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  • New Years Countdown Online 2010 Streaming

    Actually the “New Year’s Rockin Eve show will be a three part event. The first part starts at 10pm .Then the 2nd part will cover the countdown to the New Year at 11:30pm after the local news. The third part will move to Las Vegas where Black Eyed Peas band member and singer, Fergie will be hosting their edition, and ring in the New Year on the west coast. Enjoy the live New York, New Years 2010 coverage from Time Square,below.
    Hulu is hosting the live stream direct from Times Square from 10 p.m. EST to 12:15 a.m. EST. Hulu’s coverage will include views of Times Square and the crystal ball dropping plus ambient sounds from the “crossroads of the world.”

    And here’s a brief instruction from Hulu, in case you’re watching the ball drop online from their site:

    When the live feed begins Thursday night, you’ll be able to access the festivities from Hulu’s home page (we’ll provide a direct link) or from our Spotlight; section (just click on the “explore” button beneath the section related to Times Square 2010 to launch a pop-out window).

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  • Engadget’s top posts, 2009

    Wow. Can you believe it? We made it all the way through 2009! We truly had some of the most amazing and exciting coverage ever on Engadget this past 12 months — and we figured it’s time to take a look back at the heaviest hitters from the last 365. This was a big year for us, we got a whole new look, an iPhone app (with more on the way), hired some new staff, got ourselves a show, went on late night TV, and managed to snap up some killer scoops and keep the news rolling (better than ever before, actually — this was by far our heaviest year for traffic). So let’s take a moment to reflect on what caused all the fuss in 2009, and yes, we know this list is Apple heavy. We blame you guys.

    Top 20 most trafficked posts of 2009 (in order)

    1. Phil Schiller keynote live from WWDC 2009
    2. Live from Apple’s ‘It’s only rock and roll’ event
    3. Live from Apple’s iPhone OS 3.0 preview event
    4. Live from the Macworld 2009 keynote
    5. iPhone 3GS review
    6. Motorola Droid review
    7. Palm Pre: everything you ever wanted to know
    8. Exclusive: first Google Phone / Nexus One photos, Android 2.1 on-board
    9. HTC Hero review
    10. Windows 7 review
    11. Palm Pre review
    12. Microsoft sucks at Photoshop
    13. Microsoft announces availability of Windows 7 Beta and Windows Live
    14. Steve Jobs is taking a leave of absence from Apple due to health reasons
    15. Video: Sony’s PSP Go leaks out before E3, is obviously a go
    16. Motorola Droid first hands-on
    17. Windows 7 Beta goes public
    18. Modern Warfare 2’s Prestige Edition includes fully functioning night vision goggles
    19. Snow Leopard review
    20. Live from Palm’s CES press conference

    And a few other statistics for 2009 (all related to Engadget Classic):

    $38,204.57 – Retail value of stuff we gave away to readers
    12,681 – total number of posts for 2009
    1,821 – Number of galleries on Engadget for 2009
    454 – Number of hands-on posts
    99 – Number of Engadget reviews
    66 – number of podcasts
    4 – number of Engadget shows

    Engadget’s top posts, 2009 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Dec 2009 23:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • S.o.s.

    For your Forum:

    Hello: And A Happy New Year To All !!!

    My wife has Type 2 Diabetes and has lost over half of her muscle mass, she also has Diabetic Nerve Pain Focal Neuropathy.

    Will she be able to get her muscle mass back ?

    And will her nerves heal ?

    Any info will be appreciated !

    Thanks Stiney !

  • Eco Tech: Siemens to develop six minute charging tech for electric vehicles

    edison project

    Eco Factor: High voltage charger for electric cars.

    Siemens Energy Sector in Denmark is working on the EDISON project that involves the development of new charging technology that will enable EV owners to recharge their green rides in as little as six minutes. The system works by raising charging power to as much as 300KW to replicate the familiar filling up at a gas station in about six minutes.

    (more…)

  • Year 2010 $ Wlcome Year 2010

    This New Year 2010, Ryan Seacrest will do the Times Square New Year countdown for 2010 and Times Square’s New Year theme for 2010 is “Let there be courage”.
    2010th year of the Anno Domini or Common Era epoch, the 10th year of the 3rd millennium and of the 21st century, and the 1st of the 2010s decade.
    Since there is a snow in Times Square New York today, I wonder if a lot of Americans will go to Times Square to celebrate New Year 2010 or they will juststay in their homes and watch the Times SquareNew Years Eve 2010 celebration in their Tvs.

