You Will Have the Power of a PS3 In Your Pocket In 3 Years [Powervr]

I spoke to Imagination Technologies—maker of the PowerVR chip that powers smartphones like the iPhone, Droid and many others—and they said, definitively, that you’ll have graphics comparable to the PlayStation 3 in 3 years. More »







OnLive Streaming Game Service Launches June 17 For $15/Month [Onlive]

The OnLive streaming game service that takes console and PC games, renders them server-side, then streams it to your Mac or PC, will go live on June 17 in the US (lower 48). More »







Case-mate Hug Review: A Wireless iPhone Charging Pad That Actually Works Well [Review]

Wireless charging has been around—even for the iPhone—for years, but it wasn’t until the last 12 months that it’s been refined to be as good as standard wired charging. Case-mate’s Hug is our favorite iPhone charging pad. More »







MacHeist: Get 8 Mac Apps Worth $280 For $20 [Dealzmodo]

MacHeist’s nanoBundle 2 offer is almost over, which means the really good apps are on the verge of being unlocked. Already available? Tales of Monkey Island, in both Mac and PC versions.

By the time you read this post, RapidWeaver should already be unlocked, and it should be very, very close to unlocking Tweetie at around 50 or 60k bundles sold. Once Rapidweaver is unlocked, that should be no problem. Note: this isn’t just the Tweetie that’s out now, but beta access (and a free upgrade) to Tweetie 2, with the features that were found on Tweetie 2 for iPhone.

In any case, $20 for all these apps is a great deal. [MacHeist]

Update: It’s all unlocked!






Joos Orange Solar Charger Has 6 to 20 Times More Sun-to-Power Conversion [Solar Charger]

There’s no way to verify this except to test it, but Solar Components claims their Joos Orange charger has somewhere between six to twenty times as much “3G cell phone talk time per hours of sun” than their competitors.

This is where we’re confused though. Their chart shows that they have 120 minutes of talk time per hour of sun, but rate competitors at just 20 minutes of talk time per hour of sun. However, on their tech specs sheet, they say that they can “make more powe than any other personal solar charger on the market. Up to 20 times more.” Or, if you use their reflector kit, which brings in more sun, you can get 30 times more.

So, assuming it’s just six times more powerful than anyone else, the question remains: Are these guys just so much better and found a secret to solar power generation, or is everyone else just horrible engineers? Either way, Solar Components supposedly will ship this 5400mAh solar-powered battery in June at just $100. Sounds fishy for now, but we’d love to test it out ourselves to see. [Solar Joos via iPod NN]






Apple Patents Using USB Ports as Air Vents For Cooling [Patents]

AppleInsider found four cooling-related patents by Apple that might be used in future MacBooks in order to better keep temperatures from getting absurd as performance increases. The most interesting is the one that uses USB/Firewire ports as vents.

These ports would theoretically (while they’re not being used, of course) help increase airflow to vital hot parts, so that you wouldn’t have to create more vents on the other parts of the laptop. The downside is that if you’re the kind of person who likes to plug everything in and fill up all the holes of your laptop all the time, you’re cutting off potential ventilation.

Two of the other patents, one for sensing airflow and making adjustments automatically, and the other using heat-conductive hinge assemblies, seem more obvious and less innovative. The last, though, uses the Peltier effect which…

defines when an electrical current runs through the junction of two different metals. When electrons flow from a region of high density to a lower one, it allows them to cool. The application describes a “solid-state cooling mechanism” that would employ two sides to transfer heat away from the machine and help dissipate it.

So it allows additional cooling, but without having to employ more fans. Another way for the device to keep small and sturdy without cutting more holes and adding more air-pushing components. [Apple Insider]






Corsair’s Force Series SSDs Are the Fastest in Its Class With 280MB/s Reads [Ssd]

These Force Series SSDs from Corsair have up to 280MB/s reads and 260MB/s writes, which are supposedly “class-leading”. Even if it’s not the fastest solid state drives on the market period, it’s the fastest Corsair’s ever made.

