Archive for March 18th, 2008

China — country of mystery, of intrigue, of wholesale intellectual property theft. Her majestic mountains and sprawling cities inspire us. Her cheap electronics make us puke a tiny in our mouths. Feast your eyes, friends, on the latest product from her shores: this 2GB, $69 MP3/MP4 player sold by Geeks.com. It is utter and total garbage. The […]

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China — country of mystery, of intrigue, of wholesale intellectual property theft. Her majestic mountains and sprawling cities inspire us. Her cheap electronics make us puke a little in our mouths.

Feast your eyes, friends, on the latest product from her shores: this 2GB, $69 MP3/MP4 player sold by Geeks.com. It is utter and total garbage.

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The box: What’s that, velvet?

Those of you who know me and have read me for a few years know that I am a man of some calm and restraint. I rail against only a few major players in this industry and try to give just about any product a fair shake in my reviews. When Doug posted about this MP4 player last week, I thought it would be fun to see how it worked. I see now that my decision was fatally flawed.

Coming soon to the PS3: Explode Pigboat

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The player itself is made of flimsy plastic. The touchscreen is very dim and violently non-responsive. It does not appear in disk mode under OS X and I had considerable trouble connecting it to a PC. The product, in short, is infantile — a half-assed effort by an electronics manufacturer to bilk the entire technology-loving community out of fifty dollars.

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I like to think of good products the way I think of bands. When they’re on, they’re great. When work between R&D and marketing, engineering and design, sales and support all work together, they can make beautiful music. This product, however, is like flatulence played over a reel-to-reel tape recorder made by blind Russian factory workers during the harsh winter of 1973 — nothing, not even the sound emanating from the paper cone speakers, is right.

I’m sure the folks at Geeks.com mean us no harm. We know what we’re getting into and we accept the good with the bad. But for anyone to spend any money on this — nay, for even the good men and women at Geeks.com to allow this to enter through their loading dock door — is a travesty and a crime against all that’s holy in this or any other world.

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Sure, it does everything as advertised. But the theft of the iPhone UI — for no good reason — coupled with the shoddy manufacturing, the various failed attempts and “value-added” applications, and a general unsuitability to any task makes me want to puke. Call me a stickler for shit actually working, but I couldn’t even set the date, let alone play the built-in game, Explode Pigboat.

If there is a place in hell for malicious businessmen, the designers of this abortion deserve to be there. They’ll be forced to wear Oakley Thumps and only listen to Yanni albums while they drink Crystal Pepsi and eat Hot Pockets for all eternity, cursing their mothers for bringing them into this world to cause such pain and discomfort.

I would not introduce this product into the anus of a dead jackal and then blow it up underwater. It would be a waste of dead jackal, explosives, and water.

Via [crunchgear]

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I won’t deny that the iPhone is a hyperbeast of media goodness. They surveyed 10,000 iPhone users and found that AT&T’s unlimited data plan is a massive reason as to why the iPhone has been so successful in the media category. The survey also revealed the following factoids: -30.9 % watch mobile Television or video versus […]

I won’t deny that the iPhone is a hyperbeast of media goodness. They surveyed 10,000 iPhone users and found that AT&T’s unlimited data plan is a huge reason as to why the iPhone has been so successful in the media category. The survey also revealed the following factoids:

-30.9 % watch mobile TV or video versus 4.6 market average
-49.7 % access social networking which represents 12x’s the market average (specifically 20% owners access Facebook)
-30.4 % access YouTube and 36 % use Google Maps compared to 1 % of all mobile subs accessing YouTube and 2.6 % accessing Google Maps
-74.1 % listen to mobile music compared to 6.7 % of the total mobile audience

I won’t argue that AT&T’s unlimited data plans help, but I’m just wondering how many of those 10,000 were actually AT&T subscribers. All in all it’s an in-depth survey and worth taking a look at. I feel myself slowly caving into the hype.

M:METRICS: IPHONE HYPE HOLDS UP [M:Metrics]

Via [crunchgear]

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People who have lost their digital camera need to know about Found Cameras and Orphan Pictures, more popularly known as I Found Your Camera. It’s a simple Blogger blog that people contact once they’ve found someone else’s camera. They send a unique photo to the site so that you, the owner, can easily identify it. […]

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People who have lost their digital camera need to know about Found Cameras and Orphan Pictures, more popularly known as I Found Your Camera. It’s a simple Blogger blog that people contact once they’ve found someone else’s camera. They send a unique photo to the site so that you, the owner, can easily identify it. There’s even a dedicated Facebook group.

A site like this only works when lots of people know about it, so be sure to spread the word; I’m doing my part now. I first heard about it on this week’s Tekzilla, which I enjoy more than I care to admit. As an old TechTV viewer, it makes me misty-eyed.

Found Cameras and Orphan Pictures via Tekzilla

Via [crunchgear]

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Nothing to get too excited over, but T-Mobile announced that Nokia’s quad-band 3555 is available today for $50. The clamshell is MyFaves compatible and features an FM radio, VGA camera with 4x digital zoom for stills and video, IM, stereo Bluetooth, microSD and music player. Like I said, nothing to get excited about. T-Mo ShareThis

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Nothing to get too excited over, but T-Mobile announced that Nokia’s quad-band 3555 is available today for $50. The clamshell is MyFaves compatible and features an FM radio, VGA camera with 4x digital zoom for stills and video, IM, stereo Bluetooth, microSD and music player. Like I said, nothing to get excited about.

T-Mo

Via [crunchgear]

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