Archive for groundbreaking gadgets

iPhone wielding zombies imminent

The next generation in iPhone applications is on the way, using an ‘augmented reality’ app to, well, improve reality.

These applications are expected to surface in line with the next iPhone update (3.1) and are looking quite impressive… check the video below to see how iPhone + camera + compass + GPS + imagination can create groundbreaking functionality.

Unfortunately this may have cause people to walk the streets staring at their iPhone screen rather than actually participating in human contact, we’ll have to wait and see.

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A netbook that makes you go “ooooh”

Sharp have recently announced their new “Mebius NJ70A” netbooks. Due for realease in late May, the specifications of the netbook are pretty standard, making use of the Intel Atom N270 (1.60GHz), 1GB RAM,  a 10.1 inch display and a 160 gb mechanical hard disk.

The thing that really sets this netbook apart from the rest, however, is the use of a photodetector liquid crystal, which is basically a mouse with a display. This quite frankly looks awesome, a bit like having your very own Nintendo DS on your netbook, but with multi-touch!

The applications that use the touchpad seem rather like novelties (things like pianos and a bowling game) than practical uses that really take advantage of the touchscreen, yet if the price is right (estimated at around $800) this will be a highly desirable selling point for avid netbookers.

Click below to see the touchpad in action from Akihabara News:

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Turn your iPod Touch into an iPhone (almost)

The iPhone has taken America by storm since its much-vaunted release. The rest of the world is slowly working on giving a crap, but to the States the iPhone represents the current holy grail of mobile phones. New handsets with high expectations are relentlessly branded ‘iPhone killers’, though has any phone even come close to knocking the iPhone from its pedestal in the minds of its users? Not even close.

However, during these times of economic uncertainty, a little bit of fiddling you can give your iTouch essentially the same features as the iPhone. Sure, you won’t have an inbuilt camera, but you can’t send MMS messages or record video anyway, so what are you really missing out on? The kink in the plan here is that you need to be in range of a Wi-Fi hotspot to use your iTouch-Phone, but with the ever-increasing number of public hotspots, it’s likely that if you live in an urban area you’re probably not too far away from one most of the time. The only money you’ll need to spend is on a microphone, since sadly the iPod Touch has no built-in mic.

The great news is that besides having to spend a bit of cash on your microphone solution, all the software used in this tutorial to give your snazzy iPod Touch the functionality of the iPhone is totally free. So what are you waiting for?

There’s no need to jailbreak your iTouch or modify it in any way – all you need is an iPod Touch on 2.x.x firmware, a pair of headphones with a microphone, a WiFi network, and access to Apple’s App Store so you can download and use Fring – a free app which supports several different chat protocols.

1. Choose your microphone

Philips iPhone Mic Adapter Apple Earphones with Remote & Mic Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote & Mic
Philips iPhone Mic Adapter
$9.99 from Target
Apple Earphones with Remote & Mic (MB770)
$29.00 from Apple Store
Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote & Mic (MA850)
$79.00 from Apple Store

I’d recommend the Philips mic adapter, mainly because it costs under $10 compared with Apple’s habitually expensive alternatives, but also because it allows you to use your own headphones. However, you’ll lose out on having the remote. If you prefer a hands-free approach, SwitchEasy’s ThumbTacks might be more your style. Thanks to Apple’s proprietary chip in the new iPod shuffle remote/mic combo earphones, pickings are a little slim at the time of writing.

For 1st generation iPod Touch users, you’ll have to come up with a solution that uses the iPod’s docking port, since the 1st gen doesn’t support line-in through the earphone connection. Sadly, the new fancy Apple earphones are not backwards compatible with the 1G iPod Touch. However, there are some alternative solutions which use the 30-pin dock connecter, such as the popular iVoice3.

Once you’ve sorted out your mic, you’re ready to start setting up your VoIP application.

The alternative to Fring is downloading the new Skype for iPhone/iPod Touch application, which was released last Tuesday. How do the two compare, though? Well, Skype is a very recent release and I’ve found that it tends to crash occasionally, though it’s still very much useable. Fring’s current release (v1.0.0.2.4) is very stable in comparison. Both allow you to import contacts from your iTouch’s contact list, and support both text and voice chat… but what really sets Fring apart is its ability to support not only the Skype VoIP protocol, but also 3rd party SIP accounts, MSN, ICQ, AIM, Yahoo, and Google Talk. It even has plugins for Twitter and last.fm, which make it the winner in my book. However, you can add SkypeOut credit and dial any phone in the world from the Skype application, so if you’d rather stick with a brand you know already, go ahead and download Skype for free and have fun making calls on your iPod!

