Quirky Perch, a Two-Piece Speaker and Dock for Phones

LAS VEGAS — Quirky’s Perch is an all-in-one speaker and charger for your phone. It comes in two parts: the dock, which stays put on your nightstand, side-table or desk, and the Bluetooth speaker, which charges on the dock but can be taken with you in a bag, a big pocket or just to the bathroom so you don’t miss any of your audiobook.

CES 2011When not docked, the speaker has its own kickstand, so you can prop it up wherever you like, vertically or horizontally. It also has a built in mic for conference-calling. When it is docked, the speaker snaps into place, held by magnets.

The dock part hooks up to AC power and connects to your phone via a USB cable instead of a device-limiting dock-connector. It also has a clock readout so you can use it as a bedside alarm.

The Perch is just like any other Quirky product – designed by an online community and only sent to production once the minimum order has been reached. In this case the minimum pre-order is 1,600, and the price is $200, with a $20 discount for early adopters.

Perch product page [Quirky]


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Altec-Lansing Speakers Will Toss Your Tunes 100 Yards

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LAS VEGAS — We’ve seen more than a few “wireless boomboxes” that can stream music from your computer to a set of remote speakers. Few promise as much as the inMotion Air from Altec-Lansing.

Announced here at CES Wednesday, this unit seemingly has all the bases covered. It can stream your music library from your computer up to 300 feet away via its own wireless adapter, and it can stream the songs stored on your phone or your iPad via Bluetooth. It’s smart enough to be able to navigate your existing shared iTunes or Windows Media libraries, and it comes with a remote control that works with both file systems, so you can call up songs, playlists or internet radio stations while the thing sits next to you on the back porch. The rechargeable lithium-ion battery will be good for seven hours, the company promises.

CES 2011The design of the inMotion Air is stark but monumental: It’s an austere, slim wedge with silvery buttons on top and a handle built into the back to carry it. It weighs a little more than a pound, and it comes in a matte black finish or in gunmetal gray. We haven’t had a change to hear it yet, so we can’t comment on the sound quality. It will cost $200.

Connecting wirelessly involves plugging a small adapter into the host computer. The adapter also has stereo outputs on it, you can just plug your desktop speakers into the adapter and leave the thing plugged in without having to swap any cables whenever you want to switch from one speaker system to another.

Anyone sitting nearby can sync their phone or iPad to the inMotion Air by connecting over Bluetooth and make it play the songs stored on their devices. Audio playback over Bluetooth is notoriously sub-par, but Altec-Lansing says it’s tried to keep the quality higher than average by using the Apt-X codec. The technology boosts the fidelity and clarity of the audio coming over the Bluetooth signal, Altec-Lansing claims.


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QWERTY Slider Case for iPhone Is Fat But Functional

Boxwave’s keyboard case for the iPhone 4 looks to be just about perfect for the person who loves their iPhone, but still pines for the hard keys of their BlackBerry. They’ll also need big pockets – not because the case is particularly expensive, but because it adds quite a bit of thickness to the already chunky iPhone. Boxwave doesn’t list the size, but from the photos, it appears to double the iPhone’s depth.

The keyboard itself is a landcape slider combined with a snap-on case which leaves the front of the phone clear. It’s a Bluetooth model (battery life, 45 days) and has a row of numbers up top as well as the standard QWERTY. You also get a home button and a search button, especially handy as it means you don’t have to reach up to the touch-screen to swap apps. What you don’t get is a proper spacebar, but there are both shift and caps-lock keys.

Despite the bulk, this fat accessory manages to be fairly elegant, and has cut-outs for the camera and all the edge-switches. Finally, the case charges via USB.

Like I said, it’s perfect for the keyboard-lover who has defected to an iPhone. But how many of those are there these days? I have a feeling that the people who simply cannot use an on-screen keyboard will just stick with a BlackBerry, or move to a keyboard-equipped Android phone. After all, who really wants to double the thickness of an iPhone 4? $80.

