Spotting celebs with the iPhone

The Unofficial Apple Weblog has picked up on new website, Coolspotters, which tracks brands and the celebrities that use them, and the iPhone is one of them. 36 celebrities have been spotted so far...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNBlogTech | 15 May 2008 | 2:00 pm

US operator limits iPhone sales

According to TechRadar, AT&T;, the exclusive operator for the iPhone in the US, has had a memo leaked stating customers will only be allowed to buy one of Apple's devices per person in the coming weeks...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNBlogTech | 15 May 2008 | 1:57 pm

Colossus Cipher Challenge Winner On Ada

An anonymous reader writes "Colossus Cipher Challenge winner Joachim Schueth talks about why he settled on Ada as his language of choice to unravel a code transmitted from the Heinz Nixdorf Museum in Germany, from a Lorenz SZ42 Cipher machine (used by the German High Command to relay secret messages during the World War II). 'Ada allowed me to concisely express the algorithms I wanted to implement.'"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: Slashdot | 15 May 2008 | 1:47 pm

Google to Spread Social Tool Across The Web - InternetNews.com


InternetNews.com

Google to Spread Social Tool Across The Web
InternetNews.com - 50 minutes ago
The drive for an interoperable social Web continues as Google rolls out Friend Connect service. By Kenneth Corbin: More stories by this author: Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) has picked up the banner of the social Web by launching an initiative to bring ...
The Top 10 Social Networking Annoyances PC World
Google Absent from MySpace Data Portability Initiative eWeek
New York Times - ClickZ News - ZDNet - eFluxMedia
all 461 news articles

Source: Google News - Sci/Tech | 15 May 2008 | 1:41 pm

Microsoft's New Math on SMB Servers - InternetNews.com


eFluxMedia

Microsoft's New Math on SMB Servers
InternetNews.com - 51 minutes ago
As the company inches closer to releasing Essential Business Solutions bundles, officials disclose pricing, including a price jump.
Microsoft Offers SMBs Bundled Solutions eWeek
Microsoft Reveals SMB Software Pricing, Previews PC World
InformationWeek - CRN - eFluxMedia - BetaNews
all 72 news articles

Source: Google News - Sci/Tech | 15 May 2008 | 1:41 pm

MySpace Wins Record $230M Suit Against Spammer - InternetNews.com


ChattahBox

MySpace Wins Record $230M Suit Against Spammer
InternetNews.com - 54 minutes ago
By Kenneth Corbin: More stories by this author: MySpace is emerging the winner of a $230 million judgment against a spammer in what's believed to be the largest antispam case ever.
Spam king, phishing buddy hit for $200m ZDNet
MySpace Wins $225 Million Spam Judgment InformationWeek
The Tech Herald - CRN - Register - BBC News
all 581 news articles

Source: Google News - Sci/Tech | 15 May 2008 | 1:37 pm

It's Official: Icahn Takes on Yahoo

It's official: Carl Icahn is going after Yahoo. The multi-billionaire corporate raider is nominating himself and 9 others to the board which, he said, had had an "irrational" reaction to the Microsoft takeover bid.


Source: Wired Top Stories | 15 May 2008 | 1:37 pm

Verizon picks Linux—but not Android—for mobile platform - Ars Technica


dBTechno

Verizon picks Linux—but not Android—for mobile platform
Ars Technica - 57 minutes ago
By Ryan Paul | Published: May 15, 2008 - 08:25AM CT Mobile carrier Verizon Wireless has joined the Linux Mobile (LiMo) Foundation and has announced plans to adopt the open source software platform.
Verizon shuns Android for LiMo Register
Verizon Wireless joins LiMo Foundation Reuters
InformationWeek - PC World - CNNMoney.com - Washington Post
all 268 news articles

Source: Google News - Sci/Tech | 15 May 2008 | 1:35 pm

EU Raises Privacy Issue for Google Street View - PC World


The Age

EU Raises Privacy Issue for Google Street View
PC World - 59 minutes ago
Europe's data protection supervisor, Peter Hustinx, urged Google Thursday to respect local privacy rules as it prepares to launch its Street View function this side of the Atlantic.
EU says Google map images could be a problem Reuters
Privacy issues lead to Google Street View facial blur The Tech Herald
dBTechno - The Associated Press - BetaNews - InformationWeek
all 159 news articles

Source: Google News - Sci/Tech | 15 May 2008 | 1:33 pm

Aliph’s Jawbone2: Less Weight and Great Noise Cancellation - eFluxMedia


Slippery Brick

Aliph’s Jawbone2: Less Weight and Great Noise Cancellation
eFluxMedia - 1 hour ago
By Anne Shaw Aliph announced the release of its second version of the Jawbone Bluetooth earpiece. The Jawbone 2 is designed to eliminate most of the inconveniencies that a headset presents.
Aliph Jawbone 2 (gold) CNET Reviews
Aliph's New Jawbone Headset: Smaller and More Stylish PC World
Mobile Burn - iLounge - Slippery Brick - PC Magazine
all 42 news articles

Source: Google News - Sci/Tech | 15 May 2008 | 1:31 pm

Nintendo Loses $21 Million Controller Patent Case - Gamasutra


dBTechno

Nintendo Loses $21 Million Controller Patent Case
Gamasutra - 1 hour ago
Nintendo of America has lost a court patent battle with East Texas company Anascape and has been ordered to pay $21 million by a federal jury.
Nintendo ordered to pay $21 million GameSpot
Nintendo fined $21 million for motion control infringement CVG Online
The Associated Press - Electronista - Kotaku.com - Action Trip
all 129 news articles

Source: Google News - Sci/Tech | 15 May 2008 | 1:25 pm

Comcast To Become Plaxo’s Owner - eFluxMedia


dBTechno

Comcast To Become Plaxo’s Owner
eFluxMedia - 1 hour ago
By Max Brenn Comcast announced Wednesday that it will acquire social network site pioneer Plaxo. The deal is valued somewhere around $135million to $175 million, and is intended to make the social portal part of Comcast Interactive Media.
Comcast And Plaxo Invite You To The Marriage Of Set-top Box ... Washington Post
Comcast acquires social network pioneer Plaxo Reuters
PC World - Multichannel News - Wall Street Journal - dBTechno
all 160 news articles

Source: Google News - Sci/Tech | 15 May 2008 | 1:17 pm

CrunchNetwork Prague Meet-up Update

We’re fast approaching our super fun CrunchNetwork Prague Meet-up and getting ready for the big night. We’re going to have some surprises coming up so watch this space but until then feel free...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNBlogTech | 15 May 2008 | 1:16 pm

UMG Calls Infringement Damages "Excessive"

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "Why would UMG, one of the four major RIAA members, consider an infringement award 'grossly excessive'? Naturally, because they were the ones ordered to pay it. While they had no trouble with Jammie Thomas being ordered to pay $222k, some 13,214 times the actual costs, they thought that being ordered to pay ten times the actual damages in Bridgeport v. Justin Combs was just too much. Then again, maybe that's why they didn't complain back when the increased statutory damages section was cut from the PRO-IP Act? Now if they could just cut the rest of the act."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: Slashdot | 15 May 2008 | 1:10 pm

Agency Finally Meets Deadline, Declares Polar Bear Threatened - eFluxMedia


The Southern Ledger

Agency Finally Meets Deadline, Declares Polar Bear Threatened
eFluxMedia - 1 hour ago
By Dee Chisamera Three years after the Fish and Wildlife Services was asked to review the situation of the polar bears, and one federal deadline later, the Interior Department finally did something that should have been done a long time ago: list the ...
Video: Polar Bears On Thin Ice (CBS News) CBS
google news commentComment by Reed Hopper Principal Attorney, Pacific Legal Foundation
Washington Post - Wall Street Journal - San Francisco Chronicle - Los Angeles Times
all 1,534 news articles

Source: Google News - Sci/Tech | 15 May 2008 | 1:09 pm

Xbox 360 sales surpass Wii, PS3 - Reuters


GizmoRepublic

Xbox 360 sales surpass Wii, PS3
Reuters - 1 hour ago
SEATTLE (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Wednesday its Xbox 360 game machine beat Nintendo Co Ltd's (7974.
Sony: 4Q Profits Surge, PlayStation 3 Losses Dwindle PC World
US: 360 beats Wii/PS3 to 10 million CVG Online
eFluxMedia - Slippery Brick - bit-tech.net - GameSpot
all 221 news articles

Source: Google News - Sci/Tech | 15 May 2008 | 1:07 pm

Swarming Ants Destroy Electronics in Texas

AntOverlords writes "Voracious swarming ants that apparently arrived in Texas aboard a cargo ship are invading homes and yards across the Houston area, shorting out electrical boxes and messing up computers. They have ruined pumps at sewage pumping stations, fouled computers and at least one homeowner's gas meter, and caused fire alarms to malfunction. They have been spotted at NASA's Johnson Space Center and close to Hobby Airport, though they haven't caused any major problems there yet."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: Slashdot | 15 May 2008 | 12:34 pm

CBS in $1.75B deal for online news site CNet

CBS Corp. agreed to buy online technology news and entertainment company CNet Networks Inc. for about $1.75 billion, expanding its access to the burgeoning Internet advertising market.
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNewsTech | 15 May 2008 | 12:33 pm

Flash Player 10: Dazzling Effects, Better Performance, Runs on Linux

Adobe releases a beta version of Flash Player 10, which promises better performance, improved text handling, custom photo effects filters and native 3D animations. But why will you really like it? Adobe tells wired.com that most of the new features were suggested by the development community crowd.


Source: Wired Top Stories | 15 May 2008 | 12:16 pm

Myanmar cyclone damage worsened by loss of mangroves: FAO

The destruction of mangrove forests along parts of Myanmar's coast contributed to the damage wreaked by cyclone Nargis, the UN food agency said Thursday. Farmland and...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNewsTech | 15 May 2008 | 12:12 pm

Movie plot security threat contest winner

Bruce Schneier has announced the winner of his annual "Movie Plot Threat" contest, in which his readers are invited to come up with ridiculous, improbable and frightening things that you could probably...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNBlogTech | 15 May 2008 | 12:05 pm

Movie plot security threat contest winner

Bruce Schneier has announced the winner of his annual "Movie Plot Threat" contest, in which his readers are invited to come up with ridiculous, improbable and frightening things that you could probably frighten people with enough that they're lured into buying some stupid product or giving up some essential liberty (or both). Here's the winning entry, from Aaron Massey (be sure to click through and check out the runners up, too!)
Many Americans were shocked to hear the results of the research trials regarding heavy metals and toothpaste conducted by the New England Journal of Medicine, which FDA is only now attempting to confirm. This latest scare comes after hundreds of deaths were linked to toothpaste contaminated with diethylene glycol, a potentially dangerous chemical used in antifreeze.

In light of this continuing health risk, Hamilton Health Labs is proud to announce Tommy Tester Toothpaste Strips! Just apply a dab of toothpaste from a fresh tube onto the strip and let it rest for 3 minutes. It’s just that easy! If the strip turns blue, rest assured that your entire tube of toothpaste is safe. However, if the strip turns pink, dispose of the toothpaste immediately and call the FDA health emergency number at 301-443-1240.

Do not let your family become a statistic when the solution is only $2.95!

Link

See also:
Schneier: Movie-plot security doesn't make America safe
Movie-plot security threats bonanza
Schneier TSA movie plot contest results
Movie plot threat contest: make the TSA ban watches!


Source: Boing Boing | 15 May 2008 | 12:05 pm

CBS to buy CNet for $1.75 billion

CBS says it's buying CNet Networks Inc. for about $1.75 billion. That's a 45 percent premium above the closing price of $7.95 for the online news and entertainment site.


