Archive for June 30th, 2010

This iPad protective case utilizes the design of the human ribcage as added protection for the screen. Whether it’s more rugged than the average case is open for debate, but it definitely will look cooler.

Product Page ($35 via Street Anatomy via Make)

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It would be our guess that the intersection of hipster and computer geek is in a one stoplight town. As such, Le-Samourai Eyewear is not likely to become a household name. These fashionable sunglasses have a special detachable USB flash drive that fits inconspicuously into the frame of the glasses. They intend to make these multi-role glasses in prescription and sun-glass varieties. The drives can be decorated and swapped out interchangeably as mood, outfit or occasion dictates.

In all likelihood, the glasses will succeed in making you look neither hip nor tech-savvy, a perfect trifecta of fail, at least for those given to generous rounding. Their ability to mix and match different drives with different designs or colors is nice but this is far from something that those of us who can’t be without a flash drive for more than a few minutes per day. Now maybe if they came out with a Gunnar Optiks version they might have something. Nevertheless, if you must give in to social pressures to look fabulous, you might as well get a few gigabytes for your money as well. There are no details yet on price or drive size but those details will likely have to wait until they leave the concept phase.
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Featured Reviews

USB 3.0 News

Other USB Gadget News

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Century adds to its offering of USB 3.0 products a portable drive dock. The Tribe, as they call it, possesses all the power of a serious, SuperSpeed top-loading drive dock but in a size that you can easily take with you to remote installs. Bound to end up in many a desktop technician’s bag of tricks, the dock is about the size of a standard mouse and will make a perfect companion for house calls. Comparatively, it’s about 1/4 the size of their larger sibling.

The other thing that makes the dock stands out, besides the odd name, is the power supply… it doesn’t need one. USB 3.0 bus power supplies more than enough power (900mA) to spin up even the largest 2.5″ SATA drives. So, not only is it small and portable, you only need one standard micro-USB 3.0 cable to use it. Century’s USB 3.0 dock will make quick work of remote drive imaging, secure wiping and serious anti-virus sweeps. If they can get it to the States, you can expect to be able to pick one up for about $50. Currently on sale only on their Japanese online store, we’ll have to wait for it to trickle out to other locales.
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From CubicleBot: Unfortunately for the Stealth Cat robot (who hails from a planet of space cats) he is woefully inadequate in both height and storage size to complete his mission of taking over the world. In fact, armies of these things have been captured by humans, torn in half and shoved in USB drives around [...]

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Seagate today adds yet another new drive capacity – an amazing 3TB – to its GoFlex line of external hard drives. Like its <a href=portable sibling , the GoFlex line is a modular drive system that can connect to USB 2.0, USB 3.0 and Firewire 800 base stations available as separate purchases. The 3.5″ 3TB drive, which comes with USB 2.0 as standard adapter, is new and has been equipped with a special MBR hack that allows the device to report to 4K clusters to the host operating systems. Windows XP, still one of the most popular operating systems today, is not able to handle drives past 2.2TB.

The 2TB hard drive has been the size champion for a long time. The new champ tricks XP into reading the drive by altering the MBR table with regards to cluster size. This is only needed to appease XP as Vista, 7, Mac and Linux has long since adopted a new style of partition table that is well past that limit. So, this breakthrough is sadly only truly a breakthrough in its accommodation of Windows XP. The new FreeAgent GoFlex 2TB is available now with all the aforementioned GoFlex connectivity options for a very reasonable $250.
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