Review: HP Firebird 803 With Voodoo DNA

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One night in Las Vegas, utilitarian hardware maker HP and boutique gaming manufacturer Voodoo totally got hammered, partied like maniacs, and blacked out. When they woke up the next morning, they were married and pregnant. The offspring from that evening now takes the form of wunderboxes like the Firebird 803. The progeny of two very talented parents, this PC is one of the smartest rigs we’ve tested. Here’s what reviewer Chris Null had to say:

HP and its boutique/luxe division Voodoo deserve serious praise for
what they’ve accomplished with the Firebird 803. Taking a mix of laptop
and desktop guts, juicing it up with high-end components, cooling it
with liquid goo instead of noisy fans, and encasing it inside a
gorgeous, curvy shell that would make most industrial designers weep
with envy, the Firebird is a testament to how the envelope can be
pushed in the typically boring PC world.

It’s also a veritable bargain, priced at $2,100, fully loaded.

Review: Klipsch HD Theater 500

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Klipsch makes some pretty good audio equipment. Only thing is, you needed a loan akin to home mortgage just to get some of these sonically sweet suckers. Not anymore. Klipsch is feeling the credit crunch/ economic freefall/ end of times too. And it’s doing something about it. The audio company’s newest home theater in a box, the HD 500, actually delivers decent surround sound despite costing a mere six Benjo-s. Just make sure you enjoy your tunes in a small room. From reviwer Rachel Cericola:

After an easy setup, we cranked up tunes ranging from punk rock to
classical jazz. Virtually every genre of music we tossed at the system
had clear tonal balance, distinct separation, and plenty of window
rattling bass. However, it was when we started screening films that
these noisemakers really shined.

During the Mark II test sequence in Iron Man, it literally sounded like
Robert Downy Jr. was jetting around the living room. An agonizing
screening of Beverly Hills Chihuahua yielded yelps from onscreen
pooches that actually scared the crap out of my dog. Special shout out:
the center-channel speaker. While the rest of the room was shaking
during Transporter 3, this boom box’s dual woofers delivered
crystal-clear sound — even when we didn’t necessarily want to hear
Jason Statham awkwardly deliver his dialogue.

                        
                            $600
                        

                        
                        klipsch.com

8out of 10

Bad-ow! Read the full review of the Klipsch HD 500 Surround Sound System here.


                        

Review: Outside the Box Group Plane Quiet Platinum Headphones

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Someday someone somewhere somehow will invent a pair of noise canceling headphones that do three things: 1. Deliver top quality audio. 2.) Cut out ambient noise perfectly. 3.) Cost under a hundred bucks. Senior editor Dylan Tweney just reviewed a set of cans that fall far short of this trifecta. From his review:

To their credit these bulbous cans do a good job of silencing the
traffic hum from the street below the WIRED offices, and they nicely
muffle the gnashing of teeth in the newsroom around me.

But sonically, they’re about as satisfying as a week-old rice cake.
The sound feels clipped and flat: High-end frequencies that hum
crystal-clear in better headphones are missing or muffled in the Plane
Quiets. Stereo separation is not as sharply defined as I’d like, and
the overall sound feels only like it’s half alive.

$100 outsidetheboxgroup.com

5out of 10

Read the whole Plane Quiet Platinum Headphone review here.
 

 

Review: 2009 Cadillac Escalade Hybrid

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Hey guys remember the WIRED product reviews website? It’s still there, chugging out more gear evaluations than you can shake a USB stick at. And we’re not just content pumping out five netbook reviews a week. We’re getting our mitts onto high performance gaming peripherals, top shelf audio, and automotive. Yep automotive. Like Joe Brown’s take on the 2009 Cadillac Escalade Hybrid. From his review:

I shouldn’t love this truck. I should hate it. I purposely do not own a
car, and this all-black behemoth represents everything I hate about SUV
culture: conspicuous consumption, insensitivity to our rapidly
shrinking world and crowded cities, middle finger raised at global
warming.

