Lauco car mount, SparkMaker 3D printer, and more – Notable crowdfunding campaigns

It must be a slow week for cool crowdfunding projects because I’ve only found 4 Kicstarter and Indiegogo projects to tell you about. Click through to see this week’s notable crowdfunding campaigns.

Lauco – NanoSuction car mount for phones & cases

What is it?
Lauco is a simple car or desk mount for your smartphone that uses nano-suction technology instead of suction cups and magnets.

Why do I like it?
I like the Lauco mount because you don’t have to bother with metal plates that go between the phone and a case like you do when you use magnetic mounts. That also means that you don’t even need a case on your phone to use this mount.

This particular mount is effective even in high temps which can happen in a hot car, and it allows for 720-degree rotation so that you can always adjust the phone for the most comfortable viewing angle.

They sent me a prototype to check out and I was happy with the fit and finish of this particular car mount.

Where can I find more info?
With 30 days left in the campaign, Lauco is just getting started working towards their funding goal of $5,000. You can pre-order a Lauco mount starting at $19. After the Lauco campaign ends, rewards are estimated to start shipping in September 2017. Visit their Indiegogo page for all the details.

The Color Notebook

What is it?
The Color Notebook is a reusable notebook that can be archived using a smartphone app, wiped clean, and reused over and over again.

Why do I like it?
You can draw or write on the Color Notebook using dry erase pens, colored pencils, and even crayons.

At the bottom of each page is a line of icons that can be used to archive the drawings/writings to different cloud storage services like Google Drive, Dropbox, and more. The beauty comes when you want to reuse the notebook because the pages wipe clean in a sec.

Where can I find more info?
With 31 days left in the campaign, the Color Notebook has already raced passed their funding goal of $21,500. You can pre-order a Color Notebook starting at $20. After the Color Notebook campaign ends, rewards are estimated to start shipping in November 2017. Visit their Kickstarter page for all the details.

SparkMaker – The Most Affordable Desktop SLA 3D Printer

What is it?
SparkMaker is an affordable SLA 3D printer that prints in high-resolution.

Why do I like it?
I like the SparkMaker 3D printer because unlike other 3D printers, this one is small enough to fit on almost any desk. It also uses a liquid resin instead of filament to create the models which hang from the print bed like a bat 🙂 It also does not need to be connected to a network. You just copy the model files to an SD card and insert that card into the printer.

Where can I find more info?
With 32 days left in the campaign, the Color Notebook has already passed their funding goal of $20,000. You can pre-order a Color Notebook starting at $145. After the Color Notebook campaign ends, rewards are estimated to start shipping in December 2017. Visit their Kickstarter page for all the details.

Musvalk. A fierce, yet small and elegant cutting tool.

What is it?
Musvalk is a little knife that is made of ceramics, titanium, and carbon fiber.

Why do I like it?
I like the Musvalk knife because it’s small and has a unique shape that allows it to fit in your pocket or wear it around your neck. The blade is made of zirconium dioxide ceramic (Zirconia) and is almost as hard as a diamond.

Where can I find more info?
With 31 days left in the campaign, the Musvalkv has already passed their funding goal of $25,000. You can pre-order a Musvalk knife starting at $38. After the Musvalk campaign ends, rewards are estimated to start shipping in December 2017. Visit their Kickstarter page for all the details.

Filed in categories: News

Tagged:

Lauco car mount, SparkMaker 3D printer, and more – Notable crowdfunding campaigns originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on August 8, 2017 at 12:07 pm.

Note: If you are subscribed to this feed through FeedBurner, please switch to our native feed URL http://the-gadgeteer.com/feed/ in order to ensure continuous delivery.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 LTE review

I love tablets.  Specifically, I love Android tablets.  I’ve had most of the major devices since day one including the Motorola Xoom and the earliest Samsung tablet, the Galaxy Tab 8.9.  The last one, well that was a brick – it was heavy, slow and would hurt you if you dropped it on an extremity.

Over the years Samsung has stepped up their tablet game culminating in what many thought was the zenith in Android tablets, the Galaxy Tab 10.1 2014 Edition.  Yeah, naming the tablet is probably not their strong suit.  After that device, though, Samsung introduced the Tab S series, their flagship devices, and today we are going to look at the latest in that line – the Tab S3 LTE version.  How well does this new device stack up against the competition and is it worth your valuable tablet dollars?  Read on to find out!

