Archive for February, 2008
Friday, February 29th, 2008
An anonymous reader writes “The Consumerist is reporting that one unlucky individual had to send his Xbox 360 in for repairs. The catch is he had spent a great deal of time getting signatures and artwork on the outside of the console from notable members of the gaming industry. He specifically asked and even sent a letter along with his console requesting that the outside of the case be returned intact. When he got it back it was once again, plain white. Assuming that this is a genuine claim, regardless of the circumstances surrounding the missing/cleaned case Microsoft should at least apologize to the guy.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by ScuttleMonkey
Posted in Microsoft | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
Filed under: Features, Misc. Gadgets
Ariel Waldman contributes Movie Gadget Friday, where she highlights the lovable and lame gadgets from the world of cinema.
Previously on Movie Gadget Friday, we traveled across war-torn galaxies in the 1978 version of Battlestar Gallatica. Moving forward a few years to 1982, we’ll take a look inside the computational arcade culture of TRON. Saturated with neon suits and Pac-Man blips and bleeps, the sci-fi cult Disney film has achieved pop culture status over the years.

The ENCOM Digitizing Molecular Laser
Using a matter transform sequence and a grid matrix, the ENCOM Digitizing Laser is able to transport physical matter into a digital space. The laser is able to lock on a target and dismantle the molecular structure on a cubic grid. When used for its original intentions, the molecules remain suspended in the laser beam. However, the Master Control Program is able to deviate this sequence into transporting the restructured molecules into a digitized computer game world where TRON resides. The molecules can then be shifted back safely into the physical world by selecting the run mode through the laser system. Surprisingly, the only side effects the laser has on humans is minor disorientation and temporary memory loss. Phew. More after the break.
Continue reading Movie Gadget Friday: TRON
Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Ariel Waldman
Posted in , | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
Filed under: Wearables
Oh sure, we’ve seen gadgets used as motivational tools before, but Sega Toys is apparently banking on you not being a hothead. Otherwise, you just might fling its Body Trainer headset from your dome as soon as you hear “please exercise a little bit harder” over your incessant panting. Nevertheless, those with oodles of self-control may actually benefit from having a personal trainer (of sorts) in their ear while working out, and by monitoring the wearer’s heartbeat via a sensor, it can blurt out messages at the appropriate time to help users through their session(s). Reportedly, this nifty exercise buddy is set to launch in Japan this April for ¥5,775 ($54), and while we’ve no idea if this thing is destined for US soil, we can definitely see it being used more so for its musical abilities and less for its steadfast encouragement.
[Via CNET]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in , , , , , , , japan, , , , toys | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
I Don’t Believe in Imaginary Property writes “The judge in the Wikileaks case has dissolved the injunction against Wikileaks, which means that it can get its .org domain back. He defended his prior ruling because it was based on the pittance of information the bank and registrar had provided him, saying ‘This is a case in which we had a (dispute) with named parties, and the parties were duly served. One of which properly responded and came to this court with a proposed settlement in this lawsuit… Nobody filed any timely responses to the court’s order.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by ScuttleMonkey
Posted in MulticardReader | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
Filed under: Laptops, Storage
We know, we’re getting tired of Apple Blu-ray rumors as well — they’re right up there with refreshed Cinema Displays in terms of rumor persistence — but until Steve and the gang actually shove a drive into a machine we’re stuck with them. The latest says that Apple is actively pressing Sony for slot-loading BD-R drives but quality control issues are gumming up the plan. Reportedly, this latest ho-hum MacBook Pro refresh was to feature BD-R drives, but all Sony could muster up were Blu-ray / DVD±RW drives, which Apple refused. That seems a little odd, frankly — now that the format war is over and the competition’s already shipping mid-range laptops with slot-load BD-R drives, you’d think Apple would want to cash in that Blu-ray Disc Association membership card with whoever can supply the drives. As always, we’ll see when we see — it’s gotta happen sometime, right?
