Apple Willow Glass “iWatch” smartwatch could be very curved indeed

Apple‘s much-rumored smartwatch could be the first broadscale implementation of Corning’s flexible Willow Glass, potentially opening the door to an iOS-connected timepiece that wraps its display fully around the wrist. Speculation of an Apple-made Pebble rival resurged over the weekend with chatter that the Cupertino firm was working with Foxconn on a power-efficient companion device to the iPhone, featuring a curved glass screen. Exactly how curved that might be was unclear, but according to the New York Times the flexed wearable could be wrapped entirely about the wearer’s arm.

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Corning revealed its Willow Glass technology last June, but the tough, flexible glass has in fact been in development for more than ten years. The material can be just 100 microns thick – making it thin enough to wave in the wind – which also helps with broad viewing angles: that could come in handy if you can only briefly glance askew at your wrist to check, say, on your latest iMessage pings.

Corning Willow Glass overview:

It’s not just the flexibility that makes Willow Glass special, however. The material can also be processed at very high temperatures – up to 500 degrees centigrade, in fact – which makes it suitable for roll-to-roll production. Such systems, where assembly of display components is carried out continuously rather than in individual sheets, would likely be essential for productivity if Apple was to go into mass production for what would likely be an affordable and popular accessory.

Corning Willow Glass roll-to-roll production:

According to the NYT’s sources inside Apple, the smartwatch would “operate on” iOS, though it’s unclear whether that means the digital timepiece would have its own, standalone operating system, or merely act as a conduit for iPhone and iPad notifications. The colloquially-named “iWatch” is expected to use Bluetooth 4.0, the low power iteration of the short-range wireless technology, to connect to a nearby Apple device.

Exactly what it could do with that connection is unclear, though there’s plenty of potential for a discrete, wrist-worn way to access data. Beyond the usual notifications for email, calendar alerts, messaging, and calls, the Bluetooth link could be used to remotely command Siri, Apple’s virtual personal assistant. That would help bypass the presumed absence of a complex touchscreen interface, and address one of the biggest ongoing criticisms with smartwatches in general: that though they allow wearers to check alerts, they usually fall short when it comes to acting on them.

With Siri, however, iWatch users could reply to messages, establish new appointments, search the internet, and get navigation guidance, all by asking for it out loud. Previous rumors have suggested Apple might use a roughly 1.5-inch display – akin to the sixth-gen iPod nano, perhaps, which many buyers wore on their wrist using special third-party watch straps – though how much information would be displayed on-screen and how much would be audibly reported is unclear.

A timescale for Apple’s iWatch launch is still something of a mystery, and both the company and manufacturer Foxconn have declined to comment on the speculation.

[Concept image by ADR Studio]


Apple Willow Glass “iWatch” smartwatch could be very curved indeed is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

TailorToys shows off a smartphone controlled paper airplane kit

TailorToys recently participated in the American International Toy Fair with its very cool PowerUp conversion kits for paper airplanes and boats. One of the most interesting of the products the company was showing off was the PowerUp 3.0 smartphone controlled paper airplane. This kit allows you to build your own paper airplanes with a small propeller in the back that can be controlled using a smartphone.

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Version 3.0 of the kit includes the Smart aerial unit allows your homemade paper airplanes to fly for 10 min. The aircraft can be controlled via any smartphone that features Bluetooth 4.0 technology. The PowerUp 3.0 kit can attach to any airplane design constructed using a standard sheet of A4 or 8.5 x 11″ copier paper.

This kit will launch in August of 2013 for kids 12 and up. Another interesting toy that the company is showing off that the fair is the new PowerUp Boat. This is a paper boat conversion kit that features a wind up motor. The boat kit is designed to attach to any paper boat made from a standard sheet of copier paper. This kit will launch in July of 2013.

The company also has some other interesting products such as the PowerUp Templates offering 40 full-color themed paper airplane templates to complement both the new PowerUp 3.0 and the PowerUp 2.0 kits. The templates have detailed instructions to create cool paper airplanes. The template kit will be available in May of 2013.