Before we get into the specifics, let me tell you about my tablet use so you can compare that against how you might use the device.  My tablet is a constant companion – I do occasionally leave the house without it, but not as often as you might think.  With aging eyesight the larger screen is easier for me to read without glasses, making it for me a better choice for email and even SMS.  I read on it, watch movies and TV shows while traveling, settle bar disputes about whether Daniel Craig was in The Force Awakens, figure out which song is playing on the PA system and everything else you would use a connected device for.  Even though WiFi is ubiquitous these days, there are a lot of places where it is not available – like my car – so I prefer that my tablet have LTE connectivity and am willing to pay for that service.

I also want an upgrade path on my device.  Seems that Google is releasing a new major release of Android every year, and while the hardware does not have to change I do want to stay as current as possible on the operating system.  The device needs to perform well, have a bright screen, have enough internal memory to support the apps I want to load, and use as little proprietary connectors or helpers as possible (understanding that the case for a device is of necessity proprietary).  So, no knockoff devices for me.  In today’s tablet market, it is either the Apple iPad and the walled garden that it brings, or a few key players on the Android side – Google and Samsung.  LG and other manufacturers have a tendency of producing low end devices that do not meet my stringent requirements, and worse do not do much to support the units sold.

So on to the latest, the Galaxy Tab S3 introduced at the end of February this year.  Looking at the specs it is not wildly different than the Galaxy Tab S2 introduced almost 2 years ago.  The screen size, resolution and aspect ratio are all the same – 9.7 inches, 2048×1536, and 4:3 respectively.  The memory was bumped up from 3 to 4 gig, but internal storage remained at the same disappointing 32 gig as the S2 LTE version.  Thankfully both tablets allow you to use an external microSD card up to 256 gigs, so your storage options are not so limited.  Front and rear facing cameras are the same (2.1 and 8 megapixels respectively).  The battery is slightly larger in the new tablet, the processor is the same one found in the Galaxy S7 phone line (the Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 vs the older Snapdragon 652).

Those are the dry specs.  Sorry, every review has to include that by law.  The differentiation between the S2 and S3 comes in the new SPen, upgraded sound and video, and the software optimizations made to Android to support these.  First, the SPen.  Much like the Note series the S3’s pen makes for a great way to take notes or make quick sketches.  The same SPen software is also on the tablet, but curiously the pen does not have a silo on the tablet in which to store it.  Nor does the official case come with a loop or any other way to carry the pen.  As useful as it can be, the pen really feels like an afterthought for Samsung – like “we gotta give these guys something, but we can’t change the tablet.”  It is going to be the most lost accessory Samsung ever made and at $49 the most profitable one they will sell you.

Also changed this year is the charging and data port.  The previous micro USB standard has been upgraded to the USB Type-C port, so plan on all new cables.  More than just the physical configuration, the port also bumped up to USB 3.1, so your data transfers through a physical cable will be faster.  Important in my use case as a traveling media player.  And in that use case, the new HDR and 4K content modes are very nice – the screen appears sharper, more vibrant and reacts faster to video, meaning no more ghosting when watching an action movie.  The Harmon-Kardon AKG-tuned stereo sound on the new tablet also provides richer audio at higher volumes than the previous tablet.  Except for the black bars at the top and bottom of the screen thanks to the 4:3 aspect ratio, everything you watch or listen to will be just that much better on the Tab S3.

The upgrade to the Snapdragon 820 processor and the additional 1 gig RAM makes for a very snappy experience.  Performance is as smooth as butter – apps open faster and the user experience feels like it should for a flagship product.  You won’t be disappointed by the performance.

The frame for the tablet is aluminum as was the previous version.  The back, however, is glass (as evidenced by my reflection in the photo).  It really gives a premium look to the device, but it comes at the expense of fingerprinting.  Also missing on this version are the snaps found on the back of the S2 that fixed the case to the tablet.  I thought they were outstanding, and am disappointed by the weak magnetic connection the S3 uses.

As far as accessories go, Samsung makes an interesting external keyboard that is not Bluetooth.  It connects to and is powered by the tablet via a series of pins on the bottom.  As a matter of fact, I am typing this review using the external keyboard.  And the keyboard folio case as a loop for the SPen, albeit through a rather cheesy stick-on vinyl loop.  The keyboard works well, but for some odd reason Samsung only makes this in a color that does not match the tablet – the S3 is charcoal, and the keyboard folio case is a light gray.  The standard non-folio comes in a color that matches the tablet, so it is strange why this is different.  There are plenty of after-market cases and other accessories, though, so pondering the mystery of the mismatched color is blissfully short.