Source: Wired Top Stories | 15 May 2008 | 12:01 pm

NBC Activates Broadcast Flag

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "NBC activated the 'broadcast flag' on a number of shows this week, ranging from American Gladiator to Medium, which prevented compliant programs like Windows Media Center from recording them. The matter is being 'looked into,' but that doesn't tell us whether it was an accident or a ploy to see how outraged viewers would be at being stripped of the time-shifting rights they've enjoyed ever since Sony v. Universal. Just in case it's the latter, it wouldn't hurt to let them know what you think."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: Slashdot | 15 May 2008 | 11:57 am

CBS agrees to buy CNet for $1.75 billion

CBS Corp. says it has agreed to buy online technology news and entertainment company CNet Networks Inc. for about $1.75 billion. The owner of the CBS television network and TV stations...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNewsTech | 15 May 2008 | 11:44 am

Amazon Funds Animoto Music Video Creator

Amazon has taken a special interest in one of its web service customers: Animoto, the machine-driven music video creator that launched last August and now has over 160,000 users. The online retail giant...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNBlogTech | 15 May 2008 | 11:25 am

BT 4Q profit falls costs rise, customers flee

BT Group PLC, Britain's biggest telecommunications company, reported a 6.2 percent decline Thursday in its fourth quarter profit, as costs rose and it lost some wholesale customers to...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNewsTech | 15 May 2008 | 11:20 am

TechCrunch EuroTour: Hello Hamburg!

So today I’m at the Next08 conference in sunny Hamburg, Germany, my first stop in the TechCrunch EuroTour. There are about 1,200 people here, up from around 700 last year which just goes to show...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNBlogTech | 15 May 2008 | 11:15 am

Strands Absorbs Another Personal Finance Company

Strands has made a second recruitment in its effort to develop a Mint competitor called moneyStrands that leverages the same recommendation engine behind its video and music products. Just over two weeks...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNBlogTech | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

South Korea to Slap Anti-Dumping Duties on Chinese Chemical

Text of report in English by South Korean news agency Yonhap [Yonhap headline: "Seoul To Slap Anti-dumping Duties on Chinese Benzoyl Peroxide"] Seoul, May 15 (Yonhap) - South Korea said Thursday it will slap anti-dumping duties on Chinese benzoyl peroxide for three years to protect the local industry from excessively cheap Chinese chemicals.
Source: RedOrbit News - Science | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

High Growth Reported for the World Foamed Plastics (Polyurethane) Markets

Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report related to the Plastic industry is available in its catalogue.
Source: RedOrbit News - Science | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Learn About the World Oxalic Acid Markets

Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report related to the Chemicals industry is available in its catalogue.
Source: RedOrbit News - Science | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Social Cost-Benefit Analysis of Karnataka Watershed Development (KAWAD) Project, Karnataka, India

By Silori, C S Shukla, Megha; Jalajakshi, C K; Abraham, Mary SUMMARY This paper presents results of a social cost-benefit analysis (CBA) of afforestation and soil moisture treatment of common lands under an integrated watershed development programme in Karnataka State, India.
Source: RedOrbit News - Science | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Officials Sing Praises of New Century Lake Park: $1.5 Million Project Gives Residents Another Recreational Option; Fishermen Will Have to Wait a Year

By Melissa Hall, Winston-Salem Journal, N.C. May 15--KERNERSVILLE Century Lake Park on Century Boulevard was about 10 years in the making before its opening last Friday.
Source: RedOrbit News - Science | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Environmental Water Requirements and Sustainable Water Resource Management in the Haihe River Basin of North China

By Wei, Yanchang Miao, Hong; Ouyang, Zhiyun Key words: Environmental water requirements (EWR), water scarcity, management instruments, South-North water transfer scheme, water price policy, agricultural water saving SUMMARY Lack of consideration of environmental water requirements (EWR) in water resource allocation has caused several environmental problems in the Haihe River Basin, North China.
Source: RedOrbit News - Science | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

U.S. Tourists Visiting Panda Reserve Reported Safe

By Wendy Koch Twelve U.S. tourists who were visiting a panda-breeding reserve in China on Monday survived the country's magnitude-7.9 earthquake unhurt.
Source: RedOrbit News - Science | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Omega 3 Fatty Acids Bound to Phospholipids Has Potential Benefit for Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)

GREEN BAY, Wis., May 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Omega 3 fatty acids bound to phospholipids deserves to be further considered as a credible natural alternative and may have beneficial effect on impulsivity in ADHD patients, recent in vivo French study reveals.
Source: RedOrbit News - Science | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Ralph De La Cruz: Strip Club is Way More Valuable to Boynton Beach

By Ralph De La Cruz, South Florida Sun-Sentinel May 15--Consider the possibilities. Boynton Beach has bought a strip club. Is this a great county, or what? OK. So they only "bought" it in the technical sense.
Source: RedOrbit News - Science | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Sustainable Development of an Agricultural System Under Ecological Restoration Based on Emergy Analysis: A Case Study in Northeastern China

By Wei, Jian-bing Xiao, Du-ning; Zeng, Hui Key words: Regional ecological restoration and rehabilitation, eco-economic system, agricultural effect, Emergy analysis SUMMARY Using China's advanced eco-agricultural model for Baiquan County, Heilongjiang Province, extensive statistical data and original information were collected.
Source: RedOrbit News - Science | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Top Tech Tips for a Fun-Drenched Summer HP's Desktop PCs Give You the Best in Summer Entertainment

HP Middle East today announced the best desktops to meet everyone's summer season entertainment needs.
Source: RedOrbit News - Technology | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

IBM Releases High-Performance Blade Server

IBM has launched a blade server offering high-performance computing for the financial services, digital media creation, and medical imaging markets.
Source: RedOrbit News - Technology | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Using AppleTV As a Sales Tool

By McManus, Joe Apple's versatile Apple TV comes with a small footprint (8''x8'') and is a great way to present HD-quality videos to your clients. apple entered the battle for the living room entertainment market in 2007 with the release of the Apple TV device.
Source: RedOrbit News - Technology | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Whitehall Jewelers Signs $1.6 Million Deal With New Edge

New Edge Networks, the business communications unit of EarthLink, has announced that Whitehall Jewelers has expanded and renewed a $1.6 million multi-year agreement for managing and maintaining a private network linking the jewelry chain's 375 stores in regional and super-regional shopping malls and power centers in 39 states.
Source: RedOrbit News - Technology | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

River Bend Launches Data-Rich Web Site: Maps and Useful Information Can Be Easily Accessed

By Will Buss, Belleville News-Democrat, Ill. May 15--GODFREY -- The economic development organization serving smaller communities in Madison County has introduced a new online mapping tool to help bring business and interest to the metro-east area.
Source: RedOrbit News - Technology | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

BT and O2 Sign Mobile Broadband Deal

BT has announced a five-year managed network services agreement with O2, which is owned by Telefonica, to manage high-speed connectivity between its base stations and core national network in the UK.
Source: RedOrbit News - Technology | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Shop5.Com Unveils an Innovative Way to Find the Best Websites and Save Money

SANTA MONICA, Calif., May 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Online searching became much easier this month with the launch of a novel way to find and compare the top five websites across hundreds of intuitive categories -- Shop5.com. (http://www.shop5.com/).
Source: RedOrbit News - Technology | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Seniors Increasingly Comfortable With Surfing The Net

By Korky Vann, The Hartford Courant, Conn. May 15--Old age brings a number of physical challenges, including arthritis, diabetes, hearing loss or high blood pressure, and the Internet is a good source of information and updates on services, programs and treatments.
Source: RedOrbit News - Technology | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Many Consumers Juggle Several Addresses, Frustrating Companies

By Allison Bruce, Ventura County Star, Calif. May 15--If you're a good friend of Edward Lin, you have his Gmail address. Anybody else will have to settle for the Yahoo e-mail address he has had for years, but he doesn't check it as frequently.
Source: RedOrbit News - Technology | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Sex Offenders Required to Register Online Screen Names

By Melissa Mansfield, Newsday, Melville, N.Y. May 15--ALBANY -- The 25,000 sex offenders registered in New York now will have to report their online identities to the state, in a new effort to safeguard children using social networking sites. A law signed yesterday by Gov.
Source: RedOrbit News - Technology | 15 May 2008 | 11:00 am

Crazy rasberry ants devour Houston's electronics

Houston is a-swarm with "crazy rasberry ants" -- an exotic species that eats fireants and electronic equipment. The "crazy" part is that they kind of wobble and weave when they walk. They have multiple, exterminator-resistant queens, and are attacking the local animal population as well.
They have ruined pumps at sewage pumping stations, fouled computers and at least one homeowner's gas meter, and caused fire alarms to malfunction. They have been spotted at NASA's Johnson Space Center and close to Hobby Airport, though they haven't caused any major problems there yet.

Exterminators say calls from frustrated homeowners and businesses are increasing because the ants — which are starting to emerge by the billions with the onset of the warm, humid season — appear to be resistant to over-the-counter ant killers.

"The population built up so high that typical ant controls simply did no good," said Jason Meyers, an A&M doctoral student who is writing his dissertation on the one-eighth-inch-long ant.

It's not enough just to kill the queen. Experts say each colony has multiple queens that have to be taken out.

Link (Thanks, Bonnie!)


Source: Boing Boing | 15 May 2008 | 10:45 am

Crazy rasberry ants devour Houston's electronics

Houston is a-swarm with "crazy rasberry ants" -- an exotic species that eats fireants and electronic equipment. The "crazy" part is that they kind of wobble and weave when they walk. They have multiple,...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNBlogTech | 15 May 2008 | 10:45 am

Electric house of the future: 1939's promise

Popular Mechanics' August, 1939 feature "The Electric Home of the Future" features the kind of boundless, electrical future hovering on the horizon for the brave people of 1939. In the not-distant...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNBlogTech | 15 May 2008 | 10:39 am

Electric house of the future: 1939's promise

Popular Mechanics' August, 1939 feature "The Electric Home of the Future" features the kind of boundless, electrical future hovering on the horizon for the brave people of 1939.

In the not-distant future, the home may well be equipped with “mood control,” which is made possible by newly developed light sources. It’s possible that people will suit the light and color of their rooms to their moods. These new-type lamps produce colors of warm white, daylight white, gold, red, blue, pink and green. It’s up to the psychologists to figure out the proper combinations of colors to lift one’s spirits, when they are down, with a flood of brilliant light, or subdue a sense of excitement with soothing mellow light.

These new lamps are highly efficient colored-light makers, producing from ten to fifty times as much light per watt as has been possible with incandescent lamps. They utilize a very low-pressure mercury vapor discharge which produces ultraviolet radiations, giving little direct visible light or heat radiation. The inside surface of the glass tubes is coated with chemicals which glow when struck by invisible ultraviolet radiation. The combination of chemicals used in the coating of the lamp determines the resultant color.

It is even possible that in the future we may produce on a commercial scale similar lights by bombarding the fluorescent material of the lamps with short-wave radio beams.

Link


Source: Boing Boing | 15 May 2008 | 10:39 am

Art of multi-face watches

Today on the Watchismo Times, a drool-worthy exhibition of multi-time-zone, multi-face watches. Ever since I started travelling a lot (and, consequentially, living in a bunch of timezones), I've bought...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNBlogTech | 15 May 2008 | 10:35 am

Art of multi-face watches


Today on the Watchismo Times, a drool-worthy exhibition of multi-time-zone, multi-face watches. Ever since I started travelling a lot (and, consequentially, living in a bunch of timezones), I've bought a multi-face watch or two -- but these put my collection to shame. Link


Source: Boing Boing | 15 May 2008 | 10:35 am

Nintendo hit with $21 million patent infringement

Nintendo of America Inc. was ordered to pay a small East Texas gaming company $21 million Wednesday for infringing on a patent while designing controllers for its popular Wii and GameCube
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNewsTech | 15 May 2008 | 9:17 am

Fusion Reports First Quarter 2008 Results

NEW YORK, May 15 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Fusion (Amex: FSN) today announced financial results for the quarter ended March 31, 2008. Recent Highlights: ...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNewsTech | 15 May 2008 | 9:15 am

Einstein Letter Goes on Sale

ErkDemon writes "For any Slashdotters who want a piece of frameable Einstein memorabilia, a letter from A.E. to Eric Gutkind goes on sale at Bloomsbury Auctions today (May 15th). The content of the letter mostly deals with Einstein's views on religion. (Einstein pronounces himself rather unimpressed by the whole idea and rejects it as "childish.") The Guardian has printed a translated excerpt from the letter."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: Slashdot | 15 May 2008 | 9:10 am

Cimatron to Exhibit Advanced Machining Techniques and Newly Released CAD/CAM Capabilities at EASTEC

GIVAT SHMUEL, Israel, May 15 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Cimatron's (NASDAQ: CIMT) suite of integrated CAD/CAM solutions will be on display at the upcoming EASTEC...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNewsTech | 15 May 2008 | 9:06 am

Elbit Vision Systems Schedules First Quarter 2008 Results And Conference Call

QADIMA, Israel, May 15 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Elbit Vision Systems Ltd. (OTCBB: EVSNF.OB), a global leader in the field of automatic in-line optical web inspection and
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNewsTech | 15 May 2008 | 9:04 am

Aveso and dz card to Introduce World's First Hot Laminated One-Time Password Display Card

MINNEAPOLIS and BANGKOK, Thailand, May 15 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- dz card ( href="http://www.dzcard.com">http://www.dzcard.com ), a leading Visa and MasterCard...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNewsTech | 15 May 2008 | 9:03 am

Icahn Sends Open Letter to Board of Directors of Yahoo!

