Posts Tagged Action Figure

Improve Home And Office Productivity With A Good Multifunctional Printer

Posted by on Tuesday, 4 May, 2010

The addition of a printer copier scanner fax machine to a home and also to an office can prove to be very useful as it will improve productivity at a relatively low cost. A Panasonic plasma HDTV on the other hand takes home entertainment to a whole new level and the same is the case with a transformers action figure that too makes for greater excitement and entertainment in the home.

However, multifunctional printers are really a good buy and will prove to be equally useful when installed in a home or in an office. A single machine that is able to print, fax, scan and copy not only provides added functionality but it saves space and helps you cut down on costs as well. The only trouble is that these machines might not be suitable for every kind of business.

The multifunctional printer obviously performs a number of different functions which is how it gets its name and though this is a positive you must also take into account the fact that the quality of output from such a printer might not always match expectations. So, if you need higher resolution scanning then you may be better off choosing a dedicated scanner that will ensue that you get desired level of output.

All this means that you need to be very careful about which multifunctional printer you choose. If you want one that does its printing and other functions quickly then you will have to pay a higher cost. At the lower end and even in the middle price range the multifunctional printers that are available are just too slow in printing and copying – more so when you need color printouts or copies.

Another important aspect of a good multi-functional printer is that it must have sufficient memory to handle the kinds of tasks the printer must perform. This means choosing at least 8MB of memory for ordinary tasks while 16MB and above will suit those people that need to perform professional grade tasks.

It is also important that you look for a multifunctional printer with sufficiently high resolution. This does mean that if you want higher resolution printers then you will have to pay more for it.

Also, don’t forget to look for features which help to enhance productivity even more and before buying a particular product be sure to test it out as well.


The 404 Podcast 548: Where we can has cheezburger, chipz

Posted by on Tuesday, 30 March, 2010


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This is what happens when no one speaks up at team meetings.

(Credit:
CNET/The 404)

We usually scold Wilson for eating while we’re on the air, but today we’re making an exception so that we can taste test  Jeff’s horrific supermarket find: Cheeseburger-flavored Doritos! Who knew that harnessing the sinewy flavor of cooked beef and artificial cheese would be such a catastrophe?

It takes the three of us a few minutes to recover from the explosion of McNausea, but we get it together and move onto the big Apple news of the day: while many Appleheads are still clamoring over the forthcoming iPad release, the rumor mill is also churning about the fourth-generation iPhone that will supposedly be named the iPhone HD for its 960×640-pixel resolution screen. Other features to look out for include a front-facing camera for video calls and an software update that allows for application multitasking. Our own Apple fanboy Wilson G. Tang contributes his own concerns about battery life and network robustness, and also gives us permission to tattoo a half-full hourglass on his face if his predictions are incorrect.


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Don't leave home without it!

(Credit:
Props Guy Jim/Steve Fatone/The 404)

The latest tech trend to hit Japan is called “Ringtone Therapy” that promises the cure for fay fever and obesity by using simple sounds through your phone. Japanese citizens suffering from stuffiness, runny noses, and sneezing from the pollen in the air can call a service that emits noises that supposedly releases the pollen in your sinuses if the user holds the phone up to their nose. You know what else is good for protecting your sinuses? Not holding foreign objects up to your nose.

We can’t thank Steve Fatone and Props Guy Jim enough for all the work they’ve done for the show. Whether it’s the Official 404 Temporary Tattoos, NDC’s Motherboard action figure, The 404 hoverboard from BTTF, or the Yu Be Gone spray repellent, these guys are a tremendous asset to the show and we’re honored to have them as friends. Thanks again, guys! Let us know if there’s anything we can do to return the favor, keeping in mind that Wilson is no longer allowed to attend children’s birthday parties.

Finally, be sure to tune into the second half of the show for Calls From the Public plus a couple E-Mails From the Public! Keep sending your comments, questions, critiques, and sticker pictures to the 404(at)cnet{dot}com and you might be on a future episode of The 404!




EPISODE 548


Listen now:
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Originally posted at The 404 Podcast


Green Max 4.8 GMAX robot toy: Toilets in disguise

Posted by on Tuesday, 16 February, 2010


Did you know that TOTO makes GreenMax 4.8 liter toilets? And did you that in Japan these toilets are revered as deities? What you’re seeing here is a TOTO action figure called GMAX whose catchphrase, “Protect the Earth, GMAX! Ready – Switch, on!” is now part of the Japanese National Anthem. It’s true!

