Adsense
Sunday, May 31, 2009
GPS/GSM/GPRS Alarm System/Tracking System/Navigator
Description:
1. Build-in GPS personal locator.
2. GSM /SMS communication
3. Works worldwide!
Support 3-frequency GSM 900/1800/1900 MHZ
And 4-frequency GSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHZ. (Optional)
4. High sensitivity, new technology and latest GPS SiRF-Star III chipset!
Excellent for fixing the position even at a weak signal status
Work well even in areas with limited sky view like urban canyons.
5. Compact size, and smaller than one name card. Easy to hide
6. Very Low power consumption
7. Fast Signal Acquisition
8. Support single location and continuous tracking
9. Support location triggered by tracker
10. Support location triggered by authorized cell phone
11. Support quick dialing buttons for 3 preset phone numbers
12. Support check location by SMS and GPRS
13. Monitors can track the person without interfering him,
14. Locate the locator holder by the mobile phone via SMS (Short messaging system)
15. SOS button send out exact location for immediate rescue/action.
16. Geo-fencing to restrict movement to a defined radius.
17. No monthly service charges to be paid to the call center
Worldwide Radio -- WR301 Internet Radio with LAN and wifi
Power Plug: | US and Europe-Germany versions |
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Color: | White and Black |
Wave Band: | internet |
Style: | Digital |
Function: | Multifunction |
Place of Origin: | Taiwan |
Model Number: | WR301 |
Power Supply: | Power Adapter |
Port: | Taiwan |
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Payment Terms: | T/T |
Delivery Time: | 8 weeks |
Key words: radio, internet radio, web radio, worldwide radio, mp3, mp4, wifi
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WorldRadio brings you the revolutionary radio for 21st Century where you can enjoy thousands of radio stations around the world via internet. No matter whether you are in Alaska and would like to listen to the Hawaiian music, or whether you want to listen to the classical music, hard rock, or smooth jazz; WorldRadio brings you home the radio station of your choice.
Follow a few simple steps to connect the WorldRadio to your internet connection, and turn on the radio, then you can access to any internet radio stations around the world just as easy as you would operate on your old AM/FM radio. You could select a radio station categorized by country or categorized by genre. You could also store your favorite stations for later recall with preset keys without the hassie. WorldRadio is designed to minimize the radio operaton, and to maximize your music listening experience.
Key Features |
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Dimension | 195(L) x 139(W) x 60(H) mm |
Display | 128 x 64 dots Graphic LCD Module |
Navigation |
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Audio Playback |
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Standards |
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Network Security |
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Certification | CE |
Clock & Alarm |
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Connections & Switches |
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Environmental requirements |
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Power Adapter |
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* The specification is subject to change without prior notice. |
Thursday, May 14, 2009
iBose Egg Chair Is An Absolute Music Chamber
Designing of built-in speakers within chairs or for that matter digital chairs or other form of digital furniture is not something new and here I have another worthy contender to add to the list of Lodge chair with built-in iPod and 02 Lounge stree-burner chair. Intelligently named as the iBose Egg Chair, it touts the circular acoustical features that justifies it being christened as the ultimate sound chamber. Coming from the 1960s era, it comes layered with black velveteen cloth.
To start with, it sports a Bose Companion 3 amplifier, satellite speaker system, a JBL OnTour handy speaker system featuring 1.5″ stereo speakers and an incorporated speaker is placed right above the user’s head.
The vibration of the bass frequencies can be felt via four fusion 6.5″ midwoofers, motorized by an Onkyo home theater handset with crossovers offering a vibrating effect underneath of the seat. The music is streamlined to this chair via Ethernet or Wireless-G from any PC or notebook running iTunes. It becomes a real sound chamber when attached with an Apple Powerbook and iTunes. Well, all music maniacs can enjoy their stay here, as this is a perfect offering that understands their senses.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Digital Gadget Intelligent Golf Plutter
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Brit engineers unveil tin foil-thin speaker
If you thought NXT flat panel speakers were thin, wait until you see the latest piece of engineering from the brainbox types at Warwick University. Dubbed the FFL (flat, flexible loudspeaker), it looks like tin foil but reportedly delivers a clear, crisp sound.
Unlike a traditional speaker, the FFL works by moving air as a bulk mass rather than from a single point. The idea is that this distributes audio evenly.
The tech could be used in posters, ceiling tiles or even wrapped around a lampshade, according to the head of Warwick Audio Technologies, a firm created to sell the speaker tech. It looks likely to prove popular for public address systems, as it’s directed straight at its audience and quality doesn’t degrade to the extent it does with standard PA systems.
