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Google Project Glass FIRST LOOK

Google has been teasing us for months with the idea of Augmented Reality glasses that feature a virtual Head-Mounted-Display (HMD) to make your shoddy life much better, and now they’ve got a name for it: Google Project Glass. NOTE: They couldn’t call them the obvious Google Goggles because they already have a product by that name.


What does it do?
Just know that it will be able to do everything your smartphone can currently do, but you wear it on your noggin, and you interact with it via different means, like for example your voice.

Walk along, see something you like and say “take a picture of that”.
Run into an old friend from High School and can’t remember if they’re married or gay, their Facebook profile could pop-up and remind you.
Get on to a plane, take you seat and get your porn on.

All this, and you just need to make your peace with walking around looking like an out-of-shape, less cool and not as handsome Robocop. Although there are plans to one day put Project Glass into your existing glasses or contact lenses.

For a full look at what Google Project Glass is, watch this wildly popular internet video. (produced, diseeminated and liked by the world’s largest corporation…hmmmm!).

And now for the bad news…


What’s the flippin’ point?
So what! You can watch porn on an aeroplane without anyone knowing. Doesn’t mean you can fiddle yourself to completion without getting banned from Kulula for life.

I know you’ve already thought of it, so I’ll say it out loud: “Now I can read and write texts and emails while I drive”. No, bad human being. Stop it!

More crit has come at the idea of these glasses saying that people feel like nobs walking around talking on their handsfree, what d’ya think they’re going to feel like walking around with just a cyborgish pair of glasses on?

I don’t agree with this actually. I have faith that people will get over this when they learn how much this sort of tech can supplement their lives. In the same way that humans adapted their behavior in a mainstream way to work on touchscreens, they’ll soon do the same to adapt their behavior to feel comfortable “talking to themselves” in public.

More than that, one popular viral video doesn’t mean that the gadget works or even exists for that matter. I’m holding judgement till I use them myself or meet someone who has. At this stage this could very well be the world’s longest and best prepared April Fools joke.

 

FIFA Street 2012 REVIEW

FIFA Street football


(Dammit, did I wait a long time for this game! Well we all did, but it feels like I waited longer and harder than anyone else. Sorry.)

People who find FIFA 11 or 12 too realistic, way too technical and complicated and not close enough to an arcade experience can now stop whining. FIFA Street 2012 is here.

Just some of the features that await in FIFA Street 2012: player setup and management of your own squad, unlocking and ramping up of tricks, skills, athleticism, goalkeeping abilities and a collection of the most impossible and yet strangely real tricks you can imagine.

The Players
The first thing you’re going to notice is that the players in FIFA Street 2012 are much, much more realistic. Gone are the days of the lanky, elongated Ronaldinho’s with awkward gaits and super-human abilities. Everything is in proportion and running according to the laws of gravity.

Drawing on the awesomeness of FIFA 12, EA have brought in similar stylings to FIFA Street 2012 and the game is better for it. This has implications too on the game play where characters, ironically, are a lot more agile and you as a human can be more creative with the plays because you know what is possible in the real world.

In all you feel like your players are a lot less retarded and you have a lot more control over their movements and tricks.


Setting up
I’m ashamed to say that I spent 12 minutes selecting a voice region for my character. Irish, before you ask! I didn’t even spend that much time setting up my entire Fable character! That’s how engaging this game is.

But, I quickly learnt though that a 5’2” Welsh speaking resident of the Bahamas who has
longer than average hands but the sickest white dreadlocks and the most trendy red eyebrows isn’t the best idea in a street soccer world tour that may take you a few hours to finish. Back to the settings then.


Gameplay
The game itself takes some getting used to, especially if you’re familiar with the previous FIFA Street iterations. The controls are more similar to FIFA 11 and 12 than they are to the previous Street games, so get ready.

Also don’t expect to hit the pitch with your arsenal of tricks bursting to be free (the cartoony GameBreaker feature has also been tossed). Everything in this game is unlockable, even your most basic tricks. Don’t make my mistake of entering a Freestyle tournie (where the only thing that counts is how well you can trick) with only a stepover and a flip-flap to your name. 45 bloody minutes later, I tell ya!

In games like this, an all too often obstacle is the AI ability of the computer. So much so that the casual gamer (who is on Medium) will seldom dare flip one more level up to Hard. Not so here. In no time you’ll be finding the Medium level too easy and start taking on teams at a more advanced state. Sure it’ll mean more chance of losing, but why else are you here.

You’ll play on some creative and well designed courts from around the world, take control of some famous players and compete in a variety of street soccer games like Futsal, the most formal of indoor soccers, Fresstyle where you must beat your opponent with tricks and old-school 5-on-5.


Criticisms
There are definitely a few things that I would have done differently if I had the skill to be on the EA development team.