You could slap a cold fusion generator under Big Poppa Cadillac’s hood
and the first two issues would still apply, but I was kind of wrong
about that last one. Have you ever seen Godzilla vs. Megalon?
Where Godzilla fights on behalf of the people of Japan against a giant
rhinoceros/cockroach? Sure, Tokyo’s favorite monster still smashes a
bunch of buildings and steps on some people, but he’s trying to be
good. Same goes for this Hybrid Chromedaddy.

$74,085 (as tested), cadillac.com

8out of 10

Read the full review of the Cadillac Escalade Hybrid Review here.
 

Review: Asus Eee PC 1000HE

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At Gadget Lab we were eager to get our hands on the latest netbook from Asus  — the Eee PC 1000HE. Here’s a snippet of what I had to say about it:

Asus basically invented the netbook, so it didn’t surprise us
when the company’s latest Eee PC opened a can of whoop-ass on its
competitors.

From the outside, the 1000HE doesn’t look much
different from other models in the diminutive Eee line. But it’s the
machine’s heart — the brand new 1.66-GHz Atom N280 processor — that
makes it faster, stronger, smarter than its opponents.

Price: $400 (as tested)

8out of 10  8 out of 10

Read the rest of the review at Wired.com/reviews — our complete database of product reviews.

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

Canon 5D Mark II vs. Nikon D700 Review Shoot-Out

For the last few months, we’ve been shooting with the two hottest cameras on the market. Lucky us. If you’ve been eyeing either one of these for purchase, here’s everything you need to know.

Camera makers love to invent new categories. And while that can often lead to endless bloat, the Canon 5D Mark II and the Nikon D700 represent a sweet spot that had never been hit before—the semi-pro body with a full-frame sensor. And it’s the category with the most bang for buck we’ve seen to date.

Yes, let’s just get this out of the way: Both the D700 and the 5D Mark II give you more for your dollar in terms of features, image quality and overall excellence than anything else we’ve used. Period. We know not everyone is prepared to drop $2,000 to $3,000 on a camera body these days, but if you’re thinking of investing for the long haul and, more importantly, have a good collection of either Nikon or Canon lenses, these are the two cameras you want to look at.

Why? Because they give you almost everything from Nikon and Canon’s uber-pro top end for a whole lot less, most importantly the full-frame sensor (FX in Nikon parlance). With a sensor the same size as a piece of 35mm film, your old Nikon or Canon glass will produce beautiful results on these new bodies (assuming they’re new enough to autofocus and couple to the cameras’ meters). And if you don’t have a collection built up already, your choices for new lenses will be significantly more exciting without the APS-C (DX, again, in Nikon’s world) sensor’s 1.6x crop factor changing their effective focal lengths.

The sensors in these two cameras are also responsible for their absolutely stunning high-ISO sensitivity performance—if you would have told me a few years ago that I could get 100 percent usable and almost noise-free shots in the dark at ISO 4000 with hand-holdable shutter speeds, I would have laughed in your Nostradamus-looking face. But that’s the reality here, and it’s awesome.

But of the two, which to choose? Now that’s the question, isn’t it. Here we’ll share what we’ve learned from shooting with the 5D Mark II and D700, for work and for play, and hopefully you’ll be able to make your own call.

Image Quality/Sensor Sensitivity
Again, both of these cameras will blow your mind with their high-ISO performance. Both go up to a ridiculous 25,600 ISO rating. The magic does not lie in their gaudy top-range though, which as you can see in our galleries below is still prit-tay, prit-tay noisy. No, the crazy thing here is that with both of these DSLRs, you can shoot at 3200, 4000, even 6400 in the right light and still have photos that look practically noise-free on screen. That’s just crazy, and you can’t accurately describe what this means to you as a photographer until you’ve shot your friends—handheld at quick enough shutter speeds—around a candle-lit table, and gotten photos that look absolutely gorgeous. Before, it took a crazy expensive lens to even come close to this, and even then, sensors (or even high-ISO film) couldn’t keep up.

With the 5D Mark II and the D700, you’re basically shooting with night vision. Like I was doing here at Snowscrapers a few weeks back. As you can see, there are floodlights, but it’s dark. These guys are moving fast. But I can crank up the ISO high enough to pan with them without blurring them out, and grab stuff like this, without the sky turning into a snowstorm of noise.

