Livescribe Echo Smartpen Lets You Do Almost Everything

Livescribe’s smartpen has two primary features: It records ambient audio along with every pen stroke of your handwritten notes. But not all its uses are immediately obvious.

I bought the new, higher-capacity, more ergonomic Livescribe Echo in August and have spent the last few weeks putting the pen through its paces. I’ve also gathered up testimonials about the device — mostly from other journalists, who understandably love it — and questions and tips from ordinary users.

Just like our How to Do (Almost) Everything With A Kindle 3, this is a list of (almost) everything you could do with a Livescribe Echo smartpen — plus a few Q&As at the end.

Indexing Audio

Among journalists, the Atlantic’s James Fallows has been the most enthusiastic and eloquent supporter of the Livescribe. In “The Pen Gets Mightier,” Fallows describes his love for the smartpen, particularly its ability to match handwriting with audio. “The result is a kind of indexing system for an audio stream,” Fallows writes. “For me this means instant access to the three interesting sentences — I just write ‘interesting!’ in the notebook or put a star—in the typical hour-long journalistic interview.”

In my experience, as in Fallows’, this is absolutely game-changing. I’ve tried a number of devices to record interviews, from traditional recorders to my iPhone’s Voice Memo app, even Google Voice for telephone calls. None of them are as reliable or useful after the fact as the Echo.

It captures ambient speech remarkably well, even at distance. It even works fairly well recording a speakerphone-to-speakerphone conference call, a feat that gives a good deal of trouble to most people’s ears, let alone their recording gadgets.

You can play back recordings using the pen’s built-in speaker, or by uploading the pencast to your computer. There the Livescribe Desktop application (on Mac or Windows) can print your written notes to a PDF file or export your audio for archiving or editing.

It’s particularly useful to export written notes to online note–management applications that can handle PDFs like Evernote for remote storage.

Recording Speeches and Classroom Lectures

In The New York Times, Wired columnist Clive Thompson profiled Brian Lacata, an Oakland math teacher whose students all use Livescribe pens in his class.

In the classroom, the smartpen is a curious mix of the traditional and the high-tech. As Thompson notes, “the pen is based on an age-old classroom technique that requires no learning curve: pen-and-paper writing.” But while audio recording has been used for some time (not without controversy) to tape lectures and meetings, it changes with the use of the smartpen.

When Lacata’s students take notes, “the pen alters their writing style: Instead of verbatim snippets of Lacata’s instructions, they can write ‘key words’ — essentially little handwritten tags that let them quickly locate a crucial moment in the audio stream.” Essentially, it offloads the raw-data–recording component of note-taking to the audio stream, while placing the tagging, indexing, thinking and questioning components firmly within script. Instead of notes, you’ve recorded a mind-map.


Finally, Official iPad and iPhone Cases from Moleskine

At last, Moleskine has come up with its own set of iDevice covers. Since the launch of the iPad, we have seen traditionally-bound covers from Pen & Quill and Dodocase, beautiful, handmade cases which both protect your iDevices and disguise them as old-style notebooks.

Oddly, the official Moleskine covers for the iPad and iPhone (3G and 3GS) are the least Moleskine-like of the lot. Whereas the others do nothing more than put a cover and retaining strap around your gadget, the Moleskine adds a paper notepad and a soft, suede-like lining to the cardboard and faux-leather cover. It also holds the iPad in place with an ugly bezel-covering rectangle, instead of the Dodocase’s elegant, if sometimes slippery, edge-gripping rubber pads.

The paper/iPad combo will surely prove attractive to some, but the added thickness makes things somewhat impractical. The iPhone version is especially encumbered: Look at the picture. So useless does this case render the phone that even Moleskine admits that “the Smartphone Cover is mainly conceived to be used with Bluetooth, headphones or loud speaker.”

The cases are on pre-order at Amazon, but neither launch-date or price have been announced. Our advice? Buy either the Pen & Quill or Dodocase, and sling a regular paper Moleskine in the bag along with it. Or just make your own.

Moleskine Covers for iPhone and iPad [Moleskine]

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Bluetooth Sheet Music Turner Could Help Readers With Disabilities

AirTurn’s Bluetooth foot-switch for iPad turns pages with the tap of a foot. It’s designed for keeping both hands free to play an instrument while reading digital sheet music. However, it may turn out to be an important technology for e-book readers with disabilities.

Gadget Lab wrote about AirTurn’s BT-105 prototype in July, but I discovered its accessibility potential in this thread at e-reading site TeleRead. A reader wrote the following email to TeleRead editor Paul Biba:

My friend’s grandson is bright, loves to read, but doesn’t speak and lacks the fine motor skill to turn pages on his iPad book reader. Is there any software or device that could turn the pages for him?

Could you also ask if they know of an input device, do they know how a non-technical person would hook the input device to the iPad or computer?

