Friday, February 26, 2010

2010 Vyrus


The 2010 Vyrus 97 C3 4V is the most powerful motorcycle in the world. The motorcycle is being called a 211 mph monster. The motorcycle was created by an Italian motorcycle manufacturer. The Vyrus is a powerful and heavy bike that weighs 339 pounds.


The price on the 2010 Vyrus 97 C3 4V is expensive. Consumers can expect to pay between $70,000 and $100,000 for the bike. The high price on the bike guarantees that it will remain exclusive. For those that are reluctant to ride on a bike that goes 211mph, there are two other versions of the bike. One version tops 184 mph and the other goes up 178 mph.

Portable Hard Drive Duplicator


If you need to quickly and easily duplicate hard drives for your backup purposes or recovery. Then the Aleratec 1:1 HDD PortaCruiser portable hard drive duplicator could help. It lets you clone 2.5 inch and 3.5 inch hard drives with ease and supports both IDE and SATA I/II HARD disk drives.

You can also set up access your drives via a USB 2.0 connection to your computer with RAID 0, RAID 1, JBOD Spanning or Normal disk configuration. Its compatible with Windows 2000, XP, Vista & 7 together with the support for Linux and Mac 10.3 or later.

The Portable Hard Drive Duplicator is available for $249 from from Aleratec.

Via Slippery Brick Via Chip Chick

The Soccer Ball 3G Mobile Dongle



In preparation for this year’s FIFA World Cup in South Africa Huawei have created a football themed 3G mobile broadband dongle in the shape of a football.


The Huawei 3G mobile broadband dongle is compatible with Windows 7, Linux and Mac computers and includes a microSD slot and has UK 3G spectrum support within.

Huawei has said their 3G dongle will be launched in time for this year’s World Cup for you to be able to support your team even while surfing the net but unfortunately they’ve not provided any pricing at this time.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Water City Dubai



Water City Dubai

Architectural Concept: Lilypad Floating City
Water City By now, most of us have heard about the Island Cities being built in Dubai , but Inhabitant has just done a feature on a new concept by artist Vincent Callebaut for a self-sufficient floating city that will never have to face a problem about finding land to build on.

Award-winning architect Vincent Callebaut has designed a self-sustainable Lilypad City as a long-term solution to the problem of rising sea levels caused by climate change. A Lilypad City would provide a home for 50,000 people and would float atop water. The artificial island includes a lake, mountains, shopping malls and drifts on the ocean currents.

The Lilypad would take advantage of all of today's green technologies, including generating power from the sun, wind and water, and would produce zero emissions from its residents.. Don't expect to see construction on one of these anytime soon, but don't be surprised if, like the Island Cities in Dubai , real estate starts branching out into the oceans in the next decade.