NEW YORK, May 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Carl Icahn today announced that the following letter was delivered today to Yahoo! with the attached biographies of our ten nominees for...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNewsTech | 15 May 2008 | 9:01 am

Kangaroo targets autumn rollout

Kangaroo, the internet TV joint venture between BBC Worldwide, ITV and Channel 4, is set to launch this autumn. The ITV chief operating officer and finance director, John Cresswell, speaking as ITV's first...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNPaperTech | 15 May 2008 | 9:00 am

BT enjoys growth of new wave revenues

Ben Verwaayen will end his six-year tenure as BT chief executive next month on a relative high note after annual results published today showed his transformation of the business is now firmly established...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNPaperTech | 15 May 2008 | 8:16 am

Ikea to sell virtual furniture in The Sims 2 computer game

Players of The Sims 2 will soon be able to add Ikea furniture to their virtual homes as part of a marketing deal between the Swedish company and Electronic Arts, the computer game's producer. EA has formed...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNPaperTech | 15 May 2008 | 7:40 am

BBtv - Google's "Great Firewall of China": Fun with the Billboard Liberation Front and monochrom


The San Francisco-based Billboard Liberation Front has been transforming the world of advertising since 1977. When Austrian art-pranksters and regular BBtv guests monochrom recently visited the United States to spread their Sculpture Mob dogma, a historic meeting with the elusive BLF took place. BBtv's hidden cameras captured everything.

And in part two of today's BBtv episode, Xeni travels with the BLF and monochrom to document their first-ever joint exploit to build "The Great Firewall of China" around one of the Google signs on the internet giant's Mountain View campus. Hijinks ensued; dogs, cops, and GOOG security guards pursued; TV news crews newsed.

The goal of their "unpaid advertising services"? To draw attention to Google's role in online censorship within China. As it happened, this particular day was the same day of a Google shareholder meeting, during which related proposals came up for vote.

Link to Billboard Liberation Front press release, and here's monochrom's side of the story. Here are previous BBtv episodes with monochrom.

Link to Boing Boing tv episode with discussion and downloadable video.


Source: Boing Boing | 15 May 2008 | 7:24 am

Actors don't want to lose grip on Web clips

Control over images is at stake as studios seek new Web revenue. Few things are more precious to actors than control...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNPaperTech | 15 May 2008 | 7:00 am

Iron Man and Speed Racer: The Videogame

Iron Man has good graphics and dialogue but is hard to control. Speed Racer is dull racing on color overload. ...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNPaperTech | 15 May 2008 | 7:00 am

Google's website passes Yahoo's in popularity

Google has surpassed Yahoo to become the most popular website in the U.S., according to Internet tracking firm ComScore Inc.'s rankings by the number of unique monthly visitors.
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNPaperTech | 15 May 2008 | 7:00 am

'Iron Man,' 'Baby Mama' and more: Exhibit showcases set decorators

"PULLING Back the Drapes," a new exhibition at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' Fourth Floor Gallery, looks to shed some light on an individual who is instrumental in breathing three-dimensional...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNPaperTech | 15 May 2008 | 7:00 am

Icahn expected to nominate directors for Yahoo board

The billionaire has asked 12 people whether they would be willing to serve if asked, sources say. But is Microsoft still interested in a deal? ...
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNPaperTech | 15 May 2008 | 7:00 am

Estonian Cyber Defence Hub Set Up

w1z4rd writes "The BBC reports that seven Nato nations have backed a new cyber defence centre in Estonia, which last year blamed Russia for weeks of attacks on its internet structure. The US will initially send an observer to the project, which will have some 30 staff when fully operational in August."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: Slashdot | 15 May 2008 | 5:41 am

Censorship in China targeted by RSF's new ad campaign


A creative new advertising campaign from journalist advocacy organization Reporters Without Borders (RSF), aimed at various regimes hostile to press freedom, including China. Click for larger size to see the detail that makes this such a compelling design. (thanks, Oxblood!)


Source: Boing Boing | 15 May 2008 | 4:46 am

US Air Force wants "full control" of "any and all" computers


Over at the Wired defense technology blog "Danger Room," Noah Shachtman writes:

The Air Force wants a suite of hacker tools, to give it "access" to -- and "full control" of -- any kind of computer there is. And once the info warriors are in, the Air Force wants them to keep tabs on their "adversaries' information infrastructure completely undetected."

The government is growing increasingly interested in waging war online. The Air Force recently put together a "Cyberspace Command," with a charter to rule networks the way its fighter jets rule the skies. The Department of Homeland Security, Darpa, and other agencies are teaming up for a five-year, $30 billion "national cybersecurity iniative." That includes an electronic test range, where federally-funded hackers can test out the latest electronic attacks. "You used to need an army to wage a war," a recent Air Force commercial notes. "Now, all you need is an Internet connection."

On Monday, the Air Force Research Laboratory introduced a two-year, $11 million effort to put together hardware and software tools for "Dominant Cyber Offensive Engagement." "Of interest are any and all techniques to enable user and/or root level access," a request for proposals notes, "to both fixed (PC) or mobile computing platforms...

Link to full post.


Source: Boing Boing | 15 May 2008 | 4:36 am

Gear Gallery: Slick Laptop, New Canon Rebel, Networked-Storage Machines

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When you first pop open the A305, you may gasp a little: Reflective hematite stripes and lacquered finish catch light, while the keys shimmer like little black candies, inviting your fingers to dance across them. But the mirrored surface also invites smudges to the party -- a lot of them -- which means you'll be spending time spiffing the thing up before it can be seen in public.

Then again, the Toshiba's packed with goodies. An Intel T8100 processor, 3 GB of RAM and a 512-MB ATI graphics chip provide punch for processing and playtime. Dual 200-MB drives offer tons of room for HD video that you can pipe out to a TV through HDMI. An extended battery lends two hours of time away from an outlet. While the screen is bright and sharp, it's a little too reflective; if you don't like the way you look, use this laptop exclusively in the dark. And maybe that's where the Toshiba performs best. Slip in a DVD or a game in the darkness of your dungeon, watch the inset DVD controls glow coolly through the dark, game away in peace, and know that no one will ever see the smudges.

WIRED: Breathtaking good looks. Sweet specs delight (casual) gamers without causing poverty.

TIRED: No Blu-ray to go with the HDMI. Mirrored surface is positively smudgo-philic, while the screen causes unwanted self-examination. The fingerprint reader separates the mouse keys and fails to justify its existence.

$1,250 as tested, Toshiba

7 out of 10

Read our full Toshiba A305 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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This new compact DSLR from Canon gets the now obligatory two-mil bump in resolution to 12.2 megapixels, but in the case of the XSi, the prestige lies in a new Digic III processor, higher 3.5-fps frame rate, a larger viewfinder, back-of-the-camera-dominating 3-inch LCD, quicker autofocus, a bundled 18-55mm f3.5-5.6 lens with optical image stabilization and the inclusion of Live View.

This wide zoom lens (29-88mm 35mm equivalent) benefits from expected sharpness and added f-stop range. The XSi is given a bump up from its more expensive siblings with dual Live View autofocus. You can choose between the phase-change AF and contrast-based AF. Canon specs the XSi with the same Digic III processor and 14-bit Analog-Digital converter used on its top-of-the-line 1Ds Mark III series. This combo delivers -- among many good things -- quicker image processing, faster frame rates and a broader range of tones with improved color rendition on the final prints. All told, Canon has made a credible case for the step-up-from-point-and-shoot customers to give the XSi a hard look.

WIRED: Switch to SDHC memory. Relatively low noise at high ISO settings. New battery with 50 percent more endurance.

TIRED: ISO tops out at 1600. Plastic body seems too plasticky. ISO in only full-stop increments. Lacks the useful HELP mode of its major competitors. A tad bit pricey.

$900 as tested, Canon

Read our full Canon Rebel XSi review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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There's a lot to love about this phone on the surface: It's elegantly minimalist, light weight and versatile. At 4 x 2 x.7-inches, it shares the form factor of its cousin the F700, making for a slick, pocket-friendly presentation. The Glyde's clean profile is rounded out by the unit's sparse use of external buttons and a slimming dark-blue-on-silver chassis. With its sweet looks, the bonuses of multimedia support and a decent 2-MP camera with flash, the Glyde is clearly a stylistic progression compared with Verizon's other touchscreen phones.

Likewise, the Glyde does fairly well with its full HTML browser too. Wikipedia and Google queries were easily executed and relatively quick with the phone's EV-DO connection. Of course, with no accelerometer, onscreen QWERTY keyboard, or gesture-based navigation, the Glyde isn't exactly an iPhone-killer. Samsung attempts to sweeten the deal by adding a basic QWERTY keyboard (accessible by sliding the screen to the right). In truth, this addition ends up being a mixed bag. The fastest way to zip around on this phone seems to be an underwhelming combination of touchscreen and QWERTY navigation. Score? Glyde 1, Pseudo-futuristic badassery 0.


WIRED:
Sleek and compact design. Bluetooth compatible. Adjustable vibrating feedback for touch commands. Backlit QWERTY keypad is easy to see in the dark. Records up to 10 minutes of video. Speedy performance. Crisp call quality. Vibrant 240 x 440 touchscreen. Touchscreen automatically locks after initiating calls.

TIRED: Onscreen buttons near screen perimeter can be unresponsive. Automatically switches to landscape whenever browser is opened. Weak speaker output during both multimedia playback and speakerphone calls. No onscreen QWERTY keyboard for texting. With only 35 MB of internal memory for music, shelling out for a microSD card is unavoidable.

$300 (with two-year agreement), Verizon

7 out of 10

Read our full Samsung Glyde cellphone review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The Olympus Evolt E-420 is the most diminutive digital SLR we've seen -- and that's a good thing. Most SLRs are bulky, heavyweight beasts tipping the scales at 2 pounds or more. The E-420 is more of a bantamweight, weighing in at just 1.4 pounds with the included kit lens.

Feature-wise, the E-420 holds its own against other low-cost SLRs. The 10-megapixel sensor produces good quality images with little noise up to and including ISO 800 (it maxes out at ISO 1600). Like other recent Olympus cameras, such as the E-510, it has a Live View mode, which lets you compose shots on the LCD instead of peering through the viewfinder as you must do with most SLRs. The E-420 sports a variety of autofocus modes including one that automatically detects faces in the frame and focuses on them. That feature worked well in our tests but sometimes took as much as a second to locate a face. Also, it only works when the camera's Live View mode is switched on.

WIRED: Light weight and small size make it far more portable than most DSLRs. Live View lets you compose onscreen instead of peering through viewfinder. Speedy autofocus. No discernible shutter lag. Paging all photo geeks: RAW format support.

TIRED: Fewer buttons means it takes more menu-surfing to adjust basic settings like ISO and white balance. Face-detection feature can be slow. Four Thirds lens compatibility is largely moot, as no manufacturers beside Olympus and pricey Sigma support the standard. No pop-up bong attachment.

$600 with 14-42mm kit lens, Olympus America

7 out of 10

Read our full Olympus E-420 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The Drobo storage automaton takes care of just about everything a normal RAID-based device does, but with virtually no effort on your part. Better still, it plays friendly with every manner of OS: Linux, Mac, Windows or whatever bric-a-brac home computing environment you can throw at it. The only problem -- as many have noted -- is the lack of a GigE port. But that's where the DroboShare comes in.

