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Switched Summer Fun Guide

Gadget picks and tips for warm weather trips and outdoor activities

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Reviews of the latest gear and gadgets for taking on the road -- or to the beach.

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Breaking stories and updates on the latest travel and outdoor gadgets, sites, and services.

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In-depth stories on the best summer gadgets, wired celebrities, and tech-related travel articles.

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Tips and tricks on making the most of your gadgets, as well as quick fixes and how-tos.


Posts with tag summernews

Ordinary Windows Collect Energy with New Solar Coating



Windows that collect solar energy while still allowing a clear view from inside? While it may sound like madness and poppycock, it's actually yet another invention from those ingenious minds at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Researchers at MIT have figured out how to transform normal windows into solar power-collecting super-panels.

According to an article in last Friday's 'Science' (an international science journal), here is how it's done: First, the windows are coated with special materials. These chemicals range in color from the very bright to the near-transparent, and this special coating absorbs light and re-emits the energy into the glass. Solar collectors surround the edge of the window and collect the energy conducted by the glass.

The chemicals utilized in the process are relatively inexpensive, making the whole concept that much more brilliant. Apparently, these will be ready in 3-5 years, which we hope is true, given the shocking and depressing increase in our energy bills of late. Let's make some good use of that global warming, already! [Source: USA Today]







Shadow Caddy Follows Your Every Move (and Swing)

In golf, the helpful caddy is a rare site these days among amateur players, replaced typically by motorized golf carts or little three-wheeled rollers. But, driving around in a cart takes away something from the nature of the game, and dragging your bag behind you isn't all that much better than carrying it. If you're looking for another option -- and have oodles of cash to blow -- you might want to check out the Shadow Caddy, a robotic club carrier that follows you wherever you go.

It relies on a transceiver clipped onto the golfer's belt, locking on and tracking the wearer like a heat-seeking missile. As you walk about the course, it stays a few feet behind, stopping when you push a button on the nose so that you can make your putt without the thing cruising across your line. Presumably you're expected to remember to tap the same button before digging for your ball in the bunker, too, lest you want to dig your new robot out too. And, at about $6,000 each, you'll want to do your best to keep sand out of the thing. [Source: Mail Online]

Replace Your Deck Chair With a 'Tech Chair'

Ditch the Deck Chair and Get a Tech Chair
UK electronics purveyor PC World has been showing of its concept of a technology-saturated deck chair that may have many gadget fetishists drooling, but leaves those with more reasonable sensibilities a little perplexed. The chair is made from solar fabric (which we imagine would be uncomfortably warm) for powering MP3 players, laptops, and the like. The top of the chair hides a long range Wi-Fi and Bluetooth antenna for keeping you connected, and the side of the chair is loaded with ports including Firewire and USB as well as dedicated digital camera and media player docks.

If the host of connections isn't enough, then the built-in toys should push you over the edge. The chair has a pair of speakers and an adjustable LCD monitor for watching videos from your media player. At the foot of the tech chair is a questionably useful GPS device. The chair may fold up to suitcase size for easy portability, but we can't imagine a situation that would call for a chair-mounted GPS. [Source: Daily Mail]
Engadget

iPhone 3G Lines Around the World -- In Pictures



Yes, it's a sad indication of the materialistic, shopping-obsessed mentality that has overtaken the entire world (a mentality that we here at Switched wholehearteadly encourage), but Engadget's lineblog featuring images of eager iPhone 3G shoppers waiting in line from Auckland, New Zealand to, as of post time, New York City, is a riveting, fun browse. It'll make you wish the iPhone were running for president, given its impressive abilities to get people around the world on the same page about one thing, inanimate though it may be. [Source: Engadget]
Engadget

Kodak Zi6 Pocket HD Camcorder for the YouTube Set


Sure, it might shoot 720p video, but you aren't gonna catch indie filmmakers capturing the next low-budget masterpiece on Kodak's new Zi6 HD pocket video camera. The camera is Kodak's response to Pure Digital's Flip and Creative's Vado, complete with upright form factor, YouTube friendliness, simple as could be interface, a flip-out USB plug (with some surprising spring action), and, of course, totally shoddy video quality.

The camera is powered by a pair of AA batteries, sports a 2.4-inch LCD, and can switch between VGA video, 30fps HD and 60fps HD. It'll sell for $180 in September, in black or pink, but there's only 128MB of memory on board -- you'll have to spring for an SD card if you want to do any substantial shooting.

HD Radio Struggles to Find Audience

HD Radio Struggles to Find Audience
When HD Radio hit the scene two years ago, it was supposed to revolutionize radio in the same way that HDTV revolutionized television. Despite a new wave of affordable players, supposed 'cd-quality' sound, and a wealth of unique programming, HD Radio just isn't attracting the audience that broadcasters would hope. After two years, only about half a million HD-Radio-capable receivers are in circulation.

The manufacturers of receivers are banking on increasing variety and quality by focusing on content not available on other media outlets and integrating with other gadgets (such as iPods) in order to expand the format's reach.

