Pages

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Insignia Internet Viewer - a must for your list


The name of this device doesn't even begin to communicate what it does. If I hadn't been following the rise of "Internet appliances" through the more technical literature I would have missed it. Fortunately for me, Best Buy put it on sale for Black Friday, and most people did not know what it was. So when I came later in the day, this little gem was still available.

I think of it as a the all purpose kitchen counter Internet connection. It's something families have wanted since they realized how much information was out there, and how hard it was to get to it quickly. It has "apps" that allow you to quickly answer those questions you ask every morning. You can see headlines, your calendar for the day and week, and play the radio. My must-haves:


  1. Weather in the morning - I'll never forgive our local provider for cutting out "Local on the 8s" from their programming, but this compensates.

  2. Pandora Internet radio - radio stations that play only music I like with no commercials

  3. Headlines - Sports, news, finance, fashion news items that I can scroll through, or drill down into

  4. Calendar - even my Google calendar so I can see what is ahead for the day

  5. Photos - Gadgets that show Facebook photos, Flickr and Picasa albums, and pictures from the thousands stored on my home network.



There are 1500 apps available for this including recipes, YouTube,and many others. This "chumby" platform is open to new apps being developed, and these keep appearing. Most of all - the apps are free. Not 99 cents or a few dollars, but free.

This device is not perfect. Like most computers, easy things are easy to do, and more complicated things are harder. It took me a few hours to figure out how to make the viewer see my photos on my home network. Looking at photos on Flickr, Picasa or Facebook was a snap. Streaming my iTunes library through the device is taking a little more configuration.

If you don't have much patience with configuring devices to talk to wireless, or connect to the Internet accounts for social network, email, calendar, etc., you might want to get some help from someone who is Internet-savvy like Momisageek. An experienced expert can zoom through those tasks that might take you hours to research and complete.

Did I mention the touchscreen? The fast response? The great-sounding audio audio? The crisp clean display? The alarm clock? The $99-169 price?

For me, this is the biggest hit of the Christmas gadgets for 2010. I've already bought two, and am shopping for more. You can find these at Best Buy branded as the Insignia Internet Viewer and as the Sony Dash Internet viewer

No matter what room of the house you put it in, it will be a hit.

Gadget Girl says: It stays. And it is my top pick to gift this Christmas.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Nextbook Android Tablet


My quest for an affordable tablet has begun. Today's review is for the Nextbook Next2.

The Nextbook Next2 is available from HSN at a very reasonable $199. Though advertised as a tablet, it really is basically a Borders-branded ebook reader. Some Android apps are available through the market, but not all Android apps.

Especially not the Kindle app.

That alone was a deal-breaker for me. Beside this very big drawback of reduced access to the Android apps, the device itself has some problems. For me, the touchscreen isn't responsive enough. Anytime I am scrolling through a list, it seems the scrolling doesn't move at all - or not without multiple attempts. The buttons are slow, but fairly consistent.

The screen is criap and easy to read, and the device is light and convenient. If you want an Borders only ebook reader and a browser, and a few app like email, calculator, YouTube, etc., it does the job. It just doesn't provide enough functionality for me to either replace one of my current devices, or bother to carry it.

It frustrates me to have a deliberately crippled device. I wouldn't accept a Windows device that only allowed me to install and load a subset of Windows programs. As time goes on this may change, or not. Without control over the apps, the likelihood of going out-of-date increases.

Gadget Girsl says: It goes as fast as I can pack it up.

Technology Showcase

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Technology Showcase for 2010

Want to know about the latest gadgets before you go Chirstmas shopping. Gadget Girl is out there trying the latest and greatest and letting you know what is worth it.
Here is what is on our Christmas evaluation list.

E-book readers and Android
1. Nextbook Next Tablet
2. Pandigital Color Ebook reader
3. Barnes and Noble Color Nook
Photos
5. Eye-Fi geo-taging SD card for photos
6. Kodak Pulse digital photo frame with email address
7. Internet viewers (chumby-based)

Music
7. Korg mini Midi controller Keyboard
8. Aiwa LPK75 Midi controller
9. Aptek Midi controller keyboard

Keep watching our posts for what Gadget Girl thought was worth keeping.