A DIGITAL CAMERA THAT ACCEPTS LEICA LENSES
Photo buffs know a few things for certain: It's best to shoot with the sun behind you, red-eye can be avoided with the right flash and Leica makes some of the most sought-after cameras. Its latest, the Leica M8, is a 10-megapixel digital camera built on Leica's M system of lenses.
The M8 uses Leica's standard magnesium and brass body. It also has a 10.3-megapixel sensor and Leica's range-finder viewfinder and 2.5-inch color display. The camera takes SD cards for storage and can create compressed JPEG's or uncompressed DNG format images.
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The M8 is compatible with almost all Leica M-series lenses (Leica introduced the line in 1954, so plenty of lenses are floating around). The camera weighs almost 567g and includes a rechargeable battery and simple controls on the top to set shutter speed and exposure.
What do all of these high-end features cost? Almost US$5,300. The M8 can be preordered now at online camera stores and will be released in mid-November. It comes in black and silver; a rakish fashion photographer's beret and turtleneck are not included.
PUT ON THE ‘TROUT’ QUINTET AND WATCH THAT FISH BOOGIE
While Darwinists may take exception, Tiger Electronics has placed its fish higher on the evolutionary ladder than its dog and cat.
This month the high-tech toy company released its I-Fish interactive music companion, sculptured of white plastic with an artfully articulated tail with blue and silvery details.
Like Tiger's popular line of I-Dog and I-Cat music companions, the I-Fish is made to be plugged into a portable media player and operate as a speaker. But I-Fish responds to music and touch, with much more sophisticated expressions than its predecessors.
The I-Fish rocks, spins and swishes its tail to the music, and displays a hypnotic dance of colored lights inside its minimalist, translucent head, whether it is working as a speaker or just positioned in front of one.
I-Fish operates on three AA batteries. It is recommended for those eight or older, but ultimately, said Sharon John, general manager of Hasbro, which owns the Tiger brand, “it is for anyone for whom it appeals.”
FOR THE mobile PHONE WITH EVERYTHING, A DVR OF ITS OWN
Now that many portable devices can show video — iPods, PlayStation Portables, Pocket PC's, Palm devices and even cell phones — the question is how to get that video to the devices. SanDisk has a hardware solution for moving video from your television, DVD player, cable set-top box, digital video recorder or digital camera to your hand-held viewer.
The SanDisk V-Mate video memory card recorder acts as a bridge between your video source and your hand-held device. It takes the output of any video source, converts it to the video format of the receiving unit and saves it on a memory card. The V-Mate has slots for all the major memory card formats, from SD to Sony Memory Sticks.
The unit connects to your TV, and the V-Mate's built-in software lets you mimic a DVR by scheduling the recording of a TV show for later viewing on your portable device. The V-mate retails for about US$130 and will be available next month at www.sandisk.com and major retailers.
SanDisk also sells memory cards, of course, and cards for the V-Mate are sold separately.
80 YEARS OF A MAGAZINE ON A HARD DRIVE?
If E.B. White and Joseph Mitchell had known that their essays would end up on metal platters spinning at 5,400rpm, they would probably have asked for a bit more per word. Their writing — along with articles by hundreds of other contributors to The New Yorker — is now collected on one 3-by-5-inch portable hard drive.
The 80-gigabyte drive has Eustace Tilley, the magazine's top-hatted symbol, engraved on the case. It connects to Macs or PC's using a USB cable and contains 4,164 issues of The New Yorker, dating back to 1925. The drive has 20 gigabytes set aside for updates that will be available online.
The US$299 device is available at www.thenewyorkerstore.com. Installation is simple: plug it in, allow it to install a special reader on your computer and then search or browse issues by author, date or content. Each article appears just as it did in decades past, and the archive includes all the advertisements, cover art and, of course, the cartoons.
You can even personalize your drive with two lines of text, creating an heir-loom to be passed on from cyborg to cyborg, far into the future.
IT'S NOT HOW MOZART STARTED, BUT IT MAY AMUSE THE CHILDREN
Electronic piano lessons have not posed much of a threat thus far to your neighborhood piano teacher. I Can Play Piano, an US$80 device from Fisher-Price that is intended for children four to eight years old, is no exception, but it could generate some musical fun.
The three-octave plastic keyboard, which plugs into your TV, uses an adaptation of the teaching methodology from an older PC-based piano system called the Piano Wizard.
Children can peck out the melodies to one of eight songs, including Fur Elise or The Entertainer, by matching moving colored dots on the screen to the color-coded keys on the keyboard. If the note is played at the right time, the melody plays and your score improves. You can buy additional songs on cartridges with various themes, including holiday music, pop hits, Scooby-Doo and Barbie.
The keyboard, which is powered by either four C batteries or an included AC adapter, has controls for adjusting the music's tempo. A freestyle mode lets children jam along with background chords. The package also includes a car-racing game and a game of dodgeball to add some variety to all the music.
The year was 1991. A Toyota Land Cruiser set out on a 67km journey up the Junda Forest Road (郡大林道) toward an old loggers’ camp, at which point the hikers inside would get out and begin their ascent of Jade Mountain (玉山). Little did they know, they would be the last group of hikers to ever enjoy this shortcut into the mountains. An approaching typhoon soon wiped out the road behind them, trapping the vehicle on the mountain and forever changing the approach to Jade Mountain. THE CONTEMPORARY ROUTE Nowadays, the approach to Jade Mountain from the north side takes an
Last week Joseph Nye, the well-known China scholar, wrote on the Australian Strategic Policy Institute’s website about how war over Taiwan might be averted. He noted that years ago he was on a team that met with then-president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁), “whose previous ‘unofficial’ visit to the US had caused a crisis in which China fired missiles into the sea and the US deployed carriers off the coast of Taiwan.” Yes, that’s right, mighty Chen caused that crisis all by himself. Neither the US nor the People’s Republic of China (PRC) exercised any agency. Nye then nostalgically invoked the comical specter
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April 15 to April 21 Yang Kui (楊逵) was horrified as he drove past trucks, oxcarts and trolleys loaded with coffins on his way to Tuntzechiao (屯子腳), which he heard had been completely destroyed. The friend he came to check on was safe, but most residents were suffering in the town hit the hardest by the 7.1-magnitude Hsinchu-Taichung Earthquake on April 21, 1935. It remains the deadliest in Taiwan’s recorded history, claiming around 3,300 lives and injuring nearly 12,000. The disaster completely flattened roughly 18,000 houses and damaged countless more. The social activist and