Canesta gesture controlled TV frees us from the tyranny of the remote

See the look of euphoric bliss on this man’s face? He’s calm and relaxed because he is using Canesta’s new gesture TV control technology. No longer does this cat have to scroll through hundreds upon hundreds of channels on a standard channel listing. Au contraire, today he’s using his right hand to wave through a cover view-esque selection of stations, and boy does he make it look easy. The heart of this bad boy is a low-cost 3-D chip that uses a single CMOS sensor to output a continuous stream of depth maps that can be interpreted by as specific gestures, obstacles, faces, or individuals, depending upon the application. Although the current demo might be especially appealing to you and your couch-potato brethren, the company has big plans for this device in the realms of security, robotics, medical devices, and more. But first, it will have to tear itself away from the couch, Video after the break.

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Canesta gesture controlled TV frees us from the tyranny of the remote originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 07:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Beatles Rock Band books surprise gig at Xbox 360 meetup

Last night Microsoft held an E3 2009 post-press conference event, and while Natal wasn’t anywhere within our reach, we did happen upon Harmonix’s Beatles Rock Band stage, an appropriately cliché setup on the rooftop of The Standard Hotel. We’ll be getting more thorough hands-on time with the instruments later in the week, but for now, enjoy a glimpse at the concert ensemble, blasting forth with (confirmed!) three-part harmony.

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Video: Beatles Rock Band books surprise gig at Xbox 360 meetup originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 07:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Acer Aspire Timeline thin-and-lights priced for the US: $600 to $900

Acer’s Aspire Timeline inexpensive thin-and-lights have been popping up here and there around the world since we first laid eyes on ’em in April, and now the CULV machines are ready to hit the States. Pricing is actually a little lower than we initially heard, with the base 15.6-inch 1.3GHz Pentium SU2700 machine coming in at $598, but you’re more interested in the two smaller machines: the 14-inch, 4.2-pound 1.4GHz SU3500 Core Solo unit is $699, while the 13.3-inch, 3.5-pound 1.4GHz SU9400 Core 2 Duo pictured above is $899. All three machines feature 16:9 1366 x 768 LED-backlit displays driven by Intel 4500MHD graphics, and battery life exceeds eight hours, aided by a PowerSmart energy-saving switch. So — anyone still thinking about an Adamo? Full press release and two more pics after the break.

Continue reading Acer Aspire Timeline thin-and-lights priced for the US: $600 to $900

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Acer Aspire Timeline thin-and-lights priced for the US: $600 to $900 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 07:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Battery life comes first in Acer Aspire Timeline laptops

The Acer Aspire Timeline 15.6-inch, 1.3Ghz laptop.

(Credit: Acer)

Now that surfing the Net while flying is no longer new, I really want a computer that can last the entire flight from San Francisco to NYC, which is about 6 hours long.

Acer seems to have a solution for that. On Tuesday, the company announced its newest Aspire Timeline series, which it claims offers more than 8 hours of battery life on average in one charge. If this is true, it’ll really sets a new standard for mobility and productivity.

According to Acer, the Aspire Timeline series achieved this extended battery life thanks a combination of factors, including an unique design, Intel’s ultra low-voltage processors, advanced-power management, high-capacity batteries, and LED backlit displays. The result is a series of laptops that are thinner, lighter, and much more energy-efficient than other laptops.

The best thing about the new Aspire Timeline series, however, is the price. Ranging from $598 to $899, the Timelines are among the most affordable laptops.

However, there’s a catch and it’s rather big: the three laptops in this series use very low-performance CPUs. …

Fujitsu hops on Netbook bandwagon

(Credit: Fujitsu)

The potential of the Netbook market is turning even the skeptics into believers these days.

On Tuesday, Fujitsu is expected to announce its first Netbook-class laptop for the North American market. It’s called the Fujitsu M2010, though the company prefers to describe it as a “mini-notebook” instead of a Netbook. Regardless, it’s the first Fujitsu notebook with an Intel Atom processor inside for buyers on this continent.

The M2010 is your standard Netbook/mini-note, with Windows XP, a 160GB hard drive, 1GB of RAM, and three-cell battery for $449. It’s nothing all that different from the rest of the crowd, unless you count that it’s only available in Ruby Red.

Fujitsu has sold another Netbook, a 9-inch model sold only in Europe, which Fujitsu’s senior product director Paul Moore said wasn’t suitable for the U.S.

“We didn’t bring it to North America because it was an 8.9-inch screen. At that time the feedback we were getting was 8.9 was too small,” he said.

The M2010 has a 10-inch screen, which is quickly becoming the standard size for Netbooks–on Monday Dell canned its 9-inch Netbook in favor of two models of its 10-inch Netbooks. And Asus and Acer have also been increasing their focus on the 10-inch category.

Sigma DP2 Camera Review: It’s Complicated

When I first fiddled with the DP2, I was like “Who would ever want this?” Then I shot some of the most amazing photos I’ve ever taken.

The Set Up: Sigma calls this camera a DSLR in the body of a point and shoot, and they’re kinda right. It’s got the Foveon X3 sensor, which is just a hair smaller than the Nikon and Canon APS-C sensors. Sigma has carefully paired a fixed 24.2mm F2.8 lens in order, they told me, to maximize the benefits of that larger sensor. No zoom lens would do, they said, because picture quality would likely suffer.

To make things even more complicated, for these same reasons, they could only build in contrast-based autofocus. Though more accurate, it takes a lot longer to focus, and, in this camera, tends to give up easily when it can’t quite do it. It was often hard to get a satisfied chirp that meant focus was locked, especially in lower light conditions. Many hastily shot shots are blurry beyond help.

As you can see, this camera is low in the frills department, with greater reward going to those who can shoot manually, and most certainly in RAW. Meaning my first shots were hideous things, and it took a few days for me to become worthy enough to even hold the bastard. Eventually, slowly, I learned what it could—and could not—do.

The Bad News: Let’s repeat: There’s just the one fixed lens, which isn’t much of a wide angle, isn’t much of a macro, isn’t exactly “fast” by today’s DSLR standards, and does not zoom. You have to get in the habit of going to your subjects, then making them stay still long enough to get a decent focus, then a decent shot. To add to the troubles, the sensor that is pristine at ISO 200 is noisy as crap at ISO 800, which means you also have to shoot longer at times to make up for it.

Sigma people said that the ISO should be compared to other point-and-shoots, and that shooting RAW and converting it to JPEG on the computer cuts down on the noise, but even so, check out how crazy the noise was at 1600 after RAW post-processing on the computer:

It’s a mess, you know? I did manage to make some artistic looking black-and-whites by just desaturating the grainy 1600 shots—frankly, they were pretty cool, but it’s something you’d want the option to do, not something you should be forced into.

Other dings the camera gets are a lack of RAW+JPEG mode—what I like to call “insurance+good enough”—some extremely abysmal QVGA video mode that probably should have been left out of the product altogether because it’s pointless, and poor battery life. When Sigma sent me the camera, they included a spare battery. I thought it odd at the time given how insanely great camera battery life is these days usually. Clearly they knew something I didn’t. On top of all that, it’s just not terrifically small—Olympus and Panasonic are pushing Micro Four Thirds cameras that aren’t much bigger. (Course, their sensors are actually smaller.)

The Good News: As I have alluded, I have come around on this camera. Push aside all of the uncool characteristics, focus on what it can do—shooting relatively still objects at relatively close range—and you get some seriously attractive photo work. I can’t show them all to you—the wife lays down a general rule of not posting family pics in Giz reviews—but what I can show you should give you a decent idea of the DP2’s capabilities, coupled with patience and some basic know-how, can deliver. I’ll let them speak for themselves (and yeah, I already know you can do better with your mom’s LG cameraphone, so let’s go easy on the qualitative judgments):

(Note: Wait for page to fully load before clicking on gallery thumbnails, otherwise you’re gonna have a bad time.)





