TabletKiosk rises from the ashes, pops Atom CPUs into hideous new UMPC / tablet line

Sheesh — whatever happened to TabletKiosk, anyway? Aside from one random slate PC tailored for the medical industry, we haven’t seen anything meaningful from these guys since 2008. And yes, that includes the present day. Oh sure, the company’s newest trifecta of machines — which includes the 7-inch eo a7330D, 7-inch eo TufTab a7230XD and 12.1-inch Sahara NetSlate a230T — may use the incredibly mighty Atom CPU now, but that doesn’t change the fact that they’re all uglier than sin itself. In fairness, all three are designed more for the enterprise market than for fashion conscious consumers, but still, we’re struggling to see any design improvements here compared to the wares this outfit was pushing way back in 2007. If you truly believe that beauty’s on the inside, hit the read link for all the dirt.

[Via HotHardware]

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TabletKiosk rises from the ashes, pops Atom CPUs into hideous new UMPC / tablet line originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Sep 2009 23:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rugged, waterproof Predator VX360 wearable camcorder destined for X Games

Had your daily dose of Sal Masekela? No? Shame on you! Though, we have to say, if this here wearable camcorder takes off, you could very well hear that very fellow doing color commentary over some pretty sick footage. The Predator VX360 is a rugged, waterproof wearable video camera that’s engineered to withstand abuse from the elements while popping 1080 kickflips on the halfpipe, and unlike many head-worn alternatives, this one has its recording module (complete with a built-in LCD) strapped to an armband. The “eyeball camera” is still meant to cling tightly to your dome, but details are scant when it comes to resolution and the like. It’s available now for daredevils in the UK, though the £549.99 ($892) sticker is apt to keep most of ’em at bay.

[Via I4U News]

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Rugged, waterproof Predator VX360 wearable camcorder destined for X Games originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 02:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pentax’s waterproof Optio W80 reviewed: tough as nails, ‘so-so’ image quality

We’ve always heard that life was full of compromises, and evidently Pentax made a few when it decided to build its toughest, most rugged point-and-shoot camera of all time. On paper, the Optio W80 looked mighty promising, but in practice, the all-important image quality was found to fall short. Over at PhotographyBLOG, critics found that the camera could withstand “virtually anything” within reason, and while the 5x optical zoom and HD movie mode were both appreciated, most everything else was at least somewhat disappointing. The anti-shake system was found to simply slow the camera down, and the image quality was hamstrung by excessive noise at all ISO levels — even 100. Feel free to peek the full review down in the read link, but make sure to keep your expectations in check.

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Pentax’s waterproof Optio W80 reviewed: tough as nails, ‘so-so’ image quality originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Sep 2009 10:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sonim XP3 Review: Boiled Alive

You might not know it, but you’ve heard about the XP3: It’s that phone that’s always getting drenched, elephant-smooshed or shot, and surviving. Well, I finally got one, and the timing couldn’t be better. XP3, I’m going to eat you.

The Price

The Sonim XP3 is by no means a new phone, either as a product or a piece of technology. For the US, though, it’s still semi-fresh: It’s just been announced on regional carriers around the country, and as of last week you can pick one up unlocked for about $400 at Best Buy.

The Verdict

As you can see, this thing is a brick. It’s a heavy, Tonka-yellow slab of plastic and rubber that sometimes makes calls, sends texts and visits a website or two. In a way it’s the ultimate dumbphone: It’s not annoyingly dumb—it’s actually got a decently attractive UI, and it’s worlds easier to use than the not-as-tough Casio G’zOne—and the battery life is conversely related to the phone’s feature set, just like it should be. (I’ve been playing with this thing on and off for more than a week, and I still don’t need to charge it.) Also, of course, it’s tough, like all my favorite dumb people. It’s the anti-iPhone, and not necessarily in a bad way.