Essentially a flat stand that sits under the Drobo, this little device transforms the server from a DAS (Desktop Attached Storage) to a NAS. For anyone who already owns a Drobo, this little supplement device should be a no-brainer. We hooked it up to our Airport Extreme and were up and running in minutes. Yes, speed was noticeably affected when switching from USB2 to Ethernet, but most home users aren't going to be using the Drobo as a swap drive for Photoshop or video editing anyway. Time Machine backups worked like a gem, and we were even able to stream iTunes and some other, um, HD content in across an 802.11n WiFi connection without a single hiccup. While pricey, the Drobo and DroboShare still represent one of the easiest ways we've found to set up a shared-network drive.

WIRED: Idiot-proof setup. Self-mounting (thank you, Samba file server). No software required. Supports almost all major file systems, including NTFS (Windows), HFS+ (Mac OS X), EXT3 (Linux) or FAT32 (various), so you can use it in multiple PC settings. Flexible: mix-and-match drive capacities, brands and speeds, so as your insatiable lust for storage grows, so too will Drobo's data storing prowess.

TIRED: All that expandability and ease of use come with a ridiculous price. All told, you're paying $700 for the Drobo and DroboShare (tip: search the Internetz for package deals and save a few ducats) -- and that's sans SATA drives. Four drive bays + fan = leafblower-level noise. No UPnP or DLNA media-server functionality, so no remote web access. USB-Ethernet bottleneck hampers speed.

$700 as tested, Drobo

8 out of 10

Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

Read our full DroboShare Storage Device review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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This little guy will let you manage and fine-tune your backups, and it functions as a media server so you can remotely access your photos, music and videos as well. There are some notable limitations to the 2120. Setup was a bit more involved for things like the Photo Webshare service, and it took us a while to figure out how to simply add photos. You also won't be able to remotely access the PCs on your home network with the Media Vault.

One very important thing to remember: The 2120 ships with just one fixed 500GB drive -- not exactly a storage beast. It could (or should) be presuming you'll be backing up from multiple PCs. There is one extra bay that accepts a 1-TB drive, but still, the 2120 is nowhere near as flexible as the Drobo or other RAID-based devices. Still, if remote access is important to you and you want the ability to manage all your backups and shared folders, for the price, you're simply not going do much better than the 2120.

WIRED: Back up your backups by adding an additional drive to the 2120 with USB. Serves as a DLNA media server, which paves the way for iTunes music aggregation, photo web sharing, remote access and web-based file browsing. None of that data corruption bugginess that's been plaguing WHS. Cheap at 300 bones.

TIRED: Mac-tolerant, but not Mac-friendly: Access stored data from a Mac, but setup is restricted to Windows machines only. Only two drive bays instead of the typical four. The Media Vault's software can handle only file-level backups, not full-system backups.

$300, HP

7 out of 10

Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

Read our full Media Vault 2120 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The Z9 effortlessly satisfies the standard phone user, and pleases the rest of us with a couple extra perks. You get your e-mail and IM; you can listen to music from the microSD card or buy some more. Calls are above-average quality (trust us, we've been shouting into an iPhone for the last year). In addition to 2-megapixel shots and recording video, it can also video share -- send live video to other 3-G AT&T users, which is great for broadcasting scenes from your DIY fight club or natural disasters.

But the star of the show is the GPS. This is no cell-tower GPS Lite that only tells you what block you're on; this is the real deal, with turn-by-turn directions, live traffic info, access to the AT&T database for points of interest -- you know, stuff that's actually useful. If you don't want to punch in an address, just call the 877 number and speak it. On the downside, you will visibly age while it initializes, and it sometimes miscalculates your direction. Fortunately, goofs are few and far between and the Z9 picks up on them.

WIRED: Excellent call quality. Strong GPS capabilities. Lets you transmit (or receive) live video to other 3-G AT&T phones. Haptic feedback tickles.
TIRED: GPS can be slower than waiting for the Optimus Maximus. Pretty heavy. Proprietary headset/power connector = crap.

$249 (with two-year contract), Motorola

7 out of 10

(Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com)

Read our full Motorola Z9 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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If Dr. Evil of Austin Powers fame were more musically minded, he may have demanded something like the beamz -- a musical instrument with "fricking lasers" attached to it. As a kid with his music career still ahead of him, beamz founder Jerry Riopelle frequented an ice cream shop with a laser-triggered doorbell. When the MIDI music format appeared in the '80s, he wondered whether the same concept could apply to making tunes. The result, decades later, is the beamz Music Performance System.

This large USB peripheral includes six beams generated by 12 lasers that, when broken, activate elements of 30 songs stored on your computer. Riopelle managed to create a laser-based instrument anyone can play -- a harder task than it sounds, since the musical parts have to mesh musically in nearly limitless permutations of hand waves. Music experience helps with timing, tempo, arrangement and composition, but it's so easy and amusing to play that only the Invisible Man could fail to have fun. — Eliot Van Buskirk

WIRED: Lets anyone make music. With lasers. Near-zero latency. One-shots, loop-based samples, dual-sample banks, "conductor" beams for toggling sections and a backing-track creator allow complex compositions. Exports in WAV format. Plans include a "third-party composer program," a Stevie Wonder play-along and other downloadable songs for $2 each.

TIRED: The demonstration video almost defies explanation. Seriously, click on it. Some of the sounds seem dated. No Mac version (yet). Pricey considering that this is nothing more than a fancy toy.

$600, Sharper Image

7 out of 10

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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What RIM's aversion to 3-G is we'll never figure out. With version 8120, RIM updates its beloved Pearl smartphone with WiFi but still omits a 3-G radio and, oddly, GPS, the latter of which can be found on both the 8110 and 8130. The shell is virtually identical to older Pearl models, and functionally very little here has changed. Aside from some minor interface tweaks (woo, new icons!), the trackball-and-two-letters-per-key experience is fully intact.

The big news, of course, is the addition of WiFi, and RIM seems to have finally gotten the kinks worked out of its 802.11g implementation; we didn't encounter any of the troubles we experienced with the BlackBerry 8820 last year. If you dig the BlackBerry's mature e-mail features (who doesn't?) and can handle the whole bi-character key setup (and we know many who don't), the Pearl 8120's a solid upgrade to hold you over until a 3-G version (fingers crossed) arrives. —Christopher Null

WIRED: Camera upgraded to 2 megapixels plus flash and video capability. Software is somewhat better at word detection and correction; even works well with odd, multiword URLs. Crazy-loud speakerphone. Very sensitive mic offers exceptional call quality in our tests. Very fast battery charging, and nearly nine solid hours of talk time in our benchmarking. Stable WiFi implementation.

TIRED: Pearl keyboard still not for everyone. Lack of 3-G is absurd. No GPS.

$200 (with two-year contract), RIM

8 out of 10

(Photo courtesy Jim Merithew, Wired.com)

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The latest effort to get the boob tube on a mobile device is AT&T's Mobile TV with FLO (Forward Link Only), and it's surprisingly good. Coupled with the LG Vu phone, it's a match made in couch-potato heaven. The MediaFLO service uses an unusual, nonstandard bit of spectrum to ensure that the streaming of your favorite flicks is uninterrupted. Instead of downloading the data over AT&T's 3-G network, the Qualcomm-developed technology operates primarily on the old UHF television band, though it does tap into the 3-G network in order to get started.

The result is that there's virtually no buffering and programming starts up within a few seconds. On the Vu's brilliant 3-inch screen we found picture quality to be insanely clear and frame rates to be smooth as the ice cubes in a tumbler of 30-year-old bourbon. "Mobile TV" is a bit of a misnomer. Only a few channels are simulcast, meaning you can watch them in near-real time. All other programming, like episodes of your favorite Fox shows, are time-shifted and updated when necessary. Still, watching live streaming TV or movies like The Karate Kid on the Vu's 3-inch haptic touchscreen is pretty amazing.

WIRED: Good selection of simulcast and time-shifted programming. No network lag. Live streaming CNN is a must for news junkies. Variety of programming packages should fit just about everyone’s viewing style.

TIRED: Unless you're in an area with strong 3-G coverage, the service simply will not work. Right now the service is only available in 58 locations nationwide.

$30 per month as tested, AT&T

8 out of 10

(Photo courtesy AT&T Wireless)

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The Kensington SlimBlade trackball mouse is an aerodynamic, sleekly designed peripheral. It's also a tad schizoid. And that's a good thing. What I am crazy about is that with the touch of a button on top of this mini-size travel mouse, its smooth-gliding scroll wheel transforms into a responsive trackball. Finally, there's a pointing device for your notebook that works in tight spaces and is as comfortable to use as the larger desktop mice I'm more accustomed to.

The SlimBlade’s 1,000-dpi laser is dependable: No matter what surface it lands on, the mouse performs perfectly. The roller ball even offers 360-degree scrolling without having to physically move the mouse. Bluetooth connectivity means that the thin-profile mouse is all you need to carry -- no extra USB adapters or encumbering cables to schlep around. If your PC doesn't have built-in Bluetooth, Kensington's new USB Micro Adapter should do the trick. With a mouse of this caliber, don't be surprised if you find yourself plugging it in to your desktop PC as well.

WIRED: Thin enough to stick in a shirt pocket. Seamlessly switches from mouse to a 360-degree trackball. Auto-sleep mode automatically extends the two-AA-battery life up to six months. Seriously. Plastic chassis feels like metal with some heft. Amazingly comfortable to use despite its size.

TIRED: Mouse/trackball mode button initially takes some time to figure out. Hard to know when sleep mode has kicked in.

$100, Kensington

8 out of 10

Read our full Kensington SlimBlade Trackball Mouse review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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This no-frills unit rocks a bright 3.5-inch QVGA screen encased in a black plastic chassis, and weighs less than half a pound. On top of all the normal manuals, the NAV730 includes a car charger, mounting bracket, 1-GB SD card containing U.S. maps, USB charging cable and a DVD containing backup maps. The WinCE-based OS was fast enough when navigating the menus, but the user interface was a bit of a downer.

Acquisitions were also a bit of a mixed bag. I was able to get a 28-second lock while outdoors on a relatively clear day. Meanwhile, attempting the same feat indoors took 2 minutes, 32 seconds. These aren't necessarily bad times, but other GPS units we've tested achieve faster locks in more challenging settings. Once I got moving, the voice-guided turn-by-turn directions were easy enough to understand via the text-to-speech feature and surprisingly loud 1-watt speaker. Unfortunately, these solid additions were marred by occasionally spotty destination markers. These navigational hiccups were extremely rare, but honestly there was a moment or two when I questioned whether the NAV730 would accidentally direct me into oncoming traffic.


WIRED:
Extremely cheap and mostly effective. Excellent multimedia support (MP3, WMA, OGG, MPEG4, AVI, WMV, GIF, JPG, TIFF). Zippy menu navigation via 400-Mhz processor. Accurate text-to-speech pronunciation of street names. Traffic Message Channel compatible (subscription required). Voice guidance in 20 languages.

TIRED: Seriously light on preprogrammed points of interest. Hard power cycle necessary for charging. Clunky menus and overall UI can prove challenging. No Bluetooth support. On/off switch is too far recessed, hard to toggle. 320x240 screen is hard to read outdoors.

$170, V7

5 out of 10

(Photo courtesy navigonusa.com)

Read our full V7 NAV730 GPS review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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For its price, the Navigon 2100 Max is fairly swank. If you plan out your trip far ahead of time you'll have a positive experience. The Navigon can switch from 2-D to a 3-D Reality mode that will even show you which lane you should be in. In emergencies, you can bring up the nearest tow truck, hospital or pharmacy. But once you leave the highway or want to navigate on the fly, prepare for frustration. It's hard to get the scroll buttons to register, address look-up is time-consuming and unintuitive, and the Points of Interest directories are hard to navigate, especially if you don't know the name of the business you're searching for.

The most aggravating of all is when the unit starts talking back, arguing like a real estate lawyer. If a community is not a "registered municipality," the Navigon can still find it, but won't let you navigate to a street within that area. One address we checked simply couldn't be found because we couldn't provide the correct hamlet for it. Yes, Madame Navigon is hard to satisfy and takes patience to deal with; if you don't have the time to convince or cajole her to do your bidding, then it's time to spring for a pricier model.

