Category: News

  • Sonic Fabric – Ties and Scarves

    sonic-fabric-ties-scarves-m

    Sonic Fabric have come out with multiple items and accessories for this season. One of their more popular pieces are their limited edition neckties that are made from 50% recorded audio cassette tape and 50% colored thread. Their unisex slit scarf are also made of brown sonic fabric with a brown polar fleece lining (this very unique design allows the texture of the two layers of the scarf to be visible – like two scarves in one). One edge of the scarf includes a selvedge made of loops of tape. Avialbale now at Supermarket.

    Continue reading for more images.





    http://www.uncrate.com/men/style/dress-shirts-ties/sonic-fabric-ties/


  • Palm: Verizon Troubles For The Pixi? (Updated) [Voices]

    By Eric Savitz, Blogger and Columnist, Barron’s, Tech Trader Daily

    The contract manufacturer Compal Communications will ship 600,000 Pixi smartphones to Palm (PALM) in the calendar fourth quarter, rather than a previously projected 800,000, according to DigiTimes, citing a report in the Chinese-language Commercial Times.

    The brief story says that the lower shipments reflect the failure of the cellphone’s software to pass tests conducted by Verizon Wireless (VZ), which is widely expected to start selling the phone sometime in 2010. The piece says that shipments to Verizon will be delayed to the first quarter.

    Read the rest of this post on the original site

    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • iPhone Slow to Catch on With Nanchong Province Farmers [Digital Daily]

    iphone-china-unicom-112-300x300Sales of the iPhone in China appear to be picking up steam after a relatively underwhelming start. Though it took China Unicom — Apple’s (AAPL) carrier partner in the country — 40 days to sell its first 100,000 iPhones, it managed to sell another 200,000 in the 20 days that followed.

    So, 300,000 iPhones sold in China since the device arrived at market in early November. Cleary, that’s not the nearly the number Apple sold in the states when the iPhone first debuted in 2007. But it is an improvement over the paltry number sold at launch.

    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • GSM Encryption Cracked… GSMA’s First Response? That’s Illegal!

    The big news in security circles this week is the fact that a security researcher claims to have cracked the encryption used to keep GSM mobile phone calls private. It looks like he and some collaborators used a brute force method. He admits that it requires about $30,000 worth of equipment to de-crypt calls in real-time, but that’s pocket change for many of the folks who would want to make use of this. What’s much more interesting (and worrisome) is the GSM Association’s (GSMA) response to this news:


    “This is theoretically possible but practically unlikely,” said Claire Cranton, an association spokeswoman. She said no one else had broken the code since its adoption. “What he is doing would be illegal in Britain and the United States. To do this while supposedly being concerned about privacy is beyond me.”

    There are so many things wrong with that statement it’s hard to know where to begin. First, claiming it’s “theoretically possible, but practically unlikely” means that it’s very, very possible and quite likely. To then say that no one else had broken the code since its adoption fifteen years ago is almost certainly false. What she means is that no one else who’s broken the code has gone public with it — probably because it’s much more lucrative keeping that info to themselves. Next, blaming the messenger by announcing that cracking the code is “illegal in Britain and the United States” is not what anyone who uses a GSM phone should want to hear. They should want to know how the GSMA is responding and fixing the problem — not how they’re responding to the public release. Finally, if it’s “beyond” her why cracking a code used for private conversations and showing that it’s insecure is all about being concerned about “privacy” — she should be looking for a different job. This has everything to do with privacy. The GSMA claims that the code is secure for private conversations, and this group of folks is showing that it is not. That seems to have everything to do with privacy.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Kennewick machinist proceeds despite losing sight

    Published Dec. 28, 2009
    By John Trumbo, Tri-City Herald staff writer

    KENNEWICK — The sign says “Basic Machining,” but what Bernie Vinther accomplishes inside his two-car garage converted into a shop is far more complicated than that.

    The 65-year-old moves around the cramped quarters, sidling between a 13-by-40-inch metal lathe, a metal band saw, drill press, cabinets with razor-edged cutting tools and a milling machine that would take three hefty men to inch it into position.

     
    Bernie Vinther feels for parts he is machining at his Kennewick shop. Although Vinther is blind, he’s an active machinist and works on contracted work and his own inventions. Photo by Paul T. Erickson of the Tri-City Herald.

