32 posts categorized "Electronics Trade Shows"

01/09/2013

CES 2013: Samsung Unveils An 'Entertainer's Fridge'

Samsung-fridge

Samsung has expertise with consumer electronics — including TVs, laptops and cameras — and they also develop appliances. Now they're combining the two areas by putting an LCD display on a fridge.

At CES 2013, Samsung unveiled the 32-cubic-feet T9000 Four-Door Refrigerator (we like the four French doors, by the way) and is billing it as "the home entertainer's ultimate refrigerator" for several reasons. For starters, the LCD display can run apps, allowing you to check your calendar, weather and recipes on the screen. At the company's CES press conference announcing the T9000, Samsung put the focus on Evernote, which lets users share photos, videos and recipes. Those whose recipes live on their smartphones may find that a fridge display could reduce greasy fingerprints on iPhone screens.

As a refrigerator, the T9000 parallels industrial coolers in temperature and humidity control. With two compressors, three evaporators and other sensors, the refrigerator's cooling system can keep food fresher for longer.

Perhaps the most compelling reason why the T9000 is billed an entertainer's refrigerator is the ability to alter the function of the bottom-right compartment, which can convert into either fridge or freezer space. That'll be handy for Thanksgiving.

Credit: Samsung



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01/07/2013

CES 2013: Gorgeous Hard Drive By Philippe Starck

Blade-runner-1
Design virtuoso Philippe Starck's latest project has popped up at CES in Las Vegas: It's a hard drive.

Boring, you might think, but look how gorgeous this thing is. Inspired by the movie of the same name, the Blade Runner is a 3.0 portable hard drive from LaCie that contrasts the sleek aluminum used as a material against the "angular cage-like shell" of the exterior, according to the company. Here's Starck in his own words:

Blade-runner-2
"In my design nothing is useless -- style, symbolism or functionality," said Starck, who design credits include the super yacht of the late Steve Jobs. "In the Blade Runner, the warm interior electronics are encased in a mystifying shell, and the blades are the radiator that cools it down. The suspension gives space for air to circulate around the hard drive, and the metal material increases the temperature conduction."

The front of the drive features Starck's signature plus symbol, which functions as a power button and glows orange when there's activity.

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The Blade Runner has a limited-edition run of 9,999 produced. No available ship date yet, but the drive will retail at $299.

Credit: All images, Alice Truong/DNews

CES 2013: What to Expect

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Attendees preview the latest gadgets -- and a live trampoline act -- in the North Hall of the Las Vegas Convention Center. Credit: CES

By FoxNews.com

Apple won’t be there. Nor will Google. And for the first time in many years, Microsoft won’t have its own booth. But the International Consumer Electronics Show (Jan. 8 - Jan. 11), one of the largest and longest running tech trade shows around, is still expecting one of its biggest years ever.

Despite a couple tepid years following the recession, CES is back to setting records. The Las Vegas show remains the ultimate platform for thousands of companies to show off their latest wares with aplomb with the arrival of the new year.

CES 2013 will be the biggest CES ever with over 3,000 exhibits showing off 20,000 new products across 1.87 million square feet of floor space, the CEA (the Consumer Electronics Association, the show’s governing body) announced last month. Here’s what we can expect from what is still one of the greatest tech trade shows on Earth.

The Rise of the Startups
Microsoft isn’t the only juggernaut bowing out of the gadget extravaganza. Nokia, Dell and HP are all skipping this year’s CES along with perennial no-shows like Google, Amazon and Apple. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing for a show that’s traditionally been dominated by heavyweights like Intel and Sony.

WIDE ANGLE: CES 2012: Gadgets Galore and What's in Store

Hardware is the new software and, as The Wall Street Journal reported in August, a new generation of Silicon Valley start-ups are turning their back on the web and actually making stuff now. In the age of Kickstarter, expect big ideas from bit part players (like the Pebble smartwatch, which raised $10 million). From an innovation perspective, this can only be a good thing.

Samsung’s Big Party
This year could be all about Samsung, which will be one of the biggest players strutting its stuff. The Korean conglomerate has rapidly taken up the mantle of “the other Apple” with an endless array of smartphone and tablet devices, including the blockbuster “iPhone killer” the Galaxy SIII (there are rumors Samsung may even unveil the SIV). Samsung has a lot in store this year, including “unprecedented” smart TVs (check out the teaser) and even a state-of-the-art bendable phone display.

