Elecom Travel Mouse Can Hide Its USB Cable Under Its Skirt

Elecom M-MK1UR Travel Mouse (Image behavior Geek Stuff 4 U)
By fear Liszewski

Because of its diminutive filler and add small receiver, I typically propose Logitech’s wireless VX Nano pussyfoot for travelers not thrilled with their laptop’s touchpad. But it crapper be a discernment pricey at times, so if you’d favour to go with a more inexpensive unsmooth model, the Elecom M-MK1UR features a accessible foam contact that crapper be raised allowing you to twine up and accumulation the USB message when not in use. It’s acquirable for pre-order today from Geek Stuff 4 U in a difference of significance for most $41.

[ Elecom M-MK1UR Travel Mouse ] VIA [ Akihabara News ]

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LG BL42 Chocolate leaked; springy pics with LG BL40 spotted

LG BL40 is not the exclusive infant Negroid Series Chocolate good embattled by LG for this year.

The South Asiatic interact module also promulgation the LG BL42 – a mid-end good that seems to be the candid progeny of the example Chocolate.

Apparently, the LG BL42 module feature GSM/UMTS connectivity, a touchpad, a QVGA display, a sliding alphamerical keypad, and a 5MP camera with Flash and Schneider-Kreuznach optics.

Here’s what the LG BL42 looks like:

LG-BL42-Chocolate

LG-BL42-Chocolate 2

LG-BL42-Chocolate 3

LG-BL42-Chocolate 4

LG BL42 vs. the grownup LG Chocolate:

LG-BL42-Chocolate 5

Alongside the BL42, individual springy images of the high-end BL40 effect appeared over at the Telefon-Treff forum:

LG BL40 live

LG BL40 springy 2

LG BL42 vs. LG BL40 (notice the Brobdingnagian 800 x 345 pixels designate of BL40):

LG BL42 vs BL40

We don’t participate when LG module forebode the BL40 and the BL42, but it shouldn’t be daylong until this happens.

Via All About Phones

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Always Innovating Touch Book Supposedly Available This Month For $300

touchbook-custom

By Evan Ackerman

Always Innovating has taken a completely different approach to the burgeoning (and some might say cluttered) netbook market with their Touch Book tablet laptop… thing. Really, it’s a tablet computer that uses an 8.9″ touchscreen, but you can also use it with an attachable (more like, dockable) keyboard and touchpad that essentially turns it into more of a laptop.

There’s more besides the versatile form factor that differentiates the Touch Book from a netbook, though. Firstly, it’s always on, like a cell phone. No booting up, no shutting down, and it’s all solid state, so there’s no noisy fans. Somehow it manages to keep itself on for 10 hours with a single charge, thanks in part to a battery in the keyboard half as well as the screen half, although the entire package still weighs under 3 pounds. As you might expect, it has b/g/n WiFi and Bluetooth, plus an accelerometer and 3 external USB ports.

The only potential downside is that the Touch Book was not engineered to run Windows. It’s not just that it doesn’t come with Windows, it’s that Windows won’t work it. At all. Except maybe mobile versions of Windows. It unsurprisingly runs a custom distribution of Linux off of an SD card, which should easily provide enough functionality to do more or less everything you’d want to do with a mobile computer (web browsing, media, and light document editing). If you’re not happy with that, they’re also working on an Android version.

The Always Innovating Touch Book should be available sometime this month for $300, plus an extra $100 for the keyboard… It’s not a powerhouse compared to other netbooks in the price range, but it really speaks to what the core principle of a netbook is (or should be): flexible, mobile, inexpensive, basic computing.

[ Always Innovating ] VIA [ Gizmodo ]

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Artificial Muscle makes touchy devices burlier

In the future we envision artificial muscle driving our cybernetic soldiers and helping to repair our fleshier ones. In the present, though, it seems the tech is starting a little smaller, at least it is in the case of Artificial Muscle (the company), which has developed tech enabling a silicon film to expand or contract when a voltage is applied to it. It’s currently being used to create small pumps and linear actuators and the like, and is now is being pitched as a solution for feedback in touch-sensitive devices. The silicon film is thin enough to be inserted beneath a touchpad or touchscreen, moving the surface appropriately depending on what you’re stroking on-screen as shown in a video demonstration below. Impressively this tech will only cost “a couple dollars” to add to any given device, meaning even cheap netbooks could start coming with fidgity touchpads soon. Now that is progress.

