According to Eurogamer, sources close to Sony say that sometime in the future, a new PlayStation Portable will be released. While there’s been no official word, the game site is reporting that there could be an update to the current PSP (which might be called the PSP 4000), and in the not-too-distant future (2010 or 2011), Sony will introduce a completely new model, confusingly dubbed the “PSP2.” David Reeves, SCEE president has recently been quoted as making vague, suspicious statements such as “there are currently no plans for a PSP2,” and “I go to Tokyo quite a lot and no one has referred to it – I think they have their hands full at the moment.” Nice try Reeves, but If you keep up these kinds of thinly veiled allusions to a new system, we suspect it’s only a matter of years till this cat’s out of the bag.
It’s not often that tremendous advancements are made in the realm of binoculars, but these LightSpeed specs are something special. Aimed primarily at military / surveillance uses, this device is able to transmit video and audio via Infrared, theoretically enabling rooftop spies on opposite buildings to communicate. Furthermore, this method of communication is undetectable and untraceable. No mention of just how expensive these are, but suffice it to say, you aren’t apt to see these on shelves of Toys R Us and the like.
Manchester based 3D animation agency AHD Imaging released a video Christmas Greeting this year in the form of a one-minute short featuring a down-and-out robot who can’t get a part in a CGI commercial.
It seems to have gathered quite a bit of interest from advertising agencies and the company has now put it up on YouTube so everyone can have a look and of course generate a hefty amount of publicity for itself.
Dan Shiffman isn’t like most professors. Instead of Scantron sheets and bluebooks, Shiffman prefers to give his final exams on a 120-foot video wall that’s the equivalent of six 16:9 displays linked end-to-end.
Yes, it is final exam time for Shiffman’s Big Screens Class—at 6PM on a Friday night, with free wine—and I am standing with a couple hundred other likeminded art techies in the lobby of the IAC Building, a curvy glass Frank Gehry creation on the West Side of Manhattan. We are in front of a 120-foot screen that’s the equivalent of six 16:9 displays arranged end-to-end, and we are doing what it’s telling us to do. We are obeying it.
It tells us to clap, and we clap. Then we stomp our feet and say “la la la.” Then we send text messages to it, filled with the anticipation of influencing what appears on its glowing greatness. We clap to shoo white birds off a power line that’s strung across its great length. We do it while drinking and taking pictures of the action, and it is good—a techie church for bigger screens, always bigger! We kneel!
Shiffman and his students have the IAC people, in part, to thank for their classroom. Rather than put in a garden or expansive, empty lobby, Barry Diller’s IAC conglomerate—which owns several web-related businesses like Ask.com, Ticketmaster, etc—decided to build one of the world’s biggest indoor video walls. It’s made up of 27 vertically oriented projectors, linked into a single display by software from Spyder and shined onto a translucent screen to create a massive projection image:
For the Big Screens class, the wall is powered by three dual-head Mac Pros, each driving their own pair of 16:9 aspect-ratio screens (splitting nine projectors for each head), for a total resolution of 8160 x 768 pixels.
The class is part of of NYU’s Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP), a two-year graduate degree they’ve offered since 1979 and the source of all kinds of geeky curiosities. Shiffman, a wizard of the graphical programming language called Processing that many of the students use to fill up the screen (a few others use openFrameworks, another visual language) has taught this class for two years now. Processing has been used in tons of music videos, data visualizations and interactive video art and is popular for its relative simplicity as a way to turn code into amazing visuals.
Talking to the students, it’s apparent that such a unique medium can barely be classified as a “screen” in the traditional sense. The immense size, when paired with such an extreme aspect ratio, turns the screen into more of a physical space than anything resembling a TV (even one that’s 150-inches). Besides, it’s not about resolution, in the home-theater sense. Sure, you can do a lot with 6 million pixels, but it’s not why you come to see this 120-foot screen.