I did my own research and was discouraged not to be able to find any purpose-built software or hardware to do the job. Late last night, reader “possentespirto” mentioned the AirTurn, which is still scheduled to be available sometime in Q4 of this year. Bluetooth pairing doesn’t require a great deal of technical wizardry, and the AirTurn foot pedal is already compatible with third-party software. This could be a terrific solution.

Users lacking either full control of their arms and hands or the limbs themselves could use the foot pedal to turn pages and zoom in on text; users with other disabilities could convert the foot clicker into a hand-clicker. In fact, the device reminds me of nothing so much as the clicker Stephen Hawking used to select text before he eventually lost control of his hands as well.

AirTurn’s foot-clicker may be too heavy or require too much force to be usable for some disabled users. Here’s where there’s a natural opportunity for an accessibility-minded company to build on this technology, make something explicitly for these readers and do it right.

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Booq Boa iPad Sleeve, Like an Upgrade to Apple’s Own

After testing (and buying) far too many iPad cases, including the famous bamboo Moleskine-alike Dodocase, I finally settled on Apple’s own slimline sleeve. So good is it that I have removed it precisely once since buying it almost a month ago, and that was to show my mother the iPad inside.

Booq’s new Boa folio-style case looks a lot like Apple’s, and adds a few extras. Like the Apple case, the iPad slides into the Boa and is held with its edges enclosed, and with holes for the ports. Both cases also share a sticky-out bumper around the perimeter, although the Boa’s sits at the back, not the center. Booq’s case also folds into a stand for either typing or horizontal display using the same clever tuck-in flap as Apple.

Then things diverge. The Boa is slightly padded, which makes it thicker but more protected than Apple’s case. It also has a couple pockets: a document sleeve on the inside and an iPhone-sized pocket on the front. These, too, could add bulk. Finally, the case has a closing strap to stop it flapping open like dirty uncle Pete’s shorts and accidentally revealing the delicate object within.

For me, the Apple iPad case is pretty much perfect. I don’t care about its dirt-attracting abilities, and prefer its slimline, skin-like profile to more protective padding. But in taking the best points of the Apple case and slightly adding to them, along with using high-quality Napa leather and something called “Twylon”, the folks at Booq have come up with a nice upgrade. It isn’t cheap, though: the Boa can be had in a range of manly, neutral colors for $90, or in a ballistic nylon version for $50. Available now.

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Booq Boa product page [Booq. Thanks, Brad!]

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Wood-Carved iPad Stand Adds Instant Class for $35

Ooh, is that mahogany? Sherwood+Meister’s Block 22 iPad stand is actually carved from a single block of FSC-certified kiln-dried Ipe, which might be even better. Ipe resists moisture and weathering like cedar but is sturdy and handsome like cherry. You can build decks with it, without painting or staining — this has an extra hand-rubbed satin finish to keep the color.

Why is it called Block 22? That’s for the 22-degree angled groove that holds the iPad in either portrait or landscape. Although I think I would keep it in portrait, just because it looks so beautiful that way, particularly from the back:

It’s like a scaled-down mid-century modern iMac, designed by Charles and Ray Eames.

Finally, there’s a rounded dish in the back to hold accessories, like a power adapter, headphones, or camera (which would be the main reason I’d set the iPad to landscape). I’d probably wind up sticking my iPhone in the dish, and then forgetting where I’d put it because it’d be hiding behind the iPad. 21st-century comedy ensues.

If you’ve already got an iPad keyboard dock ($69) or love standing it up in an iPad case ($39), there’s probably not that much extra here to get you to pull the trigger. But if you use the iPad in the kitchen, in a slick design or architecture office, or just go nuts for the contrast of hardwood and aluminum, $35 gets you a very lovely stand indeed.

Block22 iPad Stand [Sherwood+Meister]
iPad Wood [Yanko Design]

All images via Sherwood+Meister.

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Sony Ericsson LiveView, An External Monitor for your Phone

At first, SonAt first, Sony Ericsson’s tiny 1.3-inch Bluetooth external cellphone screen seems like a joke. And then you realize that it is designed to work with the giant, slab-like HTC Desire or Sony Ericsson’s own Xperia X10 and it all makes sense.

The LiveView is a small OLED screen the size of a watch-face. It has physical buttons on its corners, and the bezel is touch-sensitive. You can use it to control music, check Twitter, read RSS feeds or do pretty much anything an app wants to do. Applications need to be written to use this monitor, and the most impressive demo in the video below shows a sports app sending stats to the LiveView as you run.

The widget comes with a wrist-strap (of course – wrist-mounted gadgets are the new pocket-watches, or something) and can be clipped onto clothes, just like the iPods Nano and Shuffle. There are a handful of phones that support it already, but you can use it with any phone running Android 2.0 or better by downloading Sony Ericsson LiveWare Manager from the Android Market.

I love the idea. Wouldn’t it be great if Apple did something like this with the Nano and the iPhone? The LiveView will be in stores in the fourth quarter of this year, price as yet undecided.

