Sunday, November 2, 2008

Nokia's N85 drops by the FCC, dips head, inquires about what's good


Not that we ever (okay, maybe there was a moment of weakness in there somewhere) doubtedN85 was North America-bound, but the handset dubbed superior to the flagship N96 by one Italian reviewer is indeed coming to US soil. And we've found the FCC documentation to prove it. At this point though, there's little the User Guide, external / internal photos and SAR report can tell us that we don't already know, so again, the takeaway here is that we're one (huge) step closer to having an N85 to call our own. Now that's what's up.
that Nokia's

JVC's Sound Garden concept thrives beneath a black hole sun


See that? That's how far JVC's eco-friendly designers will prostrate themselves in hopes of recycling your paper money into their bank accounts. On display in Tokyo at the Designer's Week exhibition, the Sound Garden "Kirikabu" speaker combines your choice of potted plants with multi-directional speakers consisting of a woofer, and left- and right-channel stereo speakers powered by an internal amplifier. Just add water and let the electrifying fun begin. The pods can also be joined into hives where guinea pigs and other varmints of doom can breed and ultimately wash away the rain of our despair. See that particular construction after the break.

Continue reading JVC's Sound Garden concept thrives beneath a black hole sun


Lightweight Windows 7 pre-Beta on Eee PC 1000H looks very promising

Sure, Windows 7 will run just fine on a thick slab of screaming desktop, but what everyone's really wondering is how it'll perform on laptops, or better yet, down-market netbooks. The very same stage that put Linux into the grubby hands of the Wal-mart consumer and forced Microsoft to extend the life of XP just to stay in the game. It's all pre-beta stuff for now mind you, but Laptop loaded up its early Windows 7 build onto an Eee PC 1000H (10-inch, 1.6GHz Atom, 1GB RAM) with decent results. For the most part, it ran "pretty well" with Laptop managing to get the netbook's features working from the XP drivers supplied by ASUS. And just as Microsoft demonstrated, the relatively lightweight Microsoft OS required just 485MB of RAM when Windows 7 was fully loaded, sans applications of course. Hot. There were some problems with graphics performance as demonstrated by jumpy, 720p video playback and video conferencing over Skype. Still, pre-beta is exactly that, pre-beta. Drop a gold-release Windows 7 OS onto an Eee PC convertible touchscreen and Microsoft and ASUS might be on to something come mid 2009.

[Thanks, Avram P.]

Fanatec's Porsche 911 Turbo S racing wheel plays on Xbox 360, PS3 and PC


If you managed to pull in the reigns and hold off on Fanatec's wireless Porsche 911 Turbo Racing Wheel back in April, you can get a beautiful alternative right about now with even more utility. Today, the outfit has introduced the limited edition Porsche 911 Turbo S Racing Wheel for Xbox 360 -- which, contrary to its name, actually plays nice with the PlayStation 3 and PC. Of note, there are three variants from which to choose: a 911 Turbo S Edition, Clubsport Edition, and Pure Edition, all of which are licensed by Porsche Lizenz- und Handelsgesellschaft mbH and feature a 900° steering angle. You'll also find a 6+1 shifter, and if you opt for the Clubsport Edition, you'll get high-end pedals that are actually crafted from aluminum and feature a load cell pressure sensor for the brake. The pain? $250, $400 and $150 in order of mention, 90% of which is totally paying for that logo in the middle.

ASUS finally details ET1602 / ET1603 Eee Top all-in-one PCs


If you've paid any attention to the release cycle of ASUS' Eee Top, you'd have noticed by now that things have been done in quite the unorthodox way. Although we've already learned most everything we need to know from buyers in global markets, ASUS has finally seen fit to do us English-speaking folk a solid and host up official detail sites for both the ET1602 and ET1603. Both rigs boast a 15.6-inch touchscreen LCD, a 1.6GHz Intel Atom N270 CPU, 1GB of DDR2 RAM, a 160GB 5,400RPM hard drive, 1.3-megapixel webcam, gigabit Ethernet, 802.11n WiFi, a pair of stereo speakers, two USB 2.0 ports, a multicard reader, audio in / out and a swank carry handle for lugging it around. The only difference between the two flavors is the GPU; the ET1602 includes an integrated graphics set, while the ET1603 packs a discrete ATI Mobility Radeon HD3450. Per usual, ASUS isn't dishing out any further pricing / release deets, but most everything else you could ever want to know (about the pair, not life or taxes) is just a click or two away.

