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This week in Crave: The superhero edition

ec61f ramona 2 270x405 This week in Crave: The superhero edition

Superhero Ramona shows off the design on her new customized cape.

(Credit:
Josh Miller/CNET)

Too busy learning new pickup lines from robots this week to keep up with Crave? Here’s what you missed while you were studying Daniel123′s winning ways.

? Is a 311-mph train fast enough for you?

? Never has the world seen a cuter superhero.

? This week’s Low Latency: Times change, and so do people.

? Your brand new camera’s out of the box. Now what?

? If you have green hair and flip-flops, you’re probably not an Android user.

? For out-of-this-world flair, try pairing a Boba Fett hat with Princess Leia headphone covers.

? See what dominated Google’s Zeitgeist in 2011.

? And now that 2011 is just about over, what are your tech-related resolutions for 2012? We want to hear them!

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Fisker Karma recalled over battery fire risk

c9a69 drive 10 610x342 Fisker Karma recalled over battery fire risk

The 2012 Fisker Karma went on sale in late Oct. 2011.

(Credit:
Fisker)

Although there have been no reports of problems so far, Fisker is recalling 239 Karma plug-in hybrid sports
cars due to a high-voltage battery problem that could result in a fire.

The problem with the luxury plug-in hybrid is that certain hose clamps may have been positioned incorrectly during assembly, which could cause a coolant leak near the battery compartment.

According to the the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration: “If coolant enters the battery compartment, an electrical short could occur possible resulting in a fire.”

Fisker plans to notify customers, and dealerships will replace the high-voltage battery with a new part at no cost. Costumers can call Fisker at 1-855-575-7577, option 2, for more information.

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Five family-fun board games for the iPad

a1882 ipad board games 610x232 Five family fun board games for the iPad(Credit:
Matt Elliott/CNET)

Did your spouse or significant other bestow an
iPad upon you this Christmas? If so, it won’t be long until your spouse or significant other asks you to put down your new toy for a little while and pay attention to the rest of the family. There is, of course, a way to spend time with your family and your new iPad simultaneously: iPad board games!

Four classic games–Monopoly, Scrabble, Life, and Risk–are available for the iPad, and if you catch EA’s DailyDeals holiday sale on the right day, you can get them for as low as 99 cents. The fifth game here, Ticket to Ride, is a personal favorite, and its iPad version is beautifully done. With Monopoly and Ticket to Ride, the iPad acts as the board, with players sitting around it and taking turns as they would with the actual board game. With Scrabble, Life, and Risk, the games feature Pass N’ Play, where the board is oriented in one direction and the iPad is passed to each player when it is his or her turn.

Granted, playing a board game on the iPad isn’t the same as gathering the family around the real thing, but for these five games, the iPad offers a reasonable facsimile. The iPad forces you to downscale, but what you sacrifice in size you make up for in faster gameplay, as the iPad tallies scores, moneys, armies, and so on.

Monopoly HD

a1882 monopoly 610x458 Five family fun board games for the iPad(Credit:
Matt Elliott/CNET)

Monopoly on the iPad looks and feels like the real thing, although no player is forced to act as the banker. In Tabletop mode, you can play with up to four players. You can keep the iPad in the middle of the table or rug, with the players seated around it. If there is more than one iPad in your house, you can set up a up a game via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth via the Local Network Play option.

To start a game, you can select from the traditional Monopoly pieces–top hat, dog, thimble, and so on–as well as a Toyota Prius. You can choose from five different environments, and there are a number of house rules you can tweak, from starting players with properties at the start of the game and setting a turn timer to setting a payout for free parking and the Pass Go payment. You can also turn on Sleight of Hand, which lets each player cheat up to three times to roll a specific number.

With each turn, you can pick up and fling the dice, which approximates throwing actual dice. And the game handles all banking, so when you land on someone’s property, the payment is handled automatically and the amount is deducted from your total. Trading properties and building houses and hotels is easy, and by tapping on a group of properties on the board, you can see the probabilities of your opponents landing on them on their next turn. Skip the probabilities and tutorials, and a party of four can get through a game of Monopoly in less than an hour on the iPad. And if you don’t get through a game in one sitting, you can save your game without worrying about the board getting kicked or jostled or your brother stealing cash from under your side of the board when you’re not looking.

Scrabble

a1882 scrabble 610x458 Five family fun board games for the iPad(Credit:
Matt Elliott/CNET)

Up to four people can play Scrabble with either the Pass N’ Play method or via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. You can also play friends on Facebook, and the Party Play option lets players use their
iPhone as a tile rack (with the free and appropriately named Scrabble Tile Rack app). The game moves just like the real thing. You can swap tiles, shuffle your tiles, and recall tiles from the board during your turn you no longer wish to play. You can also consult a dictionary, which features a handy list of two-letter words, and you can obtain a bit of help by tapping the Best Word option, which creates and places the most valuable word on the board from your tiles, such as oothecae. Best yet, Scrabble on the iPad obviates arguments among players about whether a word played is actually a word.

