Classic, Retro HP Calculators Now on iPhone

hp 15c

What you see above is not a calculator. Or rather, it’s not the calculator you think it is. Rather, it is the latest software-only implementation of the classic Hewlett Packard scientific calculator, the 15C.

It gets better. This emulator runs on the iPhone, and is joined there by its little brother, the 12C (a financial calculator). Both calcs are photo-perfect representations of the originals and both run the same algorithms as the hardware versions to do the actual number crunching.

Now, the catch is the price. Although by no means expensive, these apps do cost more than the free calculator that comes with the iPhone, which will be enough to put many people off. But compared to the price of an actual second hand 15C, something of a sought after cult classic, they look cheap. The actual 15C can go for up to $400. The software version is a mere $20.

Product page 12C [iTunes]
Product page 15C [iTunes]


13 Year Old Uses Walkman for a Week. Result: Embarrassment

walkman

The BBC convinced 13 year old Scott Campbell to swap his iPod for a Walkman and use it for a week. The first shock came just from seeing the thing:

[My Dad] had told me it was big, but I hadn’t realised he meant THAT big. It was the size of a small book.

It gets worse from there. Wearing the 30 year old device on his belt (“it is certainly not pocket-sized, unless you have large pockets”) Scott felt embarrassed at the attentions of passersby as they stared and shouted insults.

Other problems included lack of a shuffle mode (“I managed to create an impromptu shuffle feature simply by holding down “rewind” and releasing it randomly”), terrible battery life (three hours), sound quality (we’d disagree — even a tape sounds better than the average MP3), and capacity (twelve tracks in your pocket!).

Scott had some operational troubles, too: “It took me three days to figure out that there was another side to the tape.” The ultimate insult comes at the end, though:

Did my dad, Alan, really ever think this was a credible piece of technology?

Ouch!

Giving up my iPod for a Walkman [BBC via BBG]

Photo: miniteca.org/Flickr


Floppy Disk as USB Thumb Drive

floppy-thumb-stick

More loyal readers (read: those willing to sit through a video featuring me) might remember a spot we did on turning an old floppy disk into a USB drive. The results were disastrous, involving splintered plastic, a non-functioning USB stick and a lot of embarrassment.

The picture above shows what we were trying to make, only done properly. Unfortunately, a solid quarter-hour of Googling hasn’t turned up the manufacturer. Normally this would mean we’d skip the post here on Gadget Lab, but this time we’re making an exception, so very cool is the object in question. I’d buy one in an instant. The only caveat is that it needs to have more than 1.44MB storage. Anyone know where I can get one?

A volta do Disquete [Guaraná Rosa via Book of Joe]

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SNES USB cartridge adapter should set eBay aflame

Sick of having to use your inconvenient mouse and keyboard to do “internet searches” for ROMs of your favorite retro games? Well a gentleman named Matthias might just have the answer to your prayers — a USB SNES cartridge adapter. The enterprising DIY’er has created a combo hardware and software solution that allows you to plug in your dusty carts directly to your rig, and see the ROMs appear as standalone files which you can then load into the emulator of your choice. Apparently there are still some kinks to work out (like getting data rates up for larger games), and Matthias already has plans underway for a multi-system solution. Still, this is impressive stuff, even if it means we’ll have to repurchase any titles we’re missing from reputable online auction houses. Hey, at least it’ll cut down our visits to “Russian porn sites.” Check out the video of the whole thing in action after the break.

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SNES USB cartridge adapter should set eBay aflame originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 21 Jun 2009 10:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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More Leaked Shots Show Beautiful Retro Olympus ‘Pen’ Camera

olympus retro hot

No dubious blurry-cams here. In fact, this leaked shot of the Olympus E-P1 is so pristine and tallies so well with both other leaks and actual prototypes that it’s certainly the real deal. Coming in three colors (the leather patch is either orangey-brown, pinky-brown or black) and with a choice of at least two lenses and an accessory viewfinder, this is likely to be the modern Olympus “Pen” that will be officially unveiled tomorrow.

Here we see both the previously-leaked 17mm ƒ2.8 prime lens and a new 14-42 (28-84 equivalent) ƒ3.5-5.6 zoom and a huge and bright looking optical ‘finder. That finder alone has got us all hot, as compacts usually skimp on this part of the optics in favor of the LCD screen. Speaking of LCDs, this is the one part none of the leaks has shown us.

Like we said, only one more day to wait for the official line. If Olympus has gotten this camera right, it could be huge. Lovely styling, a big sensor (Micro Four Thirds sensors are half the size of a 35mm frame) and what looks like a well laid-out set of controls. If the shutter response is good and low-light performance up to modern standards, it will be almost impossible to stop me buying one. Fingers crossed.

New Olympus [Xitek via Engadget]

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App Turns iPhone into Star Trek Communicator

star-trek-iphone

The Star Trek communicator was arguably the original cellphone, and clearly the model for Motorola’s Startac (even the name was a thinly disguised homage). The iPhone, in turn, is obviously the closest thing us 21st century humans have to the technology of the future. It fits, then, that there should be an application which turns your iPhone into its future counterpart.

And of course, there is. The $0.99 application looks just like the prop from the original series, and consists of the same useless flashing lights. The sounds are pretty much dead on, and the very best part, guaranteed to make you smile, is that you can “open” the “lid” with a flick of your wrist. If you’re running this on an iPhone, you can actually dial numbers from within the app using a custom, retro dial-pad (the iPod Touch, obviously, can’t do this).

