Google Applied for "Nexus One" Trademark [Google]

In between all the exciting rumors of when Google's Nexus One will be released and how much it will cost, there's at least something that's confirmed: Google submitted a trademark application for "Nexus One."

Android.in writes that the application was filed on December 10th, a bit before all the excitement about Nexus One began, which they speculate could mean that there'll be little involvement by carriers, but who knows at this point? I'm just going to keep staring at mysterious countdowns. [AndroidOS.in]



Apple Gestapo: How Apple Hunts Down Leaks [Apple]

They call themselves the Worldwide Loyalty Team. Among some employees, they are known as the Apple Gestapo, a group of moles always spying in headquarters and stores, reporting directly to Jobs and Oppenheimer. Here's how they hunt people down.

"You may want to know about their Worldwide Loyalty Team," Tom told me recently in an email. I read what he had to say. It felt like a description of the Gestapo, without the torture and killing part.

Tom never lived in Nazi Germany, back in the time when the Geheime Staatspolize had the power to get into any house or any office, at any time of the day or night, without any warrant or reason, to seize whatever or whoever they wanted in their never ending search to find enemies of the state. A place in which you had no right to privacy whatsoever. A place in which you were guilty until proven otherwise.

No, Tom never lived in Nazi Germany, nor in East Germany, nor in the Soviet Union, nor in Communist China. He lives in the United States. For sure, he has never been scared of losing his life nor the ones he loves, like thousands of millions in those countries. But he knows how it feels to be watched, to always be considered guilty of crimes against another kind of state. He knew how it felt to have no privacy whatsoever when he was working right here, in a little Californian town called Cupertino, in a legendary place located in One Infinite Loop.

Tom knew about all that pretty well, back when he was working at Apple Inc.

Operation Lockdown

Of course, if Tom had never sent any sensitive information to media outlets, he would have never had the fear of being caught, only to get fired and sued into oblivion by Apple Legal. But the lack of any privacy whatsoever is something that he shared with all his fellow employees.

"Apple has these moles working everywhere, especially in departments where leaks are suspected. Management is not aware of them," he told me, "once they suspect a leak, the special forces—as we call them—will walk in the office at any hour, especially in the mornings. They will contact whoever was the most senior manager in the building, and ask them to coordinate the operation."

The operation, as Tom calls it, is not anything special. It is not one of a kind event. It's just a normal practice, and the process is pretty simple: The manager will instruct all employees to stay at their desks, telling them what to do and what to expect at any given time. The Apple Gestapo never handles the communication. They are there, present, supervising the supervisors, making sure everything goes as planned.

All cellphones are then taken. Usually, they collect them all at the same time, which means that the process could take a long time. If you need to contact the exterior during the time your cellphone is under examination, you will have to ask for permission, and your call will be monitored.

They don't ask for cameras because there are no cameras at Apple: Employees are not allowed to get into the campus with them. If the cellphone is an iPhone, it gets backed up onto a laptop. "In fact, at the beginning they used to say that the iPhones were really their property, since Apple gave every employee a free iPhone," he points out. All the employees are asked to unlock and disable any locking features in their cellphones, and then the special forces will proceed to check them for recent activity.

They back up everything and go through all the other phones' text messages and pictures. If you have porn in your phone, they will see it. If you have text messages to your spouse, lover, or Tiger Woods, they will see them, too. Just like that. No privacy, no limits.

While all this is happening, the employees are ordered to activate the screensaver on their computers, so the special forces are sure there are no chats happening between employees or with the exterior. They are told not to speak, text or call one other when the lockdown is happening: "It is like a gag order, and if the employee does not want to participate, they are basically asked to leave and never come back."

2009 Is Like "1984"

Of course, all this is voluntary. Management recommends that you relinquish your phones. If you don't do it they will fire you, or they will investigate why you didn't want to give them your cellphone. Simultaneously, everyone is asked to sign NDA's during the investigations, even though they already signed Apple NDAs to work there.

