Archive for August, 2008

Taser touts MP3 player that’s a real shock to the system

Friday, August 29th, 2008

CES If you feel the lusting eyes of robbers every time you publicly adjust your iPod Touch, then American company Taser International looks set to stun you with its latest offering.The firm is displaying a leopard skin-effect covered taser, dubbed the C2, at this year’s CES show in Las Vegas, which features an optional 1GB Music Player Holster (MPH).One for the ladies. Or, on second thoughts, maybe notWhile the C2 is your standard electrical shocker, the MPH pouch incorporates its own MP3 player, meaning you will always be able to get a seat on the tube or quickly reach the front of the queue in any coffee shop while listening to your music.Although a mere gigabyte of storage is somewhat disheartening for any diehard portable music player fan, the good news is that it should serve you well as a temporary replacement to, say, an iPod Touch if you’re intending on drunkenly walking home from the pub.The C2 Taser’s musical pouchThe company’s CEO Rick Smith claims that both the, ahem, funkier Taser design and the MPH are the result of it listening to its customers, because “personal protection can be both fashionable and functionable”.The C2 Taser and MPH will be available from Taser International’s website in March, priced at $380 (?190/€260) and $72 (?36/€58) respectively. European prices haven’t been released yet.

T-Mobile to conjure up HTC Wizard smart phone in US

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

T-Mobile will next month ship its MDA - better known in Europe as the MDA Vario - and SDA - aka the SDA II - smart phones in the US.The MDA is based on HTC’s PDA-style Wizard device and incorporates a slide-out QWERTY keypad. Based on Windows Mobile 5.0, the MDA offers GSM and GPRS/EDGE connectivity, along with Bluetooth and Wi-Fi support. T-Mobile is also touting the device’s ability to work as an instant messaging client with AOL, MSN and Yahoo! IM services. There’s a 1.3-megapixel camera on board too.The SDA offers the same features in a more phone-line form-factor, and with the addition of dedicated music and video playback controls. The SDA also incorporates an antenna bulge at the top, a ‘feature’ missing from the European version. It may be unsightly, but the antenna makes sense in the US market where aerial stubs are held to indicate a better ability to latch onto a weak signal.T-Mobile’s European operations have offered HTC-made devices for some time, but February’s MDA and SDA launch marks the first time the cellco has offered such own-brand smart phones in the US. To date, it has focused on the its tie-in with Danger to offer the Sidekick II handheld, and with Research in Motion (RIM) to provide a number of Blackberry devices.T-Mobile didn’t say how much it will charge for the new models when they ship in the US. RRelated reviewsHTC Wizard Wi-Fi smart phoneHTC Universal 3G Wi-Fi smart phone

Nvidia gets its chips out

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

CeBIT Nvidia has announced a raft of new graphics kit at CeBIT, aimed at providing what it calls “extreme high-definition” to users. SVP Dan Vivoli said the move towards high-definition displays and the extra demands it will place on hardware is: “music to our [Nvidia’s] ears”.Its new flagship GeForce7900 GT high-end card leads the charge; Nvidia says this will be the fastset GPU in the market. It’ll be able to support two hi-def displays simultaneously, if you’re into that sort of thing. It’s little brother, the 7600GT replaces the firm’s best-selling 6600 chip.After complaints from customers, the PureVideo technology, designed to lighten the CPU load, will now work with software other than Nvidia’s proprietory NVDVD package.Its super-duper SLI technology expands to handle four GPUs in desktop PCs, and the original two-chip flavour will be available for notebook gamers for the first time. The selling-point of the new Quad-SLI boxes, Nvidia says, is that 30-40fps in hi-def with all filters and dooberries turned up to 11 will be possible for the first time.Vivoli described using an SLI-enabled laptop recently as: “The most impressive thing I’ve seen in my entire life.” Yikes.Nvidia’s notebook main man, meanwhile, showed off the first portable with SLI grunt, from Toshiba. For the mainstream, he introduced the first integrated chipset with the NForce media chip onboard to reduce CPU power consumption, that Nvidia reckons will be the lowest-power Turion-class chipset on the market.Nvidia says all the new gear should be available immediately. R

20,000 videos available for PSP, iPod

Monday, August 25th, 2008

More than 20,000 independently produced, user-published videos are now available to be pushed to Sony’s PSP portable videogame console and Apple’s iPod. They’re from Veoh Networks, which claims to be “the first internet television peercasting network”.Veoh automatically downloads videos of interest to a PSP owner’s device each time the PSP is connected to a user’s PC.In recent months the rush to make video entertainment available on the net has increased. The demand has accelerated because of the popularity of products like the Sony PSP that can be connected to the net and are capable of storing and playing high-quality videos. Many of these, such as the PSP and Apple’s video iPod, are portable.Veoh’s peercasting network distributes TV-quality, full-screen video to be played on a PC or Mac or on a variety of new portable devices. The company says thousands of iPod owners are already filling their players with thousands of videos available through Veoh. It claims that from music videos and comedy sketches to how-to sessions and all things automotive, PSP and iPod enthusiasts will find compelling content from Veoh.”Portable video is a hot topic for consumers, with many devices introduced and lauded earlier this month at the Consumer Electronics Show. Consumers clearly want to see their content when and where they choose,” Veoh Network CEO Dmitry Shapiro said. “Veoh is designed to support the many viewing choices consumers need, including the living room TV, their laptop and portable video devices. Our network allows anyone to publish TV-quality video that can be watched everywhere.”Veoh integrates with the Sony PSP Media Manager, sold separately through Sony, allowing easy export of videos from the Veoh network to a person’s PSP. Veoh’s peer-to-peer distribution technology, unlike streaming video, gives portable device owners a place to discover high-grade video they can watch wherever they are.Veoh software can be installed on a PC or Mac to create a virtual television network. That allows video bloggers and independent producers, as well as film studios and TV networks, to distribute TVquality, full-screen video to hundreds of millions of users with broadband connections. Producers can publish unlimited amounts of TV-grade video content to the network, providing consumers with unparalleled choice in television programming and control over their viewing experience.Unlike rogue P2P networks that are used to share mostly pirated video, Veoh is a community of publishers and consumers, where published content is approved by editors, and consumers are assured they get what they request. The system also integrates tightly with RSS, providing content producers with easy publishing to multiple video systems.Meanwhile, Viacom says it has signed an agreement with Apple to make some of its TV series’ available through Apple’s iTunes online store from MTV, MTV2, Comedy Central and Nickelodeon at $1.99 per episode.Copyright c 2006, FaultlineFaultline is published by Rethink Research, a London-based publishing and consulting firm. This weekly newsletter is an assessment of the impact of the week’s events in the world of digital media. Faultline is where media meets technology. Subscription details here.

