TravelTeq’s ‘The Trip Sound’ luggage boasts integrated speaker, USB charging port

Heaven only knows if you could actually squeeze this thing into the overhead bin of an Airbus A319, but darn if we wouldn’t give our left arm to try. TravelTeq’s newest piece of luggage makes just about every other average piece of zip-up cloth look downright antediluvian, but with a price tag well north of $700, that’s certainly to be expected. It’s engineered to be toted onboard your aircraft, with the top doubling as a seat and a set of pull-out wheels ensuring that you never tip it over whilst darting from one end of PHX to the other. It’s fairly clear that the technophile was in mind during this unit’s creation, as it touts a dedicated laptop pouch, a reinforced aluminum exterior, inbuilt speaker system (two drivers and 15 total watts of power), a 3.5mm auxiliary input, and a port for charging your mobile (or anything else with a USB port, save for an iPad). The Trip Sound is up for order right now, and we’re guessing the toughest decision of all will be deciding between white or red wheels.

TravelTeq’s ‘The Trip Sound’ luggage boasts integrated speaker, USB charging port originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Sep 2010 10:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dont Walk, Zoom with Titan High-Roller Suitcase

titan_luggage.jpgEver sprint across the airport terminal to reach the gate and still miss the flight? Next time, skip the running and zoom through the concourse via a TITAN High-Roller Suitcase.

Still a concept, the suitcase comes with a footrest to transform into a scooter. The suitcase (with your beginnings) remain in the front. The three-wheeler uses the two wheels on the suitcase front and the single wheel  on the back footrest.

A laptop case slides off the top of the suitcase to slightly shrink the bag. When placed under the seat in front of you, the space cleared by the laptop case creates a perfect footrest.

Designed for the business types who fly regularly, the High-Roller would appeal to aynone who sees a kid fly by on a scooter, “I wish I didn’t have to walk.”

via Yanko

Eight Great Tips for Traveling with the iPad

Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg works on an iPad in a lounge at Newark airport, Wednesday April 14, 2010, before his flight to Oslo from the United States was diverted to Spain because of the cloud of dust from a volcanic eruption in Iceland hanging over northern European air space. (AP Photo/The Prime Minister's Office, ho)

The iPad is an almost perfect travel computer. It’s easy to carry, works as a guide, a map, a book and it’s crazy-long battery life will let you sit back and watch another movie while your laptop-toting companions search for a power outlet. But as convenient as it is, a little preparation will make things even smoother. Here are some things you should do before you leave the house.

Go Offline

A 3G iPad is a wonderfully useful machine, but outside of your home country, unless you’re willing to pay extra for roaming or a new, local micro-SIM, you’ll be back on Wi-Fi. Get ready for this by preparing a few apps.

OffMaps

OffMaps is an iPad (and iPhone) app which lets you download city maps for offline use. This lets you use the GPS (or Wi-Fi triangulation) on your iPad without an internet connection. City-specific versions of OffMaps are free, but a master version costs just $2 and lets you grab any map, for free, from within the app.

Maps are organized by country and then city, and are sourced from OpenStreetMaps, the crowd-sourced map project. There are also city guides which can be downloaded, and these not only give tourist hints and tips, but add a user-built database of restaurant, hotels, tourist-spots and so on. This makes searching the map double-useful. The guides cost around 30-cents each, and are paid for by buying tokens from within the app. Three free guides are included with the purchase.

A Wi-Fi Hotspot Directory

One way to get online in a foreign city is to find some free Wi-Fi. But if you don’t have an internet connection, you can’t download a hotspot database. Do this before you leave. There are several free and paid apps in the store, although I couldn’t find anything good for the iPad, so I just picked the free Wi-Fi Finder for iPhone and use it pixel-doubled.

Weather

If you’re spending your days outside, a weather app is pretty essential. You’ll need a connection to use it, but a once-a-day update should be enough. I use Weather Pro for iPad, which costs $5. It’s uncannily accurate and easy to read, and yet offers an embarrassment of detail, from animated weather-radar charts to an hour-by-hour breakdown of rainfall predictions. It also works worldwide, unlike some rather short-sighted U.S-only apps.

Language Guides

Which one you choose depends on where you are going, and quality is astonishingly variable. For vacations, though, you should opt for a travel-guide app rather than a full-on dictionary, as these will have useful phrases grouped together. Try learning the numbers one to ten by looking them up individually in a dictionary instead of together on a page and you’ll see why.

Why bother? Because if you are like most native English-speakers, you are an arrogant traveler, and you assume that you can just start talking English at somebody and they’ll understand. They probably will, as these foreigners are smart enough to learn another language, but they’ll hate you. You’d be amazed how far the local words for “hello”, “please”, “thank you”, and “do you speak English?” will get you. I tried it in jaw-crunching Polish this past weekend and the helpful, warm smiles I got betrayed just how few people bother. This happened despite my truly dreadful pronunciation.

