Saturday, July 23, 2011

Porsche's Compass Watch Makes Me Wish I Needed a Compass More Often [Desired]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5824044/porsches-compass-watch-makes-me-wish-i-needed-a-compass-more-often

Porsche's Compass Watch Makes Me Wish I Needed a Compass More OftenThe compass-in-a-watch concept isn't exactly a breakthrough in functionality, but my goodness is Porsche Design's P'6520 compass watch pretty. Its black titanium case splits in two, with the Swiss movement timepiece on the top half and a removable liquid compass on the bottom.

The compass is viewed through mirrors on the compass face and the bottom of the watch half, and it works in both hemispheres. It's also waterproof to 50 feet. No word on the pricing just yet, but expect it to cost about what you paid for your car. [Porsche via uncrate]

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Pix-Star FotoConnect HD is a 10-inch digiframe ripe for regifting

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/23/pix-star-fotoconnect-hd-is-a-10-inch-digiframe-ripe-for-regiftin/

PixStar FotoConnect HD
Are you ready to meet your next regift? This is the Pix-Star FotoConnect HD, a 10.4-inch, 800 x 600 digital photo frame with a WiFi radio inside. This little display can pull in pics from Picasa,
Facebook, Smugmug, Shutterfly, Flickr, and MobileMe amongst others, and show off images sent straight to a special e-mail address. It may seem like every other digiframe, but it does have one unique feature -- support for UPnP and DLNA. That means any pictures stored on your home network can easily be beamed to it as well. If you want to be the original gifter, instead of the regifter, you can pick one up now for $189 at Pix-Star.com and Amazon. You'll find the full PR and an additional pic after the break.

Continue reading Pix-Star FotoConnect HD is a 10-inch digiframe ripe for regifting

Pix-Star FotoConnect HD is a 10-inch digiframe ripe for regifting originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 23 Jul 2011 09:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Vizio Tablet tiptoes into retail, starting at Costco

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/22/vizio-tablet-tiptoes-into-retail-starting-at-costco/

We know it's been a long wait since CES, but after getting pawed at by both Blake Griffin and yours truly, the Vizio Tablet is starting to show up in stores right about on schedule. Frequent Engadget commenter DaHarder took a step away from the Disqus box and snagged this tablet at a local Costco store for $329 ($20 off the regular price), an achievement also unlocked by the folks at Mobileslate. According to their reports you may have to ask around to find out if the VTAB1008 is actually in stock but it may be lurking along with its $40 Accessories Kit, while it's already showing in stock on the Vizio online store. Impressions so far suggest a "budget" tablet experience above that of the flood of craptablets with decent hardware and battery life, but a software experience behind the top of the line slates due to the custom UI, small internal storage and RAM and slower single core Marvell CPU. Our review is yet to come, but if there's around three bills burning a hole in your pocket and you've just got to have an Android tablet with integrated IR blaster, we're not seeing too many other options available.

[Thanks, DaHarder]

Vizio Tablet tiptoes into retail, starting at Costco originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jul 2011 07:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lenovo's 7-inch IdeaPad caught by Mr. Blurrycam?

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/22/lenovos-7-inch-ideapad-caught-by-mr-blurrycam/

We spied a mystery FCC listing just the other day, filed under a no-name company but bearing some unmistakable Lenovo markings. Now we have another unidentified device bearing the same branding and, according to our friendly neighborhood tipster, this is the company's 7-inch IdeaPad, which might be (internally) dubbed the A1-07. It's said to be powered by a TI OMAP3621 processor (which also drives the Nook Color), features a 7-inch 1024 x 600 touchscreen, a Broadcom GPS unit, 3G wireless with a SIM slot, and room for a microSD card as well. A 3,700mAh battery supposedly keeps things juiced, both front- and rear-facing cameras are on offer, and it's all wrapped in a glossy plastic styling that makes it look a little like a TouchPad with some bare metal highlights. It also features three buttons up front that we're hoping don't mean it's been relegated to Android 2.x. Now, the image above (and the second one, below) have obviously been crudely modified to hide something, and we can't be sure of what we're looking at here, but it's interesting enough for us to pass these along. Have a gander and let us know what you think in comments.

