Smartfish Pro: The most intelligent keyboard!

February 1, 2009 by Jason  
Filed under Tech

k 150x150 Smartfish Pro: The most intelligent keyboard!Although many think the computer on which you buy, the keyboard is quite large in terms of users is never a matter we can not deny. Long-term computer use, especially in the hand and wrist pain in the majority of users do not use the appropriate keyboard is caused to them.

Users identified as the most suitable keyboard from the mission to get a keyboard manufacturer Smartfish called, late in the day, the world’s most intelligent and the most healthy ergonomic keyboard has announced the development Smartfish Pro. Users looking at writing style, the user himself can adjust Smartfish Pro, hosted by the Dynamic Positioning Controller system the status of keyboard height and angle can be determined by, and so users, user-friendly keyboard that does not have the close of the hand and wrist pain relief. Read more

Microsoft Blue Track Says Goodbye to Laser

August 29, 2008 by Jason  
Filed under Microsoft, Tech

microsoft blue track says goodbye to laser 150x150 Microsoft Blue Track Says Goodbye to LaserAlthough Microsoft is not breathing a single word in relation to an event it has cooking for September 9, 2008, under the slogan “Say Goodbye to Laser,” leaks from its partners are managing to paint a more complete picture. As it has been speculated, the new technology, which will be unveiled in the second week of the coming month, has been incorporated in a mouse. The Microsoft Blue Track mouse, featured in the adjacent images, reportedly sports a LED in combination with wide angle lenses, instead of a laser diode. In this context, despite the attempt to build anticipation with consumers, the Blue Track mouse is by no means reinventing the wheel. Read more

iPod and iPhone on the Big Screen

June 12, 2008 by Jason  
Filed under Apple

quingbar 150x150 iPod and iPhone on the Big ScreenHere’s an interesting little gadget for iPod and iPhone owners, it’s a mini LED/LCoS projector called the QuingBar MP101. Just pop in your pod (or phone) into the docking slot on the top and it’ll throw up a 640 x 480pixel image, up to 50cm across, on any handy white surface or wall. Okay, so the picture is going to be a bit grainy, and with only 15 lumens on tap, not very bright, but it has to be better than going boss-eyed trying to watch a movie on the handset’s titchy screen. It has a built in speaker and it’ll also charge you iPod or iPhone while it’s in place. No price or UK availability yet – it’s only lust been launched at a European trade show, but I’m guessing £150-ish and in the shops in a month or two.

Is My LCD OK? Well, Is it?

June 8, 2008 by Jason  
Filed under Tech

lcdok 150x150 Is My LCD OK? Well, Is it?Here’s one way to find out, a small freeware program called, you guessed it, IsMylcdOK. It’s a simple LCD monitor checker program that displays a series of solid colours, gradients and horizontal and vertical lines that will show up most of the common faults on flat screen monitors. These include dead or ‘hot’ (always on) pixels, faulty backlights and incorrect video phase setting. The program download is tiny, around 15kb, and it doesn’t even need to be installed, it runs from the zip/exe file, or from a pen drive. It is really easy to use; though watch out for the intro screen, it’s in German, so click the English button to continue (unless you are, or speak German, of course). Read more

Canon Prints on the Move

May 8, 2008 by Jason  
Filed under Tech

selphy 150x150 Canon Prints on the MoveIt might look like something you would use to keep your sandwiches and a cold drink in, but what you are looking at here is the new Canon Selphy CP770 ‘home photo lab’ dye sublimation colour printer. The integrated carry-pack makes it easy to transport and it also provides storage space for paper and consumables, and an optional battery pack. Features include a bright, angled 2.5-inch LCD, it has a memory card reader for direct printing, there’s auto image correction with face brightness compensation, auto red eye correction, infrared data link and big, easy to use controls. Prints take around 52 seconds and Canon reckons they should last upwards of 100 years, we shall see…

Watching the Weather

April 28, 2008 by Jason  
Filed under Tech

watching the weatherBilled as the world’s first ‘Weather Watch’ this widget from Oregon Scientifictells you what the weather is going to be over the next 24 hours, oh yes, and it also tells the time. Quite how it performs this semi miraculous task wasn’t’ fully explained in the advance publicity blurb but it’s a fair guess that it measures barometric pressure, and by plotting a trend, can give an indication of what direction the weather is heading. In other words it is probably just a wrist barometer, though it’s just possible it picks up some form of weather data transmissions, though with a retail price of under £40 that seems a bit unlikely. Either way, in addition to the time and date it also has alarm and stopwatch functions, and just in case it fails to warn you that it’s about to rain, it’s waterproof too. Read more

Smarty, or should that be Qwerty Pants

April 24, 2008 by Jason  
Filed under Google

qwerty2.thumbnail Smarty, or should that be Qwerty PantsIt’s what every well dressed computer user has been waiting for, a pair of jeans with a built in Qwerty keyboard. It’s just the job for having a quick google when you’re away from your desktop PC.

We can blame designer Erik De Nijs for the classically styled ‘Geek’ jeans, which, you may be interested to know, also incorporates a small pair of speakers that have been sewn into pockets just above the knee, and there’s also a handy mouse but we can only guess where the joystick is kept…

Simple Email Backup

April 17, 2008 by Jason  
Filed under Computer

amic.thumbnail Simple Email BackupOver the years I must have written tens of thousands of words on how to copy, transfer and backup email messages. With Outlook Express backing up the Message Store folder is not too difficult but it’s all the other bits and pieces – account settings, signatures, rules, blocked senders and so on – that make life difficult because they’re all over the place. Now it looks as though I won’t have to go through the rigmarole again.

Presenting Amic Email Backup. It’s a small freeware application that backs up all of the vital files and info in most popular email clients, including OE, Outlook, Eudora, Pegasus, Incredimail, The Bat, Poco, Netscape, to name just a few. Read more

Watch Out Windows

April 17, 2008 by Jason  
Filed under Microsoft, Mobile, Tech

epoq.thumbnail Watch Out WindowsRadio, phone, GPS, MP3 player, TV, camera… been there done that, but just when you thought there wasn’t anything else that could be shoehorned into a wristwatch, think again. A company called Epoq has managed to fit a copy of Windows Mobile onto one, which you drive using a 1.4-inch OLED touch screen, and just for good measure the EGP-98B has built in 1.3MP camera, wi-fi, Bluetooth and a 4-band GSM phone. Now, it might all be a wind-up (pun intended) because details and availability are all very sketchy, and good images are also hard to find. Read more

Lock Your Windows, With a Cellphone

April 15, 2008 by Jason  
Filed under Microsoft, Mobile

btprox Lock Your Windows, With a CellphoneIf your PC or laptop has a Bluetooth adaptor, and your cellphone is similarly equipped, then here’s something that might interest you. It’s a free utility called BtProx, and the idea is you can lock your PC, so no-one else can use it, unless you, and your cellphone are in the immediate vicinity. As I’m sure Apple Mac fans will remind me, it’s not exactly a new idea, but no matter, its a simple and effective way to protect your computer, though, just make sure your phone battery doesn’t run out, or you will be in trouble…