    When Vinther flips a switch, fluorescent lights reveal dozens of wrenches, files, hammers, pliers and machinist’s drill bits filling niches above, on and under benches and cabinets.

    A typical machine shop, except each item has its place.

    This is Vinther’s world, one where he works in total darkness.

    “The lights are for you handicapped people,” the Kennewick resident says with a smile as his fingers feel for the switch. His eyes don’t hint at the meaning of the joke because he lost his vision to diabetes more than two decades ago.

    Sightless but confident and seemingly fearless, Vinther’s love of machining is his second chosen career.

    He used to be a skilled electronics technician in Western Washington, owning a business that specialized in industrial communications systems. He designed, built and fixed radios, and even climbed communications towers.

    But the diabetes that began in childhood worsened. At age 38, his sight began to diminish, marking the end of his chosen career.

    His life change included a move to the Tri-Cities, where his wife Brenda had grown up and had a job offer.

    As Vinther’s world grew darker, a desire to work with his hands led to an interest in machining, so he enrolled in machine shop classes at Columbia Basin College 10 years ago.

    The first challenge was overcoming the resistance of having a blind person in a shop where the odds were high for losing fingers to the equipment. Vinther prevailed, completing the required courses, which even included blueprint reading.

    How did he do it?

    “You have only two eyes. I have 10,” he says, holding up his fingers and thumbs.

    Having a good mental picture also helps, Vinther said.

    Vinther feels shapes, molding three-dimensional objects out of clay.

    “I have a way of making drawings I can feel, using a drawing kit made with Velcro and yarn for the lines,” he said.

    Listening carefully also tells him not only where things are, but also the relative speed of moving machinery.

    But Vinther’s best trick is an audio readout device that tells him the precise measurements and positions on his lathes and milling machines.

    By attaching the device to each machine’s digital display, he hears the information he needs. That way he can make necessary adjustments to as close as one ten-thousandths of an inch.

    The device was designed and built for Vinther by the nonprofit Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute in San Francisco, which was founded to develop products for the blind.

    Using a Braille printer, Vinther has labeled all of his cutting tools. He’s even created a multi-page drill size index in Braille so he knows which tool to use, in both metric and standard sizes.

    Most of Vinther’s jobs are for people he knows as friends or neighbors, but he also does contract work. A recent assignment involved making parts out of stainless steel for LIGO, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory at Hanford operated by the California Institute of Technology.

    Vinther is one of perhaps only 100 blind machinists nationwide, with maybe only 10 others who are at his level of proficiency.

    He’s a rarity, but not perfect.

    “When I make mistakes, I start over,” he said.

    He’s had a couple of injuries, both to the same finger and once cut to the bone. But Vinther notes that he still has all 10 digits and his only lingering problem is it’s more difficult reading Braille with the damaged finger.

    He said he doesn’t think about what could go wrong. “I visualize things in my head. I just do it.”

    An example of his mental capabilities is evident in a 6-inch square box crammed with 32 wires attached to his milling machine. Vinther designed and built the electrical component as a dead man’s switch to replace a much simpler on-off switch that burned out.

    His design is better because it controls all of the features of the machine with a single control, making it safer to operate.

    “I like to keep learning. I’m always having to figure out how to do something,” Vinther said.

    Willard Stone, a neighbor, said he couldn’t believe what Vinther was doing. So he called the Herald to suggest a story.

    “He does the impossible,” Stone said.

    Vinther sees his life as a challenge.

    “I can’t quite understand why when most people go blind it is the end for them and they give up,” he said.

    “But you see, it’s these challenges that push me on to find more and more ways to do more and more things.”

    Vinther’s life isn’t all work. He also enjoys taking his wife on dates to the movies.

    He listens as she explains what’s happening on the big screen.

    Brenda also can be a big help as a machinist’s assistant.

    “She’s been a big help to me. She finds the things I drop on the floor,” he said.

    Additional news stories can be accessed online at the Tri-City Herald.

  • Welcome to Macintosh to air on CNBC on January 4th, 2010

    Filed under: , , ,

    If you missed Macworld Expo 2009 in San Francisco last January, then you probably missed the premiere showing of Welcome to Macintosh, an indie documentary that provides an intimate look at Apple’s history. It’s been shown at different times and places over the past year, and you can also buy it from iTunes, but now you can watch the documentary for free.

