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Hands-On with Griffin’s TuneBuds Mobile 01 December 2008 at 9:57 am by admin

Tunebuds1

Apple has been dragging its feet with the release of its new iPod Touch compatible, remote control headphones with mic. Neither the in-ear nor the regular earbuds have yet made it into the stores, which has given the third-party makers a head start. Grifin sent us a pair of its TuneBuds Mobile earbuds to try out. Here’s how they fared.

Tunebuds5

The TuneBuds are of the in-ear type, and will work with many new iPods. The iPhone gets to take advantage of all the features. The inline button will answer and hang up calls, pause, play and skip songs, both forward and back, and the microphone will also let you record sound.  The 2G iPod Touch gets all of this except the part pertaining to telephone calls, and the 4G iPod Nano will work with the mic, but not the remote controls, as will the 120GB Classic.

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So, how does the hardware shape up? There are three different sized rubber grommets which push onto the plastic inner section, so unless you are a ninety-year old man with big flapping lugs or a mewling babe, you should be able to get them to fit. One in, the buds stay put. This is their greatest advantage over normal earbuds, which require constant – and annoying – readjustment. The rubber doesn’t seal out external sound completely, but I like that — I listen to podcasts while riding a bike and I like to hear the traffic.

The headphone cords are particularly nice. They have a woven sleeve which feels tough and prevents tangles — you can throw these in your pocket and they won’t turn into a rats’ nest of knots. The switch, too seems solid yet still light. The switch and mic are both housed inside a small cylinder which sits inline with one of the two cords which go to your ear. This means that the mic is right by your mouth for phone calls.

The call quality is, I think, fine. I didn’t try them out with an iPhone, but the TuneBuds turn an iPod Touch into a VoIP phone. That’s right. Using VoIP software like Fring, you can make Skype calls direct from your iPod over WiFi. It works great, although the Fring call quality was a little shaky. Here’s how the conversation went:

Me: Can you hear me?

The Lady: Of course. You’re in the next room.

Me: Yes, but can you hear me on Skype?

The Lady: It works!

Recording voice notes also works great. I tried it with Griffin’s own iTalk, which is designed to, well, record your voice. Despite having a terrible cold, I sounded clear and free of background noise.

Next, music. The TuneBuds sound a lot better than the earbuds that ship with the iPod, but that’s not hard. In fact, when we first tried them out, the Lady and I both heard a dreadful hissing. This turned out to be on the MP3 track, and I hadn’t noticed it before with the Apple ‘buds. The Griffins won’t replace your high-end cans, though. While not tinny, there is a rather lot of shrill top-end to the music. Treble can sound harsh. A quick trip to the iPod’s EQ screen is in order. The "Treble Reducer" setting takes care of everything.

Tunebuds4

The Remote control works fine. One click for play/pause; two clicks to skip forward and three to skip back. It’s simple and easy. But it brings us on to the fatal flaw with the review unit. If you jiggle the mini-jack in the socket, the iPod pauses. Or starts up. It’s completely repeatable, and renders the headphones unusable for anything other than listening at a desk, or while carefully cradling the rig in your hands. This could, however, be a fault with this particular unit.

How annoying is it? Aside from music cutting in and out at random, the worst part is that the iPod can switch itself on. This may kill the batteries, and it may also leave you a few minutes or a few hours ahead in podcasts or in audio books.

To be fair, I have only tested these properly with the 2G iPod Touch, so they may fare better with the iPhone or the new Nano. I have some suspicions as to the problem. Take a look at this closeup:

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Do you see it? Of course you do, you smart, observant reader. The iPod’s jack socket is rimmed with metal, and the shape of it doesn’t really hold a jack plug steady. I suspect that the plug is bending in my pocket and metal is touching metal, causing a short. That’s speculation, but it seems to fit the facts.

So, should you buy them? Aside from the weird bug, they’re fine. They sound better than the $30 Apple buds, and they’re certainly better put together (my Apple ‘buds usually only last a few months). Until Apple actually releases its new mic-equipped earbuds, we can’t compare. We can take a look at the prices, though. The TuneBuds are $40. The Apple in-ear cans will be $80. They also come with a neat little case, which I will probably have lost by the time I finish writing this review:

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To sum up. A good, cheap alternative to Apple’s own headphones. They also have the advantage of not being white. The TuneBuds are sadly crippled with the iPod Touch, though, due to the weird, and almost random, track skipping error. We’ll be looking into that. Until then, if you want remote control and a microphone for your iPod, you don’t have much choice.

Product page [Griffin]

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+ BMW Product Navigator: create your next Bimmer on a Surface By admin 30 November 2008 at 11:49 pm and have No Comments

It hasn’t even been two months since Microsoft loosed its Surface SDK, and already we’re seeing new and improved (or is it just one or the other?) uses of the giant multitouch display. In a presumed attempt to keep savvy shoppers off of those message boards and in the dealership, BMW has developed a promotional video showcasing the so-called Product Navigator. Said device reminds us an awful lot of that fictional computer seen the recent “Twins” Volkswagen commercial, though it actually enables prospective customers to develop their next whip rather than taking their John Hancock and doing the hard work itself. Personally, we’d rather spend our time on the track in Spartanburg deciding which model suits us best, but to each his / her own, we guess. Vid’s after the break.

