Umbrella bagger dispenses, collects on rainy day

Japan is very savvy when it comes to umbrellas. Whenever it’s a rainy day shops, restaurants and hotels will usually have a stand of long plastic bags at the entrance, which visitors take and put over their wet umbrellas. The most sophisticated of these is probably the Kasapon dispenser: slide in your umbrella and it automatically slips on a bag. (Short umbrellas can be tricky but apparently there are dispensers especially for them too!)

During our recent visit to RetailTech 2010 we saw a great Kasapon dispenser which also had a “umbrella bag collection machine” (傘袋回収機). Certainly taking the now-dripping plastic bag off your umbrella when you want to leave the store can be an unpleasant experience, but here you just put your umbrella into the hole and when you pull it back up the slip is magically gone.

kasapon-umbrella-dispenser-1

There is no electricity involved, just good old springs and levers, and the dispensers can store literally hundreds of the plastic bags. This kind of smooth tool can really change your retail experience, which is usually harried and uncomfortable enough on a rainy day.

These sets (dispenser and bag disposal unit) don’t come cheap, though: one model we looked at costs 165,900 JPY ($1,800)!

InVisage envisions a world where cell phone cameras don’t suck, embraces quantum dots

The invention of nanocrystal semiconductors — more commonly called quantum dots — has spurred scientists to create everything from precisely-colored LED lamps to higher-density flash memory. There’s also been some talk of applying a solution of the tiny crystals to create higher sensitivity cameras, and according to a company named InVisage, that latter utility is almost ready for commercial production. By smearing light-amplifying quantum dots onto the existing CMOS sensors used in cell phone cameras like so much strawberry jam, InVisage claims it will offer smartphone sensors that have four times the performance and twice the dynamic range of existing chips by the end of the year, and roll out the conveyor belts in late 2011, just in time for the contract to end on your terrible new cameraphone.

[Thanks, Matt]

InVisage envisions a world where cell phone cameras don’t suck, embraces quantum dots originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Mar 2010 02:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Adobe’s second Lightroom beta arrives

Yep, there’s tethering, video handling, better noise reduction, and some performance improvements for the raw-photography application. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://news.cnet.com/8301-30685_3-20000959-264.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Deep Tech/a/p

JooJoo finally shipping?

Do our eyes deceive us? Can it be that JooJoo — the CrunchPad that wasn’t — has progressed from pre-order status to shipping? Sure seems that way. Two days ahead of the revised March 25th launch date we see that the JooJoo is now taking proper orders for their Ion-based $499 Atom tablet with 12.1-inch capacitive touchscreen, in the US anyway. So, did anyone get a revised delivery status?

[Thanks, Marquel G.]

JooJoo finally shipping? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Mar 2010 02:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Carriers Get Serious about Cellphone Recycling

old-phones

Consumers who want to get a new Nexus One or a HTC Hero don’t have to throw away their existing phones. Instead they can trade their current devices for cash at the nearest Sprint store or just have the phone recycled in environmentally friendly way.

Former executives from RadioShack and Sprint have combined to create a new electronic waste recycling company called eRecyclingCorps that will work with wireless service providers to recycle used handsets. The move could help more consumers upgrade their phones in guilt-free way, they say.

“If there’s some value to the phone you can get some dollars that can go towards buying your new phone or accessorizing it,” says David Edmondson, CEO and founder of eRecyclingCorps and former CEO of RadioShack. “If not, we promise it will be disposed off in a way there’s zero electronic waste.”

All 2,500 Sprint stores in the country and the company’s website will be the first to kick this off. Sprint has said it wants to achieve a wireless reuse and recycling rate of 90 percent as compared to device sales by 2017.

The recycling program will cover all cellphones sold in the U.S. since 2005 and customers can trade in phones from any service provider at the Sprint store.

In the U.S., about 130 million phones are retired each year, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. About 10 percent of cellphones in the U.S. are currently recycled, and only about 1 percent of the 4 billion wireless subscribers in the world recycle their handsets. With new models launched every month, the growing cellphone market has also resulted in a huge amopunt of electronic waste that is harmful to the environment.

Meanwhile, sensing an opportunity for used gadgets, over the last three years, sites such as Gazelle and TechForward have offered trade-in or recycling programs for devices. On their websites, consumers can enter the make and condition of the gadget and instantly find out if they can get some cash for it.

eRecyclingCorps will be different because it just focuses on cellphones and it will work with wireless carriers to make the process easier for consumers, says Edmondson.