[Thanks, Anonymous]

Continue reading Lenovo's 7-inch IdeaPad caught by Mr. Blurrycam?

Lenovo's 7-inch IdeaPad caught by Mr. Blurrycam? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jul 2011 10:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG Thrill 4G up for pre-order today at Radio Shack, ahead of August 7th launch?

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/22/lg-thrill-4g-up-for-pre-order-today-at-radio-shack-ahead-of-aug/

The LG Thrill 4G was announced at CTIA four months ago , but wasn't given its rightful time in the sun due to a much larger elephant in the room. Now the phone's launch is quickly approaching, however, and the AT&T-branded Optimus 3D is ready to get some glory. We were sent not one, but two separate emails this morning from Radio Shack insiders with a few details about the retail chain's rollout of the device. As it turns out, visitors to The Shack can be offered the opportunity to reserve a Thrill -- supposedly gearing up for an August 7th launch -- starting today with the purchase of a $50 gift card. According to the screenshots sent to us, the Thrill can be all yours for $80 with a two-year contract ($550 if you exhibit a fear of commitment). We're hesitant to declare August 7th the official launch date, since history has shown that resellers don't always get handsets at the same time as corporate outlets do. If you find any success reserving one today, however, we'll be thrilled elated to hear about it.

[Thanks, Anonymous]

Continue reading LG Thrill 4G up for pre-order today at Radio Shack, ahead of August 7th launch?

LG Thrill 4G up for pre-order today at Radio Shack, ahead of August 7th launch? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jul 2011 16:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Charlie Miller finds MacBook battery security hole, plans to fill with Caulkgun

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/22/charlie-miller-finds-macbook-battery-security-hole-plans-to-fil/

Those batteries have probably met a worse fate than the white MacBook line they came from. According to Forbes, Charlie Miller's managed to render seven of them useless after gaining total access to their micro-controllers' firmware via a security hole. Evidently, the Li-on packs for the line of lappies -- including Airs and Pros -- are accessible with two passwords he dug up from an '09 software update. Chuck mentions that someone could "use them to do something really bad," including faulting charge-levels and thermal read-outs to possibly even making them explode. He also thinks hard-to-spot malware could be installed directly within the battery, repeatedly infecting a computer unless removed. Come August, he'll reportedly be detailing the vulnerability at the Black Hat security conference along with a fix he's dubbed Caulkgun, which only has the mild side-effect of locking-out updates by Apple. Worth being safe these days, though. Right? Full story in the links below.

Charlie Miller finds MacBook battery security hole, plans to fill with Caulkgun originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jul 2011 23:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Electronista  |  sourceForbes  | Email this | Comments

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LG promises 55-inch OLED TV in 2012, just in time for the next b'ak'tun

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/23/lg-promises-55-inch-oled-tv-in-2012-just-in-time-the-next-bak/

LG OLEDs
LG is apparently tired of this tiny OLED stuff. 15-inch TVs and 4-inch cellphones? What is this, 2009? The company has decided it's time to super-size the organically-powered panels and plans to introduce a 55-inch HDTV in mid 2012. We've got faith it can deliver too -- last summer the Korean manufacturer was showing off a 31-inch model (above) and it sounds like it's shifting focus completely towards larger sizes. CEO Kwon Young-soo has said that IPS technology is much better suited for the mobile space. Of course, LG has promised impressively-sized panels before and, even if such a set does make it to market, chances are you'll have to take out a second mortgage to afford one.

