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Archive for April 2nd, 2008

Soundwagon portable record player

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Even though cassette tapes are a better reflection of my childhood than vinyl records, I did have a Cyndi Lauper 45 of “The Goonies ‘R’ Good Enough” that I played whenever I could gain control of the record player. I remember the single because 1) it was my first and only record and 2) my 7-year-old mind wasn’t too keen on the scary screaming skull on the cover.

Since my dad probably still has the record somewhere at his house (he’s a bit of a hoarder), I think I may have to pick up this Soundwagon Portable Record Player from Turntable Lab. Even though the battery-powered motor tucked inside officially licensed Volkswagen bus is only able to keep the small stylus beneath the van moving at 33 RPM, the built-in speaker leaves much to be desired in terms of sound quality, and the setup isn’t recommended for use on invaluable vinyls, I’d at least get to find out if the skeleton still freaks me out. Putting childhood fears to rest (or confirming that some things never change) is certainly worth $89.

Via SlipperyBrick.

1.5TB Gigabit Networked External HD - $279!

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

I ran across this deal on Dell’s site and had to post. There are a limited 500 coupons to purchase the Western Digital 1.5TB Gigabit External HD for $279! Hurry up while coupons last, it won’t last long at this price…

Limited Quantity Deals! Save $200 Off Western Digital® 1.5 TB Gigabit External HD - My Book® World Edition® II HURRY while they last!

Buffalo LT-H90LAN HD Streamer

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Buffalo have announced release of their LinkTheater HD media streamers to the rest of the world (not just Japan now), to let us stream a little HD around the place. The Buffalo LT-H90LAN HD media streamer is the wired version of the LT-H90WN (which has yet to be released), uses an Ethernet connection to stream media from a number of different devices.

The Buffalo LT-H90LAN can stream media from both PCs and Macs, along with USB hard drives and DNLA compliant media servers. The all important HDMI output is featured, along with component, optical audio and component, and the 10/100 LAN port.

The Buffalo LTH90LAN can stream and output 720p and 1080i HD video, and also 480i and 480p if desired. Format support is very impressive with H.264 (MPEG4 AVC), WMV9, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, XviD, AVI, HDV, AVCHD video formats, along with many audio formats including, WMA, MP3, Dolby Digital (AC3), AAC-LC, AAC-HE, and the usual image formats.

Pricing of the Buffalo LT-H90LAN seem reasonable at $199 or £99, and it should be avaliable later this month.

SanDisk Extreme Ducati Edition USB Flash Drive

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Welcome to the Ducati of USB sticks… from Ducati. With a fast, 20MB/second transfer rate and a large 4GB capacity, this flash drive has the speed and capacity to work for most people.

So why so expensive? The flash drive was designed in an industrial look echoing “the performance, colors and lines of a Ducati MotoGP motorcycle.” I’m sure someone will buy it, but I can get a 500GB drive that would be faster (and much bigger) for about the same price!

Gimmie!

Suggested Price: $124.95

LG LAC-M9600 Audio Head Units

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Overview

You like driving with music one? Then go and get the latest audio set from LG. With a variety of new technical features, LG LAC-M9600 Audio Head Unit lets you enjoy listening music directly from a PC or mp3 player through a USB port. Available in silver color, LG LAC-M9600 Audio Head Unit will surely help you driving in a more enjoyable way.

Features

  • Bluetooth Handsfree.
  • XDSS+ and MP3 Optimizer.
  • Preset Memory of 24EA.
  • CD-DA/R/RW CD- Text.
  • Full RDS AM/FM Tuner.
  • Sub woofer Line-out.

LG LAC-M9600 Audio Head Unit comes incorporated with features like Bluetooth Audio Streaming, Station Auto Store, Personal Picture Skin and MP3/WMA Playback. Enjoy watching more that 4,096 colors OLED display on the LG LAC-M9600 Audio Head Unit. Another great feature of LG LAC-M9600 Audio Head Unit is its Rear Aux-in.

Box content

The box comprises of LG LAC-M9600 Audio Head Unit, User Manual and Remote Control.

Source: LG

<!– ch_client = “mmliewcf”; ch_type = “mpu”; ch_width = 468; ch_height = 180; ch_color_title = “0065CE”; ch_non_contextual = 1; ch_default_category = “200001″; var ch_queries = new Array(”LG LAC-M9600 Audio Head Units”); var ch_selected=Math.floor((Math.random()*ch_queries.length)); if ( ch_selected

Switched On: Slacker in your slacks (Part 1)

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Posted Apr 1st 2008 9:20PM by Ross Rubin
Filed under: Features, Portable AudioEach week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about technology, multimedia, and digital entertainment.


The Slacker Portable is the proverbial elephant being inspected by blind men. One is the crop of portable MP3 players, to which the device’s service represents free, fresh music on the go in exchange for user control of track selection. Another is the bevy of online internet music sites such as Pandora, Last.fm, Finetune and others, to which it represents the leap from the beb to portable entertainment. A third is the traditional consumer electronics industry for which it portends a connected future. And a fourth are XM and Sirius, which now appear on track to merge in part due to the kind of competition that the Slacker Portable will ultimately provide.

