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Green Tech, Switched Video, CES 2009

'Green' Areaware Moof Bike Saves Money and the Environment

With the whole world going green, we're seeing less Hummers and more hybrids than ever before--but did you know that there's zero-emissions way to get around using nothing but the power of your legs? Be the envy of your hipster friends with the stylish "Moof" bicycle from industrial design aggregators Areaware, which we recently caught on video. The top tube of this European-style ride has recessed solar-powered front and tail lights. With vintage-inspired bikes fetching prices in the thousands, the Moof might be a steal at $500. Use it to hit the streets for some Stroopwafels and find your way home at night after a couple glasses of Genever. That's Dutch, yah!

Click after the break to catch the video.

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Switched Video, CES 2009

Porn Star Belladonna Picks Top Sex Tech: Belladonna Talks FyreTV



It seems that every mainstream tech innovation is followed closely behind by an answer from the porn industry. Like Roku's Netflix box, FyreTV's set-top player delivers a library of over 20,000 DVD-quality porn flicks from you to choose from - and it's wireless, so you don't need to run an ethernet cable into the bedroom. Check out the video for some work-safe screenshots and info about how the subscription-based system works.

Check out the video after the break.

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Audio/Video, Switched Video, CES 2009

Switched Visits the House of the Future at CES



During our trip to the desert, we took some time off from the convention floor to head over to the NextGen Home Experience. This super-green, 5,200 square-foot "smart" home boasts some smooth accoutrements, including a powerful home-automation system and a Microsoft Vista-based, centralized entertainment center and media server.

But there's nothing really new about a media server for your home, even one as slick as this Aspen Media version. No, what really caught our eye was the handsome leather floor tiles made from recycled BMW car leather. We're told they're as easily maintained as any floor surface, and will develop their own patina as time goes on. In a house filled with seen-it-before concepts like televisions disguised as mirrors, wireless remotes in every room and solar panels on the roof, we kept finding ourselves marveling at those dang tiles.

Check out the video after the break.

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Switched Video, CES 2009

Porn Star Belladonna Picks Top Sex Tech: 3-D Adult Films



Have you ever wondered what a porn movie would look like in 3D? Well, we can't show you one of those racy films, but we can show you adult film star Belladonna's reaction when she watched one at the Adult Entertainment Expo. The technology involved is the Glacier IceBerg Entertainment System and it will work with any 3D-ready TV. According to Belladonna, there's no way to grasp the amazing nature of the technology without watching it yourself, but we'll just take her word for it.

Check out the video after the break.

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Celebrities, Switched Video, CES 2009

Porn Star Belladonna Picks Top Sex Tech: We-Vibe



CES wasn't the only convention packed with gadgets this January: The AVN Adult Entertainment Expo, which takes place alongside CES every year, was filled with the latest lovemaking technology from wireless iPod pleasure enhancers to adult videos in HD and 3-D. We teamed up with adult entertainment icon (and AVN Awards official presenter) BellaDonna to check out the new sex toys for 2009. First up: We-Vibe, a high-quality, rechargeable vibrator for women that can be worn during the act. Check out the video after the break to watch BellaDonna's report.

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iPod, Switched Video, CES 2009

OhMiBod Unveils First Wireless Vibrator for the iPod

OhMiBod, the folks behind the world's first iPod-enabled vibrator, rolled out another first at this year's Adult Entertainment Expo: A wireless iPod-enabled vibrator. The system uses a discreet transmitter to sync a vibrator (available in a full palette of Nano-matching colors) to a user's favorite playlist. No wires means one can slide one's iPod into a docking system while sliding into bed. And should anyone get bored of their playlist, all of OhMiBod's products work independently -- just like a regular vibrator. Watch the video for a demonstration.

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Switched Video, CES 2009

Cisco Streams Your Media Anywhere



Cisco unveiled at CES a system of routers, players and a central media hub that sucks all your digital content into one place, and then lets you spit it out anywhere over your home network -- or even the Internet. Unlike other streaming media systems such as Sonos, Cisco's Linksys-branded products use a massive, centralized storage device (called the Media Hub) to store content, and because the system is connected to your home network, it can stream internet radio and let you access your files over the 'net. Best feature: All those iTunes songs you've purchased -- they'll work on the Cisco system. Check out the video for the details.

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TV, Switched Video, CES 2009

'Zombies' Hit Trade Show to Encourage TV Recycling

As TV manufactures galore loaded into the Las Vegas Convention Center for CES 2009, something began stirring deep in the bowels of the Earth. Whether it was black-magic or the alignment of the planets, we're not sure, but scores of undead walking television sets descended upon the Las Vegas pavement to extract revenge on their manufacturers.

Or at least that's how the 'story' goes.

In reality, we were just being treated to a piece of performance art by the Electronics TakeBack Coalition, which was on hand with said band of 'zombies' to encourage television manufacturers to establish recycling programs for their old analog TVs in preparation for the DTV switch over.

We took our camera out and scored an interview with the group's leader, Robin Schneider, as well as some of the zombies themselves, and narrowly avoided having our brains eaten.

Check out the video after the break to get a taste of some of the hot, 'Thriller'--style dancing, zombie TV action.

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Computers, Laptops, Notebooks, CES 2009

Is Sony's Clutch-Purse-Like Sony P Notebook for You?

Snap Judgment: VAIO P Series
Other than the Palm Pre, the biggest darling of CES has clearly been the Sony VAIO P Series Lifestyle PC. There has been plenty of coverage of the clutch-purse-like device, but we wanted to boil it down to just what you really need to know.