Don’t expect to see tons of FFL speakers out in the next few months, but Warwick Audio Technologies says it hopes to have a product out by the end of 2009.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
Dell Studio One 19 Desktop (S210513NZ)
- Crystal clear 16:9 widescreen flat panel HD display
- User-friendly touch applications with optional
- multi-touch screen
- Powerful NVIDIA® graphics with up to an Intel® Quad-Core processor
- Optional built-in WiFi.
Dell Studio One 19 Desktop (S210513NZ)Cool, sophisticated design with multi-touch features and speedier processor for more enjoyment
GOODS BY DELIVERY ONLY: The goods advertised above are supplied direct by Dell New Zealand Limited BN 425354. They are sold direct from the factory to the customer so we have no showroom or retail outlet. Detailed product information can be found at http://www.dell.co.nz/
ONLINE PRICING: Prices advertised online include delivery fees unless otherwise stated that delivery is free. For this reason prices are presented differently in the Dell online store. Goods are supplied by delivery only. Delivery fees start at $49.
MISTAKES: While all efforts are made to check pricing and other errors, inadvertent errors do occur from time to time and Dell reserves the right to decline orders arising from such errors.
ONSITE & ADVANCED EXCHANGE SERVICES: Technician, replacement part or unit (depending on service contract) will be dispatched if necessary following phone-based troubleshooting.
GENUINE WINDOWS VISTA®: Some Genuine Windows Vista® features - like the new Aero™ user interface - are only available in premium editions of Genuine Windows Vista® and require advanced or additional hardware. Check www.dell.co.nz/vista for details.
PRODUCT PERFORMANCE: We often quote speeds and other performance data (such as printer speed or processor speeds). Please note that these quotes are only for comparative purposes and your actual speed or other performance can vary with a host of factors, including the other equipment or telephone line used.
TRADEMARKS: Celeron, Celeron Inside, Centrino, Centrino Logo, Core Inside, Intel, Intel Logo, Intel Core, Intel Inside, Intel Inside Logo, Intel Viiv, Intel vPro, Itanium, Itanium Inside, Pentium, Pentium Inside, Xeon, and Xeon Inside are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and other countries. AMD, the AMD arrow logo, AMD Athlon, AMD Sempron, AMD Turion, AMD Opteron, AMD Live! and combinations thereof, are trademarks of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. Other trademarks and trade names may be used in this advertisement to refer to either the entity claiming the marks and names or their product. Dell Inc. disclaims any proprietary interest in trademarks and names. All rights reserved.
FURTHER INFORMATION: For more important information about our products and services go to www.dell.co.nz/important_information
Friday, May 8, 2009
A Lockbox Built from DNA
Deoxyribose sugar cubes: Because complementary regions of DNA like to pair up, researchers were able to design a long strand of DNA that, combined with many tiny DNA staples, would automatically assemble itself into a nano-sized box. This technique is known as DNA origami. Here, the boxes were imaged using cryo-electron tomography to confirm their cubelike structures and hollow interior. Credit: : Ebbe S. Andersen, Aarhus University.
Using nothing but DNA, researchers in Denmark have constructed a tiny box with a lid that can either lock shut or--with the help of a set of DNA keys--hinge open. While other groups have experimented with using DNA origami to build three-dimensional objects, the new box, described in this week's edition of Nature, is distinguished by its solid sides and moving parts.
"It's a rather beautiful molecular structure," says John Reif, a distinguished professor of computer science at Duke University, who was not involved in the research. "It's the first time that a nanostructure like that had a programmable and controllable lid."
For now, the box serves as a proof of principle that DNA origami can be adapted to make elaborate three-dimensional structures, says Jørgen Kjems, a molecular biologist at the Aarhus University Center for DNA Nanotechnology, who led the research. But in the future, he believes that the nano-sized container could be adapted for a wide range of applications, from drug-delivery vehicle to logic gate.
DNA makes an ideal building material for nanostructures. It's easy to churn out in bulk: Kjems and his team hijacked a virus to manufacture copies of the sequence that they designed. And it folds in straightforward, predictable ways according to its sequence. To design the box, the Aarhus team developed a computer program to generate a continuous single-stranded DNA sequence that, along with smaller DNA fragments that act as staples, would self-assemble into the desired shape.
The sequence was devised with many complementary regions so that it would automatically fold into six roughly square accordion-like sheets--the sides of the box--based on DNA's natural tendency to pair into double strands. The DNA staples, also driven by the pairing of complementary sequences, stitched the sheets' edges together to form a hollow cube with a hinged lid.
To make the lid lockable, Kjems and his colleagues fashioned two tiny DNA latches with sticky ends. Under normal circumstances, the latches adhere to the box, holding it shut. But when the two corresponding DNA keys are added, the latches bind to those instead, allowing the lid to swing open. A pair of dye molecules, one affixed to the box's rim and another to its lid, glow red when close together and green when far apart, providing an easy way to detect whether a box is closed or open.