WIRED: Midrange features at a flea-market price. The speaker has a good set of lungs and demands to be heard. The unit's excellent mounting bracket is virtually shake-free.

TIRED: Sluggish response time frustrates and causes double-taps. Obstinate refusal to recognize certain towns even though they show up in auto-fill enrages the most gentle souls.

Price/maker: $299, Navigon USA

6 out of 10

Read our full Navigon 2100 Max review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The enV2 is apparently the end result of spilling coffee on a stack of consumer satisfaction surveys from the first enV. It's a lighter, slimmer package, but a botched facelift leaves it with all the style of that TI-36 you ditched back in high school. Easy to dial, but with the half-inch-tall screen on the front, the enV2 isn't really good for much else. Thankfully, once you open it up there's a full QWERTY keyboard -- not as wide at the original, but the keys are evenly spaced so it's still great for messaging.

There's a 2-megapixel camera, but even if you have figured out how to comfortably hold an Altoid-can-clamshell without blocking the much smaller lens with your fingers, pics and video turn out pretty grainy. Where to end? Do yourself a favor: If confronted with the choice of purchasing an enV2, think long and hard about it. After all, you're stuck with this device for two years. — Nate Ralph

WIRED: Bluetooth. Vibrant interior screen. External microSD slot. Stereo speakers.

TIRED: VZ Navigator (pay me!), IMs as SMS (pay me!), POP e-mail (pay me!) and the walled garden web "browser" (pay me!) will jack up that monthly bill. No WiFi.

$130 with two-year contract, Verizon

4 out of 10

Photos courtesy Jon Snyder, Wired.com

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Packed into a dual analog/digital face, the Tissot T-Touch is literally a flotilla of functions. So what exactly does it do? Well for starters, how about dual time zones, two alarms and countdown chronographs? OK, still not impressed? But how about adding a barometer, thermometer, perpetual calendar, compass, altimeter and an azimuth (sort of a GPS system on your wrist)? Oh what's that? Getting gadget fever? Wait, there's more.

What really makes this timekeeper unique is how all these functions are activated: the face is a touchscreen. By tapping on seven different points on the analog face the digital portion displays the results instantly. Of course to cram this type of instrumentation into a watch requires a certain amount of heft and the T-Touch does not disappoint, weighing in at more than a quarter-pound. Programming the T-Touch's ambitious functionality also takes the same patience that would go into solving a Rubik's Cube. But if you possess that patience, this just might be the ideal timekeeping, temperature-sensing, direction-finding, altitude-detecting, all-in-one, wrist-mounted wundergizmo.

WIRED: Dual analog/digital face provides actual temperature, directional readings and barometric readings. Backlighting and water-resistance to 330 feet useful for all you deep divers out there.

TIRED: Hard to program. Confusing eight-page instruction booklet almost as thick as an issue of Wired magazine. Quarter-pound weight plus J-Lo-class thickness make you conscious of the watch at all times.

$1,100, T-Touch

6 out of 10

(Photo and wrist modeling courtesy James Merithew, Wired.com)

Read our full Tissot T-Touch Watch review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The iK500 iPod Dock's two 5-inch subwoofers and passive radiator on the back pump out the shock waves while the dual tweeters take care of the crispy bits. Whether it's thump or twitter, the Kicker sounds equally good.

More than a brutish and simple set of speakers, the Kicker comes with a remote that lets you navigate your iPod menus to select playlists or songs and adjust the volume, not just the shuffle and volume of lesser remotes like the Bose SoundDock's. Knob revivalists will dig the prominent protuberance on the front of the case, which covers power, volume, bass, treble and aux-in selection. The back of the box offers a 3.5mm line-in port and stereo RCA-out for connecting external speakers.


WIRED:
You can't get busted for disturbing the peace if you can't hear the cops banging on your door. Achieves ear-stinging volume without distortion. Volume, bass and treble controls are accessible with a poke and pinch of the front-facing knob. Zune owners can pick up a similar zK500 model.

TIRED:
The iPod docks vertically (rather than at an angle), making the screen hard to read. The direction buttons on the remote slow down scrolling. No mic-in for high-decibel karaoke.

Price/maker: $350, Kicker

8 out of 10

(Photo courtesy Jim Merithew, Wired.com)

Read our full Kicker iK500 iPod Dock review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Admittedly, most people don't sit around thinking, "Gee, I wish I could set up a high-speed WiFi network here at this picnic. Or at the beach. Or in my minivan." But for us gadget junkies, we do think that. That's why this mobile router and EVDO card combo from Kyocera is perfect for us. The router signed on automatically go to Verizon's network after inserting the ExpressCard; you can also use older PC card modems with the router. Soon, we were sharing very snappy net access with everyone in the nearby park. Two small quibbles -- the router required periodic reboots, and we never got scalding download speeds on the Rev A network. Downloads topped out at 700 Kbps while uploads peaked in the 400-Kbps range. But for the price and ease of use, not to mention the McGyver-like ability to quickly throw up a network, the combo is hard to top. — Mark McClusky

WIRED: Dead simple to set up -- we went from box to internet surfing in less than five minutes. Routing functions worked well, easily managing dozens of clients. Handsome white case design. Router accepts PC card, ExpressCard or USB wireless modems. Four-port wired router included. ExpressCard protrudes less from laptops than competing models.


TIRED:
Slight instability required power cycling to resolve. Speeds not quite up to our hopes for EVDO Rev. Antenna on card seemed a little fragile.

Router:

$250, Kyocera

8 out of 10

Card:

$50 (with two-year contract) from Verizon, Verizon

7 out of 10

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Lasonic X Famous i931

The Lasonic X Famous i931 is a ghetto-fabulous boombox designed by former Blink 182 drummer Travis Barker, and its ability to play music from iPods, SD/MMC cards, microphones, USB sticks and line-level sources hits us right in the feature-set sweet spot. But with an interface that somehow renders the user-friendly iPod nearly un-navigable and a chintzy plastic construction, it's best-suited for one activity: belting out rhymes over backing tracks stored in one of the above-mentioned formats. See, this thing has a quarter-inch input that works with a standard stage mic. A gain-control knob mixes vocals above or below the music, while an echo knob adds various intensities of delay to your voice. We would not recommend this 2x12-watt monster for regular music listening since it can be so frustrating to use. But if you know exactly what you would do with a microphone enabled iPod boombox, Lasonic X Famous i931 will get the job done in style — Eliot Van Buskirk

WIRED: Plays MP3s from iPods or flash memory. Displays song information. Lets you address throngs with a microphone (not included). Remote control and custom-fitted docks for various iPod models are included. TIRED: Flimsy construction not tough enough for the streets. Semi-opaque plastic obscures iPod screen; no display on remote. Controls are more confusing than MF Doom's rhyme schemes. Doesn't work with iPhone or iPod Touch. Even when blasting "Fight the Power," we didn't feel like tossing a garbage can through a window.

$250, Famous Stars and Straps

5 out of 10

(Photo courtesy Eliot Van Buskirk, Wired.com)

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The 10-megapixel Olympus SP-570UZ makes a good shooter for the photo enthusiast who lacks experience yet has enough loot to drop on an entry-level DSLR. You can start out relying on the auto settings (they won't steer you wrong), and then explore the advanced functions as you build your skill. Even the most hopeless of n00bs can use this thing. The more experienced user can squeeze a lot from the camera in various shooting situations, and you can perform nearly all functions manually for more control.

The camera's lens barrel extends to a lewd length, but it packs a 20x zoom. The anti-shake controls help in the long shots, but you'll lose some detail unless you're using a tripod. The camera boasts a litany of functions -- face detection, burst mode, 22 scene presets, movie recording and epic zooming ability, but where it really excels is up close. Those who like to sweat the small stuff will love the super macro mode that captures excellent detail in flowers, bugs and other assorted tiny objects.

WIRED: Stunning macro function makes big shots out of the smallest subjects. Versatile controls soothe the enthusiasts while auto presets comfort the n00bs. Excellent manual. Top-mounted hot shoe makes swapping external flash options easy.

TIRED: Pretend-professional zoom requires two hands. Zoom shots without a tripod can come out blurry. Stubborn clinging to proprietary xD media is irritating: Resistance is futile, Olympus.

$500, Olympus

8 out of 10

(Photo courtesy Jim Merithew, Wired.com)

Read our full Olympus SP-570UZ camera review.

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The brand-new 15.4-inch (1280x800) Gateway M-151X comes in three hues (red, silver and blue) or wrapped in a blue and white floral graphic called Arctic Bloom. While the M-151X is, at heart, a mid-range laptop, its 1.66GHz Core 2 Duo, 2 GB RAM and 250 GB hard drive should provide all the power and storage you need for just about anything that's not specialized: Gaming is decent, graphics are solid and video editing is easy on this machine. The sea of mainstream laptops is littered with lackluster look-alikes, and while the M-151X isn't perfect, it manages to occupy that sweet spot between price and performance, not to mention style.

WIRED: Silver keyboard looks great with the brushed metal bezel that surrounds it. Touch-sensitive volume slider and slot-load DVD burner: score! Bluetooth, HDMI, 5-in-1 card reader, fingerprint reader, 1.3-megapixel webcam with mic. Solid two hours of battery life -- even while running multiple multimedia apps.

TIRED: Only three USB ports (no room for one more?), no FireWire. Speakers leave much to be desired, namely bass. Screen is very reflective, most noticeable with dark images, as when watching movies.

$850, Gateway

7 out of 10

(Photo courtesy Jon Snyder, Wired.com)

Read our full Gateway M-151X laptop review.

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Source: Wired: Gadgets | 15 May 2008 | 4:00 am

Review: Jawbones Latest Headset is Smaller Skinnier Sexier

The second version of the Jawbone is out. It's smaller. It's prettier. But it's still marked by some of the same problems of the original.


Source: Wired Top Stories | 15 May 2008 | 4:00 am

May 15, 1930: The Skies Get a Little Bit Friendlier

1930: Ellen Church becomes the world's first airline stewardess, working a Boeing Air Transport flight from Oakland, California, to Chicago. The flight takes 20 hours and involves 13 stops along the way.

Church, a registered nurse from Iowa, was so enamored of flying that she became a certified pilot. She approached BAT (the forerunner of United Airlines) looking for a pilot's job, a futile hope for women in those days. But the BAT exec did like Church's other suggestion: that commercial airliners carry nurses on board.

Smelling a publicity coup, and figuring that on-board nurses would help quell the public's fear -- very real at the time -- of flying, he sold her proposal to the boys at the top. BAT hired eight nurses, including Church, for what it thought would be a three-month experiment.

These weren't just any nurses, though.

Even then, there were strict physical requirements for what BAT referred to as "sky girls." In addition to being a registered nurse, the successful candidate had to be single, under 25, no taller than 5-feet-4, and she could weigh no more than 115 pounds. And although it wasn't written down anywhere, the prospective stewardess had to be attractive, at least to the guy doing the hiring.

So they were trim and petite, which did not necessarily suit the rigors of the job. That's because the first stewardesses did a lot more than merely serve passengers, pass out airsick bags or take a pulse now and then. They were expected to haul luggage, screw down loose seats, help with fueling the plane and finally, at day's end, help the pilots push the plane into the hangar.

Glamorous? You bet.

Like a lot of other service jobs, working conditions for stewardesses -- flight attendants in today's parlance -- only improved with their determination to organize and use the power of the union to obtain better pay and benefits.

As for Church, she worked as a stew for 18 months before being grounded as a result of injuries sustained in an automobile accident. She returned to nursing, but her flying days weren't over yet: During World War II, she served as a captain in the Army Nurses Corps, receiving the Air Medal for distinguished service in the European Theater.

After the war, Church continued her nursing career in Terre Haute, Indiana. She was killed in a horseback riding accident in 1965.

The airfield in her hometown of Cresco, Iowa, is named in her honor.

