Microsoft ships red wireless Xbox 360 controller for the holidays

September 30th, 2008 by

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Here’s an interesting one. That red / black Xbox 360 controller that was showcased back in July is now available to any ole consumer in the US, Canada, Latin America New Zealand and Asia, and it comes bundled with a Play & Charge Kit and red rechargeable battery for $64.99. For whatever reason, Microsoft’s totally missing a golden opportunity to cash in on the holiday shopping season by reserving the green counterpart as some “promotional item.” C’mon guys, is it really that hard to understand how irresistible a red and green gamepad tandem would be in late December?

[Via IGN]

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Posted in Microsoft, xbox 360, Xbox360, limited edition, LimitedEdition, xbox, controller, color, colors, RED, christmas, holiday, black | No Comments »

Sony Rolly busts a color move

March 30th, 2008 by

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Sony just turned out the Rolly music player in black. A surprise blown by the FCC just last week. At least we can wonder at the colorful end-caps at a cost of ¥1,500 (about $15) per. Of course, if you scoffed at the original Rolly, then the April 19th, Japanese release of the new ¥40,000 (about $400) dancing-speaker bot won’t likely tug at your pawnshopped heartstrings.

[Via Impress]

 

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Posted in sony, japan, rolly, black | No Comments »

Scientists create darkest material ever

January 17th, 2008 by

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Researchers at a US laboratory claim to have created the darkest material ever; a carbon nanotube which is one atom thick and rolled into a cylinder. For an object to be completely black, it must absorb all the colors of light over every angle and wavelength while reflecting none back, and scientists at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York, may have just gotten one step closer. The team built an array of vertically aligned, low-density nanotubes — rough on the surface to minimize reflections — and then measured the optical properties. They discovered that the objects very good at absorbing light, while downright rotten at reflecting it, thus creating a new standard for “blackness.” In practice, their nanotubes could form a super-black object, leading to the creation of more efficient solar panels or solar cells, or more importantly, a Kuro display that goes beyond absolute black. “They’ve made the blackest material known to science,” Says Professor Sir John Pendry, though Shaft’s representatives have called for a recount.

 

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Posted in research, science, black, blackest material, BlackestMaterial, blackness, darkest material, DarkestMaterial, darkness, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, RensselaerPolytechnicInstitute | No Comments »

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