Short Movie Brings Paper Computer to Life

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 27, 2009 | 06:39:17 AMCategories: Notebooks  

This is Noteboek, a short film by Dutch artist Evelien Lohbeck. It is also the product promo for the best multipurpose gadget that ever lived, a little notebook whose pages bring drawings to life. Geeky life.

Many of our childhoods were filled with such things. I’m old enough to remember drawing pretend computers into my school notebooks, which, when not ignoring geography lessons to work on my comic book “Extreme Team”, was my main school pass-time.

Lohbeck actually has a computer, though, so he was able to make his fantasies real. This meta rabbit-hole, using a computer to make a notebook into a non-computer, continues in the short film. YouTube becomes the portal through which real-life enters, only to be corrupted again by paper machines, including an amazing pop-up toaster.

Check Lohbeck’s site for more — Noteboek actually contains some other shorts made separately. In all, a fantastic little movie. And is it just me, or do you all want one of these magic books?

Movie page [Evelien Lohbeck via the Giz]


Flip Mino HD Unboxed Before it Officially Exists

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 27, 2009 | 06:05:05 AMCategories: Cameras  

flip ultra hd If you wanted a Flip camcorder and high-definition video, you had one choice -- the Mino HD, a $230 pocket camera at the top of the Flip range. And according to Flip and its website, that's still the only option.

Unless you head down to Bestbuy, where a brand new Flip Ultra HD can be had for just $200. This still unofficial camcorder was picked up by a fellow named Gary Cannon, and he has posted the un-boxing pics to prove it. We're not sure if the new Ultra HD picks up some of its big brothers functions such as fast forward and rewind, or h.264 compression, but we do know that it will shoot for two hours (twice that of any other Flip), it has a supplied rechargeable battery which can be removed and replaced with a coiuple of AAs.

It also has an HDMI-out, which means that -- if that is an uncompressed signal -- this could be used as a very cheap front-end for a big video capture setup. We'll be keeping an eye on the Flip site for the official details.

Flip Ultra Hd Unboxing [Gaxonline via Engadget]

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Rest in Rice: My Poor, Dead iPhone (2007 to 2009)

By Brian X. Chen EmailApril 24, 2009 | 04:44:30 PMCategories: Apple, iPhone  

Ricephone Last night I lost something very dear to me. While I was making my bed, my comforter bumped over a glass containing a tiny amount of water, which seeped right into my iPhone's weak spot — the dock connector. The screen turned white followed by a series of fluorescent colors, as if my iPhone were seeing its life flash before its eyes. Then it shut off and wouldn't turn on again. Just a year and a half old, my iPhone was dead.

I began treading through the five stages of loss and grief. First, I was in Denial that the damn thing was borked. I quickly immersed the phone in a container of dry rice — a moisture-pulling method many nerds preach about when it comes to reviving soaked electronics — and in the morning I checked to see if my poor iPhone would show any signs of life. No dice.

Then I succumbed to Anger. I cursed at the handset, shaking it accusingly as if it had purposely swallowed the deadly H2O to commit suicide. "Work, dammit, work!" I shouted.

After that failed, I slipped into Bargaining. "If only I owned a longer night stand so the water wouldn't have reached the phone," I thought. "Or if only it were wearing protection."

I quickly sank into Depression and self-pity. "What lousy timing," I complained to Wired.com science editor Betsy Mason. "I'm flying to New York next week for business, and right now would be an incredibly stupid time to buy a new iPhone since the third-gen is probably coming out in two months. My life is a greek tragedy."

"Stop whining," she replied. "It's just a phone."

"It's not just a phone!" I cried. "It's an iPod, a phone and an internet mobile communicator. It was my life in my pocket!"

"Oh, shut up."

Hours later, I circled around to Acceptance and started thinking of ways to move on. I reached out to my Twitter followers asking if anyone had a spare iPhone lying around. Fortunately Jason Snell, my former editor in chief at Macworld, was able to loan me an iPhone for a few days until I find a permanent solution.

And now that I'm done mourning, I'm reaching out to Wired.com readers so we can all learn something from my loss. What would you do with a drowned iPhone? I'm thinking selling it through the e-junk trader Gazelle is an option, though it won't earn me much. E-mail your suggestions to bchen [at] Wired [dot] com. (Our comment system is temporarily disabled due to a system upgrade.)

Or, if you're feeling super optimistic, feel free to send in any kooky methods you used to revive your soaked iPhones, and I might consider trying them and documenting my experience. I'll leave mine buried in rice for a few more days, but I'm not getting my hopes up. 

