Three-Way Headphone Splitter Shaped Like a Tiny Branch

What’s long, brown and sticky? A stick!

I can think of precisely one use for a headphone jack splitter, and that’s for watching movies on the iPad when I’m on a plane or train, traveling with The Lady. However, I am also aware that there are couples whose individual musical tastes don’t make each other physically sick, and who might like to share a jack socket as they walk romantically down the street.

Now, these promiscuous listeners can engage in a dirty aural threesome.

The Music Branch Headphone Splitter comes from Kikkerland, and splits the signal three ways. Lord knows how you’re supposed to walk when connected to two other people by the ears, or even how loud the resulting music would be after being split like this, but the price is certainly right: The Music Branch costs just $10, and comes in a variety of stick and non-stick-like colors: white, brown and light blue.

It also solves another problem of regular splitters: they’re tiny and easy to lose. The Music Branch is not only chunky, but it can hang off a keyring by it’s chain and end-cap. Neat.

The Music Branch is available now.

Music Branch Headphone Splitter [Kikkerland via Oh Gizmo!]

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Infinite Loop Flexible Ribbon Supports Tablets, Phones

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Tim Gushue’s Infinite Loop is a tablet stand that is flexible both literally and metaphorically. If you ever used a “flexible curve” for drawing or woodworking, you’ll be familiar with the design.

The Infinite Loop is a four-foot strip of bendy plastic with a pair of metal cores running through. The combination lets you bend the strip into any shape and it will hold it with enough stiffness to support a tablet computer.

Thus you can make easels appropriate for any surface, and set the tablet at any angle. The Loop also comes with a cross-strap for extra security (see the pictures above) and also suction cup, for when you really want to make sure your tablet falls out.

Gushue has also made the Mini Loop, a two-foot long version which coils up like a king cobra and supports a phone at the top with its suction cup. Both roll up tight into a small, portable coil, like a licorice wheel.

I almost exclusively use the iPad Smart Cover as a prop these days, but it’s not very stable on soft surfaces, or anything that moves. For that, I used to use the Joby Gorillapod, but the Infinite Loop looks like it might take the crown for the most flexible iPad stand yet.

The Infinite Loop Tablet and Smartphone Stand [Kickstarter]

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The Tech Inside Apple’s $50 Thunderbolt Cable

By Chris Foresman, Ars Technica

The first Thunderbolt compatible peripherals — Promise’s Pegasus RAIDs — started shipping on Tuesday. Using the RAIDs with a Thunderbolt equipped Mac, though, requires a rather expensive $50 cable that is only available from Apple. We dug into the design of the cable to find out why Apple felt justified in charging $50 for some plastic-wrapped copper wire, and why Thunderbolt may have a hard time gaining traction outside of the higher-end storage and video device market — a fate similar to Apple’s FireWire.

Promise’s RAIDs do not come supplied with a Thunderbolt cable. Instead, users are directed to buy a Thunderbolt cable directly from Apple, which costs $49 for two-meter length. We contacted Promise to find out why a Mini DisplayPort cable could not be used in its stead, since the Thunderbolt port is based on Mini DisplayPort. A support technician told Ars that Apple’s cable is a “smart” cable that “has firmware in it.”

Intel confirmed that Thunderbolt requires specific Thunderbolt cables. “Only Thunderbolt cables can be used to connect Thunderbolt products using Thunderbolt connectors,” Intel spokesperson Dave Salvator told Ars. “The cables have been designed for the 10Gbps signaling as well as power delivery that are part of Thunderbolt technology.”

Active cabling required

Apple didn’t respond to our requests for further information about the “firmware in the cable,” but an EETimes article from earlier this year noted that in addition to having different electrical characteristics from Mini DisplayPort, Thunderbolt alsouses active cabling to achieve full duplex 10Gbps transmission.

A source within the telecom industry explained to Ars that active cables are commonly used at data rates above 5Gbps. These cables contain tiny chips at either end that are calibrated to the attenuation and dispersion properties of the wire between them. Compensating for these properties “greatly improves the signal-to-noise ratio” for high-bandwidth data transmission.

