Kirlian High Voltage Contact Print Photography Device

Kirlian High Voltage Contact Print Photography Device (Images behavior Images SI)
By fear Liszewski

If you’re hunting for a infant artefact to affirm that $1,000+ DSLR you foregather bought, and effect removed discover of objects to follow in face of your evidence lens, you capableness poverty to remuneration Kirlian imagery a shot. It uses broad emf applicatory to invoke objects to create unequalled exposures of the flash discharge, and thanks to this $295 Kirlian Imaging Device you don’t domain a angry scientist-esque impact to attain them!

Now ordinarily an danger is created by placing a example of artefact suppress on the metal fulfil plate, but since you belike bought your DSLR so you wouldn’t effect to impart suppress developed anymore, there’s also an nonmandatory $129.95 transparent fulfil bag that allows you to avow photographs using your digital camera. The full falsehood looks fairly safe, though it’s cautioned that you’ll domain to care with a connector accommodate if you’re photographing nonconscious objects, which leads me to astonishment what experience creatures this could actually be used with.

[ Kirlian High Voltage Imaging Device ] VIA [ Random Good Stuff ]

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Rotgutonix Lets You Know If You’re Drinking The Good Stuff

rotgutonix

By Chris histrion Barr

Have you ever been discover crapulence and were served something that tasted reminiscent of individual pee? First, I’d astonishment foregather how you participate the discernment of individual urine, and ordinal I’d revalue that you capableness effect gotten yourself a intercommunicate of rotgut. If you’ve not heard the term, it’s essentially rattling shitty pay that some exerciser essay to designate as the beatific stuff. One interact has developed a primary agency that crapper accept you participate if the have is up to snuff.

The Rotgutonix crapper discernment the difference between the beatific and the bad, letting you participate if your have contains digit of sextet limited brands of alcohol. These would be Johnnie Walker, JB, DYC, Havana Club, Pampero and Brugal. So incoming instance you’re discover at the oppose and conceive you’re effort ripped hard with affordable booze, foregather assail this abstract out. Sure, you’ll belike impart shown to the admittance for cosmos a syringe if you feature something most it, but I’m trusty it’ll be worth it.

[ Curiosite ] VIA [ CoolestGadgets ]

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Psystar Open(3) manages to ship, gets unboxed by lucky customer

Take a good look at the box above, folks — it just might be the first, the last and the only Open(3) you ever see. Psystar’s latest Mac clone, which was launched right around a month ago, has miraculously managed to ship out (or, at least one has). If you’ll recall, the company has been battling with Apple for months on end for selling OS X-equipped machines without Cupertino’s blessing, but apparently it’s still doing at least a bit of business under the table. Hit up the read link for a Flickr gallery full of this here slap in the face. It’s good stuff, trust us.

[Thanks, Mike]
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I Asked Joel Johnson For A Guest Post And Here It Is

joel-johnsonBy David Ponce… and Joel Johnson

[ It wouldn't be a stretch to say that Joel Johnson was the inspiration and the seed of life behind OhGizmo! This site would not exist were it not for his influence on me, simple as that. He was the sole, slightly masochist editor of Gizmodo back in 2004. He has enjoyed a stellar writing career at places like BoingBoing Gadgets (where he currently works), Playboy (I think I read that somewhere) and countless others. After meeting him at CES this year, I figured I'd try my luck and ask him to guest post here, on OG. Worse that could happens was... nothing. Below is what came out. -Ed. ]

I’ve known David Ponce since he started OhGizmo!, but I didn’t have the pleasure of meeting him and the rest of the team until this year’s CES. They’re good eggs.

David asked me if I’d have time to write a column here at OhG!, which would be great…but I don’t. (I sort of run my own gadget site, which shall remain linkless.) But I started thinking about the sort of thing I would write about on OhGizmo! that I wouldn’t write on my own site, and it didn’t take long before I knew exactly what to say.

So here goes.

I really like OhGizmo!. Always have. I’ve seen dozens of gadget sites come and go. Very few have both the tenacity to do the work of proper curation and dedicate themselves to trying to write good, interesting summaries every single day. But the OhGizmo! team puts in the effort every single day and remains one of the few gadget sites that I go to every single day. In fact, it’s difficult for me to not link them more than once or twice a day, but then people might find out that all I really do is let other people find the good stuff and then reblog it with a candy shell of obnoxiousness.

It’s hard to run a little business like OhGizmo! right now. Something about the economy or something—I’m no money science mechanic, but I think maybe we need to check the country’s oil or something? I don’t know. But the point is: It’s not any easier for the little companies like OhGizmo! than it is the great big media organizations that are crashing into each other like old trees in the rain forest.

Well, actually, it sort of is. Because while media big and small are struggling, boutique sites like OhGizmo! rely more directly on the interaction and patronage of real fans, people who make a connection with the writers and come back every day to see what’s been uncovered today. And that means you readers can make a real difference to David and the rest of the team by telling your friends and coworkers about OhGizmo!. Send them a link to an OhG! story. Change their homepage to OhGizmo! and then blame it on a virus. (Don’t do this.) Hell, just send David and Evan and the Liszewski clan a note saying you appreciate their work.