Keyboard Buddy iPhone 4 Case [Boxwave via iLounge]


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Thimble: A Bluetooth Braille Smart-Finger

Thimble is a Bluetooth finger-glove that hooks up to your smartphone and works as a Braille display. By pulsing Braille shapes onto the fingertip via an “electro-tactile grid array”, all kinds of messages can be conveyed to the user.

But that’s not all. The concept design, by Erik Hedberg and Zack Bennet, also has a camera inside to scan words in the real world and transcribe them into Braille, along with a microphone for voice control. Thus the user can ask where they are, the phone will provide the location via GPS and the Thimble will read out the answer. Here’s a slow-moving video showing how it would work.

The phone, in this case, is an iPhone, as iOS already has great accessibility features for the sight-impaired, and already works just fine with existing Braille displays. Hedberg and Bennet are “working on a patent”, and as the product is actually fairly straightforward, we’re hoping to see real, working versions in the future.

Thimble – There’s a Thing for That [Vimeo via DVICE]


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GPS Bluetooth Dongle Controls SLRs with iPhone

At first look, $150 seems a ridiculous price for a Bluetooth dongle that lets you control your SLR from your cellphone, but digging into the specs shows that it ends up as quite a bargain. But first, what does it do?

Named the BlueSLR, the little box plugs into your Nikon SLR via one of its ports (there are three identically priced models with different plugs) and talks to your phone via Bluetooth. From a companion app, you can control the camera’s focus, shutter speed, and self-timer, or fire remotely from “up to 300-feet away” (that must be some powerful Bluetooth in there).

That alone might be worth it for some pros, but we tend to ask a little more of our gadgets. The BlueSLR also has a GPS unit to geotag your photos, writing the GPS data directly into the RAW of JPEG file. Given that GPS-only widgets go for around the same price, the BlueSLR starts to look cheap.

Right now the device is Nikon and iOS-only, with support for Canon, Android and Blackberry (!) coming soon. The iOS app is a free download. Wow. I think I just sold myself on this thing…

BlueSLR product page [BlueSLR]

BlueSLR app [iTunes]


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Mac-Matching Bluetooth Keypad Is Not Quite Right

Good news for Mac-loving accountants, software-pirates and data-entry clerks everywhere: this standalone numerical-keypad will sit aside your svelte aluminum Bluetooth keyboard and (almost) match it perfectly.

The wireless pad adds in the usual numbers, forward delete and extra function keys, comes in the same finish as the Apple keyboard, tilts to the same angle and also requires a pair of AA batteries. It even comes with a rather clunky female-female plastic clip to join the two together.

But for Apple users, accustomed to a level of fit-and-finish high above the average, one thing will drive you crazy: the font. Look carefully at the numbers and you’ll see the typeface doesn’t match the one on Apple’ ‘board. The giveaway is in 3,5 and 8: the bottom is bigger than the top of each number, whereas on the original they are equal.

The radio-powered pad has just popped up in the FCC’s database, so while the pad could be near to shipping, we have no launch date or price just yet.

Finally, a number pad for Apples Wireless Keyboard [Wireless Goodness via Oh Gizmo!]


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Ears-On with the SuperTooth Disco Bluetooth Boom-Box

For the last few weeks, I have been living with the Supertooth Disco, a Bluetooth speaker seemingly named after a singles night at a dentists’ convention. It’s a battery-powered stereo-speaker with a hefty subwoofer inside and, while it will never make its way onto an audiophiles shopping list, it’s a pretty impressive box for its size.

First, the specs. The speaker weighs in at 1,140-grams, or 2.5-pounds, and has two eight-watt drivers. Also in the case is that subwoofer, which blows its sound out through a rear-facing hole. Battery life is claimed to be 3-4 hours at high volume, up to 10 hours at medium volume. Standby is rated at an almost untestable 1,500 hours, or 62.5 days. The Bluetooth is A2DP and AVRCP, meaning you can beam straight from a phone, computer or iPad (where it shows up in the AirPlay menu) and also use the buttons clustered around the volume knob to play, pause and skip tracks remotely

The battery life is indeed impressive, lasting me for days of casual listening (I left the Supertooth in the kitchen and used it to play music and podcasts whenever I was in there). I couldn’t test the battery life at “high volume”, as I live in an apartment with neighbors stacked all around me, but in general use it’s long enough not to worry about, and you can always just plug the thing in (and it takes just three hours to charge from empty).

