Tuesday, December 06, 2011

drag2share: Rentmix Makes Sure You Never Have to Stay in a Scummy Hotel when Traveling [Webapps]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5865422/rentmix-makes-sure-you-never-have-to-stay-in-a-scummy-hotel-when-traveling

Rentmix Makes Sure You Never Have to Stay in a Scummy Hotel when Traveling You don't have to book a bargain-basement hotel when you head out of the house on vacation or for the holidays. We've discussed before how you should book apartments or houses to get lots of space for little money, but new webapp Rentmix makes it easy to find available rentals in the area you're visiting so you can book ahead of time.

Rentmix aggregates listings from services like AirBnB, HomeAway, FlipKey, and other short-term rental sevices and puts them all on a Google Map so you can see how far away from events and other landmarks each listing is. For example, if you're traveling for a specific convention, you can see which houses and apartments for rent are available close to the convention center, instead of fighting all of the other attendees for hotel rooms. Just give Rentmix the dates of your trip, your budget for a rental, and how many bedrooms you need. The webapp will do the rest.

Have you rented an apartment or condo when traveling instead of spending on a hotel? Share your experiences in the comments below.

Rentmix | via The Next Web

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drag2share: Google's Nerdiest Move Ever: Now It's a Graphing Calculator! [Google]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5865326/googles-nerdiest-move-ever-now-its-a-graphing-calculator

Google's Nerdiest Move Ever: Now It's a Graphing Calculator!If you're neck-deep in math work, or just nostalgic for the high school days of your TI-83+, fire up the big G: it'll now serve you as a graphing calculator. Time to make sine waves!

It's pretty simple—plug in your formula of choice—say, x/3, (x/2)^2, ln(x), cos(pi*x/200)—and explore your graph a la Google Maps. Zoom in, zoom out, calculate. You just saved yourself a hundred bucks or so, and Google took a step closer to Wolfram Alpha. Both good things! Plug away. [Google via SearchEngineLand]

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drag2share: âInhuman Microphoneâ App Circumvents Occupy Wall Streetâs Megaphone Ban [Video]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5865327/inhuman-microphone-app-circumvents-occupy-wall-streets-megaphone-ban

‘Inhuman Microphone’ App Circumvents Occupy Wall Street’s Megaphone BanOne of the most recognizable hallmarks of the Occupy Wall Street movement has been its "human microphone," a technique through which protesters make speeches louder without the use of megaphones, which are banned from the protests. (Amplifying sound outdoors requires a permit in New York.)

The concept behind the human microphone is simple: The crowd repeats in unison what the speaker has said, chanting each sentence in succession so that people further away can hear it. Depending on your point of view, it's either inspiring or tiresome. The Inhuman Microphone does essentially the same thing - except it uses iPhones instead of human voices.

According to its creators, the use of hundreds or thousands of iPhone speakers rather than a single megaphone should be enough to get around New York's ban on amplification, because no one would argue that a smartphone's speaker would be covered by the ban. When these smartphones speak with one voice, as it were, they can not only increase the volume of the speaker's voice, but spread it to locations throughout the protests.

David Vella, Henrik Pettersson, Tom Leitch, and Tom Hannen built the Inhuman Megaphone at this past weekend's London Music Hack day event, where hacker types team up with each other to conceive and create functional music apps over the course of a single 24-hour period.

Here's how it works: The speaker simply shouts their message into an iPhone running the Inhuman Megaphone app, which sends it to a server on the internet, then back down to the smartphones of other people at the protest. They would, presumably, turn their phones up to full volume, which would then repeat the speaker's words.

The tricky part has to do with synchronizing all of those iPhones so that they play the speaker's words at exactly the same time. According to the creators,

Network latencies meant that we couldn't just fire the audio off as soon as the client received it - we have to 'synchronize watches,' as it were, so that they all trigger off at a given moment. This was achieved using Node, Socket.io, and some hack day time-sync-javacript-magic.

Luckily, you don't need to understand how the Inhuman Microphone works in order to use it. Just like democracy.

Some critics of the OWS movement have wondered why people protesting against abuses by large corporations would use devices created by large corporations in their efforts. Surely, there's a bit of irony there, and the spectacle of #OWS protesters holding aloft smartphones created by one of the biggest corporations in the world that are connected to the internet by wireless service from another massive corporation might give those people more to complain about.

