The best and worst tech products of 2008

Mon Dec 15, 2008 3:42PM EST

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Lists like this are awfully subjective, but always fun to work on. As Christmas approaches, it's time to reminisce about the products that really floated my boat in 2008... and a few of the ones that made me run away screaming.

Without further ado, here are my -- completely personal -- picks for some of the best products to come from the world of technology from 2008.

The Best

Gateway MC7803u laptop - It has modest specs and average-to-good performance, but $1,000 flat gets you a gorgeous, 16-inch screen and a distinctive, classy chassis, complete with leather trim. It's altogether an excellent value and has all the features that virtually every user needs in a portable.

Rock Band 2 - Arguably the best game of the year -- I find it humbling that I listen to more music while playing Rock Band than I do on my iPod. The ongoing addition of new -- and good -- music to the game makes it an ongoing favorite at Null HQ.

Lenovo IdeaPad S10 - If you must buy a netbook, try Lenovo's outstanding mini, which is exceptionally powerful for its feature set and size and priced to move.

Intel Core i7 CPU - This new CPU is the fastest and most capable microchip on the block, hands down, and it won't melt your computer along the way. Can't wait for the mobile version to arrive in 2009.

Hulu - This web TV service really came into its own in 2008 after a slow and rocky start. YouTube gets all the press (and about 100 times the traffic), but Hulu has the full-length, high-quality commercial shows and snippets that people actually want to watch. And the player is snappier in response than anything else on the market.

Fabrik [re]drive - Environmentalism in the tech world doesn't have to mean just a good take-back program. The [re]drive is made of bamboo and recyclable aluminum, making it not just more eco-conscious than any other hard drive on the market, but better looking too.

Sony Xperia X1 - If it weren't for the $800 price tag, you'd see X1 handsets in the hands of all the digerati instead of the iPhone. (Yeah, I like the iPhone 3G, too, but the atrocious battery life is cause enough to keep it off this year's "best" list.)

Herman-Miller Embody - Can a man fall in love with a chair? Yes, yes he can.

The Worst

Blu-ray - I'm happy to see that Blu-ray players have come down in price... but the media has not, and there's no way I'm paying $25 to watch Step Brothers. Plus the technology is still, bafflingly, dog-slow to respond. There's a very loud and vocal minority that insists that Blu-ray will be a huge success. The market would seem to indicate otherwise. (And no, I am not a disgruntled HD DVD player owner; never owned one.)

Mint.com - Lots of writers hail Mint.com's finance tracking system as the best thing since Coca-Cola Classic, but after weeks with the service I've never gotten it to work right. It still can't grab all my account information from one of the biggest banks in the world... and every month I am (wrongly) chastised for spending over $5,000 on groceries, the category into which all my spending is invariably dumped.

DRM in All Its Forms - Why does DRM still exist? It's so aggravating and generates so many lawsuits that promising products like RealDVD get sued off the planet within days of launching. Three months after launch, RealDVD is still "temporarily" off the market as the company deals with a Hollywood lawsuit.

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  • 86 Posted by lsvtecjohn3 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:58PM EDT Report Abuse

    this article is crap and half the people in here don't know what their talking about. The Sony Xperia x1 is a sexy phone but windows mobile on a touch phone is horrible at best, and windows mobile isn't easy to use as the iPhone operating system. Blu ray is goodt, but if buy a blu ray play you're a fool not because of the price of it or the price of the movies but because it's a dead technology. Everything is going to going go Digital

  • 87 Posted by denncorby on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:41PM EDT Report Abuse

    You miss the point: the iPhone is for kids and those who need an earbud in their head at all times; the Xperia is for grownups who actually need a phone for communication and business. Sony is the hands down winner by ten miles.

  • 88 Posted by solopassenger on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:32PM EDT Report Abuse

    iPhone, the number one phone in just two years. This dictates it as one of the best and groundbreaking electronics ever. Period. Chris Null gets more and more ridiculous with every column he twitters out from that brain of his. Also, the Sony phone is so completely over priced its laughable to think Chris actually included it as "best of".