So how does it sound? That depends on what you’re listening to. Rock sounds pretty rushed and jangly, classical music – notoriously demanding on stereo equipment – is equally bad. But try some jazz, some spoken-word or anything warm and funky and it sounds very good indeed. I have been obsessed with Nol Akchot’s So Lucky these past weeks, which is an album of instrumental acoustic guitar covers of Kylie Minogue’s hits (don’t laugh – it’s pretty awesome). The guitar and the squeaking of fingers on strings are projected into an impressively big sound by the Supertooth. Which brings us onto the subwoofer.

You can really crank this speaker. At full volume it distorts, but it’s loud enough to stop any conversations well before you get that far up the dial. Press the bass-boost button by the main dial and you’ll get mixed results. Sometimes it overpowers the music, other times it adds the right amount of warmth and kick. It’s not set-and-forget: You’ll be tweaking this on a per-album basis. The bass itself is big, though, and even with the volume less than halfway up you can feel the air punching out of the rear hole.

The Supertooth comes with a case, a spongy neoprene-type thing with a mesh hole for the bass-port and a Velcro-shut flap for the ports around back (power and line-in via jack). It seems perfect for keeping splashes off in the bathroom, or for taking the speaker out for a trip.

Would I buy the Supertooth (it costs $150)? Sure. It’s not as good as the sub’n’satellite speakers I have hooked up elsewhere, but considering its size the speaker sounds fantastic (just steer clear of the White Stripes) and the portability will be a huge bonus once my leg is no longer broken. And before I go, here’s one great extra use for the Supertooth. Because Bluetooth-streamed audio is in sync with any on-screen video from the same device, you can sit the Supertooth behind your iPad when watching movies and enjoy a pretty good mini-home-theater experience. Add in a pico-projector and… Well, that’s something coming in a future post.

Supertooth Disco product page [Supertooth]

Photo: Charlie Sorrel


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ThinkGeek Joins iPad Keyboard Case Cavalcade

I promise I’ll stop writing about iPad keyboard cases soon, but today’s second installment comes from ThinkGeek, in the form of a luxurious leather folio case, packed with little chiclets to help you type.

Unlike the ZAGGmate profiled earlier today, the ThinkGeek case is designed to continuously swaddle the iPad, not to be removed. It holds the tablet by its edges, covering the bezel with a leather rectangle whilst still allowing access to all the buttons and ports.

But that’s not why you’re here. The keyboard part of the case is hidden under a flap which doubles as a wrist-rest when unfolded, and the connection is, as ever, via Bluetooth (li-ion battery life 90-hours ). All the media keys are here, including the ones the Apple Bluetooth keyboard doesn’t have: home and slideshow. Ever since putting iOS 4.2 on my iPad, I have been worrying about all those extra double-clicks I’m racking up on the home-button. Putting this on the keyboard is smart: when you’re typing, you’re also likely to be doing a lot of app-switching.

When not tapping away, you can use the case like any other folio-case, folding the keyboard-containing front-cover around the back, or just letting everything close up and stick shut with the magnetic clip.

For a circuitry-toting, leather folio, the ThinkGeek case is pretty cheap, at just $60. Available now.

IPad Bluetooth Keyboard Case [ThinkGeek. Thanks, Jessica!]

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Aluminum Shell Hides iPad Keyboard

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The ZAGGMate iPad case comes in two flavors, both of which look like aluminum tea-trays, only smaller. The cases protect just the screen of the iPad, clipping on like an iPhone shell-style case, only in the front instead of on the back.

Both cases also double as stands, with a neat, hinged plastic wedge that flips out of the interior and pushes at the back of the tablet while the case’s lip stops it from slipping forward.

Then things part ways. The ZAGGmate keyboard-case contains an hardware QWERTY keyboard on its inner surface. Once the iPad is propped into place, the Bluetooth keyboard can be used for typing, and has the full-complement of media keys for volume, home, starting a slideshow and adjusting the brightness. A 510 mAh rechargeable lithium polymer battery provides juice for a couple weeks of normal use (and charges via USB).

