Logitech’s totally rad G19 gaming keyboard now on sale

For no particular reason — let’s just blame blatant capitalism in the face of uncertain times — Dell’s online store has a 30 day exclusive on Logitech’s new G19 gaming keyboard, and just started selling the thing at $180 a pop, or $260 when bundled with the G9 laser gaming mouse. Sure, that might sound like a lot of money, but just remember the next time you reach a weathered, calloused index finger across your keyboard to toss your last grenade at a grim virtual enemy: you could’ve paid $180 to do the exact same thing while listening to Korn.

[Thanks, Brian]

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Logitech’s totally rad G19 gaming keyboard now on sale originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 May 2009 11:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Logitech’s $199 Black Edition wireless Guitar Hero controller shreds like cheddar

Check it poseurs, Logitech’s Wireless Guitar Controller Premier Edition for Guitar Hero is back and ready to take on international pretenders shredders. The new Black Edition prop for the PS3 and PS2 still features the same rosewood fingerboard, wooden neck, and metal frets and tuning peg handles of the US-only original. However, it now carries a lower, $199 price tag (was $250 at launch) and “minor construction updates” based on user feedback. Oh, and it’s now black… black like the heart of Chuck Schuldiner. If that sounds like a “a great value” as described by Ruben Mookerjee, Logitech’s director of product marketing for gaming, then by all means, have at it when it ships to the US and Europe in June.

[Via BLogitech]

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Logitech’s $199 Black Edition wireless Guitar Hero controller shreds like cheddar originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 May 2009 05:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Logitech Harmony Adapter for Playstation 3 — official, real, and in our hands

Logitech harmony Adapter for PlayStation 3

Yeah, sure, we knew the Harmony IR-to-Bluetooth remote adapter was coming down the pike, but even with FCC filings and official confirmation of the device from Harmony, the PS3 owners among us are breathing a small sigh of relief now that we’ve got our hands on a unit that prove it will make it to market. We have a love/hate relationship with the PS3’s Bluetooth remote control — the range and total non-directionality of it are great, but having a separate remote control just for the PS3 is a real stick in the eye of our couch potato lifestyles. There are a few choices for solving the PS3 remote control conundrum, but on first blush this unit has three things going for it: support from a big name like Logitech (of course including codes in the Harmony database), it does not eat up one of your PS3’s USB ports, and it handles switching the PS3 on and off (not unique, but some other solutions don’t). We’ll give the IR-to-Bluetooth converter a full rundown in due course, but follow us past the break for our initial impressions, an official fact sheet and a link to a Q&A section on the Logitech blog.

Continue reading Logitech Harmony Adapter for Playstation 3 — official, real, and in our hands

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Logitech Harmony Adapter for Playstation 3 — official, real, and in our hands originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 May 2009 04:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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RipNAS Statement: world’s first SSD-based CD ripping NAS device

We’ll be perfectly honest with you — the Atom-powered RipNAS definitely caught our interest when it launched with practically no major competitors back in February. Now, the RipNAS family has grown by two with the introduction of the Statement SSD and Statement HDD. We’re told that the former is the world’s first SSD-based CD ripping NAS device, and we’ve absolutely no reason to believe otherwise. The totally silent, all-silver box is based on the Windows Home Server OS and handles a cornucopia of tasks: CD ripping, media streaming and networked file storage. Internal specifications include a dual-core Atom CPU, 2GB of RAM and four USB 2.0 ports. The Statement SSD arrives in a 500GB configuration (2 x 250GB SSDs), while the Statement HDD holds 3TB by way of two 1.5TB drives; mum’s the word on pricing, but don’t bank on ’em being cheap.

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RipNAS Statement: world’s first SSD-based CD ripping NAS device originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 03 May 2009 16:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cheap Geek: Logitech QuickCam, Dell Inspiron, Western Digital My Book

LogitechQuickCamOrbit.jpg

If your computer is placed against one wall so you can leech
off your neighbor’s WiFi, you might be a cheap geek.

1. Out of all the webcams on the market, I like the
Logitech QuickCam Orbit the best. It’s not small and it’s not easy to carry,
but it’s perfect for desktop use. This oddly shaped cam has a long neck
attachment (not shown) that puts the camera at eye level. As you move, the camera pans
to follow your face. Throw in a Carl Zeiss lens, and you’ve got a perfect
combination. Buy.com has it for $89.99 with free shipping.