Let’s compare the high-ISO range of both cameras head-to-head, shall we:

As you can see from these unprocessed (save for JPEG conversion and re-sizing with Aperture) RAW shots files from each camera with high-ISO noise reduction at its highest setting on both, the D700 has a slight edge. The 5D Mark II’s higher resolution leaves lots of room for chroma noise, the bursts of mostly red and green you see in the full crops.

But still, unless you look at them at full-res, both cameras produced almost noiseless images up to ISO 3200. I exposed each shot at f/5.6 so the shutter speeds for the ISO 1600 and 3200 shots were upwards of a few seconds each, which makes the fact that they’re almost noise-free at any decent print or display size a phenomenal sign of both cameras’ noise-busting powers.

One big difference head to head in the imaging department is resolution. At 21 megapixels, the 5D Mark II has almost double the pixels of the 12.1 megapixel D700. As you well know by now, megapixels are not as important as sensor size/quality, but here, we’re dealing with two evenly matched, high-performance sensors, both of them full-frame. So in this case, an extra 9 million pixels does give you something: The added ability to heavily crop down shots without losing detail, like I did here with Mr. Shaun White.

Folks shooting in RAW will also notice the extra resolution with added RAW headroom (meaning, more detail can be salvaged in post-processing from highlights that would be blown out to flat white in a JPG). But on the other hand, a 21-megapixel RAW file from the 5D Mark II weighs in at around 30MB give or take, so unless you’re ready to buy a huge RAID drive to go along with it, the higher resolution may not be your choice in most situations. In all honesty, for 800-pixel-wide shots intended for Gizmodo pages, I never shot above the smallest JPG size, which is still a massive 2784×1856.

Advantage: Draw The D700 does slightly better at high ISO, but the 5D Mark II has a significant upper hand in resolution.

Shooting Features
Here’s one area where there is a definitive leader, and it’s the D700. Its Multi-Cam 3500 auto-focus processor has 51 AF points, compared the the 5D Mark II’s nine (it inherited the same autofocus system from the original 5D, which was itself a bit outdated). It is decidedly better at tracking moving objects with all of these focus points, and also tends to lock in to the correct focus considerably faster.

Even without shooting, it’s easy enough to spot the difference by looking through the viewfinders. The 5D Mark II’s focus points are concentrated mostly in the center of the frame in a diamond shape, whereas the D700’s central points cover far more ground, and zone points cover the outer areas of the frame. So with autofocus, this is cut and dry: Although the 5D Mark II’s AF is quite competent, the D700 wins if you frequently shoot fast-moving kids, animals (same thing?) or sports. The D700 does have a focus-assist lamp (the 5D Mark II doesn’t) to help get this level of detail in low-light, but you can shut it off.

As far as metering and image processing goes, I also lean toward the D700. As most Nikons do, the D700 tends to saturate colors more in its default settings (which of course can be changed). I’m a fan of this look, but that’s all about settings, which should most likely be done on the computer. So a toss-up there, for the most part.

More important is my completely unscientific but still notable feeling that the D700 tends to meter scenes with more skill than the 5D. Here the difference is subtle, but I feel like I had to hit the exposure compensation knob a bit more frequently on the Canon to keep it from blowing out highlights, where the D700 would expose the frame more naturally.

Here are some D700 shots that Matt and I took:

Advantage: D700

Interface/Handfeel/Menus
Here’s where the Nikon vs. Canon flames start to get intense—both cameras take a decidedly different approach to menus and basic shooting controls. For me, I like a dedicated button wherever possible, even if this means the body is littered with switches and knobs of all sorts. This is the Nikon approach, more or less; ISO, file size, white balance, autofocus point selection, metering mode and even mirror lock-up get their own dedicated switches on the D700, which makes switching all of these things easier. On the 5D Mark II, all of these major settings share a button—press it, then rotate the thumb wheel to change one setting, and the index-finger wheel on the front for the other. I almost never remember which dial changes which setting, so that can be annoying.