[Via I4U News]

Read - Eee Top ET1602
Read - Eee Top ET1603


Dane-Elec goes its own way, intros a handful of media players


Growing tired of distributing the Meizu M6 and M3 (and growing even more tired of waiting on the M8), Dane-Elec has decided to strike up on its own and offer up a smattering of portable media players. Up first is the above pictured Music mediatouch, a 4GB / 8GB PMP with a 4.3-inch 480 x 272 resolution display, FM tuner / transmitter, microSDHC slot and USB connectivity. On deck is the reasonably attractive Music pix, which touts a 2.9-inch 400 x 240 resolution display, a 1.3-megapixel camera and your choice of 2/4/8GB of storage space. The bright green Music touch gets miniaturized to the tune of a 2.4-inch display, while the ultra-tiny Music is a simple USB thumb drive-styled DAP with either 1GB or 2GB of space. There's no word on a release date for any of the aforesaid wares, but we wouldn't bank on 'em coming to the US, anyway.

[Via PMPToday]

Panasonic's Micro Four Thirds Lumix DMC-G1 reviewed: only knock is the price


The question has been on your mind since we first got wind of this so-called "Micro Four Thirds" concept back in August: how will it stack up? Now that Panasonic's Lumix DMC-G1 is filtering out to the world, we're able to kick back and digest a mammoth review of this here camera thanks to the fine folks at Digital Camera Resource. Without going into dissertation-level detail in this space, we'll tell you that the biggest issue critics had with the G1 was its price. Not the image quality. Not the size. Just the price. In other words, Panny has delivered a superb camera that offers up "very good quality photos, an unmatched live view shooting experience and a nice collection of both automatic and manual controls." Deemed the first to "truly offer a point-and-shoot experience on an interchangeable lens camera," the DMC-G1 looks to be a real winner if you've got $800 to blow.

[Via 1001 Noisy Cameras]


Well, what do we have here? With no fanfare whatsoever, Western Digital has apparently strayed from its platter-based roots and delved into the wide, murky world of HD media streaming. The WD TV HD Media Player purports to "turn your USB drive into an HD media player, allowing you to watch your favorite HD movies on your TV." For those still befuddled, look at it like this: it enables you to plug in your USB key or USB hard drive and play back multimedia clips up to 1080p on your HDTV via the HDMI / composite outputs. The 1.6- x 4.9- x 3.9-inch box ought not bog you down too much when looking to take it on a journey, and the $129.99 price tag isn't too painful either.



HP opens TouchSmart to third-party developers

Got a touchy-feely idea you'd like to see on HP's TouchSmart PC? Then by golly, it's about time you got to work! HP has recently released its TouchSmart Application Developer Guidelines to third-party developers, enabling anyone with drive, ambition and skill (all three, not just one or two) to create their own "touch-friendly applications that integrate and run within the TouchSmart Software suite." To generate buzz and give you a little motivation, the TouchSmart Community is offering one fortunate dev a trip to CES 2009, where they'll be able to demo their software in front of the gadget world (and us!). For all the details, be sure and give the read link a visit -- crack those knuckles, it's time to code.

Aspire One shipments on pace to beat Eee PC


Acer's Aspire One has been somewhat overlooked in the face of a relentless barrage of Eee PCs and other netbooks, but slow and steady tends to win the race -- Acer says it's on track to ship six million machines this year, which is ahead of ASUS's target of five million Eees. Acer's mostly pulled into the lead due to its size and ability to push the Aspire One globally, while ASUS (which less than half the revenue) has been building the Eee market by market. Of course, that doesn't mean ASUS is going down without a fight -- we've already seen some aggressive ads, and Acer doesn't have anything to match machines like the S101. Looks like the netbook market is starting to get heated -- it'll be interesting to see how this all shakes out over the next few months.