The Ghost of Microsoft
Officially, Microsoft is done with CES, but the company will be there in spirit thanks to the flop that is Windows 8. This will be another chance for Ballmer and co. to push their controversial operating system through a plethora of newly imagined hybrid touchscreen devices. Lenovo, Asus and others will be trying desperately to catch our attention with "post-pc" devices that swivel, twist and fold. 

Smarter TVs, Smarter TV Subscriptions
Another year at CES means another year of bigger, thinner, better TVs. If last year was about 3D, this year is all 4K and OLED, which means higher resolutions, sleeker frames and more vibrant colors. And pricier sets. Much pricier sets.

ANALYSIS: Plastic Could (Finally) Replace Glass

The flipside of that is content for our big expensive screens. Intel is introducing its own set-top box and TV service in an effort to get its chips into our living rooms (after missing the boat on getting their chips into our pockets), according to Techcrunch. The proposed service would theoretically allow consumers to pick what channels they’d like to subscribe to versus paying $80 for 200 channels you never watch -- which sounds great, but we’ll believe it when we see it.

The “Internet of Things”
Chips are getting smaller, networks faster (slowly but surely at least) and everyone’s got a smartphone -- which means smarter, well, everything. Indeed, after many false starts, the “smart home” may have finally arrived with Internet-connected appliances, like the Philips Hue and Belkin WeMo. You know, “smart” lightbulbs (and of course, there's an app for that).

Gesture Control
It’s about time we started moving away from the mouse, home row keys and perpetually misplaced remote controls. With the advent of technologies like facial recognition, eye-tracking, voice recognition and gesture control, expect brand new ways to communicate with your machines.

Phones With Gig Screens
Bigger isn’t necessarily better but trust us, it’s inevitable. Phones with even bigger screens are on the way. We’re talking 5 inch screen, or even 5 and a half inchers. Just don’t call it a phablet.

Connected Cars
Over 100,000 square feet of show floor space will be filled just by automakers. Companies like Ford, Audi and Kia will all be hawking cars that seamlessly integrate with your cloud.

The Continued Slow Death of the Point-and-Shoot
The industry response to Android phones with incredible built-in cameras? Cameras with built-in Android. Ugh.

Get More from FoxNews.com/Tech




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When Will My Fridge Tweet Me?

Smartphone
Smart appliances will soon become a regular part of the household.

Smart appliances are evolving from sci-fi concept to retail offering this year, with new showroom models that can send a text message when your clothes are dry or notify you when a power outage knocks out your fridge.

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week, appliance manufacturers Whirlpool and LG are unveiling new washers, dryers and refrigerators that connect with their owner's smartphones or tablets through home-based wi-fi networks, letting them know when to change filters, schedule maintenance or the cheapest time of day to wash a load of clothes.

"We’re not looking at having the fridge tweet to you, but it can send e-mails or SMS," said Warwick Stirling, Whirlpool global director of energy and sustainability. “We’re trying to focus on ways to make tasks easier and simpler, making processes more efficient rather than more gadget-y or gizmo-y.”

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Stirling said the devices will be available for sale in March under its "Sixth Sense Live" brand. Whirlpool’s new Bluetooth-capable CoolVox refrigerator lets consumers play music through the fridge using an app.

Meanwhile, Korean electronics giant LG is introducing a new line at CES that will let users control their washer, vacuum or range by voice command via smartphone, even offering the ability to check what kind of food is inside the refrigerator remotely.

This convenience comes at a price. A Whirlpool washer/dryer combo with smart connectivity costs $3,600, compared to under $1,000 for entry-level models. While appliance and electronics makers believe consumers will go for convenience over cost, some analysts are skeptical that the public is ready for tweeting fridges or remote controlled vacuums.

"From an appliance standpoint, they are getting there, but it’s still pretty early," said Neil Strother, a senior analyst at Boulder-based Pike Research.

He says there are several big obstacles to consumers jumping from smartphones to smart appliances. They are still 50 to 100 percent more costly that "non-smart" appliances and manufacturers still haven’t agreed on a common household communications platform that would help integrate stereo/TV/computer systems with kitchens and laundries, for example.

Last week, Microsoft purchased R2, a company that makes a Xbox-like controller that attempts to do just that.