Source: Various



Source: Wired Top Stories | 15 May 2008 | 4:00 am

Gear Gallery: Slick Laptop, New Canon Rebel, Networked-Storage Machines

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When you first pop open the A305, you may gasp a little: Reflective hematite stripes and lacquered finish catch light, while the keys shimmer like little black candies, inviting your fingers to dance across them. But the mirrored surface also invites smudges to the party -- a lot of them -- which means you'll be spending time spiffing the thing up before it can be seen in public.

Then again, the Toshiba's packed with goodies. An Intel T8100 processor, 3 GB of RAM and a 512-MB ATI graphics chip provide punch for processing and playtime. Dual 200-MB drives offer tons of room for HD video that you can pipe out to a TV through HDMI. An extended battery lends two hours of time away from an outlet. While the screen is bright and sharp, it's a little too reflective; if you don't like the way you look, use this laptop exclusively in the dark. And maybe that's where the Toshiba performs best. Slip in a DVD or a game in the darkness of your dungeon, watch the inset DVD controls glow coolly through the dark, game away in peace, and know that no one will ever see the smudges.

WIRED: Breathtaking good looks. Sweet specs delight (casual) gamers without causing poverty.

TIRED: No Blu-ray to go with the HDMI. Mirrored surface is positively smudgo-philic, while the screen causes unwanted self-examination. The fingerprint reader separates the mouse keys and fails to justify its existence.

$1,250 as tested, Toshiba

7 out of 10

Read our full Toshiba A305 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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This new compact DSLR from Canon gets the now obligatory two-mil bump in resolution to 12.2 megapixels, but in the case of the XSi, the prestige lies in a new Digic III processor, higher 3.5-fps frame rate, a larger viewfinder, back-of-the-camera-dominating 3-inch LCD, quicker autofocus, a bundled 18-55mm f3.5-5.6 lens with optical image stabilization and the inclusion of Live View.

This wide zoom lens (29-88mm 35mm equivalent) benefits from expected sharpness and added f-stop range. The XSi is given a bump up from its more expensive siblings with dual Live View autofocus. You can choose between the phase-change AF and contrast-based AF. Canon specs the XSi with the same Digic III processor and 14-bit Analog-Digital converter used on its top-of-the-line 1Ds Mark III series. This combo delivers -- among many good things -- quicker image processing, faster frame rates and a broader range of tones with improved color rendition on the final prints. All told, Canon has made a credible case for the step-up-from-point-and-shoot customers to give the XSi a hard look.

WIRED: Switch to SDHC memory. Relatively low noise at high ISO settings. New battery with 50 percent more endurance.

TIRED: ISO tops out at 1600. Plastic body seems too plasticky. ISO in only full-stop increments. Lacks the useful HELP mode of its major competitors. A tad bit pricey.

$900 as tested, Canon

Read our full Canon Rebel XSi review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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There's a lot to love about this phone on the surface: It's elegantly minimalist, light weight and versatile. At 4 x 2 x.7-inches, it shares the form factor of its cousin the F700, making for a slick, pocket-friendly presentation. The Glyde's clean profile is rounded out by the unit's sparse use of external buttons and a slimming dark-blue-on-silver chassis. With its sweet looks, the bonuses of multimedia support and a decent 2-MP camera with flash, the Glyde is clearly a stylistic progression compared with Verizon's other touchscreen phones.

Likewise, the Glyde does fairly well with its full HTML browser too. Wikipedia and Google queries were easily executed and relatively quick with the phone's EV-DO connection. Of course, with no accelerometer, onscreen QWERTY keyboard, or gesture-based navigation, the Glyde isn't exactly an iPhone-killer. Samsung attempts to sweeten the deal by adding a basic QWERTY keyboard (accessible by sliding the screen to the right). In truth, this addition ends up being a mixed bag. The fastest way to zip around on this phone seems to be an underwhelming combination of touchscreen and QWERTY navigation. Score? Glyde 1, Pseudo-futuristic badassery 0.


WIRED:
Sleek and compact design. Bluetooth compatible. Adjustable vibrating feedback for touch commands. Backlit QWERTY keypad is easy to see in the dark. Records up to 10 minutes of video. Speedy performance. Crisp call quality. Vibrant 240 x 440 touchscreen. Touchscreen automatically locks after initiating calls.

TIRED: Onscreen buttons near screen perimeter can be unresponsive. Automatically switches to landscape whenever browser is opened. Weak speaker output during both multimedia playback and speakerphone calls. No onscreen QWERTY keyboard for texting. With only 35 MB of internal memory for music, shelling out for a microSD card is unavoidable.

$300 (with two-year agreement), Verizon

7 out of 10

Read our full Samsung Glyde cellphone review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The Olympus Evolt E-420 is the most diminutive digital SLR we've seen -- and that's a good thing. Most SLRs are bulky, heavyweight beasts tipping the scales at 2 pounds or more. The E-420 is more of a bantamweight, weighing in at just 1.4 pounds with the included kit lens.

Feature-wise, the E-420 holds its own against other low-cost SLRs. The 10-megapixel sensor produces good quality images with little noise up to and including ISO 800 (it maxes out at ISO 1600). Like other recent Olympus cameras, such as the E-510, it has a Live View mode, which lets you compose shots on the LCD instead of peering through the viewfinder as you must do with most SLRs. The E-420 sports a variety of autofocus modes including one that automatically detects faces in the frame and focuses on them. That feature worked well in our tests but sometimes took as much as a second to locate a face. Also, it only works when the camera's Live View mode is switched on.

WIRED: Light weight and small size make it far more portable than most DSLRs. Live View lets you compose onscreen instead of peering through viewfinder. Speedy autofocus. No discernible shutter lag. Paging all photo geeks: RAW format support.

TIRED: Fewer buttons means it takes more menu-surfing to adjust basic settings like ISO and white balance. Face-detection feature can be slow. Four Thirds lens compatibility is largely moot, as no manufacturers beside Olympus and pricey Sigma support the standard. No pop-up bong attachment.

$600 with 14-42mm kit lens, Olympus America

7 out of 10

Read our full Olympus E-420 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The Drobo storage automaton takes care of just about everything a normal RAID-based device does, but with virtually no effort on your part. Better still, it plays friendly with every manner of OS: Linux, Mac, Windows or whatever bric-a-brac home computing environment you can throw at it. The only problem -- as many have noted -- is the lack of a GigE port. But that's where the DroboShare comes in.

Essentially a flat stand that sits under the Drobo, this little device transforms the server from a DAS (Desktop Attached Storage) to a NAS. For anyone who already owns a Drobo, this little supplement device should be a no-brainer. We hooked it up to our Airport Extreme and were up and running in minutes. Yes, speed was noticeably affected when switching from USB2 to Ethernet, but most home users aren't going to be using the Drobo as a swap drive for Photoshop or video editing anyway. Time Machine backups worked like a gem, and we were even able to stream iTunes and some other, um, HD content in across an 802.11n WiFi connection without a single hiccup. While pricey, the Drobo and DroboShare still represent one of the easiest ways we've found to set up a shared-network drive.

WIRED: Idiot-proof setup. Self-mounting (thank you, Samba file server). No software required. Supports almost all major file systems, including NTFS (Windows), HFS+ (Mac OS X), EXT3 (Linux) or FAT32 (various), so you can use it in multiple PC settings. Flexible: mix-and-match drive capacities, brands and speeds, so as your insatiable lust for storage grows, so too will Drobo's data storing prowess.

TIRED: All that expandability and ease of use come with a ridiculous price. All told, you're paying $700 for the Drobo and DroboShare (tip: search the Internetz for package deals and save a few ducats) -- and that's sans SATA drives. Four drive bays + fan = leafblower-level noise. No UPnP or DLNA media-server functionality, so no remote web access. USB-Ethernet bottleneck hampers speed.

$700 as tested, Drobo

8 out of 10

Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

Read our full DroboShare Storage Device review.

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This little guy will let you manage and fine-tune your backups, and it functions as a media server so you can remotely access your photos, music and videos as well. There are some notable limitations to the 2120. Setup was a bit more involved for things like the Photo Webshare service, and it took us a while to figure out how to simply add photos. You also won't be able to remotely access the PCs on your home network with the Media Vault.

One very important thing to remember: The 2120 ships with just one fixed 500GB drive -- not exactly a storage beast. It could (or should) be presuming you'll be backing up from multiple PCs. There is one extra bay that accepts a 1-TB drive, but still, the 2120 is nowhere near as flexible as the Drobo or other RAID-based devices. Still, if remote access is important to you and you want the ability to manage all your backups and shared folders, for the price, you're simply not going do much better than the 2120.

WIRED: Back up your backups by adding an additional drive to the 2120 with USB. Serves as a DLNA media server, which paves the way for iTunes music aggregation, photo web sharing, remote access and web-based file browsing. None of that data corruption bugginess that's been plaguing WHS. Cheap at 300 bones.

TIRED: Mac-tolerant, but not Mac-friendly: Access stored data from a Mac, but setup is restricted to Windows machines only. Only two drive bays instead of the typical four. The Media Vault's software can handle only file-level backups, not full-system backups.

$300, HP

7 out of 10

Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

Read our full Media Vault 2120 review.

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The Z9 effortlessly satisfies the standard phone user, and pleases the rest of us with a couple extra perks. You get your e-mail and IM; you can listen to music from the microSD card or buy some more. Calls are above-average quality (trust us, we've been shouting into an iPhone for the last year). In addition to 2-megapixel shots and recording video, it can also video share -- send live video to other 3-G AT&T users, which is great for broadcasting scenes from your DIY fight club or natural disasters.

But the star of the show is the GPS. This is no cell-tower GPS Lite that only tells you what block you're on; this is the real deal, with turn-by-turn directions, live traffic info, access to the AT&T database for points of interest -- you know, stuff that's actually useful. If you don't want to punch in an address, just call the 877 number and speak it. On the downside, you will visibly age while it initializes, and it sometimes miscalculates your direction. Fortunately, goofs are few and far between and the Z9 picks up on them.

WIRED: Excellent call quality. Strong GPS capabilities. Lets you transmit (or receive) live video to other 3-G AT&T phones. Haptic feedback tickles.
TIRED: GPS can be slower than waiting for the Optimus Maximus. Pretty heavy. Proprietary headset/power connector = crap.

$249 (with two-year contract), Motorola

7 out of 10

(Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com)

Read our full Motorola Z9 review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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If Dr. Evil of Austin Powers fame were more musically minded, he may have demanded something like the beamz -- a musical instrument with "fricking lasers" attached to it. As a kid with his music career still ahead of him, beamz founder Jerry Riopelle frequented an ice cream shop with a laser-triggered doorbell. When the MIDI music format appeared in the '80s, he wondered whether the same concept could apply to making tunes. The result, decades later, is the beamz Music Performance System.

This large USB peripheral includes six beams generated by 12 lasers that, when broken, activate elements of 30 songs stored on your computer. Riopelle managed to create a laser-based instrument anyone can play -- a harder task than it sounds, since the musical parts have to mesh musically in nearly limitless permutations of hand waves. Music experience helps with timing, tempo, arrangement and composition, but it's so easy and amusing to play that only the Invisible Man could fail to have fun. — Eliot Van Buskirk

WIRED: Lets anyone make music. With lasers. Near-zero latency. One-shots, loop-based samples, dual-sample banks, "conductor" beams for toggling sections and a backing-track creator allow complex compositions. Exports in WAV format. Plans include a "third-party composer program," a Stevie Wonder play-along and other downloadable songs for $2 each.

TIRED: The demonstration video almost defies explanation. Seriously, click on it. Some of the sounds seem dated. No Mac version (yet). Pricey considering that this is nothing more than a fancy toy.

$600, Sharper Image

7 out of 10

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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What RIM's aversion to 3-G is we'll never figure out. With version 8120, RIM updates its beloved Pearl smartphone with WiFi but still omits a 3-G radio and, oddly, GPS, the latter of which can be found on both the 8110 and 8130. The shell is virtually identical to older Pearl models, and functionally very little here has changed. Aside from some minor interface tweaks (woo, new icons!), the trackball-and-two-letters-per-key experience is fully intact.

