Archive for the “General Tech News” Category

This must take the record for the trippiest data-center build anywhere, ever: It’s an old nuclear bunker 30 meters below central Sotckholm, and its new conversion for one of Sweden’s biggest ISPs has made it truly 007-worthy. Check it: it has simulated daylight, greenhouses and waterfalls, there’re German submarine engines rigged as emergency backup generators, plus there’s 1.5 megawatts of cooling for the servers. Oh, and it can survive a hydrogen bomb attack.

That’s ’cause it was built into the old “Pionen White Mountains” nuclear bunker from the Cold War, though they took a year to convert it, and had to blast out more than 4,000 cubic meters of extra rock to make room for Bahnhof’s infrastructure. The backup engines are two Maybach MTU diesels, and they’ve got the submarine emergency sound horns still in place. Meanwhile the net connections even have triple redundancy, with the fiber-optic and copper trunk lines following three different routes into the bunker. That’s one massively redundant data center, no doubt about it.

On the human side, the 15 staff are treated to a 2600-liter fish tank, and a circular mid-air glass-walled conference room that has a moon-map for a floor. The CEO himself has confirmed that some sci-fi movie inspiration was deliberately incorporated into the design. Craziness. [RoyalPingdom]


Via [Gizmodo]

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The finicky, rubbery controls of the Atari 2600 were as much part of its charm as the classic arcade ports it’s known for. And now, for a mere $15, those bittersweet memories can come to your Windows, Linux or OSX system through this faithful-looking USB recreation of the original Atari 2600 joystick. The peripheral promises compatibility for most emulators and support for up to four simultaneous controllers. We’re just glad to see the phallus making a comeback. [Legacy]


Via [Gizmodo]

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Hey Brian,
Are you excited? I’m excited. Why am I so excited? Because we’re getting ready for our Gizmodo vs. Wired match in Gears of War 2, which you’re going to be participating in. Maybe. If we can’t find someone superior at video games that’s (just kidding). I’m also excited about finally getting Wii Fit, which you’ve just given your six month review of. Running on my treadmill will definitely help me more than this toy, but it’s an additional motivator. Good times!

Here are three of my favorite posts in the last 24 hours:

The new Watchmen trailer! Sadly, without Dr. Manhattan genitalia
Our James Bond review. Need to see that this weekend
RED’s crazy ass DSLR/camera


Via [Gizmodo]

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As some of you’ve probably noticed, things look a tiny different inside posts. Like, larger. It’s not your imagination, or your new contacts. We’ve bumped up the font size to be a bit more readable, and stuff now sprawls across a lot more of your monitor—800 pixels of it, actually. We’ve also moved metadata, like views and such, right under the post headline, and tags hang out below. Hopefully, this should make it even easier to read and find stuff on Giz. If you think it works (or doesn’t), let us know in the comments.

P.S. Our mobile site should look a bit prettier on the iPhone now. Let us know how that’s workin’ for you too.


Via [Gizmodo]

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Ars discovered that the upcoming Nintendo Wii Talk peripheral—a microphone that finally lets you communicate to other Wii users online—comes with a 16 character code to download the “Wii Speak” channel. This is a one time use code, which cannot be replaced if lost. What does this mean to you? It means you can NEVER sell this thing, NEVER give it away or NEVER use it on another Wii Console than the one it was first downloaded on. We know game studios and publishers hate secondhand sales, because they don’t get revenue from it, but this is HARDWARE. Nintendo’s seriously going to limit what you can do with hardware you purchased? You go too far, sir. You go too far. [Ars Technica]


Via [Gizmodo]

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Obama is officially the first YouTube president—you know, if you doubted it for some reason with 1800 videos uploaded and over 110 million views. He will be the first president to post videos of his weekly fireside coffee speaks on YouTube in addition to the traditional radio format, which goes back to FDR, who used the medium to directly address the nation as he steered it through the Depression and WWII. Indeed, some pundits are calling the Obama administration’s use of the internet the “internet-era” version of FDR’s fireside chats.

Policy experts, future Cabinet officials and senior members of the transition team will be holding Q&As and video interviews at Change.gov, in addition to Obama’s weekly YouTube addresses. Is it a stretch to state that the way the Obama administration says it’ll use the internet might be the most significant step forward in communicating with the public since the fireside chats started? Maybe. I mean, presidents have never used Television constantly or particularly consistently to do so. But it could also be a big failure.

Yeah, much of what the Obama administration puts out will be PR and spin—that’s what all politicians do, and I don’t see how it will be much different in that regard. But still, this shift to the internet seems care about it could be a leap forward in accessibility. The potential is there, and it won’t be much harder to be more transparent than the current administration, at any rate. If nothing else, maybe people under 40 might actually listen to the president’s weekly addresses for a change. At least until we get bored and go watch South Park or YouPorn. [Washington Post]


Via [Gizmodo]

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It’s not every day that you get to check out the world’s thinnest LCD HDTV, let alone all three “ultrathins” currently in production, but that’s what’s going down. Sharp’s super insane new flagship, the Limited Edition Aquos LC-65XS1U-S, arrived at my door in a bulletproof shipping container, 138 pounds of metal and glass measuring 65 inches diagonal that you can barely see from the side. Yes, in spite of its full-frontal gravitas, it measures only an inch thick at its edge, and a slightly more flexed 2 inches in the middle. It’s gorgeous and ridiculous and designed to hang on a wall with no more protrusion than a dainty sketch in a frame—only it can blast Casino Royale at 1080p, 24 frames per second, while your face melts, and I’d have to sell my vehicle twice over to purchase it.