    On Monday, January 4th, 2010 at 9:30 PM ET, CNBC is broadcasting the documentary for the first time on a major network. Welcome to Macintosh features interviews with many of the early forces in Apple history, including Andy Hertzfeld, Guy Kawasaki, and Ron Wayne (often referred to as the “third founder” of Apple and the person who designed the original Apple logo).

    CNBC seems to be vying for the title of “The Apple Channel,” as we reported yesterday that they’re airing a special about the app revolution titled “Planet of the Apps: A Handheld Revolution” on January 7th.

    [via Macworld]

    TUAWWelcome to Macintosh to air on CNBC on January 4th, 2010 originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Voyij helps you find travel deals on Twitter

    voyij twitter

    More companies are using Twitter to broadcast bargains and promotions. Now a startup called Voyij wants to help travelers tap into those deals with a new feature called Twitter Travel Streams.

    The Cupertino, Calif. company says it’s aggregating tweets from more than 1,000 travel companies that post deals on the micro-blogging site. Not only does it gather all these tweets in one place, it also categorizes them and makes them searchable. So you could just search for deals in New York, or use the different menus to drill down into specific types of deals (flights, hotels, cars, etc.), places, companies, or tweets from a certain timeframe. And you can set up alerts, so you receive emails whenever there’s a tweeted deal about a destination. Voyij president Brent Stewart writes:

    We’ve seen significant growth in the use of Twitter as a “deals” channel for travel suppliers over the last few months. Suppliers (airlines, hotels, cars, vacation packages, etc.) are increasingly using Twitter as a new distribution point for these kinds of offers. The consumer faces increasing challenges trying to keep up with the real-time Web: knowing which users to follow to get the best deals, coping with the sheer volume of offers published and filtering the “noise.” Voyij has done the work for the consumer.

    Voyij has pulled in 1,753 new tweets so far today, according to a counter at the top of the site.

    That sounds like a lot of deals, but if you have a specific destination or schedule in mind, there’s a decent chance you still won’t find the right match here. And that’s not how people are supposed to use the site. Voyij compares itself to travel search engine Kayak, but with a focus on bargains and specials rather than general travel. (Stewart actually sold a previous company, SideStep, to Kayak.) So it’s aiming specifically for people who think, “Hmm, I’d like to get out of town next week, I wonder what kind of bargains I can find?” The new Twitter pages seem like a good fit for that audience.


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Coapt Systems takes $3.7M for facial rejuvenation

    Coapt Systems, maker of treatments to keep women’s faces looking smooth and youthful, has raised $3.72 million of an anticipated $9 million round of debt, securities, warrants and rights, according to a filing with the SEC. Based in Palo Alto, Calif., the company is backed by Canaan Partners, Alta Partners, Global Life Science Ventures, Boston Millennia Partners, Foundation Medical Partners, Easton Capital Investment Group, Asset Management, Spring Ridge Ventures, Saints Capital, Trellis Health Ventures, Sears Capital Management and Trellis Health Ventures.


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Booq Mamba Shift L Review — Backpack Extraordinary

    It’s no secret that I have a fetish for gear bags; my quest for the perfect bag has been ongoing for years. I had reached a happy place with the Booq Boa XS backpack that I picked up several years ago, so my quest slowed down quite a bit. But I recently finalized the kit I’m taking to cover CES, and came to grips with the realization that this gear would not fit in the Boa. That put me in the market for another backpack, preferably one just a little bigger than the Boa, as I like to keep my travel gear as small and light as possible. My search for a new bag started at the Booq web site, and I quickly settled on the Mamba Shift L backpack. The Mamba Shift looked like it would easily fit my gear, yet remain as small as possible. With the trip approaching, I was getting nervous that the Mamba wouldn’t arrive in time, but today the FedEx guy dropped one off.

    The Mamba Shift L is made of the same indestructible nylon material used on the Boa. The Boa has hundreds of thousands of travel miles on it without any visible wear and tear, so I know the Mamba will stand up to the rigors of life on the road. The zippers are high quality, and the attention to detail shows the typical Booq design touches.

    What I like most about Booq bags is their slim profile. This is especially important to me on backpacks, as I need one that fits all my stuff yet doesn’t add a lot of bulk on my back. The Mamba has a very thin profile, considering the ample storage space it has in the main compartment. Opening the compartment exposes a number of pockets to fit all kinds of gear, in an organized fashion. There are mesh pockets that expose the contents, pockets with flap closures, and room to fit all sorts of accessories.