"I was at several events. When they find what they are looking for—which they usually do—the person is asked to stay until the end of the business day. Then he is asked to leave the premises quietly, escorted by security," Tom says. While he's there, the special forces hang around, watching. "There is a lot that goes behind doors that I don't really know about. I do know, however, that they really interrogate people that are serious suspects, intimidating them by threatening to sue."

There is no way to know how often this happens, however, as everything is handled very quietly. The same Worldwide Loyalty Team does many other things to keep everyone in check, from searching out the email history of every employee—which is also a normal practice in other corporations and government agencies—to seeding fake images to catch potential leaks and diffuse the hype about some product introductions.

As Tom was describing all this, my mind was getting back to all I've read about Steve Jobs and Apple, back when he was El Capitán of the brave group of free pirates who created the Macintosh. The Mac was a secret project too, but there was no secret police making sure there were no leaks. After a hard day of work, all the Mac team sometimes played on the beaches of California, careless and happy, confident that this new revolutionary computer would change the world, one desktop at a time. All of them shared information, there were no seeeecrets, and that's why they came up with an "insanely great" computer, as Steve Jobs himself used to refer to it.

And while I understand that secrecy is paramount to success in today's extremely competitive market—hello, dear marketdrones—now I look at this story on the Worldwide Loyalty Team, and it makes me realize how much Apple has changed. From a happy hippie company, to a company that does KGB-style lockdowns and Gestapo interrogations that end in suicides.

I wonder if the special forces have ever chased anyone through the Infinite Loop campus, dressed in their full regalia:

I wouldn't be surprised.



Tangled Bank: Read the Excerpt And Then Stuff That Stocking! | The Loom

beetle excerptThe National Center For Science Education (now at its new ncse.com address) is offering a free pdf of a chapter from my book, The Tangled Bank: An Introduction to Evolution. The chapter, called “Radiations and Extinctions,” is about the two sides of biodiversity. First I look at how biodiversity rises over time (the ascent of the animal kingdom, for example, and the wild exuberance of insects). Then I look at how biodiversity falls, thanks to background extinctions and mass extinctions. And then I take a look forward and see ominous signs for biodiversity’s future, such as corroding oceans.

If you like what you read, you can find out more about The Tangled Bank here. Or you can cut to the chase and get the whole book–as a holiday gift for yourself, or for that special someone who keeps asking you how we can be descended from monkeys if there are still monkeys around.


Boeing Dreamliner First Flight Video: IT FLIES! [Airplanes]

They made it! It flies! IT FLIES! After countless tests, the Boeing 787 Dreamliner is finally flying. As in, taking off, going around a few times, and then landing without any problem. Here's the first video. And another one here:

It has been long way since we saw it complete for the first time but, after all the delays, the first commercial airliner fully made of composite materials is now a reality. [Gizmodo Dreamliner Coverage]



The LaCie Rikiki Is the Tiniest 2.5-inch Portable Hard Drive On the Market [LaCie]

With LaCie, you always expect the product to look good—and the Rikiki portable HDD is no exception. They also claim that it is the smallest 2.5-inch drive on the market.

I'm not sure if that is accurate or not, but with measurements at 4.3 x 2.9 x .5 inches it is even smaller than the popular FreeAgent line from Seagate. The USB 2.0, self-powered drives are available in 250GB, 500GB and 640GB flavors for $75, $109 and $149 respectively.

Today, LaCie introduced the most compact 2.5" hard drive on the market – LaCie Rikiki, in metal. Measuring just a mere 110mm, its sophisticated form factor holds up to 640GB of media that you won't mind storing in a pocket or purse.

Encased in brushed, sturdy aluminum, the LaCie Rikiki, which means "tiny" in French, represents a resilient aesthetic that protects your media from everyday blunders and unwelcome fingerprints. Its lightweight design makes it a perfect companion for keeping your digital world close at hand.