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Lenovo’s ThinkPad X301 now with $9,969 multi-touch trackpad option

About a year ago Lenovo’s ThinkPad X300 launched as a direct competitor to Apple’s slinky MacBook Air. Over that time, the ultra-slim Thinkpad with a face for business has come to either match or dominate the MBA in nearly every category except the sexy. Now you can tick off one more as the X301 brings a new multi-touch trackpad option with fingerprint reader. In the typical befuddlement that seems to greet every new on-line spec on the Lenovo store, the new TouchPad is listed as a $9,969 option. Too rich? They maybe the $8,402 bump from a 1.4GHz to new 1.6GHz Core 2 Duo SU9600 processor will interest you?

[Thanks, James C.]

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EMTEC’s Gdium netbook reviewed: colorful case hides an underwhelming device

When you’re drowning in a flood of copycat netbooks it’s hard to not to be drawn to one that’s a little different, one like EMTEC’s Gdium, bravely forgoing internal storage in favor of a 16GB thumb drive “G-Key” and willfully ignoring the ubiquitous Atom processor. But, such attraction only gets you past so many inadequacies, and according to Laptop Magazine’s review this one has plenty. Its customized Linux interface was said to be nice, but that 900MHz MIPS architecture couldn’t even keep up with average netbooks, its touchpad was borderline unusable, and after a few moments placed on a lap the thing turned into a 112-degree oven — just the sort of thing that won’t do your future generations any good at all. Sure, the $349 price is lower than expected, but with Mini 9’s going for $150 less it’s not exactly a bargain.
Source

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Acer Timeline hands-on

We just got all friendly with Acer’s new Timeline lineup, and while we couldn’t technically grasp at the hours upon hours of battery life they’re promising, we could definitely feel the palpable presence of longevity. The laptops are very much an interesting blance; they’re thin, but not astonishingly thin, they’re heavy for their looks (especially the 15.3-inch), and they’re styled aggressively in some ways while incredibly conservatively in others. We’re not sure we’re sold on the funky trackpad setup — the right and left buttons aren’t articulated, are sunken below the level of the touchpad, and are rather hard to touch — but we like that Acer is really embracing multitouch here. The chiclet keys have a lot of great travel to them, but the board overall felt a little cheap and “prototype-ey” — it may very well be a prototype.
Gallery: Acer Timeline hands-on

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HP Pavilion dv2 review roundup

We figure the design just to the left of the touchpad is more than enough to convince you to impulse-buy the $750 HP Pavilion dv2, but just in case you hesitated, the reviews are in and it’s not all sunshine for the AMD Neo-powered non-netbook. Laptop Magazine notes it handles HD video pretty well, but it suffers from a cramped keyboard, above average heat, and a less than stellar battery life. Instead, they suggest a Samsung NC20 as a ligher, cheaper alternative. CNET said it got beat performance-wise by Intel Core 2 Duo laptops of comparable price range, and although it bested Atom in most tests, the two processors tied when multitasking. As for PC World, like Laptop, they did give kudos for better graphics performance, but added the caveat that the NC20 and upcoming MSI X-Slim X320 would give it a run for its money. For all the nitty-gritty details, browse through the reviews below.

Read – Laptop Magazine
Read – PC Magazine
Read – CNET

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Plethora of new Acer Aspires, eMachines, Gateway laptops and netbooks unveiled in one fell swoop

In addition to Timeline and the 11.6-inch Aspire One, Acer decided today to announce new laptops much in the way Nikon and other camera makers roll out their PMA lineup — in groups of eight or more. By our count, we’ve got at least ten different models here.