Panasonic's Lumix DMC-G1 ninja-ships to consumers


Panasonic had us fooled with that press release dating its micro Four Thirds camera, the Lumix DMC-G1, for mid-November. We're not sure what Panny was trying to pull, but when we took a gander at its online store today we discovered that the G1 has already started shipping. The price is $799.95 as expected, so your time has come if you've been dying to try this slim and sexy micro Four Thirds thing out -- though we might wait for a few reviews to drop to confirm that the performance matches the price.

iriver cuts prices on three PMPs for the holidays


Fans of iriver's PMPs should be happy to hear that it's cutting prices on three of them for the holiday shopping season. The E100 and tiny Lplayer's prices will be $69.99 for 4GB models and $99.99 for the 8GB ones -- a drop of $40. The priciest of the three, the SPINN, will see its tag drop to $189.99 for the 4GB and $229.99 for the 8GB (they normally fetch $249.99 and $279.99 respectively), though that still seems fairly expensive given its storage capacity. The price drops are in effect starting November 1st (AKA today).

MSR-H101 Hexapod kit lets you build your own nightmares


Robot builder Matt Denton apparently first built a one-off Hexapod robot for himself some time ago, but he's now taken things one big step further and is offering a kit of a similar bot to the general public through Micromagic Systems. In addition to being excessively creepy (just check out the video after the break), the MSR-101 Hexapod also looks to be relatively simple to get going straight out of the box, with it boasting a built-in HexEngine with plenty of pre-loaded settings, and built-in PS2 controller suppport, which'll let you parade your creation about without having to mess around with it too much beforehand. Of course, there's also plenty of room for more experienced robot builders to get their hands dirty, and Micromagic is more than happy to sell you a whole slew of optional add-ons for the kit. Those just looking to get started, however, can simply grab the base kit in their choice of black, red, or silver for an entirely reasonable €105, or roughly $168 -- just don't blame us if you never get a good night's sleep again.

[Thanks, David]

Continue reading MSR-H101 Hexapod kit lets you build your own nightmares



RIM's BlackBerry Curve 8900 gets hands-on treatment, looks mighty good


Oh RIM, why must you torture us? Just when we'd moved beyond our nightly dreams of the Javelin and had our sights set on a Bold, here you go reminding us of just how luscious the next-generation Curve looks to be. Sure, the omission of 3G makes us none too happy, but it's hard to kvetch about the design. The Boy Genius managed to get his paws around one of the forthcoming BlackBerry Curve 8900s, and his initial impressions are almost universally positive. He's totally digging the size, the screen, the keyboard and even the bezel. That's right, the bezel. Check the read link to see what the fuss is all about.


Marware Game Grip turns iPhone 3G into a gamepad controller


It’s obvious as shown in the picture, a device by Malware, called Game Grip, which physically turns your iPhone 3G into a gamepad controller.

When your iPhone is affixed into the Malware Game Grip, the iPhone will be turned into a complete game controller, presenting you a horizontal view of game play on the iPhone’s screen. This gives you much better grip of your iPhone while playing exciting games on it. And your two thumbs are nicely positioned on the touchscreen, making it to feel like a gamepad controller.

The device works with iPhone 3G. It allows you to use the headphones of your iPhone 3G and also charge it while gaming. It carries a price tag of $50 and comes with lifetime warranty.

Buy online, $49.95, Malware

via [iphoneworld.ca]



GPS lingerie, for super-possessive men to track their women!


The super possessive guys will definitely love a new line of lingerie - Find Me If You Can, which was proposed and designed by Brazilian designer Lucia Lorio. It contains GPS unit which your woman can never run away from you.

A brick-sized electronic device, a GPS unit, is sewn into the undergarment. The “Find Me If You Can” lingerie line sells between $800 and $1,100. Although the price is more pricey than any average lingerie, but overly possessive geek would not mind to spend that much, as it keeps their worries away that their women will not be able to run away from them.

And of course, brainy girls could simply remove the GPS device from the undergarment, and hide it somewhere to play hide and seek with your man. Think on the positive side, it shall be great as a safety device which you can track your girl at those high kidnap-rate areas.

via [geekologie]


Aldebaran Robotics’ NAO - an entertainment humanoid robot for your family


If you and your family are rich but too bored, you might consider getting an entertainment robot to bring more excitements into your life. Aldebaran Robotics’ NAO, is a humanoid robot that is made for this purpose and it carries a huge price tag of $15,000.

