Tag Archive for 'rim'

Pistol Cams may Offer the “truth” behind every Gun Shot!

Pistol Cams may Offer the \"truth\" behind every Gun Shot!

Pistol Cam, a gun-attachable camera that records audio and video during a gun shot, may help document and provide a solid evidence for every gun shooting by the police.

Whether the cop has shot a person unnecessarily or not, the Pistol Cam may be effective in reducing wrongly-convicted police crimes or people who get shot by accident by cops.

Currently it’s only being used in the high-crime U.S. metropolitan cities like LA and New York but if proven effective, it could be widespread throughout the country soon.

This allows us the opportunity to review shooting incidents, unlawful use of force incidents and hopefully exonerate the member that’s involved in the shooting. It also ensures the public the police are not overstepping their boundaries,” said Orange County Sheriff’s Office Capt.

via abcnews

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Pistol Cam for NYPD

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Brothel On Wheels Gets Busted, I Weep

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Well folks, in an attempt to take away our Eighth Amendment right (the right to pay for and receive sexual acts in the back of a moving vehicle) the FBI busted what they’re calling a “brothel-on-wheels” in Miami.

Miami Beach undercover detectives who paid a $40 entry fee and boarded a stretch limousine bus Sunday found women onboard offering oral sex and lap dances for money, authorities said.

Authorities arrested Christine Morteh, 29, of Miramar, and the driver, Clyde Scott, along with four other people Sunday. Miami-Dade jail spokeswoman Janell Hall said Morteh faces charges including offering to commit or engage in prostitution, conducting business without a license, directing another to a place of prostitution and deriving support from prostitution.

Whoa, whoa, whoa — those sound like some pretty serious charges. Completely inappropriate. I was thinking more along the lines of a gas card and handicapped parking sticker.

Cops bust alleged brothel-on-wheels in Miami
[cnn]

Thanks Romeo, but I kind of wish you had notified me about this service earlier.

Sharper Image will continue to hawk crap, only as a brand

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Sharper Image died an inglorious death in February and then went through some embarrassing death spasms, but it sounds like liquidators Hilco Merchant Resources and Gordon Brothers Retail Partners have realized that there’s still some value in the Sharper Image name — they’ve just announced a plan to rent the name out to other companies looking to spruce up their knockoff crap. The idea is for the Sharper Image name to lend credibility to infomercial and catalog products, and there’s even talk of wholesaling to Target and Best Buy, with the goal of reaching annual sales of $1B. That’s a lot of air purifiers — let’s hope America’s late-night TV shoppers think more highly of Sharper Image than pretty much everyone else we know.

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Review: Walkman Phone Nails Form but Fails Function

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Sony Ericsson W350

You’ve lusted after your high-school crush for two semesters, and you’ve finally got a date. But now that you have alone time, every feature that you found cute or enticing shows a transparency, a shallowness. As you spend time together, the very things you liked start to grate on your nerves, and new discoveries show how ill fit you are for each other. That’s how it goes—and that’s how it is with the Sony Ericsson W350: What appeared to be a cool little phone proved itself to be an annoyance and a hassle to use.

Not that it doesn’t look good. The W350 has style to spare. Sleek and petite, this Walkman phone is dwarfed by an average hand, slimmer and narrower than most candy-bar handsets. The matte-black surface is accented by metallic trim and Walkman-style navigation controls. A small flip panel that houses the controls opens to reveal a keypad composed of glossy Chiclets and a squared-off oval navigation pad.

Though pretty, these design touches are the most irritating features of the phone. The smooth keys are hard to press in isolation. The navpad leaves little room for easy navigation — you’ll often press the "up" button when you mean to press the center "select" button, opening the wrong menu item or application. And the flimsy flip panel takes great skill to open one-handedly, which makes it bad for efficient answering.

And the Sony influence brings frustration in new forms. The proprietary headphone connector is ungainly, jutting from the side awkwardly and removing any trace of grace from the unit. The phone comes with what looks like a 512MB microSD card. But wait — it’s Sony’s own memory card, the incompatible Memory Stick M2. When was the last time you’ve seen any Memory Stick slots in a non-Sony notebook?

Call quality was muffled, but we tested a prototype, so that could improve before the final version ships. Don’t forget to lock the phone after every call, because when it’s flipped shut, the phone defaults to Walkman mode, and a key in your pocket could start an impromptu jam session in a company meeting. In our case it was the lone provided song, an electronica instrumental that sounded like hold music or the background track to a ’90s sexual harassment training video.

