<![CDATA[Gizmodo: hong kong]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: hong kong]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/hongkong http://gizmodo.com/tag/hongkong <![CDATA[When You Try to Get a Cheap Xbox 360 HDD, It Can Only End in Tears]]> I refuse to pay $160 for a 120GB Xbox 360 HDD. But I need one, as my 20GB model is filling up. So I decided to order a cheap one from a shady Hong Kong website. What a mistake.

One of our interns found a sweet deal for a new 120GB HDD for the Xbox 360: $60. Sure, the website seemed a bit shady, and it shipped from Hong Kong, but $60 was a damn good price. So I ordered one.

A few weeks later, I get what appears to be a legit Microsoft Xbox 360 HDD. It comes in a distinctly non-legit box, but everything else looks OK. The problem? It's just the HDD, meaning I can't transfer anything over.

So, of course, I order a transfer cable from eBay. Only $10 this time, yet again from Hong Kong. This time, it doesn't come with the necessary disc to make the transfer.

So now I have a choice: either download an ISO of the transfer disc from any number of shady torrent sites, risking my computer and my Xbox in the process, or eat the $70 I've spent and just buy a legit HDD. At this point, I'm not even sure I trust the HDD I bought to work.

Is this a huge problem? No. Am I whining about something that I should have avoided by doing even a little bit of research first? Yes. Am I still annoyed and frustrated with this? Yes. So let this be a lesson to you: if you think you can outsmart Microsoft into paying less than their obscene HDD prices, you may be wrong.

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<![CDATA[Honey, Someone Shrunk Hong Kong]]> Dear Google, please make every single Google Maps city in the world look like this ultra-detailed, SimCity-like, isometric map of Hong Kong. Not only it looks beautiful, but if feels clear, useful, and you can get really close:

I love maps, and this is my favorite city map after the axonometric view of midtown Manhattan. [Edushi]

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<![CDATA[Pay Attention to the Road Please, Sir]]> This taxi driver in Hong Kong has somewhere between six and eight cellphones on his dash. Maybe he just uses phones people leave in the back? [Holygadzooks Flickr]

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<![CDATA[Meeting Brando, Hong Kong's USB Willy Wonka]]> I get a text message from a guy saying to meet him at the Outback Steakhouse at the Discovery Park in Tsuen. Ordinarily I might have passed, only this guy was Brando. Yes, that Brando.

The last time I'd traveled to Hong Kong, I'd narrowly missed meeting Brando thanks to hectic scheduling on all sides. But this time, nothing could stop me from my rendezvous with the legendary USB-gadget maven.

Except maybe... me having no clue where he was. I looked down at the text and blanked. Outback Steakhouse? Where? I consider myself pretty knowledgeable of Hong Kong geography, having traveled there at least a dozen times, but I had never heard of Tsuen before. Turns out this is why:

I don't think I ever thought of Hong Kong as big until that moment.

I was a good twenty minutes late. Red and huffy, I paused outside Outback and glanced around, trying to look for someone whose face matched the one blurry picture I had of Brando.

Maybe it's because the only things I knew about him involved his online store—a treasure trove of gadgets both useful (like the 7-in-1 USB charging orgy) and ridiculous (the choke-able chicken)—but he wasn't what I had imagined. My mental image was that of either a giant nerd, complete with dark suspenders and eyeglass frames taped in the middle, or one of those slick entrepreneurs with oiled back hair. Maybe, like most Hong Kong businessmen, a mixture of both.

Or perhaps, I gleefully envisioned, he'd be an amalgamation of his entire online store, a living embodiment of all things fanciful and useless, be-sprocketed and USB-ports-a-plenty. He'd come fully decked in Workshop regalia, sporting one of those laser pointing bluetooth headsets, his arms wrapped in data bands and possibly one of those tiny camera recorders slung around his neck (though truthfully, I wouldn't mind if that were left out of the ensemble. I'm uncomfortable in front of cameras).

Two boyish looking men, both decked out in hoodies and worn-in jeans, shyly approached me.

"Are you Elaine?" the shorter of the two asked. He waved, in his hand an iPhone. "I am Brando. Nice to meet you."

To be honest, Brando kinda looked like a blogger.

