Archive for May 17th, 2009

Microbot controls swarm of bacteria, puts all flea circuses to shame

May 17, 2009

Sylvain Martel, what hast thou sown? The director of the NanoRobotics Laboratory at the École Polytechnique de Montréal this week is presenting his latest microbot at ICRA in Japan, and it’s got a pretty crazy trick. The solar panel-equipped device sizes up to about 300 x 300 microns, and using a sensor to detect nearby pH levels, it’s been shown as capable of controlling a swarm of 3,000 bacteria using electromagnetic pulses. Sure, Martel suggests there’ll be some eventual medical uses for the technology, but we’d be lying if we said the video demonstration didn’t give us the willies. See for yourself in the video linked below.

Read – Announcement
Read – Video

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Microbot controls swarm of bacteria, puts all flea circuses to shame originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 17 May 2009 16:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Crimson Red Dell XPS 16 in the wild?

May 17, 2009

So about that apparently canned crimson red Dell XPS 16 laptop. We received a handful of pics from a tipster who claims to have gotten one about a month ago when he returned his other, decided un-red model for a screen replacement. We don’t want to say this is 100 percent legit without holding it in our hands, but if this is the beauty we once had the option to purchase, Dell, please, bring crimson back.

[Thanks, P]

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Crimson Red Dell XPS 16 in the wild? originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 17 May 2009 14:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft’s Surface gets its first Service Pack, devs and yacht owners rejoice

May 17, 2009

Forget the future for just one second. Kicking off its TechEd conference last week, Microsoft released Service Pack 1 for its tabletop-inclined Surface. The update’s mostly developer-centric — not too surprising given its small customer base at present — with one of the only bullet points that’ll directly interest the end user being new calibration guides for setting up the system without needing an external display. No indication on if set up still requires a keyboard a mouse, but if that’s a concern, keep your fingers crossed they find a way around that before you pony up the $13,000 to join Lazarra and Roker as an early adopter.

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Microsoft’s Surface gets its first Service Pack, devs and yacht owners rejoice originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 17 May 2009 12:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MSI’s Turbo Drive-equipped GX723 gaming laptop unveiled

May 17, 2009

Looking for another option in MSI’s oft-ballyhoed Turbo Drive laptop series? The company’s announced the GX723, its gaming hat trick for the month. Under the hood, the 17-inch, WSXGA+ portable’s packing an Intel Core 2 Duo, NVIDIA GeForce GT 130M, Windows Vista Home Premium, up to 4GB of RAM, and your choice of 320GB or 500GB HDD and six / nine cell batteries. It’s also got the ECO quick launch touch sensor for cycling through five performance settings, and colorful W/A/S/D buttons for gamers who are interested in picking this up but somehow don’t have the popular FPS directional keys ingrained into their memory bank. Mum’s the word on pricing or availability.

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MSI’s Turbo Drive-equipped GX723 gaming laptop unveiled originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 17 May 2009 10:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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SmartQ 7 MID unboxing

May 17, 2009

Our compatriots at Engadget Chinese just got ahold of that surprisingly attractive SmartQ 7 MID, and have given the thing a proper unboxing. Hands-on impressions are on the way as well, but it’s not hard to see that despite the continued pointlessness of MIDs in most practical applications, they’re only getting better. Except for the ones that aren’t.

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SmartQ 7 MID unboxing originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 17 May 2009 08:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Pre makes conspicuous appearance at large gathering of cool people

May 17, 2009

We don’t know a lot about driving cars really fast, but we do know one thing: this guy sure does seem excited about the prospect of a touchscreen-driven, QWERTY-equipped slider smartphone with webOS, from struggling handset manufacturer Palm. Apparently at some point during the race somebody from Sprint confirmed that they’ll be outing a launch date in the “next couple of days.” We like the sound of that.

[Thanks, Leo B. and Kenny]

Read – PreCentral forums
Read – Sprint’s NASCAR landing page

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Palm Pre makes conspicuous appearance at large gathering of cool people originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 17 May 2009 04:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Home built massage chair strikes inexpugnable fear into aching joints

May 17, 2009

digg_url = ‘http://digg.com/odd_stuff/The_Home_Built_Massage_Chair_FROM_HELL’; It’s important to remember that when we make inevitable war with the machines, it was really all our fault — take this guy Lin, for example. Sure, he means well, building this massage chair out of scrap for his aging wife, who suffers from joint pain, but future generations scraping together a meager existence as they huddle for protection from homicidal robots and a rage-filled Christian Bale won’t be exactly forgiving of Lin’s plight. “Why couldn’t he just travel backwards in time to stop the joint pain before it started?” they’ll ask. “Didn’t he know he was endangering the entire human race?”

