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Hasbro Flying Millennium Falcon

Feb 16
Uncategorized

Flying the Millennium Falcon is a childhood dream for many.  All different generations have become serious fans of the famous ship.  Well now you can fly your very own – sure it won’t be making it into space anytime soon, but you can fly one.  You’ll just have to stay on the ground and watch it float through the air.  It’s pretty close to the next best thing.

This flying machine is intended to be used indoors and measures 11 inches long by 8 inches wide.  You can take this detailed flying machine for a spin through your living room and control it through the rechargeable controller.  The controller and vehicle’s respective batteries allow you to fly for up to five minutes at a time.  It probably won’t be the fastest flying machine out there, but it’ll at least get you a little entertainment.  It’ll be available this fall and at that point will cost $49.99.

Source: Geekologie


Cool Gift Idea: Digital Picture Frames, check out our reviews.
[ Hasbro Flying Millennium Falcon copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]




HTC Desire Android Smartphone

Feb 16
Uncategorized

HTC has presented their Android Smartphone namely HTC Desire. It is basically an updated version of the Google Nexus One, it features a 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor and a 3.7 inch WVGA AMOLED touchscreen display, WiFi, A-GPS and a microSD card slot, and a five megapixel camera.

htc desire

Another features of HTC phone Desire is GPS receiver, a 3.5mm audio jack, microUSB port, 576 MB RAM, 512 MB of integrated memory, a microSD card slot (up to 32GB), Bluetooth 2.1, Wi-Fi, and accelerometer.

htc desire smartphone

Dimensions of HTC Desire are 119×60×11.9 mm and weight is about 135g. Battery of HTC Desire is a 1,400 mAh battery and provides up to 360 hours of standby mode and up to 400 minutes in talk time. HTC Desire phone is supported GSM/GPRS/EDGE and UMTS/HSPA networks. HTC Desire will be available in Europe and Asia in early Q2 2010.

Laptop Review

HTC Desire Android Smartphone

Four or five years ago my kids got my wife and I involved watching American Idol from the very beginning of the season, since it was something they discussed with their friends. In various articles I’ve been pretty clear that my musical tastes range pretty far from the popular realm, but family time trumps all for me. On a now defunct site I started writing a series called ‘Idol Thoughts’, where I would blog weekly about the show, later carrying it on to my own personal blog and GamerDad’s … [visit site to read more]

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HTC HD Mini Smartphone

Feb 16
Uncategorized

HTC has added another new smartphone to their range with the launch of the HTC HD Mini. This HTC phone is a smaller form factor and shrinking the display of HTC HD3.

htc hd mini

The HTC HD Mini features a 3.2 inch HVGA touchscreen more bigger than HTC Smart, and it runs Windows Mobile 6.5.3 with HTC’s Sense user interface, and it is powered by a Qualcomm 600MHz processor.

htc hd mini smartphone

Another features of HTC HD Mini like 5 megapixel auto focus camera, 384MB RAM, a 512MB ROM, a microSD memory card slot with up to 32GB, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, GPS, microUSB, 3.5mm headphone connector, and a 1200 mAh battery. The HTC HD mini is supports GSM/GPRS/EDGE 850/900/1800/1900 MHz and UMTS/HSPA 900/2100 MHz networks. Dimensions of HTC HD mini are 103.8×57.5×11.7 mm and weight is 110g. It will be available in April 2010.

Computer Electronics Review

HTC HD Mini Smartphone



Android Powered Samsung i8520 Halo Projector Phone

Along with the Samsung Wave that was announced at MWC, Samsung has also introduced another smartphone, the Samsung Halo (i8520). This mobile phone comes with a twist in the form of an integrated pico sized DLP projector that can project digital video on a nearby wall.

In addition to the projector, the Samsung smartphone comes packed with features including a 3.7-inch WVGA Super AMOLED display screen, an 8-megapixel digital camera as well as a front VGA camera, support for 720p digital video recording, DivX and XviD support and 16GB of internal storage which like many mobile phones these days can be expanded further with a microSD card. Rounding out the features are 802.11b/g/n wireless connectivity, Bluetooth technology and assisted GPS.

The Android powered Samsung I8520 will come with a “Specialized Projector UI” and is expected to launch throughout Europe in the third quarter of this year. Pricing was not available.

Via: Gadget Venue, TechChee, Slippery Brick


© Coolest Gadget Reviews, 2010.


Coated brings you the coolest gadgets and best geek toys.

Android Powered Samsung i8520 Halo Projector Phone |
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[ image courtesy of Slacker Radio ]

The time has come for a few lucky folks to claim their prize.  To celebrate Valentine’s Day we ran a visit site to read more]

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EIZO’s new 22-Inch LCD Monitor

Feb 16
Uncategorized

If you are in the market for a new 22 incher, this may be the monitor for you. EIZO’s new 22-inch LCD monitor is part of its ColorEdge range and goes by the snappy name of “CG223W”. Thankfully the specs are better than the generic name.

