Archive for March 28th, 2008

New Pantech concept phones for 2010

Friday, March 28th, 2008


Concept phones are great. They’re not intended to be full production models, but rather give a sense of what can be achieved when designers are freed from the constraints that commercial mobile phones must operate in. You know, things like style, usability, cost, and, perhaps most important of all, the laws of physics!

Korean manufacturer Pantech is particularly fond of its concept phones, dishing out several new designs each year. Although none come to fruition, it’s interesting to see the designs nonetheless, and it at least points to teh direction that mobile phones may take in the years to come.

The concept phones shown here have all been designed from students of various Korean Universities, in response to a challenge by Pantech to design a mobile phone for 2010. The one above is called the Wavy Stream, and looks the least conventional of the set.

Read on to see the other four concept phones designed for Pantech.

The next phone in the list is called the the Waterfall Fish. It seems the designs of the phones weren’t the only things the students were given free reign over - the names they gave the phones seem to have a concept feel to them as well!

Next in the list comes the Simplice Section. Looking more like an old retro calculator than a mobile phone, it at least resembles today’s mobile phones more than some of the other concept phones shown here.

The fourth concept phone is the Cell Dot. This is the most conventional of the lot, and of them all, would be the most likely to make it to production if it wasn’t for the single button on its front. Given the current trend towards buttonless phones that rely solely on touchscreens pioneered by the iphone, no phone worth its salt in 2010 will have something as archaic as buttons on it!

The final concept phone is called the Lily Tower, and obviously takes its inspiration from, well, a tower of lillies! Personally, I can’t see this one taking off, as it looks too much like a fancy fixed line wireless phone, and its curved edges wouldn’t work well in a pocket.

Akihabara News conducted a short poll asking which of these phones its readers preferred. Of them all, the Simplice Section was favourite, closely followed by the Cell Dot, both of which, revealingly, look more like today’s phones than the other concepts on display. Seems that no matter what designers might think future mobile phones might look like, we users prefer our tried and trusted designs that we’re already familiar with. Good job we’re not paid to design new phones, then, else we’d still be living with the bricks that were around in the 80s!

[Source: Akihabara News]

Digital Photography And People Pictures

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Filed in archive Photography by jim on March 28, 2008

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Most people who have a digital camera use it, among other things, to take pictures of other people.

How many times have you heard: "Smile", "Look into the camera", "Hold still", etc?

Well those commands may be OK for a formal portrait, and those are just fine, but this type of picture doesn't really capture the essence of an individual.

What you want is a picture that looks natural, not posed. For this type of shot you'll want your subject to do something other than to stare directly into the lens and have the result look like a mug shot.

This article is written by someone who maintains the same train of thought when it comes to taking people pictures with your digital camera.

Here's more on the way to pose an individual for a naturally good portrait.

Inkjet Printers suck … down?

Friday, March 28th, 2008

I admit the title of this post is a bit cryptic, but bear with me. If you own an inkjet printer, the short video referenced here is worth a look. In case you’re wondering why your printer may be running out of ink quicker than you think it should or maybe just plain not working, take a look as the author rips apart his own printer; this may be why. While I’m not sure that this really applies to all inkjets, I’ll bet it’s true of many.

Aptera to make cameo in next Star Trek film?

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Posted Mar 28th 2008 12:35AM by Darren Murph
Filed under: Transportation
For those unaware, “veiled in secrecy” is an extreme understatement when it comes to the next Star Trek flick — if there actually is a next Star Trek flick, that is. Nevertheless, an undercover photographer managed to grab some recent shots of a film production operating under the title “Corporate Headquarters,” and a few snaps caught a vehicle that looks awfully similar to the 300MPG Aptera. Coincidentally enough, said craft was also missing from last week’s New York Auto Show. Look, we aren’t piecing together clues in a valiant attempt to get you stoked about seeing a space aged automobile in a movie that may or may not even be real (okay, it’s real), but then again, it’s hard to shake the evidence.

[Via AutoblogGreen]

A-DATA goes overboard with the Eee PC craze; unveils Eee PC branded flash memory

Friday, March 28th, 2008

While most people would realize that any USB flash drive and any SD, SDHC or MMC card will work perfectly with the Eee PC, some people will always feel a branded product is better. Perhaps in a marketing plan to take advantage of an already hot name, A-DATA has announced a white Eee PC branded SDHC memory card and USB flash drive.

The memory card, which is listed as “The 2nd HDD for your Eee PC,” seems to be nothing more than an regular 8GB SDHC card with the Eee PC logo on it. As for the USB drive, that also offers 8GB of storage and is the standard A-DATA S701 USB flash drive. Both storage options are listed as being a “special Eee PC edition” and are newly colored white, which will match at least some of the Eee’s. The USB flash drive also comes with a leather carrying strap.

Pricing information was not available for the “special Eee PC edition” SDHC card or USB flash drive, but just a guess—I am sure you will be able to find cheaper, and still reliable memory elsewhere.

Via [Eee Site]

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Kodak releases the M820, M1020 digital photo frames

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Kodak has released two new digital photo frames, the 8-inch M820 and the 10-inch M1020. In addition to displaying photo’s both frames can also play videos and MP3’s, have two memory card slots and has Kodak’s quick touch border with back lighting.