On the other hand, I am a huge fan of Canon’s jumbo thumb wheel in general—something no Nikon has. Being able to always change EV with the thumbwheel is huge, and in manual mode, you can’t beat having that big knob down there. It’s also great for quickly scrolling through your images. I also much prefer the traditional Canon shooting-mode selector wheel; on the Nikon, you have to press down a button and turn a wheel at the same time. But these all come down mostly to personal preference. And in the on-screen menus, again, preference: Canon tends to split their menus out into multiple screens with every option on the screen at once without scrolling, where Nikon gives you long scrolling lists. Canon did provide a nice quick-access menu to most major settings via the LCD, which is an improvement for them.

And even though the D700 is a good 300 grams heavier than the 5D Mark II with lens, it feels a bit more balanced (almost gyroscopic) in your hand, so that’s good, if you don’t mind the extra weight.

Advantage: D700 Another tough call, but I’m giving it to D700 by a nose for all the dedicated switches, even though I like several of Canon’s choices better.

Extras
Let’s not ignore the elephant in the room: The 5D Mark II is the first DSLR in the world to shoot 1080p (30fps) HD video through its live view mode (see here for more on how this works). By now you’ve thoroughly ogled Vincent La Foret’s amazing demo film—let me tell you, nothing I shot can come close to that. But what even the least video-inclined person will find is that videos look absolutely incredible shot with the limited depth of field of an SLR lens feeding a big full-frame sensor.

There are some drawbacks though, which will ensure your HD camcorder still has some time left: Autofocus is non-existent. When you press the autofocus button during video capture—and that’s the only way to activate it—you’ll need to be prepared to edit out the part in your video where either the mirror slaps up to expose the AF sensor or the contrast detection system cranks the exposure way up (accompanied by the sound of your lens squeaking into position after a good 4 to 5 seconds of hunting). If you’re cool with that, then you’ll be OK, because the autofocus does work, after mangling your videos for a few seconds. Thankfully, manual focus works just fine. You can zoom in with the LCD to make sure you’ve nailed the focus, although this can be kind of tricky to juggle while twisting the focus ring and trying to keep the shot framed at the same time.

Another drawback is that, aside from shifting the EV exposure compensation, you can’t change exposure or ISO settings while you’re filming.

But for grabbing quick 90 to 120 second clips of relatively stationary subjects, or things far enough away to be covered by your infinity focus (like the snowboarders here), then you’re absolutely golden. Your clips, with their popped colors, low-light sensitivity and limited depth of field will be far more beautiful than anything spit out by a Flip video cam or, in some cases, your dedicated camcorder.

Here’s a quick montage of some stuff I shot around town:


On top of the video shooting, the 5D Mark II also comes with a better kit lens than the D700, a 24-105mm L-series that’s f/4 throughout the range. I would normally feel the constraints of f/4 pretty hard and long for my f/1.4 50mm, but with the 5D Mark II you almost don’t notice, when you factor in VR and the crazy-bananas low-light sensitivity. The D700 comes with a capable but not nearly as performance-centric 24-120 f/3.5-f/5.6 zoom.

Oh, and I almost forgot: The D700 has a built-in flash, and the 5D Mark II does not. Which is something I would only ever think of using as a fill in the day time. So that’s not that big of a deal for me, but it might be for you. Update: As many of you guys have pointed out, the D700 on-board flash can also be used to wirelessly trigger Nikon’s CLS compatible strobes. Cool feature.

Advantage: 5D Mark II Easy call there.

Conclusion
Today in the DSLR world, wedged somewhere in the middle of entry-level APS-C, semi-pro APS-C, pro APS-C and pro full-frame, we now have a nice semi-pro full-frame option to consider. The categories may be piling up, but we are so happy this new one came along. Now that getting a full-frame sensor doesn’t require going into hock to get the same body that photojournalists are taking to Iraq, we serious-but-still-recreational shooters can use these full-framers to get great shots at ISO settings so high it’s ridiculous to think about. And on the 5D Mark II, we can film 1080p video. Holy crap.

In the end, for me, I give the trophy to the 5D Mark II for the 1080p video. It’s got its drawbacks, sure, but being able to switch seamlessly from stills to beautiful movies with my awesome 35mm DSLR lens is just too good to be true. The D700 has an edge, albeit a slight one, in some categories like high ISO, but in the new world order, 1080p video from your DSLR is an ace that can’t be beat.