The widescreen monitor uses a vertical alignment panel that delivers a 1680 x 1050 native resolution. Some other specs include a 6ms response time, 950:1 contrast ratio, 270 cd/m2 brightness and it will cover 95% of the Adobe RGB color spectrum. It also offers DisplayPort and dual DVI-I inputs.

[Eizo]





60,000 Google Android Handsets Shipped Daily

The Apple iPhone may not have any immediate contenders to its crown when it comes to the Motorola Droid or the Google Nexus phone, but as a whole, there is whole other beast that Apple needs to worry about and those are the Google Android handsets that are moving.

In fact, Android powered mobile devices are shipping at a pace of 60,000 units each and every day either by Google or Google partners. This was a sliver of information that Google Chief Executive Officer Eric Schmidt revealed in his keynote speech at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain.

On a quarterly basis, it means that 5.4 million Android handsets are being moved which is only some 3.3 million less then the 8.7 million iPhones that shipped last quarter. When you consider how established the iPhone is in the mobile phone market and how relatively new Android handsets are, this is quite a feat and something that Apple needs to be cognisant about. You have to wonder just how long it will be before Android powered mobile devices out-ship the iPhone. One of the things that Google has on their side is the fact that their mobile OS is hardware independent whereas Apple is limited to only their own devices as their product is proprietary.

Via: Geek, Tech Crunch


© Coolest Gadget Reviews, 2010.


Coated brings you the coolest gadgets and best geek toys.

60,000 Google Android Handsets Shipped Daily |
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Meet cylinder-head Stormtrooper and Darth Vader. No they aren’t lamps, despite those heads, they are actually speakers…We aren’t sure why they have the lamp head. We only know that these things are a real disturbance in the force.

Just plug in your mp3 player and play your tunes, while pondering over those huge heads. They don’t even have alarm clocks. I think now we have officially seen everything Star Wars. Hey, they also have round bellies. That ain’t right.

[Gizmodo]



What’s a guy supposed to do when he’s out of work and forced to shovel his parents’ driveway? Build a huge igloo of course. The whole 25×25 structure took over two months to build and required extra truck loads of snow from neighbors. But it was totally worth it. After all it got him featured on CrunchGear! [via Asylum]



You guys ready to look at some massive watches? Tsovet’s Ronda Quartz-powered CS79 is quite intriguing even if the 10 – actually a 0? – is a bit off-putting. This monster watch costs $425 and is cased in PVD-coated steel on a leather band.

They have a few other interesting models – most are, sadly, quartz – and this is the first I’ve seen of them. They all cost under $500, which is great for a fashion watch.



Sure this isn’t the most attractive or exciting device ever, but in terms of practicality, it’s pretty cool. Aleratec’s 1:1 HDD PortaCruiser Lightweight and Portable Hard Disk Drive Duplicator lets you easily clone 2.5″ and 3.5″ hard drives for backing up your data.

It also functions as a Dual Disk RAID Controller so you can attach two hard drives to it, connect it to a USB 2.0 port and use it as external storage. The 2-line LCD display makes things even easier. And it weighs only 8 ounces, so you can carry it with you.

[Chip Chick]



The best numbers I could find suggest that 30 percent of homes in the U.S. have access to a DVR. That doesn’t seem like a lot, no, but it’s already had an undeniable impact on the way TV studios evaluate their shows. Lost, The Office, and The Ultimate Fighter all saw their final ratings boosted after taking into account delayed DVR viewings. That means that just because a show doesn’t have killer overnight ratings doesn’t mean plenty of people aren’t watching—they’re just watching a little while later.

This brings us to professional wrestling, or “sports entertainment” if you subscribe to WWE’s way of thinking. Rival promotion TNA Wrestling, which recently brought Hulk Hogan, Ric Flair, and Eric Bischoff on board, announced yesterday that it would be moving its weekly TV show, TNA Impact, from Thursday nights to Monday nights starting on March 8. It will go head to head against WWE Monday Night Raw, Impact on Spike TV and Monday Night Raw on USA. It’s a big deal in the wrestling world because it marks the first time WWE has had direct competition since it purchased WCW in March, 2001. You could argue that WWE has never really recovered since then, sorta producing a bland product that hasn’t been nearly as exciting as it was in the days of Stone Cold Steve Austin and the Rock. TNA, for a certain number of people, represents the best chance of seeing “good” wrestling on TV again (aside from smaller promotions like Dragon Gate USA or Ring of Honor, as made famous by the movie The Wrestler), whether within TNA itself, or by forcing WWE to up its game. After all, if WWE doesn’t improve, people will now have the option to see what TNA is up to.