[Via Autoblog]

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BMW Product Navigator: create your next Bimmer on a Surface originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 30 Nov 2008 23:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ Five Geeky Things to Do This Holiday Weekend By admin 26 November 2008 at 8:27 am and have No Comments

Turkeytemp

The orgy of spending that is The Holiday Season begins in the US this weekend. Family, food, gifts, the whole daunting shebang.

Sure, you might enjoy spending the four-day weekend locked up in the house with the in-laws and stuffing yourself with leftovers, but why not escape? Here we give you five suggestions for healthier, cheaper, nerdier and, above all, funner things to do this holiday.

Photo: [177]/Flickr

Get Nerdy in the Kitchen

Face it. You’re going to have to cook a turkey, so why not make it fun? Deep frying is dangerous but gives a crispy skin, a Turducken is, well, it starts with the word "turd", so we’ll skip that, and you can even chop out the breastbone and flatten the thing for the grill (fast and juicy). There are many alternative turkey methods, but the main thing you need to remember is the temperature.

A probe thermometer is cheap, and it’s the only way to know when the bird is done. Turkeys have thin parts, thick parts, flat bits and round bits, so estimating the time you need is wildly inaccurate. An probe plunged carefully into the thickest part of the meat will tell you when the meat is just juicy, but not overdone. When the readout hits 161ºF, pull out the roast and let it rest for 15 minutes and carve. If you have a thermometer with an alarm that can summon you from the den, then that’s just gravy.

Make a Camera

You could buy a new Canon 5D MkII, as we suggested earlier today, and escape the family for a day of shooting. Better still, especially if you have kids, is to make a camera. Yesterday we posted a guide to building a giant camera from an old flatbed scanner, a magnifying glass and a stack of black cardboard. This will keep you from getting bored, keep the kids out of trouble and, best of all, you can escape into the den later to "process the images".

Hold a Garage Sale

All that junk you have accumulated over the last year? Get rid of it. While everybody else is out buying yet more plastic crap on Black Friday, you could clear out the cupboards, make little cash and even meet the neighbors. Don’t underestimate the feeling of wellbeing you’ll have when all the digital detritus has been cleared from your home. I do it roughly once a year and it’s both relaxing and satisfying. Bonus: You’ll make some cash to spend on newer, faster, better gadgets.

Get Out

Theoretically, once everybody has finished rushing about the country in planes, trains and automobiles, the roads on Thursday should be relatively safe and quiet. This is the perfect time to get on your bike or try out the in-line skates that have been sitting in the basement since last Thanksgiving. You’ll work off the post-turkey tryptophan-trance and probably have a lot of fun doing it. Just make sure you don’t drink too much first.

Rip Everything

If you’re the indoor type, perhaps a spot of organization is in order. If you’re a Gadget Lab regular, you may have done this already, but you could spend your spare cycles this weekend by clearing all the plastic disks from your home.

CDs might offer better quality but they’re a pain to use. Better to simply copy everything onto a hard drive and hide the coasters in the basement. Your computer will already have software to do this, but here are a few tips:

First, think about making actual, direct, full sized copies of your CDs. Hard drive space is cheap, and you won’t have to drag the optical disks out when you decide you didn’t encode those MP3s at a high enough bitrate. Once the copying is done, just hook up the disk to your computer, throw the contents into iTunes or Winamp and let it work through the whole lot in one go, turning the music into iPod-friendly, bite-sized MP3s.

DVDs will work, too, but it will take a little longer. Legal concerns aside, the best way to go is Handbrake, a free application for Windows, Mac and Linux that will rip your movies to the size and file format of your choice.

Now you have everything in one place, hopefully ready for the media center Santa is bringing you for Christmas.

Over to you. If you have any more cheap and fun ways to spend the weekend, stick them in the comments.

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+ G1 and BlackBerry Bold get the Colorware treatment, finally feel at home with your bippies and lightsticks By admin 25 November 2008 at 2:01 pm and have No Comments

As you probably learned in grammar school, there’s a time in every gadget’s life when it gets the Colorware treatment — and for the G1 and the Bold, the time is now. It’ll run you $150 to dress up your current T-Mobile handset, or the company will ship you a brand new one $725. Prices for the BlackBerry Bold run $139 and $674 for the makeover and the whole phone, respectively. Sure, that’s a pretty pile of change, but if you’d spent your formative years in the East Coast rave scene you’d know just how coveted and stylish a pink, blue and orange G1 really is. If the BlackBerry is more your speed, make sure you check out that sexy number after the break.