However, HD Radio still faces an uphill battle. Outside of the talk and news formats, radio has been a medium dying a slow and painful death. Satellite radio has proven to be an industry that didn't even have room for two competitors to coexist. Now that iPods have made their way into the car, HD Radio may as well be dead on arrival. What do you think? Do you listen to HD Radio much? [Source: USA Today]

Update: Kate Moss Hair Extension Worth More Than Our Lives


Sooo. We blogged last week about how Kate Moss lost a hair extension and a philanthropic paparazzo decided to auction it off on eBay. This was all for the kids, of course, claimed the pap. To keep them off drugs.

We waited anxiously all 4th of July weekend to see how the auction would turn out. Last time we checked, the stakes were not so high, peaking at around 40 bucks. But the bids are in, and Moss' locks o' love have sold for a handsome 805 Euros, or $1264!

The auction results naturally beg a more pressing question -- who is the mystery buyer that shelled out more than a G for Moss' not-even-actual hair? An avid supporter of German D.A.R.E.? Or a pervy hair fetishist? A Wordpress blogger claims the eBay winner is some guy from Haiti. His motivations remain unknown. [Source: Yahoo! News]
Engadget

Roomba Creator Working on Lawn-Mowing Robot?

Not that it's any surprise, but according to a patent filing (which we were unable to ourselves unearth from the abyss that is the USPTO), iRobot would appear to still be working on the "Mowba," or whatever the hell the lawn-cutting robot is that they were talking up years ago.

We're not sure you really need to pore over 80+ pages of sketches and drawings to get the idea though, especially since there are already a number of autonomous grass-cutting machines out there. [Source: Robot Stock News]

Google Talk Comes to the iPhone

Google Talk Comes to the iPhone
Sure, the iPhone has had various ways of letting you chat with friends via just about any instant messaging network you want. And hey, there are even a number of solutions out there that will let you manage all your chats from one application, like eBuddy, Meebo, and Fring.

But what if you want to limit yourself to one instant messaging network. And one with as few people on it as possible? In that case, the official Google Talk gadget for the iPhone is here to answer your prayers.

Okay, maybe we're being a bit harsh. We actually really like Google Talk and its integration with Gmail, etc, but the iPhone version lacks AIM integration, so it looks like we'll still have to use more than one program to access all of our chat contgacts. Plus, to use the GoogleTalk for iPhone app, you have to have it constantly open in Safari and have Safari active. This means if you switch apps to check your calendar or contacts to share information with someone via Google Talk, you'll have to make yourself inactive on the service and you won't recieve instant messages until you bring the GoogleTalk page back up.

The whole thing seems only moderately useful to us. [Source: Official Google Blog]

Get Married in Space for Just $2M

Get Married in Space, and for Only $2Million

Getting your ashes shot into space when you die is so 2007. The space fad for 2008 is weddings! Or at least signing up for them. A Japanese company called First Advantage has joined forces with an American aerospace firm called Rocketplane to offer weddings 100 kilometers (62 miles) above earth. First Advantage now joins Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic in the space-marriage racket.

The $2 million covers not only the flight on the Rocket Plane XP, but also a ground-based party where friends and family can watch a live stream of the zero-G ceremony. The company will even even throw in a wedding dress! The first ceremonies will take place in 2011, beginning with the wedding of Cindy Cashman, entrepreneur and author, and Mitch Walling. [Source: Daily Mail]

To Charge Your Cell Phone, Just Dance, Dance, Dance

To Charge your Phone Just Dance, Dance, Dance
Cell phones are valuable things to have at all-day music festivals. It's awful easy to lose your friends in the massive crowds and, with bands popping up on multiple stages all day long, it's important to keep current on who's on where and when. But long days of rocking, and spotty reception at a back-country venue, can leave batteries flat in hours. The solution? More dancing -- at least it is if you have a new kinetic charger strapped to your arm.

It's called "dancecharge"and had its debut last week at the Glastonbury Music Festival in Somerset, England. The device itself is about the size of a pack of cards and, through a series of magnets and other high-tech wizardry, can convert the rhythmic motions of dance into some additional juice for your handset. No, the blood pressure cuff design won't win you any style points as you show your moves, but being the only one able to call for a cab at the end of the day could make you a hero. Take it to the Sustainable Dance Club in Holland, and you'll be the most earth-friendly raver out there! [Source: MSNBC]

Virgin America's Got Tech Chops -- Take a Look



Riding in airplanes is sooo boring. They make you sit down at the worst times, eat gnarly snacks, and watch bad sitcoms for however many hours it takes. Painful.

Virgin America is trying to make things better, though. The airline is on the verge of launching in-flight wireless Internet! Now you can sit around between New York and LA doing what you'd be doing anyway (in this case, reading Gawker and streaming episodes of 'The Hills' until we feel nauseous).

Charles Ogilvie, head of in-flight entertainment and general stand-up guy at VA, gave our bros at Boing Boing t.v. a behind-the-scenes tour of the airline's technological underthangs. (BBtv is featured on the airline's in-flight program, btw. No 'Everybody Loves Raymond' for you!)

