Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Left-handed multimedia keyboard

Lefties, rejoice! There is now a multimedia keyboard that caters specifically to left-handed folks, where the numeric keypad and additional keys are situated on the left hand side of the board in order to allow the natural movement of your left hand during access. Some of the hot key functions located at the top of this keyboard includes Sleep, WWW, Search, Email, Favorites, Mute, and Volume adjustments. It retails for £29.99 (US$58.48) and would make a great gift your your southpaw friend who's been ranting about the lack of left-handed friendly products available in the market.
[VIA]


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Sunglasses Camera with Personal DVR

Check out this pair of Sunglasses Camera with Personal Digital Video Recorder, enabling you to film whatever you're currently looking at. The design doesn't suit everyone though as it looks rather huge and blocky, so younger folks might avoid this in order to preserve their street cred. Features include an integrated color monitor, a speaker, 32MB of internal memory, and an SD/MMC memory card slot for a much larger storage capacity. You'll have to dig deep for this one though as it retails for £816.63 after taxes.
[VIA]


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Pen Color Document Scanner

The Pen Color Document Scanner enables you to store approximately 200 pages in one go, helping students as well as working professionals alike who deal with tons and tons of paper-based information each day. It is capable of scanning a page every four seconds, and comes with software that manages your scanned documents easily while hooking them up to existing programs such as Outlook Express, Winfax, Notepad, Adobe Photoshop, Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, and Excel. A microSD memory card acts as the storage device of choice, and data is transferred via USB. The Pen Color Document Scanner retails for £299.63 after taxes.
[VIA]


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Klipsch unveils IMAGE in-ear earphones

Klipsch, well known for high-end audio equipment, has just revealed what could possibly be the smallest and lightest in-ear earphones in the world known as the Klipsch IMAGE. I must say it is pretty pointless to have the most minuscule in-ear earphones if they're still going to dangle from your ears no thanks to the wired connection, although having that lightweight feeling could be beneficial especially for those who constantly travel across continents often. Made from aluminum and copper, the Klipsch IMAGE retails for a rather hefty $349 for each pair.
[VIA]


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Friday, August 31, 2007

Toshiba reveals Gigabeat T401

Toshiba has just announced the Gigabeat T401 that could lay the path for the next Zune. This flash-based DAP comes with 4GB of internal memory and features a 2.4" LCD QVGA display, WiFi connectivity, and support for MP3, WMA, WAV, and WM DRM10 files. Sound quality is enhanced with the inclusion of Toshiba's very own H2C Technology. It measures 85.6mm x 54mm x 9.9mm and weighs 58 grams, with no word on pricing as at press time. After all is said and done, I still wonder why can't they throw in an AM/FM radio for added value. Will you pick this over the iPod?
[VIA]


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Panasonic D-Snap SV-SD950N

Panasonic has a brand new digital audio player in town known as the D-Snap SV-SD950N. It comes in a rectangular form factor with an SD memory card slot for your storage needs. Each purchase ships with a measly 1GB SD memory card, so you would be well advised to pick up 2GB cards when the opportunity swings by. The best part would be Bluetooth connectivity that enables you to enjoy music without the hassle of wires cramping your style, making this an ideal candidate at the gym or long road trips. Battery life is pretty impressive, clocking up to 60 hours of continuous playback before requiring a recharge. The Panasonic D-Snap SV-SD950N will be released this September for approximately $219 in silver or black colors.
[VIA]


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Narae Inter Card R voice recorder

Narae Inter has just unveiled what looks like a card-type USB flash drive, but in reality it does more than just store data files. The Card R is actually a voice recorder with all the spiffy controls on the underside. Packing 1GB of internal memory, the Card R is capable of holding up to 72 hours of recorded audio which you can then transfer over to a computer via a high speed USB 2.0 connection. It measures a mere 6.5mm thin, so you can plonk this into your wallet or breast pocket without looking suspicious. Looks like a great back-to-school item for purchase, but too bad it is currently available in Korea only.
[VIA]


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Burmester 061 CD player costs a bomb

Are CD players truly different when placed side-by-side with each other? Well, audiophiles will definitely be able to tell the difference and chances are they'll fall for the Burmester 061 CD player from Germany. It comes with a Philips CD 2 Pro direct drive with a modified servo mechanism as well as advanced D/A converters that can up-sample standard CD audio to either 96 or 192 KHz for advanced processing further down the signal chain. A milled aluminum chassis with a top-loading 10mm thick tray is added for aesthetic purposes, while sporting RCA and Toslink input and output with unbalanced and XLR outputs completing the picture. How much for such extravagance? A cool $11,995.

[VIA]


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Seoul Commtech EZON digital door lock

Seoul Commtech has just unveiled its EZON (SHS-1110) digital door lock for the Korean market, featuring an aluminum alloy construction and black colored tempered glass complete with a touch sensor for enhanced security in your home. Looks like a crowbar would be no good in this case, but if somebody really wanted to break in, all they need to do is to spy on your PIN number from afar. I guess it would be best to use this coupled with a traditional padlock system. The EZON digital door lock is tipped to retail for approximately $180.

[VIA]


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R2-D2 Wireless Web Camera

R2-D2, let's count the number of functions thou has. You can strike off 'Wireless Web Camera' from the list as well with this new offering from Hammacher. This little number is actually a 628 x 528 pixel web camera that transmits real-time video and audio to a computer wirelessly, boasting worldwide remote access capabilities that enables you to virtually control R2-D2's movements from anywhere in the world as long as there is an Internet connection. You use a lightsaver-shaped remote to control the droid, and he is even capable of 360 spins. A sensor in front prevents R2-D2 from dropping over a table edge while emitting an audible warning to protect your $349.95 investment from being the robotic Humpty Dupty. One thing that bugs me is the half dozen AA batteries required to fuel this thing.


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