Firstly they could have kept us in the “home games” stages a little longer so that we had more time to hone our skills. I started in the US and while you can stay there as long as you like, as soon as Europe is unlocked, off you go.

While it’s an easy game to learn to play, it’s a tough one to master, and a little more practice at home would have made the rest of the World Tour a lot more fun.

Another irritating, but admittedly small, feature are some of the extras they add in like setting up games on you on-screen cellphone when in the home regions.  A bit childish and un-original, and then all of a sudden that sort of thing disappears and you’re straight into simple clicking through to tournies. Either it’s in, or it’s out guys.

Is it all that good?
In an interview with Gamespot, FIFA Street line producer Sid Misra said “what you know of FIFA Street 1, 2 and 3, you can forget about”. A

Job done Sir!

SOME OF THE GAMEPLAY!

Toyota Land Cruiser crosses the impossible river EPIC SKILLS

Watch this astounding footage of a Toyota Land Cruiser tackling an almost un-crossable river.

Sheer momentum and the propulsion from the bubbles still coming out of the exhaust got it there in my opinion. Flippin’ wow man!

Turntable Bicycle by Cogoo TRENDING

Turntable Bike

This video is doing well on Youtube…wonder why?!?

Japanese professional BMX rider, Kotaro and professional DJ Baku took the best of both of their world’s and married them, the child the Turntable Rider, a bicycle that acts as a DJ deck creating new sounds everytime it’s ridden and every new trick the rider does.

Fader box is strapped on.
The bike wheels, become jog wheels.
The handbrakes, become sound pads.
You mix and scratch at will.
All the music is streamed wirelessly vis an iPhone or iPod

You really have to watch the vid to get it. I also thought it would sound crap but…

Check Cogoo’s stuff here

Taking out a BMW M5…literally!

M5

I’m entering hour two in the front of the 2012 BMW M5 and a more welcoming environment you’re not likely to find on the surprisingly quiet highway between George and Port Elizabeth. Made even more welcoming considering it’s raining outside with more vigour than a puppy attacking the morning edition of the Star.

Speaking of the Star, my co-driver, Jesse who writes for it, and I have the luxury of the 2012 BMW M5’s cabin to keep us dry and warm and the constant din of a 4.4-litre V8 German engine dishing out a max output of 412 kW and 680 Nm to keep us entertained.

It won’t be long now before we’re turning a lap of the Aldo Scribante race track in a BMW M3 only to be told that the BMW M5 that left just 20 seconds before us hasn’t come back yet, did we see it?

It’s the last day of the launch of the new BMW M5, and all week journalists have been putting this super-machine through its paces on the Port Elizabeth track. Luckily for us, it’s been raining incessantly since day 1, and we’re on the last day of the launch, with no end of the monsoon in sight.


We’ve finished lunch before Edward (the marketing meneer from BMW) and the other two journos with us on the launch and Jesse and I have snuck out so he can have a quick puff before the second session of laps in the M5 start.

A lull in the conversation (there’s only so much two motoring journalists who have just met have in common). And we find ourselves staring down the pit lane, not at the two M5’s parked a few feet away, but instead at a lone M3 that’s come along as a workhorse for the day.

As if we gave each other the idea, Jesse and I exchange a mischievous glare and he turns to me and says “Bru, how sick is that M3?” I smile and push his thoughts to the obvious conclusion, “Screw that bru. How sick would it be to take that M3 around this track right now, in this rain?”


We turn to Edward and ask him hopefully what he would say if we asked for his blessing.

He thinks a minute and both Jesse and I know what that means, it’s a “no” (it’s a PR thing, they don’t want to disappoint the journos, but they also have to bear in mind that they’re the ones responsible for the cars that we’re driving around the track at 200km/h).

We give up on it and start turning towards the M5s again. Life’s a bitch, hey?

Before we can make our peace with this bit of bad news, Edward pops his Coke can open, takes a sip and says instead, “Sure, why not? It’s the last day, go for it” (At this stage it was in fact the last few laps of the launch, not just the last day).

Fast forward 3 minutes and 23 seconds, and Jesse and I are nestled in the cockpit of the M3, completing his second lap. The M5 is sublime and quick and scientifically impossible to explain, but there’s something to be said about the M3 in its natural habitat. It’s much lighter, far less work, a lot more accepting and therefore much more fun to take around the Scribante track. Whenever I do stuff like this, I keep telling myself that driving these speeds should be illegal, and there’s a damn good reason it is.

We pull into the pits for the driver change. My chance to take the most exciting sedan money can buy out on one of SA’s most exciting tracks at whatever speed I can muster in this relentless London weather. The M5 being the second most exciting.


