I like to imagine that fuzzy Wampa arm crawled around the icy planet like Michael Caine’s mitt in the 80′s flick “The Hand.” Only the Wampa hand was nice and instead of trying to choke the life out of you, it would scrape the ice off your snow speeders windshield.

I think that would be a good use for a severed Wampa arm personally. If you live in a colder climate or just want to get ready for wintertime, ThinkGeek has an awesome Star Wars officially licensed gadget that you will want to add to your winter arsenal. The product is called the Star Wars Wampa Ice Scraper Mitt.

The scraper is expected to be in stock on October 9 and will sell for $24.99. One side of the ice scraper mitt has white fur and the other side has an ice scraper in the palm. The fingernails appear to be black vinyl. Naturally, the Wampa fur is fake, and it does have a bit red on the underside to show where Luke hacked it off.

ThinkGeek says that the plush ice scraper is warm so it should keep your hand as warm as Luke slumbering inside a recently gutted Tauntaun. The mitt measures 17 x 8.5-inches and the scraper is 3 x 4-inches. When the scraper is removed the mitt is also machine washable.


Star Wars Wampa Ice Scraper Mitt is winter genius is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Therapik Bug Bite Relieving Gadget Review: We Can’t Believe This Actually Works [Lightning Review]

Are you being eaten alive by mosquitos? Is the itch driving you completely and utterly insane? Us too! So when we heard about this magic wand that supposedly takes the itch away, we had to call it in to make fun of it. More »

FDA Approves Indigestible Medical Sensor You Swallow Like a Pill

The FDA has issued approval for an interesting medical gadget that is designed to be swallowed. The digestible sensor is designed to report back to doctors on a patient’s adherence to medications, as well as to share their vital signs. The device is called the Ingestion Event Marker system and uses what appears to be a pill with a sand grain sized transmitter embedded inside.

digi med

The product comes from a company called Proteus Digital Health and the information the sensor gathers is collected on an iPhone app. The sensor was approved for use in Europe in 2011. The sensor itself is embedded inside of a pill or other consumable item and gathers power from stomach fluid.

The sensor sends signals to a patch worn on the user’s stomach that then sends information out to a smartphone application. Information the sensor gathers includes heart rate, body position, and activity. Once the data is received by the smartphone application it can also optionally be sent automatically to a physician. The sensor eventually makes its way out of the body and into the toilet.

[via CBS News]


Microsoft advises nuking Windows Gadgets after security hole discovery, we mourn our stock widgets

Windows 7 with Gadgets

Whether you see Windows Vista and Windows 7 Gadgets as handy tools or a blight upon a pristine desktop, you might want to shut them off for safety’s sake. Mickey Shkatov and Toby Kohlenberg have found that the desktop widgets’ web-based code have flaws that would allow malicious Gadgets, or even hijacked legitimate Gadgets, to compromise a PC without having to go through the usual avenues of attack. Microsoft’s short-term answer to the vulnerability is a drastic one, though: a stopgap patch disables Gadgets entirely, leaving just a barren desktop in its wake. There’s no word on a Gadget-friendly solution arriving before Kohlenberg and Shkatov present at the Black Hat Conference on July 26th, but we suspect Microsoft’s ultimate answer is to move everyone to Windows 8, where Gadgets aren’t even an option. We understand the importance of preventing breaches, of course — we’re just disappointed that we’ll have to forgo miniature stock tickers and weather forecasts a little sooner than expected.

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Microsoft advises nuking Windows Gadgets after security hole discovery, we mourn our stock widgets originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Jul 2012 14:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lennox icomfort Wi-Fi Thermostat Geeks up a Boring Air Conditioning System

Thermostats are usually boring little devices that are typically plain rectangles or circles with a manual slider that you use to choose the temperature you want your house to be. The problem for many people when it comes to saving electricity is that if you want to make the home warmer while you’re gone to cut down your air conditioning bill, you come home to a hot house. And while there are plenty of basic programmable thermostats out there, what you really want is one of these high-tech ones hanging on your wall.

lennox icomfort thermostat

Lennox has a new thermostat that’s Wi-Fi enabled and allows you to have a lot more control over your heating and cooling system. The new thermostat is called the icomfort Wi-Fi and it has a nice large LCD touchscreen. That screen shows you weather forecast information for your area and allows you to set your thermostat temperature using the touchscreen. You can even set it to display artwork or a photo of your choice when you’re not programming it.

It also has a one touch Away mode to reduce your energy use while you’re gone. Users can also connect to the thermostat to change the temperature in the home via the Internet or a smartphone. The thermostat can even communicate with a heating and cooling service provider to tell the provider if it needs maintenance. For more info on the icomfort thermostat, head on over to the Lennox website.