When I say tough, I don’t mean to say this is a phone for people who go through a lot of handsets, or hate that their Pre’s backplate keeps getting scratched—this is in a different league, for a different type of human: Do you work on an oil rig? As a stuntman? Underwater, sometimes? Did you sign a 100-page insurance waiver before starting your current job? Have you ever watched a coworker get crushed to death, along with his phone? No?

Ok, but would you like the option to occasionally cook your phone?

Spaghetti con Tele

Gallery or video, take your pick:

Sonim never claimed this wouldn’t kill the phone, and the battery clearly states that it shouldn’t be heated past 130 degrees. After a brief speaker fritz that solved itself, though, the XP3 works perfectly.

You can boil it, like pasta, for at least three minutes

It’s surprisingly pleasant to use, for what it is

Battery lasts forever

It’s not terribly huge, but not thin either

It’s fundamentally ridiculous, though necessary for a select group of people

No 3G, or major carriers (yet)

Extremely hard to chew, even harder to pass

Taste Test is our weeklong tribute to the leaps that occur when technology meets cuisine, spanning everything from the historic breakthroughs that made food tastier and safer to the Earl-Grey-friendly replicators we impatiently await in the future.

How to Make Your Gadgets Drop- and Water-Resistant

rugged-laptopRugged gadgets can withstand drops, shocks, vibrations and coffee spills — but they’ll do serious damage to your wallet. Why not buy a regular device and ruggedize it yourself?

Two editors at Popular Mechanics did just that, taking a DIY approach to protecting a phone, a point-and-shoot camera, and a notebook. The results are impressive, if ugly.

Phones are easy to protect. Wrap the edges with a bumper made of rubber bands and tuck the whole inside a vacuum-sealed bag, being careful not to overdo the vacuum or it will push all the buttons down. Or, just put your phone inside a Ziploc baggy.

Cameras are a little trickier. Foam tape and weatherstripping protects the body, but the lens housing the Popular Mechanics editors built out of PVC pipe and a UV filter didn’t prevent the lens from getting knocked askew. A plastic zip-lock does a good job of waterproofing the camera, though.

Laptops can be ruggedized with lots of duct tape, tennis balls and pipe insulation. The resulting monstrosity is both ugly and bulky, but it survived an impressive 8-foot drop. For coffee-proofing (thanks to the need for air vents, a notebook can’t be made truly dunkable), the editors cut a sheet of polyethylene to protect the keyboard and trackpad. You can also buy silicone keyboard covers for many notebook models.

The story has more details, plus a video showing the editors testing their newly-ruggedized notebook.

How to Ruggedize Your Own Gadgets [Popular Mechanics]

Photo: Popular Mechanics editors testing the resilience of their ruggedized Dell.

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Verbatim Tuff-Clip flash drives for the adventure nerd

We can’t honestly say we’ve ever had a flash drive go bad because it wasn’t tough enough, but apparently there’s a market of globe-trotting ex-military jungle assassins out there big enough for Verbatim to join in with the Tuff-Clip USB stick. (Actually, it’s TUFF-CLIP, because all-caps names are water-resistant to 100 feet.) Of course, you’ll have to pay for those rugged good looks: the 4GB version is $30, while the 8GB is $50. Not exactly a steal when you consider this Hello Kitty stick we’ve been using cost us nothing more than our pride.

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Verbatim Tuff-Clip flash drives for the adventure nerd originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 10 Aug 2009 19:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Stealth Computer kicks and shoves its Warrior 2000 rugged tablet out the door

Stealth Computer isn’t exactly going for much subtlety with a rugged laptop line called “Warrior,” but subtlety is hardly part of the equation when we’re talking about a convertible tablet that’s protected from repeated drops, shocks, dust, water, and, um, lint. Like most such ruggedized computers, however, all that comes at some expense to performance, although this new 13.3-inch Warrior NW-2000 model is certainly still more than adequate with a 1.06GHz low-voltage Core 2 Duo processor, 2GB of RAM, a 160GB hard drive, and a built-in DVD burner, not to mention optional 3G, GPS, and all the usual security measures like a fingerprint scanner and various password protection options. Oh, and a starting price of $4,895.

