Archive for May 3rd, 2008

You may recognize Alphagrip from their bizarre line of handheld keyboard/trackball mouse hybrid controllers—but by the looks of their entry into Microsoft’s Next Gen Personal computer design competition, it appears that they are planning on taking things a step further by integrating a computer screen. The controller itself is basically a beefed-up version of their previous product—a design intended to maximize typing speed, conveniences and comfort.

However, it seems that the guys at Alphagrip have such a boner for ergonomic design that the screen itself seems like an afterthought. Seriously, the whole screen area irritates me—from the heart-shaped frame to the poorly put controls flanking the display. For these reasons alone, I doubt highly that it will win the competition much less become an actual commercial product in this form. [Alphagrip via Next Gen PC via Techpin via Gearfuse]


Via [Gizmodo]

Comments No Comments »

The Gadget: The Livescribe Pulse Digital Smartpen records your notes two ways: it creates digital copies of everything you write by hand while recording audio at the same time. It also goes one step further and links the two together, so you can quickly access audio by tapping parts of your notes. All of this is uploaded to your personal where the Livescribe software archives and makes your notes fully searchable. In addition, it offers features like a calculator, translator, and a paper piano that plays a mini piano you draw on paper.

The Price: $199

The Verdict: I like the Livescribe Pulse quite a bit. I think it performs as advertised and is relatively easy to use. That said, this doesn’t offer anything enticing or groundbreaking for people who don’t use a pen and paper on a regular basis. It’s a product for the likes of students, journalists, or even physicians, who are constantly scribbling things down with a pen. Here’s a quick rundown of the pros and cons of the Pulse.

As a swift refresh, the Livescribe Pulse uses special dotted paper for spatial recognition to digitally replicate the notes. In one regard, this is good, because it doesn’t require any secondary hardware. On the other hand, you cant just use any old piece of paper to make this thing fully functional. each sheet of paper has controls on the bottom, allowing navigation of the pens menu system, recording controls, bookmarking, playback controls, and speaker volume.

The note-taking/digital recording/replay function works smoothly. You hit the record button on the paper before you start to write, then as you jot down your handcrafted masterpiece, it simultaneously records the audio and keeps the two linked. When you stop recording, you can tap anywhere in the vicinity of your notes and it will playback the audio from that moment when you were writing. It’s awesome.

These can also be uploaded into Livescribe’s Desktop software, which archives your notes according to the notebook they were written in and the page it was on. Text with audio linked to it appears in green, and when clicked, plays back the audio. There’s also a search engine with handwriting recognition that works exceptionally well. I laid some chicken scratch on the page and it picked every word up, save for one word I couldn’t even recognize. It doesn’t currently support OS X right now, but they say its in the works.

Many of the secondary functions are neat, but I don’t know I would use any of them on a regular basis. The Paper Piano is novel. The written calculator seems semi-practical, when in the middle of note scribbling, but the printed material on the inside cover of notebooks just isn’t that useful. There’s another calculator, a visual keyboard (which isn’t yet supported) and status buttons for time and date. Also strange is that the settings can only be adjusted by the interfaces printed on the inside covers of notebooks. There’s no on-screen system for adjusting this using the cross-based navigation.

The highly touted translator is also missing (though promised in the future), replaced with a demo that translates 20 words into Arabic, Mandarin, Spanish or Swedish. And one issue I had with the written calculator and translator was that I tend to write without picking up my pen between letters, and it couldn’t recognize what I was writing. They state cursive support will come, but I’m not sure it will fix the recognition for people with poor handwriting.

The build quality of the pen is good, with a metal exterior that doesn’t feel too light or heavy in the hand. It has an OLED screen that brightly displays pertinent info, stereo microphone, a loud speaker, and a magnetic dock/data connector. However, it’s closer in size to a magnetic marker than a pen, and you have to hold the pen relatively high so as not to block the sensor. This feels a little cumbersome in the hand, but you mostly get used to it. Mostly.

The Livescribe Pulse is an extraordinary piece of tech, and I enjoy using it, but has an admittedly limited appeal. I’d love to see more creative and functional uses implemented with future “apps,” and a touch of refinement in the current interface. But this is suggested for anyone who takes a lot of notes. [Livescribe on Giz]


Via [Gizmodo]

Comments No Comments »

I’m going to begin a video blog. It’s going to be great. I’ll review PSP games. It’ll be called PSPblog. I’ll do it later. Until then, enjoy Gabe doing his Vlag.

I’m going to begin a video blog. It’s going to be great. I’ll review PSP games. It’ll be called PSPblog. I’ll do it later. Until then, enjoy Gabe doing his Vlag.

Via [crunchgear]

Comments No Comments »

bb9000ss.jpgNot much we don’t already know in what BGR is calling the final spec list for the BlackBerry 9000—3G HSDPA in the 850/1900/2100MHz bands, Wi-Fi, GPS and 480×320 LCD, etc.. The large nugget is that AT&T will be the first carrier to launch worldwide, as well have it exclusively in the US. So, T-Mo users are gonna have a bit of a wait The sorta good news for you is that one of the HSDPA bands the 9000 supports, 2100MHz, is one of T-Mobile’s two 3G bands (1700MHz is the other), so if you’re in an area covered by it, you can grab some 3G goodness on an unlocked phone. Otherwise, and they superior get cuddly with EDGE if they’re thinking about unlocking. Update: Astute commenters have pointed out that the way T-Mobile splits its 3G bands, you’re actually still screwed on 3G here. [BGR]


Via [Gizmodo]

Comments No Comments »

Oh, look at you with your three monitors. I bet you think you’re king nerd of computer mountain, don’t you? Well you know what? You suck. That’s right. That’s because I have fifteen monitors strung together making my screen larger than all of yours. Did you hear me?! I HAVE THE BIGGEST SCREEN! Finally, I win at something!

This monster of a display setup is made possible by 9X Media’s multi-display setups. Sure, it’s likely to topple over and pin me down, leaving me to slowly starve to death in my own home, my cellphone just out of reach up on my desk and no one coming to visit me or check on me because I’ve alienated all of my friends and family with my constant bragging and boasting about my gigantic monitor setup, but the fragging I’ll do before that happens will make it all worth it.

This scalable setup will grant you to link between two to thirty monitors together and beyond, as long as you’ve got the juice to send your picture to that many screens and don’t mind your $500 monitors to be handing 8 pixels each. But hey, it’s not the quality that counts, it’s the ridiculous size, right? [9X Media via BornRich]


Via [Gizmodo]

Comments No Comments »

Close
E-mail It