• Entertainment & Gaming

    Why You Get More Spam Than Your Friends

    By Jaya Jiwatram Posted on 9.9.2008 2 Comments

    What's in a name? A lot more than etymology. When it comes to junk mail, it turns out some names fare better than others in e-mail addresses depending on what letter they start with, according to a study conducted at the University of Cambridge. In an attempt to explain why certain people get more spam, computer security researcher Dr. Richard Clayton reviewed more than 550 million e-mails sent to customers through one of the U.K's. biggest internet service providers between February and March this year.

    9.10.2008 at 10:04pm - Comment by redbaaron

    wow

  • Gadgets

    Call of the Mild

    By Posted on 6.5.2008 4 Comments

    On a scale of outdoor bravado, I fall closer to Disney’s River Country then Sean Penn’s Into the Wild. But, I wasn’t about to let a lack of Eagle Scout skills keep from enjoying and evaluating a new backpack from Skull Candy. So this past Memorial Day, I took my own urban hike through downtown San Francisco from barbecue to beachfront. The Link Hydro Pack features two key components intended for the enjoyment by “mountain bikers, hikers and snow enthusiasts,” but easily altered to enhance a weekend of burgers, beaches and perhaps a few cold brews: speakers and a ½ gallon hydration pack. Appropriate usage of the hydration pack requires no direction or formal training. More tactful and subtle then the beer helmet yet equally potent, our chosen form of hydration remained chilled after several hours in the sun.

    6.6.2008 at 07:15pm - Comment by redbaaron

    That Backpack looks very cool. But It is beyond my price range and I don't know how rugged the iPod speakers are so I wouldn't get this right now. Still it looks like a nifty little bugger that I might consider one day

  • Science

    Do More with the PSP

    By Posted on 1.22.2008 2 Comments

    Dept.: Hidden Talents
    Tech.: Sony PlayStation Portable
    Cost: Free ($250 for the PSP)
    Time: 10 minutes
    Dabbler | | | | | Master

    4.29.2008 at 11:31pm - Comment by redbaaron

    i want to do that but i have barley any computer skills at all! also im not so sure it will work because i have a new version of the psp.

  • Gadgets

    Note to Apple: The iPhone is Not the Best iPod You've Ever Made

    By Posted on 1.22.2008 7 Comments

    There are plenty of well-publicized gripes with the iPhone. A slow mobile data network, tricky keyboard, no MMS, etc. The list goes on. None of the big spec-related weaknesses have proven to be dealbreakers for me yet as I've been using the iPhone this week (I'm trying to defer to the iPhone instead of my home PC, stereo, television and pretty much any other gadget to test its convergence abilities accordingly). In a device billed to be all about its revolutionary user interface software, with even the tiniest of details carefully though-out in true Apple fashion for ease of use, it's logical to assume that the phone's most painful shortcomings will also be revealed in the smaller details. Case-in-point: when I first plugged in the iPhone to my home computer after its initial sync, its music tracks were grayed-out in iTunes. I thought this may have had to do with using a different computer from the one I used to activate the phone, but alas, after a bit more research, it turns out this is default behavior. Not only can you not play songs on your iPhone via iTunes, but you also cannot manually drag-and-drop media files for loading into its memory like every other iPod. You can only sync the iPhone with a playlist or library on a single computer. So if you use more than one computer to listen to and organize your music, you're out of luck—the only way to load music onto the iPhone is to have it mirror an iTunes playlist on your computer track-for-track. Any songs on your iPhone that aren't on the computer you're syncing with are deleted. I keep different music collections on my computers at work and at home. With my dusty old black-and-white iPod I can simply plug in at work and load an album I may not have at home without erasing the songs that only live on my home computer. But with the iPhone, I have to choose which computer to use exclusively. Sure, this prevents you from plugging your iPhone into all of your coworkers' computers and grabbing their music without paying for it (again, something all other iPods can do), but it also prevents you from loading the album you just legally purchased from the iTunes store or ripped from one of the CDs you keep at work for your trip home.  So buried beneath the legitimately great touch interface, a larger screen and snazzy Cover Flow browser lies a limitation that could be minor to some, but fairly significant to others. If Apple is serious about a DRM-free future, why the uncharacteristically paranoid feature crippling? Let's hope this gets hacked (or updated) soon. —John Mahoney Link - "help manually managing music" - Apple Support Discussion Forums

    4.29.2008 at 11:20pm - Comment by redbaaron

    well mabe its not the best ipod, the itouch is, but overall it has astounding value it has itunes, maps, safari, phone, notes.... but if you don't want the phone but safari and other cool things go for the ipod touch

  • Science

    Pop!Tech: Pleo Unleashed!