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Gadget leads faithful to prayer, music fans to good tunes

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

Manufacturer Mavizen has created a pendant-style Bluetooth music pick-up with a very unique selling point: it also includes a Muslim prayer alert.Mavizen’s BluQ: able to keep you entertained and tell you when it’s time for prayersThe BluQ hasn’t yet gone into production, but Mavizen told Register Hardware that it will support Bluetooth’s A2DP wireless stereo technology to receive music streamed from, say, your mobile phone. It also has the Bluetooth AV Remote Control Profile (AVRCP) so it can control TVs and Hi-Fi equipment.Mavizen’s BluQ: points to MeccaIf you’re of the Muslim faith, then BluQ comes pre-programmed with an application called Meccanism. It has Mecca’s position calculated from 600 countries, towns and cities so all users need do is select their current location and the device will automatically set prayer times and the indicate the direction of Mecca. Mavizen is considering a GPS-based version too.For the programmer in you, the BluQ will come with a coding kit so users can develop their own applications for the product - although Mavizen said it won’t be suitable for inexperienced hackers.It measures 5.5 x 4.3 x 0.4cm and, upon its general release, will also be able suitable for us as an in-car hands-free mobile phone kit. Mavzien wouldn’t confirm a price or release date.

Motorola SLVR L7 music phone

Monday, August 18th, 2008

UK PC maker Evesham will ship a music streaming system designed not only to pump your favourite tunes out across your home network, but also to protected your collection against hard drive damage. The MBox provides up to 500GB of storage, though you only get half of that because the unit has two drives, one configured to mirror the contents of the other. If one fails, the company said, the other still has a full archive.Each unit has its own wireless link ready to stream music to Evesham’s MBridge network music player, a rebagded version of Roku’s SoundBridge M1000 device. One MBox will host up to five MBridges, each of which ships with its own remote control and provides a large LED to let you select the songs you want to play. The MBridge plays WMA, AAC, WAV, MP3 and AIFF files, but not DRM-protected tracks downloaded from the iTunes Music Store.You can also connect the devices across a fixed Ethernet network, and there are both coax and optical S/PDIF digital out and analogue RCA jacks for connecting to your stereo sound system or powered speakers. MBridges can also stream internet radio stations via a networked computer.You can use MBox to store video and photos, but you’ll need a PC or Mac to view them.Both units go on sale on February 15, with a 320GB (160GB of media storage) MBox costing _599 with a bundled MBridge. Other capacities will be available at launch, Evesham said. Each MBox will ship with a two year on-site warranty. Individually, the MBridge is priced at _149. R

Reverend Horton Heat - Smoke ‘em if You Got ‘em [1990]

Sunday, August 17th, 2008


Price: $0.96
Size: 73,40 Mb
Tracks:
1: Bullet
2: I’m Mad
3: Bad Reputation
4: It’s a Dark Day
5: Big Dwarf Rodeo
6: Psychobilly Freak Out
7: Put It To Me Straight
8: Marijuana
9: Baby, You Know Who
10: Eat Steak
11: “D” For Dangerous
12: Love Whip

Reverend Horton Heat - Smoke ‘em if You Got ‘em [1990]

Friday, August 15th, 2008


Price: $0.96
Size: 73,40 Mb
Tracks:
1: Bullet
2: I’m Mad
3: Bad Reputation
4: It’s a Dark Day
5: Big Dwarf Rodeo
6: Psychobilly Freak Out
7: Put It To Me Straight
8: Marijuana
9: Baby, You Know Who
10: Eat Steak
11: “D” For Dangerous
12: Love Whip

Theodore Shapiro - Tropic Thunder [2008]

Thursday, August 14th, 2008


Price: $1.76
Size: 92,11 Mb
Tracks:
1: You’re My Brother
2: Four Leaf’s Plan
3: Lead Farmer
4: Enter the Dragons
5: Bad Feeling About This
6: Flaming Dragons
7: Panda Attack
8: Panda Call
9: The Golden Triangle
10: A Night At the Theatre
11: Don’t Judge Me
12: Portnoy’s Plan
13: The Wet Offensive
14: Shadow Me, Pinocchio
15: Flamethrower
16: Breakdown Under
17: Truck Escape
18: Blow the Bridge
19: Real Tears
20: Simple Jack Trailer
21: Satan’s Alley
22: Cue Bill Conti