Personally, I have both, since I prefer the look and feel of the Skype application, but love having the extra functionality of Fring.

2. Install Fring

Search for Fring in the App Store with your iPod, and download and install it for free. Once installed, fire up Fring and register a new user account (or sign in if you’re already a Fring member).
Step 1: Search for Fring in the App Store with your iPod, and download and install it for free. Step 2: Once installed, fire up Fring and register a new user account (or sign in if you’re already a Fring member).
Now simply pick a User ID, nickname, password and email address (only used to retrieve your password if you forget it). 04-addons
Step 3: Now simply pick a User ID, nickname, password and email address (only used to retrieve your password if you forget it). Step 4: Next, link your Fring account to an active Skype account, and a SIP provider if you have one (I recommend voipstunt.com – it’s free!)
Your contact list should now populate with your Skype contacts. Just click their names to call and chat. Click the Dialer and… hey presto! Dial the number you want (don’t forget the leading 00s) and hit the green “SIP” button to dial over your own VoIP provider, or “Skype Out” to use your outgoing Skype credit.
Step 5: Your contact list should now populate with your Skype contacts. Just click their names to call and chat. Step 6: Click the Dialer and… hey presto! Dial the number you want (don’t forget the leading 00s) and hit the green “SIP” button to dial over your own VoIP provider, or “Skype Out” to use your outgoing Skype credit.

Congratulations! You can now make as well as Skype-to-Skype and Fring-to-Fring calls with other users, absolutely free. Add some SkypeOut credit and you can use that, but watch out – if you don’t make a call for 180 days, they’ll wipe off any credit on your account.

I’d recommend signing up with VoIPstunt for your free VoIP service – they offer 100% free calls to the USA, UK, Canada, Australia and many other countries in Europe, South America and Asia (see the full list here). All you need to do is top up your account with a little bit of credit every 120 days to keep it active. Best of all, Fring supports it out of the box – just enter your username and password and you’re away.

3. Get SMS working
Now that we’ve got the microphone and phone sorted, you’re only missing SMS. Well, you’ve got plenty of options here. For a long time there were apps available that granted jailbroken iPod Touch users completely free text messaging, but sadly a lot of these have been banned, obsoleted, or have not been updated in a long time.

Right now, your best options are:

  1. http://sms.dynadel.com (Worldwide, free)
    Open this web page in Safari on your iPod (or even better, make a bookmark and put it on your home screen), choose your country/carrier and type in your friend’s number, type your message and press send. Done.
  2. Using the AIM client (Worldwide, free)
    Download the AIM client for iPhone from the App Store on your iPod Touch. Once installed and signed in, you can text anybody by creating a new buddy contact, and set their AIM address as their complete mobile phone number, with country and area code, preceded by a plus (+), for example: +12065550559. It might be better to log on AIM using your computer so you can add friends’ cell numbers more easily. Now you can simply tap the buddy number on your iPod Touch, compose your message, and click Send. Any replies you receive will show up in your AIM client as part of the chat! This method may also work on Fring, as it supports AIM chat – but I didn’t get round to testing it yet.
  3. http://www.txtdrop.com/iphone/ (US/Canada only, free)
    Open this address in Safari and send a free text to any US or Canada cellphone.
  4. http://www.cbfsms.com (UK only, free)
    Another web-based one, open in Safari and send free UK text messages.
  5. http://www.jellysms.com (Worldwide, paid)
    You can purchase the JellySMS app from the App Store for around $3.49 (there’s also an ad-assisted version for half the price). Then simply sign up with a one of the many free VoIP providers they give you, and you can send cheap text messages. OK, so it’s not free, but it seems to be more reliable than the free alternatives, it’s contained within its own app (which supports landscape texting!), and you can set your own caller ID so you can direct replies to the number of your choice.
  6. Send SMS through email (US/Canada only, free)
    Quite a nice feature of North American providers is that you can actually send an email to a number via a provider, and it will convert it into a text and send it for you. Try using the iPod’s native Mail app and email your messages to the following addresses, replacing {phone#} with the recipient’s phone number. You will have to know which carrier they’re with, however:
T-Mobile:
Virgin Mobile:
Cingular:
Sprint:
Verizon:
Nextel:
{phone#}@tmomail.net
{phone#}@vmobl.com
{phone#}@cingularme.com
{phone#}@messaging.sprintpcs.com
{phone#}@vtext.com
{phone#}@messaging.nextel.com