The thing is, this isn’t going to be another Monday Night War. (The Monday Night Wars refers to the period of time when the then-WWF went head to head against WCW on Monday nights, Raw vs. Nitro.) What typified the Wars was that people would often actively, and constantly, change the channel, going from Raw to Nitro when Raw hit a dull moment, and going from Nitro to Raw when Nitro hit a dull moment. The DVR, clever thing that it is, makes “changing the channel” seem so quaint. It’s right up there with turning a crank to start your car.

Look at it this way: say you’re a casual professional wrestling fan and you have a DVR. You’ve heard of TNA and wouldn’t mind giving it a shot. But why should you give up your habit of watching Monday Night Raw live to try out this new, plucky little promotion in TNA? What you’d do, of course, is watch WWE live while DVRing TNA. Then, the next day after work or school, you come home and watch TNA on the DVR, fast-forwarding through the silly parts. (There will be plenty of silly parts.)

The DVR makes changing back and forth between the shows completely unnecessary.

“But why didn’t people then tape shows back in 1998 with a VCR? It’s not like the DVR invented TV recording.”

For one, because many DVRs out there are capable of recording one channel while you’re viewing another one. There’s no voodoo involved in making that happen: it just works. So, watch one show while recording the other, then watch the other on you own time. Setting up a DVR is also much easier than it ever was to set up a VCD. Not having to juggle a library of blank videotapes is such a blessing.

It should also be noted that not every episode of TNA Impact will be live. That means you’d be able to look up the results of the show before it airs on TV.

That’s another knock against the idea of TNA re-creating the Monday Night Wars: the Internet has matured a whole heck of a lot since then. People will essentially be “live Tweeting” both shows throughout, so you’ll instantly be able to look up what’s happening as you check your laptop while getting a nice, healthy snack from the kitchen.

So good luck to TNA with moving to Monday nights, but I don’t know how fully it’s going to recapture the “magic” of the Monday Night Wars. (And isn’t that the point of moving to Monday nights?) We’re several years past the point where the only way to follow the action is by tuning in live.

Please note that I haven’t seen an episode of Raw since, like, 2002, so take this for what it’s worth: not much.



Vodafone has announced a pair of handsets they are calling the cheapest mobile phones in the world. Both handsets, the Vodafone 150 and the Vodafone 250 are aimed at emerging markets and are manufactured by Chinese vendor TCL.

The Vodafone 150 will be just $15.00. You get a basic phone with a 1 inch 96 x 64 monochrome display, polyphonic ringtones, dual-band GSM, a currency converter, an alarm clock, 2 embedded games and a built-in “torch”. No camera but it does give you voice calls and SMS and a built in mobile payment service.

The Vodafone 250 is around $20. You get a 1.45 inch 128 x 128 color display, FM radio, wallpapers and all the same features as the Vodafone 150. Both the Vodafone 150 and 250 will initially be sold in India, Turkey, Qatar, South Africa, Lesotho, Mozambique, Kenya, Tanzania, Ghana and Congo where they will do the most good.

[Slashphone]





Facebook Zero - A Light Version For Mobile Devices

Back in September 2009, Facebook announced a new service called Facebook Lite which was a slimmed down service meant for those individuals that wanted to access the world’s biggest social networking site but had a low bandwidth or poor network connection.

Along the same lines as that, Facebook has announced today another low bandwidth version of their service in Facebook Zero. What sounds more like a zero calorie diet drink (think Coke Zero), Facebook Zero is a bare bones, text only version of their popular website that is intended for mobile users.

The new service that is expected to launch “in the coming weeks” will reduce bandwidth usage by omitting “data intensive applications like photos.” Facebook Zero should be quite popular amongst mobile operators who are looking to free bandwidth on their overtaxed mobile networks.

To give you an idea of just how popular Facebook is, a recent UK study revealed that Facebook accounts for about 50% of a mobile users time while online.

Via: BBC, Gadgetsteria


© Coolest Gadget Reviews, 2010.


Coated brings you the coolest gadgets and best geek toys.

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Although the iPad was a disappointment to us as far as what we were expecting, I’m still excited to try one out because I know it will be one of the devices that really helps introduce and popularize the tablet computer. And one consequence of this is the kind of app Wired is making, an alternative to print and perhaps a superior one. There are issues that will have to be worked out, but I can definitely see myself reading a periodical or paper on this thing.

Whether the iPad uptake rate will justify the R&D and the enormous amount of designer hours that goes into every issue — well, that’s still up in the air. But the truth is that most magazines were going to have to make this shift at some point anyway, so they may as well do it right, which Wired appears to have done.

