Lullabelly is iPod Speaker for Your Womb

LullabellyAre you a mom who wears headphones on your belly to help pass the time for your unborn child? Well, I have good news: “There’s an app for that!” It’s called iTunes, and you can pair it with the new Lullabelly Prenatal Music Belt, available now for $49 or $55 (with packaged headphones for mom, too). I haven’t tried one out yet (know any unborn babies looking for freelance work?), but the device seems straightforward enough–and I doubt your kid will start kicking if the speakers lack rich-sounding bass.

The Prenantal Music Belt from Lullabelly ships in three colors–Pink, Green, or Blue with polka dots–and is available as a Standard Package (speakers only) for $49, or as a Deluxe Package (with a dual earphone adapter and earphones so you can listen along) for $55 from Lullabelly.com.

Brother, NEC look to invade your retinas next year

Brother may spend a big chunk of its time on things like printers and sewing machines, but it’s also quietly been working on some decidedly more futuristic products, and it may just be set to deliver on one of them. While it wasn’t offering much in the way of specifics the last time we heard about its retina display technology, Brother now seems to have a fully developed, fully functional prototype (pictured above), and it says it plans to commercialize the glasses sometime “next year.” Naturally, there are a few considerable limitations compared to more traditional displays, but the company’s as yet unnamed goggles do promise to beam an 800 x 600 image directly into your retina that’ll appear as a 10-centimeter wide image floating about one meter in front of them — which is certainly no small feat, even if it may not be the most practical one. Slightly less specific, but also working on a retina display of its own is NEC, which apparently hopes to incorporate a microphone into their display and use it as a real-time translation device that would quite literally display subtitles as you talk to someone. Ambitious, to be sure, but NEC is also saying it hopes to get it on the market in 2010.

Read – Register Hardware, “Brother creates direct retinal imaging specs”
Read – Far East Gizmos, “NEC develops Worlds first retina-display translation Eyeglasses”

[Via Popular Science]

Filed under: ,

Brother, NEC look to invade your retinas next year originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Oct 2009 13:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Design Firm Shows Gadgets From the Near Future

Q2 Cube Internet Radio

A radio without any knobs. A bathroom where a clear display wirelessly streams vital statistics on your health. And a user interface that takes brain waves and translates them into commands for a computer.


These are some of the products in development by Cambridge Consultants, a product design and development company. It showed off some of its latest inventions at a daylong event last week in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Check out these sweet ideas, many of which are set to hit retail shelves in the next few weeks.

Cube Radio (above)

As devices become more complex to use, designers are striving for simplicity in form. The Q2 Cube internet radio tries to innovate in terms of how users can interact with it. It’s the first dial-free radio, say Cambridge Consultants and the Armour Group, which co-developed it. The cube-shaped device lets users choose radio stations or change the volume by moving the device itself. To select one of the four pre-set radio stations, turn the Cube onto one of its ‘faces.’ Tilting it forward turns the volume up, and tilting it backwards turns it down. The device took about nine months to develop from concept to prototype.

Though pricing for it has not yet been announced, the Cube is expected to be available in some retail stores in the U.K. in time for Christmas.

Implantable Antenna

Implantable Antenna

Patient care is set to go beyond the doctor’s office. New low-power wireless technologies make it possible to implant monitoring devices in people’s bodies, to help keep an eye on blood pressure, metabolism and other vital statistics.

But one of the challenges of these new wireless devices is designing a suitable antenna that can operate within the human body where fat, muscle and skin tissue create challenging conditions for wireless signals.

This implantable antenna uses the 402-405MHz Medical Implant Communications Service (MICS) frequency band. Combined with a custom integrated chip or a system on a chip, device makers can use the antenna in pacemakers, neurostimulation devices, and swallowable imaging and diagnostic systems.

Connected Patient

Connected Patient

There’s no dearth of health and fitness equipment, from the basic digital scale to sophisticated heart and blood pressure monitors. But most of these devices work independently with no easy way to share the data or discern patterns in it.

Now picture the bathroom of the future, where these devices can talk to each other and wirelessly stream information onto a single screen. It’s easy to do it with the Bluetooth Health Device Profile and the IEEE Personal Health Data specification.

