After the talking-to-yourself antics inspired by Bluetooth earpieces, the next tech innovation sure to make you look crazy is the Mouseless, the first truly invisible computer mouse.
Whoever was behind all those gorgeous touchscreens aboard the Enterprise from Star Trek must also have had a hand in creating NZXT's Sentry LXE, because this thing looks just as good. We need more colorful touchscreens in this world.
You could use this USB Typewriter with any computer, but, really, it truly shines when you use it with an iPad. That's because the iPad doubles as the unit's paper, and even scrolls by as you type.
Apple has made multitouch a hallmark of how you interact with the iPhone, the iPad, the iPod Touch and MacBook Pros. Their only product still using a normal mouse? Their Mac Pro towers. But that may be changing with the introduction of the Magic Trackpad.
Well, it's about damn time. It's a simple update, but a meaningful one: a new power strip from Japan's Sanwa that helps you keep track of your wattage thanks to an LCD screen on the unit. You can also turn...
Gamers with magic fingers will snap up this Microsoft SideWinder X4 keyboard, apparently so fast that it can turn off the lights and get into the bed before it gets dark. The secret is "advanced anti-ghosting technology," recognizing even the...
Gather round, those of you with networked computers, and gaze upon one of the best ways to attach storage to that network and share files at home or anywhere on the Internet. Behold PogoPlug, a $129 network attached storage (NAS)...
What, is it external drive day in the tech world? First we hear from Western Digital, and now LaCie brings style to the mix with a couple of aluminum external hard drives designed by Philippe Starck. Both the rounded LaCie...
Here's the easiest way to hook up a USB drive to a network we've seen yet. The $70 ($80 retail) Hitachi SimpleNET USB-to-Ethernet adapter is aptly named, because all you have to do is plug it into AC power, connect...
This prototype keyboard from Microsoft might change keyboards as we know them. Or it might go over like a Segway running Vista. It all depends on the answer to this question: Is a pressure-sensitive keyboard useful? The video above demonstrates...