Still, we can't help but applaud this development on the strength of its ingenuity. It also makes us wonder which band will be first to employ it at a concert - for instance, they could send just the vocals, keyboard part, or anything else to all the iPhones at a venue, somewhat in the style of the Flaming Lips' boombox experiment.

The presentation of the Inhuman Microphone from London Music Hack Day has some more information, or you can just try it yourself (as of right now, you can only join as a replayer):

‘Inhuman Microphone’ App Circumvents Occupy Wall Street’s Megaphone Ban Evolver.fm observes, tracks and analyzes the music apps scene, with the belief that it's crucial to how humans experience music, and how that experience is evolving.

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drag2share: Dual-core Meizu MX fully unveiled, launching on January 1st with HSPA+

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/05/dual-core-meizu-mx-fully-unveiled-launching-on-january-1st-with/

After some teases and leaks, Meizu's finally unveiled its next flagship phone MX to keep China entertained for 2012. While the quad core flavor won't be here until next year, this dual core model will be available in mainland China starting from ¥2,999 ($470) on January 1st (like with the M9 last year), and Hong Kong is still expecting an early January release. The full spec list now includes a 4-inch 960 x 640 ASV display, 1.4GHz Samsung Exynos 4210 dual core chip, 1GB of LPDDR2 RAM, 16GB of storage (32GB version to launch later), 0.3 megapixel front-facing camera, a secondary mic for noise cancellation and a 1,600mAh battery. Oh, that circular button at the bottom? It's just a physical home button instead of an optical trackpad as previously rumored.

Globetrotters will be pleased to know that the 10.3mm-thick MX will pack pentaband 3G with HSPA+, so all you need is a Micro SIM to get the phone working. As for software, it'll come with Meizu's heavily customized Android 2.3.5 initially (dubbed Flyme OS) but will eventually get the 4.0 update, as already promised by CEO Jack Wong. On the multimedia front you'll again find native support for FLAC audio plus various video formats like MKV, MP4 and AVI; along with a micro-USB port that supports S/PDIF digital output, USB host plus MHL; and an eight megapixel f/2.2 backside-illuminated camera (which does smile detection and panorama shot) with 1080p 30fps recording. Head on over to Meizu's website for the full lowdown -- it'll be a good way to practise your Chinese, too.

Update: Press release added after the break.

Continue reading Dual-core Meizu MX fully unveiled, launching on January 1st with HSPA+

Dual-core Meizu MX fully unveiled, launching on January 1st with HSPA+ originally appeared on Engadg! et o n Mon, 05 Dec 2011 21:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Lenovo's rugged ThinkPad X130e targets the education market, arrives December 20 for $469

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/06/lenovos-rugged-thinkpad-x130e-targets-the-education-market-arr/

When we first spotted leaked photos of Lenovo's ThinkPad X130e, we just kind of assumed it was the next-gen successor to the X120e, which we reviewed almost a year ago. Well, you know what happens when you A-S-S-U-M-E, right? Turns out, there is indeed an X130e, but it's intended specifically for classrooms. The company just made its official announcement, and explained that that rugged design we've been hearing about isn't meant to protect it from careless baggage handlers at the airport so much as freewheeling six year-olds. Though Lenovo's already had a hand in Intel's Classmate project, this is the first time it's released a classroom-ready laptop under the ThinkPad brand, red pointing stick and all.

Of all the kid-proof touches, the more obvious ones include a rubber bumper ringing the plastic chassis, along with a thicker bezel shielded by 1.2mm of plastic. It also has recessed, reinforced ports, an accelerometer to protect the hard drive and a hinge rated for 30,000 cycles. Of course, the result of all this ruggedizing is that the X130e is fairly heavy for an 11-incher, at 3.9 pounds (1.78kg). Otherwise, though, its specs are pretty much what you'd expect in an 11.6-inch laptop. For starters, it's offered with an Intel Core i3-2367M processor, as well as AMD Fusion E-300 and E-450 APUs. It comes with 2GB of RAM (upgradeable to 8GB), up to 500GB in storage, Bluetooth 3.0 and a 6-cell battery rated for 8.5 hours of battery life. Lenovo's also added its RapidBoot technology, promising a sub-20-second startup time. It also has three USB 2.0 sockets, HDMI, VGA, Ethernet, a combined headphone / mic port and a 4-in-1 memory card reader. And, because Lenovo is selling these to schools and not individuals, it'll customize the laptops by tweaking the BIOS and tricking out the lid in assorted colors. It'll go on sale December 20th starting at $469, and in the meantime, we've got some press photos below -- after all, just because you personally can't buy one, doesn't mean you can't look, right?