Photo: Brian X. Chen/Wired.com




Obama to Get Back BlackBerry at Last, Toughened by NSA

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 24, 2009 | 09:02:55 AMCategories: Phones  

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The presidential CrackBerry is undergoing final testing before being handed back. The NSA is hammering on the SecurVoice software which has been loaded onto the Obama-phone and is in the last stages of testing just how secure it might be.

The BlackBerry is an 8830, the standard business handset, but the added software encrypts both calls and messages. Cellphone calls are encrypted anyway, but there are some back doors if you know where to find them (and of course, the NSA knows exactly where they are).

The company behind the SecurVoice software is Genesis Key, which is handily based in Washington DC. Be careful not to confuse this with spam-alike secure-voice.com, whose site reads, rather unconvincingly, thus: “The development of the Secure Voice lasts from 2001 and we have now a wide range of devices as well as Landline version of the solution.”

Since winning the election, President Obama has been limping along with two devices — a standard BlackBerry and a secured handset called the Sectera Edge, an unwieldy device that not only offers encrypted communications but is also so ugly that nobody would ever want to steal it. Both machines need to be tethered to each other to work, making every presidential e-mail look something like a game of Wii Boxing.

If the NSA tests come up clean, he could have his customised BlackBerry in his hands soon, which in governmental terms means a couple of months. And of course, secure communications aren’t much good if the person you are talking to is an open and easy target. To this end, Mrs. O should be getting one, too.

The odd fact is that the NSA usually likes everybody else to be locked out but itself. Giving the SecurVoice such a big endorsement will either mean that the encryption is indeed unbreakable (and therefore fit for the president) or that it wants everybody to think that it is unbreakable, therefore giving the NSA back-door access to every single SecurVoice customer. Paranoid conspiracy theory? Hell yes. Accurate speculation? Maybe.

Inside the Ring: Obama’s BlackBerry [Washington Post]

Photo: BohPhoto/Flickr

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Voigtländer Adapter Puts Leica Lenses on Micro Four Thirds Cameras

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 24, 2009 | 08:23:05 AMCategories: Cameras  

Voigtlander

Cosina, the maker of my first ever 35mm SLR and current owner of the prestigious Voigtländer brand, has announced a rather exciting accessory. It’s an adapter to attach M-mount lenses onto Micro Four Thirds cameras.

What does that actually mean? It means that you can buy one of the burgeoning range of modern m4/3 digicams and slip on a lens from Leica, Voigtländer or Carl Zeiss. Essentially this means you can use some of the best lenses ever made on some pretty cheap and full featured bodies (the Panasonic G1, for instance).

There are some limits. The adapter is mechanical only, which means that there will be no communication between the camera and lens. This could mess with some advanced metering features, and also leave gaps in your photo’s metadata, but for older, non-chipped lenses this won’t matter anyway.

This product alone actually makes the Micro Four Thirds system much more enticing, and until Leica comes out with a proper digital M-series camera, why not save some money and use this instead? ¥19,800 or around $200.

Product page [Cosina via DP Review]


Orange Vegas: Cheapest, Smallest Touch Screen Phone

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 24, 2009 | 07:51:34 AMCategories: Phones  

Orange_vegas

Orange has released a tiny, cheap touch-screen cellphone in the UK. Curiously, given that it is everything that its namesake city is not — small, tasteful and understated — the handset is called Vegas.

The £50 ($73) phone doesn’t pack too many features, but it has the essentials — a 1.3MP camera, an FM radio, an MP3 player, a paltry 64MB internal memory (expandable to 4GB) and Bluetooth. That £50 is not a contract price, either — that’s the full whack for a pay-as-you-go tariff.

This got us thinking. Once you have a touch screen, is it easier and cheaper to add features? After all, once you have the internal in place, its just software, right? You can churn out all manner of handsets at different prices and differentiate them with functions. A smartphone no longer needs to be made with a keyboard, just a better OS inside.

Orange has made one concession to the Vegas name, however. The phone is not only available in black. It also comes in pink, which we like to imagine is really neon flamingo pink.

Product page [Orange via the Reg]


Cruzin' or Abusin? The BodycruZer Male Body-Shaver

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 24, 2009 | 07:29:01 AMCategories: Rugged  

Braunbodycruzer

Is trimming body-hair an acceptable enterprise for the male? Sure, hairy backs are gross, and my old high-school art teacher had fur jostling twixt the buttons of his shirt and crowding over the collar — not sexy. But is the alternative — smooth, oiled bodies free of frolicking follicles — how to say this, a little too feminine?