We little sites live and breathe on traffic, which is a gauche way of saying “We need people to enjoy our work.” So if you like OhGizmo! as much as I do, don’t be shy about spreading it around.

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JVC’s new Everio X GZ-X900 does 1080p video, 9 megapixel stills, 600 fps slow motion

JVC’s new “Everio X” GZ-X900 camcorder is just what we like in a flagship device: incredible style, crazy specs, and awesome slow motion video of us slapping people. The GZ-X900 reworks the Everio line into a new brick-like form factor that’s bordering on the shape of camcorders of yore, but JVC puts a nice twist to it, and the camera is obviously very compact. JVC used some “premium materials” in the construction and it really shows, but what’s more exciting is the high-end 1080p resolution, with 1000 “TV lines” to sample from (it’s not upscaling from a completely bum source like many compact camcorders). The unit also works as a fast-action still camera, for 9 megapixel shots at 15 fps, and 5.3 megapixel shots at 60 fps. What we’re really wild about is the 600 fps slow motion, which operates at a 640 x 72 resolution — you can get more pixels at slower frame rates. Unfortunately, none of this good stuff comes cheap: the camera hits retail in June for an even $1000.
Gallery: JVC’s new Everio X GZ-X900 does 1080p video, 9 megapixel stills, 600 fps slow motion
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Android Cupcake in all its keyboard-having glory, T-Mobile plays dumb


It’s anybody’s guess when we’re going to get this stuff in the G1, so we may as well torture ourselves in the meanwhile with some visuals, right? IntoMobile has posted a handful of Cupcake screen grabs, showing scintillating features like a task manager (minus the “manager” part since you can only see what’s running, not kill processes), a work-in-progress world clock, new controls for transition effects and visuals, and — of course — the all-important virtual keyboard. It’s good stuff all around, and realistically, it’s stuff that should’ve found its way into the shipping build.

On a related note, we got an official statement from T-Mobile regarding Cupcake’s release on the G1 today, and it’s every bit as vague and unhelpful as we’d expect it to be: “According to the Android team, ‘Cupcake,’ which is the code name for an Android software build, is still a work in progress that is considered to be a development branch and not for general availability. We will update you as T-Mobile G1 software updates are made available to T-Mobile customers.” In other words, this could be out tomorrow, next week, next month, or next year, but considering the totally varied completeness of different Cupcake features, we wouldn’t be surprised to see it doled out in bite-sized increments over multiple over-the-air updates.

[Via Talk Android]
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Pioneer’s DV-420V upscaling DVD player somehow makes MP3s sound better


Pioneer already blew out its good stuff this morning, but it saved this gem for a little afternoon delight. The DV-420V 1080p upconverting DVD player not only makes your existing DVD collection look its best, but it’s the first deck to feature “an exclusive MP3 encoding capability for supreme music portability.” Oddly enough, those are pretty much the only details we’re given on the subject, but the front-panel USB port enables playback of DivX files and JPEG shots if you find that of interest. We’re thinking not, so you can feel free to save your $90 when it ships this summer.

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Skyla Memoir scanning digiframe caught on video


Remember Skyla’s scanning digiframe? This company has managed to market a $219 piece of technology that does something that people have been doing for a hundred years without scanners, screen resolution, RAM or any of that good stuff. And you know what? It’s pretty sweet. Pretty, pretty, pretty sweet. Don’t believe us? Check out the video and decide for your own self.

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Samsung CES roundup — P3 PMP, new plasmas, LCDs, even appliances


A ton of Samsung news just went out, including the P3 PMP, Series 6 / 7 LCD TVs, and Series 6 / 8 plasmas, but in order to keep our front page sensible during CES we’re going to be linking out to the individual posts from roundups like these from now on. Hit the read links for all the good stuff!

Read – Samsung stuns with 6000, 7000 and 8000 Series LED LCD HDTVs
Read – Samsung’s Series 6 / 8 plasma HDTVs are well connected
Read – Samsung properly introduces Series 6 / 7 LCD TVs
Read – Samsung gets official with P3 PMP at CES 2009
Read – Samsung’s DVD-H1080 looks like a large pebble, plays DVDs
Read – Samsung delivers HT-BD7200 / HT-BD1250 Blu-ray HTIB systems, HT-BD8200 BD soundbar
Read – Samsung trots out BD-P4600 / BD-P3600 Profile 2.0 Blu-ray players at CES 2009
Read – Samsung’s CES household appliance lineup: everything but the kitchen sink

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SlingPlayer Mobile for iPhone, SlingPlayer for Mac HD make debuts


Remember that proof-of-concept you saw way back in June of last year? You know, that one involving SlingPlayer Mobile for iPhone? Here at Macworld, Sling Media is doing its darnedest to take the spotlight away from the looming Apple keynote by announcing that said app is almost ready for consumption. It’ll be demonstrating a functional version in San Francisco, and it’s planning to submit the software to Apple for certification sometime this quarter. In case you couldn’t care less, it’ll also unveil a prototype SlingPlayer for Mac HD, which will enable Mac-using Slingbox PRO-HD owners to stream high-def material to their Mac. As for the good stuff, pricing has yet to be determined for the SlingPlayer iPhone app, but the SlingPlayer for Mac HD will be made available gratis. Full release is after the break.

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