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Sanyo’s eneloop hybrid bike has basket, will travel 01 December 2008 at 11:25 am by admin

Sanyo's eneloop hybrid bike has basket, will travel

Looking for an electric bike that does the peddling for you? You have plenty of choices, particularly if you’re willing to drop over $2,000, but finding one that uses regenerative braking to extend the life of its meager on-board batteries isn’t so easy. Panasonic’s Vivi RX10S is about your only choice until February, when Sanyo’s new eneloop-branded bike is set to start pulling weak (or just lazy) Japanese riders up up inclines before recharging itself on the way back down. On a hilly course a charge is said to last about 35 miles without braking, 46 by charging only when braking, and 62 miles in “auto” mode (charging on downhills, too). If you live in Japan it’ll be yours for 136,290 yen, about $1,450 US — but if you live around here we’d recommend not canceling your spinning class just yet, because while Sanyo pledges to ship this elsewhere in the world “at some point in the future,” it could be awhile before this thing starts hitting the diamond lanes near you.

[Via PhysOrg.com]

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Sanyo’s eneloop hybrid bike has basket, will travel originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Dec 2008 11:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ Man hacks GameCube controller for the Wii with tremendous effort By admin 29 November 2008 at 12:09 pm and have No Comments

Admit it. You’ve got an old GameCube from yesteryear laying around, and the slow economy (and fear for your life) is holding you back from running to your nearest brick-and-mortar to pick up a Classic Controller for your Wii. You know you want to play Super Mario 64 to work off that turkey, but you can’t justify laying out the cash. Fret not; YouTube user marcan42 has you covered, courtesy of a PIC18F4520 microcontroller and makeshift GameCube connector, along with a chopped off Nunchuk extension cord. Of course, you could just pick up a different model, but that would be way too easy. We didn’t say it was pretty, but if you’re still intrigued, check the full vid after the break.

Update: As a bunch of commenters have pointed out, this can be done already by plugging the GameCube controller directly into the Wii. However, this mod lets you do it wirelessly — err, if you don’t count the big microcontroller and mess of wires.

Continue reading Man hacks GameCube controller for the Wii with tremendous effort

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Man hacks GameCube controller for the Wii with tremendous effort originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 29 Nov 2008 12:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ Art Lebedev Reinvents the Traffic Light By admin 24 November 2008 at 9:11 am and have No Comments

Luxofor

We always thought that the design of the traffic light was just about perfect. But then, we also thought that the boring old keyboard had reached the zenith of its existence until Art Lebedev came along and glued on a bunch of expensive OLEDs, giving the world the Optimus Maximus.

Above you see the Luxofor Traffic Light, a rather smart update to the traditional traffic signal. Lebedev moves away from the circular lamp, which was designed for illumination by light bulbs, and places the LEDs found in most new lamps onto a square panel. And that’s it. Lebedev says you get more space for the signals, and that they are easier to see.

The Luxofor page helpfully has mockups of designs tailored to different cities around the world: New York gets yellow cases, and Tokyo gets a couple of speakers on stalks to, presumably, shout instructions at the crowds of milling pedestrians.

Britain, the home of the traffic light, is curiously excluded. We assume that it would come weighed down with extras — speed detectors, security cameras and child-scaring noise emitters.

Lebedev also left out Naples, Italy, presumably because traffic lights there are universally ignored. In fact, their only purpose seems to be to lure unsuspecting tourists into the path of speeding scooters where they will be crushed in a hideous scene simultaneously reminiscent of both Ben Hur and Mad Max. How do I know this? I was there this weekend, and narrowly escaped with my life.

Luxofor traffic lights design concept [Art Lebedev via Design Launches]

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+ New MacBooks Take Big Performance Hit With Battery Removed By admin 21 November 2008 at 3:41 pm and have No Comments

Macbook

Apple’s new MacBooks are mighty speedy, but they suffer from a huge performance drop if you remove the battery and use the AC adapter as the sole source of power.

Gearlog’s Zach Honig discovered that the MacBook sees a 37-percent drop in speed when running without a battery.

Honig benchmarked a 2.53 GHz MacBook Pro using a multiprocessor test called Cinebench R10. With the battery present, the MacBook Pro turned in a score of 5,549. Without the battery, it scored 3,504.

While this may appear to be a minor issue — since most people keep their batteries in their MacBook — Honig pointed out that some like to remove their batteries and run off the AC in an effort to extend the battery’s life cycle. Also, eventually all batteries reach the end of their life cycles, and if you’re running the MacBook off the AC, you’ll see a significant plunge in speed.

Apple acknowledges the issue at its support site. The reasons?

If the battery is removed from a MacBook or MacBook Pro, the computer
will automatically reduce the processor speed. This prevents the
computer from shutting down if it demands more power than the A/C
adaptor alone can provide.

Makes sense. But a 37-percent drop seems an awful lot, doesn’t it? Personally I don’t mind much: I run my MacBook Pro with the battery normally, and I’ll just buy a new battery when the time comes. That big number is the interesting part here.