NAO is equipped with bells and whistles. It has limbs with 25 degrees of freedom, operable hands, stereo vision, voice recognition and synthesis and it’s driven by a programmable Linux operating system. You can progam NAO in either a graphical environment or code environment (Urbi scripting language, considered pretty easy to learn).

The programming environments of this bot are made to suit all ranges of skill. Of course, for average users they will definitely choose to program it in GUI mode. For those geeky ones, will want to try the coding environment. You can also program it via WiFi.

via [botjunkie]


Softbank and Sharp unveil the FULLTOUCH 913SH Aquos mobile phone


Softbank and Sharp are hot this week. Other than the overly expensive luxury phone, they have also unveiled a new FULLTOUCH cellphone, 931SH.

The 931SH comes with a large 3.8-inch touchscreen with a resolution of 1024×480. Similar to the previous Softbank’s releases, the phone boasts lots of great features that fit well into the Japanese category, including a 5.2 megapixel camera, high-speed connectivity HSDPA, GPS, accelerometer, Bluetooth etc. And some more it’s got a magnetic compass and also equipped with on-board wireless payment system which is usable in Japan.

The little short with this phone is its on board storage isn’t sufficient at all, but you can expand it via the microSD card slot. Pricing and availability are still unclear. Similar to previous models from Softbank, this phone should remain in Japan only.

via [gadgetlite]




Pure*Gold PC


Pure*Gold PC isn’t another expensive gadget that I wanna tell you today. This PC isn’t really made of real gold, it should be only housed in a gold-plated casing.

The casing of this gold PC has been created in ceramic or glass and then gets gold plated. Every single unit of this is handmade. Under the gold-plated hood are an Intel Core 2 Duo processor, 4GB RAM, 100GB SATA II hard drive, nVidia display card with 8600GT chipset and 512MB DDR RAM, 7.1-channel high-def audio, and WiFi. No word for the pricing, but it shouldn’t be too expensive since it’s not made of real gold!

via [geeky-gadgets]


Sunjar II - a solar powered garden light


Sunjar II makes up a great decorative light for your garden. Some more it’s a green gadget that collects sunlights during day times and shines at nights with warm sunshine for your garden.

The Sunjar II is equipped with high power solar cells which are efficient to collect sun juice during day times. At nights it emits warm glow much like that of the sun jar. The Sunjar II can also be powered by 2 AA batteries, which lets it continue to shine during bad weathers when sun juice is short.

The Sunjar II pathway light can shine up for 8 hours at night after a full charge. It’s also equipped with a sensor that automatically detects the ambient lights - when the surrounding is bright enough, it’ll shut itself off to save the power during the day. For only $20, you can get it online from Soucingmap. It’s deemed pretty easy to assemble and mount it at one corner in your garden.

Buy online, $19.99, Sourcingmap


Lounger hover chair floats in the air using magnets


The Britain’s biggest gadget show, Stuff Live has showcased an unusual hover chair called Lounger, which is able to float in the air.

The chair is claimed inspired by “Star Wars”. It uses the powerful repulsive magnetic forces to float in the air. While you lie on this chair, close your eyes, it feels like you’re floating on a cloud. Unfortunately, the Lounger chair carries a price tag of $9,500, meaning that you must be rich enough to own this chair, so you get to feel the sensation of floating on a cloud.

The Stuff Live gadget show seems to be stuffed with lots of expensive gadgets. The hover chair is considered cheap compared to another star attraction - a pair of limited edition curvy metal loudspeakers that costs 70,000 pounds or USD $113,000. At this show, you’ll have to temporarily forget the financial worries that have been bothering you due to the recent economy crisis.

via [therawfeed]


Japanese iPhone 3G gets 1Seg TV tuner and a second battery


In Japan, 1Seg TV is popular which lets Japanese watch mobile TV on their mobile devices. And many Japanese mobile phones come with built-in 1Seg TV tuner excepts the iPhone.