You can watch Boing Boing's video tour (see above) of a pretty swanky Virgin plane and cockpit, starring Chuck O. himself and Xeni Jardin from Boing Boing. We admit, the setup does look pretty cool, but Xeni kinda freaks us out. [Source: Boing Boing]

New Graphic Novel From Zune Is Free Online



Whoaaa, a new graphic novel from Zune Arts. Microsoft's digital entertainment brand (it's not just a portable media player, ya know) just came out with 'The Lost Ones,' a collaboration between '30 Days of Night' author Steve Niles and a bunch of artists. Our favorite of the gang is painter Kime Buzzelli, whose awesome watercolors adorn a chapter involving aliens and caves and an Andre-3000-esque hero. Gary Panter, of 'Pee-wee's Playhouse' notoriety, is also involved in the project, as are Brooklyn duo Morning Breath and indoor-sunglasses wearer Dr. Revolt.

The story involves four friends who get into trouble while "planet jumping" and transcending space and time, much like Lily Tomlin in 'I Heart Huckabees.' You can buy one of 42,000 paperback versions of the novel for subway/beach reading at select bookstores or download it free from Zune itself and read it on your computer. [Source: Zune Arts and PR Newswire]

iPhone 3G Pricing Detailed



Only 10 more days till the updated Jesus phone hits the shelves and some details about pricing are finally starting to make the rounds of the Internet. Of course, with that surprising price drop for the iPhone (which we all knew was too good to be true) comes some hefty price hikes on data and voice plans, as well as some draconian activation limitations.

Folks who already own an iPhone, new subscribers, and existing AT&T customers eligible for an upgrade will be able to pick the iPhone for $199 (8-gigabyte) or $299 (16-gigabyte). Existing customers not eligible for an upgrade will have to cough up $399 or $499. Either way, you'll have to sign a new two-year contract, get an iPhone-specific data and voice plan, and activate the phone in the store -- at least at first. Though it offered no time line, AT&T said it plans to offer a "contract free" option for a sizable premium that lands the 8-gigabyte (GB) iPhone at $599 and the 16-gigabyte model at $699. Exactly what "contract free" means, though, remains to be seen.

Individual plans (unlimited data included)
  • $69.99 - 450 anytime minutes, 45¢ each additional minute, 5,000 night / weekend minutes
  • $89.99 - 900 anytime minutes, 40¢ each additional minute, unlimited night / weekend minutes
  • $109.99 - 1,350 anytime minutes, 35¢ each additional minute, unlimited night / weekend minutes
  • $129.99 - Unlimited minutes
Individual text plans
  • $5 - 200 messages per month
  • $15 - 1,500 messages per month
  • $20 - Unlimited messages
Family plans (2 lines, $39.99 each additional line, unlimited data & night / weekend minutes included)
  • $129.99 - 700 anytime minutes, 45¢ each additional minute
  • $149.99 - 1,400 anytime minutes, 40¢ each additional minute
  • $169.99 - 2,100 anytime minutes, 35¢ each additional minute
  • $209.99 - 3,000 anytime minutes, 25¢ each additional minute
  • $259.99 - 4,000 anytime minutes, 20¢ each additional minute
  • $359.99 - 6,000 anytime minutes, 20¢ each additional minute
  • $259.99 - Unlimited minutes ($129.99 each additional line)
Family text plans
  • $30 - Unlimited messages
  • 20¢ per message if no plan is selected

If you need a refresher as to what you get for allowing AT&T to plunder your bank account, then take a look at Apple's requisite walk through of the iPhone 3G's features and menus.

The first nut-bags, sorry, customers, will be able to get their greasy fan-boy hands on the new 3G iPhones at 8am July 11th, though we wouldn't be shocked if there are already a few dedicated loons waiting on line. [Source: Engadget]

12,000 Laptops Lost Each Week at US Airports


travelers carry laptops with secret information

In these digital times, it seems as though everything about us these days is reduced to bits and bytes and stored on computers -- so it's only fair to ask that those computers be secure. Well, according to a new study by the Ponemon Institute, half of all the business travelers surveyed said they fly regularly with important information on their laptops. Most of them -- more than two thirds -- don't use any type of security system in the event that laptops are lost or stolen.

Clearly, this is bad news, especially since the study also estimates that about 12,000 laptops are lost every week (based on interviews with officials at 106 American airports). This means business travelers are losing several laptops a week. Eventually, one of those laptops is going to be loaded with our Social Security numbers and names.

So for all you mobile workers out there, read this: We know you're not going to stop traveling with this kind of information on your computers, but please use any encryption software that came with your computer to lock that stuff up. Even just setting your computer to require a password to get on will keep your information secure from garden variety thieves.

If you're willing to spend some cash, may we recommend PGP's encryption software for company's or SecuriKey's combination of hardware and software authentication. And, for the the cash strapped but wary, TrueCrypt offers free encryption software for all operating systems. [Source: The Statesman]




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