We’re in. At all times second in line to one of the other two journos currently not making the M5 feel left out. It’s them, and then 20 seconds later, it’s us on to the closed circuit race track. (They’ve closed the circuit just at the start of the pit lane so we’re forced to pull the cars into the pits after each lap. Besides ensuring that we don’t overheat the car’s tyres and engine too much, this also serves the function of pulling the plug on us from enjoying the full joy of the longest straight on the track. Unfair, but a damn good idea on BMW’s part.)

So we watch the white BMW M5 take off with Ciro from Overdrive TV behind the wheel. He’s on his own and he’s been pushing it hard since doing a few laps with my partner Jesse and picking up a few tips. One tip too few, as it turns out.

20 seconds. And it’s a go, my first lap in the M3.

What a sublime car. Made selfishly for the track. In fact, if you know a mate who owns one and doesn’t take it to the track to stretch its legs at least as often as he walks his dog, you’re entitled, nah, duty bound to steal it when he isn’t looking and take it there yourself.

Obviously we see little else than the tarmac ahead of us and the occasional clipping cone as I complete my first lap.


“I can do better”, I say to Jesse as we pull in to the pits for my second lap. And Jesse knows a thing or two about speed, so I’m feeling the pressure. Not half as much as Ciro is in the M5 as it turns out.

“Did you see the white car (the M5)?” says Danie as we halt in the pits. Quizzically Jesse and I look at each other and then turn to Danie and say “What? Isn’t it back yet? It should be, it left before us”

Danie gives us a “no-shit-Sherlock” look and trots off to find an empty car with an engine that’s running. We quickly offer up the M3. Everybody here has done this before and we know what it means…the M5 has gone off the track.

Have you ever been in a business meeting when one of the guys gets a call to tell him that his wife has been in accident, she’s ok but is on her way to the hospital? That’s is the only equivalent scenario I can think of to adequately explain to you the level of “uncomfortable” we are all now feeling standing next to Edward as we wait to hear if they’ve found the AWOL M5 and what sort of nick it’s in.

The seconds are excruciating! Where is it?

Finally the M3 comes into sight and pulls into the pits with Ciro in the passenger seat. The M5 is definitely not ok, now we know for sure.


As Ciro gets out of the car the first thing Edward says is “Are you ok?”
The first thing Edward wants to say is “You dumb shit! What have you done to my one million rand car?”, but the first thing he says is “are you ok?”

“Nothing’s hurt but my pride” says Ciro. And the front grill of the M5 and some of Aldo Scribante’s best tyre wall and the grass just off the big s-turn of the track and our chances of doing any more laps that day.

The same story we’ve heard a thousand times before. With each lap Ciro got braver and braver until the tricky wiggle got the better of him. Still, the car could’ve been in worse shape, and us journalists couldn’t pay money to see how a BMW M5 behaves in an accident, we got this one for free.

Not to mention that we all got a great story to tell at future car launches too. And if Ciro ever forgets the details, one of the hordes of motoring journalists who heard about the accident on Twitter before we could even leave the track that day will be more than happy to remind him.

Mini Roadster 2012 REVIEW

Mini Roadster

First things first, if you’re a die-hard Mini fanboy or fangirl, then you might as well go back to playing Draw Something on your iPhone while you sip your Vida e Cafe coffee. No logical point that I make below will dissuade you from believing that a Mini Roadster is the best car on South African roads.

You wants a Mini
You needs a Mini
You’ll have a Mini

For the rest of you, read on.

The Mini Roadster comes into the Mini family based on the previous coupe, but with a slightly different roof-line and few other changes. There are three engine options, no real surprises from the 1.6-litre engines in all: Cooper at 90kw, Cooper S at 135kw and the JCW beast at 155kw.

That’s true speed in a really short-wheelbase, low-slung coupe. After the whole Countryman debacle, I must say that it was really, really nice to be driving a Mini that handles like the original go-kart again. What a dangerous amount of fun dependent on your power.
As with any convertible that I’ve ever driven, my main complaint is the uncomfortable drive. While the Mini roadster isn’t the most uncomfortable I’ve ever driven, my kidneys did take a bit of a pounding. Nothing you can do really.

The receding roof is the party-piece of the Mini roadster, it’s manual and semi-automatic neither of which got much of a workout from me. Sorry, but there’s nothing more pretentious than driving around in Jozi in a convertible car. Cape Town, different story but Jozi…you’re removing the word “smash” from smash-and-grab, idiot.


The big safety question in a convertible is what’s the damage to your road visibility, and in the Mini Roadster it’s bad but not visible if that makes sense. You’ve definitely got some blind-spot blindness, but this car is so small and manageable that you kind of just corner and lane-change on assumption alone. There’s also the reverse camera sensor to be absolutely certain. Just don’t be a dumbass and you’ll be fine.