LG promises 55-inch OLED TV in 2012, just in time for the next b'ak'tun originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 23 Jul 2011 05:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Slash Gear  |  sourceWhat Hi-Fi  | Email this | Comments

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Friday, July 22, 2011

Droid Bionic's secrecy betrayed on Amazon, by simple dock listings

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/22/droid-bionics-secrecy-betrayed-on-amazon-by-simple-dock-listin/

We had our hands on a raw version of the Droid Bionic way back at CES, but two listings on Amazon for desktop and car docking stations, uncovered by Android Central forum posters, may give the clearest look at the phone so far. As you can see in the shot above of the desktop dock Motorola's slab appears to have a chrome ring running around the outside, while the dock itself has a 3.5mm audio out, HDMI output and USB ports. There's no price or release date listed for either accessory but if you've been lusting over the beast and its rumored specs we're figuring some quiet time with these shots is just what the doctor ordered -- check after the break for a shot of the car dock and the back of the desktop docking station.

Continue reading Droid Bionic's secrecy betrayed on Amazon, by simple dock listings

Droid Bionic's secrecy betrayed on Amazon, by simple dock listings originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jul 2011 04:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Android Central  ! ;|  sourceAndroid Central forums, Amazon - Car Dock, Amazon - desktop  | Email this | Comments

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Wolfram launches open CDF format, adds visual pizzazz to charts and graphs

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/22/wolfram-launches-open-cdf-format-adds-visual-pizzazz-to-charts/

Amazon's Kindle DX and RIM's BlackBerry PlayBook were supposed to be the business world's answer to an on-the-go office. Turns out, PDFs viewed in e-ink or on a tethered slate don't offer much in the way of interactive app experiences -- they're still just documents, no matter the tablet they're wearing. Well, Wolfram Group's got an open format contender to Adobe's throne and it's hoping you'll adopt it. Introduced today, the Computable Document Format "puts easy-to-author interactivity at its core," breathing animated life into otherwise static infographics. Not a programmer? No need to worry, the company promises the two-way diagrams are "easy enough for teachers, journalists, managers, [and] researchers to... create." We've seen Microsoft's XPS take a similar crack at dethroning the reigning format king, only to find itself in portable document oblivion. We'll just have to wait and see if CDF's a more noble contender. In the meantime, head on over to the source to download the free player and see for yourself the possible future of live textbooks, tables and charts.

Continue reading Wolfram launches open CDF format, adds visual pizzazz to charts and graphs

Wolfram launches open CDF format, adds visual pizzazz to charts and graphs originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jul 2011 02:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink ZDNet  |  sourceWolfram  | Email this | Comments

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IBM rig doesn't look like much, scans 10 billion files in 43 minutes

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/22/ibm-rig-doesnt-look-like-much-scans-10-billion-files-in-43-min/

Someone ought to gift these IBM researchers a better camera, because their latest General Parallel File System is a back-slapping 37 times faster than their last effort back in 2007. The rig combines ten IBM System xSeries servers with Violin Memory SSDs that hold 6.5 terabytes of metadata relating to 10 billion separate files. Every single one of those files can be analyzed and managed using policy-guided rules in under three quarters of an hour. That kind of performance might seem like overkill, but it's only just barely in step with what IBM's Doug Balog describes as a "rapidly growing, multi-zettabyte world." No prizes for guessing who their top customer is likely to be. Full details in the PR after the break.

Continue reading IBM rig doesn't look like much, scans 10 billion files in 43 minutes

IBM rig doesn't look like much, scans 10 billion files in 43 minutes originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jul 2011 03:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Thursday, July 21, 2011

The First Image of the Shuttle Entering Earth Is Simply Unbelievable [Image Cache]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5823596/the-first-image-of-the-shuttle-entering-earth-is-simply-unbelievable

The First Image of the Shuttle Entering Earth Is Simply UnbelievableWhen I first saw this image just released by NASA I just couldn't believe my eyes. It shows Atlantis re-entering the Earth's atmosphere from the International Space Station, leaving a trail of fire behind it. As NASA describes it:

This unprecedented view of the space shuttle Atlantis, appearing like a bean sprout against clouds and city lights, on its way home, was photographed by the Expedition 28 crew of the International Space Station. Airglow over Earth can be seen in the background.

