Somnus Sleep Shirt watches while you sleep, won’t be creepy about it (video)

Monitoring sleep patterns usually involves a hydra of sensors that keep track of brain activity, muscle movements and heart rates, but a startup called Nyx Devices has developed a new night shirt that can evaluate the quality of a user’s slumber by analyzing only breathing patterns. The form-fitting Somnus Sleep Shirt is embedded with two sensors that keep track of a person’s overnight breathing and transmit this information to a small data recorder, which slides into the lower corner of the nightie. When a user wakes up, he or she can upload their stats to Nyx’s website, where they can generate more detailed analytics and log their caffeine and alcohol intake to find out how all those martini lunches affect their snoozing. Co-inventor Matt Bianchi, a sleep neurologist at Massachusetts General Hospital, thinks the Somnus could help patients suffering from insomnia, who often have difficulty determining how much shuteye they actually get. It’s worth noting, though, that this exclusively respiratory approach is still considered experimental and Nyx still has to conduct a few at-home tests before bringing the shirt to market next year, hopefully for less than $100. Until then, we’ll just keep tossing and turning in our Spider Man jammies. Stroll past the break for an appropriately soporific video.

Continue reading Somnus Sleep Shirt watches while you sleep, won’t be creepy about it (video)

Somnus Sleep Shirt watches while you sleep, won’t be creepy about it (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 11:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceMIT Technology Review  | Email this | Comments

Smarter elevators sort riders, stand ready to enforce social hierarchies

While we’re still awaiting pneumatic tubes that can whisk us to our destinations, elevators have been gaining a few IQ points. For example, they can be voice-activated or recognize an ID badge and route riders to their floors, meaning fewer seconds staring uncomfortably until the doors open. But they can also track workers’ comings and goings, and bosses at Philadelphia’s Curtis Center can program elevators to deliver specific employees directly to them. Not coincidentally, intelligent lifts can also ensure executives rarely have to ride alongside the hoi polloi — a feature Bank of America, for one, paid for but says it doesn’t use. The Wall Street Journal seems to worry this is the end of elevator democracy, but we support anything that reduces our time trapped in small metal boxes.

Smarter elevators sort riders, stand ready to enforce social hierarchies originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 11:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceThe Wall Street Journal  | Email this | Comments

Droid 3 details leaked: dual-core processor, 4-inch qHD screen, no LTE?

Droid 3

You’ve probably already seen the leaked pictures of the Droid 3, but what you really want to know is what’s going on underneath that chrome trim. TechnoBuffalo claims to have the inside scoop and it sounds like the latest landscape slider from Motorola is packing a number of nice improvements. According to a tipster the screen has been upgraded to a 4-inch qHD panel and inside is one of those fancy dual-cores all the cool phones are rockin’ these days — presumably of the Tegra 2 variety like its Droid X2 cousin. As spied in the photos it also has a new 5-row keyboard layout and front facing camera for video calls, while the rear-facing shooter is getting bumped to 8 megapixels. There is one disappointing, but not entirely shocking, detail though — the Droid 3 will lack LTE. We can’t confirm these specs, but they’re perfectly logical assumptions and raise no alarms and no surprises.

Droid 3 details leaked: dual-core processor, 4-inch qHD screen, no LTE? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 10:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceTechnoBuffalo  | Email this | Comments

Kobo unbuttons for $129 eReader Touch Edition, we go hands-on (video)

Kobo today kicked off Book Expo America with the launch of a new six-inch, one-button touchscreen e-reader — named, appropriately enough, the Kobo eReader Touch Edition. Priced at $130 — $10 cheaper than Amazon’s Kindle — the pocket-sized device strives for a reading experience more akin to that of old timey paper books, courtesy of a Zeforce infrared touchscreen, new Pearl eInk technology, and a freescale i.MX507 processor for faster page turning. Click on through for more details and our impressions of this little reader.

Continue reading Kobo unbuttons for $129 eReader Touch Edition, we go hands-on (video)

Kobo unbuttons for $129 eReader Touch Edition, we go hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 10:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Amazon’s Android tablet coming in 10- and 7-inch models with quad-core Tegra power?

