Hermaphrodite USB Cords Stack to Infinity

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Buying USB cables is like buying plastic shopping bags: both normally come free with a purchase (and both end up stuffed into the back of a cupboard or drawer). But Gonglue Jiang’s USB cable concept design would actually get me to part with some cash.

The cables solve the problem of overloaded USB ports without resorting to a messy hub. Each plug is both male and female, letting it both give and receive USB data and power. The hermaphroditic cords can be daisy-chained, letting you stack several plugs together for some hot multiple gadget-on-port action.

The only limit we see is that of power, just the same as when you use a non-powered hub to hook up too many devices to one port. Other than that, this design is so good we’d like to see it incorporated into every USB cable out there. That way we could go back to not paying for them.

Running Out Of USB Ports? [Yanko]


Jill-e Clutch Bag: Tote Your Compact Camera in Style

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Jill-e makes camera bags for girls. Or rather, it makes camera bags that aren’t the dorky nylon utility packs everybody else makes. The bags combine designer-purse style looks (patent leather, chain straps and fancy detailing) with a practical, padded interior. The triple advantage is that the ladies can have a bag that goes with their outfit, protects their gear and doesn’t attract the eyes of a bag-snatcher.

The latest bag is this clutch, a red leather purse with a silky interior to keep compact cameras comfy. The snap-shut clutch has adjustable pads inside to fit your camera, and the production version, due in the Summer, will have credit-card slots inside the top section. Best of all, it comes in at a distinctly camera-pouch price, not a designer handbag price: $25. And boys, if you’re jealous, don’t be. Jill-e also makes the Jack line for the stylish gentleman about town.

Jill-e Clutch [Photography Bay]

Photo credit [Photography Bay]


Simplest and Best? The MoviePeg iPhone Stand

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This is the MoviePeg, and it’s the simplest gadget you’ll see this week, and possibly, like, ever. The MoviePeg is no more than a little plastic rectangle with a notch cut from one side. This notch matches the thickness and radius of your iPhone’s edge, and forms a snug stand.

We love it. You can use it as a kind of tripod to keep the iPhone completely vertical for photos, or prop the phone at almost any angle both in portrait and landscape mode, for watching movies, reading, turning the phone into an alarm clock, pretty much anything that doesn’t require laying the iPhone on its back.

Could you make your own? Sure, but at £5 (it’s made in the UK) or around $10 shipped to the US, why bother? I was filling out my credit card details before I remembered I don’t have an iPhone (seriously), so I hope an iPod Touch version comes soon.

Simple, effective and colorful. Did we mention the colors? Holy spectrum! I’ll take the pink one.

MoviePeg [Movie Peg via ]


Idapt Gadget Dock Charges Almost Anything

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Idapt’s new i4 is a charging dock for pretty much all of your gadgets. Like the company’s previous stations, the dock reduces cable-clutter, but this time it does it in shiny, piano-black style.

The hot-looking dock plugs into the mains and sits on your desk or night-stand. In the top are three virgin sockets, into which you can insert various “tips”. These are analogous to the dock inserts in Apple’s universal dock, only they also carry circuitry and connectors for various devices. If you have a vanilla USB-powered gadget, there’s a hole for that, too, hidden down at the side.

The tips fit most kinds of cellphone, the Nintendo DS, the PSP, the iPhone, all sizes of USB and one is even a charger for AA and AAA batteries. It even has an off-switch so you don’t have to yank the cord from the wall. The only problem might be the price. At $60, the i4 isn’t bad, but you’ll need to buy tips, either at around $15 each or in packs which start at $40 for 4.

The i4 also comes in white, available in May.

IDAPT Unveils i4 Universal Charging Solution [Max Borges. Thanks, Valerie!]

Idapt store [Idapt]


ATT Zero Charger Switches Itself Off

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AT&T’s Zero Charger will save the world and help trees to grow. Just kidding, but that’s just what the promo shot of the new cellphone charger would have you believe. The charger is a significant announcement though, as it solves an environmental problem most people don’t know exists: Vampire draw.

Vampire draw is the trickle of power that a charger pulls when left in the wall, even if there is no device plugged in. While small, if you add up all the chargers in the world, the numbers quickly get big. AT&T’s new Zero Charger fixes this by switching itself off completely as soon as the phone is fully charged. This would be great for my dad who inexplicably leaves his cellphones plugged in all the time except when he leaves the house.

The Zero Charger is in fact a USB charger, so it’s good for iPods and other devices, too. It should really come with every one of AT&T’s cellphones, but it appears that you’ll have to buy one (big surprise. Thanks AT&T). Given that anyone savvy enough to buy the Zero Charger is also likely to already unplug their chargers, it seems more like a rather pointless PR exercise.

Save Your Planet AT&T ZERO Charger – Coming Soon! [AT&T via DVICE]


Ears-On with iFrogz Comfort Series Headphones

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IFrogz sent through yet another pair of headphones to test and this time, finally, they’re good enough to buy. The Comfort Series CS40 cans are an over-the-head, over-the-ear design and, while they don’t offer the big, detailed sound of even slightly more expensive headphones, they’re competent, tough and, yes, comfortable.