His friend, a tall shaggy-haired fellow with square-rimmed glasses, was called Lawrence and worked with him at his company. I'm still not sure why he was there, but I assume it was for support. There, as he sat across from me, munching on salad and telling me his life story, I couldn't help wondering, Did I make Brando nervous?

"I read a lot of Gizmodo," he told me. "I don't comment because my English isn't good, but I'm always happy to see our goods on there."

After a quick lunch (the first meal he'd eaten that day), we went to see Brando's Workshop.

The place looked like what would happen if a garage hobbyist, comp-sci college student, and nerdy teen mashed all their stuff together and exploded it into an otherwise sterile office. It was, in short, geek heaven.

Boxes, filled with USB cords, wacky flash drives, keychain laser pointers and who knows what else, were stacked on top of each other everywhere.

By one wall, they made a precarious citadel that towered over our heads like some gadgety sword of Damocles. According to Brando, a good chunk of these were being shipped out to other stores, including ThinkGeek. Now you know where they get some of their oddball products too.

Employees stepped gingerly around, avoiding the open containers the best they could. On several people's desks were even more boxes—full of stuff they were still testing, had just tested, were mailing out or were receiving back. Brando wasn't always sure which it was, but he assured me his employees knew.

The more I spoke with him, the more I realized Brando and Giz staffers have a lot in common.

Back in 1998, fresh out of university, Brando started a Palm enthusiasts' site. It became popular among Chinese Palm users and several accessory manufacturers started asking him to promote their products. That turned into a part-time job selling Palm peripherals.

In 2000, he quit his engineering job and went full time, founding Brando's Workshop in his apartment. Four months later, it was big enough to warrant an actual office.

In the beginning, all the Workshop sold was Palm accessories. But by the end of the year, he decided it was worth getting into other products as well.

Fast forward eight years: Brando now lords over 19 employees and takes up an entire floor of the building. He's expanded into USB trinkets, mobile peripherals, watches, toys, random electronics and most recently (and bizarrely) ladies accessories. Like blender brushes and nail stickers—serious ladies accessories.

Brando's "office" wasn't really an office at all, just a corner of the main floor, an alcove set slightly apart from the rest. Arrayed on the cabinet behind his desk were a slew of devices, including a big professional HD camera and a stack of laptops. I could see both a Macbook Air and a Toshiba R500.

“I don't use either of them,” Brando admitted. “I just like to collect things I find beautiful.”

In that vein, he told me some of the favorite gadgets he sold were the prettier ones, such as the spy camera and MP4 watch. In fact, he seemed especially hung up on the spy gadgets, pointing to a bunch that we hadn't covered and wondering aloud why not.

Despite being surrounded by the latest and greatest, Brando said his favorite and most memorable gadget of all time was still the Palm V. Back in 1999, when he used to ride an hour on Hong Kong's subway—the MTR—every morning, that's what kept him company.

“It was thinner than the iPhone but the battery lasted for very long. I would read novels and news on the train ride over. It's still very memorable for me,” he said.

“Palm didn't integrate with cellphones very well. The Palm OS is a very good OS, not like Windows Mobile. But they stopped making their own and switched to Windows Mobile... and so I switched to an iPhone,” he explained.

This was before news of the Palm Pre came out. When it got shown at CES, I sent him an email asking what he thought of it.

“I can't comment, because I haven't tested it,” he replied cautiously, sounding like a lover burnt. “I hope it has a nice open SDK for developers, then it can have a better future. If it is only a closed OS, no hope.”

Before I left, he insisted I see the storage room—the area where they keep everything they sell.

Inside, I felt like I was at a Lilliputian version of Costco: Metal shelves spilled forth a haphazardly categorized assortment of stuff. To my right was a set of tiny remote control cars. To my left was a motley of Bluetooth doodads. I turned a corner and was met by a collection of ladybug-themed fingernail clippers.

Being in there was a strange feeling—exhilarating and claustrophobic at the same time. We blog about millions of things, and the room felt like an aggregation of everything I'd ever written about in one windowless vault.

“Here are our best selling items... our hot items,” he told me, pointing at a particular bracket that, quite honestly, was hard to differentiate from others. I nodded, smiled, and scrambled to get out of there before something fell on me.