"We are part of a generation that wants more from our electronics, but in the smallest form factor possible, and with a competitive price," said Anne-Sophie Marchand, Consumer Product Manager. "With the LaCie Rikiki, we have done just that by fitting high-performance and high-capacity in the palm of your hand, for under $100."

Leveraging the versatile USB 2.0 interface, the LaCie Rikiki is instantly compatible with your PC or Mac. Simply plug it in and you're ready to store and share your favorite media with high-speed performance. LaCie Rikiki also offers USB Boost software for enhancing speeds up to 33% (Windows® only).

LaCie Rikiki also comes with a simplified software suite – for quick setup and easy-to-use backup management – enabling complete configuration in just a few clicks. The LaCie Rikiki is an all-in-one solution for storage mobility.

Availability
The LaCie Rikiki will be available in 250GB, 500GB, and 640GB capacities through the LaCie Online Store, LaCie Reseller+, and LaCie Corner, starting at the suggested retail price of $74.99 (excluding VAT). For more information, visit http://www.lacie.com.

[LaCie]



Forever Is Forever: New IR Technology Can Spot “Removed” Tattoos | Discoblog

tattooTattoos just got even more permanent. Scientists have developed a method to uncover old tattoos that have been altered or surgically removed. The technology involves infrared cameras and could be particularly useful to law enforcement agents, according to Tech Radar:

Often used as a distinguishing factor to identify criminals, tattoos can be altered or removed relatively easily, but a team at the University of Derby has come up with a solution.

Using infrared means that removed tattoos, or even tattoos that have been altered, can be spotted in the deeper layers of skin.

Guess that means DISCOVER’s CEO and Publisher Henry Donahue will never be able to fully get rid of his fish. Let’s hope he stays out of trouble!

Related Content:
Discoblog: DISCOVER CEO Makes Good on Promise, Gets Science Tattoo
The Loom: Science Tattoo Emporium Archives
Bad Astronomy: We Who Are About To Dye

Image: flickr / House of Sims


How To Use Hashtags To Send Us A Tip Or Talk About Anything [Comments]

Did you know you can post a tip straight to Gizmodo? Or, start a new conversation all on your own? Thanks to our hashtag pages you can do all sorts of comment related goodness. Here's how:

#Tips:

Once you're at Gizmodo.com, just go to the comment box where it says "Got a tip for us?", write your tip — and then click the share button. Remember to include #tips to make sure your note shows up on the tips page.

So what kind of tips do we like to see? To tell the truth, It really doesn't matter how big or small the tip might be, just as long as it's something interesting or newsy. Obviously our favorite kinds of tips have stuff like spy shots and info of a new unseen gadget, but that's not the only thing we're looking for.

For example commenter kjoost used the #tips to share The Most Powerful Desktop PC-Sized Supercomputer with us. As you can see, sharing a tip with Gizmodo has never been easier. So if you have a juicy bit of news for us or just want to show us an interesting piece of tech please don't hesitate to let us know.

Hashtags:
If you haven't noticed we use hashtages at Gizmodo for all of our tagging needs. This is important to you because it means anyone can create their own hashtag for just about anything. We showed you above how to use the #tips hashtag to send us a tip, but you're not limited to using only this hashtag.

We already explained how to use #whitenoise to talk amongst yourselves, but say you wanted to start up a discussion on your favorite gadget? Then at bottom of your comment type in something like #favgadget. Or maybe you want to send us a letter of suggestion or complaint, you could use #letters. Also, if you want your comments to appear in multiple places, use multiple hashtags. Need a starting off point? Try any of our most popular tags featured above. The possibilities are endless and we encourage all of you to start using hashtags to talk about what you want, when you want to.

If you still have questions regarding out comment system try reading over our Comment FAQ. If the FAQ doesn't seem to help then try shooting an email to comments@gizmodo.com for help.



