BigShot DIY Digital Camera Kit

bigshot

By Evan Ackerman

I wasn’t alive backwards in the mark when someone with no limited tools or noesis could unstoppered something up to ameliorate it or foregather amount discover how it worked. Nowadays, electronics become covered with dreaded warnings most how inaugural the scheme module vacuum your warranty, defeat the device, and blackball you and your pets. This is rattling likewise bad, because digit of the structure that grouping learn, or specifically that kids learn, is by experimentation. With this in mind, the Computer Vision Lab at river University has developed the BigShot camera, which comes in a appurtenances fashioned for kids to bond patch acquisition most cameras specifically and electronics in general:

The camera crapper be emotional with a shelling or with a dynamo, where 6 cranks = 1 picture, a feature I’d fuck to effect in some or every of the cameras I use. It’s also got lenses on a rotating wheel, including a panoramic essay lense and a prism for attractive biaural pictures. It goes beyond foregather a buildable camera kit, though… The coverall assignment of the BigShot beam aims to primed the camera affordable adequacy that they’ll be acquirable to kids worldwide, and to create an online ethnic contact of sorts to deal photos and inform the principles of photography.

The viability of this full abstract belike depends on what the effort sound of the BigShot ends up being. It’s currently ease in a effort investigating phase, and my surmisal is that it’ll add up in most the aforementioned locate as the OLPC… Great idea, but most twice as pricey as it ideally should be.

[ BigShot ] VIA [ Make ]

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iDive300 Waterproof Case For The iPod & iPhone

iDive300 (Image courtesy H2O Audio)
By Andrew Liszewski

I always thought that diving itself was supposed to be an enjoyable activity, so I’m scratching my head as to why anyone would need to bring along some other form of entertainment while down there. But that’s exactly what the iDive300 deep dive waterproof case is for. It’s designed for the iPod, iPod Touch and the iPhone and allows you to watch movies or listen to music (with an included pair of over the ear speakers) at a depth of up to 300 feet underwater. And while down there you’ll still have control over your media thanks to a set of waterproof buttons on the side of the case.

With a price tag of $349.99 the case is kind of hard to justify, even if it does make decompression stops a bit less boring, but it does come with peace of mind thanks to a replacement warranty for your iPod or iPhone should anything ever happen to them as a result of the iDive300 failing.

[ iDive300 ] VIA [ bookofjoe ]

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Stone Neo 101 drops into the netbook pond, doesn’t cause a ripple

We haven’t heard much from Stone since it fulfilled its destiny and bought Rock Computers last year, but it looks like the company is now finally having a go at a netbook of its own, and blending right in with the masses with its just-announced Neo 101 model. As you can no doubt guess, this one packs a standard issue 10.1-inch 1,024 x 600 display and an unspecified Atom processor, along with built-in WiFi and optional 3G, a pair of USB ports and, somewhat notably, an ExpressCard slot for a bit of expansion. You’ll also get a slightly better than usual three-year warranty, which apparently doesn’t add much of a premium to the netbook’s £275 price tag (or about $400). Look for this one to be available in the UK starting May 1st.

Source

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Bricked 360 Becomes The Ultimate Arcade Stick

xbox360-arcade-stick

This post is syndicated with permission from GamerFront.net

We all know that the 360 is prone to failure. I think that collectively we have had to send in our units a total of 5 times here at GamerFront. Luckily they have all been covered under the extended warranty. But when you have a failure that isn’t covered, what exactly do you do with that old broken console? Sure, you could keep it for spare parts, but what’s the fun in that? A better option would be to mod it into something useful like this guy did.

When you think about it, a bricked 360 makes a perfect arcade stick housing. Physically, it looks good and is plenty durable enough for you. Then of course you have the irony factor that you’re using a $200 machine as an arcade stick. Kudos to Seppun for this kick-ass mod.