Things are even more clear cut when both cameras were selling for MSRP: Adding insult to injury after nearly matching Nikon in ISO sensitivity and adding 1080p video and almost double the resolution, Canon priced the 5D $300 lower than the D700 ($2700 vs $3000 for body-only). The D700’s been on the market a few months longer, though, and the prices are starting to come down—you can get the body for $2450 at B&H right now. With the 5D Mark II still backordered just about everywhere, this disparity will probably last for a while.

So for you it may be an interesting decision. The option to save a few hundred bucks and get a smidge less noise at high ISO is surely attractive. Either way, you’ve got an absolutely amazing camera. I would imagine most people considering a $2,000 to $3,000 body already have a lens or two of one of these two systems—so in the end, you may go with the one you already have glass for. If you’re a Nikon person, this may mean holding off on the D700 and waiting a while for 1080p.

We based this review on real-world experience, and we didn’t spend any time in a lab for testing. Consider supplementing our impressions here with the good work done by our friends at digitalcamerainfo,com (read their 5D Mark II review and their D700 review), as well as teh labcoated folks over at DPReview’s takes: here is their D700 review and their 5D Mark II review. And, while we focused here on Canon and Nikon, the Sony Alpha 900 is also a contender in this price range for a full-frame shooter, though in our experience, it doesn’t touch either of these two, especially in high-ISO performance.

Gizmodo’s Amazon Kindle 2 Review Matrix

You don’t wanna wear out your eyes reading superlong Kindle 2 reviews before you get one, right? Well here’s our review matrix for quick, easy-on-the-eyes digestion of reviews from tech’s biggest names.

We’ve got reviews here from the NYT’s David Pogue (no musical, sadly), Wired’s Steven Levy and USA Today’s Ed Baig. Mr. Mossberg is MIA, probably waiting until the regular run of his column tomorrow. Update: Fixed a quote accidentally swapped between Pogue and Levy.


There’s Jon Stewart’s take on it, as an alternative. [Wired, NYT, USA Today]

Time Crisis Strike For iPhone Lightning Review

I’ve stomped a lot of Time Crisis pedals in my day, boy. And now, the gold standard in duck-and-cover arcade rail shooters is on the iPhone. How is it?

The App: Time Crisis Strike, by Namco. Played by many of us with light guns and stomping pedals in the arcades of our youth.

The Cost: $6

The Verdict: Fun enough, but just not the same, man. The great thing about Time Crisis in the arcade was that you felt like you were actually ducking behind incoming bullets, molotov cocktails and knife-wielding crazies. That, and the real gun kicking in your hand (if it wasn’t broken) were the essential gameplay elements. And maybe I’m just jaded, but tripping the iPhone’s tilt accelerometer forward to duck and tapping the screen with a finger just doesn’t quite capture that magic. You feel like the kid who clanked the muzzle of the Nintendo gun directly against the face of the TV to play Duck Hunt.

Then again, if you can detach yourself from the past, Time Crisis Strike is not bad. Plus, it’s on your phone, and it’s cool that even just a little taste of the duck-and-cover gameplay magic is still present.

The game consists of only three levels, which you’ll make it through pretty fast. Those three stages, plus five quick challenge-based mini games are all there is here, so if you want an epic unfolding story line or a great deal of variety, you’re out of luck. Maybe updates will bring new levels (Namco was pretty quick with the updates to fix I Love Katamari).

So if you’re a huge Time Crisis fan, this is probably worth a pickup. Just don’t expect to be hypnotized like you were twelve years old again. [Time Crisis Strike]

Here’s a gameplay video from the folks at Touch Arcade, who also have a review up here.

iRobot Roomba 610 Professional Series Review

The Gadget: The Roomba Professional 610—the most powerful Roomba EVER—is made for large areas like offices, businesses, and big homes. It comes with two interchangeable bins, extra brushes and filters, and two virtual walls.