On the bright side, when this phone comes out, it’ll be cheap, around $29 with a two year contract. It seems you can also buy unlocked versions of this handset now for about $200, but why on earth would you?  —Roger Hibbert

WIRED It’s as tiny and as pretty as a music-box ballerina. Includes an FM radio (which will be cool until the HD radio takeover next year).

TIRED
The keys and navpad are unfit for grown-up human use. The phone’s clunky headphone connector has all the charm of a tumor. The awkward flip panel makes for clumsy, fumbling answers.

$29 (estimated) with 2-year contract, sonyericsson.com

5 out of 10

(Photo by Jon Snyder for Wired.com)

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Dell’s Studio Laptops Offer Personalization and Simplicity

Dell on Thursday announced a new consumer product line of PCs. Dubbed Studio, the laptops take a personalized approach to high-definition mobile computing.

The Dell Studio 15 and Dell Studio 17 are the first two laptops in the new lineup. Dell opted for visual color elements and personalization options with features such as a built-in Webcam, media-control touch buttons, slot-load drives, optional mercury-free LED displays, and built-in mobile broadband.

The Studio 15 starts at $799 and the Studio 17 at $999. Consumers can purchase them directly from Dell beginning Thursday. They also will be available at Best Buy and Staples stores in a few days, the company said.

“These products are built for today’s digital nomad based on the millions of conversations we have every year on dell.com, Ideastorm and community forums,” said Michael Tatelman, vice president of Dell consumer sales and marketing worldwide. “With Dell Studio we’re answering the call for personalization, connectivity and simplicity.”

Taking a Cue from Inspirion

The Studios inherit design elements first introduced in Dell’s XPSTM, M1330 and M1530 laptops, including a wedge-shaped profile and a drop-hinge design. Taking its cue from the Inspirion portfolio, Studio laptops also offer several personalization options that allow a customer to color-customize a laptop.

Customers may pick one of six optional color choices, including Plum Purple and Tangerine Orange, in addition to Flamingo Pink, Midnight Blue, Ruby Red, Spring Green, or standard Jet Black. Dell also offers an optional high-gloss Graphite Grey choice that can be customized with contrasting black, more vivid blue, pink or red edge trim around the display back.

“What’s new is how Dell has divided its branding into targeted customer segments as opposed to form factors,” said Roger Kay, principal analyst at Endpoint Technologies Associates. “Each of Dell’s new lines, Studio, Inspirion and Alienware, offer both notebooks and desktops in…

Nokia Naming Explained

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I’ve shared some info on the naming convention used by Sony Ericsson. Again, I turn to Wikipedia, which has a very detailed article on how Nokia names its phones.

For those who’ve been under a rock for the past 10 years, the top cell phone manufacturer in the world usually uses four digits to designate its models, reserving the special “N” and “E” prefixed for some of its most versatile and capable products.

  1. 1000 “Ultrabasic” - The cheapest (or “affordable” as marketing peeps would say) phones offered by Nokia. My experience has been that these phones usually only do calls and SMS, but do them pretty well. The lack of high-end features also means that 1000 series phones are usually the most responsive.
  2. 2000 “Basic” - Also cheap, but carry some extra features like Bluetooth. Some “higher-end” variants even have cameras built-in.
  3. 3000 “Expression” - Another creative way of saying “cheap”. More recent (as of 2008) 3000 models are borderline mid-range, color-screen gadgets that are capable of taking pictures, playing music, and even connecting to a PC.
  4. 4000 - For some reason Nokia hasn’t named any phones 4xxx (as far as I know). Maybe the Finnish company could start doing so once they use up the other 8000+ digits?
  5. 5000 “Active” - A fitting series name, especially when you look at models like the relatively old 5500 (a ruggedized product meant for jogging), the 5300, 5700, 5310, and 5610 (all music-oriented phones).
  6. 6000 “Classic Business” - Here’s where Nokia starts blurring the lines. Granted, the 6500 Slide is pretty mid-range, perhaps even high-end. But that’s not the case with the decidedly entry-level 6030. The confusion is probably due to the so many Nokia phones out there starting with a 6.
  7. 7000 “Experimental” - Very descriptive of the series, since the first S60 smartphone, the 7650, falls under here. You’ve also got aesthetic experiments like the Prisms. And who can forget the 7110, with the roller and snappy keypad revelation?
  8. 8000 “Premium” - To be honest, the only experience I have with these series is that phone from the first Matrix. I did witness a friend confidently take his phone out, and press the button to release the cover, only to have it fly off! Lol.
  9. 9000 “Communicator” - Every geek knows this as the predecessor to Nokia’s current E series (see below). First models of this series even ran on GEOS, not Symbian, while latter ones worked on the defunct Series 80.
  10. E-Series - The “E” stands for Enterprise. This series is literally all about business, usually featuring phones with minimalyst styling, comprehensive feature set, and best of all, responsiveness. I fell in love with the E51, E61, and E6i1 for these very reasons, and I’m totally excited about the upcoming E71.
  11. N-Series - I’m less ambivalent about the N-Series, and it’s not only because of the high-end prices. I totally understand Nokia’s push to cram everything imaginable into a phone, but does it have to come at a cost to responsiveness, battery life, and many others? A few models have won me over though, especially the N82.