Risk

c80ec risk 610x458 Five family fun board games for the iPad(Credit:
Matt Elliott/CNET)

Like Monopoly, Risk is a game that is started more often than finished. When played on the iPad, however, gameplay is greatly sped up. The three phases of each turn–Draft, Attack, Fortify–take place quickly, and the graphics and sound effects of mortars exploding and bullets flying add excitement to the proceedings.

To draft troops to your territories, you can drag them one by one from the corner troop box or you can pinch them together and drag the group to a territory. Alternatively, you can tap on a territory and use a scroll wheel to select the number of troops to add to it. In the attack phase of your turn, the territories from which you can launch an attack are highlighted. Simply drag your troops to a neighboring territory to launch an attack. You then roll dice against your opponent to wage war, or you can speed up the battle by tapping the yellow button next to the dice. It skips the dice throwing and immediately announces the winner of the skirmish. Lastly, the fortify stage of each turn lets you move troops between territories by using the scroll wheel to select the number of troops to start marching.

With Pass N’ Play, you can play with up to six players, and you can play with up to four players via Local Play.

The Game of Life

c80ec life 610x458 Five family fun board games for the iPad(Credit:
Matt Elliott/CNET)

Life was one of my favorite board games growing up. In addition to the gameplay itself, I liked the layout of the board, with its molded plastic pieces to lend some topography and the colorful spinner at its center. Life on the iPad gets the spinner just right, but it’s hard to see the whole board. You can pan out to see more of the board, but the icons get small and difficult to make out. The default view keeps you too close to the action, and the slow, cartoon-y effects when your
car is on the move distract from the game. If the slow gameplay doesn’t bother you, you can play with up to six players with Pass N’ Play mode.

Ticket to Ride

a7841 ticket 610x458 Five family fun board games for the iPad(Credit:
Matt Elliott/CNET)

Ticket to Ride is a fantastic board game, so much so that I own both the regular U.S. version and the European version of the game. And both get played regularly. (Disclaimer: I am something of a board-game dork.) The iPad version looks and feels like the real game. The entire board is laid out on the iPad’s screen, and you can pinch to zoom in on a portion of the map if you need to see a critical junction in more detail. The real game burdens one of the players with shuffling and deal the train cards, but such a chore is not needed with the iPad acting as the brains behind the operation. The optional tutorials will aid new players, as will the fact that your particular destinations are highlighted for you on the map. As with the real game, you can play with up to five players on the iPad.

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Photography 101: Learning the ropes with your new camera

503f2 photo101 610x458 Photography 101: Learning the ropes with your new camera

Flea markets, farmers’ markets, and other outdoor events are great places to practice your photography and get a feel for what you like to shoot. At least until an irritated vendor says “are you going to buy something?”

(Credit:
Lori Grunin/CNET)

You’ve opened the box, charged the battery, and oohed and aahed over your shiny new toy. Now what?

Scan your manual
No, you don’t have to read the whole thing, just the important stuff. In the beginning somewhere there will be a diagram showing you the parts of the camera. That’s really important stuff. Then turn to the index, providing the manual has one (there are some utterly heinous examples of manualcraft that don’t include an index); if there isn’t, use the table of contents instead. Run down the index or TOC, and look at the page in the manual for every term you don’t understand.

Learn your camera’s quirks
You don’t want to discover that all your low-light photos look like Seurat or Monet paintings after you’ve photographed your kid’s first birthday. To do that, you need “test” the camera somewhat methodically. For instance, set up a little still life in typical living room light, and (presuming your camera supports it), try it in various automatic and manual modes, changing settings like white balance, exposure compensation, ISO sensitivity setting, and so on. Then download and compare the photos on your computer, looking at them closely. Figure out which ones you like best and see which settings you’d used. Which leads me to one of the most important suggestions…


503f2 exif 120x164 Photography 101: Learning the ropes with your new camera

The EXIF data of an image contains the camera settings from when you shot it.

(Credit:
Screen capture by Lori Grunin/CNET)

Read your EXIF
Learning to use a camera in the days of film meant–for people more disciplined than I–carrying around a little book in which to record the camera’s settings so that you could match them against the shots and analyze what you’d done wrong or right. For digital, thankfully, the camera records all that information for you automatically and stores it in the file header; that metadata is referred to as Exchangeable Image File Format, or EXIF, data. Modern operating systems can usually read and display the basics: for instance, in
Windows 7, the EXIF data appears in the file properties dialog, in the Details tab. You can also get free utilities which display EXIF data in combination with thumbnails for a more usable way to scan it. For example, I occasionally use FastStone Image Viewer. The most important settings to look for are shutter speed, aperture, ISO sensitivity, white balance, metering, flash, and exposure compensation and focal length.

Checking the EXIF data is the only way to figure out some critical information. For instance, if some of your photos are blurry, look for a pattern in shutter speed–that’s how you figure out how slow you can drop the shutter while hand-holding the camera. Because each camera model varies in size, weight, and sensitivity of the optical stabilization system, the minimum usable shutter speed can differ quite a lot for an individual across cameras.