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  • Australia’s coal addiction set in train 30 years ago

    The ABC has a report on how the energy crisis of the 1970’s set in train Australia’s modern day coal dependency – Australia’s coal addiction set in train 30 years ago.

    As the world battles to secure a low-carbon future, secret cabinet documents from 1979 show that before global warming was on the radar, Canberra acted to lock in Australia’s coal-based energy future.

    It was the year of the second oil shock, when Iranian oil supplies slumped and crude prices skyrocketed on the back of Iran’s Islamic revolution and nations scrambled for policies to reduce their dependence on foreign oil.

    Global politics were volatile in 1979 and included the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan on Christmas Eve of that year, which was also seen in significant part through the lens of energy security.

    US president Jimmy Carter made his view clear in a speech in January the following year. “Let our position be absolutely clear. An attempt by any outside force to gain control of the Persian Gulf region will be regarded as an assault on the vital interests of the United States of America, and such an assault will be repelled by any means necessary, including military force,” he said to deafening and repeated applause.

    But the fallout from Iran’s political upheaval was the more direct threat to energy security.

    In January 1979, the Shah of Iran had fled his country, followed in February by the tumultuous return from exile of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who embarked on the Islamic revolution.

    The chaos of the transition saw Iran’s oil industry grind to a virtual halt, and even when supplies resumed, they were at much lower levels to which the world was accustomed. Global oil prices soared with the supply constraint. OPEC countries reaped the financial windfall and in turn restricted output, further cashing in.

    In the West, there was panic and stockpiling. Crude prices rose by about 250 per cent. The talk was of reducing reliance on foreign oil.

    For the Fraser government in Australia, that set in train policy considerations which in some areas echo responses to the imperative of climate change. But other considerations stand in contrast to energy-policy thinking in the current context, according to 1979 cabinet documents released by the National Archives of Australia.

    “In June, cabinet approved a range of measures to reduce dependence on imported oil,” Dr Jim Stokes, historical consultant to the National Archives of Australia, told Radio Australia.

    “These included a reduction in fuel octane ratings, suspension of tougher standards on lead additives and vehicle emissions and encouragement of the use of LPG.”


  • Tomato Ginger Sauce( Condiments – Sauce )

    Daily Random Recipe

    INGREDIENTS:

      • 1/4 cup oil
      • 1/2 onion, cut in thin slices
      • 1/4 cup whole wheat flour
      • 2 cups vegetable or soybean stock
      • 2 T tomato paste
      • 1/2 t finely minced fresh ginger root
      • Soy sauce to taste

    METHOD:
    Saute onions in oil until soft. Stir in flour and cook several minutes. Slowly add the stock and tomato paste, stirring all the time. Add ginger. Bring to a boil, then simmer gently for about 15 minutes. Add soy sauce and serve.

    NOTES:
    Makes about 2 1/2 cups.

    Vegetables and grain dishes alike take on a distinctly Oriental air when served with this flavourful sauce.

    “Found these recipes in an old book of my mum’s from the 70’s (her vegetarian phase as she calls it…) – ‘Laurel’s Kitchen – A Handbook for Vegetarian Cookery and Nutrition’. Lots of good, simple, interesting food!”

  • Travis Pastrana Jump 2009 New Year Recorded Jump

    The “Red Bull: New Year. No Limits” will be televised on ESPN and ESPNHD on Dec. 31 at 11 PM EST. Tune in to see if the Travis Pastrana New Years Eve 2009 stunt lives up to all the hype!
    “Given the venue, the atmosphere, the hype, and the steps we’ve taken to create a unique environment, this party will be truly one of a kind,” he said. “We are very excited for Thursday evening.”

    Pastrana is a 26-year-old former motocross and supercross star, who has a passion for racing. He crashed one of the cars during initial tests but is still optimistic he can pull off the daredevil feat. Pastrana noted that they put a whole lot of Imprezas through testing and ultimately modified the car he’ll be using with $250,000 worth of new upgrades. Hopefully that pays off and helps Mr. Pastrana make his jump record target of 171 feet.