Think outside the box: The nano boxes, modeled here in gray, might one day ferry drugs to specific destinations in the body or serve as logic gates in a DNA-based computer. Each box's lid is normally latched shut with two pairs of complementary DNA snippets (blue and orange). But when corresponding DNA keys (also blue and orange) are added to the mix, they interfere with the latches and allow the lids to swing open. Fluorescent dye markers glow red when a box is closed and green when it is open. Credit: : Ebbe S. Andersen, Aarhus University.
With three-dimensional structures such as this one, the real challenge isn't designing the object but proving that it successfully formed, says Paul Rothemund, a computer scientist at the California Institute of Technology, who developed a simple technique for making DNA structures. The researchers used several different imaging methods to ensure that the boxes assembled themselves as planned. "They did a very convincing job of showing that they made what they thought they made, which is really important," Rothemund says. "And now they're free to try and elaborate on it and get it to actually do something."
Kjems has several ideas for what the boxes might do. One possibility is to load them with drugs and program the lids to open in response to some biological cue inside the body--the presence of a virus or a cancer gene, for example--thereby releasing their therapeutic cargo.
"There's a way in which they're more interesting than almost any other nano-encapsulation scheme you can think of for that purpose, because they have these infinitely programmable lids," says Rothemund. "That's something that no other kind of nano-drug-delivery capsule can offer."
Therapeutic uses are still a long way off, however. While the boxes are theoretically solid enough to prevent large molecules from leaking out and spacious enough to enclose a ribosome or a small virus, the researchers haven't yet tried to put anything inside them. And so far, the boxes only function inside a test tube. Unlike some other nano-delivery vehicles, there's no evidence yet of the safety or efficacy of DNA-based devices in living systems.
But the lockboxes needn't carry a payload to prove useful. Kjems also envisions turning them into electronic components. Because they have two distinct keys, the boxes act as AND gates, opening (and glowing green) only when both keys are present. With a few straightforward tweaks, they could serve as NOT gates or OR gates as well. "In principle," says Kjems, "you could build a DNA computer using these boxes."
Rohos Logon Key v.1.7.2 For Mac OS X
Thursday, May 7, 2009
New DRM receiver unveiled and reiterated support for DRM from EBU/ABU
Erlangen, Germany – A new state-of-the-art DRM digital radio receiver was unveiled to DRM members at the annual general assembly of the Consortium being held in Erlangen, Germany where the world's two biggest broadcasting unions – EBU and ABU – re-iterated their support to the DRM Consortium. The new DRM receiver is called 'Di-Wave 100' and has been developed by Uniwave Development SAS. This is the first DRM receiver with colour screen and will be in mass production from April 2009. The receiver has all the multimedia features offered by DRM technology including identification by station name, programme information, Journaline, MOT Slideshow and listening time shift. The radio can receive DRM broadcasts in SW, MW and LW as well as analogue FM and can store 768 stations in its memory. The receiver also has a USB/SD card -reader and mp3/mp4 play-back. The 3.5 inch TFT display colour can display text in many different languages. Patrick Leclerc, CEO of Uniwave said "The unique thing about the new receiver is that we have a clear road-map and plan to produce subsequent models with newer features like recording, EQ, DVD, GPS and navigation for an in-car version." The DRM General Assembly is being attended by members from all over the world and got support from the EBU and ABU. Sharad Sadhu, Technical Director of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union told the DRMmembers "It is the most suitable technology for MW broadcasters in the Asia-Pacific region and that the Consortium should have a 'look east' policy for the roll-out of DRM". Lieven Vermale, Technical Director of the European Broadcasting Union said "DRM is one of the critical technologies for converting analogue radio to digital and is being endorsed by several countries in the world. Both broadcasting unions are in favour of different digital radio bodies in the world working more closely together to give a unified message to the users." "We are really excited about the good news we are sharing with our members : major countries like India and Russia opting for DRM, up-to-date receivers ready to hit the market, completion of the DRM standard family with DRM+. The DRM consortium is in a good place, ready for cooperation and real activities to push the digitisitation of radio worldwide", said Ruxandra Obreja, DRM Chairman.
TEC's Lingo mouse touts itself as world's smallest, most likely to get lost in laptop bag
Can a Car swim???
The Lamborghini Countach is fast, but everyone knows Bulls can’t swim, so is it fast enough to walk on water, Jesus-style?
