2010-11-17

IDAPT i4 Gives You Even More Charging Power
Posted by MobiG @ 11:22 am

By Chris Scott Barr

If you’re anything like me, you’ve got more gadgets than you can keep track of. Unfortunately, almost all of them require a battery of some sort to function. This means you need a lot of free outlets to keep them all full of juice. Thankfully the people at IDAPT have a great solution.

Updating their Universal Desktop Charger, the company has released the i4. This time around you can charge up to four devices, instead of three. You still only have the three docks, but they have added on a USB port to the side for charging another gadget. The three docks have interchangeable tips, which can be used to charge everything from your digital camera, to your portable gaming device or even your phone. If you’re looking to cut down on the clutter while keeping your gadgets in one place, this definitely looks worth the $60 price.

[ IDAPT ]


 

2010-10-18

Peek offers users of older devices a free Peek 9
Posted by MobiG @ 4:03 pm

The Peek messaging device is something that users out there picked up since the thing launched to allow them to message other users without having to pay for a monthly data plan to do it. The original Peek devices were the Pronto and the Classic with the latest being the Peek 9.

According to Peek last week on Thursday, one of the providers it used for connectivity with the older devices closed for good. That means that all of the older Peek devices out there stopped working leaving some unhappy users.

Peek has announced that there is no fix for the situation other than for the users of the older devices to upgrade to a new Peek 9. The good news is that Peek is offering that upgrade to the new hardware free to owners of older devices. Owners of older devices should have received an email about the upgrade, if not owners of older devices can email at care@getpeek.com.


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2010-10-14

Zibra Open It! is perfect for the coming holidays
Posted by MobiG @ 2:29 pm

I have long through that the person who designed the packaging that many gadgets and electronic devices come in is a sick and twisted person. They are as bad as the people that come up with the 100 zip ties to keep a small child’s toy in the box method of displaying a product. Zibra is officially reintroducing its magic tool of less frustration called the Open It.

zibraopenit sg

This comes just in time for the holidays with tools to open any kind of package safely and easily. This thing will work much better than the steak knife I typically use. The Open it has long cutting jaws to cut through those clamshell packages without cutting off your own finger with the razor sharp plastic. The blades also cut through those zip ties on toys as well.

A retracting blade is featured for slicing open the world’s stickiest tape typically used to hold the edges of your new CD or DVD together. I’m pretty sure that tape is payback from record labels for piracy. The Open It even has a little screwdriver in this since the screws on most toys are so small I always resort to the tip of a knife to remove them. It even has a bottle cap opener for those much needed beer breaks Christmas day. You can pick one up now for $9.99.

 

2010-10-13

Balanzza mini Luggage Scale will save your on airport overweight bag fees
Posted by MobiG @ 2:13 pm

The last time I travelled, there was a couple standing at the check in desk arguing over what they were going to toss from their bag to avoid the extra fees for overweight luggage. They could have avoided all of that wasted time and embarrassment as people stood there watching them fight over trinkets picked up on tier trip by weighing their bag ahead of time.

balscale 1

If you travel a lot or have a trip planned where you expect to bring lots of stuff back, you need something like the new Balanzza Mini Luggage Scale. The little scale is digital and has a LCD screen that is backlit with blue light. The thing is easy to use and has an integrated strap for connecting directly to the bag you want to weigh.

You take that strap and wrap it around the handle of your bag. All you have to do then is pick the bag up by grabbing the scale on both sides and wait for the scale to beep. Once done you can see exactly how much your bag weighs and shed things if it’s too heavy. The little scale will measure up to 100 pounds and is small and compact enough to not add significantly to the weight in your bag. You can pick one up now for $24.95.

balscale 1 150x100
balscale 2 150x100
balscale 3 150x100

 

2010-09-28

Hate smudges on your gadgets? Scratch it up with a scouring pad!?
Posted by MobiG @ 3:21 pm

Over the last few years, most all notebooks and other gadgets have started coming with glossy finishes that look nice when clean, but never stay that way. A glossy netbook will be covered with smears and smudges for its entire life unless you constantly clean the thing. If you hate smudges on glossy gadgets, Lifehacker has a fix for you that involves a scouring pad and scratching the gadget up.

eeescratch sg

You take your shiny, smear prone gadget, and sand the surface using one of the scouring pads that would clean your kitchen. Lifehacker recommends using a 3M Scotch Brite pad or ultrafine steel wool.

