Steve Wozniak reveals contents of his backpack, has a lot of stuff

Steve Wozniak's backpack gets the autopsy, may house Apple devices

This is what happens when you’re someone who co-founded Apple.

Filed under: , ,

Steve Wozniak reveals contents of his backpack, has a lot of stuff originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Jul 2012 15:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGizmodo  | Email this | Comments

Google searches for criminals in bid to reduce global crime

Google searches for criminals in bid to reduce global crime

Google’s pretty much aced searching for your latest whim, so now it’s turning its efforts to criminals. Working with the Council on Foreign Relations, the internet giant has been exploring ways of using its technology for the greater good. Yahoo reports that Google Ideas will meet with the CFR (and other groups) this week to develop global crime fighting strategies. Other attendees include Juan Pablo Escobar (son of Pablo,) assistant US defense secretary Andrew Weber and the DEA director of counter-terrorism Brian Dodd. Look out for the Google+ most wanted hangouts coming soon.

Filed under:

Google searches for criminals in bid to reduce global crime originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Jul 2012 12:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceYahoo  | Email this | Comments

Controller board for 3D printers emphasizes expandability, gives nod to Sun God

Controller board for 3D printers emphasizes expandability, gives nod to Sun god

Is your 3D printer’s standard feature set lacking? Maybe Elefu’s Kickstarter-funded custom controller board can help. Dubbed Ra (think ancient Egyptian god), the project places a focus on expandability and carries a roster of I/O options including camera triggers and fans. The ATMega2560-based system allows for computer-free printing by leveraging an LCD screen, SD card reader and a knob. For inattentive designers, a standalone and programmable MP3 player and a light controller can be used to create alerts when printing completes, and adds extra flair as well. The unit also supports up to three extruders and plug-and-play support for ATX power supplies. Having doubled its $4,000 funding goal nearly three weeks ahead of the campaign’s end, boards are expected to show up on doorsteps this November and can be snagged for as little as $149. Head to the source for the full feature list and reward tiers.

Filed under:

Controller board for 3D printers emphasizes expandability, gives nod to Sun God originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Jul 2012 07:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceKickstarter  | Email this | Comments

Explosion-proof flashlight could be the first to outlive its owner

Explosionproof flashlight could be the first to outlive its owner

You know the drill, walking through that mine field, only to lose another good flashlight when you drop it on one of those puppies. Well if this is a concern of yours, the EXP-LED-51 from Larson Electronics should see you right. The latest in its like of hazardous location devices, the rugged LED torch is rechargeable, has 180 lumens of output and rated for 50,000 hours of service in the (dark) field (480 hours on one charge in the lowest power mode). For the man (or woman) on the move, the EXP-LED-51 also comes with a 12V car charger, as well as the standard VAC outlets. How much for this level of resilience? That’d be 320 bulletproof dollars.

Continue reading Explosion-proof flashlight could be the first to outlive its owner

Filed under:

Explosion-proof flashlight could be the first to outlive its owner originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Jul 2012 23:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceLXFlashlights  | Email this | Comments

Raspberry Pi production ramped up to 4,000 per day, 5MP camera module on its way (video)

Raspberry Pi production ramped up to 4,000 per day, 5MP camera module on its way (video)

If you’d been frustrated thanks to all the Raspberries having been picked, and had even considered the bitter taste of other fruit, there’s hope for you yet. The tiny computer’s maker has just announced that production is now at 4,000 units per day, and the previous restriction of one purchase per person has been lifted. Good news. In addition to this is the announcement of a new camera board in the works. The 5-megapixel module (as expected, dropping a few notches from the 14MP prototype) is expected to cost around $20-$25, and be available in around three months. So now you can have your fill of the sweet little berries and look forward to your next upgrade too. Now you just need to think of a suitably sweet application for it.

Continue reading Raspberry Pi production ramped up to 4,000 per day, 5MP camera module on its way (video)

Filed under:

Raspberry Pi production ramped up to 4,000 per day, 5MP camera module on its way (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Jul 2012 17:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gizmodo  |  sourceRaspberry Pi  | Email this | Comments

US Navy deploys SeaFox submarines to Persian Gulf for universal mine control

US Navy deploys SeaFox submarines to Persian Gulf for universal mine control

Tasked with mine detection and eradication in the Persian Gulf, the US Navy has sent a fleet of unmanned submarines to help keep the Strait of Hormuz open in Iran. Dubbed the SeaFox, each vehicle houses an underwater TV camera, sonar and a dose of explosives. Tipping the scales at less than 100 pounds, the subs are about four feet in length and are controlled via fiber optic cable that sends the live feed back to the captain of each ship. SeaFoxes can dive to depths of 300 meters and boasts a top speed of six knots. The units are thrust into action from helicopters, small rubber boats and off the rear of minesweepers and are capable of disposing of the aforementioned weapons of both the floating and drifting sort. There is one small catch: the $100,000 submarine destroys itself in the process, making each successful trek a suicide mission of sorts.