If you’ve got any other working methods for sending and/or receiving SMS on the iPod Touch, let us know! Unfortunately you’ll always need a wi-fi network nearby to use your iPod-come-iPhone mobile phone, but hey! It’s easy to do and it’s a really neat feature.

Many thanks to everybody who helped me out with info for this tutorial! I got most of the info from the iPod Touch Fans forum and Macrumors – check them out if you need even more info on making the most out of your iPod Touch!

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Don’t go overboard

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Ok, I’m not a great seafarer (in fact my experiences with going on boats quite often result in severe nausea!), yet I still watched with interest last night at the slick business pitch for Water Buoy on Dragon’s Den this week. I may not venture off dry land very often (apart from my weekly swim at the local pool), but as someone who is forever losing things I appreciated how Water Buoy could be an ingenious device for boating fanatics.

Water Buoy claims to be the world’s first and strongest intelligent miniature flotation device that is also visible at night. If you accidentally drop your keys overboard, Water Buoy will save the day, so there’s no need for you to go diving in after them! Using gas, a balloon and a light, this little device may be small, but claims to be capable of lifting up to 1KG of weight!

You simply attach it to your valuable and should they end up overboard, the device will trigger the balloon before they sink too far and they’ll soon reappear on the surface of the water. If only someone would invent something similar for use on dry land – but then again, with the list of things I mislay around the house, I’d end up attaching one to everything I own!

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How far would you go to test your phone?

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I was out shopping the day the iPhone was launched and was amused to see the queues forming outside the mobile phone shop as people were eager to be amongst the first to get their hands on this long and eagerly awaited mobile. If you were one of those queuing for your iPhone, I’d be interested to know if it’s lived up to expectations.

The reason for my curiosity is that I was watching the Gadget Show a few weeks back when they put the iPhone through its paces alongside the Nokia N95 and the extremely enthusiastic and passionate iPhone supporter (male presenter, Jason) ended up admitting to feeling a little deflated by the results.

They put both phones to the test and when I say test, they went to some quite extreme measures to find out which hone was the best. This included jumping off a bridge and then competing to see who could use their phone to text and phone for help in the fastest time. Jason struggled to text with the iPhone under such extreme conditions and concluded that while the beauty of this ‘must-have’ mobile is it’s touch screen, it’s also it’s achille’s heel.

In fact the feature rich Nokia N95 seemed to hold its own and come out ahead in many of the tests conducted. The super sexy iPhone can only use iTunes, whereas the female presenter was quick to point out that with the Nokia N95 you can drag or drop tunes from any source. She was also less than impressed with the fact that you can’t change the iPhone’s battery yourself (as you can with the Nokia) suggesting that Apple will cash in on that, charging a fortune to do it for you. Jason argued that whilst you may be able to change the battery in the N95 yourself, that is because it’ll probably run out really quickly and says while the N95 has great features, what’s the point if the battery can’t support them?

However, as the tests continued, he was really disappointed by the camera and had to admit that the iPhone had consistently let him down all night. But, he still maintains that it is the most designer phone in the playground. So, if you are the type of person who has to have the latest ‘must-have’ item regardless of functionality or performance, I’m sure you won’t be put off by these findings, but as I say, I’d love to hear if the iPhone has lived up to the hype…

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Serendipity: 10 accidental inventions

As anyone with a knack for clichés knows, necessity is the mother of invention. However, it could also be said that while good inventions are often the product of necessity, great inventions are accidental. To demonstrate the importance of serendipity, we’ve put together a list of 10 examples of unintentional discoveries that too often we find ourselves taking for granted. In no particular order.


Fleming was a fun guy.1. Penicillin
Everybody knows the story – or at least, should – the brilliant yet notoriously absent-minded biologist Sir Alexander Fleming was researching a strain of bacteria called staphylococci. Upon returning from holiday one time in 1928, he noticed that one of the glass culture dishes he had accidentally left out had become contaminated with a fungus, and so threw it away. It wasn’t until later that he noticed that the staphylococcus bacteria seemed unable to grow in the area surrounding the fungal mould.

