From Laptopmagazine. Product reviews and advice for best reference
Saturday, January 11, 2014
10 Weirdest and Wackiest Gadgets of CES 2014
Sunday, September 22, 2013
12 Gadgets Ahead of Their Time
From Laptopmagazine. Product reviews and advice for best reference
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Green gadgets keep your home office humming
Each year, the list of "green" gadgets gets longer, from solar-powered coasters or networked light bulbs. But some are a lot more useful than others. If you're looking for more than a novelty item, we've spotted ten devices that can save your company money by improving its energy efficiency. Some of them offer nifty, time-saving automation features and mobile apps too. Whether you're working from home or in a high-rise headquarters, these tools can put some energy dollars back in your pocket.
From PC World. Electronics product reviews and advice for best reference
Friday, April 19, 2013
Support Literacy By Donating Your Old Gadgets
From Laptopmagazine. Product reviews and advice for best reference
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
9 Best Eco-Friendly Gadgets and Apps
From Laptopmagazine. Product reviews and advice for best reference
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Best Gadgets and Apps of March 2013
From Laptopmagazine. Product reviews and advice for best reference
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
Report: F.A.A. May Allow Gadgets During Takeoff and Landing
From Laptopmagazine. Product reviews and advice for best reference
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Average U.S. House Now Has 5.7 Internet-connected Gadgets: NPD
From Laptopmagazine. Product reviews and advice for best reference
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
15 Amazing Smart Home Gadgets
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Wednesday, January 30, 2013
$20 Verizon Jetpack MiFi 5510L Shares 4G LTE with Up to 10 Gadgets
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Saturday, July 14, 2012
Top 10 Gadgets for Apple Haters
Maybe you’re annoyed that they’re no longer the underdog. Or maybe you prefer the openness of Android and Windows to Apple’s walled garden. Or maybe you despise that people line up around the block to be the first to get new iPhones. Maybe you just hate fruit. Whatever the reason, you just don’t like Apple. Well, guess what? There are great alternatives to every product Apple makes, many of which are simply better. Here are our top 10 picks.
Samsung's sequel runs circles around the iPhone 4S when it comes to features. You can tap two S IIIs together to beam photos and videos, keep the screen on with just your eyes and use all sorts of cool gestures. Plus, the S III has a pretty smart Siri alternative built in with S Voice. Samsung crams all of this and a much larger 4.8-inch HD screen into a device that weighs less than the iPhone.Read Our Samsung Galaxy S III Reviews
AT&T | Sprint | T-Mobile | Verizon
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Sunday, April 22, 2012
10 Outdated Gadgets You Can Still Buy Today
Obsolescence is a measure of tech progress. That’s why the gadgets we couldn’t imagine living without ten years ago – that old Walkman, your black brick of a beeper, and camera with multiple rolls of film – are laughably out-of-date today. Yet oddly, some products which ought to be dead and buried are still being actively manufactured and sold as new. Believe it or not, you can still walk or log into a store and buy a new cassette boom box to use for your breakdancing routine.
Sprint recently revealed it would be offering the Lenovo IdeaPad S205s WiMAX mini notebook for $199.99 on a two-year contract, the bizarre announcement that spurred this list. The company just affirmed weeks ago that it was done with WiMAX phones, but evidently it thinks WiMAX notebooks stand a whole class apart.
In case you’ve always wanted a subsidized notebook that uses an archaic wireless standard, or you fancy the idea of being stuck with the device for two years, here’s your chance. Hiding beneath the no-frills 11.6-inch (1366x768) display, a 1.33 GHz dual-core Intel U5600 processor runs the show, and the machine comes with 2GB of RAM and 250GB of storage onboard. You can grab the IdeaPad S205s right now, either in-store or at Sprint’s website.
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Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Augmented Reality at Toy Fair 2012: The Top Apps, Games and Gadgets
Augmented-reality app-cessories were the name of the game at this year’s Toy Fair–from AppGear’s iPad-based games to Hasbro’s Lazer Tag gun. Here are the top AR products we saw on the showroom floor,
WowWee's AppGear showed off several games that combine the iPad with physical toys. Some of the line's six titles even use the world around you to construct the environment you see on your tablet. For example, in the game Alien Jailbreak, the game will create the aliens' jail on a surface within the iPad camera's field of vision, and if you move the tablet, it will alter the game-scape.
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Saturday, February 4, 2012
Certification Program Would Force Apple, Others to Make Ethical Gadgets
What if, in order to get a job, you had to promise your employer or one of his head hunters a fee equal to several days or even several months’ salary? At a number of Chinese plants, prospective workers have to pay the employer or one of his head hunters a fee equal to several days or even, as in the case of 17 Apple suppliers, several months salary. The Electronic Industry Citizenship Coalition (EICC) Code of Conduct, which Apple and nearly all of its competitors subscribe to, does not explicitly ban recruitment fees and Apple actually says that suppliers can charge a recruitment fee as high as a full month’s salary.
What do you call it when you work somewhere, don’t get paid, and can’t even quit because you still owe money to the company or its agents just for letting you in the door? Apple euphemistically terms this practice it “involuntary labor,” but let’s call it what it is: indentured servitude.