For the sample Lifehacker used the green Scotch Brite pad and tuned a glossy Eee into a matte finish netbook that looks somewhat like brushed stainless steel. The fingerprints and smudges will then be much less visible after you scratch the thing up. This is a bit at odds with the fact that I normally try to keep scratches off my gear, not add them purposefully.


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2010-09-24

UK Study finds kids more proficient with tech than reading
Posted by MobiG @ 2:36 pm

A company from the UK called Protect your Bubble commissioned a survey about kids and technology that looked at kids from 3 to 10 years old to see what they could do in relation to tech. According to the survey results, many of the kids were more proficient with tech than they were with reading and writing. I can certainly see this as accurate in many cases. My son was using a computer alone by three to play a game called Reader Rabbit.

kidatcomptuer sg

My daughter was 4 years old when she showed my wife how to use the iPhone because mom couldn’t figure it out. The study found that 47% of the 3,000 parents that participated thought their kids knew more about gadgets than they do. Another 19% of those parents say that when they can’t figure out the computer, they turn to their kids and 16% get kids to work the DVD player.

The top ten things a kid can do alone according to the study include turn on the TV at number one. Next is get dressed, followed by write their name. In the fourth spot is turn on a computer, next is work a DVD player, and sixth is ride a bike. Number eight on the list is read a book, nine is use Sky+, and the last is make their own breakfast. My kids are better at using a computer than making breakfast. A computer doesn’t spill everywhere.


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2010-09-18

The Daily Slash: September 17th 2010
Posted by MobiG @ 6:15 am

Welcome to the brand new edition of The Daily Slash. If you’ve been following the daily wrap-up since its debut a few months back, then you know that it’s been changing ever so slightly. And, you may have noticed that it’s been on somewhat of a hiatus recently. With that being said, The Daily Slash is back, with a far more streamlined and clean aesthetic to it, bringing you to the best stories of today right here on the R3 Media Network. But first, we’ll start with a story found around the Internet that grabbed our attention that may not have made it to the main stream of news. So, let’s get right into it, shall we? Welcome to The Daily Slash.

Nokia Plug and Play

From Around the Web

Self-Service Wine Machines in Your Supermarket: Most supermarkets have a section where their alcohol is located. And, for all intents and purposes, that seems to work out quite well for them. And, while there are plenty of other places you can pick up liquor or all sorts, it looks like that’s not okay for a French company out there. Apparently, the developer of the machine –La Cuve Réserves Précieuses– has already put several of these self-service wine holders into French supermarkets, and they plan on expanding into the United States within the next year. You just walk up to the thing, hold your jug or whatever else you may have, and then pick red, white, or rose. Your wine will then slip out, and you fill until you can’t fill anymore. A label will get printed out, and you give that to the cashier. A crazy idea, and one that we’re not sure will take off here in the States, but definitely worth looking into. Though, we can’t imagine that tastes very good.

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2010-08-20

Universal Translator is More Science-Fiction Than Reality
Posted by MobiG @ 10:04 pm

In most situations, when you look at a design concept, you’re supposed to get the sense that some day, at some point in the (perhaps distant) future, you’ll be able to get your hands on this. Just like we saw with Sony’s design for their Eclipse media management device. This one, though. Well, we can safely say that it’s really a concept. Not that it’s not cool — because it’s a great idea, but we’re just wondering if the designer had one too many drinks while they were watching their favorite Sci-Fi flick.

Universal Translator 540x381

As you look at the image above, you’ll have to realize that that’s the whole thing. There’s no other peripherals hiding out of view. What you’re looking at, is a thin slice of glass, that’s meant to do a whole lot of things. For example, it’s a universal translator. That’s right. Somewhere in there, there’s all the languages in the world, used on a daily basis we imagine, and all you have to do is hold it, and get instant translations. You could just take the universal translator, and throw yourself right into the middle of some unknown country and be all right. That’s a relief, for sure.

It can also give you context-sensitive information about places, like gas stations and museums. So, you hold up that thin piece of glass to your eyes, look at something you’re interested in, and then it will give you all the relevant and interesting pieces of information about it. Like we said, a bit more science-fiction than anything else, but there’s nothing wrong with that. A little dreaming never hurt anyone.