The Slacker Portable picks up where last year’s promising Sansa Connect left off. While that device was billed primarily as an mp3 player that boasted tight integration with the Yahoo! Music Unlimited service (now shuttering), the Slacker Portable is labeled as a “personal radio”. MP3 files can be loaded onto the device, but that feature is more of an afterthought.

The device comes in three capacities that are billed as storing a different number of stations, which are either genres preset by the internet radio service available at slacker.com, or customized for the user based on a particular artist. One nice touch is that a device ordered from Slacker comes pre-populated with any stations you have set up on the site.

Upon connecting to the Slacker service via WiFi or a PC’s USB port (the latter connection method does not support the Mac), the Slacker Portable caches hours of music for each of these stations. “Filling up” a station from scratch took about 10 minutes, but partial refills are faster. While the Sansa Connect relied on a premium music subscription to transfer tracks to the device, the basic tier of Slacker service — which includes two commercials and up to six skips per hour — is free.

Slacker has a premium service available for about $7 per month that eliminates the commercials and allows an unlimited number of song skips. Slacker assures that customers won’t experience constant bombardment of upgrade exhortations as its business model works well even with the free tier of service and a player purchase.

Slacker made some curious decisions in designing its portable, which is larger and chunkier than, say, an ipod classic. The device includes a large 4-inch screen even though it cannot play video or even display photos, although it does nicely highlight album art. Slacker defends the decision in part by noting that the larger screen is helpful for reading background information about the artist. And indeed, Slacker displays extensive artist information from All Music Guide, but crams the information into the lower portion of the screen, requiring more scrolling. (Also, be sure to finish all that reading as before the track ends, as the artist info page will refresh as soon as a new song starts playing.)

Next week’s column will further discuss the Slacker Portable controls and music listening experience as well as Slacker’s plans to compete more directly with satellite radio.

Ross Rubin is director of industry analysis for consumer technology at market research and analysis firm The NPD Group,. His blog can be read at http://www.rossrubin.com/outofthebox. Views expressed in Switched On are his own.

Blackberry Curve 8330 comes to Sprint

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Posted Apr 1st 2008 7:37PM by Nilay Patel
Filed under: cellphones
We had heard whispers about the blackberry Curve hitting Sprint this month, and it looks like they were dead-on — say hello to RIM’s latest, the Curve 8330, all done up in black. Apart from looking way hotter than the silver version that’s made the rounds, you’re getting GPS, a 2 megapixel camera with video recording, Bluetooth, “enhanced” web browsing, and the usual suite of Sprint music and TV services. $179 with a two-year contract later this month, says Sprint. One more shot after the break.

[Thanks, moochy989]

April Fools’ Day makes the internet cry

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Posted Apr 1st 2008 11:59PM by Paul Miller
Filed under: Misc. gadgets
Did you fall for it? The internet didn’t really cry, we were just kidding. You gotta be on your toes! And just in case you managed to blissfully glide through this April 1st with nary a fooling, here’s a small taste of what you were missing:

Read - Space bot demands to be called “Dextre the Magnificent”
Read - Windows XP running on the iRex iLiad
Read - iphone_iTouch_2.0_Beta_5a225c_ipsw
Read - Free Nokia 6630 bundled with Girl Talk mag for tweens
Read - Google’s gDay with MATE searches the future
Read - Toshiba announces hd dvd+
Read - Think Geek’s Betamax to HD-DVD Converter
Read - Qualcomm’s HandSolo
Read - FireFold’s Ultra High-Performance Coat Hanger
Read - Virgin and Google form Virgil for Mars expedition
Read - Xbox 360 Wireless Helmet, Board Game

Blue Wave 4 firmware for Samsung P2 previewed?

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Posted Apr 1st 2008 5:27PM by Nilay Patel
Filed under: Portable Audio, Portable Video
Samsung just launched the Blue Wave 3 firmware for the YP-P2 and T10 today, but we’re already hearing whispers of Blue Wave 4 — check out this image that’s popped up on some forums. Apparently all you P2 owners out there can look forward to customizable (and shareable) UI skins, some new Bluetooth-based games, subway maps, custom EQ settings, password controls, and voice recording sometime in the future, but we have no idea when. Until then, feast your eyes on the whole image after the break.

Sony presents the Black Rolly

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

The Japanese corporation of Sony has plans to launch a new colored version of their audio player called Rolly. As the name suggests, the portable device can roll and roll….

Be it up or left, back and forth, you pick the directions of the Rolly. All the movements are done thanks to rubber wheels, that can even spin the player. One of the negative points is the storage capacity - only 1GB - which is good enough for merely 300 to 400 songs.

On the other hand, the Rolly comes with bluetooth, and supports four different file formats, those being MP3, AAC, and the Sony-exclusive ATRAC3 and ATRAC3plus.

Powered by 1,560mAh Lithium battery, it can play up to 5 hours.

Available in a couple of weeks on Japan for approximately 200.

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