    By Posted on 1.22.2008 1 Comments

    Weve been anxiously awaiting the debut of the Pleo—the super high-tech robo-dino loaded with sensors and artificial intelligence—since we first reported on it last year.  Here at Pop!Tech, I had a chance to chat with the Pleos inventor, Caleb Chung. He brought along the latest prototype (its scheduled to go on sale this Christmas) which proceeded to graze, coo and whine adorably throughout the interview—Chung fed him my business card when he got hungry. I must say, the thing is really cute. And it's all in the little details: he sort of giggles when you chuck him under the chin, has big blue eyes that blink and get droopy when he gets tired, and so on. Chung says they're the most realistic-looking eyes ever placed in a toy and, looking at the Pleo, I believe him.  The other really amazing thing about the Pleo physically is its uniquely soft, rubbery skin. You can sort of scrunch it up in your hand, like puppy scruff, which I proceeded to do immediately. Interestingly, the skin was one of the hardest parts of the Pleo to make, Chung told me, because it basically makes the toy a walking rubber bag. "How do you get sound out of a rubber bag? How do you dissipate heat?" Much has been made of the pet's artificial intelligence capabilities, but the cooler feature, I think, is the Pleo's programmable open-source computing platform. Want him to speak with your voice? Sleep less? Eat more? He's your pet and you can train him as you please. Hacks are welcome, says Chung. You could even take advantage of Pleos more than 33 sensory inputs—object detectors, infrared sensors, capacitive touch sensors, and more—turning him into a smoke detector or a surveillance cam for your home (my ideas, not Chung's). Making the Pleo quite the multi-talented Dino. And did I mention its cute? —Nicole Dyer

    4.19.2008 at 03:21pm - Comment by redbaaron

    sounds cool. but i don't need it right now

  • Entertainment & Gaming

    Can a Swimsuit Be Too Good?

    By Posted on 3.27.2008 21 Comments

    digg_url = 'http://digg.com/design/Can_a_Swimsuit_Be_Too_Good'; Even we didnt guess it would be this good. When I wrote last month about Speedos latest swimsuit—an extremely high-tech full-body wonder—three world records had already been broken by LZR-clad swimmers. Coincidence? Maybe. But, after eight more records fell in the past month, the suit is causing some serious waves.

    3.30.2008 at 05:56pm - Comment by redbaaron

    i think that swim suits can't make that much of a difference. if people are complaining than just standarize the kind of swim suit. As KingFatty says above they're not doing it for shoes, so why swimsuits???

  • Entertainment & Gaming

    iTunes: Not Ready for Primetime

    By Posted on 3.18.2008 17 Comments

    It was in the third hour of a bewildering odyssey into the iTunes rental wilderness (I and my crew were fiercely at arms with a six-foot DVI cable) when a quote I had read in the paper earlier that day came back to me with sudden, crystalline truthiness. It was in a brief New York Times piece recounting a staged talk between exmedia mogul Michael Eisner and polymath Mark Cuban at last weeks SXSW Interactive conference.

    3.23.2008 at 08:47pm - Comment by redbaaron

    All right. I won't rent any movies. But there are some cool ones on there. But in theory I could just put the movie on my iPod and then be able to watch it right now, that is if i got the connecting cord that you can hook up to the TV.

  • Science

    Dropping the Big One

    By Posted on 1.28.2008 2 Comments

    3.23.2008 at 08:36pm - Comment by redbaaron

    This is scary. I don't like the idea of Russians having a bomb like that. Maybe we can learn from it. Still.........

  • Technology

    DARPA's Amazing Robot Pack Mule Keeps its Balance On Ice

    By Posted on 3.17.2008 17 Comments

    Two years ago we showed you Boston Dynamics' incredible BigDog—one of the world's most ambitious legged robots—being developed for DARPA and the U.S. Army. With its advanced system of hyper-responsive hydraulic joints and a suite of sensors, accelerometers and gyroscopes, the BigDog's most stunning achievement is it's ability to walk, climb and maintain its balance on diverse terrain, even after slipping on ice or receiving a kick to one side. All while carrying several hundreds of pounds of supplies on its "back."

    3.23.2008 at 08:14pm - Comment by redbaaron

    Wow!!!! That's amazing. Ya think that people are going to use this for helping doctors too?



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