Posts about technology

Playboy “Cover to Cover” Hard Drive

Now you don’t have to hide your porn on a secret folder on the family computer. Bondi Digital has released a 250GB drive containing a digital version of every issue of the original lad’s mag, Playboy, from 1953 to the present day. (if you enjoy retro bush you hit pay dirt)

For $300 the drive can be yours. This might be expensive for you high end smut collectors, but think of this way you just bought piece & quite.

Now your wife or girlfriend wont flip the shit when she “stumbles” upon your titties & skins collection.

via Selectism

Grohe Ondus Digitecture faucet

Not only is it a beautifully constructed faucet, it also innovates by allowing for user preset temperature controls in your home sink.

DJ MOUSE

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Manufactured by Hong-Kong based DJ-Tech Professional, the optical mouse is designed to interact with DJ applications on your laptop allowing you to Scratch, Beat Match, and Mix your entire MP3 collection using the mouse’s replica buttons and jog-wheel.

New device that controls fire

Via Major Spoilers

Prometheus device is inspired by the X-Men character Pyro, im waiting on the lazer beem shooters inspired by IRONMAN

MICROSOFT’S NEW COURIER TABLET

via the munn

The dual 7-inch (or so) screens are multitouch, and designed for writing, flicking and drawing with a stylus, in addition to fingers. They’re connected by a hinge that holds a single iPhone-esque home button. Statuses, like wireless signal and battery life, are displayed along the rim of one of the screens. On the back cover is a camera, and it might charge through an inductive pad. They say it’s in the “late prototype” stage.

LG 15-inch OLED TV

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Words by Limited Hype

The future of TV’s is here and it is OLED, or Organic Light Emitting Diode. OLED panels are basically (we’ll try to be as unscientific as possible) phosphorescent colored particles that are fused to a substrate – be it glass or a metallic screen. These particles then light up by themselves when being injected with electricity, meaning unlike LCDs, they do not required a backlight and can be made extremely thin. LG has jumped on it, mainly through a partnership with Kodak to produce some of the first consumer OLED flat panel TVs, and their design is as stunning as the images they produce. To give you an idea of costs, a Sony 11-inch OLED TV is now on the market for a cool $2500, so a 15-incher should go for even more. And if you’ve got money to burn, there are rumors of a 40-inch OLED TV in the works, but we’ll have to wait for IFA 2009 for all this be officially announced.

Detailed images of the LG 15-inch OLED TV on LG’s Flickr page.

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