Apple has quietly removed the original iPad mini from both its website and the Apple Store.
It was about time, after all. The mini was introduced in 2012, yet was still being sold alongside its two successors for a reduced price of $249 for the 16GB model (down from the original $329).
It was the last iOS device Apple still sold without a Retina display – its panel is just 1024 x 768 or 163 ppi . It’s also the last iPad running on 32-bit architecture, so developers should at least have a bit of an easier time working across devices.
Though you can still buy refurbished devices and resellers will still have some available as they empty their stock, it looks like Apple will no longer be producing new ones from here on out. So long.
➤ Apple quietly pulls original iPad mini from web site and Apple Store [9to5Mac]
Get started with hardware: The Complete Arduino Starter Kit & Course Bundle
If you have an interest in electronics, an Arduino is a fantastic entrypoint. The Complete Arduino Starter Kit and Course Bundle provides you with your very own microcontroller, plus the hardware accessories and necessary knowhow for building projects.
From a garage door opener to a Twitter-connected coffee pot, makers around the world have created some pretty amazing things with Arduinos. To help you follow in their footsteps, this bundle comes with a ARDX Arduino Starter Kit and three video courses. The kit includes an Arduino Uno, along with breadboards, LEDs, jumper wires, a buzzer, pushbuttons, a motor, plenty of resistors, and much more besides. It comes with a booklet, which shows you how to build 13 different circuits through simple diagrams.
The tuition kicks off with a basics course, teaching the fundamentals of the Arduino hardware, and how to program with commands. This track also includes content on electronics design, and the tools you will need to use. The other two courses focus on building an Arduino-powered RC car, and how to set up an environment monitoring system with an Arduino brain.
All the courses come with lifetime access, and at $75.99 , the bundle takes 81 percent off the standard price of the kit and courses. You can order it now from TNW Deals to grab free shipping. This deal ships to the continental US only.
➤ Get this deal
Flare Audio R2PRO headphones: Brilliant sound and nothing more
Britain has a stellar reputation for creating studio quality speakers. Bowers & Wilkins , Funktion-One , Gale and KEF all maintain a high standing among competition from abroad. Another such company is Flare Audio , based on the south coast. The award winning speaker maker supplies recording studios, live festivals and even the occasional cinema .
More recently, however, the company has got into headphones. Its current Kickstarter campaign introduced a pair of in-ear buds – in six material and color variations – and two over-ear models incorporating technology that Flare claims has never been used before in portable audio. Can a plucky British upstart reinvent the headphone industry?
I was given a pair of the R2PRO Titanium ear buds to try out. The PROs are top of the pile when it comes to the in-ear range, coming in at $310 (£200) if you buy on Kickstarter, or an eye-watering $620 (£400) if you wait for full production.
The company says the earphones will definitely launch later this year. The Kickstarter campaign is more to raise awareness than source the funds to put them into production. So please do buy them now to avoid a massive mark-up later.
My pair arrived in a tiny, almost ring-sized box, which feels a bit underwhelming. Trying to get the headphones out of their enclosure was nigh on impossible with my fat fingers. I had to resort to gently sliding a knife down the side to remove the internal packaging.
The first thing I noticed was just how small these buds are. I have a cheap pair of Adidas sport headphones for the gym, and they look like monsters compared to these. There’s no labelling anywhere, not even a simple ‘L’ or ‘R’ to indicate which ear you should put them in. Just black, silver and a gold tipped headphone jack. (Since publishing, we have been told that the headphones will feature branding and ‘L’ and ‘R’ indicators).
Inside the box, you’ll also find a pair of professional grade Comply Isolation memory foam tips. Sadly, they come in a rather unseemly plastic bag which makes them look more like something you’d be handed on a long-haul flight.
To get the R2PROs into your ears you have to squash the foam with your fingers before inserting and holding for 10 seconds. That sounds awkward, but it does mean they form a pretty tight seal without the need for active noise canceling.
Once in, I was surprised by just how comfortable they were. I barely noticed they were there. I managed to sit at my desk with them in for eight hours and never once needed to take them out because my ears were aching. The headphones did start to itch after four hours, but that would be classed as excessive use. Most people would actually step away from their laptop at some point during that time.
I have a pair of Bowers & Wilkins P5s which crush the cartilage on my ears meaning I have to take them off after an hour or so. So I was relieved to find a pair of headphones that I can wear all day. But how do they sound?
This is what Flare really wants you to focus on. The tiny buds are made from a solid block of titanium, which has a molecular structure that prevents vibrations. Inside there’s a pressure balanced micro 5mm neodymium driver that Flare claims eliminates audible distortion completely.
I listen to a lot of streamed music through my laptop, and so I wasn’t expecting to get much of a difference between these and my P5s. But I was surprised. The R2PROs delivered one of the most pleasant listening experiences I’ve ever had.
The sound is so stable. Even when streaming stuff from BBC’s iPlayer which guts and compresses audio files to within an inch of their life. There were no flare ups in the treble or squashy bass notes. Which felt, well, a little weird.
Previously when I’ve put on bass heavy music, that classic wobble feeling you get when a pair of headphones reaches its capacity is satisfying, and gives you goosebumps. With the R2s however that’s not there. For an audiophile that’s totally fine, but for someone who might be thinking of graduating from cheap buds to something you’d guard with your life, it can be a bit disorientating.
This is a pair of headphones for someone who wants to hear every bleep, beat, or pluck of a guitar string, and not just have something familiar to soothe your way from home to the office and back again. They compel you to pick your way through songs rather than just ignore them, which is a genuinely thrilling experience.
However, for me, a pair of ear buds this expensive needs to make me feel a little more, special. The complete absence of branding is at odds with what every other headphone manufacturer is doing. Companies like Beats Audio understand that headphones aren’t simply a tool for listening to music – they’re a badge that tells other people a bit about who we are.
Flare Audio has hidden all of that, choosing instead to focus on the music and nothing more. That will appeal to a lot of people who care about what they put in their ears. For everyone else, the unassuming packaging, the plastic bag for the foam tips and the absence of any noticeable sign of high quality audio – bar the build quality will leave a lot of consumers feeling a bit put off.
I love the R2PROs for everything they aren’t, but would I pay more than $600 (£400) for them? Absolutely not.
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