Cap Screws and Allen Keys

Good afternoon:

I want to know all the types of cap screw and all the types of bolt and the difference in use between one or another. The cap screw can be turned only with an Allen key and the bolt with other type of key...it' s that true?

50 Million Window Blinds Recalled After a Decade of Strangling Children [Broken]

Your TV is trying to kill your children. Your DVD player is trying to kill your children. Your robot lawnmower is trying to kill your children. And now, your blinds—your soft roman blinds!—are trying to kill your children.

The recall, which covers virtually every roman shade and roller blind in the country, was prompted after a series of tragic strangulations—about eight over the last ten years, along with over a dozen injuries—were blamed on the blinds, which the children can become entangled in. In case you're like most other human beings and don't know the technical name for the thing that hanging in front of your windows, here's what Roman and roller shades look like:

On both types, it's the hanging drawstring that's most dangerous to tots. On the Roman shades, the strings running down the length of the fabric can be safety hazards too.

It's a recall prompted by some no-doubt horrible tragedies, and I'm sure the Consumer Product Safety Commission wouldn't have negotiated a recall this massive unless there was a real risk here, but in a video breaking down the various dangers of these blinds with the chair of the CPSC, ABC somehow managed to make this Very Serious Thing seem ridiculous. I quote:

Any loop is the enemy of children.

Recall all loops! This is the only solution. [ABC]



Craters On the “Dark Side”

Craters on the "dark side". Don't see "craters"? Read on. Credit:NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center/Arizona State University.

Here is an image from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. The image shows secondary craters.  Secondary craters are  those craters formed not by an foreign body hitting the moon, rather they are formed by the stuff blown out from a crater forming impact.

The NASA caption for the image is below, but before you get there, I know there are some of you taking issue with the title…Dark Side indeed. The dark side of the moon exists maybe in some of the areas around the poles and in Pink Floyd songs…the reality is there is no dark side. Yes I know that, interestingly enough the LRO site titled the page “Craters on the dark side of the moon” (linked below).

Now how many of you don’t see craters and instead you see “lumps”?  It’s a trick your eyes are playing on you, click  here and you will see the very same image just rotated 180o. The image opens in a new window so you can move it around and get the two side by side (you may need to resize the new window).  Did you do it? Pretty cool eh?

Ok here’s the caption from the LRO site:

When people envision a “moonscape” it probably looks something like this — craters, craters everywhere.

There are two types of impact craters on the Moon: primary and secondary. Primary craters form as the result of an asteroid or comet (or spacecraft) impacting the Moon. Secondary impact craters formed from the impact of ejecta expelled during primary crater formation. Secondary impact craters dominate this scene, possibly from the relatively recent impact that created nearby Jackson crater (43.5 miles across), located 42 miles to the west.

Geologists use small secondary craters to help unravel the stratigraphy of the lunar surface. These secondary craters reside on the floor of a 8.7 mile wilde crater. What is the age of this host crater? If these secondary craters originated from the Jackson event, then it is a fair bet the Jackson impact was more recent. If you look at the bottom of this NAC frame in the LROC Image Gallery at ASU, you can see that this crater also has a very subdued rim, in contrast to Jackson’s well-defined rim, providing more evidence of it’s age.

MIT Reinvents the (Bike) Wheel | 80beats

copenhagen-wheelScientists at MIT’s Senseable City Laboratory have designed a bicycle wheel that can give riders a boost when they need it most. Kinetic energy is released when a rider hits the brakes, and the new wheel, called the Copenhagen Wheel, captures that energy for later use. The new wheel uses a kinetic energy recovery system, the same technology used by hybrid cars, like the Toyota Prius, to harvest otherwise wasted energy when a cyclist brakes or speeds down a hill. With that energy, it charges up a battery inside the wheel’s hub [The New York Times].

