Tuesday, February 10, 2009

MappedUp Screensaver Visualizes RSS News on a World Map [Downloads]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/BGCENXtoubY/mappedup-screensaver-visualizes-rss-news-on-a-world-map

Eye-candy RSS reader/screensaver MappedUp plots the location of RSS items on a world map with a nice visual effect—so you can use the screensaver for more than just pictures.

Once you've installed and enabled the screensaver—and stepped away long enough for the screensaver to show up—you'll see RSS items show up on the world map in little balloons indicating the origin of the news story. You can customize the items that show up by creating a free account and choosing feeds or tags to display—or add any of your own feeds.

MappedUp is a free download for Windows or Mac OS X only. If you want to learn something instead of reading the news, you can always use Wikipedia as your screensaver instead.



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Simple Tracking Provides Real-Time Package Updates by RSS [Package Tracking]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/xllt2caAVc8/simple-tracking-provides-real+time-package-updates-by-rss

Simple Tracking tips you to the where and when of your FedEx, USPS, or DHL packages, providing a stream of tracking data through RSS or text messages and a Firefox extension helper.

Why no UPS? According to the updates on Simple Tracking, it seems UPS is particularly stingy in allowing access to their API, despite their competitors openness. For most other delivery services, though, Simple Tracking is streamlined. It recognizes the different tracking numbers you paste in automatically and returns results immediately. You can then subscribe to the feed for that specific tracking number to see updates on the status of your package in your favorite RSS reader. You don't even have to copy and paste from emails or shopping sites—there's a Firefox extension that adds a Track XYZ Package context when tracking numbers are right-clicked upon. There's also a phone-friendly version of the site available for on-the-go checking. If you prefer email-based updates, check out previously reviewed Track My Shipments for stop-by-stop updates. Simple Tracking is free, requires no registration for use.



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Ultimate Windows Tweaker Updates, Adds 20 New Tweaks [Downloads]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/ee9EmdKZRjY/ultimate-windows-tweaker-updates-adds-20-new-tweaks

Windows Vista only: Similar-to-TweakUI application Ultimate Windows Tweaker adds more tweaks, bugfixes, and better 64-bit support to an already ridiculously useful tool for making configuration changes the easy way.

We've featured this application here before, but the initial release had some stability problems (especially for 64-bit users). The latest version fixes those issues and adds a bunch of new tweaks to make your tweaking tasks just a little bit easier, including more personalization, UAC, performance, and network tweaks. The already-tech-savvy might notice that most of these tweaks are available through registry hacks or complicated dialogs, but this application is designed to put every setting into one easily accessible location—and since the utility doesn't require installation it makes for a handy addition to your flash drive toolkit.

Ultimate Windows Tweaker is a free download for Windows Vista users only. Most Lifehacker readers using XP are probably already using Microsoft's TweakUI utility to customize their system.



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What Are Your Recession-Friendly (or Otherwise) Valentine's Plans? [Ask The Readers]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/T5-44tGlTNs/what-are-your-recession+friendly-or-otherwise-valentines-plans

Valentine's Day is Saturday, and rather than complaining about the commercialization of the holiday in the midst of the recession, weblog Get Rich Slowly rounds up a few romantic, recession-friendly ideas for V-Day on the cheap.

Photo by Or Hiltch.

Get Rich Slowly suggestions range from a romantic dinner at home to a photo scavenger hunt. The post details a specific romantic dinner that looks great: chicken piccata, a nice but inexpensive wine, and some homemade butter almond cake. It's a good start, but we wanted to mine the Lifehacker hive mind for a few more creative ideas for this weekend, so let's hear your Valentine's plans in the comments.



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MediaPlayerConnectivity Opens Media Directly in VLC (and Other Players Too) [Downloads]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/MUkiVsjqUUI/mediaplayerconnectivity-opens-media-directly-in-vlc-and-other-players-too

Firefox only (Windows): Firefox extension MediaPlayerConnectivity opens media files in an external application of your choice—saving you from the extra step of downloading and opening in your preferred media player.

Once installed, the extension will take you through a wizard that finds your installed media players and sets each file type to your preferred player. The options panel is chock full of configuration settings to customize playback choices, from adding launcher items to your context menu to automatically replacing the inline player with an icon to launch your external player—very useful so you can restart Firefox without affecting media playback.