And then it was over. Brando thanked me again for coming, and as he walked me to the subway station for my hour long journey back downtown, he told me he was elated that anyone would be interested in visiting his tiny part of Hong Kong. I told him that was really sweet of him, and maybe caught a glimpse of a little blush around his ears.

The most interesting thing about Brando's Workshop, I thought, was how much his work sounded like ours.

Brando doesn't actually make the things he sells. Rather, he's more of a gadget hunter.

Brando said most of his early years at the Workshop were spent in conventions all over Asia, looking for vendors from which to source the weird and wonderful. Now that he has employees to do the grunt work, he spends a lot of time reading magazines and blogs, always on the search for new products that would be good for their company. He claims that ten new products are added to various sections of Brando's Workshop each day.

His only real criteria, he said, “I want it to be interesting. I want it to be fun.”

So do we, Brando. So do we.

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<![CDATA[Hong Kong Architect Turns 344-Square-Foot Space into Ultimate Transformer Apartment]]> Hong Kong architect and technophile Gary Chang has the most amazing apartment. His 344-square-foot space can be shifted into at least 24 different layouts, using a funhouse's worth of sliding walls and detachable shelving.

Chang has lived in this apartment since he was 14, moving in with his parents and three younger sisters. Back then, he used to sleep in the hallway. Now, he uses a hydraulic Murphy bed that he designed himself, which is usually hidden behind a sofa during the day.

Turning his apartment into what he's named a “Domestic Transformer” hasn't been cheap. It only cost $45,000 to buy, but his latest design efforts came with a $218,000 price tag.

Still, his experiment in small living is incredibly cool. Personally, if I had a quarter million to play with, I'd much rather spend it optimizing something creatively rather than on another boring McMansion. [NYtimes]

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<![CDATA[100Mbps Verizon FiOS to (Probably) Arrive in 2009]]> With Comcast upping its speeds to 50Mbps in a few markets, Verizon's gotta roll out a big, round number to compete, so they've announced, and then hedged, the upcoming rollout of 100Mbps FiOS service, starting hopefully in 2009.

Verizon technology director Vincent O'Byrne declared 2009 the year America finally breaks the 100Mbps barrier that Hong Kongers have, well, long since passed. O'Byrne was quick to note that the bump in speed isn't really essential to most Verizon customers, but that the number represents more of a marketing milestone that could give them a one-up on chief competitor Comcast.

Later, a Verizon spokesperson contacted Telephony Online, the original reporter, to perform some spectacular hedging: "Verizon expects to have its delivery processes for speeds like that locked down in 2009 so that service with speeds approaching 100 Mb/s would be enabled in the very near future," the spokesperson said. So Verizon is going to hit that landmark 100Mbps soon, but it appears for now there's no guarantee. No pricing was made available, either, although the current fastest tier, at 50Mbps, costs $145 without bundled phone service. [DSL Reports]

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<![CDATA[Chinese-Themed Microsoft Arc Mice Can Get Lost In Your Pottery Collection]]> During my visit to Hong Kong, Brian showed me to a local design store called G.O.D. (Goods Of Desire), which kind of reminded me of a China kitsch-themed Urban Outfitters. When I get a chance to go back there, I'm definitely saving up some money for these laser mice, a Microsoft Arc and G.O.D. mashup. Man, could you even tell computer mice were in the picture? Fooled me at first glance!

There's two G.O.D.-designed ARC mice for sale, one with a traditional Chinese tea pottery scheme and the other with an old-timey “mouse” drawing and character. Cute! Both use 2.4GHz wireless technology with a range of about 30 feet. Like the regular ARC, these can fold to half their size. No price was listed, but they're probably a tad more expensive than the $60 the regular ARC goes for. [QK123]

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<![CDATA[Spaceship Cellphone Makes All Your Calls a Blast]]> Step aside G1, out of the way iPhone, I think I've found my cellular of choice. This little gem of a communication device was discovered by Brian and I in a gadget shop in Hong Kong's Causeway Bay. Written on the side of the phone was “Shenzhou VII,” the name of China's third human spaceflight mission. Blam wanted to get it right away, but the shop owner asked an astronomical $180 for it. “I bet my stars I can get it for cheaper in China,” I promised him as he reluctantly handed it back.


