Archive | Peripherals

Microsoft unveils the Natural Ergonomic Desktop 7000

Posted on 24 June 2007 by admin


According to Microsoft, the average consumer spends six hours a day using the computer, so its latest mouse / keyboard bundle, the Natural Ergonomic Desktop 7000, is designed to make all that surfing as comfortable as possible. We’ve seen these designs separately as the Ergonomic Keyboard 4000 and the Natural Wireless Laser Mouse 6000, but the new bundle ditches the wires in favor of that clean wireless look — although it’s using a proprietary 2.4GHz RF link instead of Bluetooth. Other than that, there’s not much else to see here — in the midst of all this touchscreen mania, regular old mice and keyboards seem downright ordinary.

More info
from engadget

Comments Off

Programmable X-keys Stick

Posted on 09 June 2007 by admin


There’s no denying that macros make all of our lives a bit less tedious, and while having a few here and there will suffice for the most of us, the hardcore RTS gamers and graphic designers can certainly appreciate the overkill on this one. PI Engineering’s X-keys Stick (full shot after the break) is a programmable, customizable rod sporting no fewer than 16 buttons ready to bow to your commands. Available in PS/2 and USB flavors, the backlit device ships with Macro Works software (or iKey for OS X) and a template for printing out your own key labels. Nah, this won’t hold a candle to the tweaking abilities of the Optimus Maximus, but the reasonable $99.95 pricetag also manages to (thankfully) pale in comparison. If you feel like really nerding out, X-keys also has X-keys Professional and X-keys Desktop editions designed to sit next to your keyboard. The X-keys Pro version even comes with a WoW sticker set to push things off the deep end — as if the macro madness hadn’t gone far enough already.

[Via EverythingUSB]

Read – X-keys Stick
Read – X-keys Pro and Desktop
From engadget
Continue Reading

Comments Off

Desktop Factory to offer up $5,000 3D printer

Posted on 08 May 2007 by admin


While they’re still a long ways from sharing shelf space with cut-rate inkjet printers, it looks like three dimensional printers are slowly inching towards the consumer space, with Idealab company Desktop Factory set to sell its first 3D printer for not entirely unreasonable price of $4,995 sometime this year. According to The New York Times, some 200 customers have already signed up to buy the printer, which will make up the entirety of the initial test run. They may be feeling a bit a buyer’s remorse before too long, however, as the company says the price of the printers will come down to $1,000 in four years. Eventually, Idealab foresees companies selling 3D designs of products on the Internet, which people could then simply print out at home. For now, however, the printers would seem to have somewhat limited applications, relying on nylon mixed with aluminum and glass that results in gray objects that have somewhat jagged edges and a sandy finish.

More info
from engadget

Comments Off

Uber-slim G4 Mouse slides away in your PCMCIA slot

Posted on 07 May 2007 by admin


Under normal circumstances, a palm-sized mouse with a built-in wireless transceiver is about as portable as it gets, but the G4 Mouse just showed all the other guys how a mobile mouse should be constructed. The uber-slim mousing instrument folds perfectly flat in order to fit in your PCMCIA slot when not in use, and when you’re all settled, it pops out, ejects a USB cable, and folds into a more ergonomic position for all your mousing needs. Additionally, the slot card mouse comes in pink, blue, and silver colors, and it appears that you can even get a matching pouch if say, a 120GB hard drive is already occupying your PC Card slot. The 800 DPI mouse boasts a left / right click and a touch-sensitive scroll wheel, touts Windows compatibility, and will run you a respectable â‚©46,500 (or about $50). Click through for a couple more snaps.

[Via CacheYourCash]
more info
from engadget
Continue Reading

Comments Off

Hanwang’s handwriting recognition mouse one-ups Chinese keyboard

Posted on 30 March 2007 by admin


It’s tough enough to peck and hunt when you’ve only got 26 or so primary characters to fool around with, but trying to construct something meaningful in Chinese just has to be a tad more complex than we’d like to imagine. Hanwang’s latest mouse is looking to ease the pain suffered while penning an email with wildly elaborate characters by offering a more natural approach to keying in text, as built-in top-mounted screen accepts handwritten input via the integrated stylus (seen after the jump). As expected, users can actually write characters on the LCD rather than typing it in, presumably making things a bit easier on those who’d rather handle a writing utensil than fight with a keyboard. No word on pricing or availability just yet, but we’re still not entirely convinced a mouse-sized panel would be classified as “convenient” when trying to pen a dissertation.

[Via EverythingUSB]
more info
from engadget
Continue Reading

Comments Off

Possio introduces GRETA, the GSM fax / printer

Posted on 14 February 2007 by admin


Ladies and gentlemen, say hello to GRETA, your anachronistic device (with the anachronistic name) for today. As anyone who’s ever actually done business in today’s world knows, fax just hasn’t freaking gone away. So why not do a little to bring it up to date, hm? GRETA’s got a 50-foot roll of fax machine paper and an illuminated keyboard to make on the go paper-to-paper transmissions easy as possible. Faxes are sent via tri-band GSM in a 35 ounce, 11.4 x 5.9 x 2-inch housing that has its own independent, internal NiMH battery power supply. No word yet when she’ll be hitting the streets or for how much.

More info
frome engadget

Comments Off

ZINK bringing printers to your handheld gadgetry

Posted on 31 January 2007 by admin

Although you probably haven’t shaken a Polaroid picture in quite some time, a bit of that allure is reportedly headed to your handhelds, as Massachusetts-based ZINK looks to deliver a pocket-sized printer that can be “embedded in any device” and shoot out photos sans ink. The sensational sounding product will initially be used to print 2- x 3-inch color photographs, and interestingly enough, won’t require a single drop of liquid to form the images. In ZINK’s system (another pic after the break), “images are created when a heated printer head comes into contact with a sheet of specialized paper,” which is actually a polymer containing three crystalline layers. Varying temperatures and pressure points create the pixels of color, and just in case you figure out your latest printout doesn’t showcase your eye color as well as you’d hoped, it’s recyclable. The company’s first offerings will likely be offered in a $99 standalone format or as a $199 camera / printer hybrid, while the snazzy paper will run you $19.95 for a pack of one hundred, but we’re definitely holding off on this here invention until we see just how impressive (or not) the printed results actually are. [Warning: PDF read link]

[Via CNET]
more info
from engadget
Continue Reading

Comments Off

Advertise Here
Advertise Here

RELATED SITES