Continue reading RCA’s line of portable hybrid televisions now available
RCA’s line of portable hybrid televisions now available originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 Apr 2011 20:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Continue reading RCA’s line of portable hybrid televisions now available
RCA’s line of portable hybrid televisions now available originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 Apr 2011 20:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Practical or not, there is no denying the nerd-gasm inducing wow factor of Microsoft’s Surface. Of course, Surface is expensive — like, unless you’re a millionaire you’re probably not buying one for personal use expensive. There are some DIY solutions out there, but designer and developer Seth Sandler has come up with the cheapest and easiest yet. Built from about $400 worth of material (some of which you probably have lying about your home / apartment / dungeon), the MTbiggie brings big-screen multitouch to the masses. Like the hacker’s previous homebrew multitouch device, the MTmini, there’s nothing particularly difficult to find here. All you need is a couple of chairs, a mirror, a projector, an infrared webcam (which you can easily hack together with some old film negatives and cardboard), a big sheet of paper and an equally large piece of clear acrylic. Just set it all up according to the instructions in the video below and in no time you be finger painting and playing Angry Birds on a screen that dwarfs your iPad — and possibly your kitchen table, too.
Continue reading MTbiggie is a DIY Surface for the masses
MTbiggie is a DIY Surface for the masses originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 Apr 2011 20:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
The KinnowLS mandarin orange, pictured at right, is incredibly sweet, has almost no seeds, a skin so thin it’s easily peeled, and can grow in the desert. And it’s a mutant created almost the same way Spider-man was. More
Car insurance rates are determined with a host of factors in mind. Objective items like a motorist’s age and driving record are the most-weighted factors insurers consider, but those items among a couple of dozens of things used to figure out what your premiums will be. Included in the CarInsurance.com graphic are stats like 2010’s most-expensive car to insure, the Porsche 911 GT2, and the least, the Mazda Tribute.
Behind driving record, age and marital status are factors like what you drive, your gender, your state and credit rating. While lots of the factors are things drivers have some control over, a small part of the insurance rate you pay comes down to what company you choose to go with and which policy you buy. Follow the jump for an expanded breakdown of insurance costs.
[Source: CarInsurance.com]
Continue reading Infographic: Why is your car insurance so high?
Infographic: Why is your car insurance so high? originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 05 Apr 2011 16:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Shared by Ken May
Mild language…
“But you said you’ve read the terms and conditions… even God has not read the terms and conditions.”
More:
Video: Eddie Izzard Walks Us Through iTunes Software Update
We've all gotten emails with disclaimer signatures, like “This email was intended for the recipients only” or “Our company accepts no liability for this email's content”. It turns out they're not just annoying—they probably hold no legal weight, either. More
As much as I love my career in design, some days I think life as a scientist would have been pretty freaking amazing too.
The disaster in Japan is horrendous, as is the Japan government’s handling of the crisis.
Something fishy is going on with how the new iOS 4.3 handles web apps, leading to some concern that Apple may be trying to encourage its user base to favor programs bought through the App Store. Web apps saved to the home screen, when launched full-screen directly from there instead of through Safari, are running at less than half-speed. The … Read More
Related Posts
Read this article:
Lack Of Nitro Slowing iPhone Web Apps
Heavy snow melt, moist soil, and North Dakota’s peculiar geography combined over the weekend to turn the roads and fields around Fargo into a seemingly giant shallow ocean. Called overland flooding, it creates bizarrely apocalyptic scenes like this. More