Lumiotec starts selling OLED lighting development kits, but not for a song

There’s probably nothing wrong with the existing incandescent setup that’s lighting your abode as we speak, but if you’ve been itching to do something — how do you say? — different, Lumiotec needs to have a word with you. The Japanese outfit is now selling OLED lighting development kits, which are perfect for DIYers looking for light-up tiles to create a nightclub in their basement. We’re pretty sure you could think of other things to do with the ¥84,000 ($934) kit, but isn’t a homegrown rave room good enough? Sheesh.

Lumiotec starts selling OLED lighting development kits, but not for a song originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 07:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Puma Phone pounces into action

At Mobile World Congress, sports lifestyle company Puma debuted its own phone and it’s surprisingly good. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13970_7-10454794-78.html” class=”origPostedBlog”3GSM blog/a/p

VoxOx Universal Translator makes multilingual communication a breeze

Despite being launched at Mobile World Congress, VoxOx has yet to make a mobile version of its Universal Translator. That said, the desktop version is still quite useful for those with Windows or OS X-based rigs who attempt to communicate with friends — particularly with friends who speak a different native language. The new software build enables real-time language translation for SMS chat, social media and email, and so long as the VoxOx client is pulled up, you can send and receive any of those messages in your own tongue while receiving translated messages in return. Granted, we get the idea that some phrases will be quite literally lost in translation, but this sure beats accessing Google’s Language Tools for each questionable phrase. Hit the download link below to grab a copy, and head on past the break for a video demonstration of what’s on offer.

Continue reading VoxOx Universal Translator makes multilingual communication a breeze

VoxOx Universal Translator makes multilingual communication a breeze originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 06:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBusiness Wire, VoxOn Download  | Email this | Comments

Window G85HD PMP is somewhere between awesome and awkward

You know, the vast majority of Chinese PMPs are underwhelming, and we can’t say for sure that the Windows G85HD is any different, but the video walkthrough of the user interface has us interested at the very lease. Reportedly, the all-white, touchscreen-centric device packs a Rockchip RK2806 processor, a 4.3-inch panel (800 x 480), 3.5mm headphone jack, 720p video output, 8GB or 16GB of internal memory, a microSD card slot, FM radio tuner, a Chinese-English dictionary and support for a multitude of file formats. There’s nary a word on when and where you’ll be able to find this, but if you find yourself situated in Shenzhen, feel free to scope things out at the local market and fill us in.

[Thanks, Sere83]

Continue reading Window G85HD PMP is somewhere between awesome and awkward

Window G85HD PMP is somewhere between awesome and awkward originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 05:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePC Online  | Email this | Comments

Wired’s tablet app goes on show: developed on AIR, heading to the iPad (video)

Mmm, digital magazines. They are the little bites of paid-for content that all the publishers believe we should be deeply enthralled with. Hoping to show us why exactly it is that we should all care (and pay) for prepackaged digital content is Wired‘s latest and most comprehensive demo of its tablet app on an unspecified 16:9 device. Setting aside hopefuls like the Joojoo and Adam for a moment, it is clear that this is ultimately intended for Apple’s iPad — the device that stands by far the biggest chance of making the digimag concept a commercial success. Interesting choice of development partner, then, as Condé Nast has opted to use Adobe’s AIR platform for the underlying mechanics. Adobe promises its Packager for iPhone, part of CS5, will allow devs to easily port AIR apps to run natively on the iPad, but until Apple gives its official assent to the final code, nothing is guaranteed — and Packager hasn’t even officially shipped yet. As far as the app goes, it’ll come with Twitter and Facebook integration, and navigation is geared toward the touching and swiping model so prevalent today. See it on video after the break.

Continue reading Wired’s tablet app goes on show: developed on AIR, heading to the iPad (video)

Wired’s tablet app goes on show: developed on AIR, heading to the iPad (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 05:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Buffalo Kokuyo reveals 4-port USB 3.0 hub, leaves you little choice but to upgrade

Oh c’mon, that 80-port USB 2.0 hub served you well, and frankly, it owes you nothing. With USB 3.0 upon us, it’s only a matter of time before every last external HDD, scanner and printer you own is cruising along the SuperSpeed highway, and while that’s obviously a gross exaggeration, we’ve always been one for proactiveness. If you’re worried about having the bandwidth to handle the next generation of USB, Japan’s own Buffalo Kokuyo has just the thing: a 4-port USB 3.0 hub. The BSH4A03U3 supports Windows and Mac platforms and promises to handle speeds up to 5Gbps, though the ¥8,000 ($89) asking price does feel a wee bit steep.

