Fingers-On With The Chunky Alupen iPad Stylus

I have been skeptical of iPad and iPhone styluses in the past, but the Alupen, a chunky, pencil-shaped, rubber-tipped pen arrived in the mail today, and it has changed my mind.

The whole point of the iOS user interface is that you can control it with a fat finger. A stylus is necessary on a Windows tablet, as you need to hit targets designed for a pixel-sharp mouse pointer, but on the iPad, it’s superfluous. As Steve Jobs has said, “if you need a stylus, you’ve already failed.”

But it turns out that the iPad is also great for painting, drawing and writing, and the fingers are hopeless for these tasks (unless you are daubing paint in kindergarten). I have tried a few styluses in the past, with too-grippy rubber tips, or floppy foam nibs, and hated them all. Then I ordered the Alupen, for around €20 (the US price is $20). I have been drawing all day.

The Alupen is a stubby aluminum stick, shaped like a thick pencil. A rubber core runs through it to add heft, and the tip is a squishy rubber bobble. The hexagonal cross-section keeps it from rolling away, and the thickness makes it comfortable to hold.

The first test was the tip. I have owned another rubber-tipped stylus and it was impossible to use, the rubber sticking to the iPad’s glass. The Alupen’s tip glides across the screen, and the fat bubbled shape lets you press without the metal touching it, a problem with foam tips.

The weight is good. An aluminum tube would be too light and cause cramp. Like a fountain pen, the Alupen presses itself down for you. At first look, the pen seems to be too short for comfort, like one of those free pencils at Ikea. In use, it is actually long enough (and I have big hands).

In fact, the only fault I can find is that the metal pen gets icy cold when left on my desk. But then, my desk is marble, and my apartment has no heating, so it could be that.

$20 may be too rich for some, although a good fountain pen is much more, and with a stylus you never need to buy any ink. Available now, in silver and a range of anodized candy-coatings.

Alupen product page [Just Mobile]

Photo: Charlie Sorrel

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Ford takes us on the world’s shortest test drive in the Focus Electric (video)

Ford takes us on the world's shortest test drive in the Focus Electric (video)

When offered a chance to take a Ford Focus Electric for a spin we jumped at it, though were admittedly a bit perplexed when told it would be on the show floor. As it turns out the company set up a loop upon which a Transit Van and Focus Electric were driving, one after the next, up a steep incline and over the heads of fellow journalists, stopping at a little dyno to see just what this thing was putting down, and then back around to where it all started. No shocking information was gleaned, and we still can’t get anyone to confirm or deny the ability for a 480v quick-charge, but it sure beat walking.

Continue reading Ford takes us on the world’s shortest test drive in the Focus Electric (video)

Ford takes us on the world’s shortest test drive in the Focus Electric (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Jan 2011 09:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft Fighting Apple App Store trademark

app store apple.jpg

Microsoft this week filed a complaint with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, asking the organization to reject Apple’s request to patent the term “App Store.” The software giant is arguing that the term was generic long before Apple filed for a trademark, used to describe all manner of mobile application storefronts.

Says Microsoft (or, rather, Microsoft’s lawyers),

Any secondary meaning or fame Apple has in ‘App Store’ is de facto secondary meaning that cannot convert the generic term ‘app store’ into a protectable trademark. Apple cannot block competitors from using a generic name. ‘App store’ is generic and therefore in the public domain and free for all competitors to use.

Even Steve Jobs himself has used the term to refer to competing stores, according to Microsoft lawyers.

Here’s what Apple argues in its own filing,

The vastly predominant usage of the expression ‘app store’ in trade press is as a reference to Apple’s extraordinarily well-known APP STORE mark and the services rendered by Apple thereunder.

Certainly Apple’s store is the first that springs to mind when uttering the term, these days. But “vastly predominant usage” seems a bit much. I know we’ve certainly been guilty of bandying term about in reference to stores from Google, RIM, Microsoft, Palm, and others.

PlayStation Phone torn apart, found to not contain actual PlayStations

PlayStation Phone torn apart, found to not contain actual PlayStations

What must surely be the industry’s worst-kept secret just got even further out of the closet with a new suite of pictures showing not the outside but the inside. After all, we’ve already seen the outside at every possible angle, even in motion playing games. TGBus is the source here again, its disembodied hands apparently completely bored with actually playing games, so they broke out the Torx and spread it asunder. See for yourself on the other end of the source link, and feel free to contact your local Sony representative and tell them what a great job they’re doing on keeping this thing quiet.

PlayStation Phone torn apart, found to not contain actual PlayStations originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Jan 2011 09:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Kotaku  |  sourceTGBus  | Email this | Comments

Balanzza modular carry-on fits anywhere

Forget fat carry-ons. Slim down with this detachable three-in-one and stick what you need under airplane seats.

