Neat iPhone Wall-Dock Sits Atop the Socket

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The Wall Dock wins a space on the G-lab pages partly because it looks so very sleek, and partly because it shows just how great the US power-plug design is – it may use flimsy, cheap and confidence-sapping prongs, but those things are so tiny that pocket-sized chargers are easy to build.

The Wall Dock is as simple as an iPhone/iPod dock could get — a plastic block that plugs into the wall and has a protruding dock connector up top. This connector rotates, hiding when not in use and allowing the iPhone to tilt back against the wall when charging. Apart from a soft, padded top surface to pamper your ‘pod, that’s it. But what it leaves out – cables, clutter and blinkenlights – is at least as important as what it puts in. $25.

Wall Dock [DLO]

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Clever Power Outlet Incorporates Dual USB Chargers

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Gadget Lab reader Michael Lowdermilk writes:

Hi Charlie,
Since you’re a power junkie I wanted to get your feedback on what you think about adding USB ports to power outlets.

By “power junkie”, Michael isn’t referring to my constant attempts to wrest control of the Gadget Lab from its esteemed editor (damn your physical fitness and level-headed approach, Tweney — I’ll get you one day). Instead, Michael is talking about my weakness for cleverly designed wall-warts, of which his is one. After some correspondence between us, Michael has at last launched his power outlet, the TruePower, which combines a couple of standard 100V-240V sockets with a pair of USB ports.

These ports are, of course, for charging-only, but given the proliferation of junk that dangles from our computers’ busses these days, there is a real, and obvious, need for something like this. Michael is selling them through Fastmac for $10 a pop, which is cheaper than a USB charger alone, and those double sockets mean that you can hook up both your USB Humping Dog and a USB fan to keep him cool.

TruePower USB Outlet [Fastmac. Thanks, Michael]

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Gino Mount Gives the Lowdown on Lights

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The Gino Light Mount is $20 and 30 grams worth of ingenious minimalism. All it does is add a handlebar-diameter tube to your bike, anywhere that you have a 5mm braze-on thread. The mount itself is made from aluminum by Paul Component Engineering, and comes with an allen-bolt like the ones you’d use to attach a bottle cage.

But why would you want it? The main selling point is it means you can get your lights down low so they’re throw long, easy-to-spot shadows from any bumps and pits in the road ahead – this is for the cyclist to see his way safely on dark streets, and clearly not to make you visible to other road users: for that you’ll need a regular helmet or bar-mounted lamp. This is particularly handy in the city where you want to use removable lights for security: Try finding a clip-on lamp which will fit the narrow tube of a fork and you’ll see why the Gino exists.

And that’s it, a specific device for a single problem. In fact, Paul’s store is full of handy little bike tchotchkes, most of them damned handy, and many of them beautiful. Check it out. I have my eye on one of these lovely Flatbed racks.

Gino Light Mount [Paul Comp via EcoVelo]

Photo: Gino/Flickr Creative Commons


USB Hub Packs Clutter-Reducing iPhone Charger

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Until somebody builds USB sockets into standard power-outlets, we’re stuck stringing endless cables and hubs from our poor computer’s USB ports. And have you ever noticed just how long it takes to charge your laptop’s battery when you have a full complement of gizmos hooked up?

The 3 Port USB Hub with Line-In Dock connector for iPhone/iPod won’t help with the juice-drain, but it will keep the number of cables that festoon your desk to a minimum. The cable snakes into the three-port hub and reappears at the other end, terminating itself in an iPod dock-connector. As the rather long-winded name implies, the cable will both charge the iPod and allow data syncing.

At $15, it comes in at roughly the same price as other USB hubs, but thankfully also means you’ll need One Less Cable.

Product page [USB Fever via the Giz]


Cormac McCarthy’s Typewriter Dies After 50 Years and 5 Million Words

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Cormac McCarthy, author of cheery favorites such as The Road and Blood Meridian, is about to trade in the typewriter he used to write them. The Olivetti Lettera 32 has been in his care for 46 years, since 1963, and it wasn’t even new then — McCarthy picked it up for $50 from a pawn shop in Knoxville, Tennessee.

Lately, though, the machine has started to falter, and McCarthy is looking to upgrade. It’s no surprise. The author reckons he has put around 5 million words on its clock, and maintenance consisted of “blowing out the dust with a service station hose.” The typewriter will be auctioned this Friday, and the auction house Christie’s estimates it will fetch between $15,000 and $20,000.

