11.22.05

USB powered pencil sharpener

Posted in gadgets at 6:00 pm by admin

Just when you thought that every possible variation of USB-powered peripheral was on the market, another one comes along to fill some tiny, microscopic niche and re-confirm that the world has gone completely bonkers.

The iSharpener is a USB-powered pencil sharpener, which in itself is either a clever satire on the rampant USB-ification of otherwise non-computer-related goods (example) or it’s just, well, dumb. My favourite touch is how in one of the photos on the website it is coupled with a laptop — as if somehow the single function, brick-like iSharpener is a compliment to your mobile lifestyle.

Great Gift for you gadget guy friend

The iSharpener features an automatic pencil-sharpening action coupled with flashing LED lights, to enhance your pencil-sharpening experience and to emphasise that sharpening pencils is crazyfunawesome.

But wait, there’s more — behold the USB electric shaver and nail care system after the jump!

usb sharpener
The iSharpener is available in a “family” pack with 2 other items, the iShaver and the slightly less Apple-rific “USB Nail Care System”. The iShaver is a men’s shaver that charges through the USB port. Thankfully yes, once it is charged up you can use it independently from the computer, so all of you who envisaged standing at your bathroom mirror whilst your laptop dangles from your chin repeatedly hitting you in the balls, can breathe a sigh of relief.

Should you wait for the PS3?

Posted in gadgets at 4:41 pm by admin

Even if the Xbox 360 is a rousing success, Sony will likely still dominate the console universe.
November 21, 2005: 6:23 AM EST
By Peter Lewis, FORTUNE senior editor

Video game guide 2005
Xbox? PlayStation? Nintendo? CNN/Money tells you the best choices for all the systems. (full story)
sony ps3

NEW YORK (FORTUNE) - More than 90 million PlayStation 2 consoles have been sold worldwide since the PS2’s debut in 2000, compared with some 25 million Microsoft Xboxes sold since 2001. Even if the new Xbox 360 is a rousing success, Sony’s dominance of the console universe is likely to continue, and there’s a powerful new PlayStation coming next year.

The PS3, scheduled to be introduced in Japan in mid-2006 and in the U.S. a few months later, is expected to be technically more advanced than the Xbox 360 in many ways. Notably, it will include a high-definition DVD player intended to capitalize on the growing market for HDTV sets, which, of course, Sony also makes. (The Xbox 360 supports HD games, but it lacks the ability to play next-generation, prerecorded HD movies.)

Sony’s CEO, Sir Howard Stringer, said recently that Sony will sell the PS3 at a loss in order to populate the world with Sony’s favored high-definition DVD standard, known as Blu-ray. If millions of Blu-ray PlayStations find their way into living rooms, Sony figures, movie studios will be compelled to embrace it over the rival standard, known as HD-DVD. Yes, brace yourself for another Betamax vs. VHS standards war.

Sir Howard said the PS3 will sell for $300 to $400 and will come with a bundle of games, movies, and TV shows, many of which Sony also makes. The question is whether the titles will be bundled on Blu-ray DVD discs or on a built-in hard drive.

Because the first standalone Blu-ray DVD players are expected to cost $1,000 or so, Sony is essentially giving a free next-generation DVD player to every PS3 customer. That eases the pain (a little bit) for people faced with buying new, high-def versions of their favorite DVDs.

Of course, nothing is stopping Microsoft from adding a high-definition DVD player to the Xbox down the road, once the standards battle has been resolved.

How else does the PS3 stack up against the Xbox 360? It’s based on a bodaciously powerful Cell processor developed by IBM and Toshiba, which appears to outmuscle the IBM PowerPC custom chip used in Microsoft’s Xbox 360. Sony has also tapped nVidia to supply the graphics engine in the PS3, and it’s going to be a whopper, with nearly double the rendering power of the top graphics card that nVidia now supplies to PC gaming enthusiasts. Again, on specs alone, the PS3 should have a graphics edge over the ATI-based Xbox 360.

Fancy hardware doesn’t mean anything, though, if the people who write the games for the hardware can’t take advantage of it. (Exhibit A: The PlayStation 2 is technically inferior to the original Xbox, but it’s still the world’s most popular gaming platform based on the selection of compelling game titles.)

At its launch the PS3 will be backward compatible with thousands of earlier PlayStation titles. But Microsoft knows software, and game developers are praising it for providing them the tools and support to build new titles for the Xbox 360.

So should you wait a year for the PS3 or buy the Xbox 360 today? Current Xbox owners are likely to upgrade to the 360, and current PS2 owners will probably stick with Sony. New gamers, however, have little reason to wait nearly a year for the PS3, and Microsoft is almost certain to gain some ground on Sony.

The one wild card: Sony could slash the price of the current PS2, perhaps to $100, making the $400 Xbox 360 seem less attractive.

Strike, counterstrike: It’s all playing out like a good videogame. Only in this game, billions of dollars are at stake. Top of page

11.14.05

Asus MyPal A632 and A636 Available Next Week

Posted in gadgets at 4:02 pm by admin

TrustedReviews has a bit of juicy info on the upcoming Asus MyPal A632 and A636. We last posted on the A636 back in June (here and here) - obviously, news of the device has been pretty dry as of late.

Both devices feature an Intel XScale 416MHz processor, 64MB RAM, 128MB Flash ROM (85MB usable), a 3.5″ 240 x 320 (QVGA) screen, an SD slot, Bluetooth, and Windows Mobile 5.0. The A636 includes 802.11b Wi-Fi, while the A632 has an additional miniSD slot to make up for its lack of Wi-Fi. They measure in at 122mm x 73mm x 18.8mm and weigh 186g. Amazingly, off a single charge, Asus is quoting a battery life of 44 hours of standard usage, up to 18 hours of media playback, and 7.5 hours of GPS usage. The device also includes an in-car mounting kit and charger, a 128MB memory card, and all your standard accessories (stylus, synchronisation cables, AC adapter, and case). Available from next week, the A632 should retail at £299 (inc. VAT) with the A636 coming in at £349 (inc. VAT).

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