Archive for April 2nd, 2008

The 360 Degree Mirror: Perfect gift for Mother’s Day

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Mother’s day is already next month, more specifically on the second Sunday of May, which is on the 11th. If you want a simple yet useful gift, check out this peculiar mirror.

It has 7 mirrors in total, 3 in each side and 1 in the middle. All these mirrors mean that the person using it, won’t need (in theory) any help to take care of the hair, or make-up. To make everything more interesting, and give a bit of style, the central mirror has some lights.

Mounts with suction cups or screws.

Priced approximately at 20.

Product Page

PS - works with 3 AAA batteries, most likely for the illumination.

via

Old PC Better Than OLPC XO Laptop

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

This video from the Wall Street Journal talks about the second biggest problem with the One Laptop Per Child XO Laptop:

The biggest problem with the OLPC is discussed here:

  • gadgets Page » One Laptop Per Child Review from the.Inevitable.Org/anism

It seems that the OLPC is neither useful for developing countries nor developed ones. I wanted this to be a good product that could be a computer alternative for children, but it appears that it is just a toy and not a very fun one.

Via: Kids Prefer Aging Desktop to OLPC XO Laptop | notebooks.com

Adobe breathes AIR into Linux Foundation

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Adobe is up and about this past few days. After launching Photoshop Express, here comes Adobe announcing that it’s AIR (Adobe Integrated Runtime), a cross operating system runtime used for developing various web applications that run both online and offline. Adobe AIR for Linux joins Windows and Mac in giving users with a rich interface to develop their applications.

“Adobe’s decision to join the LF is a natural extension of its commitment to open standards and open source, which demonstrates its leadership and foresight in the software industry,” said Jim Zemlin, executive director at The Linux Foundation. “Adobe’s membership will contribute to our goal of increasing even more application development on Linux with a specific emphasis on Web 2.0 applications.”

Adobe AIR is currently in alpha stage on both Mac and Windows but most of the apps developed so far run smoothly on both operating systems. It is not yet ascertained whether these applications will also run seamlessly in a Linux environment. But once these applications were tested and proven good in the Linux environment, we might be seeing the start of mainstreaming open source software. Some other major players have already pledge their support to the Open Source advocacy of the Linux Foundation. Adobe will be joining Google, Nokia, IBM and HP in supporting the Linux Foundation.

Perhaps finally, major industry players are seeing the value of Linux and its open source work as well as the community’s overwhelming support of open source applications. Hence, these companies are starting to make their presence felt in the open source community.

Via [CrunchGear]

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Motorola Z9 at AT&T

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

AT&T now has the Motorola Z9. It features TeleNav service or AT&T Navigator, a microSD expansion, stereo bluetooth, and quad-band GSM with WCDMA 850/1900 supporting 3.6Mbps HSDPA data and a 1.3 megapixel camera. The Z9 is about $150 after $50 online discount and 2-year contract.
[ Source ]

The Brick

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

The BrickEssential TV ammunition, The Brick is an astonishingly realistic looking house-brick made of foam. The box is nowadays so riddled with complete and utter tosh that it’s almost impossible to watch it for long without wanting to throw something at it. Well now you can lob a very satisfying brick at all those asinine creatures strutting about on your screen. Of course it’s also immense fun to chuck it at friends, family, work colleagues and the neighbour’s windows - just to watch their screaming reaction before the brick bounces harmlessly off them. Vent your frustrations and have a damn good laugh at the same time.
Features

  • A scarily realistic-looking foam brick.
  • Terracotta (for this we mean brick) coloured.
  • Suitable for ages 8 years+.
  • Size: 21 x 10 x 6cm

You can have this for £9.99 - Approx USD $17.98 / €14.79

Google Docs Offline being rolled out

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Google Docs proved (at least for me and others I know) that for a significant portion of what we use office productivity software is relatively simple and does not usually require full-blown, feature rich suites like MS Office, or OpenOffice. While I found that using GD was not an issue as I regularly have high-speed Internet access (@ work and @ home), it did lack what the other suites provided which was offline use (like say when I’m on a plane or at an airport refusing to pay $12 for 24 hours of Internet access).

Now get ready for Offline Google Docs. All you will need to do is download and install a browser plugin called Google Gears, which already has me wondering what other applications Google has in mind for your browser. For now, Offline GD only works with the word processing app and only in English, but stay tuned. The others will be coming soon. Here’s a video of it in action.

