Thursday, February 26, 2009

ASUS' Eee PC 901 with 20GB SSD and 6-cell battery now just $268

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/02/26/asus-eee-pc-901-with-20gb-ssd-and-6-cell-battery-now-just-268/


An Eee PC costing $550 just 8 months ago is now selling for less than half that price from a trio of major on-line retailers. In an apparent across-the-board price cut, several SSD-based EEE PC 901 models have been slashed with your choice of Linux or XP. Most notable is the 8.9-inch netbook configured with a 1.6GHz Atom N270 processor, 1GB memory, 20GB SSD, Linux, and 6-cell battery. Careful though: the European CeBIT show (an ASUS favorite event) is just days away and with it should come a few new Eee PC models running the latest Intel processors and chipsets. Consider yourselves warned. Hit the read link for the details.

Filed under:

ASUS' Eee PC 901 with 20GB SSD and 6-cell battery now just $268 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Feb 2009 06:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Dell's Inspiron Mini 10 finally up for order, starts at $399

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/02/26/dells-inspiron-mini-10-finally-up-for-order-starts-at-399/


It's been a rocky road, paved with hardship and confusion, but Dell's finally ready to let us at its colorful collection of Inspiron Mini 10 netbooks -- at least the order page. You can (slightly) configure them to your hearts content, but any color outside of black comes with a $30 price premium. We upped a Mini 10 to "Jade Green" and threw in a 1.6GHz Z530 Atom processor (1.33GHz is standard) and ended up at $479, but there's no expanding beyond the 1GB of RAM or the 160GB HDD, as per the international netbook treaty. The order page is quoting a "preliminary ship date" of April 2nd, up from the March 31st we saw two days ago, so we hope that's just a rough estimate.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Filed under:

Dell's Inspiron Mini 10 finally up for order, starts at $399 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Feb 2009 09:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Nuclear Grade Duct Tape [Stuff We Like]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/MZ8wtEaJ4HA/nuclear-grade-duct-tape

3M's nuclear-grade Performance Plus duct tape is serious about holding your business together in the harshest of conditions.

What makes it nuclear grade, you ask?

3M Performance Plus Duct Tape 8979N is tested by an independent laboratory to insure that it meets the low leachable halogen and sulfur levels required by nuclear regulating agencies.

Honestly, we're not sure just how how much you'll need that extra protection (or what do I know, maybe you do), but as big fans of MacGyver-style hacking, we're not ones to look the other way when we spot some serious duct tape. The 3M Performance Plus duct tape will set you back $14 at Amazon.



Read More...

Install Google Toolbar 6, Get Quick Search Box [Downloads]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/ML_uGBGj174/install-google-toolbar-6-get-quick-search-box

Windows only: Remember Quick Search Box, Google's new search-and-launch application built by the same guy who developed Quicksilver? Well, now it's available for Windows—you've just got to install Google Toolbar in IE to get it.

That's right, Quick Search Box is only available to install through Google Toolbar for IE, of all things. We don't even particularly like the Google Toolbar to begin with, let alone IE. On the plus side, if QSB requires Google Toolbar, better that I install it on IE—where I never have to see it—than on a browser I might actually be using. But anyway, on to the application we're interested in.

First, the bad news. In actuality, the Windows version of Quick Search Box is much lighter on features than the Mac version. For example, you can't drill down into any search items the same way the beta of QSB for Mac does. In fact, it really can't do all that much at the moment.

Now for the good news. What it can do, it does very well. QSB for Windows is a very simple, no-nonsense search box. It searches the web, and it searches for and launches applications (from what I can tell so far, it just indexes your Start menu). It's extremely fast and responsive, and it didn't use more than 15MB of memory while I was testing it. In fact, QSB for Windows is clearly more stable at the moment than QSB for Mac. Of course, functionally speaking, that's sort of like saying a screwdriver is more stable than a power drill. It's nice, but you'd still really like to be using a power drill.

