USB 3.0 shocker! Supersonic Magnum thumb drive rocks 200MB/s read times, sure to be rather pricey

You thought the 70MB/s write speeds were wild? The kids at Patriot are making the scene at CeBIT with the successor to the Supersonic USB thumb drive we first saw at the tail end of last year, and it’s putting its old man to shame. The Supersonic Magnum series, sporting capacities up to 128GB, boasts a single eight channel controller with 200MB/s read and 110MB/s write speeds. And it will fit in your hip pocket! Release date TBA, and we can only imagine it will cost you a pretty Deutschmark.

USB 3.0 shocker! Supersonic Magnum thumb drive rocks 200MB/s read times, sure to be rather pricey originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Mar 2011 12:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceHexus  | Email this | Comments

Intel’s SSD 510 reviewed, measures up well against Vertex 3

Been wondering how that new 6Gbps SATA interface and Marvell controller have been treating Intel’s latest SSDs? The answer, it turns out, is really rather nicely. Faced off with OCZ’s awesomely quick Vertex 3 drive, the 250GB SSD 510 from Intel more than holds its own, occasionally flashing ahead and taking the lead. Opting for Marvell’s processing chip has improved Intel’s sequential performance, but has actually led to it taking a ding on random read speeds — the latter being arguably more important on a day-to-day basis. Still, this $584 drive is one of the finest the consumer world has yet had to feast upon and should encourage high expectations from Intel’s 25nm G3 storage units, which are still to come. As to having the extra Serial ATA bandwidth, we’ll leave it to Anand from AnandTech to summarize: “these next-generation SSDs not only use 6Gbps SATA, they really need it.”

Intel’s SSD 510 reviewed, measures up well against Vertex 3 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Mar 2011 11:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAnandTech, PC Perspective, Hot Hardware  | Email this | Comments

Xtreamer Prodigy features AirPlay support, USB 3, and a GUI that will delight fans of Flash (and fans of GUIs)

Looks like the folks at Xtreamer have a few tricks up their sleeves! Following hot on the heels of the company’s Ultra HTPC comes Xtreamer Prodigy, a Realtek 1185-based media player and streamer that sports USB 3.0 connectivity, 256MB RAM, 512MB NAND flash, HDMI, an integral IR remote control, a multi-card reader and a 3.5-inch HDD bay. But the real fun here (or so we’ve heard) is the Adobe Flash GUI, as well as support for such services as Apple AirPlay, Mediafly, Google Talk, Last FM, Pandora, Facebook, and more. The rumored price is €119, which will have to suffice until we find something more concrete (which should be about five days from now). Get a closer look below.

Xtreamer Prodigy features AirPlay support, USB 3, and a GUI that will delight fans of Flash (and fans of GUIs) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Feb 2011 20:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Engadget Spanish  |  sourceXtreamer  | Email this | Comments

Super Talent debuts CoreStore MV, super small, super fast mini PCIe SSD

Super Talent is living up to its name today with the release of the world’s “smallest and fastest” mini PCIe SSD. When we last took a look at the company’s mini PCIe offerings, they were rocking 40MBps reads and 15MBps writes, but with the release of the new CoreStore SSD line, these exceptional storage makers have destroyed those 2009 specs with speeds topping out at 350MBps and 80MBps. The speedy CoreStore MV measures a mere 30mm x 50.95mm, combines Marvell’s latest controller with DDR ONFi 2 flash, and is compatible with netbooks, notebooks, and other devices sporting a second gen mini-PCIe slot. Those devices working a standard PCIe slot can expect 350MBps reads and 220MBps writes with MV’s big brother, the CoreStore MP. Both drives come in 16GB, 32GB, or 64GB and should be available starting next month at an undisclosed price — though we figure true speed freaks will pay just about anything to get their fix. Jonesing for specs? Check out the source link below.

