Jul 2, 2008 0
Jul 2, 2008 1
Why Wait for Toyota? The Carver One
Well, while you wait for Toyota to jump into real production, we’ll take this baby that’s available right now. For about $22,000 pounds (about 40 grand), you can have this Dutch beauty in your garage now. The Carver One, a single passenger (and two passenger in some styles) vehicle that’s essentially a covered motorcyle, but with real car cred. The flyest feature is its ability to turn corners on a dime in a very similar way that crotch rockets turn. It’s the best of both worlds - the safety of a car, the sexy of a bike. I want one - now!
Jul 2, 2008 0
What Happened to the Toyota PM?
Given all the gas price madness lately (projections of $15 per gallon in 7 years?), people who hit the auto shows are no doubt asking what’s happened to all those cool concept cars from years past that promised so much. Like the Toyota PM, the single passenger “personal mobility” vehicle promoted by Toyota in 2003. Guess all the money being made on the Prius has pushed this one concept back a bit.
Jun 25, 2008 0
Whose iPod Do We Dance to Tonight?
Just released from JVC, the NX-PN 7 a dual iPod docking station that’s configured either for two pure iPods or an iPod and iPhone. Of course it charges both, but it also allows you to switch back and forth between the two if you’ve got a couple of Party Mixes loaded up.
All it needs now is a remote that lets you do turntable-like scratching between two iPods. Hey, what an idea! We said it first. No fair stealing.
Feb 22, 2008 0
Walmart Goes BluRay - Best Reason Ever to Buy a PS3
So it finally happened. The BETA - VHS battle of the 21st century, Blu-Ray v. HD DVD gets settled by none other than WalMart. Hard to figure this decision. Why make a choice in a technological environment that about having many choices?
Not that anything’s wrong with Blu-Ray, it’s beautiful and perhaps superior to HD DVD, but why would WalMart piss off all those Best Buy customers (who represent the same market) and make all those HD DVDs they got for Christman obsolete? Way too much power in the hands of one company.
Our best advice - buy a PS3, which doubles as a BluRay player. That way you get Guitar Hero and all your movies all in one.
Jan 15, 2008 1
Best Overall Category: High Performance Audio
In a digital world filled with more and more devices to distribute and playback music, it’s amazing that not one of those fancy new items seem to actively pitch the sonic quality of the music that they’re making so portable. That’s what made the High Performance Audio section of CES so refreshing. It’s good to know that somewhere in the outer reaches of the tech world, dedicated lovers of real music are slaving away at things like pitch, modulation and clarity and developing the perfect tone arm for the even more perfect turntable. Thank you, folks.
Jan 15, 2008 1
Personal Favorites from CES: The Motorola Rokr E8
I haven’t discussed mobile phones that much. Frankly, phones need their own mini-version of CES. It’s nearly impossible to make sense of the fairly minute differences in design and functionality from product to product, and after looking at hundreds of them it just makes your head spin. Nevertheless, amid madness, a standout - The Motorola Rokr E8. On this point, there seems to be a consensus. The device won overall points from CES judges, and on major tech sites like CNET and Gizmodo. The Rokr raises the stakes a bit on the touch technology identified with iPhone, and with its dedicated photo function and real lens (not just a whole in the back) it also steps up photo capability and facilitates sharing to social networking sites. On the market in about 90 days.
Jan 15, 2008 0
Personal Favorites from CES: The Pioneer Elite Kuro
Yes, another TV, and yes, this time for the TV. Pioneer smartly went the reverse of their peers and went beautiful instead of big with almost all their product lines, but most significantly in the TV realm. CES is one million square feet of exaggerated, overblown, overly lit exhibit space that not only overwhelms but blinds you after a while. For a TV monitor to make you stop and admire the picture in the midst of such confusion is a major tribute the superiority of this product.
Jan 14, 2008 0
Personal Favorites from CES: The 108″ Sharp Aquos Wall
Yeah, I know, after all those jokes about big TV’s, dumb guys and penis envy, I turn into the average guy and go for the big honking flat screen. But it’s not about a big TV. In fact, the TV part is probably the least interesting feature. This is yet another elegant mashup of things that work well separately but becomes much more when fused together. In this instance, a ginormous wall-sized screen mixed with what is essentially a computer desktop full of essential widgets. Again, let’s talk practical life here: You walk into your fairly large kitchen/family room and instead of having to abandon what you’re doing to sit down to a computer and check your calendar, then flick on the TV to see weather and pick up another device to make a call, the size of this screen allows you to get your essential information in a much more passive way, but also gives you the freedom to interact with and manipulate the experience.
Imagine someone e-mailing you, say, a list of those endless school fundraising events and having them show up on your wall for easy reference next to a tool that can tell you the weather on that date. Yes, your computer can do that now, but taking the computer out of this and giving me more engagement with my surrounding instead of a small screen sells it for me. Of everything I saw, this is what I want right now most. If it can be done as a projection instead of a 108″ display - even better.
Jan 14, 2008 0
Personal Favorites from CES: That Westinghouse Refrigerator
I have somewhat of a bias when it comes to technology. As much of a gadget fan as I am, I am most excited about those products that really address some of the basic needs that people have and make life just a little bit simpler and more organized. And frankly, the home is where the sweet spot is. The refrigerator is not a very sexy product and digital frames (like iPod docks) are now ubiquitous and a dime a dozen. But the combination of a refrigerator with a digital frame is one of those simple mashed-up ideas that are inspired.
The kitchen is the centerpoint of the modern home, still much more so than the family room with that enormous flat screen. The Westinghouse refrigerator elegantly answers a few problems: (1) What do I do with all those digital photos that never see the light of day on my computer, (2) How do I get those stupid magnets off my expensive stainless steel appliances, and (3) How do I engage my family in the place that they spend the most time without turning on another TV?
I know it’s an unusual choice for a top pick with all this other cool stuff around, but in terms of practical use and ready to market availability, this is on a short list of the things I came away wanting immediately.