Actually all of that was false, but WTF: it’s a TOTO toilet action figure. Don’t we have better things to waste precious oil resources on? Like glasses for the poor? The sheer fact that this exists – and comes in a big package – is an affront to the very standards that GMAX is supposed to be upholding. It’s like making a “Stop the Destruction of the Rainforests” building out of 500 rare rain forest trees.

via Plasticpals



Android 2.0 Review: Almost Human

Posted by on Tuesday, 3 November, 2009

A year ago, Android was an unfinished OS for nerds, bursting with potential. With Android 2.0, it’s evolved into something sleeker, more refined and focused—but still something not quite human.

Over the last year, Android’s evolved more rapidly and appeared in more shapes than any other smartphone OS. Every major update has made Android more capable and advanced, while custom interfaces from companies like HTC and Motorola, mean it’s constantly and continually shifting shapes. When you look at the bucket of bolts everybody started with, some of the oh-so-shiny end results were kind of amazing. Android 2.0 blows all of that away, and lays down a platform for the next year that’s wildly more compelling, even as it retains a lot of the same fundamental weaknesses.

We reviewed on Android 2.0 on the Motorola Droid—our review of the actual phone is here.

New Skin, Same Awkward Body

Android 2.0 is glossy—not in an Apple “the whole world is shiny and reflective” kind of way, but more like molded plastic for a collectible action figure. The cartoon whimsy—the classic Google rainbow of bright colors—are gone. The iconography, redrawn for high-res displays packed with tons of pixels, is smoother and sleeker, more subtle, and forces you to ask yourself, “Google designed this?”

While icons and menubars have been polished to fine gloss, and some things are cleaner and better organized—settings, for instance—overall, the user experience is basically the same: three desktops, which you can pack with icons and widgets; the still brilliant drop-down notification shade, which pools everything Android wants to tell you; and a pop-up tab where all of your apps are at. This is all still fine, mostly, if a bit muddled.

The reason that cluttered interface confusion is mostly fine is that multitasking with Android is addictive, and it’s a better, easier-to-use implementation than any phone but the Pre. The window shade, a simple but powerful concept, is what makes it work. If I’m browsing the internet and get a message, I can pull the shade down, check the message, and go right back to browsing. Or flip over to messaging, reply, and get right back to browsing. At this, Android 2.0 excels, especially now that everything runs faster.

The long press and menu button conventions are still used nearly everywhere throughout the OS, but almost always inconsistently. If you’re trying to do something in-app and have no idea how, there’s a good chance the action you’re looking for is buried behind the menu button or a long press. But these controls do different things in almost every single app, and even sometimes in the same app, depending on the context.

Universal search, and in particular, voice commands which let you quickly access search, map or navigate with surprising accuracy (seriously, it deciphers my mumbling better than my mom), are probably the most significant improvements to usability. Universal search isn’t quite as universal as we’d like, though. It only pores over apps, contacts, YouTube, music and the web—you have to go into the messaging and email apps separately to search through them, which doesn’t make a whole lot of sense.

And while Android 2.0 is capable of multitouch, other than making typing smoother, it’s nowhere to be found, at least not where I want it: the browser and maps. Also, the portrait keyboard’s still too tiny.

A Killer Machine, Sorta

Software is inextricably tied to hardware in many respects, and nowhere is that more true than performance. Droid, the first Android 2.0 phone—and the only one we’ve used—is ridiculously capable, with an ARM Cortex A8 TI OMAP3430 processor that’s basically the same as the chips inside of the Palm Pre and iPhone 3GS. Point being, it’s got heavy duty processor firepower.

So it’s absolutely inexplicable that while it’s overall the fastest version of Android yet—most apps fly open instantly, run zippily and practically zoom from one to another, even with a couple running in the background—very basic user interface elements, like the main pop-up menu on the home screen and sliding over from one desktop to another, often stutter or lag (with no apps running up front, and just a couple of widgets on the desktop). At this point, it’s clear that these performance hiccups are an Android problem, not a hardware deficiency. It’s maddening to hold a badass phone like the Droid and watch it handle menus like a pussy.

Accounts, Contacts, Exchange and Other Serious-Sounding Words

Besides Google Maps Navigation Beta, Android 2.0′s most significant upgrade for regular people is all about contacts and networking. Like the Palm Pre and HTC’s Sense UI, it integrates contacts from multiple sources—namely, Facebook and Exchange (no Twitter yet). The scheme works exceptionally well, with finesse that’s almost out of character for Google. The way it pulls in your Facebook contacts actually makes sense: When you add the account, you can choose to add all 900 of your Facebook contacts, or just the ones who you have actual Google contacts for. Oh, sweet reason! It even managed to match our address book contacts with correlating Facebook accounts pretty accurately and seamlessly, with a few exceptions.