    The Mamba Shift comes with a small cable pouch that fits in a tapered pocket for transport. This provides a convenient way to carry a few cables while keeping them out of the way of other gear. This is a thoughtful touch for the road warrior.

    There’s a zippered pocket on the front of the bag, the perfect place to carry boarding passes and other travel documents to keep them in easy reach. There are two pockets, one on each side of the bag that can be for things that are used a lot. The two shoulder straps have a pocket on them with a tab closure, perfect for iPods or mobile phones.

    The laptop compartment is fully padded and made with a velour type of material for protection of the computer. It’s a separate zippered compartment, providing easy access to the notebook. This compartment is on the back of the bag, so the heaviest gear rides comfortably on the back while in the bag. It will fit up to a 17-inch laptop.

    Booq bags carry the Terralinq service, which can come into play should the bag be lost. There is a Terralinq serial number on a metal tag in each bag, and once registered (free), should anyone find it they can contact the web site as instructed. The bag can be returned to the registered owner, a nice security feature.

    The Mamba Shift L is $149.95 at Booq, and comes with a 5-year limited warranty.

















  • Storing Breast Milk

    Have you found yourself wondering how long breast milk really keeps in the refrigerator? And how do you know if it’s losing nutrients just sitting there?

    baby-drinking-bottle

    Thanks to a new small study, you might have some of those answers.

    Researchers from North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, New York found that breast milk can be stored at 39 degrees F for 96 hours without compromising the integrity of the milk. The researchers tested the milk for bacterial levels, beneficial fatty acids and protein, as well as acidity at 24, 48, 72 and 96 hours. They found very minimal changes taking place when breast milk is stored at 39 degree F for up to 96 hours.

    Storing Breast Milk

    While breast milk may keep longer, it’s best to use within 96 hours. Milk should be stored in clean glass containers. If you use a plastic container, make sure it’s free of BPA. One option is BPA-free breast milk bags from medela. However, Mayo Clinic doesn’t recommend plastic bags for long-term breast milk storage as they may become contaminated more easily.

    Breast milk should be labeled with the date and stored at 39 degrees F or colder. To help avoid waste, store milk in single serving sizes, up to 4 ounces. Leftover breast milk not consumed during a feeding should be discarded to avoid risk of bacterial contamination. According to Mayo Clinic, it’s safe to add newly expressed milk to milk expressed the same day if you chill it for one hour before adding to the other container. However, milk expressed on different days should be stored in separate containers.

    (Image via stock.xchng)

    Post from: Blisstree

    Storing Breast Milk

  • Pomegranate Cocktail and 10 Best Wine Deals at Trader Joe’s

    Holidays are a great time for festive cocktails like this one.  Pomegranate seeds make a colorful and edible garnish that dance to the top of each glass.  

    For a non-alcoholic version, use mineral water (plain or lemon-flavored) instead of champagne.  Or, use straight sparkling pomegranate juice garnished with pomegranate seeds.  It’s a great option for kids — now they can have their own drinks that look just like the adult version!  To make things even easier, Trader Joe’s sells pomegranate seeds preshelled and ready to go — no need to struggle with the whole fruit.

    If cocktails aren’t your thing, Trader Joe’s is well-known for their terrific wine selection.  For great wine buys, check out Jason’s Trader Joe’s Top 10 wine list, just updated this week with best value wines < $10 at Trader Joe’s.  Jason is a wine blogger and connoisseur, known for finding wines that deliver great value to the wallet and the palate.  The first 3 wines in Jason’s list are shown below.  For the full list, check out Jason’s Top 10 Wine List.


    2007 Trentatre Rosso1. 2007 Trentatre Rosso ($6) – A wine that has grown on me with every bottle. I am now smitten with this well balanced effort that offers a very nice finish to boot. Supplies are waning and I’ve been grabbing every bottle I can find…


    2. 2007 Rabbit Ridge Allure de Robles ($5) – If my readers haven’t emptied stores of this one by now you may still have a chance to get some. The only reason this didn’t make the top spot is the high ABV%. That said, I just grabbed another case of this a few days back. Fantastic stuff!


