Saddleback Leather Gadget Pouches are all Class

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Gadget bags and cases are almost uniformly hideous. Made from neoprene, nylon and brightly-colored fabrics, they offer protection at the expense of style. Dressing well and toting a notebook or cellphone inside a standard bag is like turning up to a wedding wearing a tailored suit with a ski-jacket.

The alternatives are usually expensive. These cases, though, from Saddleback Leather, are both reasonably priced and gorgeous. Made from heavy, good-quality leather, they’re guaranteed for 100 years, so they’ll still be with you when your face starts to look like your laptop bag. And the prices? Amazingly, pretty low. The iPad sleeve, seen above with a couple of smaller pouches perched on top, is just $55.

But best of all is the website. There is a page titled “Our Rivals“, which is a list of links to other leather-makers’ sites. The FAQ is probably worth sending off to your Instapaper to read later. Some examples:

How can I get ink off of my leather?

Well, you’re pretty much screwed. One person said that hairspray worked to get their ink out, but there’s something cooler you can do. Take it to a tattoo artist and have him make a sun or cross or something like that with it. It’ll look cool and you’ll have a good story too.

and from the warranty details:

Saddleback Leather products are made to last a lifetime, but the warranty does not cover misuse or abuse such as the following: Like if you take it shark diving in salt water (see video) and a rivet corrodes.

These are the kind of people I like to do business with. All products available now, with international shipping. And if you can’t choose what color you want, there’s even a personality test to help you decide.

Gadget Pouches [Saddleback Leather via Uncrate]


Red dot sight for hotshoes makes shooting tangos a viewfinder-free experience

Red dot sight for hotshoes makes shooting tangos a viewfinder-free experience

If you’ve been playing Modern Warfare 2 so much that you’ve studied Arabic just to learn what the OpFor team is saying, yet you’re more interested in photographing birds than capturing flags, this is the hotshoe accessory for you. Thanks to Brando it’s easy to make your camera a little more lethal looking with the Tactical Four Reticle Sight, an adapter that screws into a camera’s hotshoe and then enables the addition of an included sight, which has four separate crosshairs, two colors, and three laser strengths. Yes, we know people have been doing this for years on their own, but this is the cheapest ($45) and easiest way we’ve seen to get such a thing secured on your SLR. Oh, and “Tango sakat?” It means “tango down,” duh.

Red dot sight for hotshoes makes shooting tangos a viewfinder-free experience originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 May 2010 08:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Firearm Blog  |  sourceBrando  | Email this | Comments

High school senior builds walking robot, the VSR-2: Talos FG (video)

These days, you don’t have to be a whiz kid to build robots in your basement: off-the-shelf microcontrollers, Arduino boards and Lego Mindstorms can take care of the hard work. Adam Halverson, however, is the real deal — he built his first robot at the age of twelve, and after six years of failed attempts, he’s crafted a full-size humanoid that can walk. Filed with pistons, servos and an assimilated laptop, the VSR-2:Talos FG cost the South Dakota high school senior $10,000 to build with fellow student Anthony Winterton; he claims he could reconstruct it for half now that he’s done. The hulking metal machine won him an all-expenses-paid trip to the 2010 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in San Jose, where he’s competing for up to $75,000 in prize money. We’ll be watching to see if he recoups his investment — awards will be announced this afternoon. See how the Talos FG’s gears mesh in our gallery, or watch the bot take its first steps after the break.

Update: The awards are in, and though Talos FG’s grippers didn’t manage to pull down that $75,000 grand prize, they did manage to net Halverson $5,500 in cash and savings bonds from Intel, the Cade Museum Foundation and the U.S. Army.

Continue reading High school senior builds walking robot, the VSR-2: Talos FG (video)

High school senior builds walking robot, the VSR-2: Talos FG (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 May 2010 07:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tabloid Turns Tweeted Links into Sleek Personal Newspaper

tabloids-twitter-ipadTabloids is a beautifully designed iPad application that turns your Twitter stream into a newspaper. More correctly, it grabs the links found in the Tweets of people you follow and formats them into a tabloid-newspaper-style page.

I think the idea is fantastic, although this first, 1.0 version is still rather sparse. I already use Twitter as a replacement for my Sunday newspapers, shuffling off the links of interest to Instapaper for browsing later. Tabloids takes this a step further, automating the process (and as the product blurb points out, showing up the Twitterers who post lame links).

The pages combine headlines, articles ledes and a What’s Trending section, complete with descriptions for the hashtags. You can click through to read further with the in-app web browser, and there is support for multiple accounts. This is handy if there are multiple users of your iPad, or to separate work and personal feeds. Future versions should also support your Twitter lists, which will be kind of like the different sections in your newspaper. I shall be putting my fellow Gadget Lab Twitterers in with the funnies.

The app is $3, available now.