Beam me up, Scotty!

Product page [iTunes]


Amazing Gallery of Retro, Streamlined Steam-Irons

streamlined-irons

The internet is supposed to be the place for niches. No matter how odd your interests, you’ll almost always find something pertinent on the web. Paper books, on the other hand, need to aim at the mass audience and are therefore more mainstream, right?

Then what the hell is Streamlined Irons? The book details the most extraordinarily wonderful steam-iron designs from the 1930s and 1940s, irons with curves so swooping and voluptuous that they make the Chrysler Building look like a prefab garden shed.

Of course, the book comes from somebody eccentric enough to know all about the history of steam irons. The author, Jay Raymond, is a collector, and along with the close-up pop-shots of the irons there is a history of the electric steam iron running as a narrative.

But we don’t care about that. It’s all about the pictures. And possible the names, too. Try some of these monikers for size: The Never-Lift, the Lady Dover and the Steam-O-Matic A.

The book is available to order now for $70. The publisher? Who else but the Streamline Press?

Product page [Streamlined Irons via Core77]


Bianchi to Launch Retro-Styled Fixie in 2010

2010-pista-via-brera2

Recently, I have been considering the ironies of combining a fixed-gear bike with a Dutch city bike, two machines from opposite ends of the cycling spectrum. It looks, though, like the king of the ready-made fixie, Bianchi, has beaten me to it. Unless I bust one out before the end of the year, that is.

You’re looking at the Pista Via Brera, a fixie that will be added to the Pista lineup in 2010. It’s a regular steel-framed Pista, with track-ends, toe clips and skinny, skinny wheels, but instead of the drop handlebars designed for racing, you’ll get a much more comfortable straight bar, complete with winter-warmer cork grips. The Via Brera will come with a SRAM Torpedo rear hub, which can be converted from fixed to freewheel at the turn of a screw. Presumably you’d want to add a brake if you choose the freewheel option.

It’s gorgeous, and clearly influenced by Dutch bike design. All it needs is a Brooks saddle and some fenders. The price is to be decided, but we’d expect it to be somewhere around the $750 asked for a regular Pista.  Available in the fall. I want one.

Product page [Bianchi USA via Prolly]


Wrists-On With Casio’s Old-School Calculator Watch

casio-1

This is my new watch, acquired after an experiment in riding a fixed-gear bike whilst drunk resulted in the loss and/or theft of my old, twin-dialled watch.

Faced with buying a replacement, my geek-genes immediately kicked in and I picked up something I first yearned for as a d20-rolling, miniature-painting, ZX Spectrum-programming schoolboy: The Casio Calculator Watch. This is, according to the almost inch-thick instruction manual, the DBC-32. It cost me €35.

So, how is it? In short, it’s a fragile piece of junk, but I love it.

As you can see from the pictures, the watch, although barely a few days old, has already received some dings: both the the glass and to the bezel down below the keypad. The metal itself, chosen because it looked both classier and tougher than the plastic models, has more in common with a foil cupcake casing than actual metal. This has the advantage of making the watch very light, but the disadvantage of bruising as easily as a haemophiliac in a mosh-pit. In fact, the “brushed metal” finish is already well on its way to becoming a “scarred metal” finish.

But it’s all made up for in the functionality, right? Well, sort of. Apart from the obvious calculator mode, you also get a stopwatch (itself infinitely less useful day-to-day than a countdown timer), dual time, an alarm and a rather quaint “database” for storing “up to” 25 phone numbers. I didn’t buy this watch for any of these additions — I got it purely for the aesthetic — which is probably just as well. Modern interfaces, touch interfaces especially, have spoiled us. I still have the muscle memory from my digital watch-wearing school days to control this but faced with anything harder than switching on the backlight I reach in my pocket for my iPod Touch.

And about that light. You can set it to come on automatically when you tilt the watch to look at the screen. But there is a rather tiresome safety measure — if you choose the auto mode, it actually switches off after six hours to save on batteries. This is, of course, admitting that the function doesn’t work properly to begin with.

I tested the calculator. 2+2. The answer? Inexplicably, 2+2=1, until you realize that the plus and the division signs are rendered so as to be almost identical. I tried again and achieved the more usual answer of four. There’s a rumor on the street of an Orwell Edition which gives the answer five, although this is unsubstantiated.

Do I recommend this watch? Not really. I’d spring a little more and go for a more sturdy model, one which is perhaps water resistant, too. But it looks good, and despite the flaws it works perfectly as a timepiece. The final joke, though, is visible in tiny letters above the watch’s screen. Look closely and you’ll see the legend “10 Year Battery”. As if there would still be anything left to power in a decade’s time. $70.

Product page [Casio]


World’s first camera goes on public display in Macau

If you thought the golden anniversary of Olympus’ Pen camera was something, get a load of this. From now until August 23rd, an elaborate exhibition entitled ‘The Invention of Photography and the Earliest Photographs’ will showcase some of digital imaging’s earliest tools, including the planet’s oldest camera. The wooden sliding box shown above will undoubtedly be the centerpiece of the Macau-based expo, though it will be surrounded by 250 photography antiques and 180 old photos, which were collections lent by the Nicephore Niepce Museum and 12 other museums, cultural institutions and private collectors around the world. Anyone planning on making the trip over? Make sure you take a few snapshots with your 90s-era point-and-shoot, cool?

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World’s first camera goes on public display in Macau originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 May 2009 04:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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