I love you Giz readers too much to stop with something that none of us can actually afford—and if you can afford it, you’ll be decent enough to not let us know—so I called in the new slender 1080p models from Hitachi and JVC, too. As much lower-priced sets, I thought they’d just be the icing on Sharp’s Limited Edition cake, but they turned out to be, in their own right, fine specimens. Let’s review, shall we?

Who Thin?
“Ultrathin” is ideal defined, at this moment, as a TV that is mostly thinner than 2 inches.

Hitachi’s Director’s Series 1.5 UltraThin UT37X902 (37 inches listing for $1,900) got its name because it’s an inch and a half thick across its entire panel. It is a monitor with speakers, but no tuner and the barest of inputs—one HDMI and one VGA—to help it keep trim. JVC’s LT-46SL89 (46 inches for $2,400) on the other hand is a true TV, with digital HD tuner, 3 HDMI ports, 2 analog inputs with option of component, composite or S-Video, and a PC VGA input. That adds a bit to the girth—while most of its main panel is one-and-three-quarter-inches thick, there’s a middle section that is a fat three inches.

To give you a sense of comparison, Pioneer’s fairly slim and lightweight first-gen Kuro plasma is almost 4 inches thick, with a slimming bezel that measures about half that. Pioneer isn’t content there, though—its newest Kuro Elite monitors are quite trim, and you’ll recall last CES the company showed off an unbelievably thin half-inch plasma screen that’s presumably nowhere near production.

WTF Thin?
When I asked Sharp Aquos product manager Tony Favia what the fuss was about all of these new super thin Televisions, he stated that customers, particularly high-end ones, wanted a Television that could hang on a wall as flush as art, and even fill in for art as needed. That’s why Sharp loaded the XS1 with paintings: When you push “Image” on the remote, up pop masterworks by Hokusai, Renoir, Seurat and Van Gogh, about 10 or 12 total. You can’t leave the TV set on a particular image, though, despite the remote’s discreetly stashed Play/Pause/Fwd/Rew transport buttons.

The XS1 achieves its thinness in part by farming out its functionality: An accompanying AV box, tethered by a single long HDMI cable, doesn’t just handle all of the inputs, but the digital tuner and AquosNet internet access as well. It’s so integrated into the TV’s life that without it that, though I was able to run a video source directly, I couldn’t even touch picture settings.

The thing about thin is that it’s not cheap, and as such, manufacturers aren’t at liberty to cut out performance to trim down the screen. This is probably why the biggest successes in TV sales—Sony, Panasonic, Samsung and LG—haven’t expressed outright interest in marketing slim product. In fact, Sharp is smarter than JVC and Hitachi, aiming the thin concept at particularly spendy customers (Russian oil barons, professional golfers, Alaskan governors who might soon sign book and/or TV deals), rather than just going thin to differentiate itself at the Best Purchase.

You Can’t Afford It
The sleek all-metal Sharp 65-inch XS1 Limited Edition costs $16,000. The 52 incher costs $11,000. The build materials have a lot to do with the cost. A critically acclaimed, plastic-encased 3.7-inch thick Pioneer 50-inch plasma (that weighs 13 fewer pounds) lists for around $4,000, and sells for as little as $2,500. So you’re not a sheikh, I’m not a sheikh, why are we talking about a sheikh’s Television? Favia stated the company went for a “no compromise” approach, and as hard as I looked, I found just one technical compromise, one most (sheikhs) could live with. If the damn thing didn’t cost so much, the XS1 would be one of my favorite TVs ever.

Speaking of the Kuro, I placed a first-gen model side-by-side to calibrate and compare, and though the Sharp LCD wasn’t always as perfect as the Pioneer plasma, I was surprised to see how well it kept up. Although the LCD is equipped with 120Hz Fine Motion Enhanced blur reduction, I realized that during the action sequences in Casino Royale it went with native 24p (24-frames-per-second) motion picture playback. There wasn’t any noticeable blur. In fact, thanks to the large LCD’s dazzlingly snappy 4-millisecond response time, I found that you really didn’t need 120Hz at all.

Contrast Is King
In the all-important land of contrast, this Sharp scores massive. Sharp has, in the past, been criticized for confusing contrast with an overuse of darkness. The XS1 is obviously a ground-up redesign, but in that arena in particular, I found I could tweak settings to walk the line between crushed and bleached blacks. You don’t see charcoal gray when you’re supposed to see pitch black, and yet dark textures are plainly visible.