The Price: $549

The Verdict: Although the Roomba Pro—which we lovingly dubbed “Calculon Jr.”—is meant to be the tough, industrial one of the Roomba series, there are times it acted less like a machine, and more like a rebellious child with ADD. This would be a good cleaning device for industrial sized rooms despite its drawbacks, but it’s too big and too loud for apartments.

The Pro is supposed to run on four different cleaning paterns: spiralling, wall following, room crossing, and dirt detection—all seemingly random unless you’re familiar with the paths and AI its creators programmed for it.

After directing Calculon Jr. to find his “home,” he only managed to dock himself—even when physically placed next to the docking station—twice out of five tries. Moreover, the Roomba is extremely loud, so I wouldn’t bother trying to watch TV when the Roomba Pro is running—(unless he’s cleaning a different room, which can be sanctioned off using the two included virtual walls, which worked fine with two C batteries).

One cool feature about the Roomba Pro is how simple it is to schedule a cleaning time—which can be set up to once a day, seven times a week—by using the built-in display that also tells the time and day. However, the display can only be seen if you keep the “clock” button held down.

When trying to clean up cookie crumbs and sunflower seeds, Calculon Jr.’s side brush would scatter the mess in different directions instead of sweeping it up into his vacuum. However, if you let your Roomba Pro run around for quite some time—or if you place him directly on top of the mess—he does a quite thorough job of cleaning up the dirt and debris on the floor, as long as it is an open space. You can see the cleaning process in the gallery below.

Here’s where the Roomba Pro differentiates itself from its smaller brothers. Because of the Pro’s larger size, it is unable to get to the dirt under smaller areas—such as the spaces under counters and couches. Similarly, when Calculon Jr. was placed under a table, it took him a while to maneuver around/between the chairs, and try to find his way out from under. When it is unable to do so, the Roomba Pro will automatically shut itself off.

Because it’s a Pro model designed for offices and bed & breakfasts, it comes with various spare parts that owners can use to self-repair. It would’ve been nice if the Roomba Pro came with a remote, but in addition to what comes already attached, the box has two brushes, a high capacity sweeper bin (which, according to the instruction manual, you’re still instructed to clean out after every use), two filters, a mini screwdriver, two brushes, two virtual walls and an extra side sweeper. But it’s still a Roomba, so its AI is not going to be dramatically smarter than other models.

For example, when it comes to sensor detection, Calculon Jr. is smarter than a baby, but dumber than a five year old. With our smaller Roomba (4220), whenever it hit an object such as a PS3 controller or my foot, it would immediately turn around and go in a different direction. With the Roomba Pro, however, Calculon Jr. painfully ran over my toes, attempted to crawl up a Rock Band drum set, and knocked over three (toy) guitars.

Many of the problems that we encountered could have been because we tested the Roomba Pro in a (carpeted) medium sized living/dining room and a (tiled) family-sized kitchen. If this apartment were a mansion with large rooms and minimal clutter, the Roomba Pro would be an ideal vacuuming device for everyday housekeeping. But if you’re looking for a gadget that’ll routinely clean your cozy apartment, we recommend going with one of Calculon Jr.’s smaller and cheaper brothers. [Product Page]

A First Look At Freespire 1.0

This article was written on August 10, 2006 by CyberNet.

A First Look At Freespire 1.0

The new Freespire 1.0 was just released a few days ago which was nearly one month ahead of schedule. It appears that the built-in codec support is the big feature of Freespire which provides a great out-of-the-box experience. This review on the first impression of Freespire really covers everything that makes it so great and they conclude by saying:

It’s too early to say whether or not Freespire can be the king of newcomer-oriented distros; a few weeks of usage will be needed to determine the its stability and see if any problems crop up. Nonetheless, it certainly offers the best out-the-box experience of any free-as-in-beer distro we’ve seen, and could genuinely open up Linux to a wider audience. Without doubt the codec support is the most notable feature, but the clean K menu and single app-per-task selection also contribute to a very approachable desktop.

The only thing that they really criticize is that Freespire takes twice as long as Ubuntu to boot-up on the same computer. That is a little depressing but Ubuntu does startup remarkably quick. If you haven’t given Freespire a whirl yet there is no better time than the present…so go try it.

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