HP 12-core workstation is 34% faster, consumes same power

The beautiful HP Z800 workstation knocked our socks off last year , but now it’s packing even more serious heat. This new $10,483 workstation, designed by BMW DesignworksUSA, looks the same as last year’s model, but inside lurks a pair of Intel’s fastest six-core Xeon Westmere EP X5680 3.33GHz processors. We knew the machine would be faster, but putting the pedal to the metal, the results were even better than we expected.

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HP 12-core workstation is 34% faster, consumes same power

Google Nexus One: Almost the best smartphone

Want to know about Google’s Nexus One smartphone, but don’t feel like reading a 10,000-word review? You’ve come to the right place. We’ve taken the shiny, smooth smartphone on the road, putting it through its paces and testing it every which way. Now we’ll give you our impressions of the phone in the most succinct manner. First of all, just look at it. Although it’s that weird color of grayish dog doo, its design reeks of derring-do. Every picture we’ve seen of it makes it look too big, but in the real world it’s a lot smaller and thinner than those pics depict.

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Google Nexus One: Almost the best smartphone

Magic Mouse

After the first minute I hated it. After a day I loved it. After a week, I’m on ibuprofen. I like the Magic Mouse, especially the touch-sensitive surface and flick scrolling, but am just not sure how long my metacarpals can take it. It’s not Apple’s fault: my hand is passing three decades old and I can’t get away with poor mousing habits anymore. But the iffy ergonomics don’t help. And though this is Cupertino’s best mouse by a country mile, it has some other drawbacks, too. So an unqualified recommendation isn’t quite possible. But I do like it. Surfing the web was a flick-scroll delight from the get-go, even if something about the twitchy touch-sensitive surface dissuades me subtly from doing any real work with it. It’s just weird enough to present the brain with a new learning curve that turns swiftly into a dangerous acquired taste: like the iPhone keyboard, it makes casual use easier and serious use harder. As far as the multitouch touchpad goes, the iPhone–not a laptop’s trackpad–is the right comparison. Clicking is still done the old-fashioned way, which is a good thing, but there’s no middle-click. No pinching gesture, either! The embedded multitouch tracking pad covers almost all of it and mostly serves to replace the scrollwheel found in standard mice–and the Mighty Mouse’s scrollball. Visually, Magic Mouse is an archetypally beautiful Apple product. There are just two curving surfaces, which meet to trace the geometrical form otherwise represented in nature by shoe horns. On top is the expansive white button/trackpad. Underneath is the metal base, broken up by two long teflon pads, a hole for tracking optics, a power switch and a battery light. Two AA batteries are required and are included. It’s well-made, wireless (BlueTooth) and attractive; the minimalist design will be a boon for those who like neat desktops. Drivers are available for Windows. Momentum scrolling feels natural and establishes an organic correspondence between force used and on-screen results. It’s the best thing about it. Other tricks the touchpad facilitates, like holding one finger down to click and then using another finger to scroll-select—feel elegant, a taste of even better implementations to come. This stuff is the magic in the Magic. Also good is that it doesn’t have the wake lag that typifies the BlueTooth mice I’ve used before. In its tracking, responsiveness and precision, it feels much like a decent RF wireless mouse from Logitech or Microsoft. The lack of middle click remains my most pressing real problem. Snow Leopard users can set up a triple-tap gesture with this trick , but people on 10.5 seem out of luck. Command-clicking is a poor substitute. The relatively low-profile shape means it lacks the domed, palm-nestled ergonomics of standard mice. For me, this encourages a punishing anti-grip in which the mouse is pushed around by the inside edges of my little finger and thumb. My pointer, index and ring finger arch over the surface like taut fleshy claws. Old muscle-memory habits occasionally send my hand wandering up it like a spider, sending documents scrolling out of place. Any who prefer a sense of mechanical control will not like this inadvertant fluttering around. Lack of middle click, odd ergonomics, and an occasional inclination to do whatever it pleases. If you don’t like the sound of those drawbacks, don’t let yourself get addicted to momentum scrolling. Magic Mouse - $69 at the Apple Store.