By far, this is the most amazing shot I've ever seen of the shuttle. Absolutely crazy. Now I'm even sadder to see it go. [NASA]

Watch our homage to the video space shuttle program: 30 years of the shuttle in one single launch video

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A $3,000 Bike with 4 Wheels for the Well-Heeled [Bikes]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5823536/a-3000-bike-with-4-wheels-for-the-well-heeled

A $3,000 Bike with 4 Wheels for the Well-HeeledIt must be nice to be filthy rich— to not have to worry about making rent, to be able to shrug off $4/gal gas, and have the bankroll to purchase one of these custom quad-wheeled cruisers from Autumn Sphere.

The Epitaph Cruiser is opulent, if anything. Its powder-coated steel frame is accented with aged-leather. The seat, handlebar covers and insert are all hand-made. The Epitaph also uses a single rear coaster brake to maintain the clean, fixed gear look (though you'll want to avoid long hills). Oh, and it has four wheels— oversized front and rear forks accommodating its custom double alloy rims. The production run is limited to a scant 12 cruisers with each bike retailing for $2950 (hey, exclusivity ain't cheap). No word yet on how you'd change out flats from the twin-mounted tires. [AutumnSphere via Born Rich]

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Dell quietly pulls the Streak to perform an update, might bring it back next month?

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/21/dell-quietly-pulls-the-streak-to-perform-an-update-should-bring/

What Dell can give, it can taketh away. That's the story with the Streak, which has quietly vanished from retail as well as the outfit's online storefront. We first got wind of this when a tipster wrote in to say he had spoken to a company employee, who said the 5-inch Android tablet / phone had been discontinued. When we reached out to Dell's PR team to see what's up, we got the pat "Dell does not comment on rumors, speculation, or unannounced products." So then we called customer service, pretending to order one, and that's when things got interesting. The rep told us the Streak hasn't, in fact, been end-of-life'd; it's just been pulled from shelves while it receives an update. The gentleman couldn't say how severe the issue is, though he insists it has zilch to do with Android. Whatever it is, Dell isn't even accepting orders for the 5-inch Streak at the moment. If all goes according to plan, though, we're told it should go back on sale in early August.

[Thanks, Venkata]

Dell quietly pulls the Streak to perform an update, might bring it back next month? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 Jul 2011 12:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola Droid 3 review

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/21/motorola-droid-3-review/

The third installment of a trilogy is typically the most satisfying. The Empire Falls, Frodo destroys the ring, Cinderella goes back in time. (Okay, that's a stretch.) Our protagonist in this tale is the Droid 3, which bears an uncanny resemblance to its dad and granddad-- but Verizon's added a few new components and made some minor design tweaks in attempt to improve the overall experience.

Are these adjustments enough to save the series? The original Droid launched with much fanfare, a device that steered Motorola back onto the path of success from its post-RAZR Hades. It had a refreshing gold-laden design that oozed elegance, top-of-the-line specs for its time, and was the pioneer that helped usher Google's mobile OS into a new era. Each new iteration has received less attention than the one before, however, and the Droid 3 experienced such a quiet launch that we blinked and almost missed it. No matter, though -- as long as the phone can speak for itself, it doesn't need the confetti to accompany it. But is the third time another charm for the Droid? Or will it be buried by other heavyweights like the Droid Bionic or Samsung Galaxy S II Function? Join us after the break to find out.

Continue reading Motorola Droid 3 review

Motorola Droid 3 review originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 Jul 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Watch 30 Years of the Space Shuttle In One Single Launch [Video]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5823357/watch-30-years-of-the-space-shuttle-in-one-single-launch

Watch 30 Years of the Space Shuttle In One Single LaunchThe end. Today it's all over. Three decades of the Space Shuttle, with its many amazing successes and two horrible failures, are gone forever. This video shows those thirty years in one single launch.

Click video to enlarge.

The space shuttle was the most complex machine ever created. Even with all its faults, it was a mighty beast. Combined, the shuttles travelled 513.7 million miles (826.7 million km) in 135 missions. It's an staggering number—we could have visited Jupiter!

As a spacenerd who never saw Saturn V roaring up to the skies, I couldn't imagine a more amazing display of power and engineering prowess more amazing than the launch of the Space Shuttle. Strapped to 1.6 million pounds of liquid fuel and two solid rocket boosters pushing 5,600,000 pounds-force of liftoff thrust, it was a thing of beauty that we will never see again.