Our friends at iFixit made a trip to a local Apple Store to find out what hardware powers Apple’s Thunderbolt cable. CEO Kyle Wiens told Ars that Apple’s cable contains two Gennum GN2033 Thunderbolt Transceiver chips to facilitate Thunderbolt’s blazing speed.

“Unlike ordinary passive cables that can be used at lower data rates, the unprecedented speed of the new Thunderbolt technology places unique demands on the physical transmission media,” according to Gennum’s website. “The GN2033 provides the sophisticated signal boosting and detection functions required to transfer high-speed data without errors across inexpensive Thunderbolt copper cables.”

Our telecom source noted that Intel made an unusual choice in also using active cabling for future optical-based iterations of Thunderbolt. Passive cabling is more common, but active cabling could offer some advantages. For one, active cables could combine fiber optics with electrical cabling for power transmission. Another good reason to use active optical cables, according to our source, “is that your current electrical ports can be forward compatible with future optical cables.”

So far, though, Apple is the only supplier for Thunderbolt cables. Though Gennum is already highlighting its Thunderbolt transceiver chips, Intel would not say when official specs would be released to other manufacturers, or when other suppliers might be able to offer compatible cabling.

FireWire II: Thunderbolt Boogaloo?

The unfortunate side affect of all this is that if you are interested in using Thunderbolt-compatible peripherals—including RAIDs, hard drives, and video I/O devices coming soon—you’ll have to buy a $50 cable from Apple for each device. Without additional suppliers, that could lead to trouble in gaining wider adoption for the standard in the industry.

The situation is not unlike the one that plagued FireWire in its early days. Designed by Apple and featured on its own computers, the original FireWire 400 standard offered significant speed improvements over USB 1.1, could supply more power to peripherals, and used an architecture that allowed any FireWire device to communicate with another, making it possible to forgo the need to connect both devices to a host computer.

Despite these benefits, FireWire cost more to implement on a device because it required a separate controller chip in each device. And though Apple turned over the FireWire standard to standards body IEEE, the company originally required additional licensing fees to use the FireWire trademark and logo. This made USB a more attractive, less expensive alternative for device makers.

Apple later relaxed the licensing fees, but an alternate 4-pin, non-powered version of FireWire—dubbed “IEEE 1394″ and branded as “i.Link” by Sony—had already begun to gain wide adoption. USB 2.0 improved speeds to be more competitive with FireWire 400, while retaining its cost advantage. A faster FireWire 800 standard emerged, but used an entirely new 9-pin connector that required adapters to use with 6-pin FireWire 400 devices or 4-pin IEEE 1394 devices.

The combination of non-compatible plugs and added cost meant that FireWire ended up being largely confined to high-speed storage and the burgeoning digital video and digital audio industries.

As mentioned previously, the devices featuring Thunderbolt that have been announced so far include a variety of high-performance storage and mobile video I/O devices. Thunderbolt’s high bandwidth and low latency are perfect for these applications. But Thunderbolt’s high cost in terms of the necessary controllers and relatively expensive active cabling could limit its expansion to the broader market.

Furthermore, Intel only mentioned two vendors aside from Apple who were considering adopting Thunderbolt when it announced the technology earlier this year: HP and Sony. HP ultimately decided it wouldn’t be adopting Thunderbolt in its computers any time soon. Sony has announced a new Vaio Z laptop that incorporates Thunderbolt controllers from Intel, but uses a proprietary optical connection via a specially modified USB3 port. That port can connect to a special discrete GPU-equipped docking station that won’t be compatible with standard Thunderbolt peripherals.

Thunderbolt may be capable of some impressive speeds, but Apple and Intel run the risk of the technology quickly becoming a dead end if Apple remains the only vendor for Thunderbolt-equipped computers as well as Thunderbolt cables. Greater third-party support will be the key to the broad market adoption needed to support Thunderbolt in the years to come.