Verizon: CDMA iPad On its Way

Giddy on the announcement of the new CDMA iPhone 4, Verizon chief financial officer Francis Shammo let slip plans to bring Apple”s iPad to his company’s network.

Speaking in an interview in New York yesterday, Shammo told Bloomberg that “Verizon will get an embedded chip in the iPad for use on its network.” Customers who want to use the iPad on Verizon’s network currently have to buy a MiFi device, which shares its 3G connection via Wi-Fi.

It’s not surprising that Verizon will get a CDMA iPad, especially now Apple has proved itself happy to make a Verizon-specific model of the iPhone 4, complete with compatible radio. What is surprising is that somebody so high up at the telco would let this news slip.

There’s one more thing to consider. The Verizon iPhone is Verizon-only – there’s no SIM-card slot, and therefore you can’t switch carriers when traveling. This is fine on a phone, which needs a contract, but what about then iPad? The tablet can be bought contract-free, and hooked up to whatever network the buyer fancies. A Verizon-tied iPad would be a limiting investment indeed.

Verizon Will Sell IPad That Connects to Its Network [Bloomberg]

Photo: Jonathan Snyder / Wired.com

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Toyota puts Prius C on a pedestal, we go back for more

Toyota puts Prius C on a pedestal, we go back for more

Sorry, we can’t help ourselves. You see, we like the Prius. A lot. But it’s just so… well… boring. Not the Prius C. It’s just a Concept, but it’s a Curvy one, a Cute one, and a downright Catch. Call us anytime. Toyota. You have our number.

Toyota puts Prius C on a pedestal, we go back for more originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Jan 2011 08:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Repositioned Mute-Switch Means Cases Won’t Fit Verizon iPhone

The different positions of the mute button on the Verizon and AT&T iPhones. Photo by SlashGear

The Verizon iPhone 4 might look exactly the same as the AT&T iPhone, but it isn’t: small hardware changes mean that even Apple’s own Bumper cases won’t fit.

To accommodate the CDMA radio required by Verizon’s network, the iPhone’s external antenna has been redesigned. This, in turn, has required the mute switch to be moved a few millimeters down the side of the iPhone, towards the volume buttons. Therefore any case – including Apple’s – which has accurate cut-outs for the switches won’t work with the new iPhone.

You can see the difference in the above photograph from SlashGear. Think its no big deal? What about the case manufacturers, who now have to make two models of every line? Or customers at the Apple Store (or any other store that stocks accessories) who now have to make sure they buy the right case, instead of just grabbing the one they like the look of?

It looks like there is just enough space to keep the switch in its former position on the new phone, but that would have it pressing right up against the line in the antenna-band. And that would make it ugly, something Apple could never bring itself to do.

Verizon iPhone 4 moved buttons means AT&T bumpers won’t fit [SlashGear]

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The Daily Show reacts to Verizon iPhone, Jon Stewart gets a little excited (video)

The Daily Show reacts to Verizon iPhone announcement, Jon Stewart gets a little excited (video)

Were you excited about yesterday’s iPhone announcement? Not so much as The Daily Show, which spent a whole seven minutes and 18 seconds out of its 30 minutes of programming to celebrate the announcement — and certainly not sparing the whip when it comes to AT&T. Jon Stewart appeared to be somewhat excited, screaming in excitement at being able to use “the world’s most popular almost phone” as, well, an actual phone. See it for yourself below.

Continue reading The Daily Show reacts to Verizon iPhone, Jon Stewart gets a little excited (video)

The Daily Show reacts to Verizon iPhone, Jon Stewart gets a little excited (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Jan 2011 08:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lab-on-a-chip aims to take suspense out of blood work

If your doctor’s ever uttered the words, “I’d like to run more tests,” you know the wait for results can be torturous. Engineers and students at the University of Rhode Island (URI) are hoping to stop the torture with a new lab-on-a-chip technology that cuts way back on the wait for important lab results. The system provides results in 30 minutes, using a portable device and just a drop of blood. The blood is placed on a small plastic polymer cartridge, smaller than a credit card, and inserted into a shoebox-sized biosensor. It then travels across the cartridge to a detection site where reagents enable the sensor to detect biomarkers of disease. Basically, your doctor pops a bloody piece of plastic into a box, and out come your results. The first cartridges were developed to assess the risk of heart disease, but researches suggest they could be designed to detect everything from HIV to Alzheimer’s. The URI team estimates costs at $3200 for the sensor and $1.50 for the test. No official word on a release date, but we hope they won’t make us wait too long — we can’t stand the suspense.

Lab-on-a-chip aims to take suspense out of blood work originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Jan 2011 07:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Physorg  |  sourceUniversity of Rhode Island  | Email this | Comments