“There is a lack of convenience in the process right now,” he says.”and there’s a lack of scale.”

About 60 percent of cellphones sold today are purchased from stores of wireless carriers. To make the trade-in process more efficient, eRecyclingCorps will offer web-based software for the service providers that will include a pricing engine, inventory control, analytics and device re-distribution.

Once the old phones are gathered, they are divided into three categories, says eRecyclingCorps: Phones that can be re-used right away, phones that can be refurbished, and phones that are beyond their their functional life. The last category is passed on to a recycling firm. The company promises its recycling will be an environmentally friendly process with nothing going into a landfill.

Though Sprint is the first to partner with eRecyclingCorps, Edmondson says his company is trying to work with other carriers such as AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile to make this a part of their stores.

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Photo: (gassy7/Flickr)


Kyocera launches first Android phone

The Kyocera Zio features Android OS 1.6 and runs on CDMA networks. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-12261_7-20000829-10356022.html” class=”origPostedBlog”CTIA 2010/a/p

3D Imagery From Mars To Make James Cameron Jealous

mojave crater on mars.jpg

The big news in the world of 3D imagery recently has come from Pandora, the unobtanium rich moon in James Cameron’s Avatar. Spectacular, but pure fantasy. in the realm of the real the big 3D news comes from NASA and some stereoscopic images from Mars, specifically Mojave Crater.

About 60 kilometers (37 miles) in diameter Mojave Crater is a recent addition to Mars. It’s only around 10 million years old. Its depth of 2.6 kilometers (1.6 miles) suggests minimal erosion. In other words, it’s in relatively pristine shape.

‘The Panel’ rechargeable LED monitor sentences you to a more productive life

“It would let me set up shop at that posh cafe down the street.” That’s how you justified your laptop purchase — but as you sat, gently sipping your macchiato, you realized it would never work without your decidedly non-portable 24-inch Cinema Display‘s extra real estate. We’ve been there many a time, and apparently so has a startup named MEDL Technology, which has just finished prototyping the answer to our telecommuting (and portable gaming) woes. Going above and beyond the average, tiny secondary display, “The Panel” is an honest-to-goodness 13.3-inch LED-backlit monitor that’s less than an inch thick, but packs incredible connectivity (DVI, VGA, Component, S-Video, mini-HDMI and USB) in addition to a sweet folding stand and up to five hours of rechargeable battery life. MEDL told us that should they secure funding, the firm’s looking to launch The Panel in Q4 2010, and is hoping to first sway business users with a sub-$350 price point. To work surrounded by coffee — without being employed by Starbucks — that’s a small price to pay.

‘The Panel’ rechargeable LED monitor sentences you to a more productive life originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Mar 2010 01:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hypersonic-PC powers down for the last time

Avenger AG2

In 1997, Hypersonic joined the likes of Voodoo, AlienWare and Falcon Northwest in the gamble that gamers would buy what were then gut-wrenchingly expensive (think $10,000) custom PCs. Ten years later, it was gobbled up by memory manufacturer OCZ, and soon came to our attention for selling a chic, tiny, but somehow nicely specced 12.1-inch laptop. Today, the company is no more. The Hypersonic website reads that the firm is no longer accepting orders, and Techgage — speaking to OCZ’s chief marketing office Alex Mei — reports that while OCZ will honor all warranties, the company is ceasing marketing and sales support for the Hypersonic brand. Sad, yes, but at least it’s one fewer temptation to lure us extreme gamers into bankruptcy.

Hypersonic-PC powers down for the last time originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Mar 2010 23:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dish Network countersues DirecTV over signal reliability claims

Oh, don’t act surprised. As is the norm with these things, Dish Network has filed a countersuit against DirecTV. Last month, the latter company filed suit, claiming Dish’s “Why Pay More” ads were false and misleading. The countersuit, unsurprisingly, is also false and misleading advertising — in this instance, the claim “nothing comes close to the reliability and quality of DirecTV.” Dish asserts its signal reliability is exactly the same, 99.9 percent. Better strap yourself in, it’s gonna be a long and bumpy ride through the court system.

Dish Network countersues DirecTV over signal reliability claims originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Mar 2010 22:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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