Apple Notebooks Take Huge Performance Hit Without Battery [GearLog]

Photo: William Hook/Flickr

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+ Mini WiiMote Shines Mario Kart In Your Face By admin 21 November 2008 at 3:13 pm and have No Comments

Projector

Those keychain flashlights and laser pointers are more annoying than they are useful. But at least Nintendo’s Wiimote projector would look kind of cool when your friends shine it in your eye. Resembling a Wiimote controller, the keychain measures 2.25 inches long, and it beams an image of Super Mario Kart characters on the wall.

Imported from Japan, the keychains are available at ThinkGeek for $6.

Product Page [ThinkGeek via Technabob]

Photo: ThinkGeek

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+ Hands On With Lowepro’s ‘Stealth’ Camera Bag By admin 19 November 2008 at 9:29 am and have No Comments

classified-1.jpg

After seeing the Gadget Lab how-to project on making a ratty, thief-proof camera bag, the bigwigs at Lowepro couldn’t contain themselves. “We make a stealthy camera bag, too,” they cried, “You MUST test it!”

So I did. In reality, the Lowepro folks weren’t nearly as pushy, but they did send over the Classified 160AW, a nylon and leather day-bag for photographers which is purposely styled to be less flashy than a normal camera bag. Is it the kind of bag which would let you pass unnoticed through the mean streets of Barcelona’s pickpocket-laden tourist center? No. Is it a comfortable, capacious and capable bag for the photographer on the go? Let’s see.

First, the looks. The Lady said that the Classified 160 looks like a bull and, in the top picture, you can see her point: The extended zipper that gives you access to the main compartment kind of makes the bag looks like a bull’s head, if you look at it the right way. She is, though, from Catalonia, a part of Spain, so she could have been influenced by a childhood of bullfighting.

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There is a bull connection, though. The nylon bag features some leather accents, most usefully the top-mounted handle and the ends of the zippers. They add some elegance, but also toughness where it’s needed. There is also a nifty, stiff leather tab on the shoulder strap which will stop a camera from sliding off your shoulder:

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Otherwise, the bag looks a lot more like the kind of thing a middle manager might use to tote his Dell brick — not a bad thing for a low-profile design, but hardly the thief repellent that is the Gadget Lab rat-bag.

The Classified is meant to be a work bag rather than a storage or transportation bag, and it has enough cubby holes to squirrel away most of your stuff. Here’s the front pocket:

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The flap is secured by a nylon clip, as you can see at the bottom. It lifts to reveal two pockets - a front, non-padded one which is ideal for tobacco, and another just behind which, on the larger models, is big enough to take a notebook computer. This one is smaller, but that pocket still has room for my currently out-of-action Hackintosh, a 10″ netbook (the trackpad is broken, if you must know). The zipper you see isn’t another pocket. It actually unzips to reveal…

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… an expansion, erm, flap. This will add a few inches to the front-to-back depth so you can squeeze a little more in. Inside the front pocket you’ll also find this card holder, which hooks onto a strap inside the pocket via metal clip. It’s also good for holding a set of keys.

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There’s also another, zippered pocket at the back, and underneath yet another pocket containing the usual Lowepro rain cover.

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So, all your junk is taken care of. Onto the inside, which is big enough in this model to hold a camera with a lens, a spare lens or two and a flashgun, depending on their size. There are several inserts which use Velcro to grab onto the interior like a moron’s tongue on a frozen metal pole. Moving them around can be tricky but once their in, they’re not shifting. One of them even has a microfiber cloth for polishing your LCD screen.

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The odd shape of the larger dividers is designed to hold a camera up close to the top for easy grabbing. Here is the splendid Nikon D700 sat snugly atop the leather tipped pads (shortly before I put it on the sofa, caught the camera strap on my foot and sent the body and lens flying to the hard tile floor. It’s fine, but I just lost a year of my life due to shock):

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When I go out shooting, I don’t carry much — usually the camera and either a strobe or a spare lens. So I took out all the inserts except one and just let the camera rest on the floor of the bag. As there is a removable (and thick) pad here, it felt perfectly safe.

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Above you see the extra strap, and I couldn’t work out what it was for. A quick email to Lowepro revealed the truth. One end loops around the main strap and the other clips onto one of the metal rings on the back of the bag. This allows you to keep the pack from swinging around. If you are familiar with a proper cycle courier bag, you’ll be at home with the design, which sits between groin and nipples.

Conclusion

There are some downsides. The bag is very well made, but all that padding makes it both bulkier and heavier than our home-made version. On the other hand, this thing is built like a tank. You’d have to decide exactly what you need — light and thin or thick and protective.

I had some trouble with the shoulder strap, too. I like to be able to swing the bag from my side around to my butt, and back again. The ultra-grippy shoulder pad means that this action drags on the shoulder of your jacket as you do it. A small point, but an adjustable pad would help. Once in place, though, the strap is very comfy.

