You Can Tune A Guitar But You Can’t Tune A Fish With Roadie

As everyone knows, roadies are hired to set up gear, tear down gear, drink, and tune guitars. Now roadies can do one less of those things and do more of something else. The Roadie is an automatic tuner for any stringed instrument that uses the iPhone to listen to your guitar and a motorized accessory that turns the machine head to exactly the right position. It’s going to put a lot of real roadies out of business.

Created by Bassam Jalgha and Hassane Slaibi of Band Industries, the Roadie was incubated at Shezhen’s Haxlr8r and is nearly ready to ship. The product can tune almost any guitar or stringed instrument perfectly and can even support alternate tunings. A useful wind/unwind feature will spool the string off the peg in a few seconds, shaving off a few moments of downtime during your excessively loud guitar solo gone wrong. A pledge of $69 gets you an early bird model.

These sorts of tuners are nothing new but this is the first “smart” tuner that can do more than set up a guitar in one configuration. A feature called the Instrument Doctor can tell you if strings are going bad and whether the guitar needs repair or a tune up. It charges via MicroUSB and can tune 6,000 times on one charge. It’s compatible with iOS and Android and uses Bluetooth to communicate with the phone.

Jalgha expects to ship in June, just in time for summer rock season. Although I’m a tune by ear kind of guy – which usually fails – I’d use one of these in a heartbeat. At least my caterwauling git-fiddling will be slightly in tune.

Ceton ships InfiniTV 6 PCIe tuner, crams six HD channels into a home theater PC

Ceton ships InifiniTV 6 CableCARD tuner in PCIe form

Ceton vowed that it would release a PCI Express equivalent of its InfiniTV 6 ETH box, and it’s delivering on that promise (if belatedly) by shipping the InfiniTV 6 PCIe. The adapter still lets Windows Media Center users watch or record up to six HD cable TV channels through one CableCARD, but in a form factor that slots neatly into a dedicated home theater PC. The board is in stock at Amazon and Newegg today at its expected $299 price. While that cost puts the InfiniTV PCIe at the high end of the TV tuner spectrum, it may be worthwhile for viewers who just can’t afford to miss a show.

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Source: Ceton, Amazon, Newegg

Sony – NFC, Bluetooth compliant separate speaker component sound systems “CMT-SBT300W” and “CMT-SBT100″ – connect multiple components, feature Sony’s digital amplifier “S-Master” and high-power output

Sony - NFC, Bluetooth compliant separate speaker "compo" sound systems "CMT-SBT300W" and "CMT-SBT100" - connect multiple components, feature Sony's digital amplifier "S-Master" and high-power output

Sony will release the “CMT-SBT300W” and “CMT-SBT100″ separate speaker “comp” sound systems on July 6.

Total wireless capabilities through Bluetooth and NFC. One-touch pairing to connect Walkman, iPhone, Android smartphones and other smart devices wirelessly.

Both systems feature Sony’s exclusive “S-Master” digital amplifier and 2 way bass reflex speakers.

The “CMT-SBT300W” model features a 25mm dome-type tweeter, 120mm cone-type woofer and 50W+50W high-power output amplifier.

The “CMT-SBT300W model is also equipped with (IEEE 802.11b/g) Wi-Fi communication function. Through AirPlay or DLNA (home network), wirelessly play music contained in the PC or other device somewhere else in the house, in conjunction with a Wi-Fi enabled devices in the house.

The “CMT-SBT100″ features a 40mm cone-type tweeter, 100mm cone-type woofer and 25W+25W high-power output amplifier.

CMT-SBT300W

Price: ¥40,000
Color: Black
Dimensions:
– Main unit: Approx. 290×106×221mm
– Speaker: Approx. 150×270×220mm
Weight:
– Main unit: Approx. 2.7kg
– Speaker: Approx. 2.5kg each
Consumption: Approx. 40W (under 0.5W in standby mode)

CMT-SBT100

Price: ¥30,000
Color: Black
Dimensions:
– Main unit: Approx. 290×106×221mm
– Speaker: Approx. 150×240×220mm
Weight:
– Main unit: Approx. 2.7kg
– Speaker: Approx. 2.0kg each
Consumption: Approx. 35W (under 0.5W in standby mode)

SiliconDust HDHomerun Prime CableCARD tuners hit Woot for $130

If you’ve been thinking about building an HTPC without spending a lot of money then first of all we have a post that can help you with that (and a comment section of folks saying they can do even better), and second, it might be time to grab one of SiliconDust’s HDHomeRun Prime TV tuners. The three tuner CableCARD device can turn your computer into a cable box, and Woot is selling brand new units for just $130 (plus $5 shipping) in this morning’s one day sale, a decent discount form the $180 – $200 prices we found elsewhere. Still not convinced this is for you? Check out our hands-on with the device or a quick video trailer embedded after the break. Oh, and if you need a new HDTV to plug it into, Woot’s also running a sale on some LG LCDs with 3D and connected apps for $650 / $900 (47-inch / 55-inch).

Continue reading SiliconDust HDHomerun Prime CableCARD tuners hit Woot for $130

SiliconDust HDHomerun Prime CableCARD tuners hit Woot for $130 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Jul 2012 02:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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