I scoffed for a while at these keyboard cases, thinking that the iPad’s on-screen keyboard was plenty good enough. It’s surprising still just how fast I can type on it, but with iOS 4.2 and all its fancy multitasking ways, the iPad just got a lot better at doing work, and even the simple addition of cursor keys and keyboard shortcuts for copy-and-paste make a huge difference.

The ZAGGmate costs $100 in its keyboard form, and $70 case-only. Available soon.

ZaggMate product page [ZAGGmate]

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As Wireless As It Gets: Logitech’s Light-Powered Keyboard

With their brand-new Google TV Blu-ray Players and much-loved universal remotes, you might think Logitech would let their well-established business in keyboard and mice coast a little bit. Instead, they’re coming out with a new wireless keyboard with a new wireless charger: the sun.

Actually, that’s not quite true either. The Logitech Wireless Solar Keyboard K750 may have solar in its name, but let’s face it: how much typing on a full-sized keyboard do most of us do in bright sunlight? Thankfully, “solar” here are a shorthand for “powered by any light source whatsover,” including the bare-incandescent bulb in your dank basement office.

Disclosure: I have a Logitech DiNovo wireless keyboard that I love — although I’m indifferent towards its plug-in charging cradle, which always seems to get unplugged when someone else in my house needs an outlet. I also have a solar-powered calculator from elementary school that I’ve loved since before puberty. So even though I have neither seen or used this keyboard, I am predisposed to be enthusiastic about it, in the hope that those solar cells across the top can keep the keyboard charged at least as well as my old solar-powered calculator.

Logitech says that the keyboard “can operate for up to three months in total darkness,” and they’re not shipping it with a separate plug-in charger, so they seem pretty confident. They’re also shipping a desktop app that helps “measure ambient light in the room, gives at-a-glance information about battery levels, and even alerts you when you need more power.”

So that covers the wireless charging. For wireless connection to your computer, the K750 doesn’t use Bluetooth, but 2.4 gHz wireless, meaning that you’ll need a plug-in USB receiver. I knew it! I knew you’d have to plug something in! Oh, well. For better connectivity, I guess I’ll take it.

Below, I’ve got the Logitech promotional video, which tauts its super-thin frame, $80 price and one of the better tech catchphrases I’ve heard in a while: “If you’ve got light, you’ve got power.”

H/T: Navneet Alang.

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Remote Palette Uses iPhone to Pick Colors for iPad Paintings

Remote Palette is a very neat iApp for painting pictures. The twist, which will excite anyone who has ever painted real pictures with real paint, is that the app hooks together an iPad and an iPhone (or iPod Touch). The iPad is the canvas, and the iPhone is the palette.

The app is universal, so one $0.99 download works for both devices. On launch, you pair the iPad and iPhone via Bluetooth and you’re off. Swipe between pages on the iPhone to choose your colors, and splodge the paint onto the iPad’s canvas. The experience is incredibly intuitive. Somehow it really feels like you’re transferring real paint with your finger.

If you’re expecting a full-featured painting app like Brushes or Sketchbook Pro, you’re going to be disappointed. You’re limited to the pre-defined colors and just four brushes, which vary in thickness but not texture or transparency. The app is probably great for kids, though, and even has a few coloring-book style outlines that can be used.

This should be added to Brushes ASAP. I love that app, but with a color picker on a separate screen, and maybe pinching to adjust brush sizes, it would be killer. Pretty please, Steve Sprang, add this to your app.

Remote Palette product page [iTunes]

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Siemens Bluetooth Box Beams Music Direct to Hearing Aids

If you’re deaf, you don’t have many choices when it comes to portable music. The best way is probably some over-the-ear headphones which don’t touch your hearing aids and send them into a squealing feedback loop. But why not ditch the cans altogether and beam the music straight to the hi-fi buds already nestling in your canals?