When the roof is down, there’s also a tiny bit of wind noise, but you’re pumping Goldfish through the Bluetooth audio, so scratch that.

It was a task to get a longing stare from the hottie I pulled up to at the corner of Grayston and Rivonia. Girls don’t look at you in the Mini Roadster to see how hot you are, they only look at you to see how gay you are. Really sad actually since this car, the JCW in particular, is such fun to drive and deserving of some respect.

Nothing much to report on from the inside either. The same old Mini with its centre-mounted speedo, button-equipped steering wheel, LCD display and window controls that resemble movie-scene helicopter nobs.


The Mini Roadster is not cheap, but what Mini is. But I do have some thoughts on what you get for what you pay.

There’s a R16 100 bump up between the manual and automatic Cooper and Cooper S models. Understandable, but the automatic features only BMW’s Steptronic system, no triggers behind the steering wheel for shifting.

And on the fiery JCW, there’s only a manual version, no Steptronic. The exact seating position you want more power control and quicker shifting is in the front seat of a JCW Mini Roadster with 155kw underneath your right toe.

The Audi A1′s S-Tronic system has triggers…doesn’t it? #justsaying

So here’s the problem for the guys reading: the Mini Roadster is an awesome ride, has phenomenal power (in the 155kw version anyway) and is super fun to drive. But owning and driving one will make everyone question your manhood more than they would if you drove the original Cooper model. Sorry but a man having just two-seats in a car that’s not a Porsche means he’s spent his money unwisely.

Don’t stress, I have a solution: your girlfriend buys the car. She doesn’t drive it to its potential because, let’s be honest, she’s smarter than you are. You get to drive it almost whenever you want, you get to tell people it’s your girlfriend which means not only are you not gay but you’re desirable enough to procreate with. Your manhood remains intact and in fact is better for the experience because cornering in this car will take you all the way back to your boy’s only 12th birthday party at the Zwartkops go-kart track and all the fun you had with your friends on that day.

Do it.

SPECS
Cooper – R295 000 – R311 100
Ouput – 90kw and 160Nm
Top speed – 199km/h
Acceleration – 9.2 seconds
Consumption – 6.1l/100km

Cooper S – R349 000 – R365 100
Output – 135kw and 240Nm
Top speed – 227km/h
Acceleration – 7 seconds
Consumption – 6.4l/100km

JCW – R397 000
Output – 155kw and 260Nm
Top speed – 237km/h
Acceleration – 6.5 seconds
Consumption – 7.3l/100km

THE MINI AD

SOME PICS


 

 

Motorola RAZR 2012 REVIEW

Motorola RAZR

 

It’s the return of the most important phone in Motorola’s history, the Razr.  And true to its name, the new version is adequately slim at only 7mm, widening a bit at the top end.

Speaking of top ends, this phone is placed right up there as a competitor to the best Smartphones on the market (sic: iPhones and Galaxys) and it’s got a thick kevlar back cover to protect against the beating it’s in for from the bosses.

The first striking feature of the phone is the massive 6.8cm 960×540 resolution screen, again leaving the buyer with a feeling that they’re getting a mini-tablet. And the screen doesn’t disappoint either with a great 1.2GHz dual core processor to handle the back-end heavy lifting. Surfing on this device is a dream, it’s great for the couch and on demand TV trivia searching.

The size of the device is also its un-doing though. It’s just too big to hold in one hand and tap away at those moments when your other hand is occupied…like when you’re driving for example. At least the Galaxy Note doesn’t pretend to be a one handed phone.
This was quite annoying.

The Razr does feature Swype input as a choice, but I’ve never used it on any phone for an extended period of time, I just prefer tapping. And when you do tap, you can’t see what buttons you’re pushing because of your fat fingers. I couldn’t find a setting to turn on button pop-ups that appear when you’ve hit the correct button, so you land up spending a lot of time correcting and backspacing.


The new Razr runs on Android and small pockets of brilliance exist for example in Navigation which is nice. They’re quite generous too with the onboard space of 16GB expandable via SD to another 16GB.

So final verdict on a phone I just know everyone is going to be asking me about?
There’s no denying that the Razr deserves its place at the top of the pile against the more expensive phones in the market. There are some brilliant features, a decent screen and processor and a battery whose lifecycle is no better or worse than the iPhone 4S.

The irritating nuances like it being too big for one handed typing and having to guess what button you’ve just hit though really hurt the Razr’s chances as an alternative to the Galaxy.

It’s a decent effort, but I would go with something else.

What’s it cost? R7 000
From where? www.motorola.com/razr

THE MOTOROLA RAZR AD

iPad 3 TV ad and Trailer TECH

 
 

Some more visual info on the most talked about gadget in the world today!

Go to love the shot of the mechanic lying underneath a car with an iPad in his hand. Shoot “wtf videos”