But perhaps most importantly, Strother says, overall energy prices are predicted to remain stable or go down in the next few decades. That means a too-expensive, energy-miser appliance may not pay off over the long run (see electric cars).

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Despite a relative glut of inexpensive energy in the United States, some utilities are hoping new smart appliances will play a role in a bigger goal of reducing overall energy demand and the carbon footprint that accompanies it.

Ratepayers in Chicago, California, Texas and other parts of the country are already seeing electricity prices change hourly, meaning that a high-tech washer, for example, could clean clothes more cheaply at night than during the afternoon. Some utilities are developing smartphone apps to help ratepayers regulate their heating and cooling systems remotely as well.

"Everybody in the utility industry seems to be looking at more technology which will help the customer understand their energy use and modify it," said Ron Bilodeau, project manager at NV Energy in Nevada.

Retail analysts like Strother expect that smart appliances, such as the ones debuting at CES, will be purchased by high-end luxury consumers and tech geeks, the usual early adopters of technologically advanced consumer products.

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Even Whirlpool’s Warwick admits that he doesn't expect to be selling lots of these appliances until the per unit price comes down and there’s greater integration among the power utilities, appliance makers and consumers themselves.

"The connected appliance market will be small for now as all the manufacturers try to understand how to deliver it to the consumer," Stirling said. "We are moving from lots of concepts to real products. There will be lots of challenges with the connected home. But consumers do like it."

PhotoiStockPhoto

10/04/2012

Fujitsu Demos Subliminal Ads

Original-flicker

Conspiracy theorists have been writing about subliminal advertising for years, although it turns out a lot of it isn't real. But that's for humans.

Fujitsu demonstrated a subliminal ad technology at CEATAC, the Japanese electronics show. The technology works something like QR codes to access coupons, URLs and other kinds of information from a television to a smartphone. The information is encoded by varying the brightness levels in the picture at a rate too fast for humans to see. Hence the subliminal part.

Hack Yourself A Super Secret LCD Monitor

The idea is that if you're watching an ad, an icon or message will pop up telling you to point your phone at the TV. The phone will read the digital signal with its camera the same way it reads a QR code. On your phone, up pops a website or special offer. Fujitsu says the system works up to about 10 feet away.

An interesting question is whether viewers will embrace this approach, at least for advertising. During a car ad, for example, it isn't clear that anyone will take out their phone and ask for more advertising content -- after all, most people see ads as a distraction at best, and an annoyance at worst.

Please Touch: Still Life Painting Is Interactive

The technology might sell better to people that want more information about a television show or a movie. VH-1's "Pop-Up Video" has been doing something like it since 1996; it's not a stretch to think some people would rather see that kind of information on the phone rather than on the TV screen.

Via Engadget

Image: Engadget




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09/21/2012

Tilted 3-D Screens Coming Around The Bend

Tilts

Whether for television or mobile devices, most 3-D displays have used autostereoscopic parallax barriers, such as liquid crystal displays, to give users a three-dimensional viewing experience.

However, a team of scientists, led by the University of Bristol, have chosen a different route. They've developed Tilt Displays, a new type of screen composed of nine smaller panels that physically tilt and contort to give the impression of depth.

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Collectively, its display surface is approximately half the size of a standard tablet, with each individual screen capable of tilting on one or more axes and moving up and down.

Imagine looking at an image of a soup bowl where the screen mutated itself into the shape of a bowl.

While Tilt Displays only exists as a three-screen by three-screen prototype, one could easily imagine a screen composed of tens, hundreds or even thousands of smaller individual screens capable of turning the surface into an undulating display full of tangible contour.

Researchers from the Bristol University's Department of Computer Science presented the the display in San Francisco this week at MobileHCI 2012, an influential conference in the field of Human Computer Interaction (HCI).

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"The ability to tilt along multiple axes distinguishes our display from previous actuatable displays. Such screen versatility opens a range of opportunities for providing an additional integrated information channel to the user," Sriram Subramanian, Professor of Human-Computer Interaction in the Department of Computer Science's Interaction and Graphics group and co-chair of the MobileHCI 2012, said in a press release.

