Posts Tagged ‘voyager’

Transformers Animated Series Voyager Class 7 Inch Tall Robot Action Figure – GRIMLOCK with Snapping jaw and Flame Sword

Transformers Animated Series Voyager Class 7 Inch Tall Robot Action Figure – GRIMLOCK with Snapping jaw and Flame Sword

Transformers Animated Series Voyager Class 7 Inch Tall Robot Action Figure - GRIMLOCK with Snapping jaw and Flame Sword

  • Transformers Animated Series Voyager Grimlock 7 inch Figure
  • For age 5 and up

GRIMLOCK more than lives up to the reputation of his Tyrannosaurus Rex mode. Ill-tempered, powerful, and always ready for a fight, he loves to throw his weight around. He likes the way the ground shakes as he stomps around, and the way people scatter when he roars. He’s happiest on DINOBOT Island, where he can stomp and roar to his Spark’s content, shattering trees with his tail, and breathing jets of flame into the sky. Every once in a while, though, he prefers to find the biggest, most powerful DECEPTICON he can, and smash its chassis to pieces.

List Price: $ 95.50

Price: $ 95.50

Incoming search terms:

Related Posts:

Human civilization reaches beyond the solar system as Voyager 1 enters unknown space

Voyager_1_new_region_large

Even more than 35 years after leaving Planet, experts state the Voyager 1 spacecraft appears to have left our solar system. Astronomers funded by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory today revealed their study, reporting that Voyager 1 measured radical modifications in radiation degrees– an indication that the spacecraft has left the wind of the Sun’s energetic fragments behind, taking a trip into unknown space. In December, scientists noted that Voyager had gotten in the penultimate stretch of its trip to interstellar space: an area called the “magnetic highway.” At the time, NASA predicted that Voyager was anywhere from “a few months to a few years away” from leaving the solar system.

Voyagers 1 and 2, introduced in 1977 under the Carter …

Continue reading & hellip;

Incoming search terms:

Related Posts:

Accel Telecom unveils Voyager, an Android smartphone that wants to stay in the car (video)

Accel Telecom launches first carconnected smartphone, Voyager

Remember the days of yore when carphones made use of to be affixeded to the car– completely? Accel Telecom wishes to take you back there with the Voyager, an Android smartphone with car-centric features that could stay put in your car. To begin with, the handset will feature a specialized Waze launcher trick for GPS navigation tasks, and will likewise sport “high level sound decrease and echo cancellation,” together with hands-free voice activation. Other functions consist of a 3G-WiFi hotspot, a “driver-centric” design with huge physical keys, several car-focused apps and “crystal clear, echo free of cost sound quality.” Interestingly, it’ll likewise link to your car’s on-board diagnostics system via RS232 or Bluetooth and ping you if any parts will break off. Accel told us that it’ll launch Voyager in Europe and the US “with operators that offer a second sim device,” to let you share your existing phone number. There’s no sign of pricing yet, however there is PR and a video after the break.

Submitted under: ,

Voyager 1 spacecraft reaches ‘magnetic highway’ at the outer edge of the solar system

NASA Voyager 1

NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft, very first introduced in 1977 and presently the manufactured item furthest from the Earth, recently reached the furthest edges of our solar system, an area that experts believe is the last barrier the craft requires to pass through prior to reaching interstellar room. According to NASA’s report, Voyager 1 reached the “magnetic road” region for the very first time in July of this year and has actually well been in that region given that re-entering in late August. The location is known as a “magnetic road” due to the Sun’s magnetic field lines lining up interstellar electromagnetic field lines in the location where Voyager 1 is presently located. Once Voyager 1 leaves the solar system, experts forecast that the direction of the magnetic …

Continue reading & hellip;

Incoming search terms:

Related Posts:

Voyager Mobile promises free global roaming with ‘patent-pending’ technology

Voyager Mobile launches

Voyager Mobile has launched a new “worldwide” wireless service called Project Global Voyager, saying users on the plan “won’t pay a penny of roaming charges.” The brash new MVNO has only vaguely described how it works, saying that the technology is “completely network cloud based, with no special software residing on the individual handsets and devices.” Though it hasn’t revealed pricing yet, Voyager says the service will be available to businesses and consumers starting in 2013. Color us intrigued as to how they’ll pull it off — feel free to read the PR tea leaves after the break.

Continue reading Voyager Mobile promises free global roaming with ‘patent-pending’ technology

Filed under: ,

Voyager Mobile promises free global roaming with ‘patent-pending’ technology originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Nov 2012 06:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Related Posts:

Plantronics outs Voyager Legend Bluetooth headset with improved voice recognition, enhanced battery life

tk Plantronics outs Voyager Legend Bluetooth headset with enhanced voice recognition, improved battery life

For the most part, the headsets we’ve seen from Plantronics this year have been aspired at gamers, however make no blunder, the outfit is still churning out Bluetooth earpieces for roadway warriors: the company merely revealed its fifth-generation Voyager headset, the Voyager Legend. In numerous methods, it’s an iterative product, with longer battery life (seven hours, up from six), and more mics (three instead of 2). It also has an elongated windscreen and is 25 percent smaller than its predecessor, though Plantronics claims the in-ear fit hasn’t changed. Key internals include Bluetooth 3.0, not 4.0, and support for streaming over A2DP. All informed, precisely what you ‘d anticipate from the latest and biggest BT headset.