    3. 2008 Sauvignon Republic Stellenbosch Sauvignon Blanc ($7) – I’ve yet to try the Marlborough (91 points from the Wine Spectator) or the Russian River but already stocked up on all three. Pretty soon I intend to do a blind tasting of the lot. Can I pick out the differences in terroir? Stay tuned!

    Continue reading more of Jason’s tips on his blog.

    Hope these drink suggestions come in handy as you prepare to ring in the New Year!


    Sparkling Pomegranate Cocktail Recipe


    6 tsp refrigerated fresh Pomegranate Seeds
    1 bottle champagne or sparkling wine, chilled
    1 cup Just Pomegranate juice, chilled


    1. Put 1 tsp pomegranate seeds in each cocktail glass.
    2. Combine champagne and pomegranate juice in a pitcher.  Pour into cocktail glasses and serve.


    Prep time: 5 minutes
    Serves 6

  • Event Alert: January Calendar of Automotive Events

    Filed under: , , , , , , ,

    January 2010 not only kicks off a new year, but also signals the end of the Naughties. The automotive landscape has changed quite a bit since the days of the Y2K scare, but some things remain the same. January still hosts the North American International Auto Show (NAIAS) at Cobo Hall in Detroit, the racing season roars to life with the Rolex 24 at Daytona, Barrett-Jackson and the rest of the auction houses will still be propping up their tents in Arizona, and the RetroMobile classic car show and auction will return to the banks of the Seine in Paris.

    Classic and collectible car fans will also be treated to the Cavallino Classic, La Jolla Motor Classic, Grand National Roadster Show, and Kruse South Florida Collector Car Auction. Meanwhile, consumers get a chance to kick tires and take notes on the 2010 models at the San Diego Auto Show, Washington Auto Show and Portland International Auto Show domestically, and internationally at the European Motor Show Brussels and Auto Expo India. Besides Daytona, race fans can look forward to events as diverse as the IRC’s 78th Rallye Automobile Monte-Carlo and the World Drag Expo swapmeet in Schaumburg, Illinois.

    If none of those events appeal to you, check out our Google Calendar after the jump for even more listings, all with detailed info and links. And please don’t forget to use the Comments to modify listings.

    Continue reading Event Alert: January Calendar of Automotive Events

    Event Alert: January Calendar of Automotive Events originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 18:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Solar Thieves!: Solar Security Is the Latest Business Opp

    Wow, I had no idea solar theft was such a problem. According to a KQED Public Radio, over the past year over 400 solar panels, worth $1,000 each, have been stolen from vineyards throughout Napa County, California. That’s pretty amazing given solar photovoltaics don’t even have that high of a penetration rate yet.

    That statistic also […]


  • The Perils of 3rd Party APIs

    totlol_platform_dec09a.jpgIn 2006, Flickr co-founder Caterina Fake coined the term “BizDev 2.0” when looking at the phenomenon of supplying commercial API keys to startup partners. Said Fake, traditional business development meant “trying to get hopelessly overbooked people to return your email. And then after the deal was done, squabbling over who dealt with the customer service. [It’s] much, much better this way!” Three years later, many are finding that while APIs are great biz dev tools for the larger provider, startups can often suffer under the thumb of their platform keepers.

    Sponsor

    In November ReadWriteStart spoke to Lookery CEO Scott Rafer about his company’s shutdown. Rafer counts his dependency on a single platform as being one facet of his downfall. Said Rafer, “I’ve ranted for years about how bad an idea it is for startups to be mobile-carrier dependent. In retrospect, there is no difference between Verizon Wireless and Facebook in this context.”

    This week, Totlol CEO Ron Ilan set the blogosphere abuzz in a blog post describing his latest issues with YouTube.

    totlol_ron.jpg

    In July 2008, unbeknownst to Ilan, Google was about to change its YouTube terms of service. According to the startup entrepreneur and father of two, Ilan found himself in a predicament. He had originally planned to find sponsorship for his community of curated toddler-appropriate YouTube videos; however, the new YouTube ToS restricted commercial use and his ability to monetize. In one fell swoop from the API provider, his entire business model and livelihood changed. Unwilling to violate the new terms, Ilan began work on a subscription model.

