2003 articles on Gadgets

  • Kytephone App Makes Android Phones Kid-Safe
    Keeping kids safe is a priority for parents, especially when it comes to sharing information online. Everyone is worried about some creepy stalker setting up a meeting, or getting their information and whisking them away from a playground or a schoolyard. Many parents opt to keep them away from things like smartphones for fear of their making dangerous connections. The problem is that there are times most of us would like our kids to have a ready means of contacting us in a pinch. Kytephone aims to provide a way for parents to give their children phones and keep them safe.
  • Review: Game of Life: Zapped Edition for iPad
    The Game of Life was first created over 40 years ago by Reuben Klamer. Since its creation, the game has undergone some changes to keep up with the times. None of the changes have been quite as drastic as they are in the latest edition, The Game of Life: zAPPed Edition for iPad .
  • Oracle Rejected in Bid to Resuscitate Google Trial
    If Oracle wants to win its lawsuit against Google over the Android mobile operating system ¿ and it does ¿ it will have to file an appeal. On Friday, Judge William Alsup denied Oracle's motion for a new trial after a San Francisco jury returned an incomplete verdict the first time around.
  • The Wow Wireless Bluetooth Speaker: Style and Sound
    Here's a crowdfunding project for all you audiophiles. It's the Wow Wireless bluetooth speaker and it not only sounds great, but looks great, too. Despite the huge number of speakers out there, most of them look a lot alike. They're generally little cubes or little rectangles made of shiny metal and plastic. It's not that they're ugly, but they're just not very pretty. This little speaker delivers not only great sound, but a genuinely stylish design that will add to your room.
  • Russell Quinn — The World's Most Wired Storyteller
    In some ways, Russell Quinn has spent his life running from technology, in search of connection. The son of a punch card-era computer scientist who died three months before he was born, Quinn grew up an only child in Cheltenham, a small town in Southwest England, with very little to do. So in 1984, when he was 5, his mother bought him a BBC Microcomputer — one of the United Kingdom's earliest PCs — and Quinn taught himself how to program. "The BBC computer found its way into every school," he says, "so I ended up staying after class and teaching my teachers how to use them. It was second nature to me."
  • Club Caveman Raises the Bar for iPad Storytelling
    By expanding the scope of user interaction and raising game animation to movie quality, Club Caveman hopes to elevate kids¿ engagement with narrative and push the limits on what an iPad does with storytelling. Ben Sweat of Caffeine-Free talks about his current Kickstarter project.
  • Google Starts Shipping Nexus 7 Tablet
    To all of you who ordered a Nexus 7 in the last few weeks, you can expect a 7-inch package delivery on your doorstep soon. Google announced that it has started shipping the pre-orders of its first self-branded tablet on Friday.
  • Report: iPhone 5 Will Be Announced August 7
    If the latest reports end up proving true, we could be seeing the next iPhone launch sooner than expected. A "reliable industry source" told KnowYourMobile that the next iPhone would be launched at an August 7 keynote speech.
  • Powerbag Backpack by F¿l: Carry Your Stuff, Charge Your Gadgets
    It can be a pain when you're on the move and don't want to stuff a charger and a bunch of cables and connectors into your bag. That's where the Powerbag Backpack 3000 comes into play. It provides not only a sturdy backpack with plenty of pockets for all your stuff, but a built in charger and connectors so you can charge no matter where you go.
  • Amazing Alex: Hands-On with Rovio's Newest Game That Isn't Angry Birds
    Raise your hand if you're sick of Angry Birds. Yeah, we thought so. Now that Rovio has saturated the market with Angry Birds-branded games, toys, clothing and even fruit snacks, the developer has set its sights on a boy named Alex and his Rube Goldberg-esque shenanigans.
  • Can You Hear the Higgs?
    Have you ever wondered what one of the greatest scientific discoveries of our time sounds like? Wonder no longer! After the announcement of the Higgs boson discoveries last week, researcher Domenico Vicinanza immediately went to work sonifiying the data. Now that the general populous can finally hear what the Higgs boson evidence sounds like, hopefully all of us can understand the data leading to this momentous discovery. Could the mysteries of the universe be holding a waltz beat? How about a jazz rhythm? R&B? Pop? Country? Turns out the score has a distinctly latin flair, similar to a habanera beat.
  • Apple Patents Explore iPod Charging, Noise Reduction and Battery Design
    The USPTO published a host of new Apple patent applications Thursday, providing us with a peek inside the minds sequestered away at One Infinite Loop. This week, we see innovation in the form of a new method for iPod nano charging, a removable case that would be useful in the Windy City, and some innovative battery designs.
  • Greenpeace Passes Apple for Solar, Gives 'D' on Coal
    In a new report titled "Apple's clean energy plans still cloudy despite coal-free pledge," Greenpeace is putting biogas-fueled fire under the feet of Apple to live up to its vow to go coal-free for its cloud data centers -- but the environmental advocacy group goes on the give Apple its first passing grades: a Cs in "Renewables and Advocacy" and "Energy Efficiency and Greenhouse Gas Mitigation."


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