    Pastrana will start at the Pine Street Pier in Long Beach, California and take off on a ramp, where he will go about 40 or 50 feet up above water, then land on a floating barge below. There will be rescuer crews in the water below should Pastrana fall short in his New Year’s even jump attempt.

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  • How to Spot Hair Loss Baldness Treatment Scams

    One of the great things about living in this decade is that men and women no longer need to live with hair loss as a fact of life. These days you can always look for an effective hair loss baldness treatment product. You should remember though that just with any other product on earth, hair loss treatments can also be scams. Here are some good tips to help prevent getting scammed.

    Check Website Data

    These hair loss baldness treatment products are also found online. Before you blow your money on a product, check its website first. A hair loss baldness treatment product website should have a clear and comprehensive account of the causes of hair loss and how its product ingredients can address these causes. Furthermore, the site data should appeal to your logic and sense of reason. Do the pieces of information make sense? Is the solution presented in an organized, complete and sensible manner?

    Perform Your Own Research

    Don’t just take a manufacturer’s word for it. Before you buy a hair loss baldness treatment product, cross check what you have gathered from a website. Perform your own research. Look for reputable and reliable online scientific sites and journals. This is one way to see if a product site truly has the right information and if their solution has a reasonable probability of working.

    You should also visit several product sites. This will give you an opportunity to compare different solutions with each other and settle on the one that you feel would be perfect for you. This is also a chance for you to compare product prices.

    Read Reviews

    You can also determine the effectiveness and general popularity of a hair loss baldness treatment product by reading product reviews and ratings. These are useful tools created by real consumers and product users. This is one way for you to be able to gather first hand information on what people have experienced with a product.

    Be careful though as some hair loss baldness treatment product reviews are ac actually manufacturer generated. They may seem like unbiased reviews but are actually really in favor of a product. Real reviews would contain both the pros and cons of a hair loss baldness treatment product. You could also join interactive forums sites where a lot of users are more spontaneous.

    Look for Contact Information

    When you enter a hair loss baldness treatment product site, one of the first things that you should look for is the contact information. Scam sites have bogus or fake contact numbers and addresses. If there is a toll free number, try calling the number and asking the person on the other line real questions about hair loss and about the product.

    Check Policies

    Of course, you may be tempted to buy a product with money-back guarantee. What some consumers do not realize is that this may just be a marketing strategy. In the end, it may not be so easy to get your money back. There may be some hidden conditions that you may not have been aware of. Meticulously check, read and analyze their return policies.

    Searching for the hair loss baldness treatment that works for you? Buy the herbal hair loss remedy that works for your hair type.

  • Watch Travis Pastrana New Years Eve Jump Live 2009

    The “Red Bull: New Year. No Limits” will be televised on ESPN and ESPNHD on Dec. 31 at 11 PM EST. Tune in to see if the Travis Pastrana New Years Eve 2009 stunt lives up to all the hype!
    Pastrana is a 26-year-old former motocross and supercross star, who has a passion for racing. He crashed one of the cars during initial tests but is still optimistic he can pull off the daredevil feat. Pastrana noted that they put a whole lot of Imprezas through testing and ultimately modified the car he’ll be using with $250,000 worth of new upgrades. Hopefully that pays off and helps Mr. Pastrana make his jump record target of 171 feet.
    Pastrana will start at the Pine Street Pier in Long Beach, California and take off on a ramp, where he will go about 40 or 50 feet up above water, then land on a floating barge below. There will be rescuer crews in the water below should Pastrana fall short in his New Year’s even jump attempt.

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  • Ball Drop Live Streaming 2010

    We can also watch the ball drop in Times Square with My Life on the D-List star Kathy Griffin, who will cohost CNN’s New Year’s Eve Live With Anderson Cooper and Kathy Griffin at 11 pm. (Or watch the live stream online at CNN.com).
    The Star Press will provide live-streaming video of tonight’s downtown festivities, which will include a ceremonial ball-drop, courtesy of the Muncie/Delaware Robotics Team. The team designed and built the ball and will drop it from a crane at midnight.
    The ball drop will be the centerpiece of First Friday at Midnight, an event co-sponsored by NewTown and the Cherry Blossom Festival. Many of the typical draws of First Friday will be taking place, in addition to a live music street party, Hattaway said. The event is free to the general public.
    American Idol’s Ryan Seacrest will host Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve live from Times Square. Ryan isn’t the only reality personality who will help to ring in the New Year. Former American Idol contestant Chris Daughtry will be performing four of his hit songs before the ball drops.

