Thursday, April 29, 2010

M55 EVO-001 electric bike is hand built and too expensive for you

There are some things that I would spend big money on, assuming I actually had big money. I would spend lots of loot on a cool car and a big house packed with tech for everything. I wouldn’t spend big money on a bicycle though.

electricbike sg


If you are well heeled and like electric bikes, we have one for your collection. The bike is from a company called M55 and it’s called the EVO-001. The bike features a single piece aluminum frame with an integrated battery pack and a motor.

The electric motor is placed for stability while riding. Two versions will be offered with a street legal version packing in a 250W motor and an off-road version boasting a 1300W motor. The bike can hit 43mph, though which version hits that speed is unknown. My money says the 1300W sport version though. To slow down the thing has Brembo disc brakes. The handmade bikes will be limited to 250 units and if you need to know how much it is, you can’t afford it.

Sapphire Radeon HD 5970 TOXIC Edition Boasts 900MHz Clock Speeds

Customizing your computer can be a costly thing. Anyone who does it knows that. And, if you’re a gamer, or someone who needs their computer to be the best on the planet, it can be downright ridiculous. Take, for example, the Sapphire Radeon HD 5970 TOXIC Edition, which is surely going to cost you somewhere in the ballpark of $700. But, at least it’s the fastest video card on planet Earth. So, you get what you pay for.

Sapphire Radeon 5970 481x500



The new Sapphire Radeon HD 5970 4G TOXIC Edition just sounds fast, doesn’t it? Well it should, because the clock speeds reach up to 900MHz at the core, and 4800MHz effective in the memory. That’s up from 725MHz and 4000MHz respectively, so quite a nice jump there. It also features 4GB of GDDR5 memory, which bests the standard HD 5970 by twice the speeds.

But, knowing that they couldn’t leave well enough alone, Sapphire have also made improvements to the heatsink/fan, by making it more of a customized job brought to you lovingly by Arctic Cooling. The system features three low-noise fans, the heatpipes and fins were constructed from nickel plating. There’s no word on pricing or when this will be available for mass consumption, but we’re going to go ahead and assume it’s going to be pricey.

Chopper 2 for iPad uses iPhone as controller, HDTV for display [Video]

We’ve all seen Scrabble played on the iPad with iPhones used as tile racks, but Dave at Magic Jungle Software had more ambitious plans for his Apple tablet. He hooked up an iPhone to act as a Bluetooth controller with his new – currently unreleased – game Chopper 2, then going on to connect the iPad itself up to a 42-inch HDTV via the composite adapter.

chopper 2 bluetooth control

Video demos after the cut

Best of all, none of what Dave has done uses any of the private APIs that Apple is so protective about. That means there’s hopefully a pretty strong chance that, when he submits it for App Store approval, it won’t encounter any hiccups.

To be honest, Apple would be crazy not to allow titles like these. After all, if you’re using an iPhone or iPod touch to control your iPad game, that’s at least two pieces of Cupertino hardware you’ve gone out and bought. Factor in the composite adapter for big-screen playback and that’s even more cash for Steve’s pocket.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Creative Club