1. Everybody whose name is capitalized in the screenshot is matched up with Facebook—I loathe capital letters, but got over the inconsistency.
2. And the rarely mismatched contacts prove difficult, if not impossible, to completely straighten out.

Quick Contact is what keeps this orgy of personal information from getting too messy when it’s time to get down to business—clicking on a contact’s icon blooms a row of icons, letting you instantly ping them via SMS, phone, email, Facebook or whatever you want.

Android finally approaches a real smartphone when it comes to accounts. Multiple Google accounts and Exchange support come stock. What’s that mean? Well, if you have a hosted Google apps account for work, and a personal one (like all of us at Giz do), you can use the awesome native Gmail application for both, instead of being forced to relegate one of the accounts to the separate, okay-but-not-as-good email app, which is what handles all of your Exchange, IMAP and POP mail. The only bummer is that you still have to toggle between each Google account mailbox in the Gmail app. (Yes, there are two different email applications. A Gmail app, and one for everything else. And they’re completely different.)

There’s one serious limitation to the multiple Google account support: The only Google calendars that sync to the phone are the ones from your main Google account, not your secondary one. Exchange calendars, on the other hand, use the separate-but-equal-as-far-as-I-can-tell “Corporate Calendars” app. We tested Exchange support using mail2web’s free service, and everything seemed to show up correctly, FWIW.

Maps

The biggest change to Google Maps is Navigation, which Wilson Rothman, a Magellan for our time, reviewed extensively here. My assessment is mostly the same after a weekend in a car—it’s pretty good, but occasionally befuddling and hard to get around. A potential point of confusion is that Navigation is both integrated into Maps and also its own distinct app, unlike Latitude.

Also new, sorta, is layers. Basically, every bit of information you wanna see in Maps is now a “layer.” Like if I’ve got Latitude up on the map, and want to see nearby coffee places with satellite view, that’s three layers—Latitude, a search for coffee, and satellite view. It can get a little confusing, especially if you’re going from search to search or Maps to Navigation and then back to Maps—none of it’s conceptually clean or simple, and the interface isn’t always aren’t entirely self-apparent. Also. Pinch. To. Zoom. I want it.

Browse Awesomer, But No (Multi)Touchy

The browser’s faster, smarter and more powerful, and is probably the second best browser now, next to mobile Safari. It mostly cuts through lardass sites like Gizmodo with pep previous versions didn’t, with more responsive scrolling and panning (slowdown does happen though). The browser actually starts you out on each site with a view of the entire page now, which is nicer in theory, but then it makes you want to pinch to zoom in—which, like Maps, is not enabled. You’re stuck with unwieldly buttons and double-taps that never quite line the page up the way they should. If Palm, who’s an insect by comparison, can pinch and zoom with impunity, why can’t Google? Don’t say it’s out of friendship, because Apple doesn’t even like you guys anymore.

Well, It Would Be a Better Camera

More controls! Yay! White balance, focusing mode, color and more. It’s just too bad that on the Droid, the camera’s completely unresponsive garbage. I don’t know if it’s software or hardware, so I’m mentioning in it both here and in our Droid review. Fix please.

Multimedia, or the Lack Thereof

The only way to get your music and videos on the phone is to manually drag and drop the files. There is no syncing, no easy way to get your music library onto your phone. How are normal people supposed to figure this out? Verizon reps actually joked about how putting music on the Droid is sure to make for a lovely Saturday afternoon. What. The. Shit.

And, there’s not even a built-in video player! I have a phone with drop-dead gorgeous screen that I can’t use to play movies without digging up my own video app, even if I could figure out how to get videos onto it. Correction: The video player’s tucked inside of the slow and rather buggy Gallery application, where you also browse photos. And it wouldn’t play videos that worked perfectly on a Zune HD or iPhone. Also, it and the music player are hideous.

Until I can magically and perfectly sync 12 gigs of music and videos over the air, you can’t get away with not having a media sync desktop application. And DoubleTwist, a third-party app that can sync to Android, doesn’t really count, since it’s not bundled with it. (Update: FWIW, if you know where to look, Motorola offers a PC-only Media Link application for its Android phones. But it still doesn’t solve the larger Android problem—Google needs to specify an easy-to-use syncing solution for people who need that.) Make no mistake, for a phone platform that’s supposed to be ready for consumers now, this is a disaster, like a spaceship that’s about to shoot into the atmosphere with a gaping hole in the side.