That’s exactly what Siemens miniTek will do. It’s a little black box, slightly larger than the current iPod Nano, which can be combined with any of Siemen’s “wireless hearing instruments”. It receives audio from any Bluetooth device (like your phone), equipment that uses an e2e wireless connection, T-coil systems (found in theaters, bank-tellers’ booths and other public places) or a special adapter that can hook into TVs and so on. The remote-like box also has switches to control volume and answer calls, and has a jack for hooking up any other source.

The miniTek is pictured with some rather large earpieces, but will also work with hearing-aids which are recessed completely in the canal. It will run for five hours while streaming, or “several days” as a remote, and charges fully in three hours. For the price, you’ll have to ask your hearing specialist.

This stuff is important. I have a very good friend who has been profoundly deaf since birth. Some years ago, she went to an fancy clinic and they hooked her up to a new kind of machine which let her hear things she’d never heard before. They played classical music. She cried.

Siemens miniTek [Siemens via Engadget]

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Pocket-Sized Bluetooth Keyboard Folds Out Like Tranformer

If you really, really have to have a physical, clickety-clackety keyboard to get your words onto a screen, the Jorno might be just the thing. The Bluetooth keyboard gives you the full QWERTY experience but folds up into a pocketable package. The keys themselves are just 15% smaller than full-size, big enough for touch-typists with accurate and not-too-fat fingers.

After key-feel, which you’ll have to try for yourself, the next most important specification is size. Folded out the Jorno is 8.5 x 3.5 x 0.3-inches. Concertinaed closed it measures just 3.5 x 3.5 x 0.9-inches, and all the time it weighs the same 8.8-ounces, including the li-ion battery which lasts a month.

A keyboard like this is clearly best suited to the iPhone, as fast typing is pretty easy on the iPad’s larger screen. With this in mind, the Jorno ships with a separate stand for phones. It will of course work with anything that uses the Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR standard, and Jorno has a photo of an iPad balancing precariously on the small bracket.

Small, add-on Bluetooth keyboards seem to be getting more popular, or at least more numerous, since Apple opened up its iDevices to allow them. I have a feeling that the multi-year delay in allowing these accessories wasn’t for technical reasons but for training purposes, to get us used to the soft touchscreen keyboards. It worked, too. You almost never hear griping about the iPhone keyboard anymore.

The Jorno can be pre-ordered now, for $100 (with $20 off until the end of October 2010).

Jorno keyboard product page [Jorno via Cult of Brownlee]

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Looxcie, A Futuristic Wearable Bluetooth Camcorder

Looxcie looks more like a prop from Valve’s game Portal than what it actually is: a non-nerdy wearable camera, or a distinctly nerdy Bluetooth headset.

It works like this. You jam the Looxcie in your ear and switch it on. A reversible earplug means it’ll fit in either ear-hole. The camera then runs continuously and buffers up to five hours of video. If something cool happens, you hit a button and it sends the last 30 seconds via Bluetooth to a companion app on your Android phone, from where you can edit and upload it. This app also acts as a live viewfinder for the camera.

If you only use it as a Bluetooth headset, it will last for 10 hours, and if a call comes in while you are filming, the video recording is muted.

Then we get to the rub: The Looxcie costs $200, and the camera quality is crappy: your phone’s camera is undoubtedly better than the measly 480320 pixel resolution and 15fps. On the other hand, it does look like a gun from Portal, so that might make it worth the price as a novelty Bluetooth headset for a really rabid fan of the game.

Available “soon”.

Looxcie product page [Looxcie]

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Fat QWERTY Keyboard Turns iPhone 4 into Giant Plastic Slab

The Nuu Mini Key case takes a perfectly respectable iPhone 4 and turns it into a big, fat, ugly slab of corporate crap, which looks and works just like every other smartphone with a slide-out landscape QWERTY.

I might not be the best person to judge, as I actually type faster on virtual keyboards than on actual real physical keyboards, but it seems silly to add little plastic chiclets to what it arguably the best soft-keyboard around. If you want to feel the clicks when you’re typing, go grab a Blackberry: they’re great. If you’re still here, read on to find out if you really want the Nuu.