For someone who saw the original launch of Columbia as a kid, I'm finding it hard to believe that everything is over just three decades later. If I feel gutted today, I can't even begin to imagine how people working in the program must feel. Still, I'm hopeful that things will get even more exciting in the coming years, hopefully with a mission to Mars and other planets. Until then, I'll watch this video to remind me of the genius of human engineering and the American space program.

Godspeed Columbia, Challenger, Discovery, Atlantis, and Endeavour. And thanks for all the fish.

Video edited by Woody Allen Jang on an idea by Jesus Diaz. Additional video editing by Jesse Martinez.

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The 13-Inch MBA Burns the Fastest 2010 MacBook Pro [Factoid]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5823364/the-13+inch-mba-burns-the-fastest-2010-macbook-pro

The 13-Inch MBA Burns the Fastest 2010 MacBook ProHoly crud. While it's just a benchmark test and those don't accurately reflect yadda yadda yadda YOU GUYS. The 1.7GHz Core i5 13-inch MBA just blew the door off of last year's 2.67GHz Core i7 17-inch MacBook Pro on GeekBench. And did more than twice as well as last year's tricked 13-inch Air. That is bonkers.

At this point—unless you work in the optical drive industry—why would the 90% of us who don't need professional-grade computing ever choose a Pro over an Air? [Laptop Mag via ElectricPig]

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Nasa's Official Android App Makes Me Cry [Apps]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5823395/nasas-official-android-app-makes-me-cry

Nasa's Official Android App Makes Me CryDownloading the new-and-official Nasa app on my Android phone today was a bittersweet experience, what with Atlantis—and NASA's—last journey ending today. There're heaps of features considering it's free—live Nasa TV, images, future mission details *sniffles* and sighting opportunities.

Judging by the information supplied to me, the next opportunity I have to spy on the ISS is the 28th of July, at 4.21am GMT. I'd rather just catch up on Nasa videos, or take a look at their integrated Twitter stream, if I'm honest. Here's the full list of features:

- Thousands of images from NASA IOTD, APOD and NASAImages.org
- On demand NASA Videos from around the agency
- Current NASA Mission Information
- Launch Information & Countdown clocks
- Current Visible Passes for the International Space Station (ISS)
- ISS and Earth Orbiting Satellite Tracker
- NASA Twitter Feeds from around the agency
- News and Features from the NASA topic areas
- Facebook® Connect and Integrated Twitter™ client for easy sharing
- Live Streaming of NASA TV
- NASA TV and What's On Your TV schedules
- Map and links to all of the NASA centers
- Featured content section

Out now for iOS and now Android, it's a free download. [Android Market via The Telegraph]


You can keep up with Kat Hannaford, the author of this post, on Twitter or Facebook.

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Researchers use graphene to draw energy from flowing water, self-powered micro-robots to follow?

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/21/researchers-use-graphene-to-draw-energy-from-flowing-water-self/

What can't graphene do? The wonder material's been at the heart of a stunning number of technological breakthroughs of late, and now it's adding oil exploration to its long list of achievements. A team of researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have discovered that the flow of good old H2O over a sheet of graphene can generate enough electricity to power "tiny sensors" used in tracking down oil deposits. The gang, led by professor Nikhil Koratkar, was able to suck 85 nanowatts of power out of a slab of graphene measuring .03 by .015 millimeters. The little sensors the researchers speak of are pumped into potential oil wells via a stream of water, and are then put to work sniffing out hydrocarbons indicative of hidden pockets of oil and natural gas. Of course, that doesn't have a whole lot of practical application for your average gadget consumer, but Koraktar sees a future filled with tiny water-powered robots and micro-submarines -- we can dig it.

