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Hillcrest Labs Loop combines Wiimote, mouse, and Ouroboros

June 15th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Conceptual Gadgets, Stuff & Buzz

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Hillcrest Labs has taken a few moments away from its bitter patent dispute with Nintendo to finally release its $99 Loop controller, a Freespace mouse intended primarily for use by those with some sort of HTPC setup. It’s the latest in bangle-inspired design, sporting four buttons and a scroll wheel, compatibility with Windows, Mac, and Li More »

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Intel Celeron, Core i7, and Atom lineup leaked?

June 15th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Conceptual Gadgets, processors

Intel Celeron, Core i7, and Atom lineup leaked?

The sun rises, seasons change, CPUs get faster, and Intel’s plans get leaked. That’s the way it works, so while this report from Digitimes listing out Intel’s chip releases through the beginning of next year should be taken with a grain of salt, feel free to make it a small one. More »

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Slick-Looking iPod Dock Packs Slot-Loading CD Player, Radio, and OLED Display


As far as AM/FM/CD/iPod/AUX combinations go, this artfully-misspelled Sonora Eklipse is pretty good-looking, with its 7.5-watt output, shiny black finish and glowy lights. But is it really worth its whopping $550 pricetag? More »

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Shuttle’s H7 5800 packs Core i7 and all the trimmings into a small form factor PC


These days, Shuttle’s particular brand of small form factor PC isn’t as exactly stunning as it once was, but it’s still fun to see just how much they can cram in there. Shuttle has taken its barebones SX58H7 Core i7 kit and is now offering it preconfigured with Core i7 Extreme processors, 6GB of RAM and GeForce GTX 285 graphics (With support for SLI or ATI CrossFireX). Unfortunately the base price for the H7 5800 is a silly high $2,149, and once you actually get to any of those previously mentioned trimmings, you’re looking at around $4k for a computer. It might be slight technical feat, but we can’t imagine More »

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Fedora 11 packs a next-gen file system, faster boot times, all the joys and pitfalls of Linux

Fedora 11 packs a next-gen file system, faster boot times, all the joys and pitfalls of Linux
It is more secure operating System :
Linux just gets sexier and sexier, and Fedora 11 just joined Ubuntu 9.04 in the ranks of super modern Linux distros released this year. Fedora doesn’t have all the desktop refinements of Ubuntu, or the wild popularity, but it does act as the underpinnings of Intel’s Moblin, and the Sugar OS, and doesn’t shy away from the future. Fedora 11 makes the bleeding edge ext4 filesystem the default for installs, which speeds performance and improves data integrity — Ubuntu offers ext4 as an option, but some application incompatibilities have caused data loss More »

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130-Megapixel Camera Made From a Run-Of-The-Mill Scanner and an Ancient Lens

June 9th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Audio & Video, Digital Cameras

130-Megapixel Camera Made From a Run-Of-The-Mill Scanner and an Ancient Lens

The idea of a scanner-made camera is nothing super new, but concocting one which snaps photos at 130-megapixels is pretty amazing. That’s exactly what some Japanese dude with a touch of tech know-how accomplished.

Spyuge, the amateur photographer responsible for this DIY gem, says that he took a 1200 dpi Epson GT-S620 scanner, and an old Canon FD 50mm lens, fusing the two together to produce this. He said he chose that particular scanner because it has a CCD sensor, uses a camera-like lens of its own and uses LED lighting. In some of the shots, there’s obviously noticeable noise even at 800 or 1024 res, but all things considered, these photos are more than respectable.
Bouncing Red Ball also has a close-up zoom to show what kind of detail the camera setup can produce (SPOILER: it’s not shabby at all). For the few brave ones out there, you can also check out a full-resolution image for yourself. This is not for the faint of heart. In case you don’t want to do the (relatively basic) math, a 130-megapixel image calculates out to roughly a 13,000×10,000 resolution image.
Read more on Gizmodo

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iPhone 3GS, New MacBook Pros, Snow Leopard and More From WWDC 2009

June 9th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Desktop PC & Notebook, iPhone

iPhone 3GS, New MacBook Pros, Snow Leopard and More From WWDC 2009

Today was big for Apple, busting out hardware updates in the two hottest lines—iPhones and MacBooks—along with final details on the overhauls of their two operating systems, too. We saw everything but a tablet—and Steve Jobs. More »

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Pico projectors : Aiptek USB T20 for notebooks and T30 for iPhone

June 6th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Conceptual Gadgets, Stuff & Buzz

Pico projectors : Aiptek USB T20 for notebooks and T30 for iPhone

Aiptek T20 (left in picture) is a pico projector specially designed for notebook users who always wanna have impromptu presentations for their work.
This tiny projector does not need external power, as it takes power directly from the USB port of your laptop. The Aiptek T20 is able to project up to a 42-inch display at a VGA resolution. More »

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Belkin TuneCast Auto Live FM transmitter and iPhone App Announced

June 6th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Audio & Video, Electronic Gadgets

Belkin TuneCast Auto Live FM transmitter and iPhone App Announced

Belkin has announced another new iPhone accessory that allows you to listen to music on your iPod in your car. The FM transmitter is called the Belkin TuneCast Auto Live. Belkin claims that the device is the first GPS-assisted FM transmitter with an iPhone application available.

Belkin is back with the Belkin TuneCast Auto Live FM transmitter alongside their very own ClearScan Live software application that will allow both iPhone and iPod Touch owners to gain easy access to their FM transmitter, picking out the most suitable radio frequency to play music in the car. More »

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Project Natal Won E3, and Maybe the Motion Control Wars

Project Natal Won E3, and Maybe the Motion Control Wars
It is a tremendous product:
Wii MotionPlus will make the Wii better. Sony’s very impressive motion control demo will be better than Wii MotionPlus. But Microsoft stole E3 and may have already won the motion control wars with the announcement of Project Natal.

Keep in mind, the name “Natal”—referring to a city in Brazil—doesn’t really do the platform’s infancy any justice. It should really be called “Project Prenatal,” as the peripheral’s dev kits just shipped to the first set of developers this week.

But after testing the system and getting a good look at what makes its motion tracking tick, I’m going to fanboy out a bit on the platform, as responsibly and logically as I can. Here’s why I think Natal is a watershed in motion controls.

For a Motion System It Facilitates Passive Entertainment
People are lazy. If we can use a remote instead of changing a channel on the television five feet away, we’ll use a remote. And I’d argue that if we can login to our preferred entertainment by just sitting on the couch (through Natal’s facial recognition), we’ll do that next. Is talking or gesturing more simple than channel surfing on a remote? Not necessarily, but… More »

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