How Much Does the Palm Pre Cost to Make?

Palm Pre.jpgAnalyst firm iSuppli has adopted a unique niche in the world of gadget reporting: the teardown.

Taking the “unboxing” trend to the next level (and do people care about packaging material that much?) iSuppli typically buys a gadget, takes it apart, and provides a cost estimate of what it cost the assemble. The end number usually doesn’t mean too much to the average consumer, although knowing the gross margin on a product also allows guesses as to how much it can be discounted in future revisions. And that’s worth knowing.

With the Palm Pre, however, iSuppli has attempted a “virtual teardown,” basically a series of guesses as to what components are in the Pre, and how much they cost. As you might suspect, this is far less precise.

The Pre costs $137.83 in materials cost, and carries an estimated bill-of-materials cost of $170.02, which is much closer to the actual cost of manufacturing when manufacturing and software development is factored in.

At $300, that leaves about $130 in profit for Palm, although, at a subsidized price of about $200, the Pre’s expected margins will be much slimmer. And Palm also has to cross these other items off of its checklist before the Palm can be considered a hit.

PhaseOne P40+ medium format camera hits the streets of Copenhagen

It’s been a few moments since Phase One had us lusting after one of its devices, and now the company is back with a 40 megapixel system named, appropriately enough, the P40+. Like the P65+ we peeped last year, this new guy offers two separate image-capture modes — in this case, you’re looking at either a standard mode for full 40 megapixel shooting, or a 10 megapixel Sensor+ mode that gives you a four-fold increase in light sensitivity (ISO to 3200), and a 1.8 fps capture rate. Both modes feature a 12.5 f-stop dynamic range. The camera is shipping now, and it will run you a cool €16,990 ($22,073). Or pick up just the camera back for €14,990 ($19,475). Actually, you might want to think about picking up two. You know, just in case. One more image after the break.

Continue reading PhaseOne P40+ medium format camera hits the streets of Copenhagen

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PhaseOne P40+ medium format camera hits the streets of Copenhagen originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Apr 2009 18:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Upgrade a Car: Unlocked potential

2009 Subaru Impreza 2.5GT

When we last saw the 2009 Subaru Impreza 2.5GT, it left a bad taste with its mediocre cabin tech options and performance-dulling automatic transmission.

(Credit: Corinne Schulze/CNET)

Every once in a while, we get a vehicle in the Car Tech garage that presents great potential, but poor execution. …

Originally posted at The Car Tech blog

NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 285 coming to Macs in June

Mac users — are you tired of being taunted by your PC friends over their myriad GPU options / killer gaming rigs? Well, here’s one less front they can battle you on. We’ve just received a pic of this nasty piece of work in our inboxes with word that it’s due in June. Like the PC version, we’re guessing you can expect two things here: it’s killer… and it’s expensive.

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NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 285 coming to Macs in June originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Apr 2009 17:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rumor: Motorola readying first Android phone

Motorola's first Android phone could look something like this.

(Credit: Boy Genius Report)

Motorola might be getting ready to pick itself up off the canvas and rejoin the smartphone fight.

The Boy Genius Report got its hands on some information and photos of Motorola’s supposed first Android …

Originally posted at News – Wireless

Your Asthma Inhaler–Now With GPS

Asthma inhalers are great and all, but you know what they’re lacking? The latest consumer technology, of course. No, we’re not talking about Wi-Fi or an MP3 player (not that we’d really be opposed to either)–we’re talking GPS.

SiliconSky has just introduced what is very likely the first asthma inhaler with built-in GPS tracking. Why would the world need such a thing? According to its inventors, the GPS would be use to “allow tracking of asthma inhaler use trends, including exact time and geographic location of uses.”

The AGPS-enabled asthma inhaler was created with the participation of University of Wisconsin researcher David Van Sickle.

Touch Anywhere Interface Begs to be Groped

TouchTwo-finger touch or multi-touch? Users don’t have to choose. It can be touch anywhere says French start-up Sensitive Object, which offers a touchscreen technology that goes beyond the traditional display area.

The company’s ‘Anywhere MultiTouch’ platform is based on the recognition of sound waves propagated in an object when the user touches it.

A user’s touch on a glass surface produces a pattern of sound waves that creates an acoustic signature unique to the location of the touch, says Sensitive Object. The company, which was created in 2003, says it has found a way to associate this acoustic signature to the user’s every action.  A glass panel equipped with two piezoelectric sensors, similar to what is used in some new flat speakers technology, is used to detect the sound waves and determine their acoustic signature.