Fleming didn’t even hold out much hope for his discovery: it wasn’t given much attention when he published his findings the following year, it was difficult to cultivate, and it was slow-acting – it wasn’t until 1945 after further research by several other scientists that penicillin was able to be produced on an industrial scale, changing the way doctors treated bacterial infections forever.


Early microwaves: hot stuff.2. The Microwave
In 1945 Percy Lebaron Spencer, an American engineer and inventor, was busy working on manufacturing magnetrons, the devices used to produce the microwave radio signals that were integral to early radar use. Radar was an incredibly important innovation during the time of war, but microwave cooking was a purely accidental discovery.

While standing by a functioning magnetron, Spencer noticed that the chocolate bar in his pocket had melted. His keen mind soon figured out that it was the microwaves that had caused it, and later experimented with popcorn kernels and eventually, an egg, which (as we all could have told him from mischievous childhood ‘experiments’), exploded.

The first microwave oven weighed about 750lbs and was about the size of a fridge.

Ice ice baby3. Ice Cream Cones
This story is a perfect example of serendipity, and a single chance encounter leading to worldwide repercussions. It’s also rather sweet.

Before 1904, ice cream was served on dishes. It wasn’t until the World’s Fair of that year, held in St Louis, Missouri, that two seemingly unrelated foodstuffs became inexorably linked together.

At this particularly sweltering 1904 World’s Fair, a stall selling ice cream was doing such good business that they were quickly running out of dishes. The neighboring stall wasn’t doing so well, selling Zalabia – a kind of wafer thin waffle from Persia – and the stall owner came up with the idea of rolling them into cone shapes and popping the ice cream on top. Thus the ice cream cone was born – and it doesn’t look like dying out any time soon.

Lovely bubbly!4. Champagne
While many know that Dom Pierre Pérignon is credited for the invention of champagne, it was not the 17th century Benedictine monk’s intention to make a wine with bubbles in it – in fact, he had spent years trying to prevent just that, as bubbly wine was considered a sure sign of poor winemaking.

Pérignon’s original wish was to cater for the French court’s preference for white wine. Since black grapes were easier to grow in the Champagne region, he invented a way of pressing white juice from them. But since Champagne’s climate was relatively cold, the wine had to be fermented over two seasons, spending the second year in the bottle. This produced a wine loaded with bubbles of carbon dioxide, which Pérignon tried but failed to eradicate. Happily, the new wine was a big hit with the aristocratic crowds in both the French and English courts.

To do: invent better glue5. Post-It Notes
The invention of the humble Post-It Note was an accidental collaboration between second-rate science and a frustrated church-goer. In 1970, Spencer Silver, a researcher for the large American corporation 3M, had been trying to formulate a strong adhesive, but ended up only managing to create a very weak glue that could be removed almost effortlessly. He promoted his invention within 3M, but nobody took any notice.

4 years later, Arthur Fry, a 3M colleague and member of his church choir, was irritated by the fact that the slips of paper he placed in his hymnal to mark the pages would usually fall out when the book was opened. One service, he recalled the work of Spencer Silver, leading to an epiphany – the church being a good a place as any to have one, I suppose – and later applied some of Silver’s weak yet non-damaging adhesive to his bookmarks. He found that the little sticky markers worked perfectly, and sold the idea to 3M. Trial marketing began in 1977, and today you’d find it hard to imagine life without them.

Imagine life without these.6. Potato chips/crisps
In 1853, in a restaurant in Saratoga, New York, a particularly fussy diner (railway magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt) repeatedly refused to eat the fries he had been served with his meal, complaining that they were too thick and too soggy. After he had sent back several plates of increasingly thinly-cut fries, the chef George Crum decided to get his own back by frying wafer-thin slices of potato in grease and sending them out.

Vanderbilt initially protested that the chef’s latest efforts were too thin to be picked up with a fork, but upon trying a few, the chips were an instant hit, and soon everybody in the restaurant wanted a serving. This led to the new recipe appearing on the menu as “Saratoga Chips”, before later being sold all over the world.