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Magic Mouse

Reviews: Novation Launchpad, HTC Imagio, Dymo Cardscan, Moshi Voice Control Clock

Novation Launchpad - $200 With Ableton Lite bundled free of charge, this bizarre USB-powered light box is easy to set up and fun to use. An 8×8 grid of glowing pads surrounded by context-setting controls, it’s a clever way to control playback of readied tracks–but not so fluid as a compositional tool. Though a gorgeous stage prop, it’s not a toy, either: don’t get it for folks who don’t know a DAW from a doorstop. HTC Imagio $200 w/2-year contract You’ve seen HTC’s Imagio–it’s the one in those cheeky Verizon ads that mock AT&T’s dismal 3G network. Consider your needs. It’sthe best WinMo iClone yet, but being the second best phone of 2007 still isn’t good enough if you’re a contract-free agent. HTC’s concealment of Windows’ obsolete clunker OS is an amazing feat–it swipes, it scrolls, it looks good–but at every turn there’s another reminder, a performance or UI irritation that takes the shine off. Droid is better, and so is an iPhone–but don’t count it out without a fiddle at the mall kiosk. CardScan for Windows Mobile - $15, out soon. Dymos’s CardScan scans business cards with a WinMo 6.5 cellphone’s camera, performs character recognition, then syncs up the data with your address books. It’s as simple as that, but requires at least a 2-megapixel camera. The weirder the card’s typography, the more cleanup work you’ll have to do. That said, it’s as good as dedicated business card scanners–Dymo’s putting its own hardware on the critically endagered gadget list! Motorola Debut i856 - $100 with a 2-year Sprint contract , $150 contract-free with Boost . This chunky slider-phone has push-to-talk, GPS and a 1.3MP camera. Perfectly serviceable, its old-school low res display and short feature list limit its appeal, but the real killer is price: even for $100, you can get something better. Moshi Voice Control Travel Alarm Clock - $25 There are two things you need to know about this. Firstly, it is incredibly small, small enough to fit in your pocket. Secondly, the voice recognition works perfectly. Okay, so there’s a third thing: you have to press a button to get it to accept voice commands. The size makes it good for travelers or the cramped, but the voice thing is only really for those who hate figuring controls out.

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Reviews: Novation Launchpad, HTC Imagio, Dymo Cardscan, Moshi Voice Control Clock

A spoken English-to-Spanish translation app that works

Translation is tricky enough, but an app that turns your spoken English into Spanish in real-time? It sounds like something out of Star Trek , and that’s exactly what the Jibbigo app for the iPhone claims to do. We tried it out, and we like what we see. At a glance : Jibbigo would be perfect for any iPhone owner who likes to travel to Spanish-speaking countries. It does well with vital phrases you’d need, such as asking for directions for specific things. It also does it all while offline, so you really only need service for updates. Its price is probably its greatest barrier to entry, and there are a few things it won’t do. Click Continue to find out what.

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A spoken English-to-Spanish translation app that works

Garmin Nüvi 1690: wirelessly connected GPS falls short

Garmin jumps into the connected GPS game with its Nvi 1690, a $500 portable that carries on the user-friendly tradition of the respected navigation pioneer. It connects with the EDGE network to wirelessly deliver real-time traffic info and lots more. Besides driving the price up to $500 for two years’ worth of this wireless service (it’s $5 a month after that), how much does this connectivity add to the navigation experience, and is it even necessary? Continue reading to find out.

