Small But Heavy: Samsung Q35 Notebook
Here’s the Samsung Asian Babe of the Day holding another of the company’s zillions of products, and this one’s the Q35 which it calls the world’s smallest dual core laptop. It has a 12.1-inch 1280×800 widescreen display and is powered by the Intel Core Duo T2700 processor running at 2.33GHz. The only weird thing about that part of the announcement is that Intel’s 2.33GHz T2700 Core Duo chip reportedly won’t be available until Q3 of this year. Hmm. Its 4.1 pound weight seems a little heavy for this type of PC, but it’s kinda nice that there’s an onboard DVD burner. The standard config includes an 80GB disk and 512MB of RAM, and the company says its six-cell battery will run for seven hours on a charge. Don’t expect to see it before July in the UK, and it will probably be selling for around $1700. Samsung Q35 - World’s Smallest Laptop [Mobilewhack] Samsung pre-announces 2.33GHz Intel Core Duo T2700 [Reg Hardware]  Comment on this post Related: Lenovo N100 Laptop Drifts Away From IBM HeritageRelated: MacBook Magnetic MagSafe Connector Not So Safe After AllRelated: Creative Media Disney MP3 Players & Epson Endeavour Disney Laptops

WiFi MAX for the PSP
Datel’s WiFi MAX allows you to connect a PSP to the Net wirelessly via an Internet-enabled PC. Installation is painless – install the software, place the dongle, and detect the connection on the PSP. You can even connect to multiple consoles and other WiFi devices including laptops and PDAs. It also allows you to transfer media files from the PC to the PSP wirelessly, convert video files into MPEG 4 format and properly organize your PSP folders.

Card Beeper Makes You Jack-Proof
Card Beeper is a credit card case that cries out in anguish when there is no card inside. Every 20 seconds, you’ll hear a beep if you’ve forgotten to get your card back from a merchant, or if you’ve been jacked by a pickpocket. There’s a money clip on the back, too, so your cash is safe as well. At $26, this anti-theft (and anti-forget) device could pay for itself with just one incident. Well, unless the thief takes the beeper, too. Credit card case that beeps every twenty seconds : Card Beeper [Seihin-World] Thanks, Akira!  Comment on this post Related: Swiss Business ToolRelated: Pit Stop Portable Urinal: 1.25 Gallons Before StoppingRelated: Revolution Getting Name Change, June Release?

Signeo’s SN-A250 flash-based MP3 player
Filed under: Portable Audio Here we have Signeo’s latest flash-based MP3 player: the SN-A250. This compact USB 2.0 player features a tightly integrated OLED display, FM tuner, between 256MB and 1GB of storage, and up to 18 hours of MP3, WMA, and WAV playback off battery. Connect your CD or, because this is Japan, your MD player to the line-in and the SN-A250 also acts as a computer-free MP3 recording device. This 32 × 68.5 × 12.6-millimeters and 31g player goes on sale in Japan this weekend for up to 19,800 Yen (the 1GB model) or a steep, $170 green.[Via Akihabara News]Read | Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Maxfield MAX-JOY MP3 Player for the Wee Ones
Maxfield goes after the kids market with its MAX-JOY MP3 player, a durable-looking device that’s not waterproof but looks like it could be peanut butter-proof. It has a bright, two-color OLED display, and it’s expandible, too, with its 256MB of storage that can be augmented up to 2GB with a Secure Digital flash card. Don’t be surprised if your kid learns how to use its voice recording feature, but its six-stage equalizer may be a bit complicated for the less curious. Tiny eardrums will be protected with its restricted audio output, kept to an hearing-saving 60dB (which might not be loud enough for many youngsters), and the company says the thing lasts 19 hours on one AAA battery. It’s $84. Maxfield MAX-JOY kids MP3 player [Tech Digest]  Comment on this post Related: Belkin Announces TunePower for iPod VideoRelated: Nyko PSP Charging GripRelated: Lenovo Easy Cube M500

Optical Smoke Alarm
If Soaron from Captain Power could lay an egg, we imagine it would look much like this optical smoke alarm by Danish designer Jacob Jensen, the man responsible for the look of Bang & Olufsen’s classic products (19 of his designs are in the MoMa collection). Don’t let our snarking about its looks fool you, this is a serious piece of equipment: the microprocessor inside does a daily sensitivity check to avoid false alarms. The ominous red button actually serves the greater good, by allowing you to reduce sensitivity for ten minutes to avoid setting off the alarm for times like when you have smoke coming from a cold fire place. Optical smoke alarm [dansk design]  Comment on this post Related: Dear Ingo Task Lamp ChandelierRelated: Microsoft Ups 360 Shipments this WeekRelated: Philips Launches MPC9350i Media Center PC

Biometric Wall Vault
The day and age of an old combination-dial style vault hidden behind crappy paintings is over with the advent of this biometric vault. This vault is protected by 140-gauge bullet-proof stainless steel and a biometric fingerprint scanning. The biometric sensor can store up to six different fingerprint scans. It also includes a secret compartment within the actual vault for even more security. It runs $479, a small price to pay for security and safe-of-mind. Biometric Wall Vault [Red Ferret]  Comment on this post Related: TelephoneboxingRelated: Card Beeper Makes You Jack-ProofRelated: Swiss Business Tool

Visit our Sponsor
yahoo domain name registration