    Says Ilan, “When publishing a public API, a company forms a relationship with
    developers. To quote from the movie Love Actually – I love that word ‘relationship’. Covers all manner of sin doesn’t it? The relationship is by definition asymmetrical, as in me (one person) with them (the world’s most powerful company). I think the API provider should be at least as honest and open as the startup. I don’t know how Facebook and Twitter are with their API users, but I guess they can’t be worse.”

    Similar to Totlol, entertainment community Redux offers a community where users aggregate niche video content from third party sites. While much of the content comes from sites like YouTube and Vimeo, Redux CEO David McIntosh has a decidedly different view of the YouTube ecosystem.

    Says McIntosh, “We’re committed to adhering to YouTube’s Terms of Service as it exists today, and as it may change in the future. We believe that there are many awesome opportunities for 3rd parties to monetize around YouTube content in ways that are consistent with the YouTube’s Terms of Service and great for users.”

    McIntosh plans to monetize his service via video insertions in Redux’s television mode and promotional items displayed in the real-time Redux feed similar to Digg’s latest ad efforts. But the question is whether or not ToS can affect these revenue streams as well.

    You never believe your home is going to be damaged by an earthquake, but for some it happens. If you build on a platform you don’t control, is this akin to laying your foundation on a fault line? If you’ve got suggestions on how to mitigate this type of risk, let us know in the comments below.

    YouTube didn’t respond by press time to our request for comment but we’ll update this post if we get a response later.

    Disclosure: RWW is sponsored by API management service Mashery.com.

    Discuss


  • 7 Great Applications for Your iPhone 3GS

    Apple has done it again with the new iPhone 3GS. Only this time, they’ve done it even better. With an enhanced CPU, an impressive new internal compass, a 3-megapixel autofocus camera, and greater storage, the new iPhone 3GS is guaranteed to be the gift on everyone’s wish list.  But what is equally as impressive as the phone itself is the range of fun, helpful and exciting applications. Some old favorites even return bigger and better on the iPhone 3GS. Here are but a few of the great applications.

    Make daily life simpler!

    Grocery iQ

    You won’t ever forget your grocery shopping list at home again. Grocery iQ makes creating your shopping list easy with a database of 130,000 items and a predictive search. Building new lists is a snap with your Favorites list and shopping history. With Grocery iQ, shopping isn’t just mom’s duty anymore. Email the list of items to a family member or friend and let them shop for you.

    iphone applications for your 3Gs

    iPhone applications

    Stay in-the-know!

    Twitterrific

    Twitterrific is the easy way to follow Twitter from your iPhone 3GS. At home, a party, or just on the road, update your personal twitter page wherever and whenever you want. You can check your Twitter feed or browse the latest trending topics. It even supports multiple accounts, and it has a free version.

    If you’re willing to pay a small amount for your iPhone twitter client, you might also want to look into Tweetdeck, Tweetie 2, or Hootsuite. All three of these also have an desktop/webapp version, and have their own special features. Hootsuite for instance provides tweet scheduling and Tweetie provides local scans for tweeple near you.

    Get your news when you want it!

    CNN Mobile

    Get the latest CNN news updates directly to your iPhone 3GS. With live streaming video of breaking news, weather information, alerts when stories have been updated, the best way to keep in-the-know is by walking with CNN mobile on your iPhone 3GS. You can even share the stories via email and save videos. Although the ads can prove to be a nuisance in this paid application, the great interface and important news updates on- the-go seem well worth it.

    Conduct business wherever you are!

    eBay Mobile

    If you’re an eBay member, you can search, bid, and check your activity on eBay wherever you are with eBay Mobile. Forget those days of worrying about your responses from potential buyers or the progress of auctions because you were away from the computer. Conduct your eBay business wherever you are. Search for anything and refine results by category, sort, auction type, price range, distance, or even country. With eBay Mobile, reading and writing messages directly to your eBay account is also a breeze.

    Celebrity and Social news!

    PEOPLE Celebrity News Tracker

    You’ll hear it on your iPhone first! With the PEOPLE Celebrity News Tracker app, getting the hottest celebrity gossip, news and updates is faster than ever. With the ability to browse profiles and photo scrapbooks of over two hundred stars, and receive breaking news when it happens, probably the best slogan for this PEOPLE.com app should be, “You know when we know!”

    Explore musical possibilities!