The little keyboard slides and tilts from under the back of the iPhone 4, turning it into a tiny laptop-style device. The keyboard itself is backlit, and connects to the iPhone via Bluetooth. This means that it needs its own battery, which is presumably what makes the thing so hideously overweight. The folks at Engadget Spanish got a hands-on with the little accessory and pronounced the buttons as hard to press. This is no surprise. Put the thing on a desk and you’re poking at it with fingertips. Hold it in your hands to thumb-type and the phone-part will flap around like a fish on the quayside.

Should you still be in the market for this bulky and minimally functional case, it’ll be on sale sometime later this year for $60 or 60, depending on where you are.

Nuu Mini Key protege y complementa tu iPhone 4 a partes iguale [Engadget Spanish]

Photo: Engadget Spanish

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Teledildonic Add-On Turns Wiimote into Remote Vibrator

Mojowijo is a teledildonic accessory for the Nintendo Wiimote, which is somewhat ironic given the console’s family-friendly reputation. The device, currently in private beta, is very simple: You hook the hardware components to two Wiimotes. Wiggling and thrusting on the first remote are detected and sent via Bluetooth to a nearby PC (you don’t need the actual Wii itself).

From there, your movements are sent over the internet and reproduced by a vibrator on the other Wiimote, allowing a remote partner to enjoy your stimulations. Amusingly, the product page touts these teledildonics as just one possibility: the others are sharing the game with someone in the same room, or using the device on yourself. This last seems absurd, a little like riding a bike and steering it using a couple of sticks. It would obviate the need for sitting on your arm until you can’t feel your hand, though.

You can sign up for the beta now, and you’ll get a prototype device to test. The signup page asks for an awful lot of personal details, though, so it might pay to be wary before jumping in, especially as the product shots are just computer-renderings.

If this does take off though, we can see all manner of possibilities, including the inevitable professional services like those seen in FaceTime porn.

Introducing Mojowijo – Share the mojo with anyone in the world [Mojowijo via SF Weekly]

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It’s Another QWERTY Keyboard, Now For TV

We’re living in an age of multiple connected screens, where even our media-savvy televisions demand some occasional typing to search for a videogame, TV show or NetFlix rental. Problem is, typing (more like hunting and pecking) with a game controller or remote control is a pain in the butt and that’s the world into which the TiVo Slide is being born.

The TiVo on-screen software keyboard has been semi-affectionately dubbed “the Ouija Board input” from the way users slid and hovered the remote over each letter to search for titles. As TiVo added more and more text-dependent features, Ouija-hovering got more and more obnoxious. With recent software updates, Premiere and Series 3 users can use a USB keyboard or mouse, or a wireless device with a USB Bluetooth dongle. (That’s actually how the Slide connects.) But for one-stop remote/keyboard shopping, the Slide is your guy.

It solves a few technical problems that have haunted keyboard-style remotes for years. The slide interface is one: We’ve gotten so used to handheld devices that almost nobody wants to use a keyboard for everything. The bigger deal may be Bluetooth, which, among other nice things, performs the essential task of letting you use the keyboard sideways. It also lights up in the dark — there are other TiVo remotes that do this, but typing text with your thumbs makes this feature pretty much essential.

Yes — you have to type with your thumbs. If you’ve used a smartphone hardware keyboard like most Blackberries’ (or a slide-out like the Droid’s), this is familiar stuff. If your typing skills are optimized for a keyboard, or you’re not much of a typist to begin with, it’ll take some getting used to.

It’s surprising, actually, that we’re not seeing more innovation and experimentation in alt-keyboard devices. There’s nothing sacrosanct about the QWERTY keyboard layout other than that it’s what most typists in the English-speaking world have come to expect. Most people know that it appeared on early Remington typewriters because it kept the keys from clashing; if a rifle maker knew anything, it was precision-manufacturing a device not to jam.

But whether it’s hardware or software, we don’t have to worry about keys jamming on keyboards now. And yet, even swiping, chording, and hovering software keyboards use the QWERTY layout. Why not try an alphabetic keyboard — something designed for people who don’t do much typing at all? The last time I checked, relatively few people with TVs sit in front of a computer most of the day.

Or, if you’re targeting experts and speed freaks, why not try a version of the Dvorak layout?

