Apple iPod iPhone Accessories. Apple Fm Transmitter Car Kit and Car Charger with LCD display for Ipod 3rd, 4th, 5th Generation, Mini, Photo, U2, Nano, Video, Classic, Touch

On May 10, 2010, in Ipod Accessories, by Iphone Unlocking

Connects to all models of MP3 player, any CD player, DVD player, PDA device or Digital Media Player that has a headphone jack! . Transmits MP3 audio signals through FM channel so that you can enjoy your favorite music through your CAR or HOME stereo! . It has a bright LCD screen that is backlit [...]

Kanex iAdapt 20 & Dr. Bott Mini DisplayPort to HDMI Adapter II

On May 3, 2010, in Industry News, by Susie Ochs

If you’ve got a Mac with a Mini DisplayPort, you could connect it to Apple’s gorgeous but super-pricey 24-inch LED Cinema Display ($899, apple.com). Or you could pick up an adapter and connect that puppy to the flat-screen TV or third-party monitor you already own.


Dr. Bott’s adapter is for video only.

Dr. Bott’s Mini DisplayPort to HDMI Adapter II is a 13-inch-long adapter with a Mini DisplayPort plug on one end and a female HDMI jack on the other. You supply your own HDMI cable, which you can then connect to a TV, monitor, or other display with an HDMI input.

Dr. Bott’s adapter works beautifully, but since it only connects to your Mac’s Mini DisplayPort, it outputs just the 1080p video signal to your display, not the audio. If you can settle for getting audio from your Mac, that’s fine; otherwise, you’ll need a separate audio cable. This seems like a drawback, but it might be a plus if, say, you want to send the Mac’s video output to your HDTV but run the audio through your home stereo.


Kanex’s iAdapt 20 can send both video and audio to your TV.

However, some TVs don’t accept a separate audio source when the video source is HDMI–typically, an HDMI cable delivers both audio and video. If that’s the case–or you just don’t want to mess around with a second cable for audio–the Kanex iAdapt 20 is the solution. The 3-foot adapter has a Mini DisplayPort plug as well as a USB plug, and you connect both of those to your Mac. The other end has a female HDMI port, and again you provide your own HDMI cable. Then open your Mac’s Sound Preference panel and set the Output to USB Audio Device, which is the Kanex adapter. The iAdapt 20 then sends both the audio and 1080p video from your Mac to your display–piece of cake! The USB plug provides two-channel audio, but if you need surround-sound audio, Kanex also sells the iAdapt 51 ($69.99, kanexlive.com). It’s similar to the iAdapt 20 but has a third cable for your Mac’s digital audio output. Between the Mini DisplayPort, the USB connector, and the audio cable, you’ll get full HD video and 5.1-channel surround through your display’s HDMI input.

iCandy FM Transmitter for iPhone and iPod with Car Charger

On January 30, 2010, in Ipod Accessories, by Iphone Unlocking

Play your music from your iPhone or iPod wirelessly through your car or home stereo. This digital FM transmitter is powered by your iPod or iPhone, no batteries needed. Works with all iPhone (including iPhone 3g) and all iPods with a Dock Connector. Car charger included Included in the package is a car charger to [...]

Apple iPod iPhone Accessories. Apple Fm Transmitter Car Kit and Car Charger with LCD display for Ipod 3rd, 4th, 5th Generation, Mini, Photo, U2, Nano, Video, Classic, Touch

On January 14, 2010, in iPod Classic, by Iphone Unlocking

Connects to all models of MP3 player, any CD player, DVD player, PDA device or Digital Media Player that has a headphone jack! . Transmits MP3 audio signals through FM channel so that you can enjoy your favorite music through your CAR or HOME stereo! . It has a bright LCD screen that is backlit [...]

Western Digital WD TV Live

On December 8, 2009, in Industry News, by Ray Aguilera

After months of unconfirmed rumors about its maybe, possibly imminent arrival, Western Digital finally released its next-generation WD TV media player–just mere days after we finished our Dec/09 issue, in which we named the previous-gen model as one of our “2009 Gear of the Year” favorites. We had a few niggling criticisms of that earlier version, but in the latest model, Western Digital has made some excellent improvements to what became our favorite set-top box for media playback.

With the unit plugged into your home entertainment center, you can take all the videos, photos, and audio content you’ve got on your Mac and play them back on your television or home stereo. WD TV Live supports HDMI for full 1080p HD output, but you’ll have to buy your own cable for that. (The HDMI cables at your local big-box store are grossly overpriced. Find a local electronics shop or order online to find the same cables for 20 percent of what the big guys are charging.) There’s also a SPDIF optical audio out for users with high-end home theater rigs. The player doesn’t have any storage of its own, but you can plug in nearly any standard USB drive (including flash drives) that contain media.


WD TV Live plays back media from connected or networked drives.

New to the WD TV Live is network capability. Connecting the unit via Ethernet to your router instantly adds access to any DLNA media servers or shared volumes on your network. It’s the single killer feature we missed in the original WD TV, and it’s implemented quite well. Without any configuration hassles or software, the WD TV instantly recognized a NAS drive and two DLNA servers on our home network. And besides recognizing your existing shares, the WD TV can also bring any attached USB drives onto your network, which makes moving content to your WD TV from your Mac trivially easy. No more shuttling portable drives back and forth to your computer–now you can move files over your network to WD TV Live. There’s also support for a growing number of USB Wi-Fi adapters, so you don’t even need a wired connection to take advantage of Live’s best trick.

Now that WD TV is networked, there’s also support for online content. You can watch YouTube videos, view Flickr photos, and stream music from Live365 and Pandora. In particular, we enjoyed the Pandora access, which allowed us to bring our existing Pandora stations to our home stereo (for free, naturally). The Pandora interface includes the familiar Thumbs Up/Down controls for fine-tuning your stations, and displays album art and track information on your TV as the music plays. You can’t create new Pandora stations from WD TV, but that might be a blessing for some, as the system’s onscreen keyboard is vexingly difficult to use. Letters and numbers are laid out in a Qwerty keyboard pattern, but the virtual keys are listed alphabetically, making any text entry slow and unintuitive. For that reason, we quickly abandoned YouTube searches, although WD TV’s YouTube controls work well, and 720p videos looked great on our HDTV. Just don’t expect the WD TV to take low-res source videos and make them crystal clear on your 52-inch widescreen. We’re hoping that the streaming options will increase over time–Netflix and Hulu come to mind.

WD TV Live relies on a menu-driven navigation system via the included remote. We found the interface easy to use, but not without quirks–chief among them being that the dedicated Back button sometimes goes up a level, and other times you need to hit the left arrow to do the same thing.
 
Even with the added features, WD TV still stresses simplicity and ease of use. The menus themselves feel snappy and responsive. There are also file management capabilities built in, so you can delete already-viewed content or copy and move it between attached drives. It works, but for serious organizing, we still prefer to move files around in Finder on our Mac.

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