Review: PenMoto

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Penmoto was my favorite Kickstarter funding to date. The project team provided a thoughtful and creative prototype concept, and more step by step process information as the project entered production than any other Kickstarter project I’ve seen. The process junkie in me loved it. They had many issues with quality control and supply over the months of final development and QA/QC and their diligence allowed them to arrive at a top-quality product that is well put together.

The concept is simple: When you use a stylus all day, setting it down and picking it up every time you want to type can be laborious and inefficient. The Penmoto is a ring coupler, where one module fits on your digit and the other on your stylus. Simple enough, right? But the key to the design’s innovation is the interface: HOW you transition the stylus into ‘away’ mode is as important to the efficiency concept as the act itself. With Penmoto, you can either flick or spin the pen away from your writing position, thanks to two pairs of coupled magnets. It’s pretty brilliant.

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After some months of trial and tribulation on the part of the Penmoto team, the product finally shipped last week, and I was soon in possession of my Penmoto Kickstarter kit. It was packaged in a savvy, designer-appealing way, with a folded cardstock enclosure opening to reveal the penmoto modules on a punched card, with instructions shown in semaphore along each face of the enclosure. Gorgeous! As last minute additions to the Kickstarter package, we were also treated to a spare set of magnets and silicone adhesive dots, intended to double up on the magnetic coupling of the pen and ring, to ease learning of the flick or spin methods of moving the stylus away. I didn’t end up using them, but a nice inclusion. Further, a number of ring sizes are included, to allow either multiple fits, or, in a household like mine, with a diminutive yet commanding presence in the form of wifebot(tm), a second penmoto in action. Realistically though, I’ve just added a coupler to my second stylus that lives with my dreadfully underutilized Wacom Cintiq in the home office (I use an Intuos 3 tablet everywhere, but have limited access to the Cintiq, on account of the demands of small-child parenting and bike riding.)

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The default configuration is as shown above. The ring is on your index finger, and the spin sends the pen away from your keyboard. The back end of the stylus is now lined up with your index finger. An alternate method features thumb-mounting of the digit ring, which is better for some, and certainly for me. The spin you can get on the stylus, in either layout, is pretty fun, though the thing can escape at velocity if you have too many of what DeNiro called ‘the enthusiasms’ in Untouchables.

I should note that being a two-finger-typist (of considerable speed) this product isn’t always best for me. I learned years ago to shift the stylus to between my index and middle fingers while typing, which is still more efficient than this. But for proper QWERTY users, I think this must be a godsend. I still quite like it and use it for some text input, just not a 5-paragraph essay… or review.

Well-recommended, and pre-orders are now available:
http://penmoto.com/

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Baidu Maps Are Beter Than the Real Thing Asterix

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So since the PRC government blocks a lot of the country from being satmapped on Google, the alternative is Baidu, which generates high-quality, extremely accurate axo graphics in retro splendor. I’m not certain if Baidu’s maps are more accurate than the censored maps the government would offer, but to be fair, our own domestic stuff has digitally edited sites all over the place as well.

But RAD!

http://gizmodo.com/5773531/china-just-w … baidu-maps

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i3: Bad Laptop Design

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I was thinking of bad laptop design details in a meeting earlier in the week, as I watched a vendor struggle to copy data onto a thumb drive with insufficient USB port availability. I had previously, over the week before, been struggling to manage my connecs’ at the office, having temporarily taken my hub home. So, these led to me creating the framework for this i3.

Then, I spotted this article in my Readitlater List, and had to lauch. It’s right on subject.
http://gizmodo.com/5780172/what-are-the … sign-moves

Anyway, my Bad Laptop Design I3:

1. USB ports too close together: my Macbook Pros have always had this problem, though to be fair, my Dells before them were even worse, STACKING the ports vertically. But on any Apple laptop, the USB ports are spaced juuuuust close enough laterally that most thumb drives won’t fit, having their own frankly unnecessary girth beyond the width limit of the USB connector. Madness!

2. Multiple port types on the same bus: Connected to the above problem consequently, as you jigger a thumb drive or other USB device into an available USB port, you risk shifting the bus itself slightly within the case, and this can break momentarily the connection of all devices. Sure, it’s bad enough when your other USB devices promptly fail (such as your input devices when your clamshell is closed) but this can also affect your Firewire, for example, or Thunderbolt, or what have you, which is, in my case, connected to a high-speed drive frequently in use. YAY.

3. No Power Button on the Exterior: I love my Macbook Pro, but it’s been what…. 15 years or so since Apple had a laptop with an external power button. I understand the hysteria over accidental power-ups from transport vibration or whatever, but seriously. How many MBP users keep the clamshell closed on their desk, tethered to a monitor, for days at a time? It would be nice to be able to fire up the system without opening the clamshell and thereby potentially effing up the external monitor configuration. Granted, said effeing-uppery more generally happens on sleep/wake crashes, but still. They put so much work into the elegance of the clamshell opening depression, why not do a concealed, depressed thumb lever? Something rad like that?

OK, that’s my three. What about you?

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