Researchers use graphene to draw energy from flowing water, self-powered micro-robots to follow? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 Jul 2011 10:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Physorg  |  sourceRensselaer Polytechnic Institute  | Email this | Comments

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5 Best Alternatives to Apple's New Product Lineup [Toolkit]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5823109/5-best-alternatives-to-apples-new-product-lineup/gallery/

5 Best Alternatives to Apple's New Product LineupShocking as this news may be, not everybody uses a Mac (*raises hand*). For those of us not drinking the Cupertino Koolaid, here are 5 solid alternatives to the new products from today's Apple announcement.

5 Best Alternatives to Apple's New Product Lineup

MacBook Air = Samsung Series 9


The Series 9 is like the MBA, just slightly bigger. Unfortunately that includes the price as well. For $1199— what you'd pay for a 2.38 lb., 11.6" MBA with 4GB of memory and 128GB SSD—you get a 2.31 lb. 11.6" laptop with 2GB of memory and only a 64GB SSD. The other smaller thing about Series 9? Its processing speed: 1.33GHz vs the MBA's 1.6GHz. $1200

5 Best Alternatives to Apple's New Product Lineup

MacBook = Toshiba Portege R835-P70

In terms of performance for price, the R835 gives you more value. It has a 2.3GHz processor, 4GB of RAM, and 640GB HD, double the available RAM and triple the available standard HD in the last iteration of the MB (before, you know, Apple killed it and all) for $65 less. $835

5 Best Alternatives to Apple's New Product Lineup

Mac Mini = Dell Inspiron Zino HD

Sure the Mini isn't technically designed as an HTPC but some of its best work is done as a home theater-serving hockey puck. The Dell Zino does essentially the same job, albeit as two stacked hockey pucks. It's got the same basic stats as the Mini, 2.3GHz processor and 2GB of RAM, but the Zino is double the height in order to make room for the tray-loading CD/DVD/Blu-Ray combo drive. On the other hand, at $300, the Zino is half the Mini's height in money. $300

5 Best Alternatives to Apple's New Product Lineup

Thunderbolt = USB 3.0

Thunderbolt has a data transfer speed of 10Gb/s. USB 3.0 has a maximum data transfer speed of 5 Gb/s. It's half but available on things that don't start with Mac. What more do you want? (image courtesy of Maximum PC) $Depends on what it's attached to

5 Best Alternatives to Apple's New Product Lineup

Thunderbolt Display = Dell UltraSharp U2711

The Thunderbolt display's 27" viewing area with 2560-by-1440 LED-backlit resolution and ability to daisy-chain peripherals is just brilliant. But if you don't really give a shit about stringing your hard drives to your monitors (or you only have one of each and are already connected through your computer) then you'll want to check out the Dell UltraSharp U2711. It has a 2560 x 1440 resolution 27" display with 80,000-to-1 contrast ratio. And it's $100 less. $900

[Top image courtesy of Shutterstock]

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7 Ways Google Labs Changed the Internet Forever [Video]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5823190/7-ways-google-changed-the-internet-forever/gallery/

7 Ways Google Labs Changed the Internet ForeverGoogle closed the doors on Google Labs today. The ongoing projects aren't disappearing; they'll be absorbed into other departments, and many have already "graduated" into full-fledged products. The spirit and mission of the initiative will live on, just in a decidedly less centralized way.

Here are some of the coolest and most genuinely world-changing things that Google Labs's mad scientists have cooked up through the years.

7 Ways Google Labs Changed the Internet ForeverGoogle Maps
Google Maps is basically neck-and-neck with Gmail as far as Google's most ubiquitous non-search product. It's the most widely-used map service on the planet, available to 30% of the world's population, and is still expanding and adding features.

7 Ways Google Labs Changed the Internet ForeverGoogle Suggest
Sure it's fun to troll bomb Google Suggest results into suggesting searches like "Did Hitler really perform in nude burlesque shows?" But Eric Schmidt wasn't very far off when he said that "[Google] can more or less know what you're thinking about."

Google Docs and Spreadsheets
Back in 2006, most of us were still emailing things to ourselves if we wanted to access a file on another computer; synchronized online documents were so far ahead of their time that they didn't really catch on for a few years. If Google ever wanted to hipster out on the internet, Google Docs is all the cred it would need. They've been doing the cloud thing since before you even know what it call it, man.