PDFs

Wherever you store them, you should put your useful travel information in PDF-format for your travels. Well known guides are available as apps for some cities, but some of you may have illegitimate copies of the paper versions, or even saved Wikipedia articles. Convert to PDF and store on the iPad for fast, offline retrieval.

Technical Tips

Stealth and Cases

You don’t want to stand out as a tourist, and in some areas you won’t even want to pull out your iPad. To help, you’ll need a case. It should be quick-access, as you’ll likely be consulting the various guides and maps pretty often. The best kind is probably the flip-open type which makes your iPad look like a book. Failing this, a slim slip-cover will work, although you’ll have to hold it as you read. Avoid anything big or bulky, and above all don’t use something that looks like a computer bag.

If you’re really not comfortable pulling out your iPad, or you just must consult the paper guide-book, cover that book in something. Do not wander the streets with a Lonely Planet book in hand. It screams “mug me” and makes you look like a dork. Best of all, try the little Moleskine City Guides, the most covert maps you can buy.

Power

As you won’t be using 3G, you should switch it off. The same goes for Wi-Fi, most of the time. The iPad has a great battery life, but you can extend it further by switching off unnecessary radios, especially if you are in an area with no 3G coverage (the constant search for a network will drain juice double-quick).

Don’t do it right away, though: The GPS will grab its initial location much faster if it can use local cell-towers and Wi-Fi signals to give it a rough idea first. After initial acquisition, you can turn them off. Don’t use airplane mode, though, as this also kills the GPS.

Plan to Share

You can load the iPad up with the Lord of the Rings trilogy (books and movies) and the latest RPGs from Square, but won’t you please think about the children? Or at least consider your non-nerd fellow travelers. Before you leave, download some multi-player and family-friendly games (Labyrinth 2 HD is a great choice, and has a free lite version). Also, consider short, throwaway TV-shows that everyone will like, and that can be watched in half-hour chunks. Think less “The Wire” and more “30 Rock”. And don’t forget a cheap, two-way headphone splitter for shared movie-watching.

And if you’re sharing, there will come a point when you’re left staring out the train window, bored to death. This is where you pull out your secret weapon: Your iPhone or iPod Touch, loaded up with all the same goodies. And one more thing: Put all the above apps on your first home screen. You’ll thank me for it.

There must be plenty more great ways you can use your iPad when traveling, especially the online services I haven’t covered here. Got any apps, accessories or general tips? Leave them, as ever, in the comments.

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Microsoft Arc Touch Mouse Images Leaked

microsoft_arc_touch.jpg
Psst, Microsoft: A secret’s not a secret if more than one person knows it. Thanks to a trigger-happy German retailer updating its product page (now removed), the world now knows what the Microsoft Arc Touch Mouse looks like and when to expect it.

According to the retailer, the Arc Touch will be available October 13. Speculation has been rampant that next month’s peripheral announcement would refer to a new Arc Touch, and if the pictures are anything to go buy, it’s going to be pretty exciting.

With a multi-surface sensor, the Arc Touch’s big thing is that it folds. As in, it packs flat when you’re on the go and arches back up when in use. With Microsoft’s Blue Track system, the wireless mouse is designed to track on almost any surface.

Arc Touch connects to the computer via a 2.4-GHz nano transceiver that plugs in to the USB port and stows in a compartment under the mouse when it is folded. There’s also a battery indicator and physical power controls.

The Arc Touch Mouse is expected to be priced in-line with Apple’s multi-touch peripherals, at €69.99 in Europe, and $69.95 in the US.

Dear Microsoft: Official confirmation of this touch-scrolling mouse would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.

Via Slashgear

Take a Trip with the iLuv i1166 Portable Media Player

iLuv - i1166Almost a year after it was originally scheduled, and over a year after it won the Best of Innovation award at CES 2009, the iLuv i1166 portable media player is on store shelves and ready for users who are looking for a way to take multiple forms of media with them when they travel. Instead of ripping DVDs or converting video to play on a certain type of device, the iLuv i1166 is a multimedia device that looks like a tablet, but under the 8.9-inch LCD display is an iPhone/iPod dock connector (that charges your device when the i1166 is plugged in to AC power), and a DVD player.

The i1166 has USB and SD card slots on the side of the device so you can connect flash drives with media on them, or an SD card with photos on it. The device even has two stereo headphone jacks on it so you can share your movies or music with a friend while you’re traveling. There’s a kick-stand on the back so you can rest it on a flat surface, and it comes with a remote so you don’t have to enter the device menus while you’re watching a movie. All of these features in a portable device will come at a price though; it’s available now for $299.99 at iLuv’s online store. 

Innergie Simplifies Laptop Power Adapters

innergie.jpgI have several laptops around the house, and I hate playing the guessing game for which adapter goes with which notebook. I keep thinking of getting a universal power adapter — one power brick and several adapters — and the line of adapters from Innergie looks mighty appealing. Innergie offers four different universal power adapters for laptops, varying in size and configuration. 

