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Horizon's Minipak, Hydrofill and Hydrostik fuel cell devices go up for pre-order

We first learned of Horizon's most recent fuel cell-powered aspirations back at CES, but the company has been radio silent ever since. Well, until today. As of this very moment in time, a trio of alternative energy charging solutions are up for pre-order on the company's site, and while they promised that the family would be available by the end of 2010, it seems as if the first shipments will head out as early as next month. The Minipak -- described as a charging device that integrates a passive air-breathing fuel cell and a 'solid-state' hydrogen storage unit -- is up for pre-order at $99.99, while the monstrous Hydrofill water-to-hydrogen-to-power converter can also be claimed for $499.99. Last (but certainly not least), the Hydrostik can be reserved for a penny under a Hamilton. Go on, give that source link a look -- your angered AAs will peter out before they're able to take up arms, anyway.

[Thanks, Mitchell]

Lexar's 128GB Echo SE USB thumb drive continuously backs up your netbook, mobile life

Previously available in 16GB and 32GB versions, Lexar's Echo SE line just got gigantic. And a lot more useful, if we should say so ourselves. With many SSDs topping out at 128GB, and quite a few netbooks shipping with 160GB HDDs, having this USB drive plugged essentially allows your entire laptop to be continuously backed up. The built-in, "no touch software" automatically backs up files in use, requiring absolutely no activation on your end. We're told that the little bugger will work with Windows and OS X platforms, but the assurance of having your mobile life backed up at all times will cost ya. And by that, we mean "make you $349.99 poorer." It's available now at various e-tailers (Amazon, Newegg, etc.) if you're willing to pay the premium.
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BlindType vows to autocorrect all wrongs with your iPhone or Android virtual keyboard (video)

Remember that episode of The Simpsons where Homer gets too fat to be able to dial a number? Well, he wouldn't have had that problem had BlindType been around. This soft keyboard is described by its makers as being extremely resilient to inaccurate input and looking at the demo video after the break, you kinda have to agree -- it seems to have a pretty kickass predictive algorithm. Aside from that, the keyboard also dynamically adjusts to wherever and however you choose to type, meaning its size and orientation track along to your input, which goes some way to justifying the somewhat odd name (it's meant for blind operation, not blind people). Text can be inserted without the keyboard even being on screen, while spaces are added by swiping to the right. BlindType should be coming to Android and iOS devices some time in the near future.

[Thanks, Fadl]

Update: We asked BlindType's makers whether implementing their software will require replacing Apple's default button slate and they've confirmed that it would. They're making and submitting it for iOS use, nonetheless, "to put pressure on Apple to finally allow this kind of thing."
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FCC reevaluates US broadband competitiveness, finds 14 to 24 million lack access

The National Broadband Plan may one day bring broadband to everyone in the United States but, as a new report from the FCC itself reveals, there's still quite a ways to go. According to the report (issued every year by the agency), between 14 and 24 million Americans have no access to broadband, which is now defined by the FCC to be a 4Mbps downstream and 1Mbps upstream. That's a significant revision from the previous 200kbps downstream standard used by the annual report, and brings it in line with the minimum goals set by the National Broadband Plan. What does that mean for the 14 to 24 million without broadband access? Not much at the moment, unfortunately. FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski says that those individuals are mostly in "expensive-to-serve areas with low population density," and that "without substantial reforms to the agency's universal service programs, these areas will continue to be unserved." Of course, that finding is just one part of the report -- hit up the source link below to check out the whole thing.

New MIT software learns an entire dead language in just a few hours

Whenever we boot up our time machines, cruise back to 1200 B.C., and try to pick up chicks at our favorite wine bar in Western Syria, our rudimentary knowledge of Ugaritic is usually more ...

