Floating Shelf Hides iPod Dock, Speakers

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If Ikea made an iPod dock, it would look like the Hohrizontal 51. Resembling nothing as much as the Lack floating shelf the Swedish furniture-as-crack super-chain, the Hohrizontal combines iPod dock, amp and speakers into a minimalist block. Unlike anything from Ikea, it costs around $660.

In addition to the iPad connector, you can also hook up a TV or other MP3 player to pump sound through the two 25W speakers. In fact, you can leave the TV on the shelf: it supports up to 25kg, or 55-pounds. The Hohrizontal will also let you run composite video-out (we’re guessing this comes from the iPod) and audio-out, for connection to a home-theater setup.

It’s actually a rather neat piece of furniture, although we can’t help but think that this is ripe for an Ikea-hack. After all, Lack shelves start at just $10 and are almost as easy to cut as cardboard, so stuffing a couple of speakers and a dock in there should be simple. If you actually want to buy the Hohrizontal 51, though, head over to Germany, or trawl the slew of linked Flash-based sites for possible mail-order.

Hohrizontal 51 [Finite Elemente via Oh Gizmo and Cult of Mac]


Hands-On With the Dual iPod Touch GPS-Kit

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The Dual GPS Navigation and Battery Cradle is an accessory which adds proper GPS navigation to the iPod Touch. You slide in the iPod and it gets full navigational functionality, just like the iPhone. For the past few weeks, I have been testing it.

The iPod Touch is often thought of as a phone-less iPhone, and although that’s true, it’s only half the story. Aside from the lack of phone functionality, the Touch misses out on a camera, always-on internet, a compass and a GPS chip. The Dual cradle adds this last back in, letting you use the iPod as a GPS tracker for geo-tagging photos and as an in-car, turn-by-turn satnav system.

The Dual comes with a lot of accessories. First, the cradle, which plugs into both the dock connector and the headphone socket. It more than doubles the thickness of the iPod, but also adds a beefy battery pack which powers the GPS or recharges the iPod. A three-way switch on the back lets you choose between GPS or battery, or to switch it off. There is a mini-USB port in the bottom which will let you charge and sync the iPod while in the case, but you need to slide the switch to “Battery” to make it work. There is also a speaker (with volume switches) and a pass-through headphone jack.

Also in the box is a windshield-mounting kit: another cradle which attaches to the glass with a suction cup. This hooks up to the car stereo via 3.5mm jack and to the cigarette-lighter socket via included cable.

I don’t have a car, so I used my bike, and my good friend Francesc modded the bracket to fit my handlebars. I also ignored the free NavAtlas GPS application that is made by the same company for use with the unit: it is USA and Canada-only, and therefore useless outside those countries. Fortunately, an iPod in the cradle just passes the GPS info direct to any GPS-aware app. You can use anything that works on an iPhone.

Out on the sunny Barcelona streets, I fired the cradle up. It can take a while to get a fix, and you’ll need a very clear view of the sky to get one. I had to wait for a few minutes each time, and found that moving slowly along on the bike seemed to speed things up. One the unit is locked on, it stays locked on, though. In fact, once it gets going, the GPS tracking appears to be flawless, holding on even in brief jaunts through tunnels or indoors.

On the bike, the audio is loud enough to hear, as long as you aren’t on a busy road (and the speaker is quite a bit louder than the iPad’s own, making this a good way to listen to podcasts while cooking).

The battery is long-lasting, with a 1,100mAH-rating. Dual claims ten hours when used in GPS mode. I didn’t get anywhere near this time in my testing, but the four-LED battery indicator never came off full even after a couple hours. This is good: The iPod battery itself drains scarily fast when tracking with the screen switched on, so you will want to use the cradle’s battery for a top-up at journey’s end. Many apps will let you track with the iPod display switched off, however.

In use, there isn’t much to fault with the Dual cradle. It does what it says it does, and build quality is fine. The trouble comes with the size and the price. The kit costs $200, double that of rival TomTom’s car-kit. For that price, you could buy a standalone GPS and never have to worry about your iPod’s battery life.

That choice is up to you, though. If the price and features of this cradle seem good to you, then go ahead and buy it. It works great, and does it without fuss.

