Originally published Saturday, November 28, 2009 at 12:10 AM
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High-tech happiness for $100 or less
No one's going to blame you for keeping holiday gifts minimal this year. But if you want to round out your handmade cards, scarves, pickles and jam with a gadget or gizmo, here are a handful of our $100-and-under favorites.
The Associated Press
No one's going to blame you for keeping holiday gifts minimal this year. But if you want to round out your handmade cards, scarves, pickles and jam with a gadget or gizmo, here are a handful of our $100-and-under favorites.
Wii MotionPlus for Nintendo Wii ($20, or $50 with a game, available at bestbuy.com and elsewhere)
For many families, "Wii Sports," the game bundled with the Nintendo Wii since its 2006 launch, remains a favorite. By letting people swing a controller to play bowling, golf, tennis, baseball and boxing, it has changed how we play video games and made more of us into gamers.
The Wii MotionPlus is an attachment for the original "Wiimote" controller. It makes the motion-sensing controls more sensitive and precise, so a flick of a wrist can turn your virtual tennis racket and spin your bowling ball. If your gift recipient doesn't already own "Wii Sports Resort," it's worth throwing that in, too — it adds frisbee-throwing with a dog, water-scooter racing, sword fighting and other new games and comes with one MotionPlus attachment.
Roku SD Netflix Player ($80, roku.com)
If someone you know uses Netflix, he or she needs Roku. In less than five minutes, I had this little black box plugged in to my television, connected to the Wi-Fi in my home and synched to my Netflix queue.
Netflix lets members who pay at least $9 per month stream more than 17,000 movies and TV shows using Roku or a computer, and the list is growing. I still had to use my computer to add new titles to my queue, but it was easy to scroll through them on the TV screen and pick something to watch.
The Roku SD is $20 less than the original model. It would be a good bet for someone like me, who still has an old-school boxy television. By the time I get a flat-screen TV, this kind of feature will come built in. If you're shopping for someone who already has a house full of high-definition TVs, this isn't the right Roku. Instead, pick the $100 Roku HD, which can stream high-def video, or the $130 Roku HD-XR, which uses the latest Wi-Fi technology to send that video to farther-away TVs in the house.
WikiReader ($99, thewikireader.com)
This pocketable gadget contains nearly all of the text of Wikipedia, the online community-built encyclopedia, and displays it on a monochrome LCD. It works anywhere, and can be updated through downloads every few months.
Using the WikiReader is faster than searching Wikipedia on a cellphone. Too bad the WikiReader's on-screen keyboard makes it difficult to type search terms, and scrolling through long entries is slow. Wikipedia's images and tables are missing. Still, a cool gift for the curious. Comes with two AAA batteries, which Openmoko, the gadget's maker, says will power the reader for about a year.
Avid M-Audio Studiophile AV 30 and LaCie Sound2 computer speakers ($100 for either set, m-audio.com; lacie.com)
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Playing music at any significant volume on built-in computer speakers gives me a headache — the desk seems to vibrate with the tinny racket. I'm no audiophile, but these speaker sets allowed me to enjoy listening to music in my home office again.
The minimalist black-and-white LaCie set looks more at home with my iMac. It's also capable of drawing power from the computer over a USB connection if an outlet isn't available. But to my amateur ears, the blockier black M-Audio ones sounded richer.
Magic Mouse for Macs ($69, store.apple.com)
Apple's new wireless mouse comes nestled in a clear case like some artifact in an alien museum. It's flatter than most mice, which is nice. It also has no buttons or wheels, just a shiny white surface that responds to various fingertip gestures.
It took three software updates and reboots to get my iMac and mouse working together. Once that was done, I found it intuitive to use gestures for scrolling and panning: Just drag one finger across the surface of the mouse, in any direction.
I still haven't mastered the "two-finger swipe," a side-to-side gesture that can mean "go back" or "go forward" in programs such as Web browsers or digital photo collections. The movement is uncomfortable and the mouse keeps creeping to one side under my fingertips.
"Fail Nation: A Visual Romp Through the World of Epic Fails" ($12, in bookstores)
The Web-trend connoisseur will recognize the source of this book, 2-year-old failblog.org, as the online pictorial compendium of things going horribly wrong. Even technophobes should be amused by the bloopers and awkward wordings captured in this slim volume, published in October by Harper Paperbacks.
The book reprints more than 100 of the Failblog's reader-submitted photos. Marvel at signs that say "keep right" while pointing left, or that direct diners to the "drive-thur."
Snort at the ATM that asks you to withdraw multiples of $20 — to a maximum of $250. And so on.
The blog is run by Pet Holdings, the same folks who brought you LOLcats, the art of writing funny captions for amateur cat photos (see icanhascheezburger.com).
Tiny tripods ($10-$20)
Spontaneous group photos are better when one person isn't stuck holding the camera. The Bottle Cap Tripod from Dynomighty Design Inc. ($10, dynomighty.com) has a rubbery base that stuck perfectly on top of a wine bottle and a maple-syrup container, although it was wobbly atop a bottle of Perrier. The Manfrotto Modo Pocket ($20, bhphotovideo.com and elsewhere) is tabletop tripod that, when folded flat, is about half the size of a business card in length and width.
Unfolded, it has four rubber-coated feet that grip nicely to most surfaces, and in the center, a threaded screw that works with digital cameras up to 17 ounces.
LaCie iamaKey USB flash drive ($22-$100, lacie.com)
Most USB drives are ugly and easy to lose. This one caught my eye because it looks like a key, which makes it at home on my key chain (it's smaller than my car key) and LaCie says the part that sticks into the computer is water- and scratch-resistant.
The iamaKey comes in four sizes, from 4 gigabytes to 32 gigabytes, and works on both Macs and Windows PCs.
AP technology writers Barbara Ortutay and Peter Svensson in New York and Associated Press Writer Ron Harris in Atlanta contributed to this report.
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