Interaction is the key, as you can see in the following videos. Mooshir Vahanvati created a massive 120-foot stretch of powerline with birds who perch when it’s quiet and scatter when microphones pick up a loud noise:
Vikram Tank created a six-panel conductor that synced up the crowd’s claps, snaps and la-la-las:
Matt Parker’s “Caves of Wonder” took a video feed of the crowd from an IP camera and twisted it into a craggy landscape with Processing—part iTunes Visualizer, part Grand Canyon on Mars:
And Alejandro Abreu Theresa Ling combined silohouettes on screen with the shadows of real actors behind the screen to create three vignettes of Chelsea’s seedier past:
Shiffman works the controls at the back of the room with a gigantic smile; he is perhaps the only person that could teach this class. He’s the primary author of the “Most Pixels Ever” library for Processing, which allows projects to sync up across multiple displays seamlessly without delays—and not just your dual-head monitor. Most Pixels Ever is amazing because it can handle the 6 million pixels of IAC’s video wall without blinking, and without it, this class would not exist in its current form. All the art-tech nerds thank him as we file out the door.
“For the students it’s just such a completely unique experience—it’s unique for anybody, whether you’re a grad student or a professional designer. Few people in the world have a chance to work on anything of this scale, and what’s great is that I can say to them you can do whatever you want,” he says. “You learn a ton about technically producing the work, and also what it means visually to work on that scale.”
“I can’t imagine that when IAC build that wall that they imagined performances on it with actors casting shadows behind the screen, so that’s fantastic.”
The rest of ITP’s classes are having their semester-ending show this week in NYC; find out more here and look for our coverage starting later this week. [ITP on the Big Screen]
Vudu has announced a plan of expansion for its formerly closed set top box. The company has initiated a platform for developing web applications while expanding free content on Vudu boxes immediately.
As of today, a new Vudu Labs area on standard Vudu boxes will offer access to Flickr, Picasa and YouTube. In addition, the Labs’ new “On Demand” area opens free streaming from ABC, CBS, MSNBC, Nickelodeon, Discovery, and ESPN—among lots of other web-available media.
Vudu’s Rich Internet Application platform will be opened to developers in Q1 of 2009. And it seems like a pretty good way for Vudu to stay competitive against the likes of Netflix, Blockbuster and AppleTV.
VUDU Brings the Web to TV with Breakthrough Internet Application Platform
Company Launches More than 120 Channels of Web Based Content and Applications, Announces Rich Internet Application Platform Open to All Developers in 2009
Santa Clara, CA – Dec. 16, 2008 – VUDU today took a major step forward in bringing the Web into the living room by launching the VUDU RIA (Rich Internet Application) platform, a standards-based platform that brings Web-hosted rich applications and services to consumer appliances such as the popular VUDU Internet movie player. VUDU RIA combines the openness and ease of development of Web applications, lightweight hardware requirements compatible with today’s consumer Internet appliances, and a lean-back user experience optimized for television. To demonstrate the power and flexibility of VUDU RIA, VUDU has created an initial set of applications and services in a new area of the VUDU home page, called VUDU Labs. Available today to all VUDU owners, these applications include casual games, implementations of Flickr, Picasa and the entire YouTube library, as well as a new “On Demand TV” area with more than 120 channels. Today, VUDU customers can access a broad selection of free on-demand shows provided by major network television and on-line specialty sites spanning news, food, music, sports, and more. Programs include daily highlights from shows such as “Today”, “The Rachel Maddow Show”, “Anderson Cooper 360”, “Fantasy Focus NFL”, “MTV News”, as well as full programs, some in HD, from Nova, National Geographic, PBS and others. VUDU plans to add more applications and services throughout 2009.