If you really must go this way, you need a manly named gadget with which to trim. Sadly, the Braun bodycruZer isn’t it. Where I come from, “cruising” has a very different meaning, and simply adding a capital “z” won’t change that. Even the ad is suspect: Check the Web site and see for yourself. Our “hero”, now hair-free, is also testosterone-free. Witness the women around him aggressively growling, taking the male role. Hell, one even turns into peacock to attract him. That’s peacock, not peahen.

From a gadget point of view, the bodycruZer is notable in that it departs from the “razor blade model”, wherein you get the handle almost free and then pay a fortune for the blades. It does this not by eschewing replaceable blades like the usual electric razor (those will cost you around $6 apiece) but by selling blades and charging a fortune for the handle — $70 in this case.

For the excessive hirsute male (or female, we guess) this may be something you’d like — if only as an alternative to the horribly named waxing procedure, the “back, crack and sack”. Available May 5th.

Product page [Braun via Uncrate]


Zip-It: Headphone Concept Keeps it Tangle-Free

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 24, 2009 | 06:13:11 AMCategories: Headphones  

Yi_earphones1

Wake up Belkin, Griffin and other iAccessory makers — you need to be selling this splendidly innovative concept design from Yanko-er Ji Woong.

The YI headphones not only beat tangles with their built-in zipper which meshes the two cords together — it also makes any old t-shirt look like an ultra-smart zip-up top.

We especially love the zipper handle, which has a twisting tip with which to control the volume, and also a push-in switch that acts as a hold button for that volume control.

So come on, Belkin, Griffin and everyone else. Stop dickering around with FM transmitters (which never work) or in-line remote adapters which put the Shuffle-sized control next to the Shuffle itself and make me some of these. I have $29 with your name on it.

Zip Up Tangles [Yanko via the Twitter]


Video: iPod Shuffle vs. Kindle 2 Speech Fight

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 24, 2009 | 06:04:05 AMCategories: kindle, Media Players  

This fantastic video pits the text-to-voice abilities of the iPod Shuffle and the Kindle 2 against each other in an amazingly appropriate contrivance — the two machines re-enact the Voight-Kampff interview from the movie Blade Runner.

If you have seen the movie or have read the novella Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, you’re in for a treat. If you haven’t, stop reading immediately and go do your duty.

The purpose of the video — to check out the quality of the artificial speech, is satisfied with a clear winner — the Kindle. This may be because it is based on the voice of a real person, and not a replicant voice like that of Alex in the shuffle. Are you seeing how clever this video is yet?

Talking Gadget Theater: Blade Runner, starring the Kindle 2 and iPod Shuffle [DVICE]

See Also:


Googlephone: One Million Sold in Six Months

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 24, 2009 | 05:13:21 AMCategories: Googlephone  

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T-Mobile’s G1 aka the Googlephone was released to an excited (and nerdy) public back on October 21st last year. The verdict back then was that the Android OS was pretty good, but needed work, and that the HTC handset was a piece of junk, featuring a big, thumb-annoying lump of plastic next to the keyboard and a generally underpowered computer inside.

So its a surprise to us to find out that, just six months later, the G1 has sold a million units. That’s a healthy number for a pretty non-hyped (in the real, non-geek world at least) handset. By contrast, it took Apple just 74 days to shift a million iPhones, or just over two months. Another interesting tidbit is that the total number of 3G phones sold by T-Mobile in the US in the same six-month period was 1.5 million. This shows just how successful the G1 has been.

Now, if only HTC can fix the five-minute battery life for the G2, we’re on.

Press release [T-mobile via ]

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

See Also:


Dell Goes in for Plastic Surgery

By Priya Ganapati EmailApril 23, 2009 | 01:43:32 PMCategories: Design  

Adamo0422_2

Dell has been long been the Ugly Betty of the PC industry--functional, smart but severely lacking in the looks department.

But over the last two years, the company's consumer-targeted PCs have gotten a design makeover that would make Tyra Banks proud. Dell's latest machines offers sleek designs; unusual materials such as fabric, bamboo and leather; and striking covers designed by graffiti artists. 

"You are seeing the switch from total utilitarian, speed-and-specs kind of thinking to something that will fit the personality of consumer," says Ed Boyd, vice president of consumer products at Dell. "It’s the same transformation you saw in cellphone and the automotive industry."

The former global creative director for Nike, Boyd has helped build Dell's consumer division into a design powerhouse, churning out products that the company hopes will put it ahead of rivals and bring in consumers who want both style and value in their PCs.