We spent some time with the tiny "don't call it a netbook" from Sony and came away quite impressed with it on the whole. We couldn't truly test any streaming media because the network connection was clogged with a million and one devices, but otherwise the speed of it was truly impressive. Despite having an Atom processor (and not even the top of the line model), the VAIO P in our brief tests ran Vista faster than most other netbooks with faster processors and can run Windows XP (which makes us wonder if Sony is cheating somehow).

The screen is bright and crisp, but probably too small for anyone who requires reading glasses, and the pointer nub requires tiny, nimble hands.

Starting at $899 the VAIO P isn't cheap, but it's as close to a full-featured ultra-portable notebook as you're going to get in that price range (though we haven't had time to really manhandle MSI's X-Slim 320 yet). Add in the instant-on, though surprisingly slow, cross-bar menu that anyone who has used a PSP or PS3 would be familiar with, and Sony has a real winner on its hands.

So who exactly is the VAIO P for? Well, if you want the smallest possible notebook and style and speed are important, but price is not, then you should seriously consider it when it becomes available in February.

For a quick overview of the Sony P's basics, check out our video below.

If you crave some of the finer, geekier details, check out Engadget's extensive coverage here.

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CES 2009

LG Watch Phone Would Make Dick Tracy Proud

One of the most talked about products from this year's Consumer Electronics Show was LG's Dick Tracy-esque watch phone prototype. The device can link to your headset via Bluetooth, or you can fulfill all your crime noir fantasies and talk directly to your wrist. Necessary? Probably not, but the touch screen device's sleek interface has to be seen to be believed: Check out our hands on video with LG after the break.

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Green Tech, Switched Video, CES 2009

Freeplay Zipcharge

Freeplay, creators of a large line of self-sufficient hand-cranked radios and flashlights, is entering the rechargables market with its Zipcharge rechargeable power stick, available in March. Co-opting tech developed for hybrid cars, the device pairs intelligent circuitry with a nano-phosphate lithium cell to achieve a swift charge time of only ten minutes, with enough juice to bring to life your depleted cellular lifeline.

With a single USB port and a variety of tips, Zipcharge shouldn't give you any problems with compatibility, but the $80 price tag could rival the price of your phone. If we could only get this battery tech in our cell phones themselves...

Check out the video after the break for a closer look at the Zipcharge.

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Audio/Video, Switched Video, CES 2009

FlatWire HDMI Cable Is Literally Flat Enough to Stick and Hide on the Wall

We saw a lot of cool technology at CES: Towering display booths studded with hundreds of screens that make the latest televisions and entertainment products into objects of techno-lust. Amidst all the flash, however, it was nice to see something practical, which we found with FlatWire's new home theater solution: Flat HDMI and power cabling that you can paint over.

Expanding upon its existing line of flat audio and video wires, the company's new HDMI flat wire looks like it would make wiring up that new super-thin OLED on the wall much easier, particularly if you're better with a firewall than drywall, and the company's flat power cables allow you to extend power from standard wall outlet. Apparently it's very safe too.

Of course, there's more to wall-mounting a gorgeous new television than wiring, and the FlatWire still requires a little bit of hands on (painting and attaching the connectors), so we'll go ahead and say that this is definitely for you DIY-ers out there. As for the rest of us, well, we'll the let pros handle it.

Check out the video after the break.

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Cell Phones, Switched Video, CES 2009, Mobile Phones

Motorola Renew

Motorola is jumping on the green bandwagon in a big way with its recently announced "Renew" phone, billed as the world's first carbon-neutral phone. The company teamed up with CarbonFund.org to help offset the energy cost for the new device, whose shell is made entirely of recycled water bottles. Included in the packaging for the phone is a recycling envelope so you can send it back to Motorola at the end of its life. The device is going to be priced low. which pretty much guarantees a more limited feature set, but we like that the company is providing avenues for recycling their products--if only more companies would follow suit. In fact, one of the more interesting sights of this year's CES was the zombie television protest organized by Electronics Takeback Coalition urging conference goers to demand their television manufacturers take back and recycle products made obsolete by the digital TV switch on February 19th. Motorola must be hedging its bets against a similar rising of cellular undead.

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CES 2009

Coby Vitruvian -- the Rotating iPod Dock

Coby calls this iPhone and iPod touch dock the "Vitruvian," for Leonardo da Vinci's famous drawing of the perfect human form. As a design piece we expected the price to be a little high but we were pleasantly surprised to learn it will carry a $79 tag when it hits store shelves sometime this summer.

The dock rotates to take advantage of the iPhone and Touch's position sensor – so if you're watching a movie you need only turn the unit horizontally. The video really says it all.

Coby is known as a less expensive brand that makes digital photo frames, some MP3 players and a few other iPod docks and alarm clock combo units. We're wondering why they don't apply this same design finesse to their other products, but in the meantime this iPhone dock is a good start.

The Sharper Image, which is no longer the store but a new brand for a small collection of products, has its rotating iPhone and iPod Touch dock, as well. Though this one is motorized and sleek, we actually like the Coby a bit more for its simplicity. The Sharper Image unit is coming the first quarter of 2009 for about $70.

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Audio/Video, Switched Video, Televisions, CES 2009

Flap Your Hands, Change the Channel (Hitachi Gesture-Based TV Control)

Is gesture-based remote control the next biggest thing since the touchscreen? Last week, we saw Sony Ericsson's new W508 Walkman phone, which lets you ignore a call and shut off the ringer with the wave of your hand. And as we wrote back in October, TV manufacturers certainly seem to be taking their inspiration from the motion-sensitive Wii remote with gesture based control technology for changing channels and maneuvering around various types of onscreen content.

But writing about it won't let you see just desirable a gesture-based TV controller is, especially since you won't ever have to remember where you put your old school remote. So take a look at our video of Hitachi's prototype system, which we first saw at CEATEC last October and were happy to play around with again at CES last week.


Check out the video after the break.

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