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Portable audio for your shell-likes
IXOS announces Oyster speakers  0

IXOS is offering new portable USB-powered speakers, dubbed the “Oyster”.

Designed for use with laptops, netbooks and MP3 players – in fact anything with a 3.5mm output socket – the speakers are angled towards on-the-go listening.

IXOS says the Oyster speakers “boast good quality stereo sound from their two Neodynium speaker drive units”.

Magnetically clipping together for storage or transport, there is an included battery pack for standalone sound.

The IXOS Oyster speakers will be available soon from Staples and other high street retailers for £24.99.

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Audio Speakers Ixos

IXOS announces Oyster speakers  1 
IXOS announces Oyster speakers  2 

IXOS announces Oyster speakers originally appeared on Pocket-lint on Thu, 06 Aug 2009 16:16:13 +0100

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Money saving deals, offers and innovations
Skullcandy Full Metal Jacket Earphones 0

We are pointing you in the direction of some in-ear headphones for our tech deal today, something which may appeal to music lovers in need of some portable ear appendages.

Available from Play.com at the bargain price of £17.99 these headphones have an 11mm driver, “streamlined alloy casing” and different sized earbuds, which should mean you won’t need the volume as high.

With some positive buyer reviews, stand-out characteristics mentioned are decent base and build quality for the earphones that should have an RRP of £51.99.

The link below will take you to the deal and we’ll have another one for you tomorrow.

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Audio Headphones Earphones Skullcandy Full Metal Jacket Play.com Daily Tech Deal

Daily Tech Deal: Skullcandy Full Metal Jacket earphones originally appeared on Pocket-lint on Thu, 06 Aug 2009 13:00:00 +0100

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But does it tell the time?
Timex WS4  0

Whether you’re scaling K2 or just negotiating Knightsbridge can Timex’s ‘wrist-top adventure instrument’ keep you safely on track; we strapped ourselves in to find out.

The WS4 serves up an altimeter, barometer, compass and thermometer, its waterproof to 50m, has 100 hour chronograph for serious timings, has a tough rubber casing, INDIGLO night light and all the daily/weekly alarms you could need. It also squeezes in time telling (digital and analogue) and date.

Impressive, but nothing terribly exciting; the likes of Garmin and Suunto (and Timex) have been knocking out adventure specific watches for years. What makes the WS4 stand out is the screen (WS = Widescreen) and the effortless functionality. For once you can navigate your way around all the functions with ease, even in zero visibility with huge great mittens on.

The 3.7cm wide screen is split into four sections; there’s a clear analogue dial (shows time at a glance and also compass direction), large bitmapped area that displays names, time, modes, graphs, while a smaller segments displays numbers, lap times, the date, barometer pressure etc depending on the menu. Finally a small graphic in the bottom left gives you the temperature and a current weather graphic.

Lots to take in on one display, but there’s an ocean of space between each graphic making it easy to decipher all the info at a glance.

Finding and using each feature is also a breeze. The chunky mode button gets you to the altimeter; barometer etc and once there the on-screen prompts guide you through each. For example to set up the compass the top right display asks you to rotate the watch twice before pushing mode to calibrate.

It’s up to you if you’d find an altimeter/barometer/compass useful but rest assured each worked a treat. The altimeter was accurate (standing on a desk even registered) and the progression graph a great touch. You can set altitude alarms, useful for keeping on track and hitting goals and record how long you’re at a certain height – essential if the oxygen’s getting thin.

The compass did as it should and was spot on with accuracy while the barometer proved a handy tool. Ignore the sunny/rainy symbols, you can look out the window for that info, but the Hg pressure display and history graphs can really help predict the weather – watch the numbers drop and you know you’ve got bad weather on the way, essential if you’re half way up Ben Nevis or on Bond Street without a brolly.

We were disappointed by the temperature gauge. It was too influenced by the heat of this reviewer’s wrist to be totally accurate. We had to take it off to get a proper read out.

In darkness the silver INDIGLO button illuminates the display in easy-reading neon green for about three seconds. We found it worked superbly in dark conditions but at half light the original display was often clearer.

It’s also available in black; blue; yellow; orange, and white for the fashion conscious.

Verdict:
We’re impressed by the WS4 but the one thing holding this watch back from greatness is the exact thing that makes it so easy to use; it’s flippin’ enormous. Measuring 5.5cm wide it isn’t heavy but it swamps even the manliest wrist. Pull on your Gore Tex, strap on the Timex and head for the hills, but don’t (and trust us here) wear it down the pub.

It’d be harsh to call the WS4 the ‘My First Adventure Watch’ because it’s a serious bit of kit full of useful, potentially life saving widgets, but the huge screen and idiot proof settings mean even a total novice can make the most of the information on display.

Timex have gone out on a limb with the WS4 design and for out-and-out usefulness they’ve done a great job. The four-zone display gives the wearer a huge amount of information without a lot of fiddly button pushes. Even when you do want to get geeky with graphs and altitude timers most are just one or two presses away.

Our only gripe – if you wear it with anything other than an all-weather survival suit you’ll look more like an electronically tagged teen than a rugged outdoor adventurer.

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Sports Fitness Timex Watches

Timex WS4  1 
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Timex WS4 adventure watch originally appeared on Pocket-lint on Thu, 06 Aug 2009 12:00:00 +0100

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Juice up three gadgets per wall socket
Exspect launches triple USB travel charger 0

Exspect is offering a travel charger that offers not one, not two but three USB ports for charging up your essential gadgetry.

As you can likely guess, the device allows you to charge up to three devices at the same time from one wall socket, pretty much anywhere in the civilised world it seems, via USB.

Exspect says it can be used in over 100 countries worldwide and includes adapters for use in the UK, throughout Europe, USA and Australia.

Eco-types will be happy to note the functionality that sees the power drop once a device has been fully charged.

The Exspect triple USB travel charger is on sale for £19.99.

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Gadgets Exspect Chargers USB gadgets

Exspect launches triple USB travel charger originally appeared on Pocket-lint on Wed, 05 Aug 2009 15:04:59 +0100

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Money saving deals, offers and innovations
Toshiba Satellite L300-1G8 0

Today we have a cut-price laptop in the form of the Toshiba Satellite L300 1G8. The lower-spec Satellite L300 version received an 8/10 score in our review back in July 2008 so we thought this might be worth a look.

Currently selling for £359.99 at Cdiscount it’s down from an RRP of £499.99. The laptop gets an Intel Pentium Dual core T3400 processor, 4GB RAM and 160GB hard drive.

The 15.4-inch 1280 x 800 WXGA screen will be displaying Vista Home Premium and you’ll also get a built-in webcam.

Connections include three USB 2.0 ports, an ExpressCard slot and Wi-Fi but unfortunately no Bluetooth, whilst the battery is cited as lasting “up to 2.5 hours”.

There’s a link below to the Cdiscount offer, as well as one to the review mentioned.

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Hardware Laptops Toshiba Cdiscount Daily Tech Deal

Daily Tech Deal: Toshiba Satellite L300-1G8 laptop originally appeared on Pocket-lint on Wed, 05 Aug 2009 13:00:00 +0100

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