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LiveView product page [Sony Ericsson via Engadget]


Steel Series Shift Fully Customizes Your Gaming Keyboard

Image from SteelSeries.com

Let’s suppose you’re a hard-core PC gamer, but 1) you’re equally devoted to a LOT of different games, or 2) you don’t want your keyboard to ALWAYS look like you’re battling the Lich King. Like if a girl comes over. You need a chameleon keyboard, ready to do (and look like) whatever you need it to.

SteelSeries makes keyboards for gamers that do this, with custom keysets for World of Warcraft, Starcraft II, and Aion. The hardware lets you swap the entire keyset for different games; the software lets you map every key, record macros on-the-fly, and switch between different custom key layers. The first iteration was the ZBoard; the new Shift model boasts revamped hardware and a more powerful and intuitive software engine.

I have to confess that I’m probably not the target market for these keysets — as a writer, I have to do a lot of typing in a hurry, but it’s generally not purely reacting by instinct — but I’m obsessed with keyboards, both physical and software, and I do love some of the concepts on display here. For instance, the Shift offers “Fine-Tuned Hot Spots”:

Some keys are used more frequently than others, both when gaming and typing. The keys you use the most, like WASD for First Person Shooters, require less force than the keys you don’t use as often.

I think my laptop’s spacebar could actually use the opposite of that, to stand up to my thundrous thumbs. The delete key, too, as I angrily backspace through typos or (even more often) self-inflected stupidity. Maybe they need “journalist” and “fanboy” key sets for the web — the latter could have built-in macros for “You’re too dumb to understand why [Company X] sucks and [Company Y] is the future of [industry Z].”

In the gallery below, check out how the SteelSeries Shift works, with close-ups of the different branded keysets available from SteelSeries (The image quality on the keysets is frankly not great).

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SteelSeries Shift with Standard Keyset.
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SteelSeries Shift: The Swiss Army Knife of Keyboards [Techland]

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Helmet-Cam Mount for Last-Gen iPod Nano

When it lopped the click-wheel and camera off the iPod Nano, Apple sent a clear message: it hates you, sports fans. The video-shooting iPod was tough and light, and unlike the iPod Touch, almost unbreakable. That made it perfect for wearing whilst doing sports. It also made it perfect for recording sports.

If you have a 5th-gen Nano, or manage to buy one before stocks run out, then Rampant Gear’s head-mount may be for you. An elasticated strap wraps around the back of your helmet, and the iPod slips into a boxy rubber mount at the front, held away from the helmet itself. The whole thing looks pretty solid and the rubber absorbs the bumps.

This turns the little iPod into a helmet-cam for just $35, and lets you film your sporting exploits hands-free. The quality of the Nano’s video is hardly high, but you probably won’t care – the point of catching your awesome goals on film is not the video itself, after all. The point is your awesomeness.

Take a look at the sample videos on the site to see what you can expect. I would embed a video here, but I already used up my bike-polo allowance for the day.

iPod Nano helmet-cam [Rampant Gear]

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Owleye Solar Bike Lights Also Charge via USB

Owleye makes solar-powered bike-lights, but don’t worry if you forgot to leave one on the window-ledge all day – you can quickly juice the built-in li-ion batteries via USB.

The lamp in question is the catchily-named 1996-906. Like all Owleye’s other lights, it has solar-panel on the side which will provide enough charge for 90 minutes if left to soak in the photons for two-hours. LEave it in the sun for four hours and switch the 200-lumen LED to flashing-mode and you can enjoy six-hours of night-biking.

The trick here is that you don’t need to turn the house-lights on if its a cloudy day, or to charge the lamp overnight. With the 1996-906, you can just plug in to a handy USB-port or charger and juice it that way.

The idea is a good one – I hate buying batteries or even swapping-out rechargeables. The lights are also small, so you can keep them handy in a backpack or pocket. They’re not cheap, however. Online, this model is going for $80 a set. If you don’t need the USB option, Owleye makes cheaper, bulkier lamps starting at $20.

Owleye product page [Owleye via Urban Velo]

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Photo: iPad Powers BMX Bike-Stereo

Mikey Wally is serious about bikes. He’s also serious about gadgets, and he snapped this shot of an amazing but rather dangerous-looking iPad-powered bike stereo at June’s Subway Series Ride in Los Angles

The iPad handlebar mount, seen here on a BMX, appears to be as sturdy as the bike itself. It looks like nothing more than a sign-holder from a conference-center, with rubber strips slid in to offer a little protection against the rattling steel (take a peek at the full-sized picture, though, and you’ll see it is custom-built). It also shows just how perfect a ten-inch screen is for in-bike entertainment. Sure, here it’s just using iTunes to feed the stereo, but maps, movies and anything else would work great on the big (ish) screen.

So how serious is Mikey about his bicycles? First, he lives in LA and doesn’t use a car. Second, according to his Flickr profile, last summer he rode from New York to LA. That’s as bad-ass as the 40 Glocc track playing on the bike stereo.

BMX bike-stereo [Mikey Wally / Flickr]

My June Subway Series Ride Photos [Mikey Wally]

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