The Dell XPS M1710 is heavy at 4kg but an impressive gaming laptop:
From its sleek design to its CPU, graphics processor, display, memory and disk drives, the Dell XPS M1710 screams speed. "Our" M1710 came with a 2.16 GHz Intel Core Duo CPU, an Nvidia GeForce Go 7900 GTX graphics processor with 512 MB of DDR3 memory, a 17" 1920 x 1200 display, 2 GB of 677 MHz DDR2 memory and a 100 GB 7200 rpm SATA hard disk drive.
Test your reactions with an Old West shoot-em-up
Make sure your message is noticed in meetings and at parties with the LighTalk II:
Picture this: you are in a meeting, bored out of your mind. So you doodle on your note pad, pretending to take notes. Suddenly, you realize you might have created the world's greatest doodle and you need to share it with your equally bored coworker on the other side of the table. Pull out your LighTalk II; problem solved.
With a push of a button, the LighTalk II has scanned the image into its memory. Flip the switch to the display mode, and wave the pen-shaped LighTalk II back and forth like an upside down pendulum. Your image will be created in the air by a strip of orangey LEDs, ...
Say what you really think with Monk Mail:
Goggle Trends:
With Goggle Trends, you can compare the world's interest in your favorite topics. Enter up to five topics and see how often they've been searched for on Goggle over time. Google Trends also displays how frequently your topics have appeared in Google News stories, and which geographic regions have searched for them most often.
Google Trends analyzes a portion of Google web searches to compute how many searches have been done for the terms you enter relative to the total number of searches done on Google over time. We then show you a graph with the results -- our search-volume graph.
WiFi Graph:
"WiFi Graph" let you spot neighboring Wireless LAN Access Points and their connectivity. With proprietary scanning technology, Access Point information is updated every second so you can always rely on it. IT security professionals can also use our XML-based logs to analyze the invisible network.
Features
Locate the *hottest* spot within seconds!
Connectivity chart is updated every 2 seconds to reflect real-time changes
Support VGA screen and scrollable display
Display unlimited charts at once
Display relative measurements
Limited support on GPS
Chart history compares connectivity for different locations
XML logging for network analysis
Binary Watch from OI The One:
Looking for something different? Then these Men's LED Watches are probably perfect for you. A mad way to tell the time, yet completely cool:
Functions: Time (binary style – for further instructions on telling binary time on OI The One watches please go here)Case: Stainless steelSize: 38x30x11mm, 90gDial & Display Description: Black with blue LED lightingStrap: Black genuine leather with stainless steel buckleWater Resistant: 30mWarranty: 1 year worldwide OI The One guarantee
Name central has a searchable database of 25.000 names that explains their meaning. Did you for example know that Michael means Gift from God?
TechBlog covers the top 10 strangest and coolest robots.
Akihabara News covers Papipo:
Bandai and Willcom present this Papipo, a PHS phone that uses the WSIM from Willcom. It has a 128x128 screen, a 0.3MP camera, it measures 52x29.9x101mm and weighs 100g. It will come with an anti-spam filter and a system that blocks certain people from communicating with your child.
Stellarium is available for Linux, Mac OSx and Windows:
Features:
sky
over 120,000 stars from the Hipparcos catalogue with info
asterisms and illustrations of the constellations
images of nebulae
realistic Milky Way
very realistic atmosphere, sunrise and sunset
the planets and their satellites
interface
a powerful zoom
time control
multilingual interface
scripting to record and play your own shows
fisheye projection for planetarium domes
spheric mirror projection for your own dome
graphical interface and extensive keyboard control
visualisation
equatorial and azimuthal grids
star twinkling
shooting stars
eclipse simulation ...
The Nokia 5500 Sport:
Pitched at joggers and the like, the handset boasts a work-out mode that will time runs and plan your exercise schedule. It even contains a pedometer. A push of a button flips the handset into music mode, and again into phone mode. The 5500 uses MicroSD cards for music storage and it supports many of the most popular formats, Nokia said.
The handset also boasts that ability to read out text messages. It'll do the same with pedometer and work-out progress information.
Don't break the bottle is a neat gift for wine lovers:
Don't Break the Bottle is an ingenious puzzle - simply lock the bottle up in the puzzle, and hand it over to the lucky recipient. At first sight it appears laughably simple to open, but first impressions are deceptive. It's hugely entertaining watching the recipient go from cocky to puzzled to deeply frustrated - especially whilst everyone else is chipping in with their advice... "No, loop that bit over there, slip that toggle round the whatsit" etc. They'll feel they deserve every last drop if they do finally manage to crack it. If they don't, aside from you crowing, you can put them out of their misery as ...
SyncToy is available as a free download. The easy to use, customizable application helps you copy, move, rename, and delete files between folders and computers:
There are new sources of files coming from every direction: digital cameras, e-mail, cell phones, portable media players, camcorders, PDAs, and laptops. Increasingly, computer users are using different folders, drives, and even different computers (such as a laptop and a desktop) to store and retrieve files. Yet managing hundreds or thousands of files is still largely a manual operation. In some cases it is necessary to get copies of files from one place; in other cases there is a need to keep two storage ...
The Transparent Toaster looks great and would be useful to avoid surprises:
A shame it does not toast (yet):
This transparent toaster allows you to see the bread while it is toasting so you never surprised by toast that comes out too dark. This idea is based on the transparent heating glass featured in this issue. Although the glass does not currently get hot enough to toast bread, some day this application may be possible. The concept was developed by the Inventables Concept Studio.
The Cool Or What link blog has a new, and permanent, home address: Coolissimo.com. The RSS feed has not changed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/CoolOrWhatLinks
Curious to see who links to your site? Who links to me uses several search engines to find out who links to your site.
Why add a new hard disk when you can pimp your PC with a cigarette adapter and beverage holder:
The Thermaltake X-Ray is great for any home or office, allowing you to use cigarette adaptor accessories outside of your car. Besides that with the Thermaltake X-Ray you always have a place to keep your drinks, at home, and more importantly at LAN Parties. Now you don't have to worry about mixing drinks up with the people around.
Features:
Use car accessories (charge Mobile phone, PDA Notebook etc.. )
Beverage tray
Convenient for LAN party gamers
Fits for 5.25" drive bay
Lightweight with aluminum & plastic housing
Model: Thermaltake X-Ray
The Register has a in depth review of the SanDisk Sansa c150 2GB MP3 player:
Features:
Plays MP3, WMA, and Audible audio files
By capacity, holds large number of MP3/WMA songs and hours of playback
Color screen (up to 64,000 colors) displays cover art and photo thumbnails
Easy-to-use interface for sorting and playing back your music
Digital FM tuner with 20 preset stations
FM ‘on the fly’ recording and voice recording
Supports Subscription Music Stores
Includes one AAA replaceable battery for up to 15 hours of battery life (Battery Life Based on Continuous, Standard Playback, 128 Kb MP3 file)
High-speed USB2.0 for fast and easy file transfer
Get the latest results from the 2006 Football World Cup directly on your Mobile:
Keep in touch with every match, watch online scores and results from an authorized provider, get always fresh news and commentaries right from the stadium.
Online Coverage:
World Cup News from an Authorized Provider
Results
Cards and Goals Statistics
Match Reports
Rich Historic Data:
Historical Statistics
Reports and Tables from all World Cup Tournaments
Portraits of Famous Players
Tournament Description:
Match Schedule
Calendar
Description of Teams
Description of Host Cities and Stadiums
Via Pocket PC eBooks Watch - eBook and beyond
A neat high tech strategy game with simple rules:
There are four types of playing pieces, and two of them have mirrors. Game play is simple, and easy to learn, as there are only 3 movement choices. The goal is to eliminate your opponent's Pharaoh. And, you eliminate the Pharaoh just like they did in olden times - by firing a red laser! Each side of the board is equipped with its own laser, which you press after your turn. The laser bounces from mirror to mirror (always shooting off at a 90 degree angle). If the laser hits any piece on a non-reflective surface, that piece is removed from play. If you eliminate your opponent's Pharaoh, you win. If you eliminate your ...
The X-UFO by SilverLit looks pretty cool:It has a range of 100m indoors or outside in clam conditions. One red and three blue flashing LED lights indicate when the gyro is up to to speed and helps orientation. The lights also make it look like a real UFO, especially when flown in the dark. The UFO is factory assembled and Ready To Fly and comes with a four channel proportional radio control that allows three dimensional control; take off, hover, descend, spin left, spin right, pitch forward, pitch backward, pitch left, pitch right.
Not everything few things you read on the net is true. Wired has collected some of the best hoaxes in the 10 Best Internet Spoofs
Soon after 9/11, a picture circulated through e-mail of a guy on top of the World Trade Center. The date stamp was 9/11/01, and in the background a plane was seen hurtling toward him.
Answerbag has the answer
Answerbag is a compilation of human knowledge and experience. It is a universal, user-generated set of frequently-asked questions (FAQs). It is built and policed by its users, a worldwide information community that is working together to make Answerbag an authoritative collection of questions and answers on any topic relevant today. Answerbag follows the Open Content model.
Some of the latest questions
Would a child act like an ape if it was raised by apes?
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Where did the word "inning" come from?
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Can you get married via video conference? ...
Discover how your name is written Japanese. The Japanese write foreign words phonetically so your results may wary.