Everyone loves a slinky!7. The Slinky
What walks down stairs, alone or in pairs, and makes a slinkity sound? Well, originally it was just a spring falling off a desk. To be more precise, it was the desk belonging to marine engineer Richard James, who sometime in 1940 noticed that when the spring fell, it stumbled and tumbled across the floor for a while before laying to rest. After a few prototypes, the Slinky was ready to be introduced to toy stores in 1948, where it became one of the most popular and iconic toys of all time.

James’ wife Betty was the one who came up with the name “Slinky”, and has been CEO of the company since 1960. Over 250 million Slinkies have been sold worldwide, and they were even used as mobile radio antennae during the Vietnam war.

An invention from the heart8. The Pacemaker
Like penicillin, here is another accidental invention that continues to save lives to this day. American engineer Wilson Greatbatch was working on a gadget that recorded irregular heartbeats, when he inserted the wrong type of resistor into his invention. The circuit pulsed, then was quiet, then pulsed again, prompting Greatbatch to compare this reaction with the human heart and work on the world’s first implantable cardiac pacemaker.

Before the implantable version was used on humans from 1960 onwards, pacemakers had been based on the external model invented by Paul Zoll in 1952. These were about the size of a television and dealt out considerable jolts of electricity into the patient’s body, which often caused the skin to burn. Greatbatch also went on to devise a lithium-iodide battery cell to power his pacemaker.

Now that's what I call a sticky situation.9. Superglue
More sticky stuff, though this one was famous for its high adhesive value, unlike Silver’s Post-It Notes. Superglue came into being in 1942 when Dr Harry Coover was trying to isolate a clear plastic to make precision gun sights for handheld weaponry. For a while he was working with chemicals known as cyanoacrylates, which they soon realized polymerized on contact with moisture, causing all the test materials to bond together. It was obvious that these wouldn’t work, so research moved on.

6 years later, Coover was working in a Tennessee chemical plant and realized the potential of the substance when they were testing the heat resistance of cyanoacrylates, recognizing that the adhesives required neither heat nor pressure to form a strong bond. Thus, after a certain amount of commercial refinement, Superglue (or “Alcohol-Catalyzed Cyanoacrylate Adhesive Composition”, to give it its full name) was born.

It was later used for treating injured soldiers in Vietnam – the adhesive could be sprayed on open wounds, stemming bleeding and allowing easier transportation of soldiers; adding a delicious layer of irony to the story in that a discovery made during an effort to improve the killing potential of guns ended up saving countless lives.

Sweet.10. LSD
The unintentional discovery of d-lysergic acid diethylamide tartrate-LSD-25 led to a cultural revolution – nobody today can deny that the hallucinogen uncovered by Swiss scientist Albert Hoffman in 1938 helped shape the hippy movement of the 1960s and sparked worldwide interest, having a massive impact on neuroscience research and treatment.

The actual discovery of LSD as a hallucinogen occurred when Dr Hoffman was involved in pharmaceutical research in Basel, Switzerland, hoping to produce drugs that would help ease the pain of childbirth. Having synthesized what would later become known as LSD; Hoffman catalogued the untested substance and placed it in storage, after finding nothing particularly interesting about it during the initial analysis. It wasn’t until a Friday afternoon in April 1943 when Hoffman discovered the true properties of the compound, inadvertently absorbing a healthy dose of it when handling the chemical at work without wearing gloves. On his bicycle ride back home he observed “an uninterrupted stream of fantastic pictures, extraordinary shapes with intense, kaleidoscopic play of colors”.

Criminalized throughout the USA in 1966 (and most others following suit soon after), further research into LSD was (and still is) constantly hampered by its illegal status. Early researcher Dr Richard Alpert claimed to have administered LSD to 200 test subjects by 1961, and reported that 85% of his test subjects said that the experience was the “most educational” of their lives.

Here are a few other accidental innovations that deserve at least a mention: saccharin (artificial sweetener), Scotchguard (aka Sellotape), Teflon, the band-aid, the frisbee, the sandwich, the popsicle, Silly Putty, x-rays, vulcanized rubber, velcro, and safety glass.


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Small packages!

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With this being Pocket Gadget, I thought I’d talk about some real pocket sized gadgets! Some people seem to think that the smaller the gadget the better, but surely the smaller some things get the more they lose their functionality and worth? I watched the Gadget Show with interest this morning as 7 feet and 7 inches of Neil Finnigan and 3 feet something of Warwick Davies tested small gadgets in the smallest house in Britain, in Conway.