McCarthy already has his new writing machine. Can you guess what it might be? A new MacBook Pro, perhaps, or maybe a nice, easy-to-carry netbook (the Olivetti is a portable model)? As you probably figured, McCarthy isn’t one for such modern frivolities. The Olivetti’s replacement is another Olivetti, bought by McCarthy’s friend John Miller for $11.

No Country for Old Typewriters: A Well-Used One Heads to Auction
[NYT]


Magellan Launches iPhone App and Car-Kit

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Magellan is surging with Google-ignoring optimism onto the iPhone with a new application and car-kit. Like the TomTom before it, the price of the application is high – $80 – but unlike the TomTom, the dash-mounted car kit (another $130) works with both the iPhone and the iPod Touch (TomTom will sell you a different box depending on your iDevice).

The Magellan has all the abilities you would expect from a GPS device — turn-by-turn, spoken street names and music control when hooked up to your car stereo — along with a noise canceling speakerphone and access to your iPhone’s contacts for quick address lookup. It looks like a solid application, and the choice between this and TomTom’s offering will come down to preference rather than quality.

Still, if Google’s turn-by-turn satnav application ever makes the jump from Android to iPhone, these for-pay options are likely to quickly wither. Until then, we guess it makes sense to try and squeeze as much money as you can out of your customers to pad the retirement fund.

Navigator Product page [Magellan]

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Solar MacBook Charger Costs More than MacBook Itself

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You’d buy a solar powered charger for your MacBook, right? Save money, save the planet, and all that other hippy stuff the Mac user cares about. How much would you pay for such a thing? $100? $200? Sure, it might be the cost of a couple spare batteries, but you’ll make it back in the end, won’t you?

How about $1,200, or $200 more than the MacBook itself? That’s what Quickertek wants for its new 55 Watt Apple Juicz (ho ho) charger, which can refill a tired Mac’s battery in as little as six hours. You can opt for the less powerful 27 Watt model which will take from eight to 12 hours to complete a recharge, and consequently “only” costs $700.

The solar panels are pretty huge when folded out, measuring around 12 times the size of the computer they are supplying (imagine a 4 x 3 grid of 13” MacBook Pros and you’ll get the idea). If you’re the kind of person who likes to camp for days on end, but can’t go without a computer, we guess this might be for you. On the other hand, $1,200 will buy an awful lot of extension cord.

Product page [Quickertek via


Hands-On With The Kradle Stand for Kindle: World’s Ugliest Accessory?

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For two days I have been trying to come up with something to like about the Kradle, an oversized, utilitarian stand for the Kindle. At first it seems impossible: Why on earth would you need a stand in the first place? One of the Kindle’s big advantages is that it has no pages and so can be lain down on the table while eating, say, and you don’t have to hold the thing open with one hand while shoveling caviar and foie gras (my usual breakfast) into your mouth with the other.

But I tried. I investigated every one of my normal reading positions and after that I went through yet more in my head. First, though, the Kradle itself.

The Kradle is fashioned from ABS plastic, either in an anonymous dark gray or a beige the color of a prosthetic limb. It weighs almost nothing, and feels like it should last forever. It is also one of the ugliest accessories I have ever seen, more like the molded interior of a gadget’s box rather than the gadget itself. The Kradle is all angles, every one of which is perfectly designed to hold both the Kindle and to offend your eyes. In short, the Kradle will probably never leave the house.

Once you get it out of the box (and finish reading the model number, the company URL and the proud “patent pending” boast so prominently molded into the top) you see three slots, and a collection of stick-on feet. These pads come in two types, felt or silicone rubber. After pushing the Kradle across the kitchen table and hearing the screeching scrawk of plastic on wood, I put the felt feet in right away and enjoyed sliding-silence — a blessed relief. Thus neutralized, the Kradle was ready for action. You have a choice of three slots, two of which are right next to each other and confusingly offer the same angle of 75º, or “15º from vertical” (it turns out that one is to hold you Kindle’s cover) and one that holds the e-reader almost flat (15º from horizontal). By cleverly propping the Kindle cover in it’s slot, you can also lean the Kindle against that for a 45º angle, too.

Silicone pads inside the slots hold the Kindle steady. When you press the page-turn buttons, though, you’ll want to squeeze them — a single-finger push flexes the Kindle’s body alarmingly, as it is held only by the base. This is worse in the almost-flat position as it is tricky to get your fingers between Kindle and stand.