2. Dell is celebrating its 25th anniversary (I know, 25
already, right?), and you get the savings. Take a look at the Inspiron 15, which
has a starting price of $499 after $250 in instant savings. You can customize
your purchase with whatever components you like.

3. Western Digital’s My Book line of external hard drives is
attractively designed and well-priced. I like them even better when I can get
one at a great deal. Buy.com offers a 640GB My Book drive for $79.99, and that
includes free shipping.

Cheap Geek: Nikon Coolpix, Logitech Keyboard, iPhone Case

NikonCoolpixP60.jpg

If half your wardrobe is promotional t-shirts you’ve gotten at trade shows, you might be a cheap geek.

1. Finding excellent digital cameras at around $100 is what this column is all about, and today Office Max is offering a great one. You can grab a Nikon Coolpix P60 for $99.99, which is half the list price. This baby has 8.1 megapixels, a 5x optical zoom, red-eye reduction, and face priority technology. Sounds like a great bring-along for that summer vacation you’re planning.

2. Logitech makes some of the best peripherals around, so if you’re in need of a new keyboard take advantage of this deal from Office Depot. It’s selling the Logitech Deluxe 250 keyboard for $7.95. This is a black keyboard and it connects with a USB cable.

3. iPhone owners know how slippery their favorite phone can be. If you don’t want a hard fall or a cracked screen ruining your iPhone, get OtterBox’s iPhone Defender case from Amazon. While it originally sold for $76.29, Amazon has this handsome black and yellow case for $19.25.

3DConnexion’s SpacePilot Pro 3D mouse

3DConnexion has always had a place in our heart for their reasonably priced and smartly designed three dimensional controllers. Now the company is back on the scene with the SpacePilot Pro, which ups the ante — and the price point — considerably. This bad boy sports an LCD screen and lots (and lots) of buttons, including controls for various isometric views and navigation settings (pan and zoom, rotation, speed). If that weren’t enough, there are function keys for various apps and an applet for checking your MS Outlook mail. Ships with drivers for Windows XP and Vista, Solaris 8 and 10, and Linux — as always seems to be the case with this company, Mac users are stuck without for the time being. Retails for $499, available now.

[Via The Inquirer]

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3DConnexion’s SpacePilot Pro 3D mouse originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Apr 2009 17:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Giz Explains: The Difference Between $100 and $100,000 Speakers

A speaker system can cost as little as $35. Or as much as $350,000. As a normal person, you probably have just one question about speakers that cost as much a Ferrari: What. The. Hell.

How Speakers Work
Especially when you consider just how simple the overall mechanism behind a standard speaker is: It moves air. Essentially, what happens in a speaker—loudspeaker, to be technical—is that the alternating current from an amplifier runs to the speaker and through the voice coil (which is just, wait for it, a coil of wire) turning the coil into an electromagnet. That, in turns, creates a magnetic field between it and the permanent magnet in the driver. As the current alternates between positive and negative, the magnets are attracted and repulsed, moving the cone back and forth. Voila, it emits the soothing sounds of Bach or Korn. (Driver diagram from Wikipedia’s unusually exceptional loudspeaker article.)

But that’s probably not quite what you think of when you hear “speaker.” You’re probably thinking of a box with a circle thing and maybe a hole in it. That’s actually a loudspeaker system, and it actually has more than one kind of speaker inside of it, called drivers. That’s because the driver tuned to deliver high frequencies—a tweeter—ain’t so good at delivering bass, which is why you need a woofer or subwoofer (low and lower). And then you’ve got mid-range speakers—for mid-range sounds—in higher-end systems. Your average GENERIC SPEAKER COMPANY set skips this middleman. So generally two or more drivers are stuffed in a box or cabinet, called an enclosure.

Lovely, but that doesn’t explain what separates these $107,000 YG Acoustics Anat Reference II speakers from the $50 Logitech Z-2300s on my desk—which are even THX certified. So, we enlisted some help: Cnet’s Audiophiliac Steve Guttenberg, who lives and breathes speakers ranging from the sensible to the ludicrous, and Paul DiComo and Matt Lyons, speaker guys who came from Polk and are now at Definitive Technology.