Now the other shoe drops.  The base WiFi-only version of the tablet is on sale in the US, but so far there is not a US-based mobile carrier who is selling the LTE version.  After waiting many months and even seeing the tablet pass through the FCC (meaning it could be sold here), I am still unable to obtain a T-Mobile-specific model (or AT&T or Verizon, for that matter).  I purchased an unlocked international version, the SM-T825 and have been using it on T-Mobile without any issue.  This version does not support the 700mHz LTE band that T-Mobile has available, but in practice, this has meant literally nothing for me.  I get 4G speeds almost all of the time when I am not on WiFi, so not having the T-Mobile brand on the tablet does not seem to impair my use in any way.

Bixby is also curiously missing.  Introduced at the same event, Bixby is Samsung’s entry into the digital assistant category.  I get that having Bixby native on the S8 line of phones is an important differentiator for Samsung, but the S3 is their flagship tablet product.  Given how buggy the current version is and how limited the functionality is today, you are not missing that much by not having it available.  Hopefully, they will stabilize the software and push it out in a later release, but in the meantime, you can use Google Assistant.

The bottom line?  This is a worthy upgrade from the Galaxy S2 model and is hands-down the leading Android tablet out there.  And that is not solely because most of the competitors (including Google) seemed to have left the market.  On its own merit, the S3 is a great device.  At $650 (what I paid new for the LTE version) and without US carrier support, your mileage may vary.  Regardless of whether you want/need LTE connectivity, either model of the S3 will definitely not disappoint.

Source: The device reviewed was purchased by me.  For more information, visit the official Samsung site and Amazon.

 

Product Information

Price: $779.00
Manufacturer: Samsung
Retailer: Amazon
Pros:
  • Faster, more fluid than the previous generation
  • Enhanced sound and video playback make for great media consumption
  • SPen is included with all versions of the tablet
  • Comes with Android Nougat (v7) loaded and will get the O upgrade later this year
Cons:
  • Price
  • No US-carrier with an LTE version
  • SPen is going to get lost because there is no on-device storage for it
  • Bixby is not included nor is it available as an update

Filed in categories: Featured Items, Reviews

Tagged:

Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 LTE review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on August 8, 2017 at 9:00 am.

Note: If you are subscribed to this feed through FeedBurner, please switch to our native feed URL http://the-gadgeteer.com/feed/ in order to ensure continuous delivery.

SmartBoy turns your Samsung Galaxy S8 into a Game Boy

Do you still have a pile of Game Boy and Game Boy Color cartridges gather dust in a drawer somewhere in your house AND do you also have a Samsung Galaxy S8? Then your retro dreams have just come true with SmartBoy.

SmartBoy from Hyperkin is a module that attaches to the bottom of your S8 (and a select group of other Android phones) to turn it into a Game Boy / Game Boy Color device right down to those iconic controller buttons.

This device doesn’t require batteries. It plugs into the Type-C port on the bottom of the S8. You supply the Game Boy cartridge and then all that’s left is to have fun playing your favorite games.

The SmartBoy is priced at $49.99 and will start shipping on 8/21/17. You can read more about it and check the device compatibility list at hyperkinlab.com

Filed in categories: News

Tagged: ,

SmartBoy turns your Samsung Galaxy S8 into a Game Boy originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on August 8, 2017 at 8:00 am.

Note: If you are subscribed to this feed through FeedBurner, please switch to our native feed URL http://the-gadgeteer.com/feed/ in order to ensure continuous delivery.

Write in the dark without wrecking your night vision with this pen

Pilots, security guards, and people who wake up in the middle of the night with a million dollar idea all have one thing in common. They need to write stuff down without impacting their night vision. One solution is a pair of night vision goggles and another potential solution is the Skilcraft Luminator LED Light Pen.

This pen is made in a factory by vision impaired workers and features a metal body and a pressurized ink cartridge that allows the pen to write upside down and in extreme temperatures.

How does this pen preserve your night vision? It has a red LED at the tip that you can turn on to provide light while you write, but that light won’t impair your night vision.

