Sony unveils Meb Keflezighi Edition Walkman W Series, fills it with the marathoner’s coaching wisdom

Sony unveils Meb Keflezighi Edition Walkman W Series, fills it with the marathoner's coaching wisdom

NBC may have retired its Olympic spirit by repurposing its dedicated app, but Sony’s sporting fever hasn’t broken, as its just announced the Meb Keflezighi Edition Walkman W Series. A special edition orange hue graces the third-time Olympic marathoner’s device and, like the other players in the line, it features a water resistant design, a quick-charge mode and an eight hour battery life when fully juiced. Twenty-four minutes of audio coaching by Meb himself are preloaded into the player’s 2GB memory, which is estimated to store roughly 470 songs. Eager to hear the athlete’s dulcet tones as you pound the pavement? You can pick up the player for $69.99 at Sony’s online and brick-and-mortar stores, or wait until October for its arrival at Walmart.

Continue reading Sony unveils Meb Keflezighi Edition Walkman W Series, fills it with the marathoner’s coaching wisdom

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Sony unveils Meb Keflezighi Edition Walkman W Series, fills it with the marathoner’s coaching wisdom originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 08:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hit the rapids with Google’s latest Olympic doodle

DNP Hit the rapids with Google's latest Olympic doodle

It’s time to pound the arrow keys again for Mountain View’s latest Olympic doodle game, a whitewater slalom canoe challenge. The idea is to speed through the course with the left/right keys in the best time while using up/down to avoid rocks and the riverbank. Our intrepid web paddlers managed a time of 18 seconds so far, and you can post your own time in the comments below — if you dare.

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Hit the rapids with Google’s latest Olympic doodle originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Aug 2012 05:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google keeps the interactive Olympic doodles going, tests your spacebar with a game of hoops

http://www.engadget.com/2012/08/08/google-olympic-doodle-basketball/

If your keyboard survived yesterday’s track & field test, the folks in Mountain View have posted another interactive doodle to satisfy your Olympic dreams. This time around, you can give arcarde-style basketball your best shot by tapping on your spacebar to get into a rhythm from the charity stripe. Once you hit that blue play button, you’ll have 24 seconds to give the main search page your best Kevin Durant. A chance for Google+ bragging rights awaits your fingers via the source link below.

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Google keeps the interactive Olympic doodles going, tests your spacebar with a game of hoops originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Aug 2012 15:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google’s Olympic doodles get interactive with button-mashing hurdles

Google's Olympic doodles get interactive with buttonmashing hurdles

Google has already churned out quite a few of its trademark doodles for the Olympics, but it’s upped its game considerably today for its depiction of the hurdles. Pressing that red play button on the search engine’s front page will let you test your Track & Field skills (and your keyboard’s sturdiness) in an interactive event — one where you can, naturally, also share your results on Google+ when you’re finished. Hit the source link below to give it a go yourself.

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Google’s Olympic doodles get interactive with button-mashing hurdles originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Aug 2012 11:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Slow-Motion Flaming Tennis Should Be an Official Olympic Sport [Video]

It looks like the usual tennis superstars are going to walk away with all the medals at this year’s Olympic games—yawn. So to make it more interesting and unpredictable four years from now, perhaps the organizers of the Rio games should consider adding flaming tennis balls into the mix, and filming everything in super slow motion. More »

The Olympics Are Using Miniature RC Mini Coopers To Retrieve Javelins and Other Track & Field Gear [Olympics]

The 2012 Olympics might best be remembered for being some of the most over-sponsored games ever. But even product placement can occasionally be awesome, like these 1/4-scale RC Mini Coopers that will be used to retrieve hammers, shots, discuses, and javelins when the track & field events finally get under way. More »

MedalCount.com Helps You Keep Track of the Only Thing That Really Matters at the Olympics [Olympics]

Every nation, broadcast network, and news site on the planet have a way to keep track of the medal count at the Olympics. But why wade through all that other ancillary crap—like stories of athletes overcoming adversity and political drama—when all you care about is what nation has the most medals, and by extension is the greatest country on earth? More »

This Lego Olympic Park Is Just Like the Real Thing [Lego]

If you’re getting bored of technology making the Olympics worse, maybe it’s time to give up and build your own version of the games out of Lego. Be warned though: if you do, Warren Elsmore has already done it better than you ever will. More »

Everything You Need To Stage Your Own Backyard Olympics [Toolkit]

Every few years the Olympic games brings the world together to watch the planet’s finest athletes compete for the gold medal—assuming you’ve got the money to travel the globe and can afford the ridiculous markups charged by restaurants and hotels in the host city. Not to mention trying to get tickets to the best events without selling your soul. More »

Data-hungry crowds spoil Olympic TV coverage, archers alerted

Data-hungry crowds spoil Olympic TV coverage, archers alerted

With an opening ceremony celebrating social media and a guest appearance by the father of the world wide web, you would think the games are pretty Twitter-friendly. Well, not so much, as the hordes of London have been told to keep non-urgent texts and tweets to themselves to avoid disrupting TV coverage for those who weren’t lucky enough to score beach volleyball tickets. The recommendation comes after broadcasters bumbled through the men’s cycling road race due to a lack of available data from the cyclists’ GPS. The information bottleneck appears to be related to one specific network and sharing the data burden has been discussed, although probably not via Twitter. The IOC knows that telling the masses not to log on likely won’t have any impact — so, what’s next for the data haters.

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Data-hungry crowds spoil Olympic TV coverage, archers alerted originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Jul 2012 03:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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