Buffalo Kokuyo reveals 4-port USB 3.0 hub, leaves you little choice but to upgrade originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 04:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Engadget Korea, Akihabara News  |  sourceBuffalo-Kokuyo  | Email this | Comments

RIM CEO claims we are staring ‘down the barrel of a capacity crunch,’ should all get BlackBerrys to prevent it

Capacity crunch, isn’t that a breakfast cereal? RIM’s Mike Lazaridis seems to have been a real grouch at MWC this week as apparently he hasn’t stopped talking about the doom and gloom awaiting mobile carriers over the next few years. Focusing on the bandwidth-hungry North American market, Lazaridis has criticized the apparently irresponsible network saturation growth, which he sees as being primarily driven by app-centric operating systems. If you’re wondering who he could possibly be referring to, let Mike clarify it — according to him, you could carry five BlackBerry devices for each iPhone on a network. As evidence of his firm’s focus on efficiency, he points us to that freshly demoed WebKit browser, which he claims uses a third of the bandwidth required by the competition from Apple and Google. If only he wasn’t implying that owning a BlackBerry would save the internet, Mike’s sales pitch would be rather compelling — those are mighty impressive numbers he is citing.

RIM CEO claims we are staring ‘down the barrel of a capacity crunch,’ should all get BlackBerrys to prevent it originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 03:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink 9to5Mac  |  sourceDaily Telegraph, Economic Times  | Email this | Comments

Samsungs Wave: 4x Snapdragons Graphics Performance?

Samsung Triangles.JPG
When Samsung announced their Wave phone on Sunday, they called out the 1-Ghz processor but they didn’t mention the graphics performance. Maybe they shouldn’t have been so coy. In a panel here at Mobile World Congress yesterday, they slapped up this slide, claiming that the Wave does 89 million triangles per second.

That’s insanely good graphics for a phone in 2010. The Qualcomm Snapdragon chipset that you see in top-of-the-line phones today only does 22 million triangles per second. NVIDIA’s Tegra and the Marvell Armada 610 both do around 45. The new Tegra 2 chipset which NVIDIA unveiled at CES last month does 85-90, but we haven’t seen it in any phones yet.

Way to hide your light under a bushel, Samsung. If the Wave can actually crank out 89 million triangles, that’s going to make for some eye-popping mobile gaming experiences

Ubuntu Hardy Heron 8.04 gets ported onto Sony Ericsson’s Xperia X1

Not even a fortnight after we saw Android 2.0.1 slapped onto Sony Ericsson’s all-but-forgotten Xperia X1, along comes a port that makes the other look like child’s play. A dedicated coder over at XDA Developers has managed to stuff Ubuntu Hardy Heron 8.04 onto an X1, and while the functionality is limited (as you’d expect), the amount of fun to be had is restrained only by your imagination (and available vacation time). Go on and peek that source link to join the discussion — but be warned, you’ll be sucking down over a gigabyte worth of data before the first installation process.

[Thanks, Jules]

Ubuntu Hardy Heron 8.04 gets ported onto Sony Ericsson’s Xperia X1 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 02:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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$2 Sensory chip could give toys (and other products) improved speech recognition, additional capabilities

Sensory Inc. may stay behind the scenes most of the time, but the company’s speech recognition chips are already used in toys from JVC, Mattel, Hasbro and others, and it’s now announced a new chip that could lead to toys with some significantly improved capabilities. Costing just $2 apiece (in quantities over 100K/year), the company’s NLP-5X chip not only boasts support for speech recognition and text-to-speech that lets it “generate thousands of voices on the fly,” but support for sound samples and MIDI playback as well. What’s more, the chip uses what’s described as an “incredible algorithm” that allows it to be on all the time and simply listen and activate itself when needed — or when you least suspect it. Of course, while toys are one application, the company also sees the chip being used in a whole range of other consumer electronics — Sensory even gives the example of an internet-connected oven that could let look up a recipe and then have a conversation with your oven about how you’d like to cook it.

$2 Sensory chip could give toys (and other products) improved speech recognition, additional capabilities originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 01:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Yahoo News  |  sourceSensory Inc.  | Email this | Comments