The commitment to better design comes at a challenging time for Dell. Dell's personal computer shipments fell 16.7 percent worldwide in the first quarter from a year ago. In the United States alone, Dell shipments fell 16.2 percent, according to research firm IDC.  Meanwhile, Dell's rival Hewlett Packard increased U.S. shipments 2.9 percent worldwide and 12.2 percent. Dell now ranks second to HP in terms of overall market share in the United States.

In focusing on design, Dell is making a risky bet. Better design could help rejuvenate consumer interest in the company's products -- or it could add to costs and make its products pricey at a time when consumers are rushing in droves to buy inexpensive netbooks.

Meanwhile, driven by Apple's focus on design, customers are increasingly looking for products that are stylish yet offer value, says Craig Vogel, associate dean and professor of design studies at University of Cincinnati.

"The design of the iPod and the iPhone has driven sales to Apple's computers, which is something that other companies have noticed," says Vogel. "Design is not an option anymore, the marketplace is demanding it."

It took the clout of Dell founder Michael Dell to get the frumpy, utilitarian PC maker more focused on style. Two years ago, Michael Dell stepped back into the CEO seat to take over a company that seemed to be in danger of losing its luster. Dell's much-admired efficient supply chain process no longer seemed enough to put the company ahead of its competitors. Dell's customers were beginning to balk at the company’s bulky machines.

"Nineteen months ago, Michael told me the horse that we rode so far wasn't going to take us to the next level," Boyd says. "Design was going to have to play a much bigger role at Dell."

As the first step, Michael Dell brought on Ron Garriques, the former Motorola executive credited with the success of the RAZR phone, as the president of Dell's consumer products.

Garriques, in turn, has attracted star designers like Boyd and helped put together a design team that is growing fast. Five years ago, Dell had just about half a dozen designers on its team. Today the company has 130 members on the team. They include a behavioral and cognitive psychologists, usability experts, former designer from companies such as furniture maker Herman Miller and auto maker GM.

Second Skins 
Dell has embraced a variety of new materials for covering its PCs.

Dell_studio_hybrid_pc_f_2 Bamboo: The Studio One Hybrid PC comes with a bamboo case.
Dell_fabric_4 Fabric: The Studio One 19 touchscreen desktop offers optional fabric panels to frame the display.
Leather Leather: The Studio XPS 13 laptop has a leather panel that runs through the back of the display.
Dell_red_3 Designs: Dell offers artsy decals for its laptops and a Product Red portfolio from various African artists.

There have also been changes to how Dell has organized its design teams. "Earlier, design reported to engineering and marketing," says Michael Smith, who has been part of Dell's design team since 2003. "But now it is becoming its own entity with equal footing."

The moves have helped Dell get more fashionable, fast. Most conspicuously, the company is experimenting with different materials and finishes. The company's Studio XPS 13 and 16 laptops use leather trims. The Studio hybrid desktop offers an optional bamboo casing, and the Studio One 19 PC -- aka the 'kitchen PC' -- can come with a fabric panel that fits around the display.

Many of the design improvements have to do with the outermost surface of the Dell's computers, and that doesn't go deep enough for at least one industrial designer.

"Dell needs to treat design as something that is not superficial," says Max Burton, executive creative director for Frog Design in San Francisco. "What they have right now is more of applique design -- [it's] more about finishes than real change to the materials and process."

But Dell execs say that their focus on design means more than just looks. For example, a Dell Studio hybrid desktop launched in the last year uses 70 percent less material and power than older desktop models, says Boyd.

Design improvements do not have to come out of the consumers' pockets, says Boyd. It's about making the right tradeoffs. "We can take out the non-value-adding functionality, such as too many connectors, and put value where people find it," he says.

For instance, designers removed an external button for turning Wi-Fi on and off in the Dell XPS 1330 laptop. Now users have to go through the software program to do it. "That's money I save," says Boyd, "and give it back to the customer in the form of lower prices or better finish."

"When we do put more money into the finishes and industrial design, we don't do that arbitrarily," says Boyd. "In those products we see a spike in sales, as in the redesign of the Studio XPS line."

Boyd has also helped the team improve on such things as packaging and accessories, says Smith. Adamo, for instance, comes in a clear package and offers optional accessories such as tote bags from Tumi.

All that may not be enough. Design experts such as Vogel and Burton say Dell needs to take a chapter out of Apple's playbook. For instance, Apple's latest Macbook, introduced last year, has a body whose main part is machined from a solid piece of aluminum. It allows for lightweight, yet sturdy, machines and better design.