All in all, though, it works just fine, holding your Kindle at a jaunty angle. But the problem remains: Why? I actually managed to come up with a few uses, although none that cannot be replicated by things already lying around. First, it could be a useful prop for hands-free reading when cooking. The trouble here is that the Kindle will go to sleep and you’ll have to touch it with greasy fingers to re-display the recipe. Also, a Kindle next to a cooking pot is probably a bad idea.

Next, reading at the table. Again, it does this fine, but no better than just laying it flat on the same table. On your lap? Nope. Not stable. Cafe? Bar? C’mon. It’s dorky enough reading an e-book in public without adding to the embarrassment, plus this takes up the room of a couple more Kindles in your bag.

Actually, there is one place that it could be handy: The stand has a hole where you can thread the USB cable. The problem is that it is extremely fiddly to get the cable through. It’s a shame. The device is well made and does its job just fine. It’s just that it’s a job that doesn’t need doing, especially not if it’s this ugly while it does it. $20.

Product page [Kradle]


Saddle-Bag Glows in the Dark, Swallows Tools

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Woho makes a range of small bike bags which are most likely to be used for tool kits, but could also be great for carrying cellphones, iPods and cash. The lineup consists of handlebar and saddlebags, but here we’re looking at the Classic Roll, partly because it sounds so tasty, and partly because you can hang it just about anywhere.

The classic roll is made from a translucent vinyl-like material which keeps the water out (the zipper is also weatherproof) and because it is see-through, you can throw a light inside and have the whole sack glow. Fixing is done by two straps and buckles, but there is a version (which I can’t find on the site) that has a single Velcro strap across the top that can be threaded through the rails under the saddle.

The loop’n’buckle version is still rather versatile, sitting under the seat, hanging from the handlebar or just dangling from the top-tube. According to Jeff at Urban Velo, the bags are very well made and come with a webbing strap inside to help organize tools.

Right now I’m in winter mode, and so everything goes into a new mini Timbuk2 messenger bag, the tools stuffed inside a pencil case. This Woho Classic Roll is rather tempting, though, as it solves one big problem of using a saddle-bag: it blocks out the light from the hipster-cyst I have on the seat-post. $21.

Product page [Woho via Urban Velo]

Photo: WOHO Bike/Flickr

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Review: Apple’s 27-inch iMac and Magic Mouse Make an Excellent Pair

Apple’s new 27-inch iMac is a speed demon, especially the model shipping with the new Core i7 processor. Even better, the latest iMacs ship with the new Magic Mouse, Apple’s first single-button mouse that gets it right thanks to the powers of multitouch.

Wired.com’s Mike Calore is mesmerized with his Core i7-powered iMac. He gave it a rating of 8 out of 10:

Put one of Apple’s new 27-inch Core i7 iMacs on your desk, and you run the risk of alienating yourself from your friends, co-workers and loved ones.

Sure, the sheer speed of the thing is amazing — the new Core i7 processor is outrageously fast — but it’s the massive screen that will turn your brain into a gob of HD-saturated jelly. Seriously. The iMac’s screen is so freaking huge, so bright and so crisp, it will render you dumb with child-like glee. You’ll just want to sit there and watch movies all day and night.

And yours truly was a fan of the Magic Mouse. I think it’s the first Apple mouse that doesn’t suck. (I wasn’t a fan of the Mighty Mouse because of its gunk-collecting trackball.) I gave it a 7 out of 10, knocking off a few points because of the lack of Exposé functionality:

The Magic Mouse ditches the lozenge-shaped body and gunk-collecting trackball of its predecessor (the Mighty Mouse) in favor of a curvy wedge shape with a fully touch-sensitive housing. The new form factor fits more naturally in your hand than previous Apple mice — enough so to erase the painful memories you have of that atrocious hockey-puck mouse from the ’90s.

….

As is often the case, these gains come with loss, too. The Mighty Mouse had a clickable scroll wheel and two squeeze sensors on the side that could each trigger the Exposé and Spaces tools for desktop management. The Magic Mouse doesn’t have any built-in gestures for Exposé, which seems like a wasted opportunity.

Want the full gist? See Mike’s full review of the iMac and my writeup of the Magic Mouse at the Wired Reviews site.

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Photo: Mike Calore/Wired.com