Kodak’s Quick Touch Border with back lighting helps users in viewing and scrolling digital photos. It prevents the main display from getting smudged by the user’s finger. To make it even easier to navigate through the photos, the digital photo frames touch panel is equipped with yellow lighting illuminates to tell users which part of the digital frame to touch. The digital frames also allow users to create, edit and view the photos in slideshows.

Viewing photos using the two digital frames is easily done just by inserting a memory card or USB flash drive containing your photos. For photos residing on your PC, the frames can be connected using a USB cable. You can use the Kodak EasyShare software to download and upload photos from your PCs to the frames. You can also create photo slideshows in your computer then upload it to the frame for viewing later on.

Both models have two memory card slots aside from the 128MB of internal memory.  So, you can upload a good number of photos in either model.

Both the M820 and M1020 are already available for $179 and $229 respectively. That makes one inch of the digital photo frame worth $25. Definitely not a huge amount to spend for additional viewing pleasure.

Product [Kodak] Via [I4U]

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Surface to hit consumerdom in 2011, maybe sooner

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Posted Mar 27th 2008 10:29PM by Nilay Patel
Filed under: Desktops
The last we heard about a consumer-oriented version of Microsoft Surface, Steve Ballmer was saying that the company was trying to get it out ASAP — which is apparently three years, we’ve just learned. That’s the word from Tom Gibbons, the MS VP in charge of Specialized Devices and Applications, who says Microsoft can “absolutely see how” to get Surface to consumers by 2011, but that it’ll try to beat that deadline if possible. Of course, the $10,000 commercial version of Surface still hasn’t been released to high-profile customers like T-Mobile and Harrah’s, and although it’s starting to make semi-random promo appearances here and there. Still, though, 2011? We’re getting pretty sick of old-school Hungry Hungry Hippos here, people — let’s make this happen.

Google releases Mail Trends for Gmail

Friday, March 28th, 2008

A Google developer recently released Mail Trends, a Phyton based program that analyzes and visualizes email data. Developer Mihai Parparita is associated with Google Reader, so if you are familiar with the Trends page in Google Reader you may see some similarities with the version for Gmail.

Google Mail Trends can show distribution data of messages by year, month, day, day of week and time of day as well as distribution of messages by size and a user’s top 40 largest messages. If you want to know the top people you send mail to, you can do so as Google Mail Trends can also show your emails’ incoming and outgoing traffic.

To date, Google Mail Trends is only available for Gmail use only. But knowing Google, they might offer the mail trends to other e-mail services that can be extracted from an IMAP server. Other data that can be gathered include: the top senders, recipients and mailing lists you’re on, distributions of senders, recipients and mailing lists over time, and the distribution of thread lengths and the lists and people that result in the longest threads. More like everything you want to know about your web mail activity. Ideally, only a few minutes is what it will take to generate the e-mail data but if you have tens of thousands of mails, then it may take awhile.

Via [Googlified]

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MIT spin-off 1366 Technologies touts better, cheaper solar cells

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Posted Mar 27th 2008 4:57PM by Donald Melanson
Filed under: Misc. gadgetsIn what’s become an increasingly familiar tune, a startup company has announced that it’s just pulled in a significant haul of funding based on its promises of better, cheaper solar power. In this case, the company in question is 1366 Technologies, which was spun out of research from MIT and is headed by MIT professor Ely Sachs (who is taking a leave of absence to focus on the company). According to the company, it’s found a way to make solar cells from multicrystalline silicon that are just as efficient as ones from single-crystal silicon, which is normally much more expensive to produce. In terms of hard numbers, that translates to solar cells that are 27 percent more efficient than your average solar cell, and (in its current state) a cost a $2.10 per watt. Sachs says that cost will come down to $1.65 per watt when manufacturered on a commercial scale, however, and will eventually drop to $1.30 a watt with some “planned improvements.” That’s still short of the $1 a watt goal they’re aiming for (which is roughly the cost of coal), but the company seems confident they can hit that mark by 2012 with some “anticipated advances.”

[Via Physorg]

Samsung launches 10.2-megapixel L210 point-and-shoot

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Posted Mar 27th 2008 6:48PM by Darren Murph
Filed under: Digital Cameras
Now isn’t this bugger just as cute as a button? Even if red isn’t your hue of choice, Samsung’s L210 point-and-shoot comes in black and silver motifs too, and while the 10.2-megapixel sensor is probably a bit much for a shooter this size, we suppose Sammy’s just following the trend. Aside from the pocket-friendly design and 3x optical zoom lens, you’ll also find a 2.5-inch lcd monitor, red eye correction, optical and digital image stabilization, face detection, an SVGA movie mode and ten whole megabytes of internal storage. Should that fill up on you during your outing (we know, chances are slim), you can slam an SD / SDHC / MMC card in for additional space. Not too terribly shabby for $199.95, yeah?

[Via gadgets-Weblog]

Gallery: Samsung launches 10.2-megapixel L210 point-and-shoot

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