He added: "These opportunities include collaboration, terrain modeling, 3D video that is beyond auto-stereoscopic 3D and tangible gaming. We can imagine many scenarios that would benefit from the physicality offered by Tilt Displays. However, we need to establish whether users can relate to the new experiences and advantages of using such a device."

via Eurekalert

Credit: Bristol University




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09/12/2012

iPhone 5 Live: Watch the News

Apple-event-iphone-5-622

Today, starting at noon Pacific Time (3 p.m. Eastern), Revision3, a video company owned by Discovery, will be on Apple's iPhone 5 press conference like white on rice.

Patrick Norton (Tekzilla) and Anthony Carboni (Rev3 Games/New Challenger) will be discussing all of the news with their colleagues Mark Watson (Soldier Knows Best), Ty Moss (Ty’s iHelp), Graham Hancock (AppJudgment) and Robert Heron (HD Nation/Tekzilla).

Click on the Youtube link below. 

06/19/2012

Life-Sized Boxing Robots Pack A Punch

Bot2

Last week, while attending Microsoft’s TechEd event in Orlando, I saw a line of guys hanging out at what looked like a boxing ring. I went to check it out and saw two life-sized robots beating the hell out of each other, just like the old Rock-Em Sock-Em game. These are called "BoxingBots" and they were built by Microsoft's  Coding4Fun team, that shows off just-for-fun coding projects on their website.

6a00d8341bf67c53ef016767a91d41970b-800wiThe six-foot tall bots are pneumatic, using pressurized gas for mechanical motion. In this case, the bots use two 2.5-gallon tanks of compressed air at 150 psi. Players control the bots with a Kinect for Windows-enabled PC that reads their movements and maps out their body through a series of dots displayed on screen. Once the player’s dots are in balance and the bots are gassed up, the punches can be thrown. Players deliver punches with a full arm stroke, once the bots are close enough. Leaning forward moves the robot forward on its four omni-directional wheels.

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When they throw a punch or lean forward to move the bot, that information is sent to the administrator PC, which can override, reset or pause the game, just in case things get out of hand. Players aim their bot's blows at the center target of the opponent machine's chest. The target is powered by Phidgets LED controller board and when hit enough times the bot is “knocked out.” (Phidgets-based systems are popular with robot lovers because they allow robots to be controlled by a simple PC and are low cost.)

Want to make your own boxing robot? Check out this link to download the code. Take a look at me demo-ing the bots and getting robotically KO'ed in the video below:

 




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03/14/2012

Paper App Poster at SXSW Plays Music

Poster-zoom

So many new bands are popping up, and just as many posters advertising their arrival in your town are doing the same. If the posters could play music samples, it would be a lot easier to decide whether you should check them out.

At SXSW a prototype called the "Listening Post" does just that.

BLOG: Paper Makes Touch Screen Displays

The poster advertises different bands playing in the area and allows users to hear a sample of music by pressing on an image. This is an example of a new way to use technology through paper, or "paper apps."

Developed as a ULAB project from British branding agency Uniform, paper apps are possible through printed electronics, which are electronic circuits and components printed onto a surface.

For a project like the Listening Post, conductive links are printed onto paper so that users can interact with the poster. The poster is just the tip of the iceberg for paper apps, speakers at SXSW believe that this kind of tech can be printed on a postage stamp-sized sticker within the next few years.To see current paper apps in action, check out the video below.

Paper Apps from Uniform on Vimeo.

Via: Ubergizmo

Photo: Uniform




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02/05/2012

Bluetooth Ski Goggles Record and Play Video

Contour camera Recon goggles final

MOD Live, $399.99; HD Camcorder, $499.99

Two weeks after Discovery News strapped on a sweet pair of snow goggles augmented with a GPS-enabled Micro Optics Display at CES, heads-up display specialist Recon Instruments and hands-free HD camcorder maker Contour announced a partnership. The result is that, without the need for a smart phone, Contour's GPS ($299.99) and + (pictured above) models will be able to send images directly via Bluetooth to alpine goggles enabled with Recon's MOD Live. So downhillers can set up high-def video shots before a run and then watch the action afterwards on the chairlift, all without having to remove their gloves or goggles.

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With an Android smart phone running Recon's free HQ Mobile app, users can also see incoming callers, view text messages, organize music playlists, find buddies on the hill, view real-time stats and share them with Facebook, Twitter and other community members. According to Recon's CMO, iPhone users will have to wait until next winter for the iOS version. And although the $400 price for MOD Live given above is just for the components themselves on Recon's site, they're also available bundled with a set of Uvex goggles at REI for $539.99.

Credit: Recon Instruments




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