First, whether at home, on the plane, or in the car, the mCube90 (pictured) is the most all-in-one adapter. The Auto/Air adapter, which is just two-thirds the size of a business card, detaches from the rest of the power brick, and allows you to charge your devices everywhere you go.

Some of you may prefer to hold out for the Magic Cable, a multi-headed cable with tips for mini- and micro- USB devices, as well as Apple’s proprietary charging port. 

Innergie also has a USB power charger in case you only need an adapter for USB devices.  

The mCube90 and other universal power adapters also include USB ports so you can charge both your laptop and your mobile device at the same time. If you are running low on power outlets, or you’re traveling, you don’t want a separate USB charger when there’s one in the body of the power brick already. And once the Magic Cable is available, you have an all-in-one charging station. It doesn’t get any more convenient than that.

When buying, you buy the power brick and the actual tips you need. Enter your manufacturer and product name in the nifty compatibility tool on the Innergie Web site to find out which tip you need. (My Acer Aspire One needs tip G, for example.)

The universal power adapters range from $69.99 to $119.99, and are available online at Innergie and Amazon.

Luggage Tags Double as Flash Drives

Thumbnail image for luggage-drive.jpgLuggage tags in the air; flash drive on the ground — these luggage tag flash drives join the long line of dual-purpose drives.

It’s a perfectly valid luggage tag, with its plastic handle to loop around the bag’s handle and displaying your contact information through the clear plastic. Snap open the tag and it reveals a USB plug to be a flash drive. With 2GB storage, it’s a decent-sized drive.

Available in gray, green, light blue and pink, these tags are available online for $29.95.

It’s a nice idea, especially if you are on the road and need a way to transfer some data. Instead of digging around for a flash drive, it’s already there on the luggage. Or just store information you need for the trip (like the contact information of that long-ago friend you want to have lunch with) and as long as you have the bag, you are set.

That brings up a good point, though. Airlines do often lose luggage: do we really want them losing our data as well? I predict a crime spree of stolen luggage tag thefts at airports, too.

Kobo e-reader sashays into ten Fairmont hotel properties, adds to your poolside experience

Oh sure, you’ve been able to get your hands on iPads, iPhones and Kindles when checking in before, but a Kobo? Nah. Well, until now. Announced today, the a-okay e-reader company has landed a deal with Fairmont that’ll put e-book readers into the hands of select guests at select properties. Specifically, Fairmont Gold-level guests that are members of the (free to join) President’s Club will be able to trial a Kobo during their stay free of charge, and they’ll find each one brimming with a variety of fiction, non-fiction and high drama titles. Upon returning the device (as if there’s another alternative, right?), patrons will be gifted with a $2 off coupon for Random House titles, and if you’re curious as to which ten properties will be involved in the offer, head on past the break and have a look.

Continue reading Kobo e-reader sashays into ten Fairmont hotel properties, adds to your poolside experience

Kobo e-reader sashays into ten Fairmont hotel properties, adds to your poolside experience originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Aug 2010 12:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mercedes SLS AMG and Isle of Man take center stage in ‘world’s fastest 3D car film’

Frankly, you could’ve stopped at “Mercedes SLS AMG” and “Isle of Man,” but toss in ex-Formula 1 driver David Coulthard, a litany of 3D cameras, helicopters and a closed section of the Mountain Road… and well, you’ve got magic in the making. The crew here set out to create the “world’s fastest 3D film,” and honestly, we aren’t in any position to doubt ’em. We’re also guessing that this 4 minute and 2 second masterpiece will be looped in Benz dealerships around the world, and for good reason. Word has it that the clip will be shown on Sky 3D across the pond, but there’s no telling when it’ll grace three-dee screens in North America and beyond. While we wait, feast your senses on the 2D version just beyond the break.

Continue reading Mercedes SLS AMG and Isle of Man take center stage in ‘world’s fastest 3D car film’

Mercedes SLS AMG and Isle of Man take center stage in ‘world’s fastest 3D car film’ originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Aug 2010 16:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sidewinder Cranks Out Clean Water

Thumbnail image for sidewinder.jpgEven though sterilizing water is not hard, SteriPEN‘s Sidewinder is a nifty alternative to boiling or using iodine pills to sterilize water.

Green geeks will like the idea of sterilizing water using UV light. Holding one-liter of water, Sidewinder has a hand crank on the side and a UV-light-bulb inside. Turning the crank powers on the bulb, blasting the water with germ-killing UV. An LED indicator on the front flashes green when the sterilization is complete and the water is safe to drink.

Whether out camping, traveling, or just anal about your home tap water, the Sidewinder is easy way to to just be sure.

Priced at $99.95, Sidewinder will be available online and in stores in September.