Thunderbolt Cable Teardown Reveals Enough Chips to Make a Computer

The 12 chips inside Apple’s Thunderbolt cable might justify its high, high price. Photos iFixit

It might not mitigate the ridiculous $50 price-tag, but iFixit’s teardown of Apple’s “lightning fast” Thunderbolt cable at least goes some way towards showing why it doesn’t cost the same as any other dumb cable.

After picking up the new wonder-cable and digging into its “suspicious” looking sturdy plastic sleeve, iFixit’s Miroslav Djuric was confronted with a lot of hefty metal shielding. One soldering iron and a bit of chopping later and he was in.

So what’s inside: The cable contains 12 individual chips, almost as many chips as the Smart Cover has magnets, plus a (small) handful of sundry resistors and other electronic-y type bits. The main brains seem to be in the two Gennum GN2033 chips, one in each end. The GN2033 is the “[i]ndustry’s first in-connector 10Gb/s transceiver chip for Thunderbolt.”

It would seem that a Thunderbolt cable is in fact a tiny computer.

So that, I’d guess, is where your money is going. Apple has actually been cutting the costs of cables recently, most famously with the $20 HDMI cable which managed to undercut pretty much everyone else when it was introduced. I’m not saying there isn’t a decent profit margin on the Thunderbolt cable — there surely is — but at least you’re getting something other than copper strands and plastic for your cash.

What Makes the Thunderbolt Cable Lightning Fast [iFixit]

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Kinetic Theater Chairs: Immersion or Distraction?

D-Box movie-theater chairs will shake you in time to the on-screen action

Imagine if, every time there was an explosion up on the cinema screen and a crashing thunder of sound from the theater’s THX speakers, your seat shook, spilling your beer/coke/popcorn into your lap. Well, imagine no more. The Kinetic Movie Theater chair could make this messy, pants-wetting fantasy into a moist reality.

The D-Box, already in several theaters across the U.S and also available for home use, takes “motion-codes” embedded in the movies (DVD and BD for home use) and uses them to control motors in the seats that rock, roll, shake and rattle you in time with the on-screen action.

I can see this being great for games, but who really wants to watch a movie and be jerked around while doing it? Does being shaken in time to Jake LaMotta’s punches in Raging Bull, or bobbing up and down as you descend the rapids in Deliverance really add to the movie? My guess is that this will work best in crappy action movies, which are pretty low on content as it is.

Still, if there’s one thing that can tempt me to part with my money, it’s a scary-sounding health warning, and the D-Box has a great one:

The D-BOX motion system and motion enabled seats may be harmful to women who are pregnant, persons with heart conditions, the elderly, persons with back, head or neck conditions or injuries or those with other pre-existing medical conditions.

Available now, in various first and third-party forms.

D-Box Movie Theater Seats [D-Box via Core77]

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Apple Releases Thunderbolt Cable. Now All We Need Are Thunderbolt Devices

A Thunderbolt cable, resting and ready for eventual action

Up until today, owners of Thunderbolt-equipped Macs were pretty much left to dream of the super-fast port’s potential. The only useful thing you could do with the Mini DisplayPort shaped hole was to plug in the same Mini DisplayPort monitor cable you plugged into your old Mac. Thunderbolt has been pretty boring.

Now, at last, you can buy a Thunderbolt cable from Apple. The two-meter length of plastic and metal will cost you a hefty $49, steep even by Apple’s standards. Still, even this pales to some of the still-rare Thunderbolt-equipped peripherals available. Apple will also sell you a Promise Pegasus 4×1TB RAID drive for $1,000. And no, the cable doesn’t come in the box. You’ll have to buy it separately.

And if you’re lucky enough to own both a new MacBook Pro and an iMac, you can connect them together in Target Disk Mode. This lets you mount one computer as an external drive on the other, just like in the old FireWire Target Disk Mode. This should be ridiculously fast.

The Thunderbolt cable, as well as a Thunderbolt software update for compatible Macs, is available now.