The Copenhagen Wheel made its debut today in Copenhagen, one of the most bicycle friendly cities in the world and the site of the current international talks on climate change regulations.The special wheel can be swapped in for any bike’s rear wheel, and includes other bells and whistles such as an odometer, a sensor to track air quality, and a GPS. The wheel can even talk to your iPhone though a Bluetooth connection so you can check your speed, direction, distance traveled, monitor traffic, and find your biking buddies. The wheel is expected to retail for between $500 and $1,000.

Check out the video below for a preview of the Copenhagen Wheel:

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80beats: A Two-Wheeled, Two-Seat, Tiny Electric People-Mover from G.M. and Segway
80beats: Improved Batteries for Electric Cars Could Recharge in Seconds

Image: the COPENHAGEN WHEEL; Video: YouTube / senseablecitylab


Protecting Our Lungs at Copenhagen

On the weekend of December 12th, there was a world-wide weekend of rallies and vigils to call for a real climate deal in Copenhagen. See 350.org for more information. 350ppm is the amount of carbon dioxide that scientists tell us we need to return to in the atmosphere to prevent dangerous temperature rises.  As of today, 350 was no longer officially on the negotiating table in Copenhagen.  As the delegation from Stanford said, there is an idea at the summit that we can survive with 450ppm in the atmosphere but there is no science that tells us that will be a survivable level, especially at the rate we are losing trees.  To get back to 350ppm with reforestation and other natural methods, and just leveling off of emissions, would take over 200 years, they said.  REDD was also discussed earlier today by several panels which you can find at the COP15 webcast site.

Deforestation is a big priority at Copenhagen and countries are struggling to save the last remaining segments of rainforest they have left.  Nigeria is desperate to save their last rainforest and losing the battle unless they have help from richer countries.  Unfortunately it’s a situation that has boiled down to countries needing money to not cut them down.

At this point, cutting down trees should probably be an act that is fined, per tree cut down. Our planet’s lungs (the rainforest) cannot be considered  optional.  Today, UN head climate negotiator Todd Stern said the U.S. is in favor of a global climate fund for poorer countries, for mitigation and re-forestration, etc.  That’s good news.  And more on deforestation:

“Over the weekend, environmentalists howled as short-term targets were stripped from a forest plan at the U.N. climate talks over complaints that rich nations weren’t offering developing countries financing.

In the latest draft of the forest plan, the short-term targets are back, with the caveat that any bold action would have to be backed up by financing.

In the latest text, delegates are given two options: either they can go for general language calling on all parties to reduce emissions and halt deforestation or language calling for reducing deforestation 50 percent by 2020 and ending it by 2030 as long as financing is provided.

The text also includes tougher environmental and social safeguards, including language lessening the chance that forests would be converted into plantations and protections for indigenous groups who fear their land would be stolen under the program which will be known as REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation).

Destruction of forests, the burning or cutting of trees to clear land for plantations or cattle ranches, is thought to account for about 20 percent of all global emissions. That’s as much carbon dioxide as all the world’s cars, trucks, trains, planes and ships combined.
[So let's put a cost on the cutting down of trees!]

REDD would be financed either by richer nations’ taxpayers or by [...]

Marimba, Meet MIDI. MIDI, Marimba. Now Go Play Nice. [Midi]

Long and agonizing has been my wait for the pairing of a three-octave marimba's upbeat tonality and the synth kitsch of a MIDI player. Thank you, Player Marimba, for answering my prayers.

By deconstructing a standard marimba, assigning a mallet to each, and hooking the whole mess up to two MD24 MIDI decoders, Larry Cotton has found a way to enjoy the soothing plinking of a marimba that can be controlled by any a MIDI sequencer or keyboard. The result is, as you can see/hear, not far from magic. I just like to imagine how many shootouts could have been avoided if these had been around in the Old West instead of those rinky dink player pianos. [Highly Liquid via Make]



Palm’s Going To Have Something at CES, But What? [Palm]

It's pretty obvious that Palm's going to be debuting a new device at CES, seeing as they were the highlight of last year's event, but what is it going to be?