[Via Make]

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Home built massage chair strikes inexpugnable fear into aching joints originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 17 May 2009 01:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Vanna White loves Slingbox on her iPhone — if only she could find three Gs!

May 17, 2009

At what appeared to be a totally wild and awesome search for Wheel of Fortune contestants in a mall, Vanna White confessed on camera her deep love of gadgets, particularly her excitement about Slingbox and the new Slingbox app for the iPhone. We suppose it’s fitting for somebody who’s been playing with touchscreens since before most of us knew how to spell “technology,” though it’s really too bad she can’t enjoy her daily The Price Is Right fix without hunting down a WiFi connection first. In an even more bizarre twist, it turns out Vanna White sued Samsung back in 1993 for using a robot that looked like her (pictured) in an advertisement. You may be a “geek girl,” Vanna, but we bet your robotic doppelganger is using VOIPover3G with SlingPlayer on her Jailbroken iPhone right this second. The brief segment of her talking about Sling starts at the 2:06 mark, the video is after the break.

[Thanks, Lonny P.]

Continue reading Vanna White loves Slingbox on her iPhone — if only she could find three Gs!

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Vanna White loves Slingbox on her iPhone — if only she could find three Gs! originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 16 May 2009 22:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony confirms new Alpha 230, 330 and 380 mainstream DSLRs

May 17, 2009

Sony’s been pretty generous with the Alpha leaks in the run up to this launch, but it looks like this new trio of DSLRs for “first time” SLR buyers, the Alpha 230, 330 and 380, is ready to go. The press release confirms all of what we already knew, along with bringing word that the cameras will support SD/SDHC cards in addition to Sony’s still-kicking Memory Stick format. The best news is in pricing, however: the shooters will retail in two different kit types, with the L-series cams ringing in at $550, $650 and $850, respectively, when paired with the SAL-1855 standard zoom lens. The Y kit series adds a second lens, the telephoto SAL-55200, along with bumping the kit price $200 across the board. Pre-orders will start on May 18th, with the cameras becoming available in July. Oddly, while parts of the press site are live, the press shots are still on lockdown, beyond a nice stack of thumbnails — we’ll keep you posted.

[Via Photo Rumors]

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Sony confirms new Alpha 230, 330 and 380 mainstream DSLRs originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 16 May 2009 20:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple may (or may not) be mulling background apps for the iPhone

May 17, 2009

Whether it be case materials and design, native iPhone app development, or video support on the iPod, Apple’s not a company to apologize for drastically (and suddenly) changing course. Strategically that’s to the company’s benefit, since it keeps the competition guessing; for consumers, though, it’s a nightmare trying to figure out whether the device you buy today will be dismissed as passé in a heavily-liveblogged Jobs or Schiller press conference the next week. iPhone OS versions 2.0 and 3.0 have gone a long way toward addressing some of the iPhone’s well-publicized shortcomings — clipboard support, MMS, better orientation change support, notifications, the list goes on — but one biggie that Apple has so far refused to take out of the penalty box is background app support.

A number of sources this week are reporting that Apple is now investigating ways to make background processes work, though it’s apparently early in development and the company is still investigating options; one would be to limit background apps to a total of two, another would require that background-capable apps meet certain criteria (presumably to limit processor utilization) before getting App Store approval. The company has invested a lot of time — way too much time, actually — crafting its push notification infrastructure designed specifically to get around the need for background processes in many common cases, which makes it seem terribly unlikely that they’d reverse so quickly. While it’s true that every other modern smartphone platform supports them, Apple has all but perfected the art and science of ignoring its competitors’ game plans.

Any way you slice it, it’s a near certainty that the next-gen iPhone will bump processor and memory specs, which makes background processing a more palatable concept — thing is, battery technology has barely evolved in over a decade, and that’s ultimately the roadblock to letting an iPhone (or any other cordless device) run wild. What’s more, requiring the user to choose their own two background apps seems totally counter to the “it just works” mantra that rules the iPhone’s dumbed-down interface.

Hell has a tendency to freeze over in Cupertino, though, so we can’t rule it out.

[Via Daring Fireball]

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Apple may (or may not) be mulling background apps for the iPhone originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 16 May 2009 20:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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