Dual XGPS300 [Dual]

Photo: Charlie Sorrel

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Conductive Finger-Buttons Allow Gloved Gadget Control

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While shrink-wrapped pork-meat products might make great faux-fingers for chilly Koreans to operate their iPhones with gloves on, a new product from Quirky is higher-tech and much less gross.

The Digit is a button, designed by Brian Shy, which pins onto the finger of your glove. The safety-pin fastening pokes through top the inside whereupon it conducts the electricity from your finger and transfers it to the conductive fabric on the button itself. The Digit comes in packs of four. Put one on each thumb, and one on the index and middle-fingers of your preferred hand and you’ll have toasty fingers and full control of your iDevice, be it the Nexus One, the iPad or any other gadget with a capacitive touch-screen.

Ingenious, and just $14. Sure, you could buy 14 Korean wieners instead, but this solution is just so much less icky.

Digits [Quirky. Thanks, Brian!]

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First Look: Leather Lumix GF-1 Ever-Ready Case

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The two-part, leather (or leatherette) “ever-ready” camera case used to be pretty much your only choice back in the days of the all-manual film SLR. They were expensive, made-to-measure for your specific camera model and they would last pretty much forever. The one thing they weren’t was convenient. Their slow-to-open design earned them the nickname “never-ready”. I just bought one for my Panasonic GF-1.

The case is a custom-designed model made in Hong Kong and bought new on Ebay (from seller Kanye Wayne) for a probably ridiculous $120 (plus $10 shipping). It costs more than the official Panasonic version, but both looks better and hugs the camera closer, keeping things compact. So why the hell did I buy it?

Two reasons. The retro-design means I can carry it around and most people will think I have an old film-camera slung over my shoulder. Even if it were slow to get to the camera and take a shot, it would still be quicker than digging in a bigger bag.

Second, it is actually pretty fast to get in.

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The case is hand-stitched and made to snugly fit the GF-1 and the 20mm pancake lens. Any other lens won’t fit, although you can just use the bottom half-case. This part joins to the camera by screwing into the tripod socket. You do have to remove it every time you change the SD card, but this is better than the olden days, where you had to swap films every 36 exposures. Some other designs also hook over the strap-joints, but that just adds more things to undo.

The top section is joined by two press-studs at the sides, and a magnetic clasp joined underneath. The case pivots on the studs and swings back, over and down underneath the camera when shooting.

How does it perform? Pretty well. The lower case is snug, and the soft, plush lining cossets the body. The extra thickness and the small finger-grip on the front make it a lot more comfortable in my big hands.

The top case needs to age a little, though. Right now, the new leather is rather springy. While the magnet clasp makes opening and closing quick and easy, the stiffness makes the case stand out straight towards you when open. This is less of a problem when using the LCD screen to compose than it would be with the viewfinder. A few months of use should make things a little more floppy, though, and you can always just pop the whole top section off for longer shoots.

The other glitch is that, when you open and close the case, it rubs against the bottom edge of the lens-barrel and sometimes knocks off the lens-cap. Again, this should ease up as the leather softens.
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Should you buy it? That depends. The price is high, but you get what you pay for. The stitching and leather are top-notch, and the details are well thought through (the tripod screw has another female thread in the base so you can still mount it while in the case). It is also perfect for carrying the camera everywhere, and if you care about looks, you’ll love it (you can also choose white, black and dark brown versions).

But it does only work with one lens, the 20mm, and there is no space for storing extra SD cards or batteries. In the end, you’ll have to decide: it’s a specialty item with a price to match. The good news is that, if you need such a thing, then you certainly won’t be disappointed. The worst part? Now I need to find a matching leather strap.

Panasonic GF1 GF-1 Genuine Leather 20mm Case [Ebay/Kanye Wayne]

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Acadalus, The $5,000 Self-Leveling Tripod Head

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Dr. Carl Koch was sick of fiddling with his tripod to get his camera level, so he spent the next four years inventing and designing the Acadalus, a self-leveling tripod head. Instead of adjusting knobs and levers until the little spirit-level bubble sits obediently between its lines, you just pop the camera onto the Acadalus and wait a couple seconds.