There is some information that’s not recorded in the EXIF header, or that’s hard to locate, because it’s nonstandard across cameras. It includes, for instance, special-effects modes. To try those out, just remember to shoot sequentially through the options so that you can later go back and match the shots to the mode.

Start a photo project
I’ve found it’s really hard to learn to use a new camera effectively by just kind of going out an shooting aimlessly. Find a subject you like to look at–flowers, animals, scary dolls–and head out to shoot some interesting photos of them. (People are great, but if you’re concentrating on learning the camera you don’t also want to be worrying about dealing with people.) Once you’re comfortable and think the photos are coming out okay, then make an effort to use a different feature and/or to use it in manual mode. At the same time, branch out into shooting more complex subjects, such as people and pets. But always remember to go back and look at the EXIF data for the shots you like best or least.

Learn about photography
Once you’re happily snapping away with your camera, you may want to try to learn some more about photography in general. The best (free) ways to learn more are participating in forums on photo-sharing sites, visiting sites like Digital Photography School, and attending the free Webinars and seminars frequently hosted by camera and software manufacturers. Look for photowalks and meetups in your area.

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Fisker Karma is so green, even interior uses low-carbon leather

87d67 512368 66368 a bofw 610x431 Fisker Karma is so green, even interior uses low carbon leather

Bridge of Weir leather was chosen for the interior of the Fisker Karma for its luxurious feel and its low environment impact during processing.

(Credit:
Fisker)

Less than three months on the market and the Fisker Karma is already getting high praise for being “green” and luxurious. Just last month, the near $100,000 plug-in hybrid was named “Luxury
Car of the Year” by BBC Top Gear magazine.

Part of what makes the Karma so luxurious is the used interior material from Bridge of Weir. The EcoStandard and EcoSport models’ seat, steering wheel, dash, door casings and center console trim are all wrapped in the Scottish company’s locally produced “low carbon leather,” Bridge of Weir said in a press release.

The leather used in the Karma travels less than 100 kilometers (about 62 miles) from the slaughterhouse (or abattoir) to the tannery–most of the leather used in vehicle interiors comes from South America and travels thousands of miles. Then the leather is processed at a plant that follows rigorous environmental standards, the company said.

The plant’s computerized dye dispensing system, for example “brings greater accuracy, reduces waste and eliminates the need for employees to handle chemicals,” said Bridge of Weir.

Energy conservation at the plant includes the use of hydro-generated electricity and natural gas.

Bridge of Weir leather is also used by Aston Martin, Vertu smart phone handsets, the world’s only seven-star hotel in Dubai.

87d67 512372 66368 b bofw 610x518 Fisker Karma is so green, even interior uses low carbon leather

The Fisker Karma plug-in hybrid, which features Bridge of Weir leather, and can accelerate from 0-60mph in 5.9 seconds.

(Credit:
Fisker)

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Bond battles The Man with the Golden Mouse

efa34 sphere2 Bond battles The Man with the Golden Mouse

Computer mouse, weapon, or torture device? Only Q knows for sure.

(Credit:

Screenshot of oreobject.com by Edward Moyer/CNET
)

What do you get the James Bond villain who has everything?

Let’s see… He’s already got the $560,000 iPod dock. And the $2.1 million diamond-dipped iPad (which he had customized with bits of secret agent bone). Hmmm…

Ah: here’s something! How about a gold-plated spherical computer mouse that looks elegant and sinister at the same time? That might be just the thing!

At only $290, it’s a steal. And as if its appearance weren’t enough, the Sphere 2 boasts other features that would probably appeal to the sort of temperament possessed by a Blofeld or a No.

For instance, “its impenetrable surface eschews germs,” Sphere 2 maker OreObject informs us, “and is easily sanitized if necessary.” We wouldn’t want our beloved white feline coming down with something after batting about a spherical mouse, now would we? A mouse covered with double-O cooties from a far too inquisitive member former member of Her Majesty’s Secret Service?

Besides, a fully sanitized mouse seems the perfect device to use when clicking that drop-down-menu option that will unleash germ warfare on 99.9 percent of the human race. (You remember that menu option, don’t you? It’s the one right between “Bisect Guest with Laser Beam” and “Convert Guest to Shark Food.”)

But that’s not all. The Sphere 2 is also “completely recyclable, [so] you can feel confident of making a smart environmental decision.” You wouldn’t want to set a bad example for that remaining 0.1 percent of humanity–your new master race would wind up covering the planet with trash in no time.

The Sphere 2 is made with surgical grade stainless steel and, in addition to the gold-plated version, is available in titanium ($185) and platinum ($320). It even comes with a “luxurious, elegant traveling pouch” (microfiber for the titanium number, suede for the other two).

Oh wait. Shoot. You’d better think twice about this. Q would be astonished–it looks like this fancy gadget is everything but wireless. And once your villainous pal gets over his initial cackling delight and realizes that, he might just feed you to the sharks.

(Via Gizmag)

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