We're waiting to see some serious improvements before we're ready to give QSB for Windows the same optimistic enthusiasm w! e've sho wn its Mac counterpart. In reality, QSB for Windows is very similar in feel to early versions of Launchy—with the admittedly nice addition of Google search. Still, we've seen that in Google Desktop. So while we're big fans of the QSB effort on Mac, we're so far pretty lukewarm on QSB for Windows.

On a related note, the new beta of the Google Toolbar isn't bad if you're into that sort of thing. It adds the Chrome start page to, which is cool, but if you really like Google that much, you may as well be using Chrome in the first place.

Google Toolbar 6 Beta (Note: The link will redirect to Google Toolbar 5 unless you're using IE)


Read More...

Hidden Preference Tweaks in Safari 4 [Safari 4]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/gxNm_4Zgm5k/hidden-preference-tweaks-in-safari-4

If you have been kicking the tires on Safari 4, you might be interested in Random Genius' list of basic preference tweaks for people looking to disable some of the new features. [Random Genius]



Read More...

Tunnel with 40,000 LEDs Is the Closest You'll Ever Get to Light Speed [Art]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/OrtFHZtXguc/tunnel-with-40000-leds-is-the-closest-youll-ever-get-to-light-speed

I've never traveled through space at light speed, but I imagine that standing in this LED tunnel is pretty close to the dizzying experience. The video is just plain awesome.

The name of the installation is Multiverse, and it was installed by artist Leo Villareal in a 200-foot-long tunnel in the National Gallery of Art in Washingtong DC. The entire thing features 41,000 LEDs that animate and move on their own, using randomness to ensure that no one will see the same configurations twice. Multiverse will be on display throughout 2009. [PSFK]



Read More...

Hershey's Developing Line of Sweet Gadgety Treats [Gadgets]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/E5hRICJie6k/hersheys-developing-line-of-sweet-gadgety-treats

Hershey's has teamed up with Jazwares to develop a line of consumer electronics that will do nothing to curb the fattening of desk jockeys across the US.

Expect 1-4GB USB drives modeled after your favorite Hershey treats along with digital cameras, earphones and speakers shaped like everything from Kisses to Jolly Ranchers. Prices are expected to range from $15 to $30—but there is no word yet on a release date. Needless to say, if you lack willpower, avoid these products at all costs. [Jazwares Gearlog



Read More...

Berlekamp's Switch Game May Be Nerdiest Boardgame Ever [Retromodo]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/5zR3KLWIWvQ/berlekamps-switch-game-may-be-nerdiest-boardgame-ever

The game has 100 bulbs, 10x10. Each row and each column has a switch that turns off bulbs that are on, and turns on bulbs that are off. Can you turn off all the bulbs?

The answer, even if you do attempt every possible combination, is no. But according to Microsoft Research, there's a way to "solve" the puzzle to within 1%, even if the board had 1000000 bulbs. The funny thing is, the algorithmic solution to the puzzle (originally built by Elwyn Berlekamp in 1960) can be used as a way to bypass brute-force computing in solving problems. The researchers at Microsoft are more interested in that whole thing, but I'm more interested in how some guy got to build this nice electronic board game as part of his day job, just for Show and Tell. Way to go, dude.

Here are the rules, in case you want to make your own home version (Phil Torrone, do you hear me?):


Update: This is also known as the Gale-Berlekamp lightbulb game—I'd hate for poor Mr. or Ms. or Dr. Gale to get left out of the credit. Also, I finally caught up on my Fringe from a few weeks back, and you commenters are totally right. Freaky. Wish I'd seen it beforehand.

Microsoft's TechFest is an annual jamboree of innovation and gadgetry from Microsoft Research, which means that while none of it is coming out as is in products in the near future, it's essentially what product development people use to add cool stuff to their actual releases. I'm here all day.!



Read More...

Berlekamp's Switch Game May Be Nerdiest Boardgame Ever [Retromodo]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/5zR3KLWIWvQ/berlekamps-switch-game-may-be-nerdiest-boardgame-ever

The game has 100 bulbs, 10x10. Each row and each column has a switch that turns off bulbs that are on, and turns on bulbs that are off. Can you turn off all the bulbs?