Filed under: ,

US Navy deploys SeaFox submarines to Persian Gulf for universal mine control originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Jul 2012 12:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Register, Business Insider  |  sourceLA Times  | Email this | Comments

Into the wild: cultivating the next generation of American scientists with Project Aether

DNP Into the wild cultivating the next generation of American scientists

At first it was faint — a blurry smear bisecting the sky above, running roughly north to south and flanked by a second, even more indistinct line to the west. Soon, though, both lines began to change, coalescing and intensifying into bright green streaks impossible to miss and difficult to ignore.

As the night began to expire and the morning matured, those lines grew brighter and brighter and then, without warning, they started to dance. Numbing feet and chilly fingers forgotten, bundled-up onlookers looked skyward to gasp and laugh out loud as the evergreen, spectral curtains far above began to waver and move, blown by a fickle celestial wind. Waves traveled from north to south and back as the luminescent lines above twisted, forming glowing knots of purple and red before slowly spreading out, covering the night sky in green, bright enough that even the snow-colored landscape glowed like an emerald wonderland. Gradually, the motion stopped and slowed, seeming to stall in the sky above, exhausted before — encore; the heavenly dance began anew.

Continue reading Into the wild: cultivating the next generation of American scientists with Project Aether

Filed under:

Into the wild: cultivating the next generation of American scientists with Project Aether originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Jul 2012 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceProject Aether  | Email this | Comments

Zoom Q2HD Handy Video Recorder lets you stream and record on the move, we go hands-on

Zoom Q2 HD Handy Video Recorder lets you stream and record on the move, we go handson

Zoom is known for making audio recorders, but its latest product, the Q2HD, brings video to the recording party — HD video, no less. Sure, there are many ways to shoot and share our lives these days, and it’s a wonder that services like Ustream aren’t just full of videos of people unboxing cameras, checking in and uploading pictures to Pinterest (while also watching Ustream). Zoom, however, evidently believes that though the method might evolve, the medium largely remains the same — voice and video. As such, the Q2HD Handy Video Recorder (to give it its full name) promises to play, capture and stream, all in “HD audio and video.” Paraphrasing of the box aside, we got our hands on one and took it for a spin. Want to know how it fared? Let’s reset the levels, then head past the break for the mixdown.

Continue reading Zoom Q2HD Handy Video Recorder lets you stream and record on the move, we go hands-on

Filed under: ,

Zoom Q2HD Handy Video Recorder lets you stream and record on the move, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Jul 2012 08:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Comic-Con fans go crazy over Hobbit teaser, but not the 48fps version

DNP Jackson wows ComicCon crowd with Hobbit preview, clarifies 24fps screening decision

Two different audiences and two very different screenings. After unfamiliar 48fps Hobbit footage was pretty universally panned back at Cinema-Con, Peter Jackson decided to play it safe and show Comic-Con fans the traditional low frame-rate teaser. Their response? They loved it. Which would, you’d think, give the head hobbit a clear message: his film works better without the wacky frame rate, but that’s just not how he sees it. Writing on his Facebook page, he said “I’ve always been happy to bet on myself” and the 48fps version of Hobbit is “something really special” when you watch the entire movie. In other words, he’s sticking to his orc sword, and in the meantime we’re left to wonder what would have happened if the Comic-Con crowd — who are perhaps more his kind of people than Cinema-Con goers — had been shown the tricked out footage.

Filed under: ,

Comic-Con fans go crazy over Hobbit teaser, but not the 48fps version originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Jul 2012 06:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePeter Jackson (Facebook)  | Email this | Comments

Beacon Audio Phoenix review: our new favorite portable speaker

Beacon Phoenix Bluetooth speaker review

We’ll admit it: we’re jaded. There is so much bad, middling and just okay stuff floating around in the portable speaker universe that we’re tired of even thinking about it. We’ve had our distinct favorite — the Tivoli iPal — for almost 10 years now, and it takes a lot to knock it off its unglamorous, but distinctive, pedestal. And we predict that it will continue to stay there. But newcomer Beacon has a hot little number in a soft-touch red dress that we’re willing to put right next to it on a slightly more diminutive pedestal. The $99, baseball-sized, Bluetooth-packing Phoenix has gotten under our collective skins, and we’d like to tell you why.

Continue reading Beacon Audio Phoenix review: our new favorite portable speaker

Filed under: , ,

Beacon Audio Phoenix review: our new favorite portable speaker originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 Jul 2012 15:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBeacon Audio  | Email this | Comments