[via Yanko Design]


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2010-07-30

5 Gadgets That Changed My World, Part 2
Posted by MobiG @ 12:46 am

This is part 2 of my column on gadgets that changed the world for me. These aren’t necessarily gadgets that changed the world, not even the gadget world. But they all had a profound impact on my life, and were more important to me than simple technological tools or joyous little toys.

Macintosh Powerbook 520c 540x473

[Image credit Ryonix.com]

Hayes-compatible 1200 baud modem

This is sort of a cheat, because the Hayes-compatible modem was definitely important, but it came bundled with a membership to the Prodigy network. Signing up for Prodigy was one of the most important moments of my life, and it started my contentious relationship with the Hayes modem.

For those of you who are a few years younger than I, Prodigy was sort of like AOL without the rest of the Internet behind it. It was a pay service with tons and tons of original content. You could shop on Prodigy. You could read the news and send e-mail. You could post messages on bulletin boards and comment back and forth on what other people were saying. Except for the multimedia, there is little about today’s Internet that wasn’t already possible on Prodigy, 20 years ago.

For those of you decades younger than I, Prodigy is what the Internet would be if it were only Wikipedia . . . with comments. We had flame wars. We had anonymity. We had modems that made crazy loud beeping noises, followed by the static white noise sound. I often wonder if my toddler son will understand that sound in 10 years when he hears it in an old movie.

I could say more about Prodigy and its effect on me, but let’s just say I blossomed on that early network. I made some of the best friends I’ve ever made. Real friends; in-person friends. I took a girl to my Junior Prom after getting to know her on Prodigy. I still talk to old Prodigy friends. But Prodigy was inseparable from that modem. I had one computer at the time, a huge beige desktop. I couldn’t tell you the brand; at the time we just called it an IBM-compatible.

The modem was a giant unit that had its AC plug built into the box. You plugged the entire modem into the wall, and then plugged the phone line into the modem. My parents had to get a new line installed in our basement, where I kept the computer for homework. I had no games on the computer, since it used only a CGA graphics card, and my gaming consoles were much better. It was a computer for word processing and Prodigy.

At some point during my Sophomore year, my grades slipped a bit. It wasn’t Prodigy’s fault. I was hanging out with friends after school. I was blowing off work I didn’t enjoy. My grades slipped from “A”s and “B”s to “B”s and “C”s, but never lower. My parents blamed Prodigy. It was easy to blame, because it was right in front of them.

When I was home, I was usually tucked into the basement, keeping up with my new online friends. Even when my parents couldn’t see me, they could pick up the phone in the kitchen and hear that modem connection. Since it seemed like the modem was always connected, Prodigy was an easy scapegoat for my falling grades.

They didn’t take away Prodigy, they took away the modem. Except that my parents had no idea what a modem looked like. They saw the hardware: a large AC plug with a cord running to the PC. The cord ended in a pin adapter. The modem came with two, one each for two differently sized serial ports.

Instead of taking away the modem, they took the adapter. Thankfully, the modem came with a spare that fit the other port size, and this worked fine with my machine. They took the serial adapter and hid it away in an antique apothecary scale that my father displayed on the mantel.

I kept connecting. When I heard footsteps upstairs near the phone, I would quickly kick the modem out of the wall. With no power, the connection terminated instantly. Using this deception for about a year, I was only caught once. That was enough. They couldn’t figure out my trick, but they did figure out that canceling my subscription would solve the problem.

Not really, though. Like with AOL, every Prodigy account came with 6 different login names. I lost my account, but a good friend, the girl I took to prom (the one for whom I made mix tapes as well, if you read the first half of this column), gave me one of her login names. I never got caught again.

As a post script, that apothecary scale sits on a new mantel in a new house, my parents having long-since moved. I checked last thanksgiving, and the serial adapter is still there. Perhaps if my grades improve, I’ll get it back, someday.

Macintosh Powerbook 520c

It almost seems like a copout putting this machine on the list. It’s just too awesome. The Mac Powerbook 520c was the low end of Apple’s Powerbook line at the time. There was a 540c using an active-matrix, full color display, but my machine used a passive matrix screen that left trails and a foggy picture. I loved that computer.