But more vital than enhanced performance and a more compact design, the headset answers voice commands in a smarter method. Say, for instance, that you obtain an inbound telephone call and happen not to be wearing your headset (maybe you took it out to charge). You can put the earpiece in and the headset will immediately choose up the phone call. Or, if you’re not wearing your headset you can have it path calls to the phone instead. As for responding to calls, you can easily state “solution” or “ignore,” and you do not even have to press a button to activate the voice acknowledgment. The earpiece can easily also announce your caller’s name, so long as it’s in your yellow page. In addition, the headset reacts to about 10 additional commands such as “check battery” and “pair me,” but in these cases you do need to push a button initially. Rounding out the function list is a brand-new Android-only Find MyHeadset app that makes use of tones and geolocation to assist you identify where you last saw your earpiece. The headset is available today for $ 100, and the business is additionally selling a personal computer stand and charging instance, both priced at $ 30.

Peripherals, Legend Bluetooth headset with improved voice recognition, enhanced battery life initially appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Sep 2012 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for usage of feeds. Permalink|| E-mail this|Remarks

Incoming search terms:

Related Posts:

Clear releases WiMax Spot Voyager hotspot and Hub Express router, despite impending LTE transition

Clear WiMax hotspot and router

Despite the fact that Clear has begun testing an LTE network, the company’s releasing two new WiMax-based products. The Clear Spot Voyager is the company’s latest personal hotspot, which can share a connection with up to eight Wi-Fi devices, should run for six hours on a charge, and will cost $ 124.99. The Clear Hub Express, on the other hand, is designed for in-home usage: it’s both a modem and wireless router, provides a signal up to 150 feet away, and will retail for $ 99.99. With most of the industry (including Sprint, Clearwire’s largest investor) moving away from WiMax, these devices might not be the smartest investment — but since Clear sells them contract-free, users won’t be stuck paying for out-of-date service.

Continue reading…

Incoming search terms:

Related Posts:

Corsair Flash Voyager, GT, Survivor get a USB 3.0 boost


Call us jaded, but most USB flash drives just don’t get the juices flowing like a new tablet or smartphone. Nonetheless, they’ve become a critical component of many a workflow, and for a device where speed is key, a USB 3.0 boost is certainly welcome. And Corsair did just that with its Flash Voyager, Flash Voyager GT, and “adventure-proof” Flash Survivor lines. The entry level Voyagers ship in 8GB ($ 17) and 16GB ($ 24) capacities, while the premium model offers 32GB and 64GB of storage, for $ 59 and $ 129, respectively. 8GB ($ 28) and 16GB ($ 35) drives in the ruggedized Survivor series are constructed of aircraft-grade aluminum and are water-proof all the way down to 200 meters — that algae-covered Survivor you found 650 feet down at the bottom of the ocean floor? Yup, it probably still works. The new drives are shipping now, and you can find the full scoop from Corsair just past the break.

Continue reading Corsair Flash Voyager, GT, Survivor get a USB 3.0 boost

Corsair Flash Voyager, GT, Survivor get a USB 3.0 boost originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Sep 2011 22:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceCorsair  | Email this | Comments

Related Posts:

Plantronics Calisto 800 speakerphone and Voyager Pro UC headset make concalls cool again

Plantronics Calisto 800 speakerphone and Voyager Pro UC headset make concalls cool again

We’d all rather be flown to some exotic, Caribbean location for our next corporate get-together, but in these hard economic times sometimes a good ‘ol audio bridge makes the most sense. Increasingly those concalls are happening via some sort of VOIP bridge, and Plantronics’ latest are ready for it. First up is the Calisto 800 series “multi speakerphone” devices, which offer connectivity to an analog phone line, a mobile phone over Bluetooth, and even a PC over USB. This lets you easily dial in to just about anything and naturally offers a full duplex speakerphone with noise cancellation and an LCD with caller ID. There’s even an optional wireless microphone that you can plunk down on the table so the lamentations of the entire QA team will be picked up load and clear.

Plantronics Calisto 800 speakerphone and Voyager Pro UC headset make concalls cool againAlso new is a revised version of the Voyager Pro UC, a rather more traditional Bluetooth headset with an extended boom for better voice pickup and the ability to pair to a mobile phone and a PC (via a tiny USB adapter) simultaneously. It’ll even do A2DP so you hold music won’t be the only tunes you hear. Both appear to be available now, and both start at $ 199.95, putting them out of reach for most non-corporate attendees.

Continue reading Plantronics Calisto 800 speakerphone and Voyager Pro UC headset make concalls cool again

Plantronics Calisto 800 speakerphone and Voyager Pro UC headset make concalls cool again originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Jan 2011 22:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePlantronics Calisto 800, Voyager Pro UC  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Related Posts:

[big debate] I loved my Voyager 510, but I'm hesitant to purchase the…

Volume level loud enough? …Voyager Pro. I've read various user reviews stating that the volume is lower than the 510. Has anyone had any issues with call volume using this headset?

Props to gdgt – new in gadgets

Related Posts:

Featured Products

Archive
Gruvisoft Donations