"The innovation with the aluminum is a big step ahead in terms of process and design especially when Dell is still using injection-molded plastic in many of its machines," says Burton.

That kind of fundamental change in how Dell approaches design could take much longer. For now Dell is walking a tightrope -- trying to please its flock that is price-sensitive, even as it tries to court the fashionistas. It's a feat not many designers have been able to pull off.

See also:
Dell's New Notebooks Take Design Seriously
Bamboo-zled: Eco Veneers Storm the Design World

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


OQO Cancels Pre-Orders in Battle for Survival

By Priya Ganapati EmailApril 23, 2009 | 01:25:43 PMCategories: Elsewhere at Wired  

Oqo_model2_2

Mobile Internet Device maker OQO's tiny notebooks were undoubtedly beautiful. But looks alone don't seem to be enough to save the company.

OQO has reportedly canceled all pre-orders for its latest device, the Model 2+. The company had announced the product at the Consumer Electronics Show in January and priced a basic version at $1,000.

The Model 2+ offered a breathtakingly vibrant 5-inch OLED touchscreen display, 1.86GHz Intel Atom processor, 2GB RAM and support for 3G connectivity. The company had planned to launch it in the first half of the year.

But for the last few weeks OQO has been struggling to survive. It recently lost its CEO and a top product manager even as resellers stopped taking pre-orders. OQO did not respond Thursday to our request for comment.

For a detailed analysis of what went wrong at OQO, read the story at Wired blog Epicenter: OQO's Brutal Lesson: Innovate and Die.

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Apple Removes Baby-Killing iPhone App Amid Outrage

By Brian X. Chen EmailApril 23, 2009 | 11:43:00 AMCategories: Apple, iPhone  

Babyshake1thumb Apple has pulled an iPhone game that involved shaking a baby to death in response to widespread outrage from parents.

The premise of Baby Shaker was to quiet a baby by shaking the iPhone. But the animation suggested a player was silencing the baby by murdering it: A successful shake caused two large red Xs to appear on the baby's eyes.

"As the father of a three-year-old who was shaken by her baby nurse when she was only five days old, breaking three ribs, both collarbones and causing a severe brain injury, words cannot describe my reaction," said Patrick Donohue, founder of the Sarah Jane Brain Foundation, a New York-based group that educates the community on pediatric brain injuries, in a letter to Steve Jobs and other Apple executives.

Baby Shaker launched in the App Store on Monday. Apple pulled the game Wednesday after it gained attention from various media outlets, including New York Times, Washington Post and LA Times. Krapps, a "different and funny iPhone app review site," was the first to report on Baby Shaker.

Albeit short-lived, the approval of Baby Shaker brings into question Apple's App Store approval process. When Jobs introduced the App Store, he laid out the rules of what wouldn't be approved — and the list did not include offensive apps like Baby Shaker.

"There are going to be some apps that we're not going to distribute," Jobs said. "Porn, malicious apps, apps that invade your privacy."

Though the approval of Baby Shaker appears to be a slip, Apple has approved other peculiar apps as well. For example, the app Spank snaps a photo of a person and then displays a talk bubble above his or her head that says "Spank." Then, when you shake the iPhone you hear the sound of a spank followed by a man yelping.

"As the grandmother/adopted mother of a 'shaken baby' I can't even start to explain the anger and rage at this game that someone was trying to promote," Wired.com reader Debbie Dunlap said in an e-mail. "My son is now 6 and was very fortunate ... but is faced with many problems now and more to come.... How could any one with a brain think a game like this would be OK?"

See a video of Baby Shaker below the jump.

Continue reading "Apple Removes Baby-Killing iPhone App Amid Outrage" »


Canon Firmware Update Fixes 50D Noise Problems

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 23, 2009 | 08:39:11 AMCategories: Cameras  

50d_big_2

Canon has issued firmware updates for the EOS 50D, 450D and 1000D. Unless you are planning on using them with the Speedlight 270 EX flash, you needn't bother with the update -- all it does is add support for the AF-assist beam in this strobe (which you shouldn't use anyway unless you hate the people you are photographing and enjoy blinding them with blinkenlights).

All except the 50D. If you have one of these you'll want to run the update -- it fixes some banding issues, specifically the little-known "vertical banding noise phenomenon". Canon is characteristically quiet on the precise details but, you know, noisy banding is bad and fixes are good.