They began with the Haier Elegance, which claims to be the smallest mobile phone but still has an impressive range of functions. It slipped into Warwick’s tiny pocket with no unsightly bulges! But, it was very difficult to see the display, so surely that renders it a little pointless?

They then tested the Cowon iAudio D2, a Portable Media Player measuring 78.0 X 55.4 X 16.6 mm and weighing just 91 grams. The D2 is in fact smaller than a credit card (although not as thin) and easily sits in the palm of your hand or neatly in a pocket. Neil and Warwick were impressed by the superb sound quality and the surprisingly detailed picture on the 320 by 240 pixel resolution screen. The D2 also has a very simple interface which enables you to navigate with ease.

Next into the house was the OQO Model 02, currently the world’s smallest PC. It’s about as small as you could imagine a PC being (5.6 x 3.3 inch), yet manages to squeeze in an amazing amount of functionality. Despite the impressive spec, the smallest house in Britain lacks broadband, so the tester’s attention was turned to the tiny keyboard which they were less than impressed with. They then concluded there’s not much point having a tiny PC if you then need to invest in full size add ons!

Last, and sadly least, Warwick tried a miniature vacuum cleaner that plugs into your USB port. It looked like it would be more at home inside a Barbie House! After he had used it for a clean up of the smallest house they opened it up and found none hair inside! So, maybe not all the best things come in small packages after all…

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Canadian iPhones for $799… British iPhones for $1200?


After the frantic digging that followed the (now disproved) announcement that the iPhone would cost Canadian customers a whopping $799, today I came upon the first iPhone I’ve seen to be offered from a UK high street retailer – an unlocked 8Gb model for an astronomical $1200.

That’s right – a closer look at the picture reveals a price of £595, which at current exchange rates translates to just over USD $1200. True enough, the phone is unlocked and available a month before Apple’s official UK release date of November 9th, but does this even come close to justifying the obscene price tag, especially when the label describes the product as “second hand”?

Still, it would take a special kind of idiot to part with £595 just to get the iPhone a few weeks early, especially when there are eBay auctions offering the exact same thing for under £300…


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Cheap online chat

If, like me, you love to talk and are also a little addicted to the Internet, then you really should be investing some VOIP equipment. With Voice Over IP (VOIP) services, you can make phone calls – even long distance or international calls – for free.

There are currently several VOIP providers and services on the market, MSN and Skype being amongst the most popular ones. These programs and voip phone systems can be used to make free calls over the Internet to anyone using the same service. With a little bit of research, you’re sure to find a VoIP phone service to suit you. When you make a VoIP call, you usually use your PC’s built-in microphone and speakers or a headset in place of an ordinary phone.

VoIP phones and other voip equipment can be expensive, but the good news is you don’t need to pay a fortune for a dedicated VOIP internet phone. The VoIP Talkie acts as a speakerphone and is fun alternative to the more costly Voip PC phones available. To use the VoIP Talkie, all you need is a PC and an Internet connection. You can then access one of the many free VoIP services and cut down your huge phone bills by talking through your PC instead. Simply attach the VoIP Talkie to your PC or laptop via your headphone speaker plug and it will work in conjunction with your VoIP system to translate the analog signal of your voice into a digital signal that will travel across the Internet. Once it reaches its destination, the telephone or computer that answers your call will translate it back into an analog sound. Buck Rogers here we come…

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Eagerly awaiting iPhone

iphone.jpgYou must have heard about the iPhone?  I’m not usually one to get swept up in the latest technological fad, but I can’t help being intrigued by this one.  Apparently iPhone combines a revolutionary new mobile phone with a widescreen iPod with touch controls.  Whatever will Apple come up with next?The iPhone will enable you to make a call by simply pointing your finger at a name or number in your address book, a favourites list, or a call log.  And it lets you select and listen to voicemail messages in whatever order you want – just like email.  The Apple iPhone may be just one lightweight, handheld device, but it’s not just a phone.  It’s also an Internet communication device with email, web browsing, maps, and Internet searching – all controled with just your fingers.

But do we really need a phone to do all this?  Or what about the iTouch which has the finger pointing functionality of the iPhone in an iPod without the phone bit.  Confused? I’m reserving judgement until I’ve had a play!

Over-expensive hype or well worth every penny – we’ll just have to wait and see…

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