Modeled on an airplane flight-simulator, an inclinometer measures just where the head is and then uses stepper-motors to acquire a level-plane. Further adjustment can be made manually by using the D-pad like buttons on the side.

The Acadalus can be used in the studio, plugged into the mains, or you can hook up the 2800 mAH 18.5 V lithium ion battery which should last you for a day of shooting (or two hours of continual use if you are, we suppose, on a ship yawing and rolling in a stormy sea).

So how much is this five-pound, Swiss-made behemoth? A whopping $5,000 for the studio kit, plus another $500 if you want the battery and charger. If you need both the power cable and the battery option, you’re looking at yet another $100, nickel-and-diming you up to $5,600. No wonder the PDN article which led us to the Acadalus shows it supporting the Leica S2, a camera that costs $26,000 body-only.

I don’t know about you, but I’d be willing to spend a lot of hours in Lightroom using the crop tool to level my drunken, off-kilter snaps before I’d drop this cash, but I imagine that there may be somebody out there who really, really needs a level camera. Good luck if your subject is wonky, though.

Acadalus [Acadalus via PDN]


Zaftig Cargo Fork: Lowriding Load-Lifter

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This is the Zaftig, a replacement fork/rack combo for any bike which, if paired with a strong front wheel should enable you to move the entire contents of your home in one go.

The stock $200 Zaftig can be had for threaded or threadless headsets, and is designed for a 20-inch (BMX) wheel. Should you choose not to carry heavy boxes with you onto the half-pipe, the fork is adjustable with a 5mm Allen wrench to fit most any wheel. The steel rack is integrated with the fork to minimize flex and increase strength, and you can opt for a disk-brake tab or a pair of cantilever posts (both a $25 option).

Why we like it: While not cheap, this is still an inexpensive way to get yourself a strong cargo bike. It is also a great way to switch out the front wheel for a smaller one and lower the load into a much more stable position. If you haul a lot of gear, this might be just what you’re looking for. Available now.

The Zaftig [Jacobs Green via Urban Velo]


Hands-On with the Drinkclip Belt-Mounted Cup-Holder

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The Drinkclip/Beltclip is a combination plastic cup-holder. The twist is that you clip it to your belt for on-the-go slurping of the day’s coffee ration. Over the last week, I have been testing it out in a variety of unsuitable situations. But first, a brief recap.

Almost three weeks ago, I gently mocked the clip as being both dorky and dangerous, inviting spillage of scalding-hot coffee directly onto your body. Readers agreed: “Imagine the fun when the crowd surges and the hot coffee is squeezed out of the squashed cup!” wrote ka1axy in the comments (somebody else tried to co-opt the thread with a fundamentalist anti-coffee screed: “coffee is bad for you anyway, stop drinking it and you wont be temped to buy this stupid thing.”)

The Drinkclip people got in touch and issued a challenge to test their device. I accepted. So how did it do?

Pretty good, although as ever I tried to abuse it beyond necessary limits. The clip comes in two parts. A strongly sprung clamp like that found on a workshop inspection lamp, and a detachable belt-clip-able section that does the cup-holding. When used together, the hinged joint lets the cup stay more-or-less upright as the clamp section sways.

The clip works great as a low-slung desk-bracket that keeps your coffee below notebook level for safer spills. And the detachable clamp is strong enough to grip even the thinnest surface safely. But that’s not the point. This is a clip to be used on the move.

I avoided coffee, mostly due to a Starbucks allergy which kicks in every time I see a children’s milkshake packaged for adults. Instead, I chose beer, and slipped the can into the included “koozie”, a neoprene sleeve which both insulates the can and keeps it firmly in the clip. Mounted directly to the belt, it is surprisingly spill-resistant and frees you hands for essential tasks like flipping steaks on the grill or making a turn signal as you cross four lanes of traffic on your bike. In fact, get the clip to sit upright when you’re in the saddle and it is rock-solid, mostly because your waist doesn’t move much as you ride.

Stage two was a stress-test for the full clamp assembly. Again on the bike, but not just rolling down the street. This needed to be brutal. I took the clip and a six-pack to Friday-night bike-polo and clamped the Drinkclip to my handlebars, ready for the full stop-start, herky-jerky ride ahead.