If you read our profile of Audiophile Maximo Michael Fremer “Why We Need Audiophiles,” it probably won’t surprise that when initially asked simply, “What the difference between ten dollar speakers and ten thousand dollar speakers?” the Definitive guys’ initial answer was, “Well, it ought to be that they sound better.” Even Steve told us, “You can’t apply a Consumer Reports kind of index to something that’s as subjective as audio quality.”

No, but seriously.

The Goal of a Loudspeaker
A speaker’s ultimate goal is “to sound like reality”—the elusive dragon that every audiophile chases—so on a broad, not-very-useful level, how close it comes to matching that reality is the difference between good and bad, expensive and cheap speakers. To be slightly more technical, the “spec” is clarity: The lower the distortion of the original sound it recreates, the better the speaker. In fact, basically every other spec, every confusing number you read on the side of a box is actually totally meaningless, according to both Steve and the Definitive guys. Steve singles out watts as “one of the more useless specifications ever created.” If you have to look for a number when buying speakers, Steve said one that’s “kind of useful” is sensitivity/efficiency, which would be something like 90dB @ 1 watt, which relates how loud a speaker will play at a given power level.

Three Characteristics
But when pressed, there are a few qualities Paul and Matt from Definitive singled out in amazing speakers—what they call the big three:
• More dynamic range, or simply the ability to play louder without sounding like trash as you crank the volume. With good speakers, you want to keep cranking it up, like accelerating a fast car.
• Better bass. That doesn’t mean louder, “but better.” It’s more melodic, and not muddy—you can actually hear individual notes, an upright acoustic bass being plucked.
• “A very natural timbre.” Timbre is the “tone color” or how natural the sound is—if you played the voice of someone you know on a speaker with excellent timbre, it would sound exactly like them. Or if two different instruments play the same note, you’d be able to tell them apart very easily and cleanly.

Beyond that, what audiophiles are looking for—which Mahoney alludes to in the audiophile profile—is a speaker’s ability to create an image, the picture. That is, its ability to create a sense of three-dimensional sound. The defining problem of designing speakers, say the guys from Definitive, is that “physics is dogmatic.” So every speaker is built around a set of compromises.

Size
To put that in some concrete—rather than seemingly religious—terms, you can’t have a small speaker that sounds good. So one defining quality of six-figure speakers is that they are large. They have bigger woofers and tweeters. More surface area means better sound. There are also simply more drivers—every driver you add is like when you add another string to a guitar, to create a better-nuanced sound. So, for instance, a $300 speaker from a “quality manufacturer” you’ll get a 5 1/4-inch woofer and a 1-inch tweeter. A $3000 pair of speakers might have two 5 1/4 mid-range drivers and then a 10-inch woofer.

Build Quality
Build quality is the other thing. A “dead box,” or an enclosure that doesn’t create any sounds of its own—since that’s distortion—is key and something that costs a lot of money. You just want sound from the drivers themselves. The quality of the woofer and tweeter themselves, obviously, comes into play—their ability to handle more power, since that’s what translates into volume.

At the extreme end, Steve says, they can just handle more power without breaking—as the copper wire inside heats up, it can deform or melt, and the driver gets messed up. Pricey speakers don’t do that. In terms of exotic materials or construction, Steve mentioned ribbon tweeters, which are only in the highest-end speaker systems—they’re “literally a piece of aluminum foil that’s suspended between magnets that vibrates back and forth” producing excellent clarity. Better speakers also have intricate dividing networks to make sure the right signals go to the right place—they get more complicated as the price goes up.

Dollar Figures
So how much do you have to spend to get a good system in the eyes (ears?) of an audiophile? Definitive recommends $1000 for a home-theater component setup. (In other words, don’t buy a home theater in a box.) You can also get a pretty decent pair of “neutral, natural sounding” speakers for $300—they “won’t knock your ass” and won’t be great as some things, but they’ll be alright. There’s no magic one-size-fits-all speaker system, however. It depends on the room and the situation. (If your couch is against a wall, skip the 7.1 surround, says Steve.) Heavier speakers tend to sound better than lighter ones, though that’s not an absolute.

But what’s the upper limit? Well, there isn’t any. Paul from Definitive said he heard these $65,000 Krell Modulari Duo last month and “was mezmerized.” It’s like wine to oenophiles, Paul said. As Steve puts it most simply: “To people who are into it, it’s worth it.”