Super Talent debuts CoreStore MV, super small, super fast mini PCIe SSD originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Feb 2011 09:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink PC Perspective  |  sourceSuper Talent  | Email this | Comments

Adobe promises Flash Player 10.2 for Honeycomb tablets ‘in a few weeks,’ Xoom gets namechecked

We found out yesterday that Motorola’s Xoom would be shipping sans Flash support on Verizon Wireless, and while Big Red claimed that an update would be doled out this spring, the folks at Adobe are pointing to a far more specific time frame. In a new post over at the Flash Platform Blog, Adobe has confirmed that “Flash Player 10.2 [will be] pre-installed on some tablets and as an OTA download on others within a few weeks of Android 3.0 (Honeycomb) devices becoming available, the first of which is expected to be the Motorola Xoom.” We’re guessing that the company’s going public with a statement like this to fend off fears that the Xoom may be waiting an eternity for Flash, in essence removing a bit of fear from hesitant early adopters. Either way, it’s excellent news for those eying a Honeycomb tablet of any flavor, and we’re going to take the liberty of taking “a few weeks” to mean “a fortnight.” Cool, Adobe?

Adobe promises Flash Player 10.2 for Honeycomb tablets ‘in a few weeks,’ Xoom gets namechecked originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Feb 2011 15:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Macworld  |  sourceAdobe  | Email this | Comments

Motorola Xoom Launches Without Flash

Motorola's Flash-free Xoom tablet at the Mobile World Congress. Photo: Charlie Sorrel

Motorola’s $800 white elephant, the Xoom tablet, will ship without Adobe’s Flash browser plug-in. The news, gleaned from small print on Verizon’s new Xoom pre-order page, has been confirmed by both Motorola and Adobe.

Update: The $800 launch price for the Xoom has been confirmed by the company’s press release. It will also be available for $600 with a two-year Verizon contract.

If you remember, Motorola has promised us the “full web”, in the form of Flash support. It seems that Adobe still hasn’t finished the 10.2 version of its proprietary plug-in, though. The Verizon ad says that “Adobe Flash [is] expected Spring 2011.” Motorola is even less specific in its official statement “Motorola XOOM will include full support for Adobe® Flash® Player® for accessing the rich video and animations of the web, to be available after launch [emphasis added].”

And what about Adobe? Here’s the official line:

Adobe will offer Flash Player 10.2 pre-installed on some tablets and as an OTA download on others within a few weeks of Android 3 (Honeycomb) devices becoming available, the first of which is expected to be the Motorola Xoom.

I had some hands-on time with the Xoom at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona last week. I (and some friendly German journos I ran into at the Motorola booth) wondered about Flash support. I surfed to a restaurant website (these are seemingly the only sites left on the web that require Flash) and got the familiar blue Lego “Flash not installed” symbol. We checked the settings, and Flash was indeed absent.

Flash is largely old news. Most things Flash is used for have already been re-optimized for tablets. But if you make it a headline feature for your new device, and can’t deliver until a vague future date, then it’s a little embarrassing. But not, I suspect, as embarrassing as the battery life of a tablet with Flash enabled.

Update for Flash Player 10.2 Support on Tablets [Adobe Flash Blog]

Xoom product page [Verizon via Engadget]

See Also:


Motorola Xoom will ship without Flash support on February 24th, expects it in ‘Spring 2011’ (updated)

Verizon’s webpage dedicated to the Xoom has just gone up and one of our eagle-eyed readers has already spotted a disquieting bit of small print: “Adobe Flash expected Spring 2011.” You don’t sit around expecting what you already have, so that leads us to conclude that the Xoom, the mighty iPad-slaying, Honeycomb-bringing, world-changing tablet… won’t have Flash at launch. The version of Adobe’s rich media player it’s waiting for is most probably 10.2 for mobile devices, scheduled to arrive in the coming weeks, which should mean first-day buyers this Thursday will get a limited-time premium feature on their tablets: no Flash ads.

[Thanks, Chris]

Update: Motorola has confirmed this, in a very roundabout fashion. The company’s statement in full:

“Motorola XOOM will include full support for Adobe(R) Flash(R) Player(R) for accessing the rich video and animations of the web, to be available after launch.”