[Image courtesy of dadako.com]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Nilay Patel
Posted in elite, delfly, Press, nanotube, blu-ray, sony, Apple | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
Filed under: Cellphones
Quite frankly, the traditional Jawbone headset is pretty stylish as is. Nevertheless, Yves Behar has somehow managed to make it even sexier with the creation of the Love To Talk family. This trio, which will reportedly be made available “in a very limited quantity,” consists of a gold Sweet Talk version, black Dirty Talk edition and white Trash Talk model. No word on a price nor where to actually find one outside of the totally shady black market, but feel free to take a closer look at each in the read link below.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in Tech | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
ScienceDaily is reporting that researchers at the University of Edinburgh and Southampton in cooperation with partners from Japan and the US have shed some light on the Standard Model of physics using a new computer model. “The project’s enormously complex calculations relate to the behavior of tiny particles found in the nuclei of atoms, known as quarks. In order to carry out these calculations, the researchers first designed and built a supercomputer that was among the fastest in the world, capable of tens of trillions of calculations per second. The computations themselves have taken a further three years to complete. Their result shows that the Standard Model’s claim to be the best theory invented holds firm. It raises the stakes for the riddle to be solved by experiments at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, which will switch on later this year. Physicists’ efforts to confront Standard Model predictions using the most powerful computers available with the most precise experiments offer no clues about what to expect.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by ScuttleMonkey
Posted in | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
Filed under: Features, Laptops
While everyone and their second cousin third removed had something to say about Apple’s ultra-sexy, ultra-hamstrung MacBook Air, we’ve a sneaking suspicion that folks previously eager about this week’s MacBook Pro updates will be equally vocal. For whatever reason, Cupertino faithful had February 26th pegged on their calender, and while the addition of a Penryn or two was nearly a given, the dreamers in the crowd had much higher hopes for that fateful Tuesday.
Nevertheless, the time came and went, and the re-opening of the online Apple store brought a whole heap of disappointment to many. Sure, folks still (somehow) enamored with the aging MBP design were thrilled to have access to a more potent, less scalding iteration of their favorite machine, but honestly, we’re still using the GeForce 8600M GT? Really, Apple? Needless to say, this refresh likely did little to satisfy your desire for a revamped MacBook Pro, but we’re interested in finding out exactly what it is you really wanted. An option for an SSD? What about a built-in Blu-ray drive? Would integrated HDMI make things more appealing? Or is a top-down case redesign the only thing stopping you from abusing your credit card in the name of Steve Jobs? Go on, we know you folks are chock full of good ideas, so let’s hear ‘em, shall we?
Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in freestyle, freestyle ascent, , Vectra, elite, ocular, Press, Apple | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
Filed under: Home Entertainment
Just when the members of the Blu-ray Disc Association were settling down to enjoy the fruits of victory, another challenger has entered the ring — oh wait, it’s just NME, makers of VMD, so it’s really more like “remained in the ring and basically ignored.” The company just issued a press release saying “All indications are that VMD can fill the void left by HD DVD,” and that “The way is now clear for VMD to be embraced by the industry.” We suppose that’s true — the Asian bootlegging industry really hasn’t weighed in with a format choice yet, has it? In any event, VMD players have apparently been shipping to the US for a month now, so all you HD DVD fans out there looking to back yet another losing horse can probably find one — start at the shadiest retailer you can think of, and then move downwards.
[Thanks, Chris]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Nilay Patel
Posted in , , , , headphone, Dr.Dre | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
E Online is reporting that a new spinoff is currently in the works to feature Cleveland, the soft-spoken neighbor in popular animated sitcom Family Guy. “Not much is known about Cleveland other than the fact it will revolve around the Brown clan. It’s unclear whether the series will remain set in the town of Quahog or whether Cleveland, along with his wife and son, will continue to appear on Family Guy, though as both series are animated, the double-billing won’t so much be a logistical problem as a creative decision.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by ScuttleMonkey
Posted in TV | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
Filed under: Gaming
Your parents ever do anything mean to you for their own amusement when you were a kid? Whatever it was, something tells us it wasn’t as evil as what Jonathan’s (above) family did, having him unwrap an empty Xbox box with some shirts inside — while on video, mind you — and then laughing at him when he got upset and cried that he’d been hoodwinked. For the love of all that is holy in the gadget-loving world, that is so wrong. The person who uploaded the video, supposedly the kid’s shining example of an older brother, claims that despite the fact they told Jonathan multiple times in the video, “C’mon, you know we can’t afford an Xbox!” the family actually did get him the console and that he’d eventually upload the video of the real unwrapping — he never did. (Original video after the break.)