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  • Times Square Live Streaming 2010

    You can tune in here for the live stream coverage of Times Square that will be airing in the New Year’s Eve Countdown and celebration. Australia did a great job on there Fireworks display and let’s see if the Americans will pull this one through in a very beautiful way.
    We can also watch the ball drop in Times Square with My Life on the D-List star Kathy Griffin, who will cohost CNN’s New Year’s Eve Live With Anderson Cooper and Kathy Griffin at 11 pm. (Or watch the live stream online at CNN.com).
    New Year’s Eve Celebration in the US in New York Times Square. The main highlights will be the grand ball drop , this Great Ball in Times Square is said to be one of the most cheapest made in their history because they didn’t use any LEDs.
    “It started there [at the AMAS], and then, no kidding, Marc [Anthony] and Jennifer came over to my house and literally Walked through what it would be like inTimes Square , and now we’ve got a stage built [in that spot in my house]. ” “That’s exactly what happened. It’s a small house!” Seacrest joked.

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  • Happy New Year from BBGeeks

    Thanks to everyone who read and supported us in 2009. Everyone will tell you that they have big plans for 2010, so we’ll spare you the platitude. But we will promise more useful BlackBerry information this year, and the year after, and the year after that. Happy New Year everyone.

    This post originated at BBGeeks.com – home to all things Blackberry! Also a great source of info about AT&T BlackBerry.

    Happy New Year from BBGeeks

    This post originated at BBGeeks.com – home to all things Blackberry! Also a great source of info about AT&T BlackBerry.

    Happy New Year from BBGeeks


  • Higher capacity Blu-ray discs coming soon

    CaptureYou might be able to squeeze a little more storage into those Blu-ray discs soon. Sony and Panasonic have been working on increasing the maximum capacity per-layer from 25 to 33.4GB, and the new version might be ready for market in the near future.

    Hopefully this doesn’t mean you’ll have to buy another drive, and there’s one hell of a lot of science content involved (regarding something known as an i-MLSE), but the gist is that there is new technology coming.


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  • OmniTread: a terrifying, vibrating, go-anywhere snakebot

    It’s not quite as endearing as the (also terrifying) BigDog, but the OmniTread robot does seem pretty useful. That is, if you don’t need to go fast. The bot is a specialist in navigating rubble and small spaces, and could help locate people trapped under collapsed buildings. There is a risk of them running in terror, but if they’re pinned it shouldn’t be a problem.

    It’s designed by roboticists at the University of Michigan, and right now there aren’t any production plans. But if it were to prove itself in a quake or other disaster, they might find themselves with a government contract right quick.

    [via Coolest Gadgets and TechEBlog]


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  • Shine On, You Crazy Gadgets [Gadgets]

    I spent this decade hunting for the perfect gadget. I never thought I would end up with tech as good as this. But it’s not the tech that interests me the most anymore.

    In 2000, I was just another kid out of college in Boston escaping to the Golden State’s climate and opportunity. The perfect job didn’t present itself for six long months; four months later, it burst with the bubble.

    It’s not important what the job was. I was fired not just because the company was eating shit but also because I spent extraordinary amounts of company time online, obsessively reading about games and gadgets. That was fate, it seems.

    My toys were nothing fancy; a leftover Dell Inspiron laptop with a 266 MHz processor, maybe 256MB of RAM, and no 3D graphics; a Motorola Startac variant on T-Mobile (300 minutes, no data plan—can you imagine!—or even text messages).

    I don’t think I even had a portable media player, playing Napster MP3s only at home on Winamp. For video games I had a first generation PlayStation, games rented from Kosmo and copied with a CD burner, played on an Aiwa 24-inch TV that was built around a Sony Trinitron CRT tube. At the time, these were important brands.

    Since then the companies that made the gadgets I loved started looking old-fashioned, following that simple-minded formula of chasing more MHz, more pixels.