Motorola Xoom will ship without Flash support on February 24th, expects it in ‘Spring 2011’ (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Feb 2011 06:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceVerizon Wireless  | Email this | Comments

Low-Tech Geekery Makes Beautiful High-Speed Photography

Vincent Riemersma’s beautiful time-freezing photographs are a mixture of skill and old fashioned geekery. The pictures show splashes of colored water frozen in time as they jump simultaneously from a row of wine glasses. The results are clearly impressive. But how were the photos taken?

First, the splashes. To ensure repeatability, time after time, Vincent built a simple rig. Two inline skate-frames and a piece of wood made a rolling trolley which was mounted on a slope. A marker at the top meant the start-point was consistent, and a plank of wood at the bottom stopped the trolley suddenly. Momentum takes care of the rest, flinging the colored water into the air. Capturing these repeatable spills was the tricky part.

Timing is everything. To capture the splashes, you need to have perfect timing. Vincent decided to let a computer take care of this, and used an Arduino to fire a flash gun. The trigger was a piezo-element which would detect the noise of the crash and fire the strobe. Into the Arduino Vincent programmed several delays. The first was to give the water enough time to jump from the glass (around 100ms). The flash would then fire, and be cut immediately. A final delay, of 4,000ms, is there to make sure nothing tricks the circuit into firing again.

What about the camera? Well, that’s the easiest part. The tripod-mounted Nikon D300s was manually focussed and had its shutter speed set to three seconds. Turn out the room lights and trip the shutter, and the sensor waits patiently for some light. Roll the skateboard and wait. The water spills, the flash flashes, the sensor records the image, and the shutter clicks safely shut. Easy!

The results show just how well Vincent set things up. More photos can be seen over at his Flickr page, and you can read his write-up, complete with all the nerdy details, at the DIY Photography blog.

Creating “The Splash” [DIY Photography]

Photo: Vincent Riemersma / Flickr

See Also:


Art Lebedev’s Lo-Fi Cardboard USB-Sticks

Art Lebedev’s Flashkus is a disposable cardboard USB thumb-drive. Or rather, it is four conjoined thumb-drives, perforated for easy separation.

This is a nice, simple product from Lebedev, normally known for high-end, high-concept and high-priced items like the Optimus keyboard with an LCD screen on each key. The Flashkus is about as simple a product as you could make, with some advantages. First, it is light and environmentally as clean as could be hoped for. You can also write on the card body with a pen or pencil. And finally, it is disposable.

Having just limped my way clear of the walk-fest that is the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, I find my gadget-bag weighed down with what seems to be a few pounds of USB sticks holding press releases. Every year I wonder if i should recycle them into the worlds smallest RAID array, and every year I leave them in a bowl by the front door of my apartment for guests to grab like candy as they leave.

I’d much rather be given these guilt-free paper sticks. Even better, PR people: You could just write the press release URL on the side of the card and I would’t even need to plug it in.

Available in 4GB, 8GB and 16GB sizes, as soon as Art Lebedev gets around to making them (which — given its history — could be a while).

Flashkus [Art Lebedev via Electronic Beats]

See Also:


Disposable ‘Fleshkus’ drives ensure your memories some day hit the dump

Disposable 'Fleshkus' drives ensure your memories some day hit the dump

We’re a little less of a disposable society than we used to be, but that’s not to say we wouldn’t embrace an opportunity to get back into our formerly carefree and wasteful ways. This concept spotted over at Art Lebedev, designed by Alexei Lyapunov and Lena Ehrlich, could get us there, eight or 16GB thumb drives printed on cardboard and produced so inexpensively that you can simply tear one off, scribble on it, then give away to friends to share files — just a concept at this point, but this vision of tomorrow seems awfully likely to us.

Disposable ‘Fleshkus’ drives ensure your memories some day hit the dump originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Feb 2011 00:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceArt Lebedev  | Email this | Comments