The result? A partial success. The clip did indeed stay put, but inevitably drooped down out of reach, although the can stayed upright thanks to the hinges. Worse was the thrashing around of the beer in the heat of play. As I dodged nimbly across the court, my handlebars were flung from side to side. The can was whipped back and forth like the head of a dropped fire-hose. I lost a lot of beer (although the wet patches did cause some opponents to skid and fall, a definite benefit).

Should you buy it? Sure, if you’re a pro-barbecuer then $15 is a steal, and the Drinkclip is certainly tough enough to last. If you’re looking to carry coffee across the city as you walk, don’t. Take a break, stop pretending your time is so damned important and stop off in a non-chain cafe for a real espresso, not some turgid, watery brew or creamy mocha-choca-fluffball.

Beltclip [Drinkclip]

Photo: Charlie Sorrel

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Retro Dial-Style iPhone Phone Dock

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This beautiful iPhone dock might cost $195, but it will last longer than you. Cast one at a time, by hand, the resin dock and phone handset has a little cutout in which your iPhone can lie and rest whilst you place and answer calls via the retro-hefty earpiece.

You do need to run Apple’s white cable to the iPhone to connect (we assume that, as the phone comes from an Etsy maker, it is not licensed for a built-in connector), but you can hook up another USB cable round back to charge and sync the iPhone.

I used to use a real old phone like this one, converted to fit modern sockets but complete with the original, crackly charcoal-filled mic and speaker. It was terrible to use, but a lot of fun. Combine this dock with AT&T’s legendarily bad coverage and one of the many rotary-dialing iPhone Apps in the store and you could almost be back in the 1930s. Currently sold out.

iRetrofone Base [Etsy]


iPad Vanity Plate Uglifies, Protects

ipad vanity plateThe iPad Vanity Plate “could be the best investment you make to protect your new iPad.” What is it? More a dog-tag than an actual vanity plate for your new device, it is a steel plate big enough for two lines of engraving.

While you could stick this straight onto the iPad, it might be more elegant to just scrawl your name and number onto the gracefully curved aluminum back using a Sharpie. With this presumably in mind, the folks at New PC Gadgets suggest sticking it to your iPad case instead. If this is their own pointless combination-lock case, then you will now be doubly “secure”.

To entice you further, here are some of the plate’s must-have features, pasted directly from the site:

Fits Any Corner

Makes your iPad stand out from the crowd

Ensures your iPad will be returned by Good Samaritan

The best part is of course the sample in the photo, which has the name and number of Steve Jobs. If only Apple had thought to stick one of these on that lost prototype iPhone: Think of all the trouble that could have been avoided. $13.

Stainless Steel Vanity Plate for the iPad [New PC Gadgets]


iPad USB Camera Connector Works With Keyboards, Audio In-Out

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The USB-to-Dock connector that ships as part of Apple’s iPad Camera Connection Kit doesn’t just work with cameras. Early reports say that it will also let you hook up a USB keyboard, connect USB audio devices and also connect a regular camera card-reader.

This last is the most obvious, but also great news for photographers cameras that don’t use SD-cards (the other half of the connection kit is an SD-reader). Direct-to-camera connections are notoriously slow, and suck the camera’s battery, so this option is handy, if a little messy.

But the surprise comes with the keyboard and audio support. The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) was contacted by a reader who plugged a USB keyboard into his iPad and was able to type, and Glenn Fleishman at TidBits tried out a USB headset. It worked great, letting him make a call on Skype. “[The] quality was just terrific,” he says, although there is no indication that sound has been switched: it just works.

It appears that any microphone or headset that uses the USB Audio Class will work. These require no drivers under OS X, which is what the iPad runs. This means that, as was speculated by Peter Kirn of Create Digital Music almost two weeks ago, the iPad should accept input from USB audio devices such as mixers and high-quality microphones. This could make it into a great mobile podcasting studio.

We hope that as more kits ship, our loyal Gadget Lab readers will continue to plug things in and test them. Let us know how it goes.

iPad USB Camera Adapter Supports Audio Headsets, Too [TUAW]

Apple iPad May Support USB Audio Interfaces Via Camera Accessory Kit [Create Digital Music]

iPad USB Audio Class 1 and Update on OSX Class 2 [Apple Mailing Lists]

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