The drives will be available in 100 and 200GB sizes in about two weeks, and will support SATA II 3.0Gb/s. No prices for these yet, but our guess is you’re going to have to pay a little more for the higher performance. In comparison, Corsair’s other 128GB drives run around $400-500, depending on where you shop. [Corsair]






TomTom’s iPhone Navigation Apps Drop Again to $50/$70 [Dealzmodo]

TomTom’s discounting their US and US+Canada navigation apps slightly, down to $50 and $70, respectively. They’ve done this before, on both apps, so it’s not unprecedented, but it is a good deal if you’re looking for iPhone Navigation. [App Store]






YouTube Gets Automatic Captioning For All Videos [YouTube]

Today, YouTube is rolling out automatic captioning for all videos uploaded to the service, using Google’s speech recognition service. You can see a demo in the video above.

Automatic captioning with Google speech recognition was launched in November. This only had a few selected education partners to test out automatic captioning, until now.

There are many reasons for captions on every video: ESL viewers, people in other countries, searchability, not wanting to disturb others, loud locations and automatic translations to other countries.

The captioning won’t be perfect, since Google’s speech recognition isn’t perfect, but it is really, really cool, and is sort of one step toward the goal of speech to speech recognition in real time that Google is aiming for. By testing pre-recorded videos, they can help refine the tech on something that isn’t as vital or time sensitive, in order for it to be used in something that is—phone conversations.

Also cool, if your video gets captioned weirdly by Google’s system, you can download the captions in plain text and correct the captions yourself. This is much easier than captioning from scratch.

If you want to have YouTube go and caption something you uploaded a few years ago—because they caption newly uploaded videos first—you can manually request that as well.

Update: In response to some of the comments, yeah, it may use the same system as Google Voice’s transcription (not sure yet), but having more people come in and upload their correct versions of captions helps Google learn and improve their system faster, which helps all their speech-to-text services.

Update 2: I don’t usually get emotional at press conferences, but watching the students from the California School For the Deaf talk about how the auto-captioning will improve their lives is kinda making me tear up. Right now, I think this is cooler than anything I’ve seen rolled out in the last few years.

Update 3: I asked if this was the same algorithm currently being used in Google Voice, and they yes, more or less, if you’re talking about the base technology. Goog411 and Voice Search all have the same core algorithms, but each of these four have various conditions and issues that the algorithm needs tweaking to. So, you can probably expect a similar level of performance to Google Voice, or maybe even worse, if the videos have people who don’t speak clearly, or multiple voices, or a noisy background.






Rainbow Wireless Laser Convertible Fit-U Mouse Review: Neat Idea, Lousy Mouse [Review]

This Fit-U mouse from Spanish peripheral designer Rainbow has a neat idea. Its top is a detachable plate, allowing you to switch back from a desktop-sized mouse and a travel-sized mouse easily. Too bad the mouse is so bad.

The Price:

TBD

The Verdict:

Bad mouse, but great idea. The concept of being able to take a regular-sized mouse (the Large plate, in their terms), swapping on another cover and turning it into a travel-sized mouse is a neat idea. Some days you want a large, ergonomic mouse like Logitech’s, but some days you want a smaller one to shove into your bag.

The downside is how bad this mouse is at mousing. I placed it on two different mousepads and a desk, and it was never able to track half as well as the Logitech Performance MX mouse. Chunks and stutters were common, and most of the time I was fighting it like an old man new to computing in order for it to do what I wanted. The button presses were hard and clacky instead of being smooth and easy. Overall, bad times.

On the other hand, the top plate is easy to pop off and easy to swap, which is a plus. Its only plus. You have to ask yourself what kind of bag you have that can fit a travel-sized mouse but not a slightly bigger mouse, and what kind of mousing surface really demands a compact device, and that extra 2 inches just won’t do. My feeling is that it’s really rare.

So it if weren’t for the fact that this mouse doesn’t function very well as a mouse, it’d be a great mouse. But in the meantime, you should go with a Microsoft or a Logitech or a Razor; one of the people that have perfected mice sensors. [Fit-U]

Interesting idea for a customizable mouse


Large size plate not that comfortable for a desktop mouse


Travel size plate is about the same as other travel mice


Bad at mousing






  


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