“VUDU RIA enables us to quickly open up huge libraries of web based content to TVs in living rooms around America,” said Edward Lichty, Executive Vice President of Strategy and Content. “We are excited to deliver both high quality TV shows as well as Web applications which enable our customers to share their photos and watch the tens of millions of YouTube videos on their HDTV’s.” VUDU RIA Brings Web Application Development to CE devices VUDU RIA allows developers to take advantage of the most advanced RIA techniques such as asynchronous Web queries, local scripting, and persistent client-side storage, along with unique TV-centered technologies such as VUDU’s acclaimed user interface, one-wheel remote control navigation, and VUDU’s TruFilm-powered video rendering for maximum visual quality. VUDU RIA enables the development of responsive, rich applications optimized for display and use on high definition televisions that bring the wealth of data and content of the Internet to the living room without needing to deploy new software on the consumer appliance, a first in the consumer electronics world. VUDU RIA is targeted at today’s low power set-top boxes and Internet appliances and delivers a lightning fast user experience on a 300 MHz embedded processor with 128MB of RAM. Applications developed on the VUDU RIA platform are as responsive as native applications but have the added advantage of being able to pull from the vast and growing reservoir of Internet content and services. They can also be updated anytime without modifying any software in the consumer’s appliance, creating a dynamic experience heretofore unavailable in the living room. VUDU RIA will be opened up to third party developers in the first half of 2009.
“Our goal in creating VUDU RIA was to allow anyone with Web development skills to easily author Web-driven applications for the TV,” said Prasanna Ganesan, VUDU’s Chief Technical Officer. “We are very pleased with the results and look forward to opening up VUDU RIA to the developer community.”
We like to keep a positive attitude around here, so we’re trying not to be overly um… skeptical about this one, even though “World’s” followed by anything awesome (in this case “thinnest,” and “first micro sized Java J2Me hand phone”) sets off a few alarms. The Neoi 906E, at least in the renders, is an exceedingly thin GSM / GPRS handset with a QWERTY keyboard, though beyond that, it’s all pretty unimpressive and run of the mill. It’s got an MP3 player, a camera, a microSD slot, plus some shortcut keys on the upper right of the phone, but details about its actual specs are a bit sparse. It’s not clear when or where the 906E is going to be available, but it doesn’t seem like Neoi plans to cut out the middle man — the minimum order number is 500.
Were you inspired by the one-of-a-kind hacked Chrono Trigger proposal? Do you now want to rip that guy’s idea off and do a DS proposal of your own? New software can make it happen.
Multiple:Option’s middleware for the DS lets you create a custom puzzle game that ends with a marriage proposal. Simply give the game to your romance target, hope they don’t totally suck at puzzle games and then see if your bet on them tolerating your insufferable nerdiness for the rest of their lives pays off. [Offworld via New Launches]
Hot on the heels of word that the 45nm Phenom II chip is up for grabs, AMD has announced that its 65nm predecessor has been relegated to budget duty. The new Phenom-based Athlon X2 7000 chips are now available, replacing the aged X2 6000 and delivering an affordable HyperTransport bus boost to 3.6GHz, 2MB of L3 cache, but still just 1MB on L2. It’s a dual-core processor, unlike the higher-spec Phenoms, and consumes 95-watts. That’s a handy drop from the X2 6000’s 125-watt rating, but isn’t exactly frugal compared to some of AMD’s other Phenom offerings. The 2.7GHz X2 7750 Black Edition is available now in bulk for just under $80, and appears to be retailing for around $90. Meanwhile a paler, cheaper, 2.5GHz version is shipping just for OEMs — but that shouldn’t stop you home builders from finding one if you’re really inclined.
If you’re using Internet Explorer to read this it might be an idea to shut it down now and open up trusty old FireFox instead.
Microsoft has today issued an alert to notify users of a critical security flaw in IE.7.0 that could allow hackers to take control of your computer and steal passwords. The company is apparently preparing an emergency patch to fix it but in the meantime simply requests that users remain ‘vigilant’ against the threat.
DataViz is porting their Documents to Go—that lets you view and edit Office documents and PDFs—and RoadSync Exchange apps to Android next year. Anyone else glad that Android’s looking better for business? [DataViz via UnwiredView]
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