Japanese love to have their iPhone 3G to be capable of tuning to 1Seg TV. So, as least when they’re stuffed in an overly packed commuter train, during their long journey to work, they could then enjoy the 1Seg TV broadcast on the iPhone.

Fortunately, the Japanese Softbank has announced an accessory for the iPhone 3G today, which is a 1Seg TV tuner over WiFi with additional battery that you just need to add on to your iPhone for tuning to mobile TV in Japan. Just hook up this Softbank 1Seg TV tuner to the proprietary port of your iPhone, then you can receive the 1Seg broadcast on it. Some more the device’s battery acts as a second battery to prolong your viewing, and the battery gets recharged while it’s in the TV mode.


Apparently, the device doesn’t display the received TV pictures on your iPhone’s touchscreen. In fact it is a separate device that lets you watch the 1Seg TV on its own screen. Meaning you have to bring along a separate bulky device in order to enjoy the 1Seg TV broadcast.

source [akihabaranews]

iPhone 1Seg TV tuner,mobile TV tuner

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10 games/apps bring more Halloween excitements to your iPhone


It could be the first year that you celebrate Halloween with your iPhone. And you wanna fill it up with full of Halloween atmosphere this year. Here are 10 interesting iPhone games/apps that are specially designed to bring you and your iPhone with more Halloween excitements. Check them out as follows:


1. AlloWin Pool is specially made for the pool lover. The game changes the pool table into a haunted house with all the balls replaced by pumpkins. It’s an addictive game, which you can play it with friends and even challenge the computer with 3 different levels. Download from App Store, Price: $2.99


2. Hallow is for meant for killing the monsters. Just tap on the iPhone’s touch screen to shoot the monsters. You get a total of 8 different monsters in different level and 13 scary sound effects. Download from App store, Price : $2.99


3. Ghosto is for you to make funs with your photos with your friends. You can easily edit any photo and add on some Halloween make-ups on this game. And it allows you to share the Halloween-make-up photos using Flickr or email. Download from App store, Price: $4.99


4. Candy Catch - Halloween utilizes the iPhone’s accelerometer, needs you to tilt the iPhone (or iPod Touch) to help Casey cath the candy corn. And you’ll have to avoid getting the attacks from spider and falling pumpkins. Download from app store, $0.99


5. Halloween Picture Haunt - a Halloween version of the picture hunt, which you should have been familiar with since kids’ time. Just spot the difference between the two nearly identical pictures. And now spot the difference between the skeletons, owls, spiders in the two pictures. You get 45 image pairs with this game, and each has 3 or 4 differences. And you get three lives and 1 hint at each level. There is a little excitement, where a spider randomly shows up on this game to distract you. You need to shake the iPhone to scare it away and you get bonus points for it. Download from app store, Price: $0.99


6. Halloween Sound Machine
When you feel like you want more excitement for the Halloween, you want scary sound effect. The Halloween sound machine brings you scary sounds to your iPhone such as door opening, ghost boo, witch laugh etc. Some more you can play the scary sound while you’re on the phone. Download from iTunes, Price: $1.99


7. Halloween C@rds a Halloween e-Card application which lets you customize your own e-Cards for the Halloween, adding your own image and fill your personal message to create your own e-Card. And you can customize the text style and colors before sending out the e-Card. Download from App Store, Price: $1.99


8. Halloween word search - A Halloween version of the Traditional word search game. It’s free, developed by developers of the popular WordSearch game. With added high-quality scary sound effects and the touch and trace input. Download from App Store, It’s Free.


9. Crazy Skeleton When you aren’t bored yet of seeing a skeleton. You can have one now to keep coming up on your iPhone screen. Shake your iPhone, the skeleton’s eyes and face will move. Some more he makes some sounds to add more fun. Download from App Store, It’s Free


10. Crazy Pumpkin - It’s from the same company as Crazy Skeleton. Instead of showing up a skeleton, it shows you a pumpkin. Just in case you’re fed up with a skeleton, a pumpkin is an alternative on the Halloween. Download from App store, It’s Free

Source 1-8: [Simon's iPhone Blog], Source 9-10: [iPhone-sync]

iPhone games,Halloween,iPhone Halloween games

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Dual remote charging station for Wii Nintendo


Here comes a handy charging station for your Wii Nintendo remote. Having this charging station you can have up to two Wii remotes being charged simultaneously.