In the past, communication between medical devices was based on ad-hoc and proprietary standards, which offered limited or no interoperability. The latest Bluetooth and IEEE standards developed specifically for medical use changes that. For a user, it means, a better overall picture of your fitness and medical information.


Police to auction off nitrous-fueled, motorized La-Z-Boy

We’ve seen plenty of strange motorized chairs in this space, including those controlled by Wii Nunchucks and even brainwaves, but rarely do they become available for sale. The handiwork of Minnesota resident Dennis Anderson, this La-Z-Boy mod features everything the manufacturer left out, including: stereo sound system, nitrous oxide booster, parachute, headlights, a steering wheel, and a sticker that reads: “Hell yeah, it’s fast.” The vehicle, which will reach speeds of 20 MPH, was seized by the state when the driver crashed into a parked car — he was on the way home from the bar (of course) and ‘fessed up to consuming “eight or nine” beers prior to the incident. Anderson may be roaming the streets with a two-year suspended sentence, but his chariot can be yours! Keep an eye out on eBay, where it’s due to appear this week with no reserve price.

[Thanks, Scooterde]

Filed under:

Police to auction off nitrous-fueled, motorized La-Z-Boy originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Oct 2009 13:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

The 404 453: Where the role of Justin Yu will be played by Mark Licea

Justin Yu has finally caught the SARS/swine flu that’s been floating around the CNET NY offices. It was bound to happen, considering the number of make-out parties we have here. Filling his petite shoes, we have Mark Licea (aka MTI). We promise a jam-packed show for those depressing Monday mornings.

This ain't right.

(Credit:

beautifulpeople.com
)

On today’s show, we talk about beautifupeople.com, a Web site that is finally coming to the United States, which only beautiful people are allowed to join. That’s right: in order to join this dating Web site, you have to be pretty. Users must submit their pictures, then the community decides whether you’re hot enough to join. Unfortunately, Jeff and Wilson will likely get rejected. We’ll let you know what Mark finds out on the Web site.

Not cool.

(Credit:

Phoenix New Times
)

After that, we find out that older men who are less educated than their female counterparts are less likely to get a divorce and are generally happier in their relationships. So we guess all those cougar relationships out there aren’t going to work out. We also check out a not cool “illegal alien costume.” It might have been funny on “Chappelle’s Show,” but it’s likely to get the crap beat out of you immediately.

Finally, we cover CNN‘s new Web site and we get to some video game news and commentary. The PlayStation 3 finally gets Netflix streaming after Xbox 360 has had it for almost a year now. Took them long enough, but we think this might start to change the balance of power in the video game console war, because it will be free on the PlayStation 3, rather than having to sell out $50 bucks a year for a Xbox Live Gold membership. Plus, Wilson gets close to beating Ghostbusters: The Videogame. His take? It’s fun to watch, a little monotonous to play after a while, but a good buy.

Please, please, send in voice mails. We’re running a bit low these days, and we love to hear your feedback. Call in at 1-866-404-CNET (2638). Call! (Especially if you’re a lady.)



EPISODE 453


Listen now:

Download today’s podcast

Subscribe in iTunes audio | Suscribe to iTunes (video) | Subscribe in RSS Audio | Subscribe in RSS Video




Originally posted at The 404

GlideTV Navigator gets a thorough hands-on and critiquing

If you’re not down with snapping up an HTPC-centric keyboard with an integrated trackpad or trackball, controlling the likes of Hulu, Boxee and ZeeVee’s Zinc TV viewer can be a real chore. Dave Zatz was able to wrap his paws around the problem-solving GlideTV Navigator, and while he deemed the actual remote trackpad “the best he’d ever used,” he couldn’t unequivocally say that this beauty was worth a buck-fifty. He also found that the remote could be used one-handed with a bit of practice, and he expressed understandable concern about this thing’s ability to stay functional as the software around it evolves. If you’ve been waffling on pulling the trigger here, you owe it to yourself to give the read link a look.

