The Blackberry Storm 3


Is this the first picture of the BlackBerry Storm 3? BerryReview thinks so, after a tipster sent it to their mailbox. And I’m inclined to agree—although I wasn’t expecting that trackpad.

If we recall, the Storm 2 and the original Storm both leaned heavy on BB touchscreen-tech SurePress. This Storm 3, though, possibly conceding a point, puts trackpad navigation back in place.

Other details are limited: we can expect a 3.7-inch display, 8GB of internal memory, and Wi-Fi hotspot connectivity. As for processor and other specs, we’ll just have to wait and see.

The Sunday Refix: Random Impulse X Labrinth: Let The Sunshine

week 11… its 1pm, again no sleep, and my laptop got wiped. good times! haha.
ok this week its the man himself mr labrinth!

I Added a HELL of a lot of things that wern’t in the original, from hi hats and cymbals to guitars all over the place, oh and I think its the first time i put down a guitar solo at the end of a refix too. Ive taught myself quite a few instruments this past year, but one that I havent quite got the hang of yet is the keyboard, and that made the main riff of this refix take a while to say the least.

I hope he gets to hear this as id LOVE to hear what he thinks if my remake haha!

anyway till next week guys and gals…

Machine That Turns Old Sheets Of Paper Into NEW Pencils

Paper To Pencil, Just Like That!

P&P Office Waste Paper Processor is one of those things that you wish you knew how it works, but dang! no reasonable explanation provided at all! Maybe it’s a deliberate attempt on the designer teams’ part, because their idea is a surefire hit! What this lovely machine does is that it converts all those useless memos on your table to something useful: A Pencil! Paper goes in from one end and come out shaped like a sexy writing tool! Sexy enough an idea to bag a Liteon Award as well!

Pencil lead, power and glue are the only other things that it requires.

Designers: Chengzhu Ruan, Yuanyuan Liu, Xinwei Yuan & Chao Chen

‘Halo: Reach’ Nets $200M on First Day!

HOLY CRAP! thats what you call a good day! Now if only the music industry could get back to numbers like these…

  • ‘Halo: Reach’ is shaping up to be another mammoth Microsoft title, with yesterday’s launch pulling in over $200 million — $30 million more than the first day of ‘Halo 3.’ [From: TechFlash]
  • Billboard.biz reports Google is preparing a new music service that will offer both digital downloads and a $25-a-year, cloud-based streaming feature for tunes. [From: Billboard]
  • Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World, the U.K. tabloid, is the next in line to go behind an online paywall. [From: Retuers]
  • Yesterday, millions of Chase customers experienced yet another day of banking website outages, reportedly caused by corrupted database issues. [From: New York Times]

Glass Speakers


If websites could be personified, Greensound Technology would likely resemble an immaculately dressed member of the gentility, haughtily hoisting its nose in the air and extending an erect pinkie finger from a dainty cup of tea. The company’s transparent glass speakers certainly possess aesthetic, and perhaps commercial merits, but the company’s use of “sophisticated” and “elegant” in its descriptions (and the absence of list prices) immediately suggests that these 360-degree, illuminated offerings are likely out of most consumers’ price ranges. (“SubWOODer,” though? C’mon, Greenwood. You know those elites tend to be grammar nerds.)

The names of the products (e.g., “Floe: isolated piece of sea ice,” etc.) don’t help, either. But, if the proletariat and the progressives can move past the aristocratic imagery and terminology, the speakers definitely allure the design-conscious. The stand-alone, 25-watt Floe (18″x18″x49″) pumps out 90.6 dB, operates in a 100-foot wireless range, and is supposedly able to maintain “a sophisticated level of performance forever” — a permanence that would undoubtedly justify an above-average price.

These snooty beauties probably aren’t as affordable as other, artsier products on the market, but — hopefully — they couldn’t be as exorbitantly priced as the “visually arresting” $140,000 Muons.

How To Shoot 3D Pictures With ANY 2d Camera!


Don’t feel like shelling out the cash for a 3D camera? Instructables user “courtervideo” has put together a little device that harnesses the magical, mysterious power of something called a “mirror” to let you grab stereoscopic 3D images with your regular ol’ 2D camera. The method is pretty straight forward: two large mirrors places beside the camera reflect the image you’re trying to capture onto two smaller mirrors, which are then photographed. The result can then be viewed through a stereoscope, which will send one half of the picture to each eye, resulting in a 3D image.