Continue reading Lenovo's rugged ThinkPad X130e targets the education market, arrives December 20 for $469

Lenovo's rugged ThinkPad X130e targets the education market, arrives December 20 for $469 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Dec 2011 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Chinese Motorola XT928 gets hands-on: less RAZR, more double-edged sword

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/06/chinese-motorola-xt928-gets-hands-on-less-razr-more-double-edg/


China's own Motorola RAZRs have arrived, and have plenty to differentiate themselves from the Verizon-coated version available in the US. Thankfully, our colleagues over at Engadget Chinese have managed to get some intimate hands-on time with the dual-SIM capable XT928. Whether it's the upgraded 13 megapixel camera, or the 4.5-inch HD display crammed inside, this Motorola mobile arrives slightly chunkier than the RAZR we're used to. In fact, it looks more like a distant cousin than a simple variant. A not-particularly tapered backing is now removable, giving access to the two SIM card slots. Ports and buttons have also been rejigged, although the main difference is certainly the carrier's decision to opt for network flexibility over the wafer-thin styling and Kevlar credentials of its fellow Moto countryman, China Mobile's MT917. See how they both measure up against the Droid RAZR in an awkward family portrait after the break or check the full gallery (and some hands-on footage) at the link below.

Continue reading Chinese Motorola XT928 gets hands-on: less RAZR, more double-edged sword

Chinese Motorola XT928 gets hands-on: less RAZR, more double-edged sword originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Dec 2011 00:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: AMD shaves 800 million transistors from Bulldozer chip, swears nothing's wrong

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/06/amd-shaves-800-million-transistors-from-bulldozer-chip-swears-n/

When a company cuts 40 percent of its transistors from an upcoming processor, one question comes to mind: why? According to ExtremeTech, AMD issued an update stating that its Bulldozer eight core / four module CPU would feature 1.2 billion transistors, as opposed to the previously stated two billion transistors. The reduction occurred despite the fact that the die size remains unchanged at 315 square millimeters -- putting it on par with AMD's lesser Llano chip -- and depriving the chip of valuable horsepower before I/O, an integrated memory controller or HyperTransport are added. When approached for comment, company representatives stated they were simply correcting a mistake regarding the chip's actual specifications. Before you bemoan the fate of the Bulldozer chip, remember that the drummer from Def Leppard has had a terrific musical career with only one arm, so what's the loss of several hundred million transistors to AMD's latest?

AMD shaves 800 million transistors from Bulldozer chip, swears nothing's wrong originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Dec 2011 01:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Kogan advertises Samsung LCDs in its HDTVs, Samsung would rather not take credit

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/06/kogan-advertises-samsung-lcds-in-its-hdtvs-samsung-would-rather/

It won't be shocking to most in the electronics industry, but the rest of the world probably doesn't realize that many products use components from other manufacturers and even direct competitors. So much like most hard drives are made by one of only a few companies, there are only about four LCD panel manufacturers. But just because it's Samsung inside doesn't make it the same, and in that vein Samsung took pause with the Australian value-minded brand, Kogan, when its commercial very plainly exposed just who makes the panels in its TVs . The cease and desist notice didn't sit well with Ruslan Kogan, who claims his company never agreed to obscure that fact and that he wouldn't "conceal the truth from the public." While we usually wish everyone could just get along, we can totally see where Samsung is coming from on this one, as there is far more involved in making a quality TV, beyond sourcing a great panel.

Continue reading Kogan advertises Samsung LCDs in its HDTVs, Samsung would rather not take credit

Kogan advertises Samsung LCDs in its HDTVs, Samsung would rather not take credit originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Dec 2011 02:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Monday, December 05, 2011

drag2share: Ainol launches the NOVO7, the world's first Android 4.0 tablet, for $100 plus shipping

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/05/ainol-launches-the-novo7-the-worlds-first-android-4-0-tablet/

Just as we were geeking out to the Jaguar 7's Ice Cream Sandwich demo and anxiously awaiting the Transformer Prime, Ingenic and MIPS completely took us by surprise by announcing the Ainol-branded NOVO7, the very first commercially available tablet with Ice Cream Sandwich officially loaded. To be specific, the device isn't brand new -- it's been previously available as a Honeycomb tablet and is now shipping with ICS pre-loaded. It's packing an Ingenic JZ4770 mobile applications processor and 1GHz MIPS-based XBurst CPU, which means this Android 4.0 slab isn't going to be the toughest workhorse in the market. What more would you expect from a $99 tablet?