An updated Pre is the safe bet. I don't think they're going to let their brand go an entire year without a new high-end phone, and the Pre is getting a bit worn compared to the hype on the 3GS and the Droid (and Android as a whole). Palm has to pull out something big to wow people back into their camp.

Electronista also points out that this will be the first "major presentation" for CEO Jon Rubenstein since he became CEO.



‘Futurism and the Technological Imagination’ – 30% discount until Jan. 15

At the moment it is offered with 30% discount until January 15th*. *Please note that this offer is not valid in combination with any other offer

More information at info@rodopi.nl <mailto:info@rodopi.nl>

technological imaginationFuturism and the Technological Imagination

Edited by Günter Berghaus

Amsterdam/New York, NY 2009. VIII, 390 pp. (Avant-Garde Critical Studies 24)
ISBN: 978-90-420-2747-3         Bound
ISBN: 978-90-420-2748-0         E-Book
Online info

This volume, Futurism and the Technological Imagination, results from a conference of the International Society for the Study of European Ideas in Helsinki. It contains a number of re-written conference contributions as well as several specially commissioned essays that address various aspects of the Futurists’ relationship to technology both on an ideological level and with regard to their artistic languages.

In the early twentieth century, many art movements vied with each other to overhaul the aesthetic and ideological foundations of arts and literature and to make them suitable vehicles of expression in the new Era of the Machine. Some of the most remarkable examples came from the Futurist movement, founded in 1909 by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti.

By addressing the full spectrum of Futurist attitudes to science and the machine world, this collection of 14 essays offers a multifaceted account of the complex and often contradictory features of the Futurist technological imagination. The volume will appeal to anybody interested in the history of modern culture, art and literature.

Contents

Editor’s Foreword

Günter Berghaus: Futurism and the Technological Imagination Poised between Machine Cult and Machine Angst

Domenico Pietropaolo: Science and the Aesthetics of Geometric Splendour in Italian Futurism

Serge Milan: The ‘Futurist Sensibility’: An Anti-philosophy for the Age of Technology

Roger Griffin: The Multiplication of Man: Futurism’s Technolatry Viewed Through the Lens of Modernism

Vera Castiglione: A Futurist before Futurism: Émile Verhaeren and the Technological Epic

Patrizia Veroli: Loie Fuller’s Serpentine Dance and Futurism: Electricity, Technological Imagination and the Myth of the Machine

Maria Elena Versari: Futurist Machine Art, Constructivism and the Modernity of Mechanization

Gerardo Regnani: Futurism and Photography: Between Scientific Inquiry and Aesthetic Imagination

Wanda Strauven: Futurist Poetics and the Cinematic Imagination: Marinetti’s Cinema without Films

Margaret Fisher: Futurism and Radio

Matteo D’Ambrosio: From Words-in-Freedom to Electronic Literature: Futurism and the Neo-Avantgarde

Michelangelo Sabatino: Tabula rasa or Hybridity? Primitivism and the Vernacular in Futurist and Rationalist Architecture

Pierpaolo Antonello: Beyond Futurism: Bruno Munari’s Useless Machines

Marja Härmänmaa: Futurism and Nature: The Death of the Great Pan?

Illustrations

Abstracts

Notes on Contributors

Index

Share/Bookmark

Lab-Built Red Blood Cells Look & Act Like the Real Deal | 80beats

red_blood_cells220They may look simple, but our red blood cells are the sophisticated result of evolution. So to create new ways to study our bodies and perhaps even disperse drugs to different organs and body parts, scientists played copycat. A team of researchers announced this week that they have developed synthetic red blood cells that mimic our natural ones in both form and function. They describe their findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

To make red blood cells in the lab, study leader Samir Mitragotri and colleagues started with spheres of biodegradable polymer. They then exposed the spheres to isopropanol, which collapsed them into the discoid shape characteristic of red blood cells. The researchers then layered proteins — either albumin or hemoglobin — onto the doughnut-shaped disks, cross-linked the proteins to give them extra strength and stability, and finally dissolved away the PLGA template to leave only a strong but flexible shell [The Scientist].

Mitragotri’s creations are about 7 microns across—the same diameter as real red bloods cells—and they have the same disc-like shape as their real-world counterparts. They act like real cells, too, he says. “The soft protein shell makes them squishy and elastic,” says Mitragotri. “They can squeeze through capillaries smaller than their own diameter, just like real blood cells” [New Scientist]. And perhaps most impressively, they can carry substances like the real thing does. Mitragotri’s team of researchers experimented with hemoglobin and the anti-blood clotting drug heparin; the synthetic cells could soak up either one and release it later.

The lab-created cells could use that talent to aid drug dispersal, or provide other useful functions like distributing iron oxide, which ups the contrast in MRI images. And now that they can make healthy-shaped blood cells, they also can begin experimenting with abnormal cells (like those found in people who have sickle-cell anemia or hereditary elliptocytosis) to better understand the physical properties of the diseases and work toward new therapies [Scientific American]. The next step remains to test the synthetic cells safety and effectiveness in vivo.

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Image: Nishit Doshi


A Century of Great Gadget Design: Phaidon’s Design Classics [Design]

Phaidon, publisher of the best-looking books on the planet, just released Pioneers, Mass Production, and New Technologies, three volumes each containing 333 of the most impressively designed objects of the last century. Here are 12 gadgets that made the cut.

The books move loosely through the 20th century—though they also contain some objects that were devised in the 19th century, and others that a certain Mr. Ive and Mr. Jobs cooked up since the year 2000. We skipped over all the Apple stuff, and much of the classic Braun and Bang & Olufsen objets de tech that you commonly encounter in gadget retrospectives. We looked deeper into the list, to find unexpectedly wondrous objects of great design. (We also skipped about a million different chairs—according to these books, designers spend more time thinking about where to park their keisters than any other dilemma in human history.)

Needless to say, the books are unbelievably gorgeous and informative, and the juxtaposition of so many varied products gives you new insight into what designers think about.

All three books are published this year by Phaidon as a series. They list for $40 each, but thankfully Amazon is selling them for a lot less (see below). While it makes sense to maybe buy just one, it's tough to pick just one, and not just because the products are numbered from 1 to 999, with each volume covering one third. To simplify things perhaps too much, Pioneers covers archetypal designs we now take for granted, Mass Production includes all of the smartly conceived products we grew up with, and New Technologies brings design up to date with contributions from the consumer electronics and computer businesses. As much as the third volume best fits our readership, it's almost more exciting to see how the legacies of the earlier product design movements informed the new tech.

Pioneers on Amazon for $26.37

Mass Production on Amazon for $26.37

New Technologies on Amazon for $29.16



Apple’s SuperDrive Firmware Update 3.0 Eliminates Excess Noise [Apple]

If your optical disk drive has been making oddly loud sounds when you start or wake your Mac from a slumber, then the EFI firmware update released by Apple is supposedly the cure. Is anyone hearing a difference?

Check Cool Geex if you need instructions on how to update, and please let us know if you are in fact noticing a change with the new firmware or if things are still as loud as ever. [Cool Geex]



Adapter Puts Blu-Ray, Xbox 360, and PS3 On Your iMac 27 [Apple]

I'm impressed: Apogee's new HDMI adapter will put any kind of high definition sources right inside your iMac 27-inch 2560 x 1440-pixel screen, including Blu-ray players, Xbox 360, and PS3. How is this sorcery possible?

The adapter works with the Mini DisplayPort in the iMac 27", which is bi-directional. Right now, only this model of iMac supports this video standard. No price, no dates, no excuses not to buy this whenever it comes out. [Apogee via Electronista]