Included in the Skilcraft Luminator LED Light Pen package is one spare battery and one spare ink cartridge. The pen is priced at $31.99. For more info visit Alphapointeonline.com or Amazon.

[via The Awesomer]

Filed in categories: News

Tagged:

Write in the dark without wrecking your night vision with this pen originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on August 7, 2017 at 11:00 am.

Note: If you are subscribed to this feed through FeedBurner, please switch to our native feed URL http://the-gadgeteer.com/feed/ in order to ensure continuous delivery.

Archeer A110 wireless Bluetooth speaker review

I have always been a fan of cheap, useful gadgets. Sure, there are Bluetooth speakers on the market that are worth hundreds of dollars, but what about for those who are on a budget? Archeer came out with their A110 slim, portable Bluetooth speaker which has quite a low price for what it offers. Curiously, I had to try it out.


Inside of the box you’ll find:

– A110 speaker
– Micro-USB charging cable
– Auxiliary cable
– Instruction Manual

There are more features to this little speaker than just playing music via Bluetooth. It comes with Bluetooth, an FM radio, TF (microSD) card slot for playback and recording, and an auxiliary port.
Of course, the FM radio I had to try out first. To do so, you press the ‘M’ button on the back of the speaker until you reach the FM mode. I like to jump into things without reading instructions, so of course, I did that at first. I could not get a signal for the life of me. Well, I pressed the play button (via the instruction manual) and it found several signals that it saved to memory. Not only that, the FM broadcasts that were auto-saved came in pretty darn clear, and I could scroll through them easily with the volume buttons.

The volume buttons actually are volume and forward/backward buttons. Holding down the up or down button will change the volume, while a single tap will change your track or radio station. It might take a few tries to get used to how long to press it for the volume.

Pairing the Bluetooth was very simple. I pressed the pairing button on the back of the speaker and it showed up on my device right away and each time I turned on the speaker, it paired quickly to my phone. It will verbally tell you it is paired as well. Pressing play would automatically start whatever was last playing on my phone which was nice since after the initial pairing, I technically didn’t even need to pick up and use my phone to listen to music.

The middle button on the backside of the unit is for the lighting. Holding down the button will turn on or off the lighting, and pressing the button again will cycle through three lighting schemes; solid blue, multiple colors fading into each other, and one that goes along to your music. It doesn’t really go along to the music, but it makes it look like it is.
There is a stand on the back of the speaker to keep the speaker upright but also can double as a phone stand. I thought this was pretty nifty and it worked well to hold the phone. On tabletops, the vibrations from the speaker would make the unit move around, so I had to be extra careful not to let it fall off of an edge. There are rubbery feet on the bottom to prevent it from moving, but they are too far forward when it is angled on the stand, so they do not work.

It is supposed to have a six-hour battery life, and it seems pretty accurate to what is advertised. It will not turn off automatically when it does not detect music, so make sure to turn it off when you are finished. I left it on all day with the lights on accidentally and it still had about a quarter of its battery life left. Charging didn’t take too long either. I plugged it in around lunch time and it was done before my evening meal.

The sound quality of this little thing was surprisingly good. It isn’t going to blow the room away, but for a small room, or something to throw in your pocket and walk around with, it worked pretty well. There is a little bass that comes through, and the mid and high tones are pretty clear. Pop songs without the booming bass, along with classic rock music sounded the best on this speaker. All and all, for how cheap the speaker is, the audio quality was really good.

Overall, for the price of this little thing, I was very happy. If you are looking for something that will blow you out of the water with amazing sound quality and bass, you might want to look somewhere else, but if you are looking for a decent, portable Bluetooth speaker that is easy on the pocketbook, the Archeer A110 Bluetooth speaker might be worth a try.

Source: The sample for this review was provided by Archeer. Please visit their site for more info and Amazon to order.

 

Product Information

Price: $23.98
Manufacturer: Archeer
Retailer: Amazon
Pros:
  • – Cheap price
  • – Portable
  • – Multiple ways to listen to audio
Cons:
  • – Does not turn off after being idle
  • – Vibrates and moves around a lot on hard surfaces

Filed in categories: Reviews

Tagged:

Archeer A110 wireless Bluetooth speaker review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on August 7, 2017 at 10:00 am.

Note: If you are subscribed to this feed through FeedBurner, please switch to our native feed URL http://the-gadgeteer.com/feed/ in order to ensure continuous delivery.