We’ve pretty much accepted that Amazon will release a proper Android tablet in 2011. The details, however, are still unclear. Enter Silicon Valley analyst, Tim Bajarin, who claims to have some inside information from his sources in Taipei. If correct, then we should see Amazon launch a 10-inch LCD tablet before the holidays. He’s also heard of a 7-inch model and plans to use NVIDIA’s new quad-core Tegra SoC in order to blaze a path into the crowded tablet market. Interestingly enough, Tim’s sources say that Amazon wanted to use a switchable “black and white E Ink-like display and a color LCD” hybrid but the two vendors approached (Qualcomm and Pixel Qi?) won’t be ready with a suitable display until 2012 or 2013. Of course, Samsung — the rumored DNA at the core of Amazon’s tablet — has plenty of experience with 10- and 7-inch Android tablets and the decision to go LCD aligns with those rumors of a Fringe Field Switching display reported by DigiTimes earlier this month. So while none of this is verified, at least it gives us something more to chew on while we “stay tuned” for whatever Bezos is cooking.

Amazon’s Android tablet coming in 10- and 7-inch models with quad-core Tegra power? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 10:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePC Mag  | Email this | Comments

HTC Trophy finally brings WP7 to Verizon Wireless

The diversification of Verizon Wireless‘ smartphone line continues. The carrier added to the Android and BlackBerry smartphones it already offered when it finally launched the Apple iPhone in February. Later that month, we reported that Verizon would soon get Windows Phone 7 in the form of the HTC Trophy. The Trophy was originally expected to […]

Legendary Skater Tony Hawk (And Many Others) Joins Rapture Bomb Armageddon

So, the world didn’t end. Sort of anticlimactic, no? But the apocalyptic letdown didn’t stop you guys from pulling off some fantastic rapture bombs. We’ve got another batch of our favorite bombs—plus super grindmaster Tony Hawk rapturing himself. More »

HP: TouchPad will become ‘number one plus’

In Cannes, HP’s European chief talks up the prospects for the WebOS-based tablet, due this summer, saying it’ll appeal to both consumers and corporate customers.

Originally posted at The Digital Home

T-Mobile lauches new individual and family plans right on schedule

T-Mobile Unlimited Voice Plans

As rumored, T-Mobile overhauled its individual and family plans today and simplified your options to just three tiers of voice service. Individuals can choose between 500, 1,000 or unlimited minutes, with unlimited text messaging adding $10 and data add-ons ranging from $10 for 200MB to $60 for 10GB. Family plans come in 1,000, 2,000 and unlimited minute varieties while the sharable data and text services cost twice as much as their individual counterparts. There are some odd restrictions, such as the inability to add texting or data to the mid-tier plans and no choice for unlimited voice service without SMS tacked on. We do, however, like the overage-free data options that simply drop to 2G speeds when you reach your plan’s threshold instead of shocking you with huge fees at the end of the month. We can also confirm that restocking fees have been bumped from $10 regardless of device to $50 for smartphones, $75 for tablets, and $25 for USB modems and “basic phone devices.” Check out the sources for all the details and fine print.

Update: Just a few hours after debuting its new individual and family plans T-Mo unleash a pair of new no annual contract choices. $50 gets you unlimited voice, text, and 100MB of 4G or 3G data while $70 pushes the high-speed data cap to 5GB. And, just like the on-contract options, these are overage-free. PR is after the break.

[Thanks, Neal]

Continue reading T-Mobile lauches new individual and family plans right on schedule

T-Mobile lauches new individual and family plans right on schedule originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 09:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceT-Mobile (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

3-D iPad Head-Tracking App Now in App Store

Remember the head-tracking app that would let the iPad fake a pretty convincing 3-D display? Well, now you can try it out for yourself — free — instead of just watching a video of other people using it. The developers, from the University of Joseph Fourier in France, have released the app on the App Store.

It works like this: The app uses the front-facing camera in the iPhone 4 or iPad 2 to track your head. It then changes the on-screen image to match what you would see if you were looking at a 3-D object from different angles. The action takes place behind the screen plane, unlike to majority of stereoscopic 3-D movie effects which jump out at you.

Once the app manages to get a proper fix on your face the effect is uncannily convincing. I had to take off my glasses to get it to work. When I wear them, the app tries to track my ragged, stubbly beard instead. There are instructions for getting a good facial fix, and one of them is “Do not wear a big beard,” so it could be that.

Some of the demos work better than others. I found the first one — a blue cube in a Tron-like grid — to be the most convincing, but then I was testing without my glasses on, so you should probably try it out for yourself.

The authors of the app, Jérémie Francone and Laurance Nigay, say that a future version could “be combined with a stereoscopic display for a better 3D effect.” Somebody needs to write a game that uses this tech right now.

i3D product page [iTunes]

3D displays on mobile devices [IIHM]

See Also: