ASUS’ Eee PC 1101HA netbook gets unboxed on video, shown in black

Unlike ASUS’ Eee PC 1005HA, which seemed to ship just days after debuting, the company’s 1101HA is taking its sweet time in going from “real” to “really available” here in America. This next member in the expanding Seashell range boasts a larger-than-usual 11.6-inch display and can be ordered with optional 3G (eventually, anyway), and the good folks over at NewGadgets managed to get ahold of one and unbox it for the cameras. Better still, they undressed a glossy black unit, which is noticeably different than the shiny white version we’ve seen thus far. Care to have a look? It’s all there just after the break.

Continue reading ASUS’ Eee PC 1101HA netbook gets unboxed on video, shown in black

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ASUS’ Eee PC 1101HA netbook gets unboxed on video, shown in black originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 08:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BeamBox Essential G2 projector is tiny, available for pre-order

Remember when 190 grams felt feathery light? BeamBox wasn’t satisfied with that, and has put its pocket projector on a strict diet, cutting its weight all the way down to 75 grams. The Essential G2 promises VGA resolution on up to a 73-inch projection, though we’d expect the listed 20 lumens to produce usable images closer to 7.3-inches. Alas, you have to expect sacrifices when moving to such miniature dimensions. USB connectivity takes care of both power and image source, though there’s 1GB of integrated memory if you don’t feel like lugging a comparatively monolithic laptop or netbook along. If this has piqued your interest, a remote control comes as part of the deal and pre-orders are being taken now — £220, $250 or €240, depending on your local currency — with general availability set for July 29.

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BeamBox Essential G2 projector is tiny, available for pre-order originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 08:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Five iPhone Apps That Replace Bike Hardware

The iPhone has proved to be rather adept at replacing other pieces of hardware. The combination of portability, a big screen that allows it to mimic any interface and an open (ish) App Store means that we are continually surprised at what people can make it do.

Today, it’s the turn of the bicycle. It turns out that many of the geegaws you might buy at the LBS (local bike shop) are already available as downloads from the iTunes Store. Here are our favourites.

cyclemeterCycleMeter

CycleMeter’s hideous interface contrasts with its truly astonishing Rube Goldberg setup. The app works as a cycle computer, showing a readout of your speed, distance, average speed and trip time. It works with any iPhone and also the iPod Touch. That’s right, the GPS-free iPod Touch. How on earth does it do that?

A cycle computer counts the revolutions of your wheels and, because you have already told it the wheel’s circumference, it can work out the rest. Purpose built devices use a magnet on the spokes and a detector on the fork.

CycleMeter uses sound to accomplish the same thing. Put a small plastic tag on one spoke so it hits the fork on every revolution. Then run the cable of your earbuds down the fork and secure the microphone next to this point. The tick, tick, tick of the plastic tab is picked up and the rest is done in software.

A truly heroic hack, we think you’ll agree, and just $0.99 (plus the cost of replacement earbuds after every passing shower). It can’t be long before there is a Bluetooth spoke-widget that can talk directly to the iPhone, though. Combine with proper trip-log software and you’d have a real winner.

Product page [iTunes]

redlight

BrakeLights

Just as ingenious as CycleMeter, although slightly less jerry-rigged, is BrakeLights. It adds a brake light to your bike, whether using cantilevers, side-pulls, disk or running a no-braked fixie. Strap it to your bag or back, screen pointing behind you, and ride. The app uses the accelerometer to detect when you slow down and flashes a red light on the screen. $1.

Product page [iTunes]

stop

Back Light

Similar to BrakeLights, the awkwardly named Bicycle Back Safety Flashlight is another $1 lamp, but this time it stays on all the time you are riding. It also lets you write messages to those following you. The suggestion is the word “STOP”, but we imagine that you, dear reader, could manage messages both more creative and abusive.

As an everyday light replacement the battery drain might put you off. But in an emergency, why not? Especially if you have an always-connected iPhone. Imagine: “Damn, I forgot my back light. Wait, I’ll just download a new one.” $1.

Product page [iTunes]

gears

Gear Calculator

Bicycle Gear Calculator is rather specialized, but if you need it, it may just beat doing hard sums in your head. The application works out gear ratios for you, based on crank lengths, wheel sizes and cog/sprocket sizes. It’ll even tell you what ratio you should ride to maximize tire wear based on the pattern of skid patches on the tires themselves. $5

Product page [iTunes]

speedSpeed

Speed is a more practical speedometer, although you’ll need an iPhone 3G or better to use it. Instead of the dangerous sounding wires-and-plastic approach taken by CycleMeter, it uses the iPhone’s GPS to work out your speed. It also has a rather lovely interface, although it might be more suited to a car dashboard than a bike’s handlebars. Works in both kph and the obsolete mph. $1

Product page [iTunes]


Freecom’s Hard Drive Secure for the businessman paranoid

It might be a butchering of English grammar — the adjective typically goes before the noun — but the Hard Drive Secure does have a pretty unique selling point to offer. The USB 2.0 drive’s security is handled by AES-encrypted RFID keycards — swiping the card once unlocks the drive, swiping it again locks it back up. Using similar technology to London’s Oyster Card, we trust Freecom has made sure their new device is not susceptible to the Mifare hack that exposed vulnerabilities in previous RFID systems. Though not yet available to purchase, the aluminum-enclosed HDD will retail for between $119 for the 500GB version and $409 for the 2TB behemoth, while in Euroland prices will range between €99 and €349.

[Via Bit Tech]

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Freecom’s Hard Drive Secure for the businessman paranoid originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 08:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Flossie the robot can ‘ride’ a motorcycle, remains oblivious to good oral hygiene


The best and worst part about robots is the fact that they can be purpose-built to perform any task at hand. Oh sure, they can be built to kill, or they can built to test motorcycles without risk to our feeble (yet tasty) meat-sacks. Introducing Flossie, the Castrol-developed test rider that’s threading a Fireblade between its “legs” in the shot above. The robot features a self-learning mode that enables it to get a feel (throttle response, clutch drag, gear shifting patterns, etc.) for any stationary bike upon which it’s perched — right, stationary… he’s no Murata Boy. Still, as the ultimate precision rider that never tires, Flossie allows Castrol to evaluate its lubricants as effectively as possible. See it in action after the break.

[Via Faster and Faster, thanks Jensen]

Continue reading Video: Flossie the robot can ‘ride’ a motorcycle, remains oblivious to good oral hygiene

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Video: Flossie the robot can ‘ride’ a motorcycle, remains oblivious to good oral hygiene originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 07:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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UC-Light project puts LEDs to work in communication networks

Yeah, mad scientists have been trying to get the public at large to pay attention to visible light communications for years now, but the gurus over at the University of California, Riverside think that the project they’re involved in holds a special kind of promise. The Center for Ubiquitous Communication by Light (UC-Light) will be funded with $3.5 million from the Multicampus Research Program and Initiatives (MRPI) competition within the University of California system, and at its core, it’s hoping to unearth a magical method for linking up all sorts of electronics (HDTVs, PDAs, information kiosks, PCs, etc.) via light. You know, so your refrigerator can tell your smartphone what groceries are needed during the next supermarket stop, and that massive billboard on I-95 can beam more information that you don’t want right onto your handset. If all goes to plan (and California’s budget problem solves itself), the work will begin in early 2010 and last five years, after which we fully anticipate “very low-cost communication and navigation systems [to be built] on existing lighting infrastructure.” And fowl in every pot. And unicorns in every garage.

[Thanks, Michael]

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UC-Light project puts LEDs to work in communication networks originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 07:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IPill Capsule Mic for iPod

ipill

Ho ho ho! The iPill. It looks like a pill. Do you see?

Bad, pun-tastic name aside, the iPill is a cheap solution for sound recording on the iPod. Compatible with the iPods Nano 4G, Classic 120GB, and Touch 2G, the little capsule breaks open to reveal its jack plug, which you than shove into the headphone socket to enable mono recording.

The little $13 mic has been tested by iLounge and the verdict is that it is actually better than Apple’s own microphone. This isn’t a surprise. In the realms of accessories, Apple pretty much sucks. The company has never made a decent mouse, and its headphones seem engineered to break after a few months of use.

So, should the iPill show up in the US in useful numbers rather than the trickle currently dripping in, it might be worth picking one up. Just don’t try to take it through customs yourself.

Ozaki iPill On-The-Go Mic [iLounge]

Photos: iLounge


Universal mirrors: more useful, less fun than carnival mirrors

You know those invisibility cloaks scientists have been struggling to master for decades? This here is said cloak’s perfect opposite, and it’s bending our minds in ways you can hardly fathom. Ulf Leonhardt, a professor at the University of St. Andrews, has worked with a brilliant team of scientists in order to construct what he calls a universal mirror, or if we’re being proper, an omnidirectional retroreflector. Unlike conventional mirrors which simply reflect objects at 90 degrees, this concoction reflects objects back at any angle. In other words, a device such as this would make aircraft, boats and satellites entirely easier to track with radar, but it’ll have to mature quite a bit before it’s ready for that kind of action. The current build is just a single centimeter high and ten centimeters in diameter, and as with invisibility cloaks, the main ingredient here is metamaterials that we won’t pretend to fully understand. Just one word of caution, boffins — don’t let Geek Squad get ahold of this stuff.

[Image courtesy of Barbara Rich, thanks JR]

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Universal mirrors: more useful, less fun than carnival mirrors originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 06:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wrist-Mounted Keyboard Has Us All in a Froth

wrist

This one handed (or rather one-handed, one wristed) keyboard is your ticket straight out of the dating game. It manages to hit plenty of extra geek-buttons as it heads for the exit, though: The company is iKey, and the name is a military hardware evoking AK-39.

The keyboard is actually designed for some heavy-duty use, featuring some decent electromagnetic shielding and mil-spec, er, specs. The faceplate which snaps over the keys helps to stop pressing more than one button at a time when wearing gloves and there is both a built in d-pad style mousing button and green LED backlights.

Getting past the inherent geekiness of wearable computers (armband-mounted iPods included), this looks like a rather neat gadget, and would possible be ideal teamed up with a pair of video goggles and a netbook in a backpack. The price hasn’t yet been revealed, nor the release date, but our wrists are getting excited at the thought of one-handed internet surfing.

Product page [iKey via Uncrate]


webOS SDK bemoaned by iPhone developer as Palm seeks game API engineers

Palm’s webOS has never been a platform to stir the interest of the casual gamer. While there are many advantages to being built around HTML, JavaScript, and CSS, those tools don’t excite game developers who need direct access to advanced graphics hardware to render animations smoothly. Unfortunately, as described by Craig A. Hunter, a self proclaimed “pretty dedicated iPhone developer” who’s been poking around the WebOS SDK, Palm does not provide the environment to develop serious games or the kind of sophisticated apps users now expect from their handhelds. Chief among his concerns is lack of OpenGL access despite the hardware supporting it. Palm also limits devs to a 4Hz sampling of raw accelerometer data, far short of the 20Hz minimum required for games utilizing tilt control. In his summation:

With such amazing software capabilities flourishing on the iPhone, Palm can’t afford to wait a year while they make the transition from web apps to native apps in their SDK. Palm might have had a chance against the 2007 Apple SDK, but not the 2009 version. Not even close. With this limitation, webOS will not be taken seriously by consumers who place importance on games or sophisticated third party apps.

Of course Palm, now with its deep Apple roots isn’t blind to the issue. In fact, the kids at PreCentral have uncovered a Palm job listing from June 29th seeking Game Frameworks Engineers who will “design, implement, debug, and optimize frameworks for game development.” So while the beta release of the webOS SDK might be limited, we’ll key on the word beta for now. Remember, Super Monkey Ball wasn’t built in a day — it took a bit more than 365 of them before being offered after the launch of the original iPhone.

Read — Craig A. Hunter
Read — Palm game engineer listing

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webOS SDK bemoaned by iPhone developer as Palm seeks game API engineers originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 05:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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