We think not, which is why we wonder what the heck this thing is doing almost fully submerged. Anyone have any ideas? We did some searching online and couldn’t find anything.
iLamp By Systemdesignstudio
Systemdesignstudio has designed a new flexible reading lamp known as the iLamp Last Version. It is made of white silicon with a electro-luminescent polymer screen. Both the lamp and the screen are flexible that allows you to mash it into any shape or form according to how you like it. [LikeCool]
Clip Stand d’iCooly pour iPhone / iPod
Samsung HMX-H106 Camcorder in Korea
MvixUSA Launches Nubbin - World's Smallest USB Wireless-N Adapter
Mvix Nubbin has a micro-footprint with protrusion of less than 2cm and is capable of delivering data at 150Mbps. With its small 3/4th inch size, Mvix Nubbin is an attractive accessory for a wide variety of applications and devices constrained by space and size. Compliant with IEEE 802.1n draft 3.0 and IEEE 802.1b/g, Nubbin supports WMM® and WMM-PS® (IEEE 802.1e QoS Standard). Nubbin also offers advanced features like innovative WPS® (Wireless Protected Setup), auto-builds connection, and synchronizes settings. It supports all encryption standards and is compatible with all operating systems: Microsoft Windows XP / Vista, Mac OS X and Linux.
Wireless-N is the latest amalgamation of multiple technologies such as MIMO (Multiple Input, Multiple Output), which utilizes multiple radios to transmit and receive at the same time to maximize wireless networking performance. Mvix Nubbin adapts to any standard USB2.0 port and connects wirelessly to a router to stream data at high throughput in a secure environment. Mvix Nubbin is also backward compatible and interoperable with 802.11b/g devices.
“Mvix Nubbin is a tiny, yet high impact addition to our product line as we continue to provide complete solutions for a wireless HD planet.” – Mike said. “It is in tune with our other products like HD (High Definition) media players and business Digital Signage players.” Nubbin facilitates enough speed, range and reliability to support streaming HD video while simultaneously listening to your digital music collection, making Internet VoIP (Voice over IP) phone calls, or playing multiplayer online games (MMOG), making it a perfect choice for home or business. MvixUSA intends to provide support for developers intending to integrate this adapter in embedded devices running linux.
Mvix Nubbin is expected to be available at all leading retailers like Amazon.com, Thinkgeek, Newegg.com, Microcenter etc.
For more information, please visit www.MvixUSA.com/Nubbin/WirelessN-USB-Adapter.html
The All New iPod Shuffle - 3rd Generation of ipod Shuffle
The All New iPod Shuffle - 3rd Generation of ipod Shuffle...
It is the third generation iPod shuffle was released on 11 March, 2009 and is said by Apple to be "jaw-droppingly small" and "The first music player that talks to you" [6] with dimensions of 45.2 x 17.5 x 7.8 mm (1.8 x 0.7 x 0.3 in). The new generation is a 4GB model at US$79, CA$99, €75, GB£59, AUD$129 (The second generation 1GB iPod shuffle is still available, however the 2GB version has been discontinued.[7]) It is available with a silver or black brushed aluminum case similar to the second generation iPod Shuffle. This makes it the first iPod Shuffle that is available in black - although the black is more of a dark grey, especially in comparision to the black iPod Touch. It features VoiceOver technology that allows song names, artist names, album names and playlist contents and names to be spoken in 14 different languages [8] using the Text-to-Speech incorporated in iTunes 8. It also has gained support for multiple playlists, in contrast to previous versions of the iPod Shuffle, which allowed only a single playlist.
Sinoda Plasma Japan’s 145-inch Film Display
T-Mobile’s Sidekick LX 2009 For $249
AT&T Officially Announces The BlackBerry Curve 8900
Unfortunately, AT&T didn’t give us an exact launch date, but it said the Curve 8900 would be available starting “early summer”.
The handset’s price is also unknown, but I guess it will be of around $200 on contract.
As we’ve already said, AT&T’s Curve 8900 is similar to the one available via T-Mobile – although, of course, it will provide exclusive stuff like AT&T Navigator and free Wi-Fi at almost 20,000 AT&T hot spots.
Android 1.5 Update For The T-Mobile G1 Next Week
Android 1.5 will bring a number of user interface improvements, better performance, as well as new features, such as an onscreen full QWERTY keyboard, video recording and playback, and stereo Bluetooth support. For a full list of features and an FAQ, check out T-Mobile's forum page.
We're anxiously awaiting our own Cupcake, and we'll update our full review of the T-Mobile G1 soon after. G1 owners, once you receive your Android 1.5 update, we'd also love to hear about your experiences as well. In the meantime, feel free to share your thoughts about the news below.
MIU Introduces 3rd Generation HDPC
MIU HDPC
MIU will be dropping a new HDPC. It’s going for about $500 and features a 4-inch touchscreen display, 1GHz VIA C7M ULV processor, 4GB of DDR2 memory, Windows XP / Linux Qplus embedded OS, 60GB HDD or 4GB SSD, miniSD/microSD card slot, 5.0-megapixel camera, 802.11b/g Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.0, and two USB ports. No word on when and where this is available. So Check back later for an update. [AVING]