It wasn’t the color screen, the first I’d seen on a laptop computer. It wasn’t the trackpad, either, the first I’d seen anywhere. I’ve owned computers since I was 10 years old, and Macs since I was 17. I was 19 when I bought my Powerbook 520c, a sophomore in college, and it changed my education for good.

I had always typed papers for school, since I was in middle school. But my note taking was atrocious. I managed to squeak by. I had a good mind for math equations, and I could fake my way through any English test. But in history, science, even my language studies, I was at the mercy of my own memory. My handwriting is nearly illegible, and in all my time in grammar school, I don’t once remember studying from my own notes.

After a month with my first laptop, I was bringing it to every class. In 1994, I was still the only one with a laptop in class. By the end of college, I could type out an hour-long lecture verbatim. I was sharing my notes with other people, comparing my notes to make sure they were correct.

I don’t think that reviewing notes later necessarily improved my education. But being able to take accurate notes and follow closely as the class was in session was a priceless advancement for me, and I think it would help an incomprehensible number of today’s students.

Note taking is a difficult skill to teach because it is so personal; but every teacher expects students to take notes and follow closely at the important moments. If every student went to class armed with a computer of her own, it would change the way students interact in a classroom.

I’m not talking about advanced networked classrooms sharing multimedia presentations and taking digitized quizzes at the end of a term. I’m talking simply about taking notes. Writing things down. Processing and recording the information as it is being thrown your way. I can’t think of a better way to pull underperforming, bright students into the modern age than arming them with the proper tools for the job. In today’s education system, those tools are no longer notebooks and pens, but laptops and wireless networks.

TiVo

This seems like an easy choice, and I’m sure plenty has been written about how TiVo has rocked the entertainment world. But it all hit home for me about ten years ago. I was a very early adopter for TiVo. I’ve been a customer since the first boxes hit the shelves.

A professor of mine once said that the VCR was the most disruptive thing to happen to performance art in a hundred years. For the first time, you could pause a work of art while it was happening, leave the room for a snack, and start the piece where you left off. Before the VCR, you couldn’t stop a movie, you could only choose to miss some of it. You couldn’t stop a play, you couldn’t only interrupt it, or remove yourself from it.

TiVo is similar, but it adds another component. TiVo is always recording what you see on television. It has a constant buffer, so if you see something you want to save for later, you can hit record and it’s already done. On my oldest TiVo (of the three I’ve owned), I have an assortment of shows that I’m keeping for posterity. Some I even have cued to my favorite part. Press a button and George Costanza says “Well, there’s nothing dirtier than a giant ball of oil.” Start up my favorite Simpsons and the first thing you hear is Homer asking: “Are you really the head of Kwik-E-Mart? Really? You?”

TiVo changed the world for me on September 11, 2001. I was faxing resumes, looking for a teaching job. My wife was working in midtown Manhattan. She called to tell me to turn on the news, something big and evil was happening downtown. I turned on CNN, and even in my initial shock, I knew to press the record button. I still have those first hours of the newscast from that day.

Some day I’ll show it to my children. I know they could probably find archival footage, but I want them to see the moment as I saw it. Aaron Brown starting to speak mid-sentence. The camera cuts to a building billowing smoke. That’s when I pressed record, and created a memory that I’ll never forget.


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2010-07-27

Moshi Kitchenette Brings All Your Appliances Together
Posted by MobiG @ 10:07 pm

If you’ve got an apartment that has more than one bedroom, or it’s anything bigger than a studio, then you probably won’t need this (unless it just interests you that much). But, if you’ve got a cramped place you call home, then perhaps putting all of your appliances into one is exactly what you need to save on some space. That’s where Moshi’s kitchenette comes in. Designed for the smaller apartments out there, it’s specifically created to bring together all of your most-used appliances.

Moshi Kitchenette

The kitchenette features a dishwasher, induction cooking hub, washing machine (yes, a washing machine), a sink, and refrigerator. All in one, compact unit. What makes it that much more futuristic, is the fact that you won’t be using those ancient knobs and dials anymore. No, no, you’ll be able to control all of these appliances with a fancy touchscreen. Obviously, this is just a concept, and there’s no way to tell if it will ever become something more, but maybe if we all start wishing hard enough, we can make something happen. Would anyone out there really want something like this?

[via Yanko Design]


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