The daily roundup: here's what you might've missed

A visual recap of the day's articles
Jul 21st 2010 | 46 Articles
12:54 am
98 Comments
Honda will bring plug-in hybrids, full EVs to United States in 2012
2:01 am
39 Comments
Panasonic's new Lumix lineup: LX5, FZ40, FZ100, FX700, and TS10 all official
2:43 am
85 Comments
Google Images get spruced up, don't need no stinkin' text
4:13 am
16 Comments
Panasonic adds Blu-ray 3D/HDD all-in-one plasmas; redesigned, rechargeable 3D glasses in Japan
3:25 am
104 Comments
Droid 2 and Android 2.2 fated to be together from the start, according to latest leaks
5:02 am
23 Comments
ARM and TSMC team up for tinier 20nm Cortex SOCs
5:50 am
58 Comments
Nonstop gaming world record has been shattered, victors sleep right through their parade
7:04 am
106 Comments
T-Mobile's HSPA+ blankets 85 million Americans in warm '4G' comfort
6:33 am
106 Comments
Researcher will enable hackers to take over millions of home routers
8:12 am
22 Comments
EU sets aside €6.4b for research and innovation grants
7:38 am
12 Comments
MSI launches Wind12 U230 'Light,' shaves two inches and 30 clamshells from predecessor's hide
9:06 am
22 Comments
Entourage Systems partners with Cengage Learning, bringing lots more digital books to the Edge
8:40 am
71 Comments
Plextor ships PX-B120U USB-powered Blu-ray drive for $100
9:56 am
36 Comments
Fits.me shape-shifter models the huge pectoral muscles men want, smaller ones they have (video)
9:28 am
99 Comments
Dell ships Precision M6500 laptop with 32GB of RAM: drill, baby, drill
10:59 am
291 Comments
Nexus One is sold out in Google's store -- forever
10:51 am
122 Comments
HULC exo-skeleton ready for testing, set to hit the ground running next year (video)
10:30 am
33 Comments
Samsung ST100 and ST600 cams take DualView screens to the high end
12:07 pm
71 Comments
Rat lungs successfully grown in bioreactor: groundbreaking, yet also kind of gross
11:44 am
29 Comments
Kinetic wall sculptures are impossible to look away from (video)
11:23 am
17 Comments
Fujifilm shoots out out five new cameras: F300EXR, Z800EXR, Z80, JX280 and S2800HD
1:15 pm
23 Comments
Growing up Geek: Clayton Morris
12:53 pm
23 Comments
Autom, the robot weight loss coach: we'll just keep the friends that lie to us, thanks
12:28 pm
124 Comments
HP confirms that Slate is still kicking, 'next steps' being determined
2:02 pm
52 Comments
HP TouchSmart tm2 gains Core i5 CPU option, a whole new level of respect
1:38 pm
174 Comments
Google: Eclair is on more than half of all Android phones, Froyo bursts onto the scene
3:06 pm
64 Comments
RIM shows off BlackBerry 6 multimedia experience, in pictures
2:46 pm
51 Comments
Archos 8 Home Tablet gets unboxed and examined
2:23 pm
13 Comments
Native Instruments teases new all-in-one Traktor controller, enlists Dubfire to help
3:55 pm
91 Comments
Verizon launching $80 5GB prepaid data plan next month, FiveSpot too?
3:34 pm
77 Comments
Microsoft says to expect non-casual, 'hybrid' Kinect games 'over the coming 18 months'
3:17 pm
121 Comments
Skype updated for iOS 4, background VoIP is a go
5:05 pm
205 Comments
iPhone headed for T-Mobile USA in Q3?
4:39 pm
54 Comments
House passes Cellphone Contraband Act of 2010, prisoners go back to writing letters
4:18 pm
72 Comments
Facebook officially has 500 million users, most of whom think Zuckerberg is a creep
5:54 pm
164 Comments
Microsoft to employees: 'everybody gets a Windows Phone 7!'
5:32 pm
63 Comments
ExoPC nabs improved screen and e-book app, still on track for a September release (video)
7:01 pm
25 Comments
Fraunhofer FIT touch-free gesture-control for multiple users (video)
6:26 pm
20 Comments
MSI rumored to have TriDef 3D laptops on deck, no active shutters required
8:09 pm
8 Comments
Samsung rolls out budget-minded PL200 point-and-shoot
7:33 pm
28 Comments
Final roll of Kodachrome processed in Kansas; angel sheds a rainbow-colored tear
8:45 pm
32 Comments
Motorola sues Huawei and several former employees for stealing wireless trade secrets
10:00 pm
54 Comments
Dell Streak available for purchase 'in late July,' says US product page
9:17 pm
41 Comments
Netflix plans discless Watch Instantly on the PS3 by late October, more 'pure streaming' worldwide
10:51 pm
5 Comments
UK defense firm pumps data through solid submarine walls
11:45 pm
0 Comments
The daily roundup: here's what you might've missed
Archive
Jul 21st 2010
Going mobile
Other news of import

UK defense firm pumps data through solid submarine walls

Wireless power may still be on the drawing board, but wireless data is here today, and a UK defense contractor has figured out a way to pipe the latter through several inches of steel. Using a pair of piezoelectric transducers on either side of a watertight submarine compartment, BAE's "Through Hull Data Link" sends and receives an acoustic wave capable of 15MHz data rates, enough to transmit video by essentially hammering ever-so-slightly on the walls. BAE impressed submarine commanders by streaming Das Boot right through their three-inch hulls, and while metadrama is obviously the killer app here, the company claims it will also save millions by replacing the worrisome wiring that's physically routed via holes in a submarine's frame. See the company's full US patent application at our more coverage link.

Dell Streak available for purchase 'in late July,' says US product page

It's funny to think, even after reviewing the device (thrice, at this point), that we still don't have a US release date for Dell's Streak. The company's been uncharacteristically coy, but the stateside product page does offer this tantalizing tidbit: "available for purchase in late July." That gives us a good 10-day window, so if you've been eyeballing that pre-sale button with intent to click, now might be the time jump on the list.

Netflix plans discless Watch Instantly on the PS3 by late October, more 'pure streaming' worldwide

It's still a pretty big window, but Netflix CEO Reed Hastings has narrowed down the time until we can expect a disc-free streaming experience on our PS3s from "later this year" to some time before its next earning call, which should happen around October 21. Other notes from the Q2 highlights included a shoutout to Hulu Plus, where Netflix "plans to learn what customers like about Hulu Plus" and use that to enhance its service, as well as the upcoming launch of a streaming service in Canada, and how the lessons learned may be applied to other "pure streaming" offerings internationally in the future. Investors aren't too happy the company missed earnings projections, but we're figuring once they close the ETrade window and pick up a Shockaxis they'll start to get over it.

Motorola sues Huawei and several former employees for stealing wireless trade secrets

Man, if you thought the lawsuit action in the mobile space was crazy before, well, you ain't seen nothing yet -- Motorola just sued Huawei and over a dozen former employees for conspiring to steal its wireless trade secrets and other proprietary technology over a period of years starting in 2001. Yeah, it's crazy. The lawsuit was originally filed in 2008 against four former Motorola engineers and a company called Lemko, all of whom Motorola accused of conspiring to stealing trade secrets related to wireless technology. After years of discovery in the case, it appears that Motorola realized the conspiracy went much deeper than it originally thought, leading the company to file a new complaint on July 16th, in which it named Huawei and nine additional former employees, who allegedly schemed to steal plans for a 3G base station called the SC300.

According to the complaint, part of the scheme was ultimately blown up when one of the employees was arrested by Customs at O'Hare airport en route to China with $30,000 in cash and over 1,000 pages of documentation regarding Motorola's various communications networking tech, while another employee was caught buying Motorola phones in bulk and sending unlock codes and dump files to Lemko for reverse engineering purposes. Motorola also says that it doesn't yet know the exact relationship between Lemko, Huawei and some of the former employees because "file destruction software" was installed and run on computers before they were turned over as evidence, but the company claims that Huawei was aware it was receiving proprietary Motorola information the entire time it was in contact with the former employees. Yes, it's all very juicy -- we'll be watching this one closely.

Samsung rolls out budget-minded PL200 point-and-shoot

Not interested in Samsung's newfangled DualView cameras? Don't worry, the company is still cranking out plenty of regular point-and-shoots as well -- like this just-announced PL200 model. Coming in at a reasonable $179.99, this one packs a 14.2-megapixel sensor, a 7x optical zoom, a 3-inch LCD 'round back, 720p video recording, and dual optical and digital image stabilization, among other standard features. Hit up the gallery below for a closer look, and watch for the camera for to be available sometime this September in your choice of black, silver or red.
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Final roll of Kodachrome processed in Kansas; angel sheds a rainbow-colored tear

Kodak stopped manufacturing the oldest film in its catalog last year, but Dwayne's Photo in Parsons, Kansas kept its Kodachrome processing rig around just in case. Last week photographer ...

Fraunhofer FIT touch-free gesture-control for multiple users (video)

It seems like everyone is cooking up their own touch-free gesture-based control technology, just like every blogger is destined to refer to it as "Minority Report-like" or "Minority Report-esque," or "Tom Cruise-tastic!" Fraunhofer's FIT, the newest such project, has recently appeared on the YouTubes, where we must say it looks pretty darn good. Not only does it not require special gloves or markers, this thing also works in real time and can support multiple users (and multiple fingers). The researchers hope to use this for working with complex simulation data and in education, although there are some kinks to be worked out: currently elements like the reflections caused by wristwatches and the orientation of the palm confuses the system. That said, the demo is pretty rad! See for yourself after the break.
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MSI rumored to have TriDef 3D laptops on deck, no active shutters required

We've heard this song and dance before, but DigiTimes has it that MSI is on pace to shove out a 3D laptop this September. Before you open that jaw and feign a yawn, you should know that the company is purportedly not following convention by integrating NVIDIA's 3D Vision technology; instead, it'll rely on Dynamic Digital Depth's (DDD's) TriDef 3D software for transferring 2D images to 3D. This means that users will be able to use cheap-o polarized glasses rather than the more expensive (and battery draining) active shutter variety. Somehow or another, the whole thing is supposed to launch at under a grand, so we'll be poking around on the IFA show floor hoping that this one comes to fruition.

Microsoft to employees: 'everybody gets a Windows Phone 7!'

Microsoft guru extraordinaire Mary Jo Foley has retweeted a company employee boasting of a commitment to hand out Windows Phone 7 devices to each and every one of Redmond's 90,000-plus employees around the world. That's certainly one way to spread the word -- and realistically, the cost to Microsoft is a drop in the bucket if they can really take advantage of the word-of-mouth advertising effect here. Of course, step one in that process is going to be making sure the product is absolutely rock solid by the time those gratis units start getting handed out. Microsoft staffers do know how to multitask when they're working, right?

ExoPC nabs improved screen and e-book app, still on track for a September release (video)

Still pining for one of the best Windows 7 tablets we've seen to date? Yeah, we're talking about the 11.6-inch ExoPC. Well, we've got nothing but good news: the company's still on track for a September release and has been putting the finishing touches on the Windows 7, Intel Atom-powered slate. According to some new videos posted by the company, the tablet's been upgraded with a new LCD that appears to have much better viewing angles than the one we checked out at Computex. Additionally, the Canadian team's been doing some stand-up work on an e-book app. As you can see in the video beyond the break (more can be found there in the source link), it's got a simple interface, snazzy page flip animations and it looks fairly easy to import a book on your own. It's all lookin' quite good to us. Not that we're trying to rush this heat wave or anything, but is it September yet?
READ MORE

iPhone headed for T-Mobile USA in Q3?

We hear so many iPhone-Verizon-tomorrow-OMG rumors that our nation's brave also-ran carriers hardly get a word in edgewise. While Sprint remains a total longshot, T-Mobile USA is an interesting proposition for the mere fact that it's a GSM network, though its 1700 / 2100 3G network remains ostensibly incompatible with the iPhone 4's existing radio. According to Cult of Mac, a "highly placed source" at T-Mobile let it slip that they've got an 80 percent chance of getting the iPhone in Q3. Now, that's an oddly specific number, and we have no idea what it's contingent on, or how much exactly this source knows. Basically, we don't know a lot here. Of course, the biggest evidence of this possible T-Mobile coup remains the statement from Deutsche Telekom's CEO in March, saying that the USA branch is hoping to get the iPhone later this year. We really don't know who or what to believe, but we do know one thing: if Apple decides to sell a T-Mobile USA iPhone, there's an 80+ percent chance it will tell everybody.

House passes Cellphone Contraband Act of 2010, prisoners go back to writing letters

Oh, we know all about doin' time. We watched both Oz and The Wire in their entirety, and have seen Let's Go To Prison, like, eight times. For instance, we know that you only do two days in the joint: the day you go in, and the day you go out. And we know that tattoo guns are readily available (if you have access to an old walkman or Playstation).We also know that cellphones are contraband, and rightfully so: you wouldn't want an inmate ordering a hit on someone, or running their record label from in "the stir." That's why we stand with the CTIA in support of S.1749, or The Cell Phone Contraband Act of 2010. Approved in April by the Senate, and passed by the house yesterday, this amendment to title 18 of the United States Code prohibits "possession or use of cellphones and similar wireless devices by Federal prisoners." And once it's signed into law by the President, we're sure that the no-goodniks will stop sneaking handsets in and we can forget all that silly talk of prison cellphone jamming once and for all.

Facebook officially has 500 million users, most of whom think Zuckerberg is a creep

That's right, Mark Zuckerberg's just announced via the official Facebook blog that the site now has 500 million users. The social networking site -- which has been reuniting girls with ...

Verizon launching $80 5GB prepaid data plan next month, FiveSpot too?

At present, Verizon only offers prepaid mobile broadband in buckets ranging from 100MB up to 1GB at prices from $15 to $50. Problem is, 1GB goes by in about two seconds if you're YouTubin' your way through a layover in Atlanta, enjoying a little too much Hulu and Pandora, or torrenting a few ISOs (perfectly legal ones, of course) -- so to that end, we're hearing that a 5GB option will be launching on August 23 for a breathtaking $80. Presumably, it'd be good for 30 days from the date of purchase the same as the current 1GB plan, though we don't know that from the information we have. Sounds a little ridiculous to us, but we suppose that's the price of contract freedom on a top-tier network these days.

On a related note, we're now hearing that the FiveSpot mobile hotspot we told you about is lined up for a late August launch as well, though we don't have an exact day, and it'll be officially replacing the MiFi -- makes sense. If you already have a MiFi and you don't do much international travel, it doesn't seem like there's a compelling reason to upgrade, but globetrotters are definitely going to want to check this out.

[Thanks, RBF]

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