![]() A rear cutout allows easy access for accessory cables. Sonoma Wire Works’ accelerates that trend with the introduction of the $149 Sonoma Wire Works: Someday soon, you won’t be able to make music without having an iPad or iPhone. The device plugs into your iOS device’s dock-connector port, allowing you to jack in guitars and other instruments via 1/4-inch and 1/8-inch (3.5mm) input jacks. You can even use both inputs to, say, record vocal and guitar tracks at the same time. The hardware is compatible with several guitar-oriented iOS apps. The first units should begin shipping in four-to-six weeks, Sonoma said this week. Speakal knows just where you’re coming from, and offers help in the form of the $120 Speakal: Who among us doesn’t love to mix great music and wine? Wait, did I say wine? I meant swine. (The new product joins similar products such as the IHog Portable iPod Docking Station Speaker System, a larger version of the company’s older iPig. IBoo.) The device includes with a 20-watt subwoofer and 28 total watts of stereo sound. The iHog can provide up to five hours of music playback on a single charge of its lithium battery. The device includes a wireless remote that control the both the speaker system and your iPod. Speakal says the shape of the iHog is more than simply adorable: It also provides 360-degree sound, so you won’t have to constantly re-adjust its position when you take it out for a visit to the farm. (The company does not list the iPhone as being compatible.) Barbecue sauce, however, is not included. Toddy Gear: Keeping your iOS device’s screen free of smudges is a never-ending chore. Toddy Smart Cloths designed for touchscreen cleaning-and adding a little bit of design sizzle. ![]() The microfiber cloths come in dozens of designs and are priced at $10 apiece for the standard size, or $15 for the larger cloths the latter are also usable as a pocket square for the more nattily dressed among us. The new line is available at Best Buy and Target stores.Griffin Technologies has shown off its new education products at the 2014 International Society for Technology in Education conference. The 2019 biographical film Stan & Ollie includes the actors recreating Laurel and Hardy's routine of singing of The Trail of the Lonesome Pine as done on stage, as well as depictions of their dance routine from 'Way Out West'.Chief among the new products is the Survivor Slim case for the iPad Air. The cu-coo motif is based on the call of the common cuckoo.Ī number of their songs are accompanied with a dance routine, the most famous of which is their dance to the song "At The Ball, That's All" sung by The Avalon Boys in Way Out West (1937). The original theme, recorded by two clarinets in 1930, was re-recorded with a full orchestra in 1935. In Laurel's eyes, the song's melody represented Hardy's character (pompous and dramatic), while the harmony represented Laurel's own character (somewhat out of key, and only able to register two notes: "cu-coo"). Generally known as "The Dance of the Cuckoos" it was copyrighted with the name "Coo ! coo ! radio time signal" and was first heard on the opening credits for Blotto (1930) and the Spanish version of Night Owls (1930). Laurel heard the tune on the station, and asked Hatley to use it as the Laurel and Hardy theme song. The duo's "cuckoo" theme, entitled "Dance of The Cuckoos", was composed by Roach musical director Marvin Hatley as the on-the-hour chime for the Roach studio radio station. ![]() Common cuckoo song, Kaluga region, Russia ![]()
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