MediaPlayerConnectivity is a free download for Firefox, but the current versions only work for Windows users—readers using Mac OS X can still download the older versions, but will probably need the Nightly Tester Tools to make them compatible. Update: Looks like it works in Ubuntu as well.



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Ditch Your iPhone for Android Without the Cancellation Fees [Android]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/rPGMP4CoKVQ/ditch-your-iphone-for-android-without-the-cancellation-fees

If the luster of your iPhone has worn off and you're interested in taking the Google pill instead, the Smarterware weblog steps through how to ditch your iPhone for Android without the hefty cancellation fees. How?

By unlocking the HTC G1 Android phone to work with your iPhone's SIM card. Discounting the cost of the Android phone, the whole process won't cost you more than $25 and won't take more than a few minutes of your time. The detailed walkthrough at Smarterware is a breeze to follow along with, so if you're dying to make the iPhone-to-Android switch, check it out.

As a sidenote, Smarterware is the new home for the general musings of our very own Gina Trapani when she's not writing her new feature series of the same name here at Lifehacker. We strongly recommend you add a new feed to your newsreader.



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Merge Multiple Emails to One Contact in Gmail [Gmail]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/a6XUXpnYjZY/merge-multiple-emails-to-one-contact-in-gmail

If today's Google Sync announcement has convinced you that it's time to move your contact management to Google servers, you probably need to do a little housekeeping with your Gmail contacts first.

For example, if you're staring in the face of numerous duplicate contacts that should represent the same person, the built-in contact merge feature in Google Contacts is a must. Just find the duplicate contacts, tick their checkboxes, and click "Merge these contacts...." Easy peasy. To manage your contacts, either head to the Contacts page in Gmail or to the unadvertised standalone site. Thanks Michael!



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Nikon's New DX 35mm f/1.8 Prime: The First Lens You Should Buy For Any DX Nikon DSLR [Lenses]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/QmOWl5A6tlI/nikons-new-dx-35mm-f18-prime-the-first-lens-you-should-buy-for-any-dx-nikon-dslr

Shooting with a prime (non-zoom), normal (50mm-equivalent) lens will make you a better photographer. This is a fact. But getting into the normal-prime sweetspot on non-full-frame DSLRs is tough. This Nikkor makes it easier.

Even though Nikon's had the same lens mount for decades, their low-end DSLRs require on-board AF motors for auto-focus, which limits your choices. And any 35mm Nikon prime lenses (the 50mm equivalent for a DX camera's smaller sensor) around before were either too old or too expensive, and the second best choice was from Sigma. You could pick up an actual 50mm f/1.8 for under $100, but on a DX camera, that will get you an 85mm portrait lens and not the 50mm normal you would want.

But here, for around $200, you get a lens that's multiples faster at f/1.8 than, say, the D60s standard-issue f/3.5-5.6 cheapo zoom, that can shoot the limited depth of field for blurred-out backgrounds that are also impossible on the kit lens.

Plus, you'll learn good composition about 10x faster with a prime than you would with a zoom. So, in short, if you have a low-end Nikon DSLR with only a kit lens, make this your next purchase. [Nikon Product Page via BBG & Wired]



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Vudu Box Drops to $150, Leaving Us Confused [Dealzmodo]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/tnUm_jjcvxk/vudu-box-drops-to-150-leaving-us-confused

Vudu just announced that its video-on-demand movie boxes would start selling for $150, down from $300, citing the "rewards of success" and not "imminent failure," like we first assumed when we saw this.

We love Vudu—we have yet to see a video-on-demand interface as user friendly, and an internet-based service so smooth. (Hint: Peer-to-peer sharing and local hard drives are both big helps.) But in the past half year, the company has gone through two rounds of layoffs, and the remaining warm bodies are focused on a third-party software for existing devices (like, hopefully, Xbox 360 and other consoles!!). This is probably what they should have been building in the first place. So when we hear there's a sale, we don't think "success"—we think "going out of business."

At this point, Vudu says it's still all good, though. Not only is the basic high-def Vudu HD box going to be selling at Best Buy and other retailers for $150, but its pricier custom-installer XL box is dropping to $500 (if you can find one). The wi-fi bridge connectivity kit is now going for $80. This is all allegedly because the company is benefiting from successful holiday season, increased movie revenues and a lower cost of parts and manufacturing. No matter what the real reasons are, it's not a bad deal, especially considering that the Vudu delivery service will probably be around long after the actual hardware is.