Goin’ to the Android Market, Buyin’ Some Apps

The Android Market has over 10,000 apps, and its state of the union is still a mixed bag. On the one hand, it’s finally got official apps from Facebook, Amazon, Pandora and other critical names people expect on their phone. On the other, and almost universally, these apps aren’t nearly as polished or full-featured as their iPhone counterparts (look no further than the Facebook app, which lacks even messaging in Android). And games? It’s a pretty desolate wasteland, if you’re looking for something beyond NES emulators. The library is getting better, and will undoubtedly keep getting better, but it’s hard not to lament Android’s comparative app ghetto, even as the platform’s poised to explode. (Update: Another point I forgot to mention, and part of the reason Android games are limited in scope, is the storage limit for apps since they can’t be installed on the SD card—for instance, it’s 256MB on the Droid.)

A problem that’s currently plaguing the ecosystem, and is hopefully not a foreboding omen of the fragmentation to come, is that many apps weren’t designed for the higher resolution screens that Android 2.0 supports, so their icons and graphics render crap-ugly on Droid, even in the main menu. (Granted, the phenomenon is partly Google’s fault for restricting access to the 2.0 SDK to all but a select group of privileged developers until basically the day Droid was announced.)

The Market itself, while it got a desperately needed facelift with 1.6, still has a ways to go. There’s no way to update all of your applications simultaneously—you have to click through the update process for each one. And finding apps remains a problem. Browsing for apps exclusively on your phone is a tedious experience, especially when there’s so many apps to wade through. Besides more refined browsing and suggestions, there needs to a way to look through the Market on your desktop. Also, Google’s got this whole cloud thing going, why aren’t my apps tied to my Google account, so if I move to another phone, they’ll all magically repopulate it, like my contacts?

Wherefore Art Thou, Android?

I probably sound like I’m more down on Android 2.0 than I actually am. I like it a lot, truthfully. It’s an amazing conduit for Google’s services. If your online life is lock, stock and barrel Google, there really isn’t a better or more powerful smartphone for getting stuff done in that universe. The Gmail app is a perfect distillation of Gmail for a small screen. The Google Talk app, if you have a bunch of friends using Gtalk, is fantastic. Google, really, is Android’s greatest strength. Excellent multitasking is a close second.

In time, Android very well could be the internet phone, hands down, in terms of raw capabilities. And while it’s not as easy to use or polished or seamless as the iPhone—or to some extent, Palm’s WebOS—it’s way more usable than most other smartphones, and keeps evolving, way faster than anyone else, continually closing that gap. Android 2.0′s potential finally feels as enormous as the iPhone’s, and I get kinda tingly thinking about it. I can’t say Android 2.0 is ready for your mom yet, but it’s definitely ready for anybody reading this.

Google’s apps are simply awesome


Facebook and Exchange integration works pretty well


Second best mobile browser


New look, same feel


Multiple Google account support somewhat limited


Still kinda sluggish at random intervals


No native way to sync music


Crappy music and video player


Balloon Boy action figure perfect for attic

Posted by on Wednesday, 28 October, 2009
Richard Heene action figure width="270" height="585" />
(Credit:
Herobuilders.com)

We should have seen this one coming. Richard Heene, much better known these days as “Balloon Boy’s dad,” has been made into an action figure.

Oxford, Conn.-based Herobuilders.com–whose action figures include Sarah Palin, Elliott Spitzer, and Joe the Plumber–is newly out with the …


Why On Earth Would Anyone Want To Remember This Scene From The Last Indiana Jones Film?

Posted by on Friday, 23 October, 2009

Indiana Jones And The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull Figure (Image courtesy Sideshow Collectibles)
By Andrew Liszewski

The same way that The Simpsons ended at season nine as far as I’m concerned, there are still only three Indiana Jones films in my mind. But unfortunately I did watch the fourth entry in that series (it can never be unwatched) and as a result here are three questions I don’t really want the answer to.

1) Why on Earth would anyone want a miniature 12-inch version of one of the most ridiculous scenes in Kingdom of the Crystal Skull?

2) Has any other action figure in the history of toys ever come with such a detailed refrigerator as an accessory?

3) Who in their right mind would pay $175 for this? Apparently a lot of people because they actually seem to be sold out.

[ Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull Sideshow Exclusive Edition ] VIA [ Nerd Approved ]