This dual remote charing station comes with two rechargeable batteries and it makes charging your Nintendo Wii remotes super easy. Simply rest the Wii remotes on the dual charging docks to get them charged. Some more this charging station also takes power from USB port. While you have a computer on, you can hook this charging station to your computer’s USB port to charge the remotes resting on its docks.

This dual remote charging station is specially designed for Wii remotes. The remotes will get charged properly even though they wear Silicon skins or other similar protective covers. The two rechargeable NiMH batteries of this charging station can provide up to 25 hours of continuous use. It takes about 3-4 hours to charge two remotes. This charging station is great for the non-stop gamers, to ease your frustration of having to stop your game play due to your Wii remotes have run out of juice.

Buy online, Sourcingmap, $20


Google Earth for the iPhone


Just in case your haven’t heard of - Yeah, the Google Earth has been released for the iPhone and also iPod Touch. Now even on your iPhone, you can use Google Earth to zoom down to see your house. Using the Google Earth on iPhone, you might be able to catch the guy next door peeing on your lovely plants in your garden.

The Google Earth makes use of the multitouch and accelerometer features of the iPhone. You can simply tilt your iPhone, the Google Earth app will adjust accordingly to suit your viewing. You can also “pinch” the screen to zoom into a location. The Google Earth also uses the my location feature - when you load it up, it jumps right to the exact location where you are on the map.

You can also use the location-based service to locate the local businesses. You also get extra layers of information such as hooking you to Panoramio and Wikipedia, to provide you with high-quality photos and information about areas that you’re viewing on the Google Map.


Mobiado announces four new luxury cellphones


The luxury cellphone maker Mobiado has unveiled four luxury cellphones. These few handsets are made of expensive materials such as maple wood, crystal, gold and titanium etc.

The first two models in the four new models are named Professional 105 EM White and Professional 105 EM Red, which belong to the company’s Professional 105 EM Special Edition series. These two handsets are made from the finest materials such as titanium, maple burl wood, sapphire crystal and 24K gold. The battery cover has some special sliding mechanism and it’s also made from a single piece of sapphire crystal.

The other two models are the Professional 105 EM CLB Black and Professional 105 EM CLB Silver which share the same specs but in different design. All these four luxury handsets sport Quad band GSM/EGSM, dual band WCDMA, 2-megapixel camera for picture and video , Music and video player, 2-inch display, Bluetooth, Micro USB and 1GB+ internal memory. The price and the availability are still unknown, but it shall be pretty expensive.

via [cellphonebeat]

luxury cellphone

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Krave ZN4 - Motorola’s first full touchscreen phone


Krave ZN4 is the first full touchscreen cellphone from Motorola, that is to be launched through major US carriers such as Verizon.

The Motorola Krave ZN4 supports the Verizon 3G services including TV and music. Verizon also includes a couple of other great services such as mobile email, GPS, speaker independent voice dialing and also the visual voicemail.

This phone has a standard 3.5mm headphone jack which allows users to use any headphones to listen to music and enjoy the TV. Somemore it supports stereo Bluetooth which lets you grab music over it wirelessly. The device has a microSDHC card slot that has been tested capable of supporting up to 8GB cards, which is more than sufficient to store your music files and those photos taken with the phone’s 2 megapixel camera.

The Krave ZN4 comes with a Ming-inspired front-flip. The flip is transparent and also touch-sensitive too which needn’t be opened for controlling the phone. Some other minor functionalities can be done on the closed flip itself without opening it up, such as reading messages, controlling your music playback, and navigating the roads with VZ Navigator. Some more viewing photos and watching TV on the closed flip are also possible. Other operations such as writing messages, buying music, or navigating the main menu need you to open the flip. There is also a lock button, which prevents getting mistakenly touched while the phone is in a pocket.


The touchscreen itself is a WQVGA display that boasts a resolution of 400×240 pixel and is highly sensitive to touch that needs users to have light touches only. And the feedback is great, which provides vibration haptic feedback when touched.