Filed under: ,

GlideTV Navigator gets a thorough hands-on and critiquing originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Oct 2009 12:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Times Editor Leaks ‘Apple Slate’ News — Sorta

Bill Keller speaks to the digital group at The New York Times from Nieman Journalism Lab on Vimeo.

New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller may have let slip something about an upcoming Apple tablet — but you have to make a lot of assumptions to interpret his comment as confirmation that an Apple tablet is really coming. Speaking to the digital media group at the Times, Keller spoke of his hopes that the newsroom would get more involved in delivering the news via various online media:

I’m hoping we can get the newsroom more actively involved in the challenge of delivering our best journalism in the form of Times Reader, iPhone apps, WAP, or the impending Apple slate, or whatever comes after that.

Harvard’s Nieman Journalism Lab posted the video of Keller (embedded above — fast forward to 8:30 to see the quote) as well as a transcript of Keller’s talk.

Gawker pounced on the comment as, perhaps, an inadvertent case of letting the truth slip out. The Times has been rumored to have met with Apple on the future of digital media — as has Wired parent company Condé Nast — and many assume such discussions included talk of delivering the news to an upcoming, e-reader-like Apple device.

But the Apple tablet is also one of the most widely expected devices of the year, and it’s just possible that the executive editor of the Times maybe, you know, reads the news?

In short: It’s not much of a confirmation at all. But then, we all know an Apple tablet is coming, right? Right?

See Also:


HTC Dragon coming to Verizon as the Passion?

We’ve been hearing about a 1GHz Snapdragon-based Android handset called the HTC Dragon ever since the HD2 came out, but now it looks like some pieces are falling into place — apparently this mystery HTC set we spotted over the weekend is a CDMA version of the Dragon headed for Verizon as the HTC Passion sometime in Q4. Apparently Verizon’s trying to unify the hardware UI of its Droid lineup, which is why the Motorola Droid, the HTC Droid Eris, and the Passion share a set of buttons along the bottom edge of the screen, and some people are also claiming that the white notification bar is further sign of similarity. As for us, well, we’ll wait to hear more before we start to get too excited — and we can’t help but wonder if this thing will run Sense or stock Android 2.0 when it hits, as HTC’s big new ad push is all about personalization. Still, it’s looking like a hell of a year for Android (and Verizon), no?

Filed under:

HTC Dragon coming to Verizon as the Passion? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Oct 2009 12:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

BlackBerry Storm 2 to blow in this week

Research In Motion’s BlackBerry Storm 2 will be available to Verizon Wireless customers Wednesday, according to the carrier.

BlackBerry Storm 2

(Credit:
CBS Interactive)

Like its predecessor, the BlackBerry Storm 2 will feature a touch screen. Unlike the BlackBerry Storm, though, the Storm 2’s SurePress “clickable” display doesn’…

Originally posted at The Digital Home

Lenovo gets official with Win7-powered IdeaPad and IdeaCentre machines

Lenovo already got official with a couple of its Windows 7-powered machines last week, but it looks like the rest of the crop is landing today. Of course, we’ve already seen the 11.6-inch IdeaPad U150 and 15.6-inch U550 pop up in various corners of the globe this month, and the IdeaPad U350 has been around since the summer. That said, we’ll take the OS refresh and minor spec bumps any day of the week (along with new colors on the S10-2), and that’s exactly what we’re getting. We’ll spare you the rehash (it’s all there in the read link if you need a refresher), but over on the desktop front, we’re pretty stoked about the stylish (and previously rumored) all-in-one IdeaCentre B500. Packing a Core 2 Quad CPU, 1TB of HDD space, up to 8GB of DDR3 RAM and a 23-inch LCD, this thing may actually perform fairly well in tasks more strenuous than checking email. The business-minded K300 and bargain-priced H230 ($299 starting point) are less thrilling from a hardware perspective, but they’ll certainly fit their respective molds quite well. The whole lot should be available to order soon directly from Lenovo, and there’s bound to be plenty of options for those not content with base configurations.

Filed under: ,

Lenovo gets official with Win7-powered IdeaPad and IdeaCentre machines originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Oct 2009 12:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments