The Gadgets Page

October 26, 2009

Don’t Shred Your Hard Drives: Donate Them Instead

Filed under: Computers and Peripherals — Laura Moncur @ 10:00 am

Jackhammer Hard Drive Shredder at Amazon.comI was appalled when I read this article about hard drive shredders.

I’m reporting to you from the Dutch hacker conference Hacking At Random, where I got to watch CMGG’s Christian Mesu demonstrate its portable hard drive shredder. Mesu said the device is incredibly popular with governments and corporations with classified data on their old hard drives. Just wheel this baby into your office, and it can turn hard drives into powder by cutting them into 1mm slices, or just chop them in half.

Electroregeneration SocietyI am working with a non-profit agency in Salt Lake City called Electroregeneration Society. Companies donate their old computers to us, we nuke the hard drives and then reinstall the operating system (Ubuntu Linux or Windows) and some open source software to get people started. Those in need can get a working computer by donating 15 hours of volunteer work or paying a nominal fee.

The thought of companies just shredding their hard drives instead of putting their computers to good use made me break out into a cold sweat. A portable hard drive shredder in every office is a horrible waste of technology. Instead of destroying your hard drive, here is a tutorial from CNET to teach you how to nuke your hard drive instead.

The software they are talking about is DBAN | Darik’s Boot And Nuke. This software will COMPLETELY erase your hard drive and you will never be able to recover what was on it before, so make absolutely sure you get all of your important information off the drive before you run this software.

After you’ve nuked your hard drive, you can donate your computer to a charitable organization like Electroregeneration Society or even the Salvation Army without fear of identity theft. If talk of buying a hard drive shredder for your office is thrown around, please be the voice of reason and suggest DBAN and charitable donations.

October 23, 2009

Video Editing on the iPhone

Filed under: PDAs and Phones — Laura Moncur @ 10:00 am

Secrets of Videoblogging at Amazon.comNow that the iPhone 3GS has a video camera, I have been using it FAR more than I used to use my normal camera. It is not as good of a video camera as my Panasonic Lumix was, but it’s ALWAYS with me, so I’m more apt to take video with it. I’m really reluctant to upload my videos to YouTube without some sort of credit for my work (i.e. my name and the URL to my website).

Happily, Michael Verdi came to my rescue. The fantastic author of the book, Secrets of Videoblogging, Michael has figured out a cool way to add a closing credits video all without connecting to your home computer. He even posted a mini-tutorial on Flickr showing how to do it:

Putting Videos in the iPhone's Camera Roll by Michael Verdi from Flickr

The iPhone app that he uses to edit video is called ReelDirector [iTunes Link] made by the people at NexVio. Unfortunately, it only allows you to work with videos in the Camera Roll, but Michael Verdi found a way to work around that as well.

He uses Ecamm Network’s PhoneView to add a movie that he has created to the iPhone’s Camera Roll. The software does a lot more than just allow you to add a movie to the camera roll. You can download and view your call history, save your SMS logs and use your iPhone in Disk Mode.

By using these two software products, Michael Verdi has been able to add credits to his videos that he uploads with his iPhone without having to edit video on his computer at home. He has gone totally mobile. Here is a quick example of video editing and adding a final credit to a video done completely on his iPhone.

If you don’t mind boring credits, ReelDirector does a fair job adding them. I filmed this video with my iPhone, edited it with ReelDirector and used their built in credits.

Thanks again, Michael, for explaining all of this so simply and making video blogging easier for us all.

October 22, 2009

Solar Chargers for your iPhone

Filed under: Green Gadgets,PDAs and Phones — Laura Moncur @ 12:47 pm

Denver Art Museum by LauraMoncur from FlickrLast month, Mike and I went to Denver for the iPhone Developers Conference. I walked to the Denver Art Museum using directions on my iPhone to get me there. I also took lots of pictures of the exhibits at the museum using my phone’s camera. By the time I got to the top floor, my phone was dead. Not just low, but DEAD.

I am ashamed at the panic that washed over me at that moment.

I use my phone for EVERYTHING! I didn’t even know how to get back to my hotel without my phone. I couldn’t call Mike to come pick me up. I couldn’t text him to tell him I had a dead phone. I couldn’t do anything! It was the first time in YEARS that I have had a phone completely run out of battery on me. To be fair, I had taken 222 photos at the art museum and used the GPS feature to take me to the museum in the first place. Despite begging every employee at the museum, NO one had an iPod charger (surprising, I know).

Fortunately, the museum had a map of the city with my hotel on it, so I could make my way back the old fashioned way, but the entire walk back, I was cursing myself for not carrying SOMETHING with me to keep my iPhone charged. The first thing that came to mind was the Devotec Solar Charger that I reviewed last year. The minute I got back to Salt Lake City, I pulled it out of its box to see if it worked with my iPhone 3GS. Unfortunately, it doesn’t, so I looked for a replacement.

Here’s what I found:

Silicone Solar Charger Battery Case for iPhones at Amazon.com

Silicone Solar Charger Battery Case for iPhones

This charger is a case that stays on your iPhone all the time. It says that it takes less than three hours to charge, but it doesn’t specify whether that is the charging time for its internal battery or the iPhone itself. I like the design of the case, but it DOES add bulk to the phone and the silicone would make it difficult to slide it in and out of a pocket. In my situation in Denver, it wouldn’t have helped me much. I was back and charging my phone in the hotel room within an hour. It might have prevented my phone from dying completely, but it wouldn’t have helped keep it alive to navigate me back to the room.

Additionally, there is no guarantee that this will work on an iPhone 3GS and no reviews from people who had bought it. I decided that this one wouldn’t work for me.

Apple iPhone 3GS Solar Battery Portable Recharger at Amazon.com

Apple iPhone 3GS Solar Battery Portable Recharger

This charger is VERY small and the internal battery can also be charged by plugging it into a wall. Unfortunately, the specifications don’t say how long the charging time is. Since the solar panel is so small, it MUST be less than three hours (which is the charging time of the previous solar charger with a bigger panel). There are no customer reviews, so buying this charger is like shooting in the dark. I decided against it as well.

Leather Solar Charger Battery Case for iPhones at Amazon.com

Leather Solar Charger Battery Case for iPhones

I just couldn’t bring myself to buy this one because it was so UGLY. Not only does it add alot of bulk, but you have to open it up to answer the phone. I’m usually struggling to get to my phone in time already. I don’t need the added impediment of trying to get a case open as well. Once again, there is no guarantee that this will work with the iPhone 3GS and no stated charging times.

Despite all my searching, I was unable to find a solar charger that was nearly as portable as just carrying around the USB charger and a retractable cable. I’m positive that the museum would have let me plug into a wall plug for a few minutes, at least long enough for me to call or text my husband in desperation. Sadly, solar technology isn’t quite ready for those desperate dead iPhone emergencies. I’m sure that when it is, Apple will build it into all of their products. Until then, I’ll just carry around a petite charger in my purse instead.

October 15, 2009

Sony Betamovie Camcorder

Filed under: Cameras — Laura Moncur @ 10:00 am

Here is an old advertisement for the world’s first camcorder, the Sony Betamovie.

Betamovie BMC-100p by LauraMoncur from Flickr

It reads:

Betamovie BMC-100P – Exciting Betamovie

Here comes Betamovie, the revolutionary one-piece video camera with built-in recording capability. With no awkward, bulky size or cumbersome weight, the compact, take-me-anywhere Betamovie goes wherever you go Just pop in any Beta-format videotape and you’re instantly ready to shoot for up to 3 hours and 35 minutes (with a Sony L-830 cassette tape).

Sony’s state-of-the-art Betamovie. The terrific way to get more out of home video movie making.

Compared to the technology of its day, this camcorder WAS compact, but right now, I have a video camera on my cell phone that can record video at a higher rate for longer. This ad was made in the 1980’s. If someone had come up to me in the early Eighties and said that I could carry around a better video camera in my POCKET than our high school TV station had, I would have been so excited for the future.

October 14, 2009

More Power To You!

Filed under: Cars & Transportation,Misc. Gadgets — Laura Moncur @ 10:00 am

I love this advertisement from America’s Independent Electric Companies.

More Power To You

It reads:

More Power To You! America’s independent light and power companies build your new electric living

Tomorrow’s higher standard of living will put electricity to work for you in ways still unheard of!

The time isn’t too far off, the experts say, when you’ll wash your dishes without soap or water – ultrasonic waves will do the job.

Still hasn’t happened yet. I’ve seen lots of gadgets that SAY they do this, but none of them have been made readily available.

Your beds will be made at the touch of a button.

Yours do that? Mine sure doesn’t.

The kids’ homework will be made interesting and even exciting when they are able to dial a library book, a lecture, or a classroom demonstration right into your home – with sound. (Some of this is happening already)

Thank you, Internet! You HAVE fulfilled the dreams of the 1950’s!

To enjoy all this, you’ll want a lot more electric power, and the independent electric companies of America are already building new plants and facilities to provide it. Right now these companies are building at the rate of $5,000,000,000 a year, and planning to double the nation’s supply of electricity in less than 10 years.

America has always had the best electric power service in the world. The electric companies are resolved to keep it that way.

Can I just take a moment to THANK the electric companies of yesteryear?! They stepped up the production of plants to meet our needs so well that we feel that electricity is a RIGHT. Whenever we get a huge snowstorm here in Utah, the weight of the snow can snap a line. When the people of Utah are out of power for more than a few hours, they SUE electric companies. Outages and brownouts are rare because these folks had the foresight to build.

Mind you, I wish they had built more windmills and less coal burning plants, but it’s not really fair for me to expect them to foresee the energy crisis as well as the need for it.

Advert via: vintage_ads: “They’re working on it!”

October 13, 2009

The Happy Marriage Blanket

Filed under: Misc. Gadgets,Retro Gadgets — Laura Moncur @ 10:00 am

I love this ad for the GE Happy Marriage Blanket.

Happy Marriage Blanket

It reads:

Have you heard of the “Happy Marriage” blanket?

If you and your husband can’t agree on how many blankets you need for perfect comfort – and he tosses them off while you shiver with cold-

You can solve this problem so easily – as so many other smart couples have done – with a General Electric “Happy Marriage” Blanket.

Just ONE fluffy-light General Electric Blanket with Dual Comfort-Selectors is all you need – and you each enjoy personal comfort.

You choose the warmth you like… he chooses his – and GE’s Sleep Guard adjusts automatically to bedroom temperature changes.

The ad goes on to say that it’s washable and available in many colors.

Sunbeam Queen Size Electric Warming Blanket Dual Control at Amazon.comThe funny thing is, this EXACT electric blanket is still available today. The Sunbeam blankets have dual control, even now. Personally, I prefer an electric mattress pad instead. The Sunbeam Queen size also has dual control, but it lays UNDER you, heating up, so if your partner kicks off the covers, you’ll still be warm. The best new feature they’ve added since the Sixties is the auto-off feature, so the pad turns itself off after ten hours, even if you forget to. I LOVE that feature.

Now that it’s getting colder, it’s time for me to start using the heated mattress pad again. I’m so grateful for it when the weather gets chilly.

Advertisement via: vintage_ads: Happiness is a warm blanket..

October 12, 2009

TomTom Releases iPhone App When All We Wanted Was the Car Kit

Filed under: PDAs and Phones — Laura Moncur @ 10:00 am

TomTom’s usual specialty are in-car GPS navigation systems. They have been making them for years. As soon as the iPhone got a GPS chip, TomTom announced that they were coming out with an iPhone app. Well, the TomTom App [iTunes link] has finally arrived.

Unfortunately for them, they weren’t the first on the market and CERTAINLY weren’t the cheapest. When they did arrive, it was a severe disappointment for many of the people who did shell out the hundred bucks for it. Here are some quotes from the reviews:

None of the TomTom “cool” features exist. This includes things like Traffic, Fuel Prices, Google Search, etc.

Before picking an address from my address book, I have to pick the correct country (state), in order for it to be correct. Shockingly bad.

Navigation seems to be OK, but it doesn’t speak street names?! HELLO!

I’m not sure, but it looks like I have to pay extra for the mount that TomTom bragged about at the Apple event a few months ago. You would think that $99 would include a mount. It’s not like TomTom had to pay anything for the iPhone hardware… who does TomTom think they are?

That car kit that the reviewer was talking about was the only cool thing about the TomTom presentation. Here is a video showing it:

When you check the TomTom site, it’s still “Coming Soon.” Get on the stick, TomTom! Don’t you realize that all we really wanted was that cool car kit?!

Here are a list of some other GPS Navigation software for the iPhone:

  • Sygic Mobile Maps US: I purchased this app. When compared to the usability of most iPhone apps, this one is horrible, but when compared to my old Garmin Nuvi, it’s almost as good. Mike and I took a drive from SLC to Denver and had both the Garmin and the Sygic running. The maps were comparable and the directions were clearer than the Garmin at times. As long as I chose a voice that had the letter TTS (text to speech) next to it, the voice would pronounce the street names. The POI (points of interest) were just as useless as my Garmin, so we used the Google Maps feature to find things close by and then plugged the address into the GPS. Best feature was being able to listen to music while the GPS app ran. When directions came, the music faded out for them. It was on “sale” for $40 when I bought it. At that price, it’s an incredible deal.

  • AT&T Navigator: AT&T is willing to give you a “free” app with a ten dollars a month fee for access to their maps and navigation. Unfortunately, it only works if you have a cell signal or wifi access. How is that useful when you’re driving from one part of the country to another? Do they actually believe that their coverage is THAT good? Sadly, it isn’t.

  • MobileNavigator by Navigon: A very highly rated app, but at $89.99, it’s so close to the TomTom price that it makes it strangely overpriced. We get maps for free from Google Maps, so it’s difficult to justify charging me that much money for them.

  • GPS Kit from Garafa: Like the AT&T Navigator, you need a cell signal or wifi access for this application to work. The only difference is that you only have to pay ten bucks once to be disappointed.

  • MotionX GPS Drive: Unless you’re willing to pay their $3 monthly fee, it’s not much better than the turn-by-turn directions given by the Google Maps app included in every iPhone.

In the end, the iPhone isn’t quite ready for GPS navigation. The GPS chip is just as strong as my antiquated Garmin, but it isn’t as powerful as the new ones. If you really want to replace your in-car GPS, you’re going to have to wait until the iPhone adds a better GPS chip. Until then, all of these apps are just a shade better than toys.

October 10, 2009

Twitter Updates for 2009-10-10

Filed under: Site News — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 pm
  • I have three presentations today. One of them in the huge auditorium. Feeling nervous now! #UTOSC #

Powered by Twitter Tools.

October 9, 2009

Retro Cars from Three Frames

Filed under: Cars & Transportation,Retro Gadgets — Laura Moncur @ 10:36 am

I love this animated GIF from three frames.

Retro Cars from Three Frames

It is from the movie, Playtime, which was released in 1967 in France. I love seeing all the old cars and buses moving around the traffic circle. That’s the beauty of old movies. They’re a glimpse of the gadgetry of days gone by.

October 2, 2009

Scrapbooking Die Cutter Comparisons

Filed under: Misc. Gadgets,Reviews — Christy Strebe @ 11:22 am

Cricut 29-0001 Personal Electronic Cutting Machine at Amazon.comDie cutting has been a staple of crafting for centuries. Originally just cookie cutters sharpened to cut paper, a new generation of digital die cutters is available that use a razor knife and computerized control to cut any number of shapes with the same precision. This means you don’t have to have a library of dies and you aren’t limited by the size of the dies you have.

There are two types of digital die cutters vying for the craft market: Self-contained cartridge-based cutters that require no computer or computer expertise, and computer driven cutters that are less expensive and more flexible, but have a higher learning curve and require a computer.

THE PROVOCRAFT CRICUT

Cricut 29-0001 Personal Electronic Cutting Machine at Amazon.comThe Cricut machine by Provo Craft is easy to use. It doesn’t need to be hooked up to a computer so it is portable. The cartridge designs are cute, although to get them to look like the examples on the boxes you will need to cut the same shape a number of times in different colors and layer them together.

If you buy cartridges at regular price they are expensive ($69-$89). They go on sale often, however, and I’ve been able to get them as cheap as $25. You can scale the images from 1” to 5.5”, in specific increments of generally ½”.

Cricut Expression 24-Inch Personal Electronic Cutting Machine at Amazon.comThe original Cricut will cut paper, cardstock, vinyl, and contact paper up to 6”x12”. The Cricut Expression gives you have more size options up to 12”x24” and can also cut chip board, but it is bigger making it not as portable (it doesn’t have a handle like the original Cricut). You need to put your paper on a tacky mat that holds the paper down while it’s being cut. The Cricut comes with two mats and they last quite a long time if you keep dust off of them. Additionally, you can revitalize your old cutting mats using the techniques in this Youtube video:

The Gypsy is an accessory cartridge that can load and store all of your other cartridges. It is due out October 4th. It also does custom layouts of images and can scale them in more ways.

Cricut is expensive however. By the time you’ve got a machine and a library of cartridges it’s easy to be over $1000 into it.

They have over 100 cartridges with fonts, shapes (garden, animals, travel, boxes, tags, seasons, holidays, etc.) licensed (Disney, Hello Kitty, SpongeBob, etc), “Classmate” (50 states, word builders, letters made of an item that starts with that letter)

Cricut Design Studio software at Amazon.comYou can only use shapes available as cartridges. With the Cricut Design Studio software you can blend and combine images from cartridges using your computer, and there is a third-party software program called Sure Cuts a Lot that takes your own images and fonts and cuts them on the Cricut machine. I have not tried it. It Costs $75-90, and it does not come with a design program. Frankly, if you want to use your computer, get the Silhouette SD, which is a lot more versatile.

The list prices for the various Cricut Machines (the machines also go on sale at local craft stores and on the web):

Cricut $163.47 – $299.99

Cricut Create $199.95 – $399.99 same size as the original Cricut with a 6”x12” mat, but cuts images from 1” to 11.5”

Cricut Expression $289.03 – $499.99

Gypsy $299.99

Cricut Jukebox $ 44.99 – $89.99 lets you combine 6 cartridges at a time

Cricut Design Studio software $49.99 – $89.99 lets you blend images from cartridges using your computer

Here is a step-by-step guide showing how to use the Cricut.

The fact that she used this elaborate machine to die cut the word “Simplify” for her wall is an irony that was obviously lost on her.

QUICKCUTZ SILHOUETTE SD/ GRAPHTEC CraftRobo

Craft ROBO CC330L-20 SD Digital Craft Cutting Machine at Amazon.comThe biggest competitor to the Cricut is the CraftRobo Silhouette SD. The Silhouette SD is just like a computer printer—in fact the computer actually thinks it IS a type of printer called a plotter. Instead of a print head, it has a razor knife.

Like a printer, it comes with a USB cable to connect it to your computer and you have to install a driver. It comes with a design program that lets you draw your designs and lay in whatever text you want. You can draw cut lines and perforations using different line colors. The cutting area of the Silhouette is 9” x 39” for cutting vinyl or other backed material, but if you need to use the cutting mat it is limited to 8 ½” x 12”. You cannot cut chipboard, foam, or fabric with the Silhouette SD.

The Silhouette SD also has an SD camera card slot that you can use to store your designs on. This allows you to take the cutter with you and cut designs without your computer attached. CraftRobo provides a library of designs that you can access on the Web, and the cutter comes with 100 free downloads from the library. Cutting from the SD card is not as easy as using the Cricut, but it does work. It’s certainly easier than setting up your computer each time you want to cut.

Like the Cricut, you have to put paper on a tacky carrier mat, which lasts quite a while if you keep the included cover on it. The carrier has precision markings and placing paper is more accurate than the Cricut—so accurate that you use the “registration” feature to cut around full color printouts from your printer—a very handy feature for cutting out heart-shaped photos, for example, which the Cricut cannot do.

The Silhouette SD costs $250 and comes with everything you need to get started except an SD card. Consumables include razor blades and tacky mats, both of which are an inexpensive $10 and last for dozens of cutting sessions. The Silhouette SD cannot reliably cut stock heavier than 100lb. paper, however you can “re-cut” the same cardstock over to make sure a cut goes all the way through.

Here is a video of a demonstration of the Quickcutz Silhouette:

THE VERDICT

If you are both computer savvy and creative enough to do your own designs, you’ll be happiest with the Silhouette SD. Other than cutting the thickest stock, it can technically do anything the Cricut can do. For example, my husband uses it to cut out playing cards after printing them, and he has designed some paper tuck boxes that can simply be folded up like origami. Neither of these functions would be possible with a Cricut. It borders on being a professional tool, and the company that actually makes it, Graphtec, has higher-end machines specifically designed for professionals. It does not come with a wide library of shapes, so if you’re looking to cut out Mickey Mouse, You’re going to have to do quite a bit of design work yourself.

If you prefer not to deal with computers, the Cricut is for you. Its wide library of cartridge designs and accessories ensures that you’ll find the stock shape you’re looking for. Be prepared to spend a bit of money, or start a cartridge lending pool with your friends.

When it comes to papercrafts and scrapbooking, die cutters are becoming as ubiquitous as scissors and paper. Make sure you take into account your financial limitations and technical abilities when you choose the die cutter that is right for you.

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