The design is simple and good looking (with one horrible blemish). The ‘phones have a steel band covered with a hard rubber strip up top and two tough plastic sliding sections from which the cups hang. The cups can gimbal inside their rings, which themselves fold up and inside the band. This means that the full-sized headphones fold small for throwing in a bag.

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The “comfort” part comes from the deep and very soft cushions which also appear to be sealed pretty well against at least a light shower. These cushions are almost erotic to the touch, and combined with the gentle spring of the steel band and the non-slip rubber grip, the headphones sit very firmly but softly on your melon.

But what about the sound? Not bad. I tested them against a pair of Panasonic RP-HTX7s, the shell-eared, candy-colored retro-cans you see everywhere (and which I bought myself), and also against Apple’s stock earbuds. The iFrogz beat the Apple ‘buds immediately. They have a good bass, very deep and resonant but still well controlled. With lossless-encoded chip-tunes (A Kind of Bloop, if you must know), they came close to the depth of the Panasonics.

But the balance of the music is somehow off. Where the Panasonics give a sense of the music existing around you (the “stereo image”) and the bass, higher tones and voices are both balanced and separated, the iFrogz kind of crams things together. Jack White’s voice on Catch Hell Blues, for example, doesn’t actually sound tinny, but you think it does.

If you just put them on and listen without comparison, though, the iFrogz do a good job, and the build-quality is more than up to the $40 price tag (the Panasonics are $60). They really feel solid, but still lightweight, and the foldability makes them doubly attractive: I have always chosen the earbuds over the Panasonics when traveling because they are so bulky.

And the horrible blemish? The stupid radiation logo on the side. These might be in the “Ear-Pollution” range, but that symbol over your ears mars an otherwise clean and almost classic design.

iFrogz Comfort Series [iFrogz. Thanks, Ashley!]

Photos: Charlie Sorrel


World’s First Left-Handed Gaming Mouse

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According to Wolfram Alpha, the “proportion of the population that is left-handed” is just “0.07 to 0.1″. That’s seven to 10 percent, which is hardly a big market. Congratulations, then, to Razer for the DeathAdder gaming mouse, a 3,500dpi twitcher for lefties which has the exact same specs and price as its less sinister brother. It is the “world’s first gaming grade mouse for left-handers.”

The mirror-image mouse has a seven-foot cable, Teflon feet, five big, non-slip programmable buttons and a fancy gold-plated USB connector, and costs $60. It also has a lame blue glowing snake on the back, presumably the “death adder” in the name, but you will at least cover this up with your (south) paw in use.

Actually, we’re kind of digging on that name (although “Left for Dead” would be even better in this case). It’s just a shame it had to be used on a gaming mouse. Surely “Death Adder” would be an awesome name for a mouse designed for accountants?

Death Adder [Razer. Thanks, Debby!]

See Also:


iPhone Alarm Dock Combines Hardware And Software

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A new iPhone dock and speaker from iLuv offers an unusual twist. A literal twist, even. It turns the iPhone 90-degrees and holds it, charging, in landscape orientation. By day, this isn’t so useful, but by night, it means that the screen can display a big clock so you can know the exact times you wake up cold and sweating from your many fevered nightmares.

The hardware is called the iMM190 App Station and it pairs with a free iPhone application called iLuv App Clock. They collaborate to lull you to sleep at night with your own music library, wake you in the morning with your choice of sounds and all the while tell you the time and weather (so you can decide whether it is worth getting out of bed). The iMM190 can be used upright or horizontally and powered from either the mains or from six AA batteries.

Unless you are the couple in the picture above, who sleep with the lights on, then you may not use the actual clock at night. I have tried a bunch of alarm apps and, while they work to wake me with mellow music, the glow of the screen is too bright. Even with a blank black screen image and the backlight turned all the way down, enough photons escape the screen to illuminate the room slightly. This isn’t a criticism of the iLuv app, just a note on iPhones in general (and on my hypersensitivity to the light creeping into my hermetically sealed bedroom).

We do like this trend of marrying hardware and software, though, especially as the apps (including this one) often come free, a kind of software promo. The speaker will cost you actual dollars, though: Ninety of them.

iMM190 [iLuv. Thanks, Jennifer!]

iLuv App Clock [iTunes]


The Guardian: A Floating, Waterproof Case for Kindle

guardian-case-for-amazon-kindle-fits-6-display-latest-generation-kindlePeople seemed to like the Ziploc-bag idea from yesterday’s post on essential iPad accessories, and it drew some tips for other products. The best wasn’t for the iPad but for the Kindle: The M-Edge Guardian Case.

The case is a semi-rigid diving suit for the newest six-inch Kindle. The two halves of the polycarbonate shell snap shut like a book and four latches clamp down, compressing a gasket to keep it watertight. The sections over the buttons are made of a soft plastic, so you can page forward and back and even shop at the Kindle Store whilst floating in a pool.