At a lot of plants, workers are not given adequate protective gear, don’t have ready access to a first aid kit, and are told that if they get injured that it’s their own problem. ”The only safety precautions workers are given is a simple explanation of being careful while at work, not to run around, don’t move products and wires, and do what the leader instructs,” the report says of one plant that makes products for Acer, Apple, ASUS, Dell, IBM, Motorola, Nokia, and Sony.
In addition to potential injury, workers must endure long hours, sometimes 12 hours a day for 30 days without any time off, all for monthly wages that are typically in the $350 range, with some earning as little as $169. During long shifts, many are asked to stand up and perform the same repetitive task (ex: wiping a phone screen) over and over again, without the ability to take a bathroom break and, in at least one case, permission to talk. Workers who make mistakes face significant verbal abuse, huge fines, and public humiliation by management. Oh, and if workers want to quit, their resignation requests may be rejected by the boss and they’ll be forced to walk out of the factory, leaving any outstanding earnings in the employer’s pocket.
Sadly, the industry is not doing nearly enough to deal with these horrors. Most manufacturers post corporate responsibility reports that tout the number of audits they’ve performed, but few do what Apple does in disclosing the list of violations the company finds.
Perhaps OEMs are reluctant to show all their cards, because audits don’t always provide an accurate picture of working conditions at these factories. According to Li Qiang, the head of China Labor Watch, many factories bribe inspectors to give them favorable ratings. If corruption doesn’t work, there’s always the old “let’s clean up our act just for the inspector’s eyes” routine.
Even the standards listed in the EICC code of conduct that OEMs embrace leave something to be desired. For example, the code states that “a work week should not be more than 60 hours per week, including overtime, except in emergency or unusual situations” (whatever those are).
An EICC case study of HP says the company became concerned by some answers it got from one of its suppliers’ self-assessment questionnaires so it initiated an audit, which uncovered one “priority nonconformance.” According to the report:
The priority nonconformance was related to worker living conditions—workers’ dormitories at the supplier factory were being locked at night — which was identified as a priority due to lack of safety for workers when emergency egress is required.
Does it bother anyone that the only problem HP and EICC had with keeping workers locked in their dormitories all night is that they might not be able to get out in the event of a fire? What about their right to freedom of movement?
There’s plenty of blame to go around for these inhumane and immoral labor conditions. The suppliers who run the factories clearly have a responsibility to keep their employees safe and treat them with dignity, but OEMs are the ones squeezing those suppliers for more production at lower and lower costs. There’s no doubt that major manufacturers, such as Apple, could pay the suppliers better and demand better working conditions.
Some say that making a humane smartphone is impossible, given the manufacturers’ need to cut costs and the public’s desire for cheap gadgets. TechCrunch’s Devin Coldewey even writes that “A conflict free iPhone would cost far, far more and would in all likelihood not be as well-built. Apple knows this. The system we and they have in place works, unfortunately, at least for everyone but the workers coated in N-hexane.”
It’s not realistic to expect factory workers in China to earn the same $7.25 per hour minimum wage we get in the U.S., but consumers can at least demand that they have a safe working environment that’s consistent with basic standards of human dignity and free from serious abuses such as recruiting fees, forced overtime and the inability to resign with pay.
This isn’t rocket science. The two Foxconn plants investigated by CLW both already provide the necessary equipment to their employees even while other suppliers do not. IHS iSuppli estimates that Apple spends only $8 on manufacturing costs for each iPhone 4S while it spends $188 on components on a device that retails for $649 without a contract. If the company even paid double that amount–$16 per unit–it would probably make a huge difference for factory workers.
Unfortunately for consumers with a conscience, there aren’t any obvious choices right now. Li Qiang, founder of China Labor Watch, decided to buy an iPhone 4 because Apple suppliers’ working conditions were a bit better than others, but still not good.
“Unfortunately I think that there is not a single factory or a single company who is making ethical products right now,” he told us.
What we need is a quick, easy, and trustworthy way for consumers to know that the products they buy are made by suppliers who at least follow the minimal standards set forth by the EICC code. That’s where a logo program comes in.
Many of the major OEMs already participate in the EPEAT environmental rating program, which rates their products bronze, silver, gold or non-compliant based on such criteria as energy conservation, recycled materials and packaging. Because vendors want to display the EPEAT rating on their packaging and in their marketing materials, they set their policies to meet these criteria. Then consumers have the opportunity to support EPEAT rated products and avoid those who rank low or don’t participate.
Of course, EPEAT is based on self-reporting, which is not adequate for us to have confidence in factory conditions. The Coalition for Consumer Information on Cosmetics provides a better model; the advocacy group will only license its cruelty-free “leaping bunny” logo to companies that submit to independent audits which ensure that they and their suppliers do not test on animals. An independent and trustworthy body would need to conduct inspections of supplier factories while also listening to feedback from the workers and advocacy groups to make sure their audits provide an adequate picture of conditions inside the plants.
However, with a logo program in place, every link in the supply and consumption chain would have an incentive to create a safe and humane manufacturing process. OEMs such as Apple would want to show consumers that they earned the humane-manufacturing logo. Suppliers would need to show the OEMs that they’re maintaining EICC standards in order to get the business. And consumers would support the whole process by purchasing products that carry the logo.
Now, someone just has to take the lead. Tim Cook, are you ready?
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