The Anywhere MultiTouch platform can be used on various materials such as glass, aluminum and plastics says Sensitive Object.

The company  hasn’t disclosed how much its new technology will cost. For now it says this will be available at a “very competitive price.” The platform is Windows 7 compliant and offers handwriting recognition.

Sensitive Object hopes to bring its technology to cellphones, netbooks, laptops, PCs and portable games terminals. For app developers, the technology can be handy to expand how users interact with their devices, it says. For instance in case of a cellphone, a game app can require touch on any part of the phone instead of just the screen.

“Sensitive Object’s products are now used in various markets such as home automation, interactive point of sale or information desks and gaming,” says Bruno Thuillier, CTO of Sensitive Object in a statement. “We’re now addressing the handheld and consumer markets.”

[via UberGizmo]

See also:
Touchscreen Kit May Spur More Multi-Touch Apps
Video: MOTO Labs Shows Large Screen Multi-touch Prototype

Photo: (Pranav Singh/Flickr)


Venus wearable monitor could offer alternative to needles

It looks like folks wary of needles now have yet another piece of technology to look forward to, with this so-called Venus device promising to measure tissue oxygen and pH levels without the need to draw any blood at all. To do that, the system makes use of a relatively small sensor that’s placed directly on the skin, which uses near infrared light to measure to measure the blood and analyze both the tissue oxygen and pH, as well as the the metabolic rate. As a bonus, the lack of needles also reduces the the risk of infection, and it’s relatively portable nature makes it ideal for use outside of strictly medical situations, such as monitoring athletes — or astronauts, as it was originally developed for. As you might expect, however, the device is still just in prototype form, and there doesn’t appear to be any indication as to when it might move beyond the lab.

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Venus wearable monitor could offer alternative to needles originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Apr 2009 17:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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My kid’s Netbook is better than your kid’s Netbook

Specifically marketed with kids in mind, PeeWee PC is a site that offers not only kid-friendly PCs, but also laptops customized for your ever-growing child.

On Wednesday, PeeWee PC is rolling out the Atom-powered PeeWee Pivot Tablet Laptop. The 3-pound PeeWee Pivot Tablet Laptop–which is more of a tablet Netbook than a laptop–sports a rotating screen that converts between a normal notebook orientation and a touch tablet.

(Credit: PeeWee PC)

Kids can use either a keyboard or an included stylus to interact with their favorite programs or games. The unit features a rugged, spill-resistant case that’s designed to endure the bumps and knocks the younger generation has to offer. So, parents, when your child goes into a temper tantrum and flings the machine around, you might be knocked on your a**, but know that your investment has sustained the fall from your head to the floor.

Kidding aside, the PeeWee Pivot Tablet Laptop runs Windows XP on a 10-inch screen, 1.6GHz Atom processor, 1GB of RAM (upgradeable to 2GB) and a 60GB hard drive. In addition, the tablet has two USB 2.0 ports, an SD/MMC media card reader, a VGA port, 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi, and a 1.3-megapixel Webcam. Reminiscent of Intel’s Classmate PC in 2007, the Pivot Tablet has a carrying handle that’s removed by taking out the battery and then removing the four screws that affix the handle.

The PeeWee Tablet Laptop ships with game titles for pre-K, early elementary, or upper elementary students, plus a free Walt Disney Windows XP theme, and a proprietary security suite so parents have complete control of how and when kids use the notebook–parents can also view browsing histories, block sites, take screenshots, and control the system remotely.

Pedestrian Safety Act of 2009 to investigate the dangers of silent automobile engines

As automobiles become more eco-friendly, they’re also becoming increasingly quieter… which is a good thing, if, like us, you want to live in a completely silent world (the blaring of Mastodon notwithstanding). The obvious problem with quieter vehicles is, of course that they can pose a real danger to unsuspecting pedestrians. To combat this terrifying prospect, Senators John Kerry (D, MA) and Arlen Spector (R, er… D, PA) have introduced The Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act of 2009. This bill requires the Secretary of Transportation to conduct a study on what effects of hybrid, electric and other silent engine vehicles are having on pedestrian injuries and deaths in the US. The bill specifically focuses on the perils of quiet engines to blind pedestrians, but notes that the dangers are likely wider spread than that. While there are no possible solutions mentioned, may we suggest writing into law that you have to have a bullhorn strapped to your car and yell “vroom vroom” the entire time you drive?

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Pedestrian Safety Act of 2009 to investigate the dangers of silent automobile engines originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Apr 2009 16:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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