Creative’s Fatal1ty Professional Series Gaming Headset MkII hands-on, and news of its sequel

Creative's Fatal1ty Professional Series Gaming Headset MkII hands-on, and news of its sequel

Cans are so hot right now; the bigger and gaudier the better, because nothing says “Don’t talk to me” like giant domes covering your ears. Creative’s latest set, Fatal1ty Professional Series Gaming Headset MkII, don’t really have much to offer in the flash category and certainly aren’t excessively sized, but for serious gamers they seem to be a solid option and just the thing to keep your mom from interrupting your session. Shipping next week for $99, they offer an over-ear design with memory-foam surrounds and a sophisticated but not particularly flashy look that says “I want to look cool while wearing these, but I’ll leave the chrome to my CPU fan, thanks.” They sport a detachable boom that has not one but two microphones in it and some apparently fancy-schmantsy processing that can discern your howl of war from your dog’s howl of neglect, meaning your CS teammates hear only the former. Unfortunately we weren’t able to try that out for ourselves, so we’ll have to see how well that pans out in the real world. The set uses the standard jumble of 3.5mm audio jacks to connect to your machine, but a Creative rep was kind enough to disclose plans for a USB version that’ll work sans-soundcard. That model is due sometime next month for a $30 premium.

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Creative’s Fatal1ty Professional Series Gaming Headset MkII hands-on, and news of its sequel originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Jun 2009 17:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DJ Hero hands-on

Activision’s being pretty guarded with DJ Hero at the moment. Not only is it available only behind closed doors at its E3 2009 booth, but even then we weren’t able to get our own hands-on time with the game, relegated instead to playing guitar along with someone else on the deck through that Monkey Wrench / Sabotage mashup. We did, however, get a chance to play take it out of the darkly-lit room and get a good feel of its weight and build quality, which we might add is pretty solid. Click on through for our full impressions and a video showing off the DJ vs. guitar mode.

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DJ Hero hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Jun 2009 10:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Logitech’s high-end Flight System G940 hands-on

Lots of people have Chuck Yeager aspirations but Joe Schmoe opportunities for flight time. For them there’s the flight sim. Titles like Microsoft Flight Sim and Falcon are some of the earliest to popularize PC gaming, and since the beginning they’ve been accompanied by high-price controllers that replicate the experience of flying. Logitech’s Flight System G940 is the latest. We spent a little bit of time with it in the company’s cramped meeting room on the show floor to see if it’s worth adding to your virtual hangar.

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Logitech’s high-end Flight System G940 hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Jun 2009 05:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CyberNotes: Best Desktop Feed Reader


This article was written on September 11, 2007 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Time Saving Tuesday

I’ve come across a lot of great feed readers before, but I don’t believe any of them match up to a new one that I was introduced to by Pieter in the CyberNet Forum. It’s called Newzie (Windows-only), and it has a strong focus on making feed reading as easy as possible. I wasn’t quite sure how good this would perform when I first started using it, but I quickly fell in love with the features it offered.

Many of you may consider discarding this post simply because you’re content with the desktop feed reader that you’re currently using, or maybe all of your feeds are on an online reader. Newzie has things that I’ve never seen before in a feed reader, and I can guarantee that some of them are sure to impress you. So at the very least scroll through the article and checkout the screenshots…you won’t be disappointed.

Oh, and I should mention that the interface definitely reminds me of iTunes!

Newzie - Desktop Feed Reader

Click to Enlarge

–Feed Organization–

Newzie Organization One of the most unique things with Newzie are the various methods available to organize your feeds. Of course it has the standard tree view that most desktop feed readers have, and you can create as many folders and subfolders as you would like.

More uniquely, however, is the time-sorted view that shows the most recently updated feeds first. It groups feeds in update intervals, such as 30-minutes to 1-hour, so that you can view the most recent news first.

There are also a few "folders" that are created by default which can be used for temporary storage. These are the "My Favorites" and "My Readings," and together they let you breeze through all of your feeds quickly. You can then come back to the news of interest when you have more time.

–Viewing Feeds–

In terms of feed viewing there are three different modes available:

  • Report View – This is often referred to the "River of News" view because it shows one story after another in their entirety. If it becomes hard to read that way you can always contract the posts, and then expand them as needed.

    Newzie Report View - Expanded Newzie Report View - Contracted

  • List View (Top) – This is similar to what you’ll see in an email application with a subject-only view above the content of the posts.

    Newzie List View (Top)

  • List View (Side) – This is also like an email application, but the list is placed on the side of the content. Widescreen users would probably prefer to use this method.

    Newzie List View (Side)

And don’t worry about the oversized buttons located at the top of the application. I originally thought it was a huge waste of space, and then I saw a button that collapsed the header down to almost nothing:

Newzie Header

–Quick Read–

Newzie Hover Feed Newzie makes it extremely easy to scan your feeds without actually having to read them. One of the ways it does this is with its unique hover window that is displayed when your cursor rests over a feed in the sidebar. It shows you how many unread posts there are in that particular feed, when the last article was written, the last time it checked for updates, and the titles of the last 5 articles. I love when tooltips like this are actually made useful. :)

–News Bar–

This is like a stock ticker, but for your news. Anytime you hover over the News Bar, it will pause so that you have time to take action on the item(s) that are currently scrolling across.

Newzie News Bar

–Today Panel–

There is a highly configurable Today Panel available in Newzie for those of you that don’t like the News Bar. This isn’t quite as compact, but it can show more information.