Still something you still wanna know? Send any questions about speakers, KoRn or John Mahoney’s secret Britney shame to tips@gizmodo.com, with “Giz Explains” in the subject line. Big thanks to Steve from Cnet and Paul and Matt from Definitive Technology!


Listening Test: It’s music tech week at Gizmodo.

iPod Dock 8-Way Battlemodo

It’s that time again, kids! What time, you ask? Time for the iPod Dock Battlemodo where contestants from Bose, Sony, Altec-Lansing, Logitech, Klipsch, iHome, JBL and iLuv battle it out to the death.

One trend that seems to be taking place in the land of iPod docks is that companies seem less concerned with the high end, hi-fi iPod docks. Instead, they’re gravitating towards smaller, lighter docks that sound nice, but are intended more for casual listening. Both Logitech and Klipsch are putting most of their weight behind these smaller docks. In our testing, we checked out:

Altec Lansing InMotion Max

Bose SoundDock II

iHome iP71

iLuv i398

JBL OnStage 400p

Klipsch iGroove SXT (NOTE: Updated product specs for refreshed iGroove SXT not on Klipsch site yet)

Logitech Pure-Fi Anywhere 2

Sony SRSGUI0iP

That said, we still went looking for the iPod dock that sounded really good while sticking as close to the $200 mark. Some were much cheaper, or much more expensive, but most of them all had something interesting to offer. Ultimately, overall audio quality had the most weight in helping to pick our winner, but price, design, and the usefulness of smaller features were also taken into consideration:

The Winner:

JBL On Stage 400p: At $250, the On Stage 400p is a bit more expensive than some of the other docks, but it sounds so nice, it was impossible to give top honors to anyone else. It uses a 30w sub to push out the low end, while delivering another 30w of power to the tweeters for the highs and mids. And though it might not wow anyone with its design, it’s nice enough that you don’t have to hide it in your living room. Just might want to wait till it goes on sale later on.

The Runners Up:

Bose SoundDock II: It’s no huge surprise why the SoundDock II out performs the rest of the field: at $300 , Bose’s accessory is outfitted with better hardware. But is the sound quality worth $100 than the rest of the docks? And what’s the chance you’ll ever find it on sale?

Altec Lansing InMotion Max: What the InMotion Max lacks in booming low end, it makes up for in precision audio tuning and a light, slim design. Two 2-inch drivers are bolstered by two, 2-inch passive radiators which sit directly above. The result are nice mids and highs that offer much better sound than the 14w power rating would suggest. Other nice little touches include song info that appears in the backlit display, capacitive touch buttons (which include <</>> controls), battery power that lasts 3.5 hours, and a spring loaded ipod dock connector that slides out. Well done.

Honorable Mentions:

Klipsch iGroove SXT: The new, revamped iGroove SXT (hitting stores this july) packs a lot of punch into a compact bundle. Enhanced acoustics and a dedicated amplifier for each driver give the SXT a nice, deep sound, but sometimes the high-end clarity suffers. Still it’s hard not to like this one, and Klipsch is phasing out its bigger iGroove, so this is it if you love Klipsch.

Logitech Pure-Fi Anywhere 2: Coming in at a lower price point and smaller size than most the other docks here, it’s hard to compare it sonically because most the other docks are bigger and more expensive . But the Pure-Fi Anywhere 2 does manage to improve over the original Pure-Fi Anywhere in the sound department and does what few other docks can do: Travel around easily with a 10 hour battery life. Besides, the larger Pure-Fi Dream system may sound better, but its clock-radio interface leaves too much to be desired.


Listening Test: It’s music tech week at Gizmodo.

Ultimate Ears 700 noise-isolating earphones for your iPod, not Apple’s

Logitech’s high-end Ultimate Ears division just announced these new Ultimate Ears 700 in-ear headphones. Weighing in at 11.6-grams, the dual-armature layout separates the 10Hz to 16.5kHz frequency response into two high-fidelity channels per ear while offering passive noise-isolation of up to 26dB. While the press release touts iPod compatibility in the boisterous headline there doesn’t seem to be anything about these — like Apple’s proprietary in-line remote control (and chip) for the new iPod shuffle — that’s unique to the iPod… other than the price. Available in the US and Europe for $230 sometime this month.

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Ultimate Ears 700 noise-isolating earphones for your iPod, not Apple’s originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Apr 2009 06:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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