    Ocarina

    You’re probably thinking, “Isn’t that the wind instrument from the game Zelda: Ocarina of Time”? But that’s what precisely has helped make this application a beloved one. With Smule’s “Ocarina”, your iPhone 3GS transforms into your very own soothing Ocarina instrument. If you want to be like the hero Link, if you’re an Ocarina lover, or just a fan of a great musical app for the iPhone 3GS, it’s fun for any age. Sensitive to your breath, touch and movements, you blow air into your mic to create the music. Don’t for a second think that you’re the only one who’ll be enjoying this app. It hasn’t been in Apple’s Top 20 Downloaded Apps of All Time list for nothing. You can even keep in contact with the Ocarina fan community worldwide and join them in posting hundreds of fun, easy-to-read musical scores of popular songs.

    Find that song!

    Shazaam

    Do you know that feeling when you hear a song on the radio that you really like, and you just don’t know which song it is? Or you hear that one song again that you remember from your childhood, but you never really knew the performer or the title? Well, fear no more, because Shazaam is coming to the rescue! Just start up Shazaam, let it listen to the song, and wait for it to come back with the performer of the song, the title, the album, and even a link to iTunes where you can buy the song!

    Of course, this is only a very small, limited list of applications for the iPhone. Please, do share with us in the comments what your favourite and most used apps are.


    Related posts:

    1. 7 Helper Applications that Make Twitter Even More Fun Every day it seems microblogging becomes more and more a…
    2. Sync’in the iPhone with multiple Google Calendars Image by marcopako  via Flickr About a month…
    3. Recognizing the iPhone for webpages As said in my 2009 predictions, the iPhone, and other…


  • DataJack to Launch Unlimited Prepaid Mobile Broadband for $39

    screenshot 023 DataJack to Launch Unlimited Prepaid Mobile Broadband for $39 3G mobile broadband on the go is great, but the costly monthly fees and long term contracts have kept it from becoming adapted by the masses. This might soon change when DataJack launches at CES next month. The service offers 3G highspeed data for just $39.99 a month, and that is without any contract commitments. On top of that, the service offers truly Unlimited data – it doesn’t have the standard 5GB a month limit that other 3G data providers like Sprint, T-mobile, Verizon and AT&T maintain on their wireless broadband plans. DataJack also promises no early termination fees, no deposits, no credit check, and their USB modem costs just $99 at signup. The modem also conveniently has a micro-SD slot so that you can use it as as USB key as well.

    As if that isn’t enticing enough, if you stay connected to the service for 12 consecutive months, DataJack will offer subscribers one free month of unlimited 3G Internet access.

    It looks like DataJack is operating over a GSM standard since its web site says that it “Works seamlessly across DataJack’s 3G Broadband Network and EDGE networks” and operates on “850/1900/2100/AWS” with upload up to 5.76Mbps and downloads up to 7.2Mbps.

    Until now the amount of contract- free 3G broadband choices in the U.S. has been very slim.Virgin Mobile offers prepaid 3G data but it’s costly, their $60 offering provides users with only 1GB per month. DataJack’s plans not only undercuts other prepaid mobile broadband options, but it also undercuts the contract based ones from the big wireless providers. Plus, with an “unlimited” plan not being capped by any megabyte restrictions, it makes the service tempting enough to replace your home highspeed data connection altogether. SlingShot Prepaid Mobile Broadband is another 3G prepaid mobile broadband alternative, but it’s difficult to locate a store actually selling it altogether.

    Here is to hoping that DataJack launches with a good coverage area and is able to offer good speeds and great service, because if that proves true, I for one will be dumping my $60 a month Sprint data plan to move to them.


     DataJack to Launch Unlimited Prepaid Mobile Broadband for $39


  • Are Digital Strip Searches Coming Soon To Every Airport Near You? | 80beats

    tsa-release-images-400-webThe Christmas Day airplane bombing attempt has renewed the debate over full body scanners at airports. The Transportation Security Administration in recent years has tried out a series of “whole-body imagers” to look for threats that typical metal detectors can’t find. These systems are the only way that smuggled explosives, like the one officials say was brought on the Christmas flight, can be reliably found [Wired.com].

    Privacy advocates are calling the full body scanners a “digital strip search” (take a look at this TSA image of a full body scan and you’ll get the idea). But some security advocates say that either patting down every passenger or taking full body scans are the only options to ensure certain dangerous items are kept off airplanes.