7 Ways Google Labs Changed the Internet ForeverGoogle Alerts
Google Alerts took the old school concept of the newsletter and mailing list and married it to the new school practice ingesting every damn piece of information on the internet. It's an ingenius fusion of online laziness and ambition: We want to know everything that's going on, but we can do without the hassle of scouting out and frequenting the actual sources.

7 Ways Google Labs Changed the Internet ForeverGoogle Scholar
One of the better identifiers of a true nerd is how devastated you were the day you lost your college access to JSTOR and other uber-nerd academic publications. Google Scholar soothed away the nerd pain with a searchable index of freely accessible full text academic papers.

7 Ways Google Labs Changed the Internet ForeverGoogle Goggles
Search-by-image is pretty awesome. It just made its way to Google desktop a month ago, and we're all pretty excited about it making an appearance in WP7 Mango. But Google's been doing it with Google Goggles since late 2009. It's really impressive, and a great example of how Google Labs helped keep Google ahead of the curve.

7 Ways Google Labs Changed the Internet ForeverMail Goggles
Sometimes knowing what you're thinking isn't good enough, and Google offers to step in and save you from yourself. Mail Goggles is a sobriety check for your email account that asks you to solve a series of math problems before you're allowed to send a dumbass 4AM message to your boss. It's the simple things, people.

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Go Green With The Sprout Biodegradable Watch [Watches]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5823276/go-green-with-the-sprout-biodegradable-watch

Go Green With The Sprout Biodegradable WatchWatches are one accessory that's crying out for some green love. They're worn daily, changed often and killed frequently with an accidental bump. Sprout understands and has developed a line of fashionable timepieces that can be tossed away without remorse.

These watches are great. They are good-looking, colorful and 80-93% biodegradable. They are made of wonderful materials such as bamboo, organic cotton, mineral crystal lenses, and mercury-free batteries. Sprout has even managed to sell them at a reasonable price. The entry-level model starts at $30, while the top-of-line model climbs to a pricey, but not exorbitant $75. [Sprout via Oh Gizmo]


You can keep up with Kelly Hodgkins, the author of this post, on Twitter or Facebook.

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Apple refreshes MacBook Air with Sandy Bridge, Thunderbolt, and backlit keyboards

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/20/dnp-stub-apple-refreshes-macbook-air-with-sandy-bridge-thunderb/

They say Apple updates its products like clockwork, releasing something new at the same time in the same place every year. Not so with MacBook Airs anyway. The outfit's gone and freshened up its 13-inch and 11-inch ultraportables -- the second such update in nine months. Although the industrial design hasn't changed much since the last generation, both models step up to Sandy Bridge Core i5 and i7 processors, Thunderbolt ports, backlit keyboards, and, of course, OS X Lion.

The 11.6-inch flavor starts at $999 with 64GB of solid-state storage, 2GB of memory and a 1.6GHz Core i5 processor. The higher-end of the two configurations costs $1,199, with the extra two hundred dollars doubling your RAM and storage. The 13-inch Air, meanwhile, starts at $1,299, with a 128GB SSD, 4GB of RAM, and a 1.7GHz Core i5 CPU. Step up to the $1,599 model and you'll get a 256GB SSD instead. Regardless, you're looking at Intel HD 3000 graphics across the board, along with FaceTime webcams, two USB ports (plus an SD slot on the 13-inch version), 802.11n WiFi, and Bluetooth 4.0. The two differ when it comes to resolution and battery life: the 11-incher has a 1366 x 768 panel and is rated for up to five hours of battery life, whereas the 13-inch model has a 1440 x 900 screen and promises up to seven hours of juice. As for that 1.8GHz Core i7 CPU, it'll set you back an extra $100 on the 13-inch version, and $150 for the 11-inch version. Whichever size you choose, it's only an option for the higher-end configuration. Hit the source link to peep the specs and buy one, if you're so inclined.

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Apple refreshes MacBook Air with Sandy Bridge, Thunderbolt, and backlit keyboards originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jul 2011 08:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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