50D [Canon]
450D [Canon]

1000D [Canon]

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Hands-On with MSI's Monstrous Nine-Cell Netbook Battery

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 23, 2009 | 08:14:01 AMCategories: Batteries, Netbooks  

Ninecell7_2

One of the major complaints about netbooks, especially the early ones, concerns the battery life. A three cell battery gives barely an hour and a half on the MSI wind, for example (although this can be improved by not installing Mac OS X on it).

The second wave of netbooks usually sport six-cell batteries, giving a life much closer to that of the regular-sized notebooks we use. And then there is the freak-show: nine-cellers so big in both physical dimensions and battery life that the market is distinctly specialist. Who on earth would buy one of these monstrosities? Me, of course.

After over a month of waiting, I finally got the call from the computer store this week. I ordered the nine-cell after concluding that my hackintosh was almost useless as it was. Even leaving it in sleep mode would kill the battery in a day or two, meaning that I was constantly tethered to a wall wart. And if I’m not taking it on the road, why the hell would I use this tiny cramped device instead of my spacious MacBook?

Continue reading "Hands-On with MSI's Monstrous Nine-Cell Netbook Battery" »


Datamancer Goes Deco with Hot New Keyboard Mod

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 23, 2009 | 07:16:11 AMCategories: Retro  

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Doc Datamancer is at it again — only this time he’s thrown out the steampunk and built this lovely Art Deco keyboard. The Datamancer Deco Keyboard was built to order for indie movie theater and rental store Cinema 16:9 in Lansdowne, Pennsylvania.

This actually looks, to us at least, better than the steampunk-style mods that Datamancer is famous for. A lot of these old typewriters are deco anyway, and adding in the deeply polished wooden side pieces and deco font on the keys just makes them moreso.

The Doc himself is wavering, too: “it seems to have jarred something loose because I’ve been sketching deco designs like crazy since then and hope to be unveiling a full deco PC soon with matching keyboard and mouse.”

We can’t wait!

Datamancer deco Keyboard [Datamancer via BBG]

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$220 Messenger Bag Carries Everything, Ever

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 23, 2009 | 06:51:47 AMCategories: Apparel  

Black4

Would you pay $220 for a messenger bag? Me either. A hold-it-all messenger bag might be great for, say, a bike messenger who needs to carry packages from here to there, but for the rest of us they just end up as a shoulder-crushing sack, big enough to fit everything in there and therefore big enough to get very heavy. Better is a set of panniers, but if you’re riding fixed, the requisite rack will “spoil your lines”.

Still, there’s a lot to like about a bag which so shamelessly tries to do everything. The Skate Messenger Bag from Incase not only has a section for your skateboard (with plastic knobs to protect against abrasive grip-tape), it has a compartment for a notebook computer, a D-lock (or U-lock) holder, all manner of buckles, straps and fastenings, a rear strip from which to hang a light and a rather over-secure tie-down for a bike pump.

In short, if you own it, you can put it in this bag. Just think about that for a second — the notebook sleeve alone is big enough for a 17” MacBook Pro — that’s 3kg or 6.6 lbs right there. Add things up and you quickly arrived at some spine-twisting numbers. Our advice? If you need to carry that much, please fix it to your bike. Or, you know, consider leaving something at home.

Product page [Incase]

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Apple COO Reveals Plans for Touch Tablet -- Kinda

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 23, 2009 | 06:15:10 AMCategories: Apple, Netbooks  

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It’s usually almost impossible to work out what is going on behind the curtain at Apple, but COO Tim Cook’s statement in yesterday’s quarterly earnings call offers about as clear a confirmation of a tablet-style computer as we are likely to get.

Quizzed again about an Apple netbook, Cook did the usual Apple thing and panned the entire category:

 

For us, it’s about doing great products. And when I look at what is being sold in the netbook space today, I see cramped keyboards, terrible software, junky hardware, very small screens, and just not a consumer experience… that we would put the Mac brand on, quite frankly. And so it’s not a space, as it exists today, that we’re interested in, nor do we believe that customers in the long term would be interested in.

This is nothing new. Steve Jobs called netbooks a “nascent market” and a race to the bottom. and if you’ve ever used one, you’ll know that the build quality isn’t up to the kind of standards we expect from Apple. But it was Cooks next words which intrigue:

 

People that want a small computer (so to speak) that does browsing and e-mail might want to buy an iPod touch or an iPhone. So we have other products to accomplish some of what people buy netbooks for. So in that way we play in an indirect basis.

That sounds to me like a giant iPhone, an impossibly thin touch-screen device which avoids the problems of a cramped keyboard by simply not having one, and combats battery life troubles by simply scaling up the iPhone, which enjoys battery life way longer that that found in a netbook.