    Then: iPod.

    And I ignored it. It was pretty but I couldn’t afford one. It almost seemed stupid, since lots of other MP3 players advertised more features for less cash. I didn’t own a Mac, nor did I plan to. It was white—and who wanted a white gadget? Silver was my kind of cool. Fake plastic silver, even. Anything with a metallic flake in its finish. I didn’t get it, conceptually or literally.

    Remember Creative? They made better stuff than Apple for less money, and I wanted one of their players. Today, I don’t know if Creative even makes MP3 players. I use iTunes and Amazon.com for music buying. I bet you do, too. It took more than a few failed experiments, but a lot of us are actually buying music again.

    Digital changed cameras, too.

    My first digital camera was a Kodak, because Kodak was the brand for imaging even through the late ’90s, before the Canon and Nikon train barreled past Rochester, leaving Kodak a ghost town. Kodak was invested in the past.

    This was the decade I got into PC gaming hardware—then got out. I wasn’t even that into the games, but loved slapping cheap components into tall steel Taiwanese cases, looping wires through sharp-edged bays for fans, lights, optical and hard drives.

    A year into this habit, I realized I was in an pointless upgrade loop. I’d get a few more frames per second out of a new video card, but the games weren’t more fun at higher frames-rates or resolutions, especially when everyone got stuck playing Counterstrike for two years straight. (I was still playing consoles, but my fervor was waning; I waited in line for a PS2 and only to collapse onto my bed with the box, too tired to open it.)

    One sweltering day my PC suffered a fatal crash and lost a lot of data. That was that. I gave in to Mactardedness—and not because I loved Apple, but because I hated inconvenience. Maybe using a Mac would provoke less cursing. I even got an iPod. Slowly, my brain released its desire to tinker, and I used my rebuilt PC less and less.

    I noticed Friendster. Joined. It got slow.

    Joined MySpace. It got filled with junk.

    Joined that Facebook thing because Nick Denton made me. Man is it ugly. I didn’t log back in for a few years.

    Signed up for Twitter. No one I know in real life uses this thing. Didn’t sign in for a few years. I didn’t get the social web, at first. Google—not other people—was my door to the internet.

    Got a PS3. Turned it on for Metal Gear. Squinted at menus. It asked me to log in for its store, but there was nothing in there. Beat Metal Gear twice, turned it off. Dust looks like a matte finish on a PS3.

    Got an Xbox 360. Added my friends. Liked knowing where my friends were and what they were doing. Liked killing my friends on Xbox, even though PS3 has faster, quieter, nicer hardware. I guess I am not as anti-social as I thought—as long as being social involves assassination. (Twitter would be better if you could use it to murder your friends.)

    Bought HD-DVD. Blu-ray won the battle the last physical media format ever. Now I just subscribe to 15 different movie services. (Wait, is that better?)

    Ten years ago, Dell was shaking things up because it sold through the internet for cheap. Now they’re shrinking. You can’t tell the difference between an Inspiron or Latitude or XPS with a 15-inch screen. People who shop for computers now often look to Apple simply because it’s easier to pick a size—small, medium, or large—and then pick the expensive or the cheaper version. (Do you want fries with that?) Dell’s branding and model line up is an American heartland clusterfuck.

    Sony stopped cooking up so many proprietary—often imaginary—formats, but only because they’d lost. The company that made the Walkman now makes iPod docks. Sony’s hardware continues to be fantastic, but does it matter? They’re the only gadget company with a music label and movie studio. Can anyone name the Sony iTunes alternative? Does anyone talk to their friends about their love for the TX-1234xZR? Or its cousin without Bluetooth, the TX-1234xZRnbt? Or the TX-1234xZRnbt2xz with an extra 2X zoom? Sony’s branding and model line up is a Japanese megacorp clusterfuck.

    For an all-too-brief moment, T-mobile was hip because they were cheap, had a phone called the Hiptop, and Catherine Zeta Jones was hotter than Ma Bell. You could get your problems taken care of in one call. Also: pink logo. Then we all got phones capable of doing real things that needed real pipes. AT&T was convinced by Apple to do some cheap flat rate thing on that iPhone. Sorry TMO.