  • 89 Posted by roycej2000 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:53PM EDT Report Abuse

    Saying Blu-ray is one of the worst products is probably the stupidest thing I've seen in print all year. Blu-ray is the successor to DVD. Do you think people are buying millions of HDTVs to watch standard definition? And the comments are priceless: "Sure, Blu Ray is great quality but that's ALL it has to offer in comparison to standard." Well duh...obviously, if you don't care about quality, you won't need Blu-ray, LOL.

  • 90 Posted by michael489 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:17PM EDT Report Abuse

    I find the whole argument about the bluray kinda odd. I have a PS3 and by the time I put the disk in and sit on my couch, it is up and running...Slow?? never experienced slow with it. And the quality is great. I never had a preference over bluray or HDDVD but am satisfied with the PS3. Seems kinda strange that the worst technology is based on somewhat higher prices for media and allegedly slow speed that is pretty much unnoticable. Shouldnt this be about what the bluray is capable of? But to each his own.

  • 91 Posted by glucas7 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    Who cares how much better quality blu-ray is from dvd, you can order virtually any movie in hd from your cable provider for like $6 nowadays. Blu-ray won't fail because people are satisfied with dvds, it will fail because there are more prudent ways to get high-quality digital media other than buying an overpriced plastic disc in a store.

  • 92 Posted by glucas7 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    And if you want blu-ray for the ownership aspect, I'm sure that soon you'll be able to buy movies and download them onto your cable box for keeps anyway. TiVo/DVR already offers that to a large extent anyway, and for free if you subscribe to the HD channels. Blu-ray is not the heir to the dvd, a 100% digital format is.

  • 93 Posted by aluisdeb@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:51PM EDT Report Abuse

    I found the same issues with Mint.com. I use yodlee.com and even though at first I had issues with them connecting to USAA Bank i contacted them and it was fixed within 48 hours - I havent had a problem since. As for Blu-ray, who knows, it sure seems the electronic stores are pushing it really hard. My gullible parents went to Best Buy for a TV and came out with not only a new TV but also a Blu-ray player and now my mom thinks Blu-ray is the end all, be all of movie watching - despite the hefty price tag.

  • 94 Posted by dlaury on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    Wow, it costs you $25 to rent a Blu-Ray movie? Where do you rent at? I only pay $1 a month more to enable Blu-Ray on my netflix account.

  • 96 Posted by chess613 on Wed Jan 7, 2009 1:39PM EST Report Abuse

    I have to side with macguru75 and dakotazgirl101 on this one - I've had several cellphones and multiple mp3 players (like the 1st gen Nomad Jukebox - one of the worst purchases I've ever made). I've had the Samsung i300, the i330, the blade, and there's not a phone that incorporates mp3 music playability, web searching and other contents (constantly growing with the App Store and Cycor for the jailbreakers) than this phone. Easily the best phone I've ever had.

  • 97 Posted by sharpmodeldesign on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:17PM EDT Report Abuse

    You people are making me feel old. Blu-ray won the format war the same way vhs beat betamax, more capacity. As for the cost, my first vhs purchase was Indiana Jones. It cost $89. Granted it was expensive, but there wasn't a Blockbuster on every corner. Blockbuster didn't even exist. It wont be long, HD movies and games will be on sd cards.

  • 98 Posted by lincheng_wang on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:52PM EDT Report Abuse

    Blu-ray can not convince consumer that it is different from traditional DVD. Visual quality and etc that Blu-ray claims make it sound like an upgrade from traditional DVD. Not a break-thru. It is not good in marketing Blu-ray. The reality is that internet TV is killing Blu-ray. By taking the advantage of high performance video compression algorithms, such as H.264 and VC1, video on internet enjoys the balance of rate and distortion/quality.

  • 99 Posted by joegi50 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    Blue Ray is the worst with many problems, too expensive, monopoly, and all DRM protections with bugs. I would urge consumers not to touch it. DVD is good enough and accessible.

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