Dvorak is an alternative keyboard configuration patented in 1932 and named for its inventor, August Dvorak. If QWERTY is the MS Windows of keyboards, Dvorak is the Mac. What its adherents lack in numbers, they make up in devotion. In “Seven Reasons to Switch to the Dvorak Keyboard layout,” Red Tani of WorkAwesome makes a good case:

In QWERTY, only 32% of keystrokes are on the home row. Which means most of the time, typists fingers are either reaching up for the top row (52%) or down for the bottom row (16%). So not only does QWERTY do nothing for typists, it actually hinders them.

Dvorak further increases typing speed by placing all vowels on the left side of the home row, and the most commonly used consonants on the right side. This guarantees that most of your strokes alternate between a finger on your right hand (consonant) and a finger on your left (vowel). Alternating between fingers from either hand is faster just imagine texting with one hand or drumming with one stick.

On a tiny mobile device, DVORAK could be comparatively even faster. More comfortable, too.

QWERTY beat out DVORAK because typists who’d learned the first were faster and more accurate using that layout than on the second. It’s a classic example of what economists and other social scientists call path-dependence and increasing returns: an inferior technology can beat a superior one if it’s adopted early and widely enough to lock out the competition.

So maybe somewhere out there is a new kind of phone/remote/controller-sized keyboard that blows the QWERTY keyboard away. The trouble is, most of us would be better off typing with something else, if they were giving superior machines away. The new TiVo remote acknowledges that this is the world we live in.

Photos: TiVo.com, Wikipedia

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Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews

Leather Case Turns iPad into Netbook

A new, soon to be released case for the iPad comes with a built-in Bluetooth keyboard that will effectively turn the tablet into a netbook. The leather folio-style case has an ingenious design that lets flips between three configurations. Closed; open with the iPad in normal, touch-screen use and open, propping up the iPad with the keyboard flat in front of it.

The keyboard itself is made of silicone and will therefore be squishy and very likely unresponsive. It has a home button along with all the media controls you’d expect, and will go into sleep mode to save batteries after ten minutes of non-use. The battery, must be charged separately from the iPad (although you can use your iPad’s charging cable to do it) and will give up to 45 hours of use on a charge.

It looks kind of neat, if you really want such a bulky thing. I prefer Apple’s Bluetooth keyboard as it is small enough to sling in your bag, but separate so I don’t have to carry it with the iPad all the time. In fact, I bought the Apple keyboard but almost never use it. Like Wired.com NY bureau chief John C Abell, I find I actually prefer typing on the iPad’s screen. The auto-correct along with the big keys means I actually type faster and more accurately on that than I do on a “real” keyboard.

Doubtless there are plenty who rightly disagree, and for them, this case exists. It’ll cost you sixty British Pounds Sterling ($93), or likely less when it makes its way to a US outlet.

KeyCase iPad Folio with Integrated Bluetooth Keyboard [Gearzap via Apple Insider]

Follow us for real-time tech news: Charlie Sorrel and Gadget Lab on Twitter.

Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews

Suicidal Bluetooth Headset Looks Like Gun

Mike Haeg is the mayor of Mount Holly, Minnesota*. He also hates talking on the telephone, and to make his point he hacked together this amazing Bluetooth headset. Inside, the guts are that same as you’d find in any other Bluetooth earpiece. Outside, it’s a gun.

Take a call and you look like you’re about to blow your own brains out. I’m totally with Mayor Mike on this: I feel suicidal every time my cellphone rings (unless the called is from my honey-voiced editor Dylan Tweney, in which case I close my eyes, kick back and just let the lilting, mellifluous tones wash over me).

Mike’s headset charges over USB, and works like this: ” I draw the gun out of my pocket, stick the barrel in my ear (the speaker is in the business end), and pull the trigger to answer the call.” Screwing your eyes shut before you pull that trigger is optional but recommended.

The next stage may or may not be a coat of paint to make the orange toy a little more realistic. Mike says “I get equally giddy and frightened by the panic that this could cause should someone not notice that the gun is a fake or should I accidentally take a call while at the bank.”

This is my favorite hack this month. Playful, simple and very funny. I’m thinking of making two. One to use, and a matching water-filled squirt-gun to sneakily swap in when somebody wants to try it out.

