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  • Alex
  • Member Since Feb 20th, 2006
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Engadget9 Comments

Recent Comments:

I think we can all agree on this...
mobile data in canada is a dream for now
ted rogers is a dink
everyone here is proud of how much they're getting screwed out of a month for their cellphone, even though for a lot of people it's over $80
we have apple products up here, but this one looks to be a little late to market
canadians love having a high dollar, but only because our news reports on it more than they do pretty much anything else :P
Finally, and industry that can benifit from short trips and travel distances, when will my pizza boy get his civic upgraded to this system, and why not start making docking/charging stations or ports at their "berths" so as to easily facilitate operation. There are any number of situations this technology could be beneficial, I live on Vancouver Island in British Columbia Canada and we're pretty much out of horizontal space in the city, and it's max 10k to pretty much most of the city from a central location, with the advances in Li-on battery technology that I've watched go by so far, this could have a serious impact on gasoline use if delivery vehicles switch to this, and it would further enable taxi and other convenience services to follow. Now that's a run-on sentance.
I'd like to think that engadget knocked Chris to get a retaliatory response from the comments and to egg him on to better things, that being said...
Great look at the complete package rather than just a single aspect of the engineering, keep on with the good work, hope to see you on hackaday again.
noma actually makes a product that does the same including a usb port and common cellphone adapters, albeit it does retail for $25 CAD where I work (Canadian Tire) (65-2101)
I'm sure you get a lot of people telling you how you're doing this wrong, and I don't want to do that. If I may however offer a suggestion, in the past I have made a few portable things and integrated car units, and I've found a cheap source of LCD's to be eBay. They have both the lilliput variety that is cheaper and has a lower resolution, but you can still remain in the price range of AEI and get at least VGA if not XGA res.
90cm is closer to 36 inches you yanks, and 35 inches is americas way of hanging on to hte past and breeding isolationism... i've been trolled
This is gonna take D&D to the next level, that and bring pr0n to yet another room in the house
hey,

They didn't say it wouldn't be $900, uh oh
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I'm looking for a solid state drive, around 32 to 64GB, for use in my web server. The drive will contain my web sites and the operating system, either Windows Server 2008 R2 or Ubuntu. Large storage is handled by a separate RAID array, so capacity is not an issue. Rather, I am looking for the fastest, longest-lasting, and most reliable drive under $150 that is suitable to my application. Any thoughts? Thanks!"
 

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