While the Classified series isn’t going to ward off the baddies like the home-made version, it’s discrete enough to pass unnoticed in a decent part of town. It’s also tough enough that I feel fine throwing it into the front basket of my bike without worrying about the contents. And if I ride fast enough, people think that a there’s a bull charging towards them. Or at least, that’s what I tell myself.

You can find the Classified 160 AW online for around $150.

Product page [Lowepro]

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+ AMD launches first 45nm, quad-core Shanghai Opterons, hitting desktops Q1 By admin 13 November 2008 at 3:17 am and have No Comments

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Intel might get all the consumer praise, but AMD has been blazing architectural trails well before Nehalem. As EE Times points out, AMD’s 65-nm Barcelona was the first quad-core processor with 2MB of shared L3 cache integrated with the Northbridge memory controller. Now AMD has (finally) caught up with its own 45-nm technology under the code-name, Shanghai. AMD’s newest quad-core Opteron server chip with 6MB L3 cache now offers up to 35 percent better performance while drawing 35 percent less idle power. Better yet, it’s drop-in compatible with Barcelona which should keep IT-types happy as they extend the life of their server farms. Available immediately in 75-watt, quad-core versions running clock speeds from 2.3GHz to 2.7GHz. Desktop-class “Dragon” chips should hit the PC market in Q1. Great, now where are those 45-nm netbook procs, eh AMD?

[Via EE Times and CNET]

AMD launches first 45nm, quad-core Shanghai Opterons, hitting desktops Q1 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Nov 2008 04:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ ‘Fire’ lights up your wrist, but probably not your life By admin 11 November 2008 at 5:25 pm and have No Comments

Fire

With instructions as detailed as this, you just know you're in trouble.

(Credit: Tokyoflash)

Tokyoflash, which previously brought us such aptly named wristwatches as the Infection, has alerted us to its latest vexing timepiece, the Fire. But not to fret: if you have trouble telling the time with …

+ Giant Wall Shadow Boxing Game Looks Insanely, Humiliatingly Fun [Pity The Fool] By admin 28 October 2008 at 10:30 pm and have No Comments

pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/10/remote_impact.jpg” width=”494″ height=”442″ style=”display:block;float:none;” / You know that anger management technique where you punch a pillow? Imagine if instead of a pillow, you were punching shadows of a giant mattress on the wall… and instead of just punching, you were elbowing, kicking and headbutting as well. Now imagine that those shadows belong to your friends (or coworkers) and you get extra points the harder you hit them. You’ll have Remote Impact – the silliest, funnest looking interactive fitness game I’ve ever seen in my life./p pRemote Impact: Shadow Boxing Over a Distance registers how much brute force is behind every punch, making it a lot like a full body version of the a href=”http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_fighter#Street_Fighter_.281987.29″first Street Fighter game/a (remember that one?). According to the developers, the game is a great way to socially bond and team build. Hmm. As hilarious and awesome as this looks (and really, it’s worth clicking through to the video), I’m not sure if I’ll feel closer to Judy in Accounting now that I know she likes to aim for the nuts. [a href="http://exertioninterfaces.com/remote_impact/"Exertion Interfaces/a - iThanks Ariel!/i]/p br style=”clear: both;”/
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+ Life Learning Device is Perfect for the Guy Who Knows Nothing [Life Learning Device] By admin 26 October 2008 at 10:00 am and have No Comments

pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/10/LLD.jpg” align=”left” hspace=”4″ vspace=”2″ width=”494″ height=”364″ style=”display:block;float:none;” /Press the glossy dome of the Life Learning Device and it spits out a motivational quote, a sentence read aloud in a foreign language, sports trivia or even golf facts. It’s like that asshole know-it-all guy at the office party, except you can throw the Life Learning Device in the trash when you get tired of it. At $30, it’s also be the perfect gift for that loved one in your family who has no idea what “The Google” is, and would be more comfortable receiving their education in as random a fashion as possible./p pThere are apparently several models to choose from, including Law of Attraction, Chinese/English, Law Cases, Football Facts, Horse Whisperer (?!), NASCAR Facts, Martial Art Quotes, and SAT Exam Questions. Here’s more from the LLD folks themselves:/p blockquote pAn LLD is an innovative and easier way to receive daily inspiration or expand your wisdom about a favorite hobby or vocation. Everyday it relays a new jolt of wisdom! Consistently feed your brain, soul, and desires with the touch of a button. These Life Learning Devices are an excellent way to motivate your dreams, learn a foreign language, or expand your worldly wisdom about your favorite hobby./p /blockquote pAgain, if Google, RSS feeds or email newsletters make you cry, this could truly be an indirect way to boost your brain power, as slowly as possible. It also trains horses, apparently. Available November 1. [a href="http://www.lifelearningdevices.com/"Life Learning Device/a via a href="http://www.coolest-gadgets.com/20081026/life-learning-device/"Coolest Gadgets/a]/p br style=”clear: both;”/
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