[ TechEBlog ] VIA [ GamerFront ]

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Stone Neo 101 drops into the netbook pond, doesn’t cause a ripple

We haven’t heard much from Stone since it fulfilled its destiny and bought Rock Computers last year, but it looks like the company is now finally having a go at a netbook of its own, and blending right in with the masses with its just-announced Neo 101 model. As you can no doubt guess, this one packs a standard issue 10.1-inch 1,024 x 600 display and an unspecified Atom processor, along with built-in WiFi and optional 3G, a pair of USB ports and, somewhat notably, an ExpressCard slot for a bit of expansion. You’ll also get a slightly better than usual three-year warranty, which apparently doesn’t add much of a premium to the netbook’s £275 price tag (or about $400). Look for this one to be available in the UK starting May 1st.

Source

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Microsoft Offers Extended Warranty To “E74 Error” Victims

xbox360closeup

This post is syndicated with permission from GamerFront.net

I think everyone is familiar with the Red Ring of Death on the 360. Hell, if you’ve owned a 360 for very long, you’ve probably experienced this wonderful sensation once or twice. Well lately there’s been a new issue plaguing owners of Microsoft’s current-gen console, simply called the E74 Error.

While the E74 Error doesn’t sound nearly as ominous as the RRoD, it has the same effect. It turns your 360 from a kick-ass gaming machine into a doorstop. Since you don’t get three flashing red lights, you aren’t covered under Microsoft’s extended 3-year warranty. Until now that is.

Microsoft has apparently been listening to their customers again and have decided to extend the 3-year RRoD warranty to include the E74 Error. Just head over to the official support page for the info. I have to commend Microsoft on this move, as I’ve been a bit worried that I’ll have a $200 brick sometime in the future. Wait, did I just commend them for offering to fix a widespread issue with their console that probably never should have happened in the first place? I must be going crazy in my old age.

[ Microsoft ] VIA [ GamerFront ]

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Microsoft Offers Extended Warranty To “E74 Error” Victims

xbox360closeup

This post is syndicated with permission from GamerFront.net

I think everyone is familiar with the Red Ring of Death on the 360. Hell, if you’ve owned a 360 for very long, you’ve probably experienced this wonderful sensation once or twice. Well lately there’s been a new issue plaguing owners of Microsoft’s current-gen console, simply called the E74 Error.

While the E74 Error doesn’t sound nearly as ominous as the RRoD, it has the same effect. It turns your 360 from a kick-ass gaming machine into a doorstop. Since you don’t get three flashing red lights, you aren’t covered under Microsoft’s extended 3-year warranty. Until now that is.

Microsoft has apparently been listening to their customers again and have decided to extend the 3-year RRoD warranty to include the E74 Error. Just head over to the official support page for the info. I have to commend Microsoft on this move, as I’ve been a bit worried that I’ll have a $200 brick sometime in the future. Wait, did I just commend them for offering to fix a widespread issue with their console that probably never should have happened in the first place? I must be going crazy in my old age.

[ Microsoft ] VIA [ GamerFront ]

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Xbox 360’s class-leading warranty extended again to cover E74 errors

Pioneer outlines KURO plasma exit, insinuates that you should buy one now

Okay, so maybe that harshly translated version of Pioneer’s recent KURO-related press release doesn’t actually encourage prospective buyers to snag a unit while they still can, but it may as well have. Following up on the outfit’s curious decision to abandon a product line that was universally adored, Pioneer has decided that just four of its PDPs will stay in production until April 11th. After 3,000 or so of the KRP-500A, KRP-500M, KRP-600A and KRP-600M units have been produced, the lines will be shut down and we’ll all be invited to what will undoubtedly be a tear-filled memorial service. The company has also made clear that warranty service will still be provided for an undisclosed amount of time (at least in Japan), but there has yet to be a statement made specifically regarding the North American market.

[Via Slashgear]

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Boston-Power’s Sonata battery now available for HP laptops

The deal has been done for a while, but today’s the first day that Boston-Power’s much-vaunted Sonata batteries are actually available from HP, where they’re now officially known as the HP Enviro Series batteries. Helping them earn that moniker is a promised “sustainable performance” for a full three years (which HP backs up with a warranty), and a number of other enviro-friendly measures that helped snag the batteries the Nordic Ecolabel certification. Best of all, the batteries are available for no less than 18 different HP laptops right from the get-go and, at $149.99, they don’t demand quite the premium price that you might expect. You can’t yet get them as an option in a new HP laptop, however, but that’s apparently on tap for later this month.

Read – Boston-Power press release
Read – HP order page

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