Aspire 5935 and 8935: The 18.4-inch 8935 laptop can output a 1080p resolution, True 5.1 channel surround sound and houses up to two HDDs totaling 1TB capacity. The 5935 meanwhile can hold just one 500GB HDD and doesn’t do full HD. Both support up to 4GB DDR3 memory, biometric fingerprinting, 802.11 b/g, Bluetooth 2.0, and optional WiMAX.
Aspire 3935: A 13.3-inch ultra portable with 1366 x 769 resolution LED-backlit LCD and Intel Core 2 Duo / GM45 express chipset. Features built-in Wi-Fi / WiMAX, up to 4GB DDR3 RAM, biometric fingerprints, and 8 hours of use with a 8-cell battery.
eMachines D, E, and G series (pictured): 16 x 9 aspect ratio LCD. Available with Intel Celeron or Pentium processors for all models, plus option for AMD Athlon with E and G series. 14-inch D and 17-inch G have up to 4GB DDR2 RAM, 500GB HDD, while the 15.6-inch E series can feature up to 5GB. All of them boast a wide keyboard, WiFi, webcam, DVD drive, a 5-in-1 card reader, and Windows Vista SP1.
Gateway EC series: Lightweight and less than 1-inch thick. The 13-inch netbook has an LED backlit screen with 16 x 9 aspect ratio, Dolby Sound Room, SSD, DDR3 RAM, HDMI out, optional 3G and Bluetooth, webcam, and capacitive hotkeys on top of the keyboard.
Gateway 10.1-inch LT20, 11.6-inch LT30: Both are under 2.62 pounds, boast built-in WiFi, Webcam, optional Bluetooth and 3G modules, 5-in-1 card reader, and up to 160GB HDD. The touch pad supports multi-gesture features and reportedly it comes with a “cool protective bag” — yay?
Gateway ID series: Available in glossy midnight blue or night sky with a matte interior and silver-colored touchpad. It’s got an 15.6-inch LED backlit screen, slot-in DVD drive, webcam with a curtain (for privacy, obviously), mult-gesture touchpad, and capacitive hotkeys on top of the keyboard.

There’s still got plenty of missing pieces here, such as pricing and availability for anything here, but one thing’s for sure: we are thoroughly overwhelmed by the sheer number of new offerings.
Gallery: Acer laptop roundup
Source

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OhGizmo! Review – Contour Design RollerMouse Free

RollerMouse Free (Image property of OhGizmo!)
By Andrew Liszewski

The first time I played with Contour Design’s RollerMouse Free was at CES earlier this year, and I’ll admit that I was initially drawn to the unusual looking device because I was spending my last day at the show specifically hunting down unusual items. But I was already familiar with Contour Design, having used one of their ShuttlePRO edit controllers for the past few years, so I knew the company produced some quality gear and I was willing to give them the benefit of the doubt.

For those not familiar with the RollerMouse Free, or missed my CES post about it, it’s basically another alternative to a mouse/trackball/tablet/touchpad that helps reduce repetitive stress injuries with a unique ‘rolling bar’ design. And even though I was extremely skeptical that the RollerMouse could replace my traditional mouse, it only took a few minutes of use on the show floor to convince and impress me.

I was told by the Contour Design rep at CES that the RollerMouse Free was destined for a March release, and sure enough, last week the company sent me a final production unit to spend some quality time with. So hit the jump for my full review and some more photos.

RollerMouse Free (Image property of OhGizmo!)

If you didn’t know any better, at first glance you might think the RollerMouse Free was actually an Apple product, given it’s clean white packaging. But as I’ve said before, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, and if you’re going to imitate a company’s packaging, you can’t do much better than Apple. Nothing wrong with that.

RollerMouse Free (Image property of OhGizmo!)

You’ll also find the simple and clean motif inside the RollerMouse’s packaging, which is rather minimal. Besides the RollerMouse Free itself, you’ll also find a multi-language user’s guide (in this case for the RollerMouse PRO, which is an older version of the product from what I understand) and a set of various sized stick-on rubber feet.

RollerMouse Free (Image property of OhGizmo!)

I assume the rubber feet are meant to raise the RollerMouse Free, or adjust its angle depending on how you use them, but I found them to be more useful with my keyboard. The RollerMouse is actually designed to sit just below your computer’s keyboard so that your hands are always close to the roller bar while you’re typing. But I currently use Apple’s aluminum keyboard which sits quite low compared to the RollerMouse, making it hard to reach the keys when used together. But these rubber risers helped to lift the keyboard to a height that better matched the RollerMouse, making it more comfortable to use.

RollerMouse Free (Image property of OhGizmo!)

Like I’ve already stated a few times, at first glance you wonder how the RollerMouse Free could ever replace your trusty mouse, but its roller bar mechanism actually works quite well. Rolling it forward and back controls the vertical movement of your cursor on-screen, while sliding the bar left and right controls the horizontal movement. It does take a bit of getting used to, but even skeptical co-workers got the hang of it in less than 5 minutes, and could immediately see its benefits.