I have some qualms about the interface, and its obsession with corners and edges, though: capacitive screens have bad edges! It’s just a fact. And furthermore, the “hot spots” for putting your fingers are no longer the corners, as they are with mice and such. I wrote this up at length a while ago and feel pretty strongly about it; moving into a truly new interface is going to require that we throw away some of the UI elements we have been relying on for years. Long, thin scroll bars and corner- and edge-based navigation are an artifact of mouse-based UI and should be expunged. Isn’t half the fun of making a new interface throwing away the old one with no regrets?

You know there’s a better way, and it’s up to the designers to find it. They talk about natural gestures, but half their UI is still based around the idea of an indirectly controlled cursor. Get creative!

The screen, while it’s hard to tell from this video, may also be an issue. At 160ppi and 1024×768, the resolution isn’t really a problem, since our monitors were about at that level five or six years ago. You’re definitely going to get a lot of eye fatigue if you choose to read longer items on this thing, though. Also, while in the e-book application you can change the typeface and font size, it doesn’t appear that’s the case with the Wired app. Homogenizing look and feel, and guaranteeing readability, are things that Apple will probably be setting their hand to personally.

And the prize quote from the video:

At the bottom we have what we call the scrubber. And it’s got a little thumb that you can browse through and you can see every page in the issue…and the advertising.

It really lets you know what it’s all about. I mean, I don’t blame the man, he has to pay the bills, but you do get an idea of just how many guns are being pointed at him from off camera. I can imagine if they let the camera roll a little longer he might have added: “Now please – let my wife and children go!” Well. It’s probably not quite that desperate, but they do spend as much time showing off the ads as they do the content.

After all, let’s not fool ourselves, media has always been a vessel for advertising, and here we have the newest vessel of all. Personally, I look forward to the next generation of advertising, but until that happens, I’ll just have to ignore advertisements using the same natural gestures I used in the real Wired.

Update: I neglected to mention that the demo video is in fact running in Adobe AIR, which does not run natively in the iPad environment. So strictly speaking it’s a tablet app, not an iPad one, though from the timing it’s clear they wanted the two associated. Besides, the iPad is the only credible outlet for this kind of app at the moment, though that may not be true in six months. Whether it can be successfully ported over is a matter for the engineers, but we would be remiss not to mention the ongoing spat between Adobe and Apple, which could have an effect on the creation of apps like this. Adobe is really pushing their presence in the video, obviously, though they will have less to do with the software you might actually get for your iPad (they have a conversion tool but I suspect it will be insufficient).



One of the big disappointments when I first made the move to Mac, was the fact that Nuance’s Dragon NaturallySpeaking was not available unless I ran a virtual Windows PC on it. There was a voice recognition solution available, MacSpeech iListen, but it was rather poor substitute. A short time later MacSpeech released a new product, MacSpeech Dictate. It used the same voice to text engine as Dragon and as a result was far more accurate. A year later they released version 1.5, and it was even better; I no longer missed using Dragon. Then last week I posted a first look at MacSpeech Scribe. It too used Nuance’s voice-to-text engine in order to work its magic. In fact, it seems like Nuance’s technology is everywhere. Then they released Dragon Dictation for iPhone, powered the new iPhone app Siri, and recently bought Jott and SpinVox. It is for all thes reasons that I wasn’t surprised to hear that…

… [visit site to read more]

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Sony was showing off its Dash personal internet viewer way back at CES. The device should arrive in April, but we are now learning that it will have the ability to stream Watch Instantly content from Netflix. This actually makes us excited about this one.

Demand Media will also be offering portals to content from eHow, Golflink and Livestrong.com, and it will also stream “online music videos, television, or film content on-demand” to the 7-inch touchpanel.

This news makes it worth the $199 asking price.

[Engadget]



Flying Millennium Falcon Toy

Feb 16
Uncategorized

Flying Millennium Falcon Toy

flying millennium falcon Flying Millennium Falcon Toy
The Millennium Falcon wasn’t meant to just sit on the floor of your bedroom- this bird was meant to fly. This hunk of junk can do the Kessel Run in less than twelve parsecs after all. And you can recreate that legendary run in your home with this hovering Star Wars toy. Sure we’ve seen flying Millennium Falcons before here but those weren’t nearly as controllable as this foot long remote controlled flying toy that was just announced at the Toy Fair (release date?!?). Check out the video:

That’s really cool. I definitely want one of these…err… I mean I know some neighborhood kids who would love to have one of these. The controller charges it up too. Should retail for about $50 sometime in the future.

via gizmodo



You still can’t get one in your hands until February 25th, but if you want to make absolutely sure you don’t miss out on the Motorola Devour, you can now hit your local Best Buy or Best Buy Mobile store and reserve a Devour starting today. And why wouldn’t you want to make sure you get one?

There’ a catch however. You’ll have to buy a $50 Best Buy gift card to insure your spot for the phone, but hey no mail-in rebates. Instead you’ll get an instant discount at check-out. However Best Buy still is not saying exactly how much the phone will cost.

[Engadget]