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Garmin Nvi 1690: wirelessly connected GPS falls short

Air Multiplier: Dyson attacks the table fan, kills the blades

Putting it kindly, the Dyson brand has made a name for itself by taking tired product categories and reinventing them, making things like vacuums and hand dryers more effective, high-tech and sexier. Putting it unkindly, it’s a company based on trying to find the most expensive ways to move air. Whatever Dyson really does, it’s now doing it to the table fan. The Dyson Air Multiplier is the company’s take on this all-too-common product. The AM’s main upgrade: It does away with fan blades, instead using “unique technology” to blow air away from a large plastic ring, attached to a motorized base. We got a chance to check out an Air Multiplier personally this afternoon. Our hands-on impressions after the Continue jump, along with price and availability information.

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Air Multiplier: Dyson attacks the table fan, kills the blades

What’s so great about the Archos tablet PC?

A tablet PC sounds like an exciting new category, the excitement fueled by the rumors of an Apple tablet coming early next year. But I got to play with the new Archos 9 tablet, which runs Windows 7, and after the demo I had to ask myself: What’s so great about a tablet PC? Follow the link below for my full assessment.

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What’s so great about the Archos tablet PC?

Review: Two weeks with the Dyson DC31

According to its inventor James Dyson, the DC31 handvac has the fastest motor in the world at 104,000rpm &mdash five times as fast as a Formula 1 race car engine! That’s cool, but what I really want to know is, does it bust dust cleanly and efficiently? I have been using its predecessor, the DC16, for about two years, and I’m sad to report that it has become virtually obsolete &mdash the suction is weak, the battery only lasts 2-3 minutes, and dust accumulates relentlessly at the nozzle. This review will not give an answer as to whether the newer DC31 will have a longer lifespan than that, but here’s what I think of it so far after a couple of weeks of use. The DC31 is lighter, smaller, and doesn’t require a giant docking station. These are all great improvements. It definitely has a lot more power than the 16 ever had &mdash it swept up everything from dog hair to human hair to wood chip fragments without hesitation. The .09-gallon bin is small but easy to empty, you just push a lever down &mdash I actually prefer it small because it urges you to empty it more often, which prevents old dust from hanging out in there for too long. There are two problems I wish Dyson would fix in their next iteration of a handvac, though: 1. This thing is still pretty loud. I would be willing to give up some of that motor power for a more quiet dust-busting experience. 2. This might sound nitpicky, but there are air holes in the top back portion that blow out a significant amount of air while the nozzle is doing all its high-power sucking. That’s fine when you’re bending down to vacuum the floor, but when you’re working on a parallel or multi-tiered surface like on stairs or between furniture, this actually blows dust and hair away. Which is kind of annoying. And then there is the meta problem of handvacs being inefficient to begin with &mdash they’re nice for daily upkeep, and I like having one in the house, but a device that only cleans a couple of square inches at a time with a 10-minute battery life that makes lots of noise may be a dying breed of gadgetry. Product page [Dyson]

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Review: Two weeks with the Dyson DC31

Video: Unboxing The Fleshlight

When I tweeted about needing to get a hold of a Fleshlight, I wasn’t entirely kidding. One BBG reader answered my bluff call, put me in touch and, well, now I’ve got a real-life Fleshlight [NSFW] in my home… actually, TWO: a pink-flesh-colored one shaped like a woman’s hoo-ha vagina and another transparent one shaped like a, uh, butthole (!) an anus. To be continued… Previously: Video: Palm Pre Unboxing (I know!) Kindle 2 unboxing Unboxing Atari's 1984 Touch Tablet Video: StevenF's iPhone 3GS Unboxing Unboxing Next Gen: Advair Asthma Inhaler Samsung Omnia “Unboxing Vlog” features Liliputians, fireworks Googlephone unboxing photos A Fleshlight is not a FireWire Audio Interface Device, Amazon Lonely MacGyver: Make a “Fleshlight” from a Potato Chips Tube … Real Touch: Interactive sex device syncs porn with belt-driven USB … You can have sex with the Muji Tenga Egg - Boing Boing Gadgets Video: Fuckzilla at Arse Elektronika - Boing Boing Gadgets

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Video: Unboxing The Fleshlight

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