Daring Fireball’s John Gruber makes an interesting point, too. Version 3.0 of the iPhone OS has a keyboard which is “rescaled dynamically.” That sounds like it’s being readied for a bigger screen.

Apple to netbooks: Drop dead [Macworld via ]

Photo: Andy on Flickr/Flickr


Desperate Sounding AT&T Memo Disses Palm Pre

By Charlie Sorrel EmailApril 23, 2009 | 05:48:28 AMCategories: iPhone, Our Telco Overlords, Palm Pre  

Attpre

AT&T is clearly feeling the Pre heat. This document is purportedly an internal memo detailing the differences between the upcoming Palm phone and the iPhone. If it’s a fake it is still absolutely dead-on. We have a feeling that this is the real deal, though.

Take a look at the list (click to make it big enough to read). AT&T has picked some rather odd points to illustrate the advantages of the iPhone. Example: The Pre — “Limited 3D gaming experience and webOS constraints” vs. iPhone — “Almost 1 Billion apps downloaded.” Hardly an apples for Apple’s comparison.

It gets worse, spending far too much time ragging on the Pre’s lack of GSM support and therefore inability to work “overseas”. In fact, fully three of the eight points refer to this, the others being the GPS section (no maps can be downloaded when roaming, which seems obvious as the phone won’t even work while roaming) and later, the same point again — “no roaming, limited global GPS”.

It sounds to us that AT&T is a little spooked by the Pre. I imagine, by contrast, what the Apple memo might say. Probably just one sentence: “Too many buttons.”

AT&T Vs Pre: Internal Document Smackdown. Oh No You Didn’t! [Pre Central via iPhone Hacks]


Jawbone Makers Dream Big for Tiny Headset

By Priya Ganapati EmailApril 22, 2009 | 11:15:00 PMCategories: accessories  

Jawbone_earcandy_model_purp

Jawbone, the Bluetooth headset from Aliph, just got a Spring makeover.

Aliph released a new version of its headset, called Jawbone Prime, that offers improved audio quality especially in extremely noisy and windy environments, a more comfortable fit and fresh colors.

“We are trying to get an in-person level voice quality even if you are in an extreme noise environment," Hosain Rahman, co-founder and CEO of Aliph told Wired.com while on a tour of the company's sound labs in San Francisco a few weeks ago. "We want the same kind of audio quality as you would get while speaking in a quiet room while you have a pounding jackhammer in the background or while at the club or on the peak of a hill."

Aliph was founded in 1999 and released the first Jawbone headset in 2004. The device designed by famed industrial designer Yves Behar was immediately seen as a breakthrough in the mobile headset market for its looks and the quality of audio. Last year Aliph released a smaller version of the headset with Bluetooth capability called Jawbone 2.

But the latest product release masks more ambitious plans in the company. Aliph hopes to take Jawbone out of the "yet another Bluetooth headset" category and transform it into a device that could become an "audio gateway" for the consumer. Think news, weather, music or even language learning modules combined with a headset in a way that would bring term 'wearable computing' to life. 

"The headset is the right form factor to be that agent into the digital world," says Alex Asseily, co-founder of Aliph. "The whole audio input and output experience is best done in a wearable device like ours."

With Jawbone Prime, the company's engineers focused on solving the interference created in a windy environment. The company's proprietary sensors and new Digital Signal Processing (DSP) algorithms make it possible to eliminate that interference from wind speed of upto 10 mph, says Aliph.

"What's the nirvana of the mobile phone communication experience?" says Asseily. "It's a device that allows me to feel as if I am truly face-to-face in communication irrespective of what the background is like."

The Jawbone Prime also offers better ear fit for users and can be simultaneously connected to two Bluetooth-enabled devices. The device, which is the fourth iteration of the Jawbone product, will start retailing in stores nationwide from May 2 for $130.  In addition to the usual black, brown and platinum, the Jawbone Prime will be available in eye popping purple, red, yellow and green.

The improvements though are just a small step as the company tries to take on a bigger goal. "We are looking at wearable computing, which we see an opportunity for us to use the audio medium extensively," says Asseily.

Aliph is currently technologies such as speech recognition as a way to bring more functionality to its headset. The company could take a leaf out of Apple's playbook there. Apple launched its latest iPod shuffle with speech recognition that tells users what song it is playing, the artist and the names of the playlists.