Press Release:

VUDU CUTS RETAIL PRICE IN HALF TO $149

New Price Puts World's Largest HD Library and Highest Quality On-Demand Picture in Reach of Wide Consumer Market

Santa Clara, CA, FEBRUARY 10, 2009 – VUDU, Inc., a leading provider of digital technologies and services that deliver entertainment over the Internet to consumers' HDTVs and ! Home The aters, today said it has lowered the price of its on-demand Internet movie player to just $149. Available at Best Buy, audio video retailers, and online, VUDU HD is the only solution on the market to deliver weekly new releases from all the major studios, the largest HD library, the highest quality HD picture quality with HDX, local movie storage and the ability to access popular Internet content directly on the TV.

"We are reaping the rewards of success in the retail channel over the holidays, lower component prices and higher movie revenues. The combination of these factors has enabled us to lower the price of VUDU and bring it within reach of more consumers," said Edward Lichty, VUDU's EVP of Strategy. "This is exciting news for the Internet to TV content delivery market. In just a year, we've been able to drive down the price of the product by 50 % while increasing image and sound quality, growing our content library to more than 13,000 movies and TV shows, building the world's largest HD library of more than 1,300 titles, and providing access to free Internet content."

In addition to the VUDU HD, the company said it is reducing the price of VUDU XL, VUDU's home theater product sold through professional custom installers, to $499. The new VUDU XL bundle, which can store five hundred purchased movies, will also include at no extra cost a home theater connectivity software package that previously retailed for over $100. VUDU's no-hassle wireless kit, available at Best Buy, other retailers, and at www.vudu.com, has also been reduced to $79.

In the past year the company has achieved a number of milestones and introduced several groundbreaking features and service enhancements. The company secured a nationwide distribution agreement with Best Buy, announced the largest HD library in the world and introduced the pioneering HDX format, which offers the highest quality picture of any on-dem! and serv ice.

The company also recently launched the VUDU RIA platform, an open platform that can bring Internet content, from video, music and photos to games to social networking applications, directly to the TV, all easily accessible using your VUDU remote control with no need for a PC.

About VUDU:
VUDU is a leading provider of digital technologies and services that deliver Internet entertainment to consumers' HDTVs and Home Theaters. VUDU's 1080p Internet Movie Players, the VUDU HD, VUDU XL and VUDU XL2 are designed to deliver tens of thousands of on-demand movies and TV shows directly to HDTVs. All versions support native instant start HD as well as movies in highest quality HD format available, HDX, and automatically upscale standard resolution movies. All movies are displayed in 1080p resolution at 24 frames per second, the cinematic gold standard.

Through relationships with every major US movie studio and more than 40 independent studios and distributors, VUDU offers a vast array of on-demand choices at the highest quality. The VUDU collection is constantly updated, and newly released movies from major studios are available on the same day as the DVD is released. Consumers can finally watch great movies without the hassles associated with traditional services:-no driving, no mailing, and no monthly fee. For more information, visit http://www.vudu.com/.



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Camera on a Sushi Conveyor Belt Scores One for the Fishies [Food Of The Gods]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/GFkcKQPnoX4/camera-on-a-sushi-conveyor-belt-scores-one-for-the-fishies

Sushi is the greatest food on this earth, hands down. Some Tokyo filmmakers decided to place a digital camera on a sushi conveyor belt, following its journey from chef to customers. Sake nigiri, now?

Dennis Wheatley and Stefan McClean were sitting in a sushi bar trying to figure out how to film things all by themselves. This film is the result, and this, Jeremy Piven, is how the sushi feels when you're stuffing your face full of it. [Serious Eats]



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How TV Towers Can Easily Make a Land-Based GPS Network [TV On The GPS]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Ieaj8hUKhh4/how-tv-towers-can-easily-make-a-land+based-gps-network

GPS satellites are just fast moving clocks, spewing out time code as they hurtle through space. Digital TV towers also spew time code, and could be a terrestrial GPS system or GPS assistant, says Ars.