Yes, it’s pretty ugly, but it’ll keep your e-reader safe when you read in the bath. In fact, the Kindle is starting to look better than a paper book for reading in the damp and wet. Sure, you could put a paperback in a Ziploc bag, but how would you turn the pages?

The Guardian Case has one more trick. Thanks to the weight distribution, and several internal, air-filled buoyancy chambers, it floats upright in the water. That means hands-free reading. $80, available Spring 2010.

Guardian Case for Amazon Kindle [M-Edge. Thanks, Caitlin!]


Five Essential iPad Accessories

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You’ve pre-ordered your iPad, and you’re impatiently crossing off the days on the calendar until April 3. What can you do in the meantime, apart from obsessively refreshing your Google search to find articles like this one? What about some accessory shopping?

The iPad looks great, but it could also be improved with a few additions that will make it more useful, more often. Don’t worry, we don’t want you to spend much. Most of these picks are free, and all of them will improve your iPad. Here’s a list of what I’ll be buying (or making or downloading) for my iPad in the next few weeks.

A Ziploc Bag

When Jeff Bezos reads his Kindle in the bath, he seals it inside a one-gallon Ziploc bag. If you’re going to be using your iPad in the bath, or the slightly less hostile kitchen, you should do the same. You can see the screen, hear the (slightly muffled) music and generally relax. Amazingly, the multitouch will still work through the plastic. I tried it with my iPod touch a moment ago and it was like the plastic wasn’t there.

Price: around 35 cents

E-Book Software

Now that we know that the iPad will support the almost universal EPUB format, it’s time to prepare some books to load onto the device (as if you’ll be able to sit still enough to read a book for the first few days of your new toy). Many public domain titles can be downloaded in EPUB-form, notably from Project Gutenberg, but what you need is a piece of software to convert any and every text or PDF you can throw at it.

Calibre and Stanza are both E-Book conversion apps, and both work on OS X and Windows. Stanza partners our favorite iPhone e-reader of the same name, and does a good and simple job of conversions.

Calibre is a lot more powerful, and along with handling complex documents a lot better, it also stores your e-books in an iTunes-style library (although this will be moot when iTunes stores them for you). It will also download daily newspapers, free, along with many websites and any RSS feed you choose to add.

Price: Free

Calibre [Calibre]

Stanza [Lexcycle]

A Stylus

product_detail_sketch_handI have been ridiculing the poor Pogo Stylus for iPhone for a couple years now: Who wants a stylus on a phone designed not to need one? But with the iPad, the little hollow tube with a foamy metallic tip looks a lot more useful.

Combine the little pen with a big-screen iPad and some drawing or painting software and you have an amazing sketchbook. Most of us draw easier with a pen than with fingers (unless we are still in kindergarten), and the good-size screen, combined with an undo function, may even make the combo better than pencil and paper. The only downside is the lack of pressure sensitivity.

Price: $15

Pogo Stylus [Ten One Design]

A Case

green-caseThis one might seem obvious, but I suspect many people are planning to buy the Wi-Fi iPad and leave it on the coffee-table or nightstand (or down the back of the couch). Don’t! This device begs to be thrown in a bag and taken with you, wherever you go. You can read, write, draw, paint, watch movies and all that stuff, all when you have a few minutes to spare. If you’re worried about scratching your precious iBaby, you’ll miss out.

Don’t, however, buy a laptop-style pouch, or anything that zips shut. You want easy, fast access or you’ll never take it out. At the very least, consider a slipcover. Better is a notepad or book-style cover, something that can be flipped open in a second, and preferably one that can double as a stand. Worried that it doesn’t offer protection from dust and spills? That’s what the Ziploc bag is for.

Price: Variable. Free if you use an old padded shipping envelope.

That Little iPad Camera Connection Dingus

usb_connectors_20100127If you have a camera and an iPad, you should buy the iPad Camera Connection Kit. Consisting of both an SD card-reader and a USB connection cable, the kit lets you load your photos onto the iPad without the computer middleman. Why would you care?

Think about what most of us do with our cameras. We take a lot of pictures of a day out, a family gathering or some other social event. Then we all crowd around the back to look at the tiny three-inch screen. Now think about the alternative: A 10-inch screen, pinch-to-zoom, a wide viewing angle, slideshows with transitions and music, plus an instant, in-the-field back up.

The iPad also supports RAW photos. That’s right. If you prefer to shoot your pictures now and ask your editing questions later, you’re not excluded from the iPad. Apple: “iPad supports standard photo formats, including JPEG and RAW.” This alone will make every pro photographer reading this article go out and order one now (here’s the pre-order page if you want it). I expect that there will soon be a lot of RAW photo-editing applications in the App Store, too, but for now, the ability to quickly view and edit pictures on a slim, portable device with a long battery life while shooting will be worth the money on its own.

Price: TBA

iPad Camera Connection Kit [Apple]

That’s my list. What about yours? Do you have a favorite Bluetooth keyboard, an awesome idea for a homemade stand or some weird use-case that nobody else has thought of? Hit us up in the comments.

See Also:

Ziploc photo: tamakisono/Flickr