Asseily and Rahman won't reveal when Aliph will release a device with a comparable speech recognition feature but say they are big believers in the technology. Meanwhile, the company's rival BlueAnt launched a voice controlled Bluetooth headset last year.

Aliph is also starting to work with phone makers much more closely to optimize its devices for popular handsets. "Today phones still can't given that in-person communication kind of voice quality yet 90 percent of the time people are talking on these devices," says Asseily.

But the Jawbone's rivals are closing in. Aliph faces an increasingly competitive and commoditized market. Competitors such as Plantronics and BlueAnt have introduced headsets are mimic the Jawbone's design and offer comparable audio quality. 

For Aliph the challenge is to now stay ahead long enough to deliver on its plans for an innovative wearable computing product.

Photo: Jawbone/Aliph

See also:
Plantronics Tries to Patent Nod Powered Headset


Apple: We're Sticking With AT&T for the iPhone

By Brian X. Chen EmailApril 22, 2009 | 05:18:04 PMCategories: Apple, iPhone  

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Apple on Wednesday said it has no plans to discontinue AT&T's exclusive rights to carry the iPhone in the United States.

Apple chief operating officer Tim Cook expressed confidence in AT&T as its exclusive U.S. partner, despite Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster's suggestion that the No. 1 reason consumers resist buying an iPhone is because of AT&T.

"We believe they're the best wireless provider in the U.S.," Cook said of AT&T during Apple's quarter-two conference call. "They put the full force and weight of their company behind it. We're very happy with the relationship we have and do not have a plan to change it."

Though the terms of Apple's contract with AT&T remain a secret, many sources have said AT&T's exclusivity over the iPhone expires in 2010. Excited by this rumor, many consumers have been discussing the possibility of the iPhone being available for the Verizon network. Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg last week speculated that a deal with Apple will be more likely when Verizon rolls out its 4G network next year.

However, Cook on Wednesday suggested it was unlikely for Apple to work with Verizon anytime soon. He explained Verizon's network is on the CDMA standard was limited, and AT&T was a better choice because it utilizes the widely used GSM network.

"We chose from the beginning of the iPhone to focus on one phone for the whole world," Cook said. "CDMA doesn't really have a life to it after a point in time."

This news will undoubtedly disappoint some Verizon customers who are itching for the iPhone but refuse to switch to AT&T.

"I would buy two iPhones in an instant if they were available on Verizon," commented reader "MikeE" in a recent Gadget Lab story. "I will never change to AT&T. I have been using Apple products since 1984 but the iPhone is missing."

For more on Apple's second-quarter earnings report, read Epicenter's report.

See Also:

Photo: Jason-Morrison/Flickr


Green Box Makes Eating Pizza Environmentally Awesome

By Brian X. Chen EmailApril 22, 2009 | 01:58:11 PMCategories: Environment, Green Tech  

Shapeimage_2

The Ninja Turtles can be green in more than one way with this awesome idea of an environmentally friendly pizza box. It's so simple and brilliant: One half of the box breaks into four squares, which can be used as plates. The other half of the box has a crease running down the middle, and two triangular pieces can be ripped off to easily fold this part into a storage container for leftovers. The Green Box is made from 100-percent recyclable material; it reduces waste of dish-washing detergent, disposable plates, aluminum foil and plastic wrap.

Freaking radical, dude. Eco Incorporated holds a patent for the Green Box and hopes to sell it to pizza businesses. Check below the jump for a video of the Green Box in action. 

Continue reading "Green Box Makes Eating Pizza Environmentally Awesome" »


LG Creates American Idol for Phone Design

By Priya Ganapati EmailApril 22, 2009 | 01:39:42 PMCategories: Phones  

Lg_0422 Fancy yourself as the next Jonathan Ive or Frank Nuovo?

Here's a chance to prove that.

LG, Crowdspring and Autodesk have kicked off the 'Design the Future' event to audition for ideas on what a mobile phone should look like in the next few years.

The idea is to let users design a concept phone that could become part of the LG portfolio. "We’re not looking for a long list of specs or phone ideas that already exist," says the competition web site. "We’re looking for a cool new concept or big idea supported by usage scenario illustration."

Entrants will have to use the Autodesk Sketchbook Pro software to design their concept phone. The competition will pick 43 entries as finalists and there's some good prize money available for the winners: $20,000 for the first place,  $10,000 for the second place and $5,000 for the third place. More details of the competition are here including judging criteria. And yes, feasibility of design is a factor.

The deadline to submit their entries is June 7 and the winners are expected to be announced a month later.

Photo: LG Muziq (nino63004/Flickr)


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