May 22

HP is doing its part to help you feel good — or bad — about your carbon footprint with its new Eco Highlights label. The sticker will list a product’s enviro-friendly “ingredients”, much like those FDA labels you see at the grocery store that tell you how much fat and sugar you’re consuming. The program’s launch products will include printers such as the Deskjet D2545 ink-jet printer, LaserJet P4015x, LaserJet P4515x and LaserJet P4515xm which are made mostly of recycled parts. Other Eco Highlights label attributes will include recycled cartridges, recyclable packaging, and auto-on/auto-off with deep-sleep modes. Finally, a new HP Carbon Footprint Calculator for Printing and HP LaserJet Power Calculator will most likely make you feel really bad about the printer you’re currently using, send you into a shame spiral, and ultimately force you to buy an HP Eco Highlight printer.
[Via News.com]
written by Jose Castillo
Mar 08

Over a year (yeah, really) after this thing was originally announced, Nyko has finally slid the final piece in place in order to offer up the rumbling, bumbling Zero Wireless PS3 controller to end users. Granted, the version hitting shelves as we speak does include rumble, but since you’ve waited this long, you’re probably better off getting the real deal when it lands in April — for $5 less. Still, those who actually prefer 3rd party kit can look forward to being $59.99 poorer and receiving 25 hours of play on a full charge, LED-backlit buttons, “heat-dissipating aluminum panels (saywha?),” and your choice of black, white or silver.
[Via Joystiq]
written by Jose Castillo
Feb 26

Break out the champagne, that Apple spec bump you’ve been waiting for is finally here: the 2GB iPod shuffle is shipping as of today. It’ll set you back a cool $69, but if you’ve decided to hold of on this round of lackluster MacBook updates, we’re guessing you’ve got the cash. Go ahead, you’ve earned it.
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written by Jose Castillo
Feb 22

The iStick is the size of lipstick tube. But it has four touchscreens for four times the Coverflow. I don’t really get the white cube eating up a quarter of the stick though—why not just make the whole thing a solid tube of touchscreen, with the bottom and top holding the single button and earphone jack? It also has Wi-Fi, for browsing the iTunes Store on a screen the size of your finger.
written by Jose Castillo
Feb 21

I love that OS X automatically fires up iPhoto when I plug in my digital camera. It’s one of the Mac’s many little touches that make it such a pleasure to use.
But ever since I got an iPhone, I’ve been frustrated that plugging it in opens up iPhoto, too. The combination of iPhoto and iTunes opening and syncing slows my computer to a crawl. And it’s particularly painful when most of the time I just want to sync my address book or music.
Fortunately it’s pretty easy to work around this annoyance. Keep reading to see how you can teach your Mac to open iPhoto when you plug in your camera but not your phone.
I recently stumbled across an option in Image Capture’s preferences that lets you select any application to open when a camera is connected. That gave me an idea: what if I could tell it to open a special application that would check to see which camera I’d plugged in? Then that application could in turn open iPhoto only if I’d plugged in my Digital Rebel.
It turns out you can do all of this using the command line and a little bit of AppleScript. Here’s how:
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written by Jose Castillo