The Novo7 also comes with a 7-inch capacitive touchscreen, a Vivante GC860 GPU clocked at 444MHz, 1080p video decoding, rear 2MP camera with VGA front-facing cam, USB 2.0, HDMI 1.3, microSD slot and an endorsement from Andy Rubin himself. If temptation is just too much to overcome, you can head over to the More Coverage link to order one. However, if you'd rather wait a while to save a few bucks in shipping -- it's over half the cost of the tablet itself -- MIPS informed us that it'll be coming to the States and other parts of the world over "the next several months," and 8- and 9-inch versions of the NOVO are in the works as well. Head below for a video and press release. Oh, and existing NOVO7 customers may be wondering why their tablet hasn't received ICS yet; MIPS assured us that there's an upgrade path for those customers as well, though no announcements have been made.

Continue reading Ainol launches the NOVO7, the world's first Android 4.0 tablet, for $100 plus shipping

Ainol launches the NOVO7, the world's first Android 4.0 tablet, for $100 plus shipping originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Dec 2011 14:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Asus Padfone with Tegra 3 coming in early 2012

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/05/asus-padfone-with-tegra-3-coming-in-early-2012/

Just as we were settling down to another calm and banterful Engadget Mobile Podcast, our special guest had to go and throw us some hard news. Yup, and rather than making you sit through the entire two-hour recording (pleasant as that would be), we're just going to come right out with it: Nicole Scott from netbooknews.com has it on good authority that the Asus Padfone will be coming out at MWC 2012 in February. What's more, it won't be powered by a Qualcomm Krait S4 as suggested by that strange GLBenchmark we saw earlier -- it will in fact sport a Tegra 3, just like its highly capable big bro the Transformer Prime. See? That's the kind of juicy reward our podcast listeners get for tuning in each week.

Asus Padfone with Tegra 3 coming in early 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Dec 2011 07:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Leaked Intel roadmap hints at Ivy Bridge's future

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/05/leaked-intel-roadmap-hints-at-ivy-bridges-future/

Considering how frequently Intel roadmaps leak out, you have to wonder which super-spy is smuggling all those diplomatic bags out of Santa Clara. The latest seems to contain detailed plans for 2012's Ivy Bridge desktop chips (and the sad news that the release has been pushed back to Q2). There are no big surprises in the documents, since the company just shrunk some Sandy Bridge CPUs in the wash. Going down from a 32nm to 22nm microarchitecture has managed to wring 19 percent better power usage, which enabled Chipzilla to concentrate on beefing up the range's integrated graphics performance, making it (reportedly) 60 percent faster than its bigger brother. The chipset will sit neatly atop your current Sandy Bridge motherboards, (You'll just need to flash your BIOS), which is good because we're stuck with the asthmatic, geriatric processor for at least another few months.

Leaked Intel roadmap hints at Ivy Bridge's future originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Dec 2011 09:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Samsung teases flexible, transparent display in concept video

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/05/samsung-teases-flexible-transparent-display-in-concept-video/

Samsung's flexible display technology isn't slated to hit the market until 2012, but the Korean manufacturer is already giving us a glimpse of how it may transform our lives, with a freshly released concept video. Yes, it's just a concept ad, and a relatively brief one at that, but it still paints a pretty mouth-watering portrait -- one full of transparent, flexible screens, smartphone-tablet hybrids, and augmented reality. Check it out for yourself, after the break.

Continue reading Samsung teases flexible, transparent display in concept video

Samsung teases flexible, transparent display in concept video originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Dec 2011 09:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Fujitsu Arrows ES IS12F coming to Japan next year: thick name, thin phone

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/05/fujitsu-arrows-es-is12f-coming-to-japan-next-year-thick-name-t/

KDDI's au network in Japan has revealed that it'll be stocking the slender Fujitsu Arrows ES IS12F starting January 2012. Fujitsu fans may recall seeing a very similar handset with the same (mostly) 6.7mm profile when NTT DoCoMo's version sashayed into those stuffy FCC offices. The phone runs on a single core processor, which is responsible for powering the image-stabilizing five megapixel camera and Gingerbread OS. The 4-inch, 480 x 800 AMOLED screen is cocooned in the same water resistant armor found on other Arrows devices, helping to protect those essential keitai functions like the One-Seg digital TV tuner and IR receiver. The skinny smartphone will go on sale in both black and red options on KIDDI, while NTT DoCoMo customers will have to settle for black.