Newzie Today Panel

–Search & Filters–

Newzie Filters There are several more advanced search features included with Newzie that help make it so great. Besides being able to search your feeds for text, you can also filter your subscriptions in using special commands that have been created. Here are some examples:

  • title:cybernet – Searches the title of feeds for matches.
  • updated<5day – Finds feeds updated in a specific period of time.
  • priority>60 – Finds feeds that are within the specified priority interval.

More information on how these work as well as more examples can be found in the Newzie help file.

–Monitor Sites, too–

Newzie Website Monitor Just when you thought Newzie already did everything, it goes and does even more! Not only can it aggregate all of your feeds into one central location, but it can also check websites to see if there have been any changes made.

There are several different options for choosing how the websites are monitored, such as looking for the addition of keywords, text being inserted, hyperlinks being added, or new images appearing. Or you can just go the old fashion route of monitoring every aspect of the website to see if it changes.

When you view a site that has been changed, Newzie will automatically highlight the changed portions so that you don’t have to try and figure out what’s new. Now how cool is that?

–Stats–

Newzie tracks what you read and how many items it brings in each day. It then puts it all together in a pretty bar graph so that you can realize just how addicted you are to the feeds (obviously my stats aren’t all that extravagant in the screenshot since I started with a fresh profile for the review):

Newzie Stats

–And More–

I think that I touched on almost everything that Newzie can do, but there are still some other things that might appeal to you. For the sake of being thorough I’ve included those additional features here:

  • I found it to be one of the fastest-updating feed readers available (in terms of checking feeds for new content).
  • Browse your feed items in a slideshow fashion. This is cool, but not something I can see myself using.
  • Minimize to the System Tray
  • Keyboard shortcut customization
  • Assign priorities to feeds
  • Change the rendering engine (uses IE by default)
  • Setup keyword watches on your feeds
  • You can monitor IE favorites for new feeds
  • You can add feeds from a Bloglines account

Some of you may still prefer the online feed readers such as Bloglines or Google Reader, but I have to say that this is hands-down the best desktop feed reader that I’ve used. It’s packed with features and focuses heavily on making reading feeds an effortless process. I highly recommend this desktop feed reader to all the news junkies out there!

Newzie Homepage

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Scratch: The Ultimate DJ hands-on

For the past few years E3 has been a tale of two guitar games. In a lot of ways it still is, with the Guitar Hero and Rock Band clans still battling it out for plastic instrument supremacy, but this year two turntable games are also vying for your attention. DJ Hero has far more brand recognition on the box, but Scratch: the Ultimate DJ has the better hardware, and we got our hands on it.

Continue reading Scratch: The Ultimate DJ hands-on

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Scratch: The Ultimate DJ hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Jun 2009 02:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Ericsson W995a hands-on!

We’ve been toying with the North American version of Sony Ericsson’s W995 slider recently, and we don’t want to spoil anything for you, but here’s a teaser: this could definitely be the best Walkman phone to date. Curiosity sufficiently piqued? Head on over to Engadget Mobile for the full story!

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Sony Ericsson W995a hands-on! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 13:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Project Natal video hands-on, impressions, and further details

We had a chance to go one-on-one with Project Natal — as well as its steward, Kudo Tsunoda — and we wanted to give you a little insight on Microsoft’s next big play. Plus, how could we pass up an opportunity to show off a video of us essentially flailing around like teenagers on a coffee high?

The first thing to note is that Microsoft is very protective of the actual technology right now, so they weren’t letting us film or photograph any of the box itself, though what they had was an extremely rough version of what the device will look like (not at all like the press shot above). It consisted of a small, black box aimed out into the room — about the size of a Roku Player — with sensors along the front. It almost looked a bit like a mid-size (between pico and full size) projector.

Continue reading Project Natal video hands-on, impressions, and further details

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Project Natal video hands-on, impressions, and further details originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 13:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Beatles: Rock Band hands-on!

We don’t know if you’re like us, but we’ve basically been waiting our whole lives to play The Beatles: Rock Band. Well, we got one step closer at E3 2009, as we were able to actually snuggle up close and personal with the full kit and see what was what (and show off our totally sick harmonies on “Here Comes the Sun”). We have to say, Harmonix has absolutely outdone themselves with this bundle — from the Ringo-style Ludwig drum set to Paul’s unmistakable Höfner Violin bass… it’s all here, and it all looks brilliant. We took the boys out for a little spin (you can see our own Ross Miller on drums there), and captured just a few photos for your enjoyment. Hit the gallery below for all the goods!

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The Beatles: Rock Band hands-on! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 10:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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PSP Go first hands-on! (updated)

Well we battled the mob to get our first hands on with Sony’s latest PSP — the Go! It was actually fairly light in hand, but not un-solid feeling. We thought there could be a little more depth between your thumbs and palm of your hand, and it felt a bit hard to locate the shoulder buttons, but that may be because we’re used to the older model. Look — we know what you really want, so hit the gallery below!

Update 3: New galleries are in — more pics, and some detail shots. Enjoy!

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PSP Go first hands-on! (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 16:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget & Joystiq live from Sony’s E3 2009 keynote

We’ve teamed up with Joystiq for live coverage of E3, and Sony’s keynote is rounding out the big three. The event is scheduled to start at around 2PM ET / 11AM PT.

10:27AM PT:
We’re live at the Shrine Auditorium, waiting to take our seats and begin the ritualistic dance we both know as a “liveblog.” Will there be a PS3 price cut? Will it be “PSP Go!” or “PSP D’oh!”? We don’t know yet, but you will as we cover Sony’s presser live. Follow along with your bingo card and make your Sony predictions in comments!

Continue reading Engadget & Joystiq live from Sony’s E3 2009 keynote

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Engadget & Joystiq live from Sony’s E3 2009 keynote originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 14:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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