This has much to do with the tight grid of RGB LEDs behind the main panel that light only what’s needed. This technique has recently earned Sony and Samsung high praise for contrast and color reproduction, but it has a third crazy attribute: The 65-inch Sharp is capable of using less energy than the 46-inch JVC and even the 37-inch Hitachi, because it lights only what it needs and doesn’t require the constant glare of a fluorescent light source.

When it comes to specific wattage demands, the Sharp hovered in the low to mid 100s with peaks upwards of 200W. The plasma was averaging 250 or higher, maxing out during the brightest scenes at 400W. The JVC’s 46 incher could be set, using the backlight slider, anywhere from 98W to 200W, and the Hitachi similarly ranged from 83W to 171W. Though nice and slim, both of these sets use constantly lit fluorescent lamps.

While contrast on these smaller TVs didn’t immediately seem as good, I got a sneaking suspicion that LED backlighting is, at least in part, a psychological trick. See, constant FL light means that, when watching 2.35:1 widescreen movies, you get a touch of gray in the bars at top and bottom, at least you do unless you dial down the backlight and sacrifice some whiteness. With LED backlighting, the LEDs behind the letterbox’s black bars are simply turned off. You perceive that contrast to be superior since there are fewer dead giveaways of less-than-perfect contrast.

I’m not trying to uncover a mystery here; I’m just saying that once I ignored the light shining through the black bars, I was happy enough with the contrast and color—demonstrated below by Disney’s new Sleeping Beauty Blu-ray, our friend HD Guru Gary Merson’s favorite color-gamut test source along with, naturally, Southland Tales—on both the JVC and Hitachi. Sometimes “good enough” is actually “good.”

The Last LCD Issue
The funny thing is that two of the three test Televisions suffered from an annoying LCD-related problem, and it wasn’t the cheaper two. Both the Sharp and the JVC, which in many ways couldn’t be more different as Televisions, lost color saturation and even shifted in tint when viewed from the most peripheral angles.

Viewing angle issues are far from new: Projection Televisions and LCDs have continued to suffer from them for years and years (in some cases decades). And maybe you think that it’s no big deal, since most people watch a Television sitting head on. But I think that ultrathin TVs—intended to hang flush on walls, and without a pivoting mount—should be especially good looking at every angle where the picture is remotely visible. The Hitachi alone managed to hold its colors to the very edge, losing only brightness, as you’d anticipate.

New Hope
In the end, I think this review session did more to renew my faith in LCD technology than it did to sell me on the whole ultrathin thing. I spent years at line shows wondering why anyone would buy an LCD when plasma was an alternative, and even the amazing rise of Sony and Samsung in the LCD space was clouded by the simultaneous rise of all those extra-crappy savings-club TVs.

It’s worth noticing that these ultrathin sets don’t hail from the current Korean, Japanese or Chinese TV powerhouses. But as flagships from their companies, they do an even better job boding well for the whole industry, at least from a technical perspective. Plasma can still enjoy its high noon, but at a cost—nothing here looked better than the Kuro, but it took twice the energy to deliver that marginally better picture. And when it comes to hanging these bastards on the wall, well, let’s see if Pioneer’s still going to make good on that ultra-ultrathin promise from last CES. If not, these LCDs are going to be the slim-o-cizers to beat. That’s, until the first 40-inch OLEDs hit the market. [Sharp Aquos Limited Edition XS1; Hitachi 1.5; JVC SuperSlim]


Via [Gizmodo]

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As a prospective homebuyer, I’ve watched enough HGTV to learn a few things: people like open floorplans and they like large kitchens with stainless steel appliances—but they don’t like wallpaper. Still, that has not deterred designers from trying to make wallpaper appealing again. One such designer named Camilla Diedrich is attempting to accomplish this feat using intricate designs and fiber optics. Her Nature Ray Charles series comes in several different colors and can be purchased for about $231 a roll—although there are no details on how the wallpaper works or how it is applied.

It still looks too busy if you ask me, plus that lighting effect could get real annoying real quick—unless there is a way to shut off the power (or you’re tripping balls 24 hours a day). [Bodie and Fou via Inhabitat]


Via [Gizmodo]

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We knew it was coming to Germany first, but there’s new info that the BlackBerry Curve 8900 will hit the streets there mid-November, and at around $450 (360€) price for a contract-free handset. German T-Mobile subscribers can even get it for as low as $6.20 (5€) with the right kind of 2-year contract monthly plans: lets hope that kind of pricing is echoed when it comes to the US (on AT&T or T-Mobile?) at a still-unspecified date. [Electronista]


Via [Gizmodo]

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Congratulations to Neil Morris for coming up with the best productivity gadget out of the submitted entries and winning himself a brand new WowWee Rovio in the process. His concept, dubbed “Chonograhper” helps users keep track of time. They system consists of a wireless, touchscreen tablet that syncs with your calendar and can be updated via SMS or email.

The display would provide information on a specific task or announcement and alert you at the appropriate time. It could also be used for group projects by organizing tasks and keeping everyone on the same page. A lot of programs already provide many of these functions, but the fact that it could organize just about anything in such a simple, visual way gives it some advantages—especially in an office setting.


Via [Gizmodo]

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