Yes, just like with Sony Ericsson, there’s a lot behind the name of Nokia phones. By the way, I didn’t cover the Mobira series, which existed during Nokia’s infancy on the mobile market, and the failed N-Gage dedicated gaming phones; check out the source for more details.

Source, image from newlaunches.com.

Sony Ericsson Xperia X1 hands-on, sorta

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Sony Xperia X1

So here’s the scene. We’re at the Digital Experience show, trying to get our hands on a powered-up Sony Xperia X1. Sure, we found a unit that wasn’t powered up, but that does you — and us — no good. Sony told us to come back in 15 minutes, so we grabbed some press kits, made a round of booths, and came back.

Sure enough, when we came back the X1 was powered up, but the nice booth lady tried to tell us that things weren’t working just right and the unit was stuck on the config screen. After some jiggering, we determined the little X1 was just stuck on the touch screen calibration, and we were cruising through menus within minutes. It’s pretty clear this unit wasn’t ready for primetime — you’ll even see some HTC test apps in the below gallery — but we were impressed by the screen’s resolution and brightness. Windows Mobile 6.1 showed it face often in the UI, but the phone app and general utilities were looking good.

Overall, the X1 is a pleasure to behold — it’s one sexy device. That said, we’ll have to wait how Sony Ericsson’s user interface shapes up and just look at the pretty pictures in the gallery until mid-September.

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Web Design Case Study: Data Visualization

“Someone once described what we do as ‘Web design that doesn’t suck,’” says Stamen founder and creative director Eric Rodenbeck, with a laugh.

From the looks of his company’s growing corporate client list, those in the business of commissioning Web sites agree with him. Stamen, which Rodenbeck founded in San Francisco in 2001, has worked with the likes of Yahoo and Schwab, has an ongoing relationship with BMW’s Designworks division, for which they created an internal, online collaboration tool allowing workers to share project information. More recently, they worked with Digg.com, for which they created Digg Labs, making animated images that illustrate what news stories users find interesting.

The Digg Arc element of Digg Labs made its debut last year. The eye-popping app is a dynamic, fresh way of presenting how people consume information online — and what sorts of news they find most interesting. The title of a story — for instance, the recent “$4 Gas Makes Hybrids Worth the Money” — posted on a variety of online sites is centered in the middle of a circle that pops up against a black background. Around the title, in the form of ray-like lines, appear the screen names of readers who “digg,” or vote to share, the story. More popular stories have more rays, which appear in vivid hues. The story-sharing is updated constantly, so the arcs grow.

Animated Databases and Crime Maps

It’s just one example of Stamen’s attempts to nudge Web site visitors to explore data on their own, interactive terms. Rodenbeck calls it “exploratory navigation.” The hope is it will encourage users to take an intuitive, adventurous approach to finding information, rather than following a prescribed path.

Shawn Allen, the company’s design technologist and another of Stamen’s three partners [Michal Migurski, the company's director of technology, is the third], cites a book…

DIY How To Get AC current from a 9 Volt Battery!

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Here’s a fun science experiment you can do to create some AC current from a 9 volt battery.  Well, it’s not “real” AC current but still really cool.

via wonderhowto

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Blackberry Bold hands-on

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Blackberry Bold hands-on

We had a chance to play with Research In Motion’s upcoming BlackBerry Bold handset tonight, and we came away happily impressed. To start things off, the keyboard felt easy enough to use, at least easier than the 8830 we’re often forced to use for work email. Gone are the sharp protrusions, replaced with a nice flat surface upon which to click.

Of note was the Bold’s user interface. Menus are clean and easy to read (despite some strange icon choices, see below), and response time is about as quick as one could hope, especially compared to other phones out there that seem to struggle with their operating systems.

Continue reading Blackberry Bold hands-on

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