Blackberry Curve 8330 comes to Sprint

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Posted Apr 1st 2008 7:37PM by Nilay Patel
Filed under: cellphones


We had heard whispers about the blackberry Curve hitting Sprint this month, and it looks like they were dead-on — say hello to RIM’s latest, the Curve 8330, all done up in black. Apart from looking way hotter than the silver version that’s made the rounds, you’re getting GPS, a 2 megapixel camera with video recording, Bluetooth, “enhanced” web browsing, and the usual suite of Sprint music and TV services. $179 with a two-year contract later this month, says Sprint. One more shot after the break.

[Thanks, moochy989]

Switched On: Slacker in your slacks (Part 1)

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Posted Apr 1st 2008 9:20PM by Ross Rubin
Filed under: Features, Portable Audio

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about technology, multimedia, and digital entertainment.


The Slacker Portable is the proverbial elephant being inspected by blind men. One is the crop of portable MP3 players, to which the device’s service represents free, fresh music on the go in exchange for user control of track selection. Another is the bevy of online internet music sites such as Pandora, Last.fm, Finetune and others, to which it represents the leap from the beb to portable entertainment. A third is the traditional consumer electronics industry for which it portends a connected future. And a fourth are XM and Sirius, which now appear on track to merge in part due to the kind of competition that the Slacker Portable will ultimately provide.

The Slacker Portable picks up where last year’s promising Sansa Connect left off. While that device was billed primarily as an mp3 player that boasted tight integration with the Yahoo! Music Unlimited service (now shuttering), the Slacker Portable is labeled as a “personal radio”. MP3 files can be loaded onto the device, but that feature is more of an afterthought.

The device comes in three capacities that are billed as storing a different number of stations, which are either genres preset by the internet radio service available at slacker.com, or customized for the user based on a particular artist. One nice touch is that a device ordered from Slacker comes pre-populated with any stations you have set up on the site.

Upon connecting to the Slacker service via WiFi or a PC’s USB port (the latter connection method does not support the Mac), the Slacker Portable caches hours of music for each of these stations. “Filling up” a station from scratch took about 10 minutes, but partial refills are faster. While the Sansa Connect relied on a premium music subscription to transfer tracks to the device, the basic tier of Slacker service — which includes two commercials and up to six skips per hour — is free.

Slacker has a premium service available for about $7 per month that eliminates the commercials and allows an unlimited number of song skips. Slacker assures that customers won’t experience constant bombardment of upgrade exhortations as its business model works well even with the free tier of service and a player purchase.

Slacker made some curious decisions in designing its portable, which is larger and chunkier than, say, an ipod classic. The device includes a large 4-inch screen even though it cannot play video or even display photos, although it does nicely highlight album art. Slacker defends the decision in part by noting that the larger screen is helpful for reading background information about the artist. And indeed, Slacker displays extensive artist information from All Music Guide, but crams the information into the lower portion of the screen, requiring more scrolling. (Also, be sure to finish all that reading as before the track ends, as the artist info page will refresh as soon as a new song starts playing.)

Next week’s column will further discuss the Slacker Portable controls and music listening experience as well as Slacker’s plans to compete more directly with satellite radio.

Ross Rubin is director of industry analysis for consumer technology at market research and analysis firm The NPD Group,. His blog can be read at http://www.rossrubin.com/outofthebox. Views expressed in Switched On are his own.

PTeq USB Pregnancy Test Kit

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

ThinkGeek is carrying the PTeq USB Pregnancy Test Kit which allows you and the missus to check whether the past few days’ night time romps in the bedroom have borne fruit. You will need to use it just like any other pregnancy test kit, and once done with your liquid disposal, plug it into the USB port and the PTeq will get to work straight away. It uses an electrospray ionization process on the device in order to create a spectograph of your urine. It works on both Mac and Windows platforms, and is a good April Fool’s hoax at $17.99 a pop.

Red Tab Comes In…Red

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008


Levi’s famous Red Tab jeans will be making an appearance as a Levi’s cell phone, sporting a different color scheme in order to be sold as the Red Tab Limited Edition. Everything else inside remains the same, so the only difference would be a small section at the top of the handset covered in bright red just like your regular Red Tab Levi’s jeans. In addition, the phone’s body will be gunmetal or titanium instead of the original silver color scheme. Other features consist of a 2 megapixel camera, an integrated FM radio, MP3 playback support, a microSD memory card slot, stereo Bluetooth connectivity and an email client, all crammed into a tri-band GSM handset. Being a limited edition handset, it ought to retail for a slight premium over the vanilla version.