    Apple came back. It was Steve, a man who lost the first round 20 years ago and came back to fight the mobile war with all the old lessons from the PC war in pocket. Design, manufacturing, sourcing of components, marketing and maybe most importantly, software. He had almost everything under control. They went Intel, declaring that hardware wasn’t the thing that defined a better computer.

    And, this little thing called iPhone. We had an email debate at Gizmodo about calling this decade the “iDecade”. Naming a decade after a gadget, no matter how great it is, makes me want to vomit. So does calling the iPhone the gadget of the year. It just seems too easy, too cliche.

    But it was the one. It has been the culmination of decades of development across countless industries, all coming together into a single little slab of near-perfection. After a decade filled with so many aborted, ill-conceived clones and ideas tuned more for profit than progress, the iPhone was a rare gem. Just because it’s obvious doesn’t make it less true.

    For years, the received wisdom was that specialized devices would always continue to progress at a rate that made all-in-one devices poor solutions.

    Here are the things replaced by my iPhone: Mapping and GPS; point-and-shoot camera; Flip camcorder; Game Boy; calculator (okay, I didn’t carry this around ever); calendar; organizer; any book-of-the-moment; phone; Playboy; newspaper; notebook; voice recorder; iPod; video player (can you believe this was a whole gadget category just three years ago?); weatherman; TV; wrist watch; radio; alarm clock; compass; pedometer; musical instrument; Bible, medical journals, dictionary, any reference book. Sometimes, even my laptop. Put together enough “good enough” solutions, it turns out, and they begin to outweigh even the specialized devices.

    Thank goodness it’s looking like it’s not going to just be the iPhone. (Although credit where it’s due; Apple pushed the whole industry forward by five years, easily, if judged by the rate the rest of the industry was moving.) Whether Android, Palm, maybe even Windows Mobile if Microsoft really buckles down, little portable internet computers with an ever-expanding array of senses we have (save taste/smell, but just wait) and little applications that make them more and more useful, are finally pushing gadgetry forward in ways we never fully expected.

    None of this happened randomly. Those who ended up on top had luck and timing and resources. But why they came out ahead was predicated by several things, naturally highlighted in hindsight.

    The four rings of gadgetdom in the 2000s were design, the social internet, powerful but inexpensive hardware, and a real software ecosystem.

    Only five companies have a shot at nailing the home, mobile and work hat trick, from software and hardware to internet: Apple, Microsoft, Google, Sony and Samsung. They’re all failing in some way. Apple’s cloud services are a joke. Sony can still make great hardware but have no idea how people want to use it. Samsung can’t write code. With Android, Google can’t figure out if they want to be Microsoft or Apple. Counterintuitive as it may seem, I think Microsoft has a real shot at winning the next decade, if they listen to their entertainment group who have figured out how to do a platform right.

    Little companies don’t really have a shot at this level of unified, do-all gadget greatness. The age of the garage hardware start-up belongs to the web generation, not the next generation of gadget makers. Smartphones have become analogous to PCs of the ’90s. There’s little room for a new PC platform to come online, but a vast potential space for start-ups to use the big platforms as a springboard with new accessories and software.

    Gizmodo has undergone fundamental changes in the last few years. It’s really hard to get excited about copy cat hardware made from the same underlying chips and parts, often in the same factory. Any blog that covers press release after press release indiscriminately is doing readers a serious disservice instead of focusing on what makes a real difference to gadgetry: content, social context and applications. What gets us excited are evolving operating systems that pump the hardware full of new life and devices that continuously inhale new movies, music, and messages from friends through the internet.

    Right now, I’m in Japan. It’s already 2010. When I look ahead at this year, it’s easy to see why the anticipation for tablets is boiling over, even though the idea of tablets, like smartphones five years ago, is perhaps old hat. Now that we’ve seen what happens when companies really nail a unified smartphone, we’re projecting our hopes on the generation of tablets to come.

    The best tech, as it approaches a zenith of purpose and polish, becomes invisible. It gets out of the way of the user, becomes just a portal to…stuff. One does not give much thought to a faucet as long as it provides water. Finally, at the end of this decade, we’ve had a taste of what it’s like when network capability, slick software, sensors and—most importantly—content and communication come together in such tiny, shrinking hardware.