The big news, of course, is the addition of WiFi, and RIM seems to have finally gotten the kinks worked out of its 802.11g implementation; we didn't encounter any of the troubles we experienced with the BlackBerry 8820 last year. If you dig the BlackBerry's mature e-mail features (who doesn't?) and can handle the whole bi-character key setup (and we know many who don't), the Pearl 8120's a solid upgrade to hold you over until a 3-G version (fingers crossed) arrives. —Christopher Null

WIRED: Camera upgraded to 2 megapixels plus flash and video capability. Software is somewhat better at word detection and correction; even works well with odd, multiword URLs. Crazy-loud speakerphone. Very sensitive mic offers exceptional call quality in our tests. Very fast battery charging, and nearly nine solid hours of talk time in our benchmarking. Stable WiFi implementation.

TIRED: Pearl keyboard still not for everyone. Lack of 3-G is absurd. No GPS.

$200 (with two-year contract), RIM

8 out of 10

(Photo courtesy Jim Merithew, Wired.com)

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The latest effort to get the boob tube on a mobile device is AT&T's Mobile TV with FLO (Forward Link Only), and it's surprisingly good. Coupled with the LG Vu phone, it's a match made in couch-potato heaven. The MediaFLO service uses an unusual, nonstandard bit of spectrum to ensure that the streaming of your favorite flicks is uninterrupted. Instead of downloading the data over AT&T's 3-G network, the Qualcomm-developed technology operates primarily on the old UHF television band, though it does tap into the 3-G network in order to get started.

The result is that there's virtually no buffering and programming starts up within a few seconds. On the Vu's brilliant 3-inch screen we found picture quality to be insanely clear and frame rates to be smooth as the ice cubes in a tumbler of 30-year-old bourbon. "Mobile TV" is a bit of a misnomer. Only a few channels are simulcast, meaning you can watch them in near-real time. All other programming, like episodes of your favorite Fox shows, are time-shifted and updated when necessary. Still, watching live streaming TV or movies like The Karate Kid on the Vu's 3-inch haptic touchscreen is pretty amazing.

WIRED: Good selection of simulcast and time-shifted programming. No network lag. Live streaming CNN is a must for news junkies. Variety of programming packages should fit just about everyone’s viewing style.

TIRED: Unless you're in an area with strong 3-G coverage, the service simply will not work. Right now the service is only available in 58 locations nationwide.

$30 per month as tested, AT&T

8 out of 10

(Photo courtesy AT&T Wireless)

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The Kensington SlimBlade trackball mouse is an aerodynamic, sleekly designed peripheral. It's also a tad schizoid. And that's a good thing. What I am crazy about is that with the touch of a button on top of this mini-size travel mouse, its smooth-gliding scroll wheel transforms into a responsive trackball. Finally, there's a pointing device for your notebook that works in tight spaces and is as comfortable to use as the larger desktop mice I'm more accustomed to.

The SlimBlade’s 1,000-dpi laser is dependable: No matter what surface it lands on, the mouse performs perfectly. The roller ball even offers 360-degree scrolling without having to physically move the mouse. Bluetooth connectivity means that the thin-profile mouse is all you need to carry -- no extra USB adapters or encumbering cables to schlep around. If your PC doesn't have built-in Bluetooth, Kensington's new USB Micro Adapter should do the trick. With a mouse of this caliber, don't be surprised if you find yourself plugging it in to your desktop PC as well.

WIRED: Thin enough to stick in a shirt pocket. Seamlessly switches from mouse to a 360-degree trackball. Auto-sleep mode automatically extends the two-AA-battery life up to six months. Seriously. Plastic chassis feels like metal with some heft. Amazingly comfortable to use despite its size.

TIRED: Mouse/trackball mode button initially takes some time to figure out. Hard to know when sleep mode has kicked in.

$100, Kensington

8 out of 10

Read our full Kensington SlimBlade Trackball Mouse review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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This no-frills unit rocks a bright 3.5-inch QVGA screen encased in a black plastic chassis, and weighs less than half a pound. On top of all the normal manuals, the NAV730 includes a car charger, mounting bracket, 1-GB SD card containing U.S. maps, USB charging cable and a DVD containing backup maps. The WinCE-based OS was fast enough when navigating the menus, but the user interface was a bit of a downer.

Acquisitions were also a bit of a mixed bag. I was able to get a 28-second lock while outdoors on a relatively clear day. Meanwhile, attempting the same feat indoors took 2 minutes, 32 seconds. These aren't necessarily bad times, but other GPS units we've tested achieve faster locks in more challenging settings. Once I got moving, the voice-guided turn-by-turn directions were easy enough to understand via the text-to-speech feature and surprisingly loud 1-watt speaker. Unfortunately, these solid additions were marred by occasionally spotty destination markers. These navigational hiccups were extremely rare, but honestly there was a moment or two when I questioned whether the NAV730 would accidentally direct me into oncoming traffic.


WIRED:
Extremely cheap and mostly effective. Excellent multimedia support (MP3, WMA, OGG, MPEG4, AVI, WMV, GIF, JPG, TIFF). Zippy menu navigation via 400-Mhz processor. Accurate text-to-speech pronunciation of street names. Traffic Message Channel compatible (subscription required). Voice guidance in 20 languages.

TIRED: Seriously light on preprogrammed points of interest. Hard power cycle necessary for charging. Clunky menus and overall UI can prove challenging. No Bluetooth support. On/off switch is too far recessed, hard to toggle. 320x240 screen is hard to read outdoors.

$170, V7

5 out of 10

(Photo courtesy navigonusa.com)

Read our full V7 NAV730 GPS review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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For its price, the Navigon 2100 Max is fairly swank. If you plan out your trip far ahead of time you'll have a positive experience. The Navigon can switch from 2-D to a 3-D Reality mode that will even show you which lane you should be in. In emergencies, you can bring up the nearest tow truck, hospital or pharmacy. But once you leave the highway or want to navigate on the fly, prepare for frustration. It's hard to get the scroll buttons to register, address look-up is time-consuming and unintuitive, and the Points of Interest directories are hard to navigate, especially if you don't know the name of the business you're searching for.

The most aggravating of all is when the unit starts talking back, arguing like a real estate lawyer. If a community is not a "registered municipality," the Navigon can still find it, but won't let you navigate to a street within that area. One address we checked simply couldn't be found because we couldn't provide the correct hamlet for it. Yes, Madame Navigon is hard to satisfy and takes patience to deal with; if you don't have the time to convince or cajole her to do your bidding, then it's time to spring for a pricier model.

WIRED: Midrange features at a flea-market price. The speaker has a good set of lungs and demands to be heard. The unit's excellent mounting bracket is virtually shake-free.

TIRED: Sluggish response time frustrates and causes double-taps. Obstinate refusal to recognize certain towns even though they show up in auto-fill enrages the most gentle souls.

Price/maker: $299, Navigon USA

6 out of 10

Read our full Navigon 2100 Max review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The enV2 is apparently the end result of spilling coffee on a stack of consumer satisfaction surveys from the first enV. It's a lighter, slimmer package, but a botched facelift leaves it with all the style of that TI-36 you ditched back in high school. Easy to dial, but with the half-inch-tall screen on the front, the enV2 isn't really good for much else. Thankfully, once you open it up there's a full QWERTY keyboard -- not as wide at the original, but the keys are evenly spaced so it's still great for messaging.

There's a 2-megapixel camera, but even if you have figured out how to comfortably hold an Altoid-can-clamshell without blocking the much smaller lens with your fingers, pics and video turn out pretty grainy. Where to end? Do yourself a favor: If confronted with the choice of purchasing an enV2, think long and hard about it. After all, you're stuck with this device for two years. — Nate Ralph

WIRED: Bluetooth. Vibrant interior screen. External microSD slot. Stereo speakers.

TIRED: VZ Navigator (pay me!), IMs as SMS (pay me!), POP e-mail (pay me!) and the walled garden web "browser" (pay me!) will jack up that monthly bill. No WiFi.

$130 with two-year contract, Verizon

4 out of 10

Photos courtesy Jon Snyder, Wired.com

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Packed into a dual analog/digital face, the Tissot T-Touch is literally a flotilla of functions. So what exactly does it do? Well for starters, how about dual time zones, two alarms and countdown chronographs? OK, still not impressed? But how about adding a barometer, thermometer, perpetual calendar, compass, altimeter and an azimuth (sort of a GPS system on your wrist)? Oh what's that? Getting gadget fever? Wait, there's more.

What really makes this timekeeper unique is how all these functions are activated: the face is a touchscreen. By tapping on seven different points on the analog face the digital portion displays the results instantly. Of course to cram this type of instrumentation into a watch requires a certain amount of heft and the T-Touch does not disappoint, weighing in at more than a quarter-pound. Programming the T-Touch's ambitious functionality also takes the same patience that would go into solving a Rubik's Cube. But if you possess that patience, this just might be the ideal timekeeping, temperature-sensing, direction-finding, altitude-detecting, all-in-one, wrist-mounted wundergizmo.

WIRED: Dual analog/digital face provides actual temperature, directional readings and barometric readings. Backlighting and water-resistance to 330 feet useful for all you deep divers out there.

TIRED: Hard to program. Confusing eight-page instruction booklet almost as thick as an issue of Wired magazine. Quarter-pound weight plus J-Lo-class thickness make you conscious of the watch at all times.

$1,100, T-Touch

6 out of 10

(Photo and wrist modeling courtesy James Merithew, Wired.com)

Read our full Tissot T-Touch Watch review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The iK500 iPod Dock's two 5-inch subwoofers and passive radiator on the back pump out the shock waves while the dual tweeters take care of the crispy bits. Whether it's thump or twitter, the Kicker sounds equally good.

More than a brutish and simple set of speakers, the Kicker comes with a remote that lets you navigate your iPod menus to select playlists or songs and adjust the volume, not just the shuffle and volume of lesser remotes like the Bose SoundDock's. Knob revivalists will dig the prominent protuberance on the front of the case, which covers power, volume, bass, treble and aux-in selection. The back of the box offers a 3.5mm line-in port and stereo RCA-out for connecting external speakers.


WIRED:
You can't get busted for disturbing the peace if you can't hear the cops banging on your door. Achieves ear-stinging volume without distortion. Volume, bass and treble controls are accessible with a poke and pinch of the front-facing knob. Zune owners can pick up a similar zK500 model.

TIRED:
The iPod docks vertically (rather than at an angle), making the screen hard to read. The direction buttons on the remote slow down scrolling. No mic-in for high-decibel karaoke.

Price/maker: $350, Kicker

8 out of 10

(Photo courtesy Jim Merithew, Wired.com)

Read our full Kicker iK500 iPod Dock review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Admittedly, most people don't sit around thinking, "Gee, I wish I could set up a high-speed WiFi network here at this picnic. Or at the beach. Or in my minivan." But for us gadget junkies, we do think that. That's why this mobile router and EVDO card combo from Kyocera is perfect for us. The router signed on automatically go to Verizon's network after inserting the ExpressCard; you can also use older PC card modems with the router. Soon, we were sharing very snappy net access with everyone in the nearby park. Two small quibbles -- the router required periodic reboots, and we never got scalding download speeds on the Rev A network. Downloads topped out at 700 Kbps while uploads peaked in the 400-Kbps range. But for the price and ease of use, not to mention the McGyver-like ability to quickly throw up a network, the combo is hard to top. — Mark McClusky

WIRED: Dead simple to set up -- we went from box to internet surfing in less than five minutes. Routing functions worked well, easily managing dozens of clients. Handsome white case design. Router accepts PC card, ExpressCard or USB wireless modems. Four-port wired router included. ExpressCard protrudes less from laptops than competing models.


TIRED:
Slight instability required power cycling to resolve. Speeds not quite up to our hopes for EVDO Rev. Antenna on card seemed a little fragile.