    Right now there are 40 full body scanners in 19 different U.S. airports. Only 6 airports use them for primary screening, the rest are used for follow-up searches. These scanners use millimeter-wave sensors that emit radio frequencies. By measuring the differences in the radiated energy, the scanner produces detailed 3-D images that resembles photo negatives. TSA has also ordered 150 similar scanners, at about $170,000 each, that use backscatter X-ray technology, after the completion of a successful pilot project.

    TSA says privacy concerns are unwarranted since facial features (and other body parts?) are blurred out before the screening officer, who is in a separate room, sees the images. A senior U.S. air security source acknowledged the ongoing controversy over using the high-resolution body scanners that can show breast enhancements, body piercings and genitals. Full-body scanners currently in use in the U.S. have been set on a “politically correct” lower resolution that prevented screeners from seeing the outlines of genitals, the source said [New York Daily News]. Supposedly, the images will be permanently deleted immediately after screening.

    Last June, the House of Representative voted 310 to 118 to oppose the use of full body scanners as a primary means of screening passengers. This doesn’t mean the issue is dead however, as President Obama has ordered a system-wide review on all screening procedures.

    Related Content:
    80beats: Editing Goof Puts TSA Airport Screening Secrets on the Web
    80beats: Computer Glitch Delays Airline Flights Around the Country
    DISCOVER: A Wing and a Prayer: The U.S.’s Crumbling Air-Travel Infrastructure
    80beats: Researcher Discovers Effective Profiling; Says It’s More Trouble Than It’s Worth

    Image: TSA


  • Vide:Tweaks and Themes

    This video is just to show off the new tweaks that I found earlier today while browsing the web. The blue clouds tweaks I found on pocketnow, and is really cool how it changes every picture with a cloud to blue, get your self a copy, it works for all WM phones. I also talk about another theme that I found, the theme changes the look of Swype keyboard and gives it a HTC keyboard look while keeping its cool, get yours also. Enjoy

    Share/Bookmark

  • What to do with all those empty car dealerships? Why, build a yoga studio, of course!

    Filed under:

    One needn’t be an Autoblog regular to be aware of the fact that the car industry has taken quite a drubbing over the past few years. The slump in our nation’s economy has slaughtered sales, leading automakers to shutter thousands of dealerships nationwide. Chrysler Group LLC slashed 789 franchises in June of this year. General Motors has said it will cut 2,400 retail locations of its own by next fall.

    With empty dealerships littering the country and a depressed real estate market adding to the opportunity, the Associated Press notes that America’s once gleaming new car showrooms are increasingly being converted into food banks, restaurants, day care centers, private residences, and more. Typical automotive showrooms are built sturdy to house heavy vehicles and accommodate high foot traffic. They offer countless windows for plenty of natural light and are generally centrally-located within a commercial community for visibility reasons. In a nutshell, they are near-perfect locations for many entrepreneurs and businesses.

    In Oregon, a Catholic Community Services organization runs a food bank warehouse inside a former showroom. In St. Louis, an old dealership is now a classy wedding venue. In Los Angeles, at Golden Bridge Yoga, the aroma of incense has replaced that “new car smell” in a relic automotive showroom. The incessant noise of customers haggling over pricing is gone and the perimeter is no longer strung with posters of shiny late model sedans. The only drone heard today are that of percussive Eastern rhythms… while solemn prayer flags adorn the former showroom walls.

    Turning car sales points into new, non-automotive businesses is a trend that’s likely to accelerate well beyond the Naughties, so check out the link below to learn more about it, and be sure to drop a line in Comments if you’ve seen any particularly creative dealership repurposing in your neighborhood.

    [Source: Associated Press | Image: Spencer Platt/Getty]

    What to do with all those empty car dealerships? Why, build a yoga studio, of course! originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 17:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Once again, good design eludes iPhone gaming controller creators

    helix
    What’s so hard about this, guys? I mean, obviously you can’t make a controller that works with all the games out there, but if you make a good, cheap, basic one, plenty of developers will add a control option that accommodates it. Instead, we get garbage like the Game Grip and this plastic Batarang-looking thing.

    Look. You have a handle, some buttons… here, I’ll save you the trouble of hiring a designer:
    hereyougo
    How’s that look? Doable? My god, can it really have taken three years for something like this to come out?

    [via Engadget]

    Crunch Network: CrunchBase the free database of technology companies, people, and investors