Handgun Bluetooth Earpiece Project [Mt. Holly Mayor's Office via Boing Boing]

*Minnesota’s Smallest Town

Follow us for real-time tech news: Charlie Sorrel and Gadget Lab on Twitter.

Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews

This post was written by Journalist on August 3, 2010

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Apple’s Magic Trackpad Brings Multi-Touch to the Desktop

Apple’s oft-leaked multi-touch trackpad is now on sale. The Magic Trackpad is a multi-touch tablet-style pad which is either a bigger version of the trackpad on the MacBook, or a smaller version of the iPad’s screen.

Like every other Apple touch-device, it is made from glass, and the panel is set into an aluminum base. The batteries that power it (the unit is Bluetooth) sit in a tube at the back, and it looks like nothing more than Apple’s Bluetooth keyboard, chopped in half and with the keys removed.

The pad works with swipe and pinch gestures, and even has the “momentum-scrolling” familiar to iOS users as well as owners of the latest MacBooks. It’s not going to replace your Wacom Tablet, as there is no pressure detection, but it will replace a mouse on a desktop Mac. The price? $70, and available now.

Magic Trackpad [Apple]

Follow us for real-time tech news: Charlie Sorrel and Gadget Lab on Twitter.

Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews

iPad Sheet-Music Foot-Switch is a Real Page-Turner

If you’re using both hands to play a musical instrument, the last thing you want to worry about is turning the pages of sheet-music as you play. The traditional solution was to make somebody do it for you, or to quickly reach up and do it yourself.

Tech has helped. These days a laptop with a USB foot-pedal is the way to go, but there have been all manner of spring-loaded and hydraulic contraptions invented to turn actual paper pages. These were, as you might expect, less than reliable.

Airturn, maker of sheet-music-reading software and hardware, has come up with a solution for the iPad. Apple’s tablet would seem to be the perfect device for reading music: it’s big enough to replace a piece of paper, whilst still slim and light enough to put on a music stand. Combined with Airturn’s new Bluetooth foot-switch, it makes a reliable, wire-free and practical solution.

The BT-105, as it is called, has a pair of switches, one to page forward, and one to page back. The switch doesn’t just work with the company’s own software, either. The video demo shows it controlling a third-party app with a zoom feature. In this case, the switch can tell the app to flip half a page at a time or, more accurately, to show the second half of the page before it flips to the next one.

The switch is in development right now, but should be available in the last quarter of this year.

iPad Bluetooth page turner footswitch prototype [Airturn. Thanks, Hugh!]

Follow us for real-time tech news: Charlie Sorrel and Gadget Lab on Twitter.

Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews

This post was written by Journalist on July 21, 2010

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IPad Keyboard Dock Works with iOS4

IOS4 will let you use a Bluetooth keyboard to type on your iPhone or iPod Touch and control various other functions. I’m writing this post on a latest-gen iPod Touch with an Apple Wireless Keyboard and it works great: The brightness buttons, volume and iTunes keys all do what you’d expect. This is a headline feature of the new iOS, shown off by Apple right there on the about pages.

What you may be surprised to learn is that the iPhone will also work when forced into the iPad Keyboard Dock, as tested by internationally-beloved technology pundit Andy Ihnatko. Once squeezed onto the dock connector, you get all the same functionality as you would with a Bluetooth keyboard, with the added danger of busting your iPhone due to the tight fit (the slimmer iPod Touch should work a lot better).

You might remember that you can also hook up a keyboard to the iPad via the USB camera connection kit. I can’t test this as mine is still on back-order, but Ihnatko tried it out an the answer is a big “no”. The iPhone flashes up its non-compatible accessory warning. Ah well.

I can’t say typing long-form text on the tiny screen is any fun, but it would certainly be better than typing long-form text on the iPhone’s screen. Even so, Apple’s minuscule Bluetooth keyboard is still large when compared to the iPhone. Perhaps this will kick-start the market in foldable, rollable keyboard accessories?

The iPad Keyboard Dock works with the iPhone 3GS! [CWOB]

Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews