Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I finally got a new laptop with a lone USB 3.0 port. I'm now looking at getting a USB 3.0 hub with a power adapter so I can use both of my USB 3.0 hard drives at faster speeds. I've read lots of horror stories where some hubs either don't come with power adapters -- and as a consequence the portable drives don't work with them properly -- or they are designed poorly which results in USB 2.0 speeds. Or, the hard drives keep getting disconnected. Do your readers have any suggestions or experience using USB 3.0 hubs? Thanks!"
I don't mind wearing these glasses. The 3D effect looks awesome on 50 in screens. $150 each sucks, $50 would be reasonable. Wearing the glasses is part of the experience, a kind of reminder that you're in virtual reality.
@John22s
That means I just need a pair of glasses for me, and also my wife and my two kids at $600. Plus a 3D capable TV at $2000, and a 3D BluRay player at $800. $3400 for the visuals, plus around $1600 for an OK surround sound set up. $5000 for all of the 5 decent 3d-enabled BluRay movies currently available. Or I could just spend $60 at the cinema to watch a film with a huge screen and sound with my family.
@John22s
how is $50 reasonable? it's another scam designed to suck the money from our wallets. why didn't they make the tv's to work with the same cheap specs you get at the cinema?
i cannot wait to see these companies fail at this
also what happens when i have more people around the tv than i have glasses? it's just a complete mess and anyone who actually invests in this stuff... well i guess money isn't an issue for them
me, i wouldn't put a penny towards it on principal even if i had the money