Video: Pixel Qi’s e-ink / LCD hybrid screen demoed at Computex

Wow, just wow. We were about three months away from putting Pixel Qi on a temporary vaporware watch, and now we couldn’t be happier about shoving this crow down our throats. The outfit’s so-called 3qi display technology — which seamlessly integrates e-ink with LCD — was on display this week at Computex, and there’s a beautiful video just after the break that shows it off. Put simply, we’ve never seen a laptop display look as good in broad daylight as Pixel Qi’s display, and even though there’s no striking colors in the black-and-white e-ink mode, at least you can see the thing (clearly, at that) without squinting. Seriously, hop on past the break and mash play.

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Video: Pixel Qi’s e-ink / LCD hybrid screen demoed at Computex originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 12:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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E3 Gets Non-Profit: Pro Vs. Gi Joe

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E3 isn’t exactly a hotbed of activity for the non-profit sector, but in one of the halls sits a tent populated by men and women in uniform playing Guitar Hero. This is Pro Vs. Gi Joe, a 501c3 non-profit organization designed for keeping the military a bit more connected.

Pro Vs. Gi Joe has partnered with the U.S. to allow service men and women to compete against professional gamers via the Internet. They also invite the troops’ families to look on via the Webcam. Pro Vs. GI Joe brings gaming to active military spots throughout the globe.

For more information on this unique organization, check out their site.

E3: Pluff, a Stuffed Game Controller

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If you manage to make it to the back of the L.A. Convention Center, past all the bright flashing lights of the gigantic booths from Microsoft and Activision and Nintendo, you’ll find a small collective of independent game designers: folks like Diana Hughes. A recent USC grad, Hughes is showing off her MFA thesis, Pluff.

Pluff is a fuzzy little game controller–make him happy or annoy him and you’ll affect his on-screen digital counterpart. Pluff’s not available commercially, but Hughes is in talks with game developers about bringing him to market. His creator has also spoken to hospitals about how Pluff might be able to help kids with autism and other conditions.

You can check more Pluff over at Hughes’ home page.

Tony Hawk Ride feets-on

Tony Hawk Ride feets-on

Want to humble a videogame journalist? Ask him if he skates and, if he answers with a modest “a little bit,” proceed to make him lose his balance and stumble off of your toy skateboard controller. That was the scene seen again and again at Activision’s thumping booth on the E3 show floor, and we took our turn to get humiliated on the company’s plastic deck, the feature piece of this October’s Tony Hawk Ride. It’s fun, it’s hard, and it’s a surprisingly (and somewhat embarrassingly) good work-out.

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Tony Hawk Ride feets-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 12:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MacBooks’ Multitouch, Buttonless Trackpad Coming to Windows Notebooks

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Owners of Apple’s latest MacBooks won’t feel special for much longer. The multitouch, buttonless trackpad unique to MacBooks will be appearing on Windows notebooks in the near future.

Touchpad manufacturer Synaptics said it plans to make its multitouch trackpad available for various PCs. The company will be providing the trackpad, dubbed the ClickPad, to computer manufacturers in the third quarter of 2009.

“ClickPad is available with an innovative mechanical assembly that will provide optimized performance for notebook PC designs, ranging from sleek netbooks to large desktop replacement portables,” Synaptics said in a press release.

What exactly will you be able to do with the ClickPad? Two-finger scrolling, of course, but moving beyond that the ClickPad will offer two-finger pinching for zoom (similar to the iPhone), two-finger pivoting for rotation (for rotating photos, for example), three-finger flick (to go forward or backward a web page, for example), and three-finger press (with MacBooks, this gesture performs a right-click).

This is great news. I own a unibody MacBook Pro, and my favorite part is the trackpad. I feel extremely productive with it thanks to the multitouch gestures (and Firefox), and I like that the whole pad is one large, clickable button.

The ClickPad sounds especially sweet for netbooks, whose trackpads are generally cramped and tiresome to use over long periods of time. We’re hoping Synaptics makes the ClickPad large enough to perform all these gestures smoothly on netbooks.

See Also:

Press release [via Jkontherun]

Photo: Aaronage/Flickr


5 Things That Should’ve Been at E3 But Weren’t

All of the major E3 keynotes from Microsoft, Nintendo and Sony are over. While 2009 is now officially the year of motion controls, there’s still something missing. Here’s what we expected to see at E3, but didn’t.

Price Cuts
The financiapocalypse has yielded no price cuts for ailing gamers from Sony, Nintendo or Microsoft. A PS3 still hurts at $400, a real Xbox costs $300 (with downloadable retail games on the way, you need that hard drive), and a Wii still costs $250. Not to mention the true price of owning these consoles—$60 $80 for a complete Wiimote (can’t forget MotionPlus, which Miyamoto said yesterday could be required for the next Wii Zelda), $50 a year for Xbox Live—also remains unchanged. This is undoubtedly part and parcel of this generation’s extended lifespan, but parts and manufacturing prices have fallen, so they’re all presumably recouping more money than ever on their consoles. If they’re serious about picking up new gamers, they need to make it affordable.

PS3 Slim
Sony inevitably slenderizes every console, and the PS3 is an effin’ monster. The PSP Go shows they’re still very much on board on the shrink ray as a way to generate sales. The PS3 costs them less than ever to make—just think how much more they’d save if they didn’t have to pay for all of that extra plastic? (OK, maybe they’d have to pay more for the smaller guts.) But we’ve seen possible branding for it, just maybe. Are they saving it for motion controls?

Zune, Zune, Zune
We really expected more ZuneHD to be a part of Microsoft’s E3 keynote, given the barebone announcement that left us parched for more details. ZuneHD wasn’t mentioned once.

Also, Microsoft promised “at E3 next week, attendees will see firsthand how Zune integrates into Xbox LIVE to create a game-changing entertainment experience.” Um, we must’ve missed that. Zune Video Marketplace moved onto Xbox Live was all we caught. When we asked Xbox Live’s Marc Whitten yesterday where Zune audio was, he pointed at Last.fm. And about what we can expect from deeper Zune integration, we got a more or less canned response that they’ll be continuing to grow the service and move toward more integration. Not very satisfying.

Live Anywhere
Nearly three years later, and one year after being assured the project is still alive, Microsoft’s Live Anywhere—the service that’ll let you tap into Live from anywhere—is still nowhere. Which is absolutely baffling, given everything Microsoft’s added to the Live service since the New Xbox Experience and all of the “cloud” work they’ve been doing. Live Anywhere fits perfectly with all of that. There’s really no good explanation for why Live Anywhere is still MIA.

But we asked Whitten where it was, just for good measure. He said they’re focusing on the living-room experience here at E3, and since that extends onto other devices, it’s for another time and place. Ooooookay. Maybe when we see that deeper Zune integration?

A Bigger, Better Wii Balance Board and More Wii MotionPlus Games
While Nintendo didn’t fail to come through with a new piece of potentially gimmicky hardware (notice they didn’t even have a game to go with it, and Miyamoto himself was vague on WTF it’s for), Wii Fit Plus is the same old Wii Fit from a hardware perspective. We hoped a Wii Fit Plus would come with a Balance Board Plus—a smarter board that’s even bigger for people who don’t have Japan-sized feet. It’s one new hardware peripheral we wouldn’t have minded one bit.

A year after announcing the Wii MotionPlus, the game pickins for it still look a bit slim. Nintendo announced a handful of titles yesterday that’ll make use of it, like Sega’s Virtua Tennis 2009 and the new Tiger Woods Golf from EA (which’ll have it bundled) but it’s disappointing they didn’t have more to show at this stage of the game. During yesterday’s Q&A, Miyamoto said that it might be required for the next Zelda on Wii, depending on how widely it’s adopted—so whether we see it used in more games may very well be dependent on how well it does with the initial load of titles. So it’s odd there isn’t well, more of them to start to really get the ball rolling.

So that’s what we really missed at E3—well, all that and Hulu. What did you guys really hope to see?

Sony Ericsson X2 spotted?

A tipster tells us that the device you’re looking at here is Sony Ericsson’s codename “Vulcan” — better known as the X2 — which would presumably replace the X1 at some point in the next few days, weeks, months, or years. Though the picture’s small, you can clearly make out the X Panel button in the lower left of the phone’s front and a Windows key in the upper left of the keyboard, which adds a dose of credibility — the company has, after all, put quite a bit of time and effort into pimping its panel interface SDK, and right now, the X1 is the only device that supports it. The image looks a little rough around the edges, but we can easily chalk that up to this being either a composite mockup or a very early prototype combined with the fact that our tipster seems to have blanked out the surroundings to protect the source. We’re not saying it’s definitely real, but this certainly looks plausible — we’re just not convinced yet that it looks better than the model it’d replace. Thoughts?

[Thanks, anonymous tipster]

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Sony Ericsson X2 spotted? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 11:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NC State gurus keep hearts beating outside of the body

If NC State‘s athletic branches had even half the aptitude as its medical researchers, maybe then those blue boys down the road wouldn’t have so much right to bang us up. Personal beefs aside, we’re simultaneously stoked and amazed by a new machine crafted down in Raleigh, one that enables scientists to keep a heart pumping even after it has been removed from the body, but for research purposes only. Andrew Richards, a bright young mechanical engineering student, designed the so-called dynamic heart system, which “pumps fluid through a pig heart so that it functions in a very realistic way.” Obviously, such a device has a multitude of benefits, including time / money savings compared to alternative approaches, the ability to record the inner workings of a pumping heart and scoring the creator some serious street cred in the industry. Mind-blowing video is just after the break.

[Via Neatorama]

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NC State gurus keep hearts beating outside of the body originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 11:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Use Your Wit to Win Klipsch Headphones and Home Theater System

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Klipsch is hosting several photo caption competitions to celebrate the release of its new Image S4 headphones and HD Theater 300 system.

Contestants will be provided with a photo of the products. They then write a witty caption in 140 characters or less. Klipsch will select the best caption for each photo, and the best authors will win a pair of Image S4 headphones ($79.99). Klipsch will also randomly select a participant from all the entries to win the HD Theater 300 ($399.99).

Visit Klipsch.com to access the contest. The winners and their captions will be posted on Klipsch’s Facebook Page. Contest ends September 7, 2009.

BenQ announces Joybook Lite U121 Eco to a nation in mourning

BenQ is back on the scene with another netbook, and against our better judgement we’re going to let you in on the details. The Joybook Lite U121 Eco sports an Intel Atom Z520 / Z530 processor, an 11.6-inch WXGA (1366×768) display, 32GB SSD storage (or upgrade her to to a 500GB SATA hard disk), WiFi, optional 3.75G HSUPA, and a 6 cell battery that boasts a generous 8 hours of use. If you’re in China, Taiwan, or Malaysia, keep an eye out for this thing sometimes this month. Ships with either Windows XP Home or Linux. Cramped hands and carpal tunnel included free of charge.

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BenQ announces Joybook Lite U121 Eco to a nation in mourning originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 11:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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