    It’s not shiny things that captivate me anymore; it’s what they shine.







  • Handheld PS3 device for fanbois to cuddle at night

    DSC_0068So here’s a somewhat interesting gadget. Instead of converting a PS3 into a hand-held device, a crafty modder named techknott built a custom transmitter. The transmitter allows a player to not only control their PS3 remotely, but also to view the output on a small video screen.

    Essentially, you’re combining a controller with a wireless video device, and a small LCD screen. Sounds simple right? Well, it’s might be simple, but looking at the fabrication quality in the video, it’s obviously something that required quite a bit of time and effort.

    [via GEARFUSE]


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  • Time to Hibernate: Get 100 classic action films for $45

    78149 If you live in a northern climate, tomorrow marks the first real day of hunkering down for the cold, cold winter with nothing to look forward to until spring. We used to have the new season of Deadwood starting up in February, but HBO killed it.

    Now there’s nothing. If you’re down with old-school movies, though, Hammacher’s selling 100 – count ‘em – 100 action films spanning 24 double-sided DVDs for $45.

    These are movies from the 1920s through the 1990s, when men were men and the women were too. There’s also a collection of 100 Westerns available for $45 as well.

    The 100 Classic Action Films [Hammacher Schlemmer]


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  • Acer’s Aspire One officially gets a little spec bump

    aacer1
    Hold on to your hats, folks! It’s a doozy. Wait… I’m being told it’s actually a minor, but significant, change to an Acer Netbook, and one we already heard about. Sorry.

    Well, as long as you’re here: it seems that the popular Acer Aspire One, a perfectly decent netbook if I ever saw one, is going to be sporting the new Atom N450 processor. This is the newest Atom, and it lowers wattage while integrating graphics. So you can expect slightly better battery life and better performance, although the clock speed is still hanging out at the same old 1.66GHz.

    Good for Acer, but hold on to your wallets. We expect pretty much every netbook maker have similar specs after the next week or so. That’s not so long to wait, is it? Just chill a bit, watch our CES coverage, and then decide which is the best afterwards. I’m betting Doug is just itching to get hands-on with all these things. He’s like that.

    Here are the full specs from the press release. Should go for $300 MSRP, less of course on the strizzle.

    Acer Aspire One AO532h
    • Intel® Atom(TM) Processor N450 (1.66GHz, 512KB L2 cache, 667MHz FSB)
    • 10.1″ WSVGA Acer CrystalBrite(TM) LED-backlit Display
    • Mobile Intel® NM10 Express Chipset
    • Integrated Intel® Graphics Media Accelerator 3150
    • 1024MB DDR2 667MHz Memory
    • 160GB(2) 5400RPM SATA Hard Drive
    • Multi-in-1 Digital Media Card Reader
    • Acer InviLink(TM) Nplify(TM) 802.11b/g/Draft-N Wi-Fi CERTIFIED®
    • 10/100 Fast Ethernet LAN (RJ-45)
    • Built-in Webcam
    • Two Built-in Stereo Speakers
    • Multi-Gesture Touchpad
    • 3 – USB 2.0 Ports
    • 6-cell Li-ion Battery (4400 mAh)
    • 2.76 lbs. | 1.25 kg
    • 10.17” (W) x7.28” (D) x .99” (H)
    • Windows® 7 Starter
    • Three stylish colors: Onyx Blue, Garnet Red and Silver Matrix.
    • MSRP: $299.99


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  • Unassuming cap sports hidden camcorder

    SpyCamCap_08_640x

    Pardon me, miss? I’d just like to tell you that I think your hat is fly. Dope, even. Too bad you’ll never remember my face. Memorize it now and then lose me forever. Unless, of course, you’ve somehow got a camcorder hidden in that thing! That’s unlikely, as your hat is far too stylish to be a technology product.

    The joke’s on me, because this hat DOES have a camcorder hidden inside it. The future! All for $55 from Brando. There’s 4GB of storage, 640×480 resolution recording at 27 (???) frames per second, and a keychain remote control.

    You use the remote to start and stop recording, at which point the hat vibrates to let you know it’s working. Yes, it vibrates. Again, this is the future.

    Spy Camera Camcorder Cap with Vibration and Remote Control [Brando]


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