A cursory search through taobao.com (the ebay of China) proved fruitless, but I did come across a Chinese site reviewing our stellar little handset. The Shenzhou VII mobile phone includes a 2MP camera, MP3 and MP4 capabilities, a microSD slot, USB, and—bet you didn't see this coming—astronaut themes. If anyone knows where to get this, please give me a holler! I don't want to end up looking like a space cadet in front of my boss. [Shanzhaiji]

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<![CDATA[Giant iPhone Display Runs OS X (This Time, At Least)]]> Eagle-eyed reader Phelipe Hamoui snapped these shots of the giant iPhone display in Hong Kong running Mac OS X. This marks a nice change from that embarrassing little slip-up that revealed a U.S. display was running (gasp upon gasp!) Windows XP. So take a deep breath, Mac Army. Everything's gonna be okay. [- Thanks, Phelipe!]

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<![CDATA[Officially Unlocked iPhones On Sale at Hong Kong Apple Store]]> Check out the Hong Kong Apple store online and you'll see a couple of lines of text that'll tempt, tease and beguile you if you're dreaming of an unlocked iPhone 3G: "iPhone 3G purchased at the Apple Online Store can be activated with any wireless carrier. Simply insert the SIM from your current phone into iPhone 3G and connect to iTunes 8 to complete activation." About $700 will get you an unlocked 8GB version, and the 16GB is just $800. Handy for the dev team, no doubt. [Hong Kong Apple Store via Slashphone]

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<![CDATA[Bill Gates Predicts the Future, Again]]> If you thought you were going to stop hearing about Bill Gates after his farewell, check out his latest predictions about what's going to be cooking in the next decade, straight from Microsoft Asia research arm's 10th Anniversary forum:

• The Internet will lead to a software revolution.

People often talk about this as the Internet service revolution. That will eventually lead to machines that have lots of server capacity, lots of low-cost computing, low-cost storage. And that will let us write software in an even more ambitious way, eliminating the last constraints we have.

• Computer interfaces will include touch, speech, and vision

They [computer interfaces] are fairly developed in the labs, I can say that in 10 years will be widespread.

• Artificial intelligence in robots. Maybe.

You might get artificial intelligence or robotics, but those are still so undeveloped, at least in terms of widespread impact.

Is that it? Google apps, iPhones, and halfwit robots? That's the future? Didn't all this nothingness actually happen in this decade? Oh the humanity. [CNN]

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<![CDATA[Cruise Ship In the Middle of Hong Kong Is Actually a Crazy Shopping Center]]> This cruise ship is called the Whampoa and it is stranded in a gigantic pool in the middle of Hong Kong's largest private housing state: Whampoa Garden. However, this Love Boat is sailing to nowhere: it's just a huge shopping mall full of restaurants, shops, and a hotel, built to look like a cruise ship. Looking at it up close, it really looks like one, down to the metal finish. In Google Maps, you realize how huge this thing is:

And now, the obligatory 80s reference you were all waiting for:

Love, exciting and new
Come Aboard. We're expecting you.
Love, life's sweetest reward.
Let it flow, it floats back to you.

Love Boat soon will be making another run
The Love Boat promises something for everyone
Set a course for adventure,
Your mind on a new romance.

Love won't hurt anymore
It's an open smile on a friendly shore.
Yes LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOVE! It's LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOVE! (hey-ah!)

Love Boat soon will be making another run
The Love Boat promises something for everyone
Set a course for adventure,
Your mind on a new romance.

Love won't hurt anymore
It's an open smile on a friendly shore.
It's LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOVE! It's LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOVE! It's
LOOOOOOOOOOOVE!
It's the Love Boat-ah! It's the Love Boat-ah!