There's a company called Rosum who has been working on this technology for a while, and is finally getting some headway. Their goal is to help devices that spend all or most of the time indoors enjoy the benefits of global positioning. They're currently focused on integrating their TV-assisted geo-location into femtocells—without a GPS lock, these internet-connected cellular repeaters are useless, even though they're totally meant for use indoors.

By locking onto the timecode embedded in TV signals from known locations, they can get a fix. As you probably know, wi-fi networks mapped by Skyhook use this same basic concept. Rosum likes TV signal because it's especially strong, it penetrates walls, and "it's roughly 12,000 miles closer" than GPS.

Anyway, it's all a heady business, so head over to Ars if you want the 202. The point is, everything can be used to get a fix on your location, and in the future, everything will. [Ars Technica]



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12-Inch Multitouch Tablet Convertible Dell Latitude XT2 Now Out [Dell Latitude XT2]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/vZ4B7nkYXdM/12+inch-multitouch-tablet-convertible-dell-latitude-xt2-now-out

Looks like Dell's 12.1-inch Latitude XT2 has now been globally launched. The tablet convertible has got a multitouch screen, DDR3 memory and weighs just 3.8 pounds with a 6-cell 11-hour battery. Starting price: $2399

The DDR3 means that you can upgrade it to have 5GB of memory, pretty awesome for a notebook. It also comes with a 1.2 or 1.4 GHz Core 2 Duo CPU, and 80/120 GB HDD or 64 GB SSD options. [Engadget and Dell Japan]



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mCubed's Atom-powered RipNAS combines CD ripper with NAS drive

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/02/09/mcubeds-atom-powered-ripnas-combines-cd-ripper-with-nas-drive/


Not that we haven't seen Atom-based NAS devices before, but we've yet to see one with an integrated optical drive. Looking to serve a unique niche that still hasn't transferred that CD collection to HDD, the RipNAS combines an audio CD ripper with oodles of network-accessible storage space, and as if that wasn't enough, there's also media streaming abilities baked in. The whole unit is fanless in nature and requires no external keyboard / PC in order to rip files to your favorite lossless format, retrieve all associated metadata and automatically re-rip tracks if errors are detected. Initially, the box is being served with 640GB of internal storage space along with a number of USB ports for external expansion. Sadly, such a specialized box won't run you cheap, with the sticker hovering around €1,095 ($1,415) right now in Europe.

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mCubed's Atom-powered RipNAS combines CD ripper with NAS drive originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Feb 2009 17:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tiny Miseal cube projector can dock with equally tiny speakers

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/02/09/tiny-miseal-cube-projector-can-dock-with-equally-tiny-speakers/


It may not technically qualify as a pico projector, but this new so-called Miseal projector available from Thanko is certainly at least somewhat pico-ish, and fairly unique as far as tiny projectors go. The stand-out feature, as you can see above, is an included speaker dock (2W, if you must know), which also includes a headphone jack and a line-out port in case you're looking for a bit more wattage. As for the projector itself, you can expect to get an adequate SVGA resolution, plus a whopping 25 nits of brightness, a 100:1 contrast ratio, and an image up to 112 inches in size from a 16 foot distance. No word on a release 'round here, but those in Japan (or those willing to pay the necessary import-related costs) can grab one now for ¥39,800, or roughly $435.

[Via SlashGear]

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Tiny Miseal cube projector can dock with equally tiny speakers originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Feb 2009 19:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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VUDU permanently cuts retail price of movie set-top-box in half

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/02/09/vudu-permanently-cuts-retail-price-of-movie-set-top-box-in-half/


We had a sinking feeling those promotional prices over the holidays wouldn't stick once Santa had done his duties, but rather than ratcheting price tags back up entirely, it has decided to permanently reduce the retail price on its standard VUDU movie set-top-box by half. As of now, prospective buyers can snag a box for $149 (down from $299), while the more capacious VUDU XL is dropping from $999 to $499 (and that'll include a gratis home theater connectivity software package). Also of note, the rack-mountable VUDU XL2 is stooping from $1,299 to $799 for those who prefer that form factor. So, these stickers low enough for you? Or are you really planning to wait 'til Christmas 2009 to score an even more special deal?

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VUDU permanently cuts retail price of movie set-top-box in half originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Feb 2009 19:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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