Thunderbolt Cable [Apple]

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Tacky Glowing Valve Caps Look Cheap, Are Cheap

Valve-cap LEDs may be tacky, but they’ll also make you safer at night

Here’s a case where tacky novelty can actually result in something that keeps you safe and also makes you look cool. The Flash Tire Wheel Valve Cap Lights pretty much sum up their function in the name: they are little LED lamps that replace your bike valve dust caps.

The little battery-powered lights screw onto a Schrader valve (the fat kind also found on cars and motorbikes) and glow like tiny Lightsabers. For such a cheap item (just $3 per pair on Amazon), they’re actually pretty smart. Instead of switches, the lights have motion and light sensors so they only turn on when you’re moving and it’s dark. Once you get going, they’ll paint a virtual circle of light in the air.

Be careful, though. Fellow gadget blogger and Wired.com alumnus John Brownlee put something similar onto his bike when he lived in Berlin, Germany. His lights were bigger and flashier, but the effects on the normally calm and bike-friendly population of Berlin were startling. Poor John was heckled and even had beer bottles thrown at him on one night ride.

If you decide to risk it, strap on a helmet and grab a pair in red, green or blue.

Flash Tire Wheel Valve Cap Lights [Amazon via Red Ferret]

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Scribbly: A Fat Marker-Pen Stylus for Tablets

There seem to be two distinct kinds of capacitive tablet stylus: fat and chunky, or slim and, well, less chunky. The Scribbly falls into the former category, and it is modeled on a regular white-board dry-erase marker, complete with chiseled tip.

It comes down to taste and also hand size, but of all the styluses I have tested I prefer the fatter ones. They’re easier to grip and, for people like us who seldom lift a pen to write more than a shopping list, they don’t tire your pampered fingers as fast. My current favorite is the pencil-shaped Alupen, but the Scribbly is even fatter and therefore — possibly — even comfier.

A cap protects the tip (until you lose it) and the plastic construction keeps it cheap. When it goes on sale, it will cost just £10, or $16. Available “soon.”

Scribbly product page [Scribbly via Oh Gizmo]

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iPad 2 Display Dock, Just Like the Ones in the Apple Store

If you have ever wandered into your local Apple Store, taken a look at the cool perspex blocks which house the new display iPads and thought “I want one of those,” then we have good news. For just $75 you can have one, turning any blond wooden table in your home into a sleek, Cupertino-compatible countertop.

If my memory of Apple’s units serves me (and it doesn’t, because I drink to forget, and I have a lot to forget), then this version, from PC Gadgets, is a very close replica of the original. Carved from solid acrylic, the iPad 2 Display Dock has space to cradle an iPad 2, with an extra dock up top for an iPhone or an iPod.

I can’t actually think of may uses for this other than making your own faux Apple Store, but I want one anyway. The best part of the whole thing, though, is a line on the product page. “The iPad2 Display Dock will make you the envy off all your friends who bought inferior stands.” Indeed.

iPad 2 Display Dock [PC Gadgets]

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Voltaic Spark Case Powers Tablets With the Sun

Ten hours of sunlight is enough to fully juice your iPad

Solar-powered laptop chargers always seemed a little mis-matched. Using a trickle of Sun-power to juice a thirsty computer is a little like running your big-screen TV from a trunk full of AAA cells. But tablets, which spend much longer away from power outlets, are perfect for solar power.

And the Spark Tablet Case is just the thing. The case, made from PET (recycled soda bottles), has a compartment inside for your tablet plus a bunch of mesh pockets for cables and other sundries. On the side are the solar panels, and these will fully charge the internal battery in ten hours (in direct sunlight).

That battery is the important part, as you could leave this hanging from your tent all day and then plug in your iPad when you get back from a long hike. The power comes out through two USB ports. Both provide 5 volts, one sends out 600mA and the other 2A. You can also plug in pretty much any other device using adapters, and the voltage can be stepped up to 12v for charging camera batteries.

It seems ideal for camping trips, except for the weight: at 1130 grams (around 2.5 pounds), you’ll probably wan to leave this at base camp. Just don’t forget to put it on a sunny rock while you’re gone.

$300, available now.

Spark Tablet Case [Voltaic]

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