The Rub: As much as I’d like to say it’s a great camera for photographically inclined people to stash somewhere for certain situations, it’s too damn expensive. It costs around $650 street price; for that money you can probably get a clearance-model DSLR model these days, maybe even with a kit lens. In the end, I’ve come to think of the Sigma DP2 as the Dogfish Head 120 Minute IPA of cameras: Beautiful in concept but complex, powerful and damn expensive—if you hit it everyday, it could well get the best of you. [Sigma]

In Brief
For a small-bodied camera, it has exceptional picture-taking capability and superior image quality

Its $650 cost can only be justified by a small percentage of wealthy photo enthusiasts

It’s tricky to use at first


Crap battery life


No zoom lens or any other obvious point-and-shoot frills

Modern Fossils Preserve Gadgets in Stone

modern-fossils

Christopher Lock’s Modern Fossils portray the gadgets of yesteryear as extinct, long-lost creatures, fossilized to pique the curiosity of future generations. Cast in concrete, the specimens rang from the cassette tape (Latin name Asportatio acroamatis) to the guts of an iPod (Egosiliqua malusymphonicus) — my favorite because it actually looks a little like a real fossil.

I should probably agree with Lock’s spewing treatise on “runaway consumerism and wastefulness at the high end of the food chain” but I am, as a gadget blogger, part of the problem. There is actually a rather interesting point underneath this otherwise flip (if fun) project: What will happen to old gadgets in the future? These things are disposable, and as such there won’t be many of them around in even a few years time. I picked a VHS tape out of a street trashcan the other day and waved it at my friends. They laughed at it.

So, instead of buying Lock’s $75 iPod cast, just hold onto your own first gen iPod. Lord knows it’s heavy enough to hold down a stack of paper in the stiffest of breezes.

Product page [Heartless Machine. Thanks, Dylan!]


Nokia’s Bluetooth BH-905 is ‘the best headset ever made’

Pretty strong words from Nokia calling its new BH-905 headset “the best headset ever made.” The claim comes as a result of a partnership with Wolfson Microelectronics to add its 10-microphone “feed-forward” active noise-cancellation technology to the headset — 8 mics for capturing background noise, 2 for your voice. The headset can connect wirelessly over Bluetooth or via a selection of plugs for your home stereo, MP3 player, or airplane jack. It also features high-performance speakers with stainless steel audio controls on one can, phone controls on the other. They’ll hit globally in August for a steep pre-tax price of €285 / $403. Hey, that’s not bad for the best ever.

[Thanks, Stephen R.]

Read — Announcement
Read — Microsite with video

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Nokia’s Bluetooth BH-905 is ‘the best headset ever made’ originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 06:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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QWERTY Grips: Keys for Your Bike

odyssey ross
Back when I was a kid, in the middle of the 1980s BMX scene, it was all about the Mushrooms: ribbed, rubbery handlebar grips which had been so overdosed with friction at the factory that just brushing your pinky against one could give you blisters. Combined with the then-fashionable two-finger brake levers, impossibly stiff sticks which had been similarly over-endowed, this time with torque, and you had a disastrous recipe for manual trauma, with top riders ending up as shovel-handed freaks.

I didn’t care. My parents bought me a racing bike: my damn brother got the BMX. Which is why I have a writing job and he spends his days playing cricket – without a bat. Sweet irony, then, in the Aaron Ross Signature Grip from Odyssey, a BMX handgrip that features an embossed QWERTY keyboard. At least it looks like a QWERTY. Look closer and you’ll see Ross’ name spelled out on the top row, along with “Odyssey” where the numbers should be.

I love it because it’s just plain nerdy, and it might be the first ever handlebar grip I actually buy. Around $8 the pair.

Product page [Google via Art of Trackstand]


Acer launching world’s first Android-based netbook in Q3

Acer’s been straightforward with the fact that it’s been dabbling with Android on netbooks. In fact, the entire industry seems to be. Now we’ve got word that Acer will in fact launch an Android-based netbook in the 3rd quarter of 2009. The move was announced by Acer’s global president for IT products, Jim Wong. The Android netbooks will run Atom (sorry Tegra hopefuls) and presumably cost less than Windows XP-based netbooks that require an estimated $25 tithe to Microsoft. Acer will continue to offer Windows-based netbooks along side the Android builds. Whether Android, an OS designed for smartphones, will succeed in gaining back market share lost to Microsoft remains to be seen. But if Microsoft’s boasting about consumers wanting netbooks offering the same OS experience they’re used to is true, well, how can Android succeed where those early Linux distros failed?

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Acer launching world’s first Android-based netbook in Q3 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 05:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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