[Thanks, Ken]

Continue reading G1 and BlackBerry Bold get the Colorware treatment, finally feel at home with your bippies and lightsticks

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G1 and BlackBerry Bold get the Colorware treatment, finally feel at home with your bippies and lightsticks originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Nov 2008 14:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ XPS 1340 appears on Dell’s website in name only By admin 25 November 2008 at 1:33 pm and have No Comments

It’s just been a few short days since Dell’s still unofficial Inspiron 1425 made an impromptu appearance on the company’s website, but it doesn’t look like the leaks are showing any signs of stopping just yet, with the also unannounced XPS 1340 now making its debut in an equally roundabout manner. Unfortunately, apart from the fact that it’ll apparently have a 64GB SSD option, there aren’t exactly many details to be found on the system, although it seems pretty safe to bet that it’ll be an update of some sort to the popular XPS m1330. Unless, of course, Dell intends to make its line-up even more unnecessarily confusing, which is also a possibility.

[Thanks, Omer]

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XPS 1340 appears on Dell’s website in name only originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Nov 2008 13:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ Awethumb is amaathing! By admin 25 November 2008 at 1:04 pm and have No Comments

Whittling might have been a hoax and Blackberry massages just a ruse, but the Awethumb is all too real — and all too freaking amazing. Yeah, we’re not at all sure that these $8 plastic thumbguards — available in your choice of colors! — will actually protect you from repetitive stress or even make typing easier, but all the dudes and dudettes on the El train will know you mean business when you slip ‘em on. As an added bonus, lack of compatibility with the iPhone will allow you to express your disdain for touchscreens in a satisfyingly dramatic way — if you can’t rock it with an Awethumb, you’re not rockin’. Ah, to be young and ensheathed in plastic thumb protectors. Frankly astounding video after the break.

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Awethumb is amaathing! originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Nov 2008 13:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ IEEE 1667 pledges secure portable storage for all By admin 25 November 2008 at 8:28 am and have No Comments

IEEE 1667 pledges secure portable storage for all

If you use a thumb-drive sans security your data is just a vacant USB port away from being thrown up on the internet, assets exposed to the world like some drunken heiress. Even secure devices, whether they use biometric scanners, hardware encryption, or even more extreme measures, all leave a lot to be desired: no standards means limited compatibility, and secure data you can’t reliably access might as well be random strings of binary digits. The answer could be IEEE 1667, the “Standard Protocol for Authentication in Host Attachments of Transient Storage Devices.” Among other things it would enable you to restrict where your thumb drive will work and, conversely, what thumb drives your machine will accept. If it becomes the standard it was born to be you’ll be able to apply the same policies whether you’re opening Windows 7, cuddling with Snow Leopard, or making jazz-hands with something a little less mainstream. Will it succeed? CNET’s Jon Oltsik thinks Microsoft’s support for the standard is a good omen and says “Let’s all follow Redmond’s lead in this case for the greater good.” That’s certainly not something you hear every day, but this time we’re game.

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IEEE 1667 pledges secure portable storage for all originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Nov 2008 08:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ Able Planet headphones cancel out bothersome noise of life so you can get into your game By admin 24 November 2008 at 11:59 pm and have No Comments

If you love gaming at loud volumes (who doesn’t) but don’t love the idea of going deaf by the time you’re 35 years old, Able Planet might have something to help you out. Their new PS500MM gaming headphones — developed with technology that was originally used for the moderately hearing-impaired — are supposedly ultra-noise-canceling, which should free you from the need to crank up the volume just to compete with background noise. They’re $99 and available for order now, so you’ll probably want to get over there asap, unless, like us, you destroyed your hearing years ago listening to Use Your Illusion II.

[Thanks, Christian]

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Able Planet headphones cancel out bothersome noise of life so you can get into your game originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Nov 2008 23:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ Panasonic puts forth proposal for 3D standard on Blu-ray Disc By admin 24 November 2008 at 10:57 pm and have No Comments

For those of you plugging your ears whilst humming along in hopes of this whole 3D revolution fading away, we’ve got a rude awakening headed your way. Just days after hearing that the HDMI specification could be updated to better handle stereoscopic 3D content, along comes word that Panasonic has submitted a proposal to the Blu-ray Disc Association (BDA) for an official BD standard to store 3D imagery formed of “left / right-eye two-channel Full HD images.” Panny reportedly made the move early in order avoid a format war, but really, it’s just looking to cash in on royalties for the next decade five years or less. It’s no secret that movie studios are dead set on moving forward with 3D production — might as well be ready on the other end, right?

[Image courtesy of 3DS]

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Panasonic puts forth proposal for 3D standard on Blu-ray Disc originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Nov 2008 22:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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+ zzzPhone now shipping with Android? T-Mobile doesn’t seem terribly concerned By admin 24 November 2008 at 8:31 pm and have No Comments

Those crazy zzzPhone kids are at it again, and this time they’re jumping on the open handset bandwagon. Sure, the whole thing has always seemed excessively shady, and as far as we can tell no one has ever received a one of these devices, but apparently the made-to-order cellphone is now “shipping” with Android. If the optional TV tuner, 100,000 candlepower flashlight, or solid gold case (decked out with one karat diamonds) wasn’t enough to lure you in, maybe this new development will seal the deal for you. Of course we’re dying to put the modular mobile boom box attachment through its paces, but not so much that we’ll be sending our hard earned cash over to the Shenzhen Special Economic Zone any time soon.

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zzzPhone now shipping with Android? T-Mobile doesn’t seem terribly concerned originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Nov 2008 20:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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