The answer, even if you do attempt every possible combination, is no. But according to Microsoft Research, there's a way to "solve" the puzzle to within 1%, even if the board had 1000000 bulbs. The funny thing is, the algorithmic solution to the puzzle (originally built by Elwyn Berlekamp in 1960) can be used as a way to bypass brute-force computing in solving problems. The researchers at Microsoft are more interested in that whole thing, but I'm more interested in how some guy got to build this nice electronic board game as part of his day job, just for Show and Tell. Way to go, dude.

Here are the rules, in case you want to make your own home version (Phil Torrone, do you hear me?):


Update: This is also known as the Gale-Berlekamp lightbulb game—I'd hate for poor Mr. or Ms. or Dr. Gale to get left out of the credit. Also, I finally caught up on my Fringe from a few weeks back, and you commenters are totally right. Freaky. Wish I'd seen it beforehand.

Microsoft's TechFest is an annual jamboree of innovation and gadgetry from Microsoft Research, which means that while none of it is coming out as is in products in the near future, it's essentially what product development people use to add cool stuff to their actual releases. I'm here all day.!



Read More...

The Government is NOT Spying on You Through Your DTV Converter Box [DTV Hoax]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/n_aW2cNhi9I/the-government-is-not-spying-on-you-through-your-dtv-converter-box

Last week, Spokane-based engineer Adam Chronister posted a Youtube video, where he cracked open a government-subsidized DTV converter box, only to find a hidden camera. Turns out, the whole thing was a hoax.

Threat Level says that conspiracy theorists jumped all over the video, which racked up 200,000 views since going up. However, Chronister simply used old cellphone parts and a hot glue gun to push the paranoid and mentally unstable into a state of crisis. However, these tin foil heads aren't resting any easier: they believe pranks like this only create a smoke screen for the government to carry on with their clandestine activity. Who am I to say they're wrong? (Original video below) [Threat Level via BBG]



Read More...

Watching the Chicago Bears While Waiting for Your Cruise: That'll be $28,067 Please [Oops]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/FgzL8Ln7Ww4/watching-the-chicago-bears-while-waiting-for-your-cruise-thatll-be-28067-please

Wayne Burdick just wanted to watch the Chicago Bears game. Using the Slingbox he had set up, he slid in his AT&T wireless card. Two and half hours and $28,000 later, the Bears won.

Burdick was just waiting for his cruise ship to arrive, when he decided to watch the game via his Slingbox (which streams television though an internet signal). Having an unlimited data plan, he thought everything would be peachy-keen. Unfortunately, he connected to the ship's network and, as a result, ran up international roaming charges.

When Burdick complained about the charges despite never leaving the country, AT&T offered to initially reduce the bill down to $6,000. Eventually, through some media attention, the bill was reduced to $220 in charges. Oh yeah—the score was 27-23. [Chicago Sun-Times via The Register]



Read More...

University Claims to Have Developed World's First Flexible Touchscreen Display [Touchscreen]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/itFCHXhXdNw/university-claims-to-have-developed-worlds-first-flexible-touchscreen-display

ASU's Flexibile Display Center and military partners have developed the very first display with a flexible touchscreen. Mainly designed for military applications, the screen is made out of glass strong enough to withstand the battlefield.

Instead of using solid glass for the touchscreen, the device incorporates special material from DuPont Tijin Films in order for the paper-thin display to bend or roll up without damaging the gadget. The device also uses technology from E-ink Corp, allowing users to write, store and erase their own content on the displays; eventually, they will also be available in full color. Although it sounds pretty cool, don't get your hopes up: The Flexible Display Center estimates that this flexible touchscreen display won't be available for another 18 months. [EETimes via Electronista]



Read More...

Samsung Memoir 8-Megapixel Cameraphone Lightning Review [Samsung Memoir]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/rGPiOfK6ye0/samsung-memoir-8+megapixel-cameraphone-lightning-review

The Gadget: Samsung Memoir, which is the 8-megapixel upgraded version of the Samsung Behold—both of which have Samsung's TouchWiz-based touchscreen interface. It's also got a Xenon flash that works quite well.