Fujitsu Arrows ES IS12F coming to Japan next year: thick name, thin phone originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Dec 2011 11:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Verge  |  sourceKDDI (translated), NTT DoCoMo  | Email this | Comments

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drag2share: LG reveals X-Note Z330 Ultrabook, claims it cold boots in ten seconds

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/05/lg-reveals-x-note-z330-ultrabook-claims-it-cold-boots-in-ten-se/

Not to be confused with the bulkier P330 13.3-incher we saw last month, the new X-Note Z330 looks to have toned up to gain membership to the mwah-mwah Ultrabook clique. It's a mere 14.7mm (0.58-inches) in thickness, 1.21kg (2.67 pounds) in weight and sports a solid state drive to help it boot up in under ten seconds. What's not so Ultrabookish, however, is the price: the Z330 has been announced in Korea starting at ₩1,700,000 ($1,500) for the Core i5 variant with 4GB RAM, a 120GB SSD and a fairly usual range of connectivity, including HDMI, USB 3.0 and Intel WiDi for streaming content wirelessly to your HDTV. Opting for a Core i7 and a 256GB SSD will add a hefty ₩900,000 ($800) on top of that. We've duly prepared a rant about value for money, but we're going to save it until there's official US price tag instead.

LG reveals X-Note Z330 Ultrabook, claims it cold boots in ten seconds originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Dec 2011 12:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sunday, December 04, 2011

drag2share: New Li-ion Battery Design Boosts Energy Capacity and Charge Rate 10-Fold

Source: http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2011-11/new-li-ion-battery-design-boosts-energy-capacity-and-charge-rate-10-fold

Charging Up Loimere via Flickr

For years, battery designers have been looking for the next big thing in energy storage technology that could replace the lithium-ion batteries currently found in everything from laptops to smartphones to cars. It turns out they may have simply needed to rethink the existing li-ion battery. Northwestern University researchers have re-engineered a lithium-ion battery that can hold ten times the charge of current batteries on the market, and can charge ten times faster.

The trick: a redesigned anode that addresses the two main issues holding li-ion batteries back--charge capacity and charge rate. Li-ion batteries work via a chemical reaction in which lithium ions are swapped between two ends of a battery (known as the anode and the cathode). As energy is burned by a device, ions travel from where they are stored in the anode through an electrolyte to the cathode. In the process, electrical charge is passed to the device as the ions make the transition through the electrolyte. When the battery charges, the ions move in the opposite direction, from cathode to anode.

Current anode design is based on graphene sheets--one-atom-thick layers of carbon--that store the lithium ions. But these anodes can only store one lithium atom for every six carbon atoms, a rather low charge density. Designers have experimented with materials like silicon, which can hold four lithium atoms for every silicon atom, but silicon tends to expand and contract significantly during the charge process, causing it to fragment. This naturally reduces the lifetime of the anode.

A graphene-based design also slows the charge rate. Because of the geometry of graphene sheets--very thin but very long--lithium ions have to make a long trip to the edges of the graphene sheets and then push their way inside. This causes a kind of ion bottleneck around the edges of the anode and slows the charge rate significantly.

The NU team sawed through these problems significantly by rethinking the anode and incorporating a hybrid graphene-silicon design that boosts capacity and charge rate at the same time. First, they sandwiched layers of silicon in between the graphene sheets, allowing greater numbers of lithium ions to come to rest there. The silicon still expands and contracts during charging and discharging, but the flexibility of the graphene still holds the anode together. The silicon can fragment but it still stays in place, allowing the anode to hold greater charge.

The team then used chemical oxidation to punch tiny holes in the graphene sheets--just 10 to 20 nanometers across--so the lithium ions can move through the graphene rather than having to go around to the edges of the anode (where the traffic jams were occurring). This shortcut allow lithium ions to pile into the anode quickly during the charge process, giving charge rates a 10-fold shot in the arm.

And that's just the anode. The researchers next plan to rethink the cathode to further boost efficiency and effectiveness. The better li-ion battery could hit the marketplace in the next three to five years.

[NU]

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