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- Sony PSPs enlisted as study aids by the Royal Navy
- Archos 5 gets Android Market, Gmail and Maps for that Google-blessed experience
- Nokia shows off SNES on N900, quickly thinks better of it
- QiGi’s Smartbook is more like a WinMo 6.5-powered MID
- Twelve South’s BassJump subwoofer improves your MacBook experience via USB, not parachute
- Sony Ericsson already working on second version of Xperia Pureness, possibly Xperia Pureness 2?
- Sony VAIO X ultraportable gets the Hackintosh treatment
- VUDU updates keep rolling by integrating Wikipedia
- HP’s Obsidian becomes iPAQ Glisten, officially comes to AT&T
- MSI eagerly supports HD video on its MT-V887 PMP
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Tired of getting shafted, lefties? Never gets old, does it? At any rate, Razer is momentarily stepping away from its ambidextrous ways in order to craft a mouse that fits especially well in the hands of righties. The new Imperator gaming mouse houses the same 3.5G laser sensor that has become common on the outfit’s critters of late, but this one includes a smattering of “adjustable side buttons” that can actually slide and lock into place wherever you find them most comfortable. It’s up for order now for $79.99 (or €69.99 for those across the pond), and if the gallery below doesn’t get you close enough, a demonstration vid is just past the break.
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A free PDA that came with a magazine subscription in 2002? An early Peek prototype? No, this is the humbly named USB Wireless Handheld Keyboard and Touchpad that’s now available from USB Geek, and it just might be the sort of device you never knew you were looking for. As the folks at CrunchGear have noted, while the device is simply being marketed as an all-in-one wireless touchpad and keyboard, it actually has all the makings of an ideal HTPC controller — not to mention an entirely reasonable price of $62. No multitouch, no LCD — just a plain old trackpad, a wireless USB dongle, and a QWERTY keypad that should be adequate enough for tweeting your reaction to the TV show remake du jour. Video after the break.
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We gadget nerds have to endure unspeakable atrocities in order to slake that early adoption jones: first-run gear shipped DOA, buggy pre-release software, and months of waiting after a product leaks only to be greeted by a jacked-up price premium at launch. So we feel your pain, original Kindle owners, after Amazon announced a major firmware update that brings native PDF support to the 6-inch Kindle 2 and DX readers with the promise of a staggering 85% increase in battery life to all Kindle 2 devices — if you haven’t already received it OTA, the 2.3 software update is now available for download and installation via USB tethering. At least owners of “some earlier versions of Kindle” (quote from the press release) will receive native PDF support whenever the 1st generation firmware update (currently at version 1.2) is released. It’s worth noting that Amazon’s PDF reader lacks a zoom function which makes many PDFs entirely unreadable on the device. Good thing Amazon’s store is chock full of easily zoomable books in a proprietary format then, huh?
