
Mar 26, 2011
Earth Hour 2011

Disaster Alert for Android Gives You Real-Time Updates on the World’s Active Hazards

Mar 25, 2011
ASUS Lamborghini External HDD

The iPhone 4 Fits Exactly Inside the MacBook Air’s Lid Dent

Qatar Will Use $500,000 Artificial Clouds for the World Cup

This is cool! But this will also happen in 2022, a whole 11 years from now where we'll likely be using an iPhone 16 (which hopefully by then, will have its own artificial cloud) and seeing a dominant US soccer team win the damn thing. One or the other, at least.
Mar 24, 2011
Toothbrush-Toothpaste Hybrid

The Perfect Dutch Bike For Those Who Don’t Eat Too Much Edam Cheese

Created by the Dutch Vanhulsteijn, the two or three-speed bikes start at 1,495 Euros ($2,110), and look to be pretty customizable in terms of what you can request it to look and ride like.
Mac OS X Turns X Years Old Today
Whether it changed everything, made you think different, or was just a sideshow to the Windows centerpiece of your life, there's no denying version X of Mac OS has been the most successful and enduring piece of software Apple has ever produced.
It is turning 10 years old today. And who knows, with the next iteration being dubbed Lion and the lack of any more senior big cats available, maybe this will be the last big anniversary before Apple takes the leap into version 11.
Mar 23, 2011
Gates, Bosch, And NuVinci Combine To Make Pedal-Assist E-bike Concept

If you find yourself a member of column B, listen up, because Gates, NuVinci, andBosch have created an e-bike concept that'll satisfy your two-wheeled transportation needs. Gates supplied its Carbon electric belt drive, NuVinci brought its N360 infinitely variable planetary hub, and Bosch threw in a battery and control system to make a bicycle beauty.
The power train is set up to give riders pedal-assist with four settings that go from Lance to lazy, depending on your mood. At an estimated cost of €2,600 - €3,200 ($3,680 - $4,530).
Kingston's Class 10 MicroSD Family Gets Bigger, Stays Tiny

By completing the family tree of Class 10 cards, Kingston is offering faster all-round performance for file transfers on smartphones, quicker write times for microSD-wielding cameras and basically a few seconds of your life back -- at lower prices than before, though you'll still be paying a premium compared to slower cards. The two memory cards start shipping at the end of March and are being offered with an available Mobility Kit, which includes an SD adapter and a USB card reader.
But, if you want a full-fat 32GB model, you'll have to wait for Q2 of 2011 like the rest of us. Pricing starts at $22 for a 4GB model up to $138 for the 16GB model.
Xperia Play To Be Exclusive Launch Device For Gameloft's BackStab Action Game

Mar 22, 2011
Energizer Single-Device Inductive Charger

Dolby Introduces Lighter, Cheaper 3D Glasses To Better Compete With RealD and IMAX

Tascam Outs New DR-07 Mark II Audio Recorder, Touts Adjustable Mics

Mar 21, 2011
How Pee Helps Us Understand Social Media

Does This Shoe Fit You?

There are plans to build 40 of the things, so the company can have a whole wardrobe of shoe-cars to step into when a bit of hype is needed. I do wonder what the in-car hi-fi system is like—and whether there's a special radio station that plays nothing but drum & lace, and sole music?
This Tokyo Girl Levitates Daily

Mar 20, 2011
WD My Book Studio Edition II Goes To a Whopping 6TB Now

You’re My Carbon Fiber Guitar Hero

Creator Blackbird Guitars is asking $1,600 for it—quite a lot, yes, but they've done some tricky fiddling with the guitar's shape, by extending the shoulder to the 10th fret to increase the volume, and treating the asymmetrical hole as an amplifier. Just don't go playing the Imperial March on it.
Mar 19, 2011
Never Squint To Read The Time Again With This Watch

The hour and minute hands are replaced by mini magnifying glasses, which makes reading the time as easy as a digital watch.
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