The Price: $250 with two-year contract, $50 rebate and qualifying data plan

The Verdict: A pretty damn good cameraphone. The TouchWiz UI is pretty much the same as the version on the Samsung Behold. In short, it's more usable as a touchscreen phone (keyboard is fairly decent) than Windows Mobile phones, but not quite as good as say, Android or the iPhone. It does have haptic feedback, meaning there's a slight rumble as you press down on the screen. And yes, that implies that the Memoir doesn't have capacitive touch. You still have to press down when you want to click things. Let it be known that Jesús Diaz does not like some Samsung touchscreen UIs.

The front of the phone looks like a Samsung touchscreen phone, but the back actually looks a lot like a Samsung camera. Which is kind of the point. The 8-megapixel camera is very good. So good, in fact, that it's (give or take) about as good as my Samsung NV3 point and shoot from a few years ago. The gallery below has comparison shots.

And here's how well the Memoir's Xenon flash works in complete darkness. Spoiler: Pretty damn well.

I haven't had enough experience with Nokia's high end N-series cameraphones to say whether or not the Memoir is better. We've ! already established that more megapixels isn't always better, but if the Memoir can take photos that are just about as good as Samsung's NV3 (which doesn't take FANTASTIC images, we have to admit), it's a great alternative for a point and shoot camera.



Read More...

Realtime Mobile Video Stitching Is So Crazy It Just Might Work [Video Tapestry]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ENUGqOOZRoc/realtime-mobile-video-stitching-is-so-crazy-it-just-might-work

The proposition: You and a bunch of strangers are live streaming mobile-phone video of some event or disaster. A server stitches it all together and instantaneously publishes a rich, immediate patchwork of the action.

I love this system, but not necessarily for the same reasons that its developers at Microsoft Research do. I want to see something like this on YouTube, for instance. How bonerfied would Wolf Blitzer have been if he could have taken all the YouTube video of Obama's inauguration and turned it into a massive patchwork of super hi-def action? I mean, this thing makes the GigaPan look like something Thomas Edison invented in his spare time.

But Ayman Kaheel, a development manager at Microsoft's Innovation Center in Cairo, said he really wanted it to be live, and not for pre-recorded video, mostly because it's a greater challenge, and making it work live ultimately means that the other forms of it would work too. Kaheel says that the stitching service could be public or private, so in addition to plane crashes and inaugurations, this thing could make sense for weddings and stuff, if enough guests feel like livecasting.

Like most Microsoft Research projects, this one requires certain things that aren't yet here, but are coming soon. In order for all that live video to sync up when the system is stitching it together, each piece of video from each phone requires a timecode, and of course all the timecodes on all the mobiles sending video have to be totally in sync. (Surprisingly, Kaheel says the bandwidth requirements are already met by most networks, needing only 200Kbps to be effective.)

I see this as a multifaceted glimpse at social video's future: Whether it's live or archived, stitching may prove to be a great way to turn all the crappy 24! 0x320 vi deo into a high-def tapestry worth watching.

Microsoft's TechFest is an annual jamboree of innovation and gadgetry from Microsoft Research, which means that while none of it is coming out as is in products in the near future, it's essentially what product development people use to add cool stuff to their actual releases.



Read More...

OmniWeb Mac Browser Finally Released For Free [Browsers]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/rA3zJqKKM4c/omniweb-mac-browser-finally-released-for-free

Old, grizzled veterans of the browser wars (Blood! Honor! W3C Standards!) will remember OmniWeb, an expensive, Mac-only überbrowser that always seemed to be slightly ahead of everyone else. Well, it's free now.

A little background: OmniWeb is based on a slightly modified version of WebKit, but used to differentiate itself from other browsers with novel features. Ad blocking, tab previews, saved browsing sessions, inbuilt RSS reading, single-windows browsing and per-site preferences could once justify OmniWeb's price, but now most of these features, and plenty more, can be found in free browsers. That's not to say that OmniWeb isn't a good browser, but it'll have a extremely hard time facing up against our increasingly capable choices in free software—especially the fantastic Safari 4.

The Omni Group is also setting a few more applications free, but OmniWeb is the by far the juiciest. [Cult of Mac]



Read More...