Tabloids [iTunes via Mashable]


iPad Supreme Edition: worth its weight in smug

It’s that time again, the time when excess ruins a perfectly functional device. You can thank Stuart and Katherine Hughes for creating this 22ct “solid gold” iPad Supreme Edition slathered in 53 gems. A cookie for the first person to wear this £129,995 (about $190k) monstrosity from an iPad Chain.

iPad Supreme Edition: worth its weight in smug originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 May 2010 07:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TechShout  |  sourceStuart Hughes  | Email this | Comments

$750 Folding Hermès Travel-Belt Features Multiple Flaws

hermes-ceinture-bricolo-belt-selectism

File under “first-world problems”. This travel belt from Hermès concertinas, zig-zag, like a folding ruler and ends up short enough to fit into a carry-on bag. It is made of metal and leather and costs €580, or $725. I hate it.

Are you ready for the rant? First, a well made leather belt is probably the least likely item of clothing to malfunction on any length of trip. But second, a belt – by its very nature – is a flexible strip that will bend, twist and roll into any shape, adopting the form of any nook or cranny in your suitcase. The Hermès belt turns into an inflexible block of hide and metal, demanding its own space in your luggage and managing to fail utterly in its purpose.

It doesn’t end there. Take a look at the design, and imagine pulling it through the belt-loops in your pants. The joints are set the wrong way, so every one of them will catch on each and every belt-loop. And remember, these riveted-together offcuts are priced at $750. Classy work as ever, Hermès. I still haven’t forgiven you for buying Leica and turning it into a fashion brand all those years ago.

Hermès Folding Travel Belt [Selectism via Oh Gizmo! Not available on Hermès web-store]


DNA robots spin gold in molecular factory

Scientists have developed microscopic bots composed of DNA that can follow instructions and work together like an assembly line.

Foxconn chairman ‘has sought the aid of an exorcist’ to stop suicides

Um, suicide is not funny. Especially when it’s the eighth attempt — this one resulting in death, sadly — in three months by employees at a Foxconn facility in China. Yes, the very same factory we reported on last month that produces the gadgets we love so dearly. But check this little snippet from DigiTimes, translating the original Chinese language site Jinbw:

“Terry Guo, chairman of the Foxconn Group, has sought the aid of an exorcist in an attempt to put an end to the recent run of negative incidents at the plant.”

Seriously? And here we thought that improving working conditions might better serve employees. Engadget Chinese did some digging and confirms reports that Foxconn will bring in a monk(s) to perform a religious service meant “to bring peace to employees” — not necessarily meant to ward off evil.

In other news Foxconn just announced consolidated net profits of US$568.73 million for the first quarter of 2010, up 34.8 percent on the year.

Foxconn chairman ‘has sought the aid of an exorcist’ to stop suicides originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 May 2010 06:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDigiTimes (suicide), DigiTimes (profits)  | Email this | Comments

Apple Rejects Wi-Fi Sync App for iPhone

App Store rejections appear as often as panhandlers around Union Square, but the refusal to let Greg Hughes’ Wi-Fi Sync app into the store deserves a special mention. Hughes’ application works in tandem with a helper app on your Mac and enable iTunes and your iPhone or iPad Touch to sync wirelessly over your local network.

Why is this notable? First, because it is insanely useful, and something that the iPhone should just do already. Second, because Apple admitted that the application doesn’t break any rules. The app is completely legit. An Apple representative told Greg over the phone that “the app doesn’t technically break the rules [but] it does encroach upon the boundaries of what they can and cannot allow on their store.”

UPDATE 5/14/2010: An Apple spokesperson contacted Wired to say that the app was rejected for technical reasons, including reading and writing data outside the app’s container, and security issues.

This is the very heart of the App Store approval problems. Rules are fair enough, however dumb or restrictive they might be, as long as they are made explicit and everyone knows how to play the game. But these arbitrary decisions are the equivalent of Apple playing a game of soccer and then declaring that scoring with your head is now illegal because it means you’re winning, and it’s Apple’s ball. And Apple is going home now, so there.

There is good news. If you’re willing to jailbreak your iPhone, you can buy the app for $10. Suck it, Apple.

Wi-Fi Sync for iPhone: now available on Cydia! [Get Wi-Fi Sync]

Wi-Fi Sync app rejected by Apple, headed to Cydia for $9.99 [Engadget]

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Samsung preparing for 42-inch OLED TV trials in 2011?

It’s approaching mid 2010 and you know what’s missing. Jetpacks. Jetpacks and those 30-inch and larger OLED TVs we were promised. Hell, the largest OLED TV available for retail currently is only 15-inches… if you can both find and afford it. Now OLEDNet claims that Samsung Mobile Display — you know, the cellphone AMOLED guys — is purchasing equipment in preparation for bringing its 5.5 generation facility on-line in the first half of 2011. That should give Samsung the ability make 42-inch AMOLED TVs on a trial basis by the end of the twenty-eleven. But with relatively cheap LCDs steadily closing the gap on OLEDs size, contrast, and power savings advantages, well, we’ll believe it when we see the first big screen OLED TVs in our living rooms. And with 3D LCDs (and plasmas) all the rage amongst distracted and financially-vested television manufacturers, we don’t see that happening anytime soon.

Samsung preparing for 42-inch OLED TV trials in 2011? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 May 2010 06:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink OLED-Display  |  sourceOLEDNet  | Email this | Comments