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Stealth Computer kicks and shoves its Warrior 2000 rugged tablet out the door originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Aug 2009 17:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Buffalo HDS-PH500U2 gives you 500GB of rugged, encrypted storage

Buffalo’s MiniStation DataVault series of drives is focused on data protection, from hackers and clumsy owners alike, with features like automatic full disk encryption and ruggedized shock-resistant design. The latest model, identified in Japan by the dry alphanumeric title you see above, sticks to the security-centric formula but bumps the storage to a sweet 500GB. ¥23,200 ($244) will be enough to snag the USB-powered 5,400RPM device in mid-August, and a prompt US / European release also seems highly likely. Judging by what’s already available in the US, you can expect a three year warranty plus preloaded auto-backup software and mobile versions of Firefox and Thunderbird for avoiding the scourge of IE wherever you may roam.

[Via PC Watch]

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Buffalo HDS-PH500U2 gives you 500GB of rugged, encrypted storage originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Aug 2009 05:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pentax debuts waterproof Optio WS80 alongside P80 and E80 point-and-shoots

Not turned on by Pentax‘s recently released Optio W80? How’s about a colorful variant for $50 less? This fine evening, the waterproof Optio WS80 is being unveiled alongside two other entirely less enchanting point-and-shoots. The $249.95 WS80 (shown above) looks about as natural as a waterproof camera can, arriving this September in “his-and-her designs” with a 10 megapixel sensor, 5x optical zoom, a sub-1-inch thick body, 2.7-inch LCD and the ability to withstand depths of up to five feet (lackluster, we know). Still, the ability to snag underwater video at 720p is a real boon, and there’s even face detection, shake reduction and sensitivity modes as high as ISO 6400.

As for the other guys, the Optio P80 gets things going with a 12.1 megapixel CCD, 2.7-inch LCD, 720p (30fps) movie mode, face detection, shake reduction, a 4x wide-angle optical zoom lens (equivalent to 27.5 – 110mm focal length) and support for AA batteries. It’s expected to ship this September for $199.95 in black, pearl and mint hues. Finally, the low-end E80 is pretty much the same as the P80 save for its 10 megapixel sensor, 15fps 720p movie mode and 3x optical zoom lens with a focal length equivalent to 32 – 96mm. It should also ship in September for $129.95. Check the full releases and specification sheets after the break… if you dare.

Continue reading Pentax debuts waterproof Optio WS80 alongside P80 and E80 point-and-shoots

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Pentax debuts waterproof Optio WS80 alongside P80 and E80 point-and-shoots originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Aug 2009 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rugged Duros 8404 tablet PC: now with Atom, sunlight-viewable LCD

We’re not saying that Intel’s Atom CPUs are lightning fast or anything, but even the 1.6GHz N270 is snappier than the lethargic 1GHz Celeron M that was placed in last year’s Duros tablet. In an effort to make the 8404 viable once more, Duros has introduced an equally rugged new model with an Atom processor, hot-swappable battery and an 8.4-inch SVGA sunlight-viewable touchscreen. You’ll still find an IP65 sealed enclosure (perfect for those leisurely jaunts through Deadfoot), as well as Windows XP running the show. For those craving extras, the 8404 can be equipped with WiFi, WWAN connectivity, GPS and Bluetooth, not to mention 1GB of RAM, a vehicle dock, integrated Intel graphics, a 120GB hard drive and a single USB 2.0 socket. There’s no mention of price, but considering that you can run this thing over with a snowmobile and continue your Gchat session where you left off, we’d expect to fork over quite the premium.

[Via HotHardware]

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Rugged Duros 8404 tablet PC: now with Atom, sunlight-viewable LCD originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Jul 2009 07:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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