One obvious downside to the RollerMouse though is that it’s roughly the same overall dimensions as your computer’s keyboard. So while it might provide a more ergonomic alternative to a mouse, it’s not really going to free up a lot of desktop real estate.

RollerMouse Free (Image property of OhGizmo!)

However, out of the box the RollerMouse Free comes with a padded wrist-rest which I found makes using it considerably more comfortable. But it’s easily removed should you find it to be in the way, or if you were hoping to reduce the RollerMouse’s overall footprint.

RollerMouse Free (Image property of OhGizmo!)

In addition to moving the cursor, the roller bar can also be ‘clicked’ allowing it to serve as your left mouse button, but you’ll also find a dedicated scroll wheel and a set of additional mouse buttons located just below it. By default these buttons come pre-configured for various functions (left-click, right-click ,double-click etc.) but as far as I can tell they can’t be customized. The RollerMouse Free doesn’t actually come with or need any special drivers, which is good. But it also means there’s no software-based configuration utility, which is kind of bad.

Now the previous version of the RollerMouse, the ‘Pro’ model, used a set of dip switches (yep, remember those?) located underneath the mouse to change how the additional buttons behaved, but I can’t find these anywhere on the RollerMouse Free, so I have to assume that customizing these buttons is simply not an option.

RollerMouse Free (Image property of OhGizmo!)

The roller bar, pictured here in an extreme close-up, has a really nice feel to it, and is covered with a textured rubber finish. It’s about a half-inch in diameter, and rolls very easily and smoothly, kind of like a flywheel minus the weight. Like I said, I’ve used other Contour Design products in the past and they’re still going strong, so I have no doubt that the RollerMouse Free will last for quite some time.

RollerMouse Free (Image property of OhGizmo!)

One last feature I wanted to point out is a set of clever (though necessary) ‘end detection’ buttons found on either side of the roller bar. While using the RollerMouse, you’ll occasionally find that even though the roller bar has reached the edge of its side-to-side movement, your cursor is no where near the edge of the screen. But fixing this is as easy as sliding the roller bar so that it pushes one of these buttons which re-calibrates and jumps the cursor to that side of your screen. It’s no different than when you have to re-center your mouse on your mouse pad, and it becomes second nature after a while.

Conclusions:

No one likes to be proven wrong, but in this case I’m glad the RollerMouse Free works as well as Contour Design claims. It’s actually a pretty clever alternative to your standard mouse, particularly for those who are suffering from arthritis, carpal tunnel syndrome or other physical problems which makes using a regular mouse difficult. Now I’m not a doctor, so I can’t say for sure if their claim that it will reduce repetitive stress injuries is true or not, but when configured properly the RollerMouse Free is definitely quite comfortable to use.

However, I have found a few situations where the RollerMouse Free isn’t exactly the best tool for the job. For example, using it with Photoshop was quite frustrating, particularly when it came to detailed brush work. Now it may be because I usually rely on a Wacom tablet for that kind of work, and I wasn’t used to doing it with the roller bar mechanism, but I gave it my best shot and I just don’t think it’s the ideal solution for those kind of precise jobs. But that’s why I always use a tablet in addition to a mouse anyways.

It’s also not an ideal traveling companion for a laptop. Given the RollerMouse’s large footprint, even with the wrist-rest removed, it can really only be used on a desk or table. Trying to balance and use it on your lap in an airport lounge or even on a flight would be an act of futility in my opinion.

And finally, I’m afraid I also have to point out that the RollerMouse Free is a bit on the expensive side in my opinion. It’s definitely a quality piece of hardware, but $220 is a lot of money to spend on a mouse. Now I’m sure if I was in the situation where the RollerMouse allowed me to use a computer again because of a physical ailment, that price would seem like a bargain. But the average user will have a hard time justifying the cost.

Pros:
Works as well as a mouse or a trackball.
Keeps your fingers close to the keyboard at all times.
Designed to reduce repetitive stress injuries.
Well built, roller ball rolls very smoothly.
No drivers to install.

Cons:
- Fairly large footprint, even with the wrist-rest removed. Not exactly travel friendly.
- Can only be used with a laptop if it’s on a desk.
- Lack of custom drivers or bundled software means there’s no way to customize the additional buttons.
- Expensive.

Links:

Contour Design RollerMouse Free – $219.95

If you have any questions about the RollerMouse Free you’d like answered, please feel free to leave them in the comments, and I’ll try to respond to them as best I can.

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