Come on, sing it. You know you want to. Sing it! [stuff4restaurants—thanks Lola]

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<![CDATA[Tricycle House: It is Almost a Good Idea]]>
The tricycle house is one Hong Kong designer's mobile solution to the cramped and expensive housing problem facing his city. It features a door, a window, a writing desk and a fold-out bed contained within a 3 x 4 foot "hut." Despite the cramped living conditions, the idea has a lot of fans. During the video, a design student comments that "he has considered all of the necessities." Uh...bathroom? Privacy? Protection from the elements? Eh? Eh? [Reuters via Spluch]

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<![CDATA[Breakdancing Robots Bring Joy, Mirth, Wham! to Hong Kong Mall]]>
This is how one Hong Kong mall welcomes in Christmas: getting a bunch of golden robots to bust a move for distinctly underwhelmed shoppers. Well, wouldn't you be, if you had to listen to a 20-year old Wham! song, bleep versions of Jingle Bells and the like? [Raw Video via Spluch]


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<![CDATA[Hong Kong Fiber Optic Rates Prove Verizon's FiOS is a Rip-Off]]> While Verizon is out aggressively trying to sell the country on their FiOS fiber optic web connection packages, which range from $40 per month for 5Mbps to 30Mbps for $180 (extra for TV and phone service!), Hong Kong residents can now enjoy their own fiber optic connections from Hong Kong Broadband Network Limited&#8230; which happen to be a fraction of the price and many times faster than what we can get here. Yes, HK residents can now get a whopping 100Mbps fiber optic connection for a mere $48.50 a month. And that's the entry-level package.

How about 200Mbps for $88.20? Yeah, not quite enough, I agree. You might as well jump up to 1Gbps for $215.40 a month. But hey, you don't really need that, do you? You should be thanking Verizon for the opportunity to pay them for a pathetic 5Mbps connection. I mean, the US is so far down on the per-country broadband speed chart (the Japanese are enjoying 60Mbps average) that we should just be loving any crumbs the telecoms are willing to toss our way, right? Thanks again, Verizon! [CNNMoney via Broadband Reports]

Photo via

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<![CDATA[Hong Kong Mass Transit Railway riders can...]]> Hong Kong Mass Transit Railway riders can now get Wi-Fi access for 20HKD ($2.55) at all stations and trains. We're not sure whether the train to 2046 will cost more, less, or just make you yearn for the In the Mood for Love. [Butterboom via Akihabara News]

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<![CDATA[SanDisk CompactFlash Goes Gold]]> You won't care much about storage space if you're lucky enough to win one of these cards. They're the grand prize in SanDisk's Hong Kong contest. All you gotta do is buy the real deal, scratch off some numbers on the packaging, and if you win, you get these little nuggets of gold. So how much will they fetch you? About five grand US currency. Not enough to retire, but enough to make me wish I lived in Hong Kong.

SanDisk Gives Gold Memory Cards Away in Contest [Everything USB]

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<![CDATA[Real-Life Transforming Optimus Prime Costume]]> Our friends over at Everything USB just tipped us off to this real-life transforming Optimus Prime costume from Hong Kong. It's a real costume—there's actually a man inside—that transforms from robot to truck mode without making the wearer bend his spine in three different directions.

The costume looks pretty great and even includes details like the gun and face shield, but check out the guy when he takes off the outfit. Yeah, someone needs to work out some more.

Thanks Ian!

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<![CDATA[Hong Kong Taxis Offering Free HSDPA Access]]> Good news for anyone heading to Hong Kong (or anyone living there now). As part of a new ad campaign, Vodafone is fitting some of Hong Kong's cabs with free wireless Internet. The plan is to put a USB modem inside as many taxis as possible, so that anyone traveling with a laptop can connect and hook up to the Internet while your cabbie drives you to your destination. All you gotta do is make sure you hail a cab with a Vodafone billboard on top. Sadly, we have nothing even remotely close to that here in NY, otherwise I wouldn't mind paying the absurd cab fares we already pay.

Hong Kong Taxies Offer Free Access to HSDPA USB Modem [Everything USB]

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<![CDATA[User-Powered Gym Saves Money (For the Gym)]]> Imagine a gym that ran its lights and TVs off the energy that was generated by all the treadmills and stairmasters being used. That's exactly what some guy in Hong Kong did, hamsterizing his gym to power a few TVs and 60-watt light bulbs with workout-power.

This is just a gimmick to get more customers, since all the electricity generated in a year by these only adds up to $183, whereas the installation cost was $15,000. Still, kinda cool if they knock off some of the membership fees for participants. That would get rid of one of about six excuses we have not to work out.

Gym powered by clients [Uber Gizmo]

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