Jonathan, you out there? Screw those people, they clearly don’t understand what it is to be a kid and to want an awesome gadget so badly you can taste it. We’ve been there our whole lives. Since, as a publication, we can’t just adopt you and raise you as our own, I will personally send you an Xbox 360 — only on the condition that you swear to us your douchebag family doesn’t ever get to play it. Hit me up at engadget at gmail dotcom, make sure you can identify yourself so I know I’ve got the right person.
[Thanks, Greg]
Continue reading Worst parents in the world punk kid into thinking he got an Xbox 360
Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Ryan Block
Posted in enclosure, xbox 360, Microsoft | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
Filed under: Cellphones
Nice going RIM, you’ve successfully filed for a patent on a device that companies like HTC have been making since 2005. That’s right folks, your friends at Research In Motion have just thrown an application in the direction of the US Patent Office which should look painfully familiar. The company is calling it a “Hybrid Portrait-Landscape Handheld Device With Trackball Navigation and QWERTY Hide-Away Keyboard,” but we’re calling it the Wizard. We suppose it’s possible that the BlackBerry-maker has something up its sleeve that goes beyond the typical functionality of a phone like this, but nothing in the application seemed to indicate such a scenario. Did RIM even check out the competition before issuing this paperwork? It seems unlikely given the obvious and commonly used shape and design of this particular handset… oh, wait, this one has a trackball. Okay, our bad.
[Via BlackBerry Cool]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Joshua Topolsky
Posted in , , , , rentals, firmware, packet mobiletalk, iphone 3g dock, court, Maker Faire, Blackberry | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
SpaceAdmiral writes to mention that NASA has some new high-resolution radar maps of the Moon obtained by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The new images have also been used to create a simulation of the Moon’s day and a movie of a Moon landing from the point of view of the astronaut. “NASA is eying the Moon’s south polar region as a possible site for future outposts. The location has many advantages; for one thing, there is evidence of water frozen in deep dark south polar craters. Water can be split into oxygen to breathe and hydrogen to burn as rocket fuel–or astronauts could simply drink it. Planners are also looking for ‘peaks of eternal light.’ Tall polar mountains where the sun never sets might be a good place for a solar power station.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by ScuttleMonkey
Posted in | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
When I took a look at the Stylophone pocket synthesizer a couple weeks back, it reignited my obsession with electronic sounds. I’ve been interested for a while, but the devices used to create such sounds have traditionally been out of my price range. Fortunately, manufacturers are looking more toward amateur enthusiasts, so consumer versions of the products are becoming more affordable.
Jen DeLeo pointed me toward one such device that she had seen on ThinkGeek’s Web site. The Korg mini-KP is a pint-size version of the company’s Kaoss Pad, a MIDI controller used by artists including Radiohead and Brian Eno. The KP has an audio input, so you can hook up a wide range of devices, including MP3 players, CD players, and musical instruments like guitars and synths.
I’ve spent the better part of the afternoon running Beck and Beastie Boys songs through it using my iPod. In this video, we take you on a brief Paul’s Boutique-style tour of the device.
The mini-KP is available for $199.99, through Think Geek.

Original post by Brian Heater
Posted in , mp3_digital_audio | No Comments »
Friday, February 29th, 2008
Filed under: Gaming
It looks like Wii users wanting to expand their
Guitar Hero arsenal (or replace an axe after they got a little
too into things) won’t have to wait much longer, as Red Octane is now set to let loose a separate
wireless Les Paul controller for the system. It doesn’t exactly come cheap, however, with the company listing the controller at $70 on its own website, although Toys R Us is now taking pre-orders for $60 (Best Buy and others don’t seem to be offering it just yet). What’s more, while Red Octane only goes so far as say “ETA: March 2008,” Toys R Us is giving a ship date of March 4th, so it looks like this one should be landing in your capable hands in no time.
Read - Red Octane
Read - Toys R Us
[Thanks, Nic]
Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Donald Melanson
Posted in , , , , , 1000h, XD1, , IphoneDevTeam | No Comments »