Router:

$250, Kyocera

8 out of 10

Card:

$50 (with two-year contract) from Verizon, Verizon

7 out of 10

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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Lasonic X Famous i931

The Lasonic X Famous i931 is a ghetto-fabulous boombox designed by former Blink 182 drummer Travis Barker, and its ability to play music from iPods, SD/MMC cards, microphones, USB sticks and line-level sources hits us right in the feature-set sweet spot. But with an interface that somehow renders the user-friendly iPod nearly un-navigable and a chintzy plastic construction, it's best-suited for one activity: belting out rhymes over backing tracks stored in one of the above-mentioned formats. See, this thing has a quarter-inch input that works with a standard stage mic. A gain-control knob mixes vocals above or below the music, while an echo knob adds various intensities of delay to your voice. We would not recommend this 2x12-watt monster for regular music listening since it can be so frustrating to use. But if you know exactly what you would do with a microphone enabled iPod boombox, Lasonic X Famous i931 will get the job done in style — Eliot Van Buskirk

WIRED: Plays MP3s from iPods or flash memory. Displays song information. Lets you address throngs with a microphone (not included). Remote control and custom-fitted docks for various iPod models are included. TIRED: Flimsy construction not tough enough for the streets. Semi-opaque plastic obscures iPod screen; no display on remote. Controls are more confusing than MF Doom's rhyme schemes. Doesn't work with iPhone or iPod Touch. Even when blasting "Fight the Power," we didn't feel like tossing a garbage can through a window.

$250, Famous Stars and Straps

5 out of 10

(Photo courtesy Eliot Van Buskirk, Wired.com)

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The 10-megapixel Olympus SP-570UZ makes a good shooter for the photo enthusiast who lacks experience yet has enough loot to drop on an entry-level DSLR. You can start out relying on the auto settings (they won't steer you wrong), and then explore the advanced functions as you build your skill. Even the most hopeless of n00bs can use this thing. The more experienced user can squeeze a lot from the camera in various shooting situations, and you can perform nearly all functions manually for more control.

The camera's lens barrel extends to a lewd length, but it packs a 20x zoom. The anti-shake controls help in the long shots, but you'll lose some detail unless you're using a tripod. The camera boasts a litany of functions -- face detection, burst mode, 22 scene presets, movie recording and epic zooming ability, but where it really excels is up close. Those who like to sweat the small stuff will love the super macro mode that captures excellent detail in flowers, bugs and other assorted tiny objects.

WIRED: Stunning macro function makes big shots out of the smallest subjects. Versatile controls soothe the enthusiasts while auto presets comfort the n00bs. Excellent manual. Top-mounted hot shoe makes swapping external flash options easy.

TIRED: Pretend-professional zoom requires two hands. Zoom shots without a tripod can come out blurry. Stubborn clinging to proprietary xD media is irritating: Resistance is futile, Olympus.

$500, Olympus

8 out of 10

(Photo courtesy Jim Merithew, Wired.com)

Read our full Olympus SP-570UZ camera review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.

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The brand-new 15.4-inch (1280x800) Gateway M-151X comes in three hues (red, silver and blue) or wrapped in a blue and white floral graphic called Arctic Bloom. While the M-151X is, at heart, a mid-range laptop, its 1.66GHz Core 2 Duo, 2 GB RAM and 250 GB hard drive should provide all the power and storage you need for just about anything that's not specialized: Gaming is decent, graphics are solid and video editing is easy on this machine. The sea of mainstream laptops is littered with lackluster look-alikes, and while the M-151X isn't perfect, it manages to occupy that sweet spot between price and performance, not to mention style.

WIRED: Silver keyboard looks great with the brushed metal bezel that surrounds it. Touch-sensitive volume slider and slot-load DVD burner: score! Bluetooth, HDMI, 5-in-1 card reader, fingerprint reader, 1.3-megapixel webcam with mic. Solid two hours of battery life -- even while running multiple multimedia apps.

TIRED: Only three USB ports (no room for one more?), no FireWire. Speakers leave much to be desired, namely bass. Screen is very reflective, most noticeable with dark images, as when watching movies.

$850, Gateway

7 out of 10

(Photo courtesy Jon Snyder, Wired.com)

Read our full Gateway M-151X laptop review.

Check Wired.com's latest Gadget Lab reviews, updated daily.



Source: Wired Top Stories | 15 May 2008 | 4:00 am

Review: Jawbones Latest Headset is Smaller Skinnier Sexier

The second version of the Jawbone is out. It's smaller. It's prettier. But it's still marked by some of the same problems of the original.

Source: Wired: Gadgets | 15 May 2008 | 4:00 am

Icahn to nominate slate to sit on Yahoo's board

Billionaire investor Carl Icahn plans to nominate a board slate at Yahoo Inc.'s next annual meeting after buying a stake in the Internet company, Reuters reported.
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNPaperTech | 15 May 2008 | 4:00 am

IBM Touts Supercomputers for the Enterprise

Stony Stevenson writes "IBM has announced an initiative to offer smaller versions of its high-performance computers to enterprise customers. The first new machine is a QS22 BladeCenter server powered by a Cell processor. Developed to power gaming systems, the Cell chip has also garnered interest from the supercomputing community owing to its ability to handle large amounts of floating point calculations. IBM hopes that the chips, which currently power climate modelling and other traditional supercomputing tasks, will also appeal to customers ranging from financial analysis firms to animation studios."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: Slashdot | 15 May 2008 | 3:11 am

Steampunk in the Boston Phoenix

The cover story on the Boston Phoenix this week is a wicked, long feature on steampunk!

The 19th century ushered in the era of the amateur: a wild-eyed tinkerer in a lab had the capacity to stumble upon a discovery that just might alter society, a common theme paralleled in Victorian and Gothic fiction and, now, in Steampunk. “I find the optimism of Steampunk rather refreshing,” says Rich Nagy, a/k/a Datamancer, a popular Steampunk artisan originally based in New Jersey but now living in California who was represented at the Maker Contraptor’s Lounge. “Steampunk has a way of making technology, which is becoming more transparent and taken for granted every day, seem novel and fun again,” adds Nagy. That much is clear in his finely wrought pieces, like the “Computational Engine” computer casemod and his sophisticated “Steampunk Victorian Laptop,” a Hewlett-Packard ZT1000 laptop with a clockwork-under-glass display that, when it’s closed, looks like an ornate antique music box. It turns on with a clock-winding key. In effect, Steampunk is poised to bring the proletariat craftsman his 21st-century renaissance.

Though Steampunk’s artisanal outputs have stolen much of the mainstream limelight so far, there is a whole other creative side to the scene that has received little attention in comparison. Countless bands have formed, filing their music under the Steampunk genre or citing Victorian fantasy as a muse. One of them, Vernian Process, is the solo project of San Francisco–based Joshua Pfieffer. A true testament to the notion of the ambitious dabbler, Pfieffer has no musical training, and writes songs with the aid of basic audio-production software. “The atmosphere is actually more important to me than writing good hooks, or melodic structure,” he says of his music, which he makes free to download. “I feel that what I do represents the genre as I would like it to sound.”

Link (Thanks, Jake!)


Source: Boing Boing | 15 May 2008 | 3:05 am

Spokane County employee run to ground by Feds for taking pic of weigh station

John sez, "This is from Spokane County's official transportation blog. The county employee who runs the blog was taking pictures of a weigh station that is going to be moved. Ten minutes later he was contacted by the state patrol on his phone."
I was out taking pictures this morning of sites of transportation projects to be completed over the next twenty years. One of those projects is to move of the weigh station near Stateline further east along I-90. I stopped at the pretty much deserted weigh station and took a couple pictures, then drove off. About 10 minutes later I received a call on my cell phone from Washington State Patrol asking why I had been taking pictures of the weigh station!
Link (Thanks, John!)

See also:
BB reader: "Two FBI agents just showed up at my door for taking photos in the Port of Los Angeles"
Taking pictures on LA's Red Line violates the "9/11 Law"


Source: Boing Boing | 15 May 2008 | 3:02 am

Universal Music: when we get hit with copyright damages, that's "unconstitutionally excessive"

Universal Music Group loves the idea of suing music fans for the full freight when it comes to copyright infringement, celebrating their ability to extract $150,000 per act of infringement with punitive damages on top -- but now that Universal's been slapped with one of these copyright suits (for sampling Hendrix without permission, something I think they should be able to do, FWIW), they've decided that these damages are "unconstitutionally excessive."
The case in question involves now-deceased rapper The Notorious B.I.G., whose album Ready to Die incorporated an unlicensed sample of "Singing in the Morning" from the Ohio Players after a Hendrix sample was denied clearance. The sample made its way onto the final album and even onto reissued albums. Bridgeport Music and Westbound Records, which control the rights to the song, sued. A district court ruled in their favor; Bridgeport took the $150,000 maximum in statutory damages, while Westbound sought compensatory and punitive damages. Westbound scored big, earning $366,939 from the jury along with punitive damages of a whopping $3.5 million.

In appealing the ruling, Universal argued that the punitive damages award was "grossly excessive and should be vacated or at least reduced." The reason? It's excessive. The brief quotes a Supreme Court ruling that said, "In practice, few awards exceeding a single-digit ratio between punitive and compensatory damages, to a significant degree, will satisfy due process." Universal pointed out that the award in question was "approximately 10 to 1, far above the line of unconstitutional impropriety."

Link


Source: Boing Boing | 15 May 2008 | 2:58 am

Elude Your ISP's BitTorrent Blockade

StonyandCher writes "More and more ISPs are blocking or throttling traffic to the peer-to-peer file-sharing service, even if you are downloading copyright free content. Have you been targeted? How can you get around the restrictions? This PC World report shows you a number of tips and tools can help you determine whether you're facing a BitTorrent blockade and, if so, help you get around it."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: Slashdot | 15 May 2008 | 1:13 am

Why So Sweaty on 'Demetrius'? Science of 'Battlestar Galactica'

Starbuck's going mental at the helm of a filthy sewage ship on what could turn out to be a suicide mission. But there are other reasons why the crew members are soaking wet.


Source: Wired Top Stories | 15 May 2008 | 12:20 am

Cable Guy's New Address Book: Comcast Buys Plaxo

Contact-management startup Plaxo has been widely regarded as an imminent acquisition target. Industry watchers were surprised by the acquirer, though: Cable giant Comcast.


Source: Wired Top Stories | 15 May 2008 | 12:15 am

Scientists issue heart warning on fat content of doner kebabs

Studies find that the food contains up to the equivalent of a wine glass of cooking oil
Source: Infocious RSS raw feed - channel BNPaperTech | 15 May 2008 | 12:04 am

China Buying US Directed Sound 'Weapon'

holy_calamity writes "The directed sound weapon made by US company ATC is being exported to the Chinese police, despite the public law banning sales of weapons to China. Turns out that such 'non-lethal' technologies are not covered by this law — an omission that may become more widely known if they are used to quell high-profile protests during the Olympics."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: Slashdot | 14 May 2008 | 11:48 pm

Someone's Out to Get Wikimedia's Deputy Director

Wikimedia's deputy director, Erik Möller, has come under fire for early writings that suggest a disturbing defense of child pornography. Danny Wool, one of Wikimedia's most vocal critics insists he didn't leak the writings to the press, but he knows who did.


Source: Wired Top Stories | 14 May 2008 | 11:45 pm

Sen. Arlen Specter Demanding Probe of 'Spygate'

Sen. Arlen Specter demands an independent inquiry into "Spygate." No, it's not President Bush's warrantless domestic surveillance program. Instead, the Republican wants a review of the New England Patriots' actions of secretly filming opposing coaches' signals on the sidelines during NFL games.


Source: Wired Top Stories | 14 May 2008 | 11:00 pm

Review: Asus Eee PC 900 Is Even Better Second Time Around

The second version of the Asus Eee PC is here. And guess what? Asus has managed to make a sequel that's even better than the original.

Source: Wired: Gadgets | 14 May 2008 | 10:45 pm

Swiss Man Flies With Jet Powered Wing

NotBornYesterday writes "After spending $190,000 and 'countless hours' building a set of jet-powered wings, a Swiss man has successfully demoed this ultimate mother-of-all-toys. After jumping from a plane like a skydiver, he then lit the four jet engines and proceeded to fly around a valley in the Alps at up to 186 miles per hour. His site is here, if you want to see shots of him in action. 'I still haven't used the full potential,' he said."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Source: Slashdot | 14 May 2008 | 10:32 pm

Get Started With Amateur Radio: A Guide for 'New Hams'

Interested in getting a ham license and riding the amateur radio airwaves? You'll be well on your way to Elmerhood after following our guide. In Wired.com's How-To Wiki.

Source: Wired: Gadgets | 14 May 2008 | 10:25 pm