[via TailorToys]


TailorToys shows off a smartphone controlled paper airplane kit is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

The Beautiful Result of Projecting a Movie Onto a Blizzard

Over the weekend, New York-based redditor Brian Maffitt aimed a projector—playing The Lorax—at the blizzard which struck the east coast and photographed the result. The images are a beautiful and psychedelic take on the pure-white flakes that fell. More »

YouTube channel coming to on demand Freesat party in March

YouTube channel coming to Freesat party

Google’s signed a deal to bring YouTube to Freesat, liberating users of the subscription-less service from the tyranny of needing an additional device. The BBC / ITV joint venture already has 60-odd channels and has now sold over 3 million boxes to 1.7 million viewers, who will be able to access the official YouTube addition through the main programming guide by the end of March. While details are scant, it’ll presumably join ITV’s player and the BBC iPlayer in the on-demand channel list, which require a compatible Freesat box (see coverage link below) and an internet connection. We’re not sure how it’ll look in the final guide, but the fanciful image above shows our best guess.

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Via: TNW

Source: The Telegraph

Own your own RoboCop ED-209 for only $25,000

If you grew up in the 80s and early 90s, you watched RoboCop. The movie was incredibly cheesy, but is one of those classic films from the youth of many geeks. If you’re huge fan of that movie, you can now own your very own ED-209if you win the auction on eBay.

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Fear not, this ED-209 won’t mistakenly accuse you of a crime and then gun you down in your living room. However, if you can’t live without it, the robot will kill your checkbook. You can pick up this ED-209 prop for $25,000 on eBay.

The prop is reportedly an actual Hollywood prop constructed for RoboCop 2. Your $25,000 will get you an incredibly cool statue to help keep those pesky kids off your lawn. One thing that remains unclear is whether or not the prop was actually used in the movie.

There is some indication that this could have been a prop used to help promote the movie and was never actually used on film. I wonder if ED-209 can stand up without those sticks attached to its back legs. I will be very surprised if this movie prop sells for that kind of money.

[via Kotaku [via Technabob]


Own your own RoboCop ED-209 for only $25,000 is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Build-On Brick Mug combines coffee and Lego

Two of the things that keep many people sane and alert are coffee and Lego. The coffee helps keep you awake while tinkering with Lego is just fun. ThinkGeek has unveiled what may be the coolest coffee mug in the history of coffee. The mug is called the Build-On Brick Mug.

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The mug has a suitably blocky design perfect for fans of Lego bricks. It has an alternating arrangement of holes where you can poke various building blocks and the raised knobs where you can click your building blocks onto the cup. The mug is black in color and the building surface is compatible with most building block systems.

That means it will work with Lego, PixelBlocks, MegaBlocks, KRE-O, and K’NEX Bricks. However, the mug isn’t officially licensed by any of those manufacturers. The mug is constructed using BPA-free plastic and has a capacity of 12 ounces. The mug isn’t dishwasher safe so you have to hand wash.

This mug opens up the possibility of constructing all sorts of interesting coffee conveying contraptions using Lego technica and other building blocks. The coffee cup is available right now for $19.99. The best part of waking up is building your Lego cup.

[via ThinkGeek]


Build-On Brick Mug combines coffee and Lego is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

An Art Deco PC Case: Brilliant or Repellant?

Here’s one piece of technological design that’s bound to divide opinoon. Jeffrey Stephenson’s Project Ayr is a fanless home theater PC encased in an art-deco style Mahogany shell. But would you let it inside your home? More »

NASA announces successful robotic satellite refueling demonstration

NASA has announced the successful completion of a robotic refueling demonstration for satellites. The mission was called the Robotic Refueling Mission or RRM. During the demonstration, NASA used remote-controlled robots and currently available technology to prove that satellites in orbit could be refueled even if they weren’t designed to be serviced.

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The test was conducted from January 14 through January 25 and has only now been announced. The demonstration resulted in the first robotic fluid transfer demonstration and shows that robotic satellite servicing capabilities are possible. NASA says that the ability to refuel satellites in orbit will lead to a greener and more sustainable space program.

NASA also hopes that its RRM demonstration may help boost the commercial satellite servicing industry. The technology used in the robotic refueling demonstration was developed over 18 months and launched in July 2011 aboard STS-135, the last space shuttle mission. The technology was a joint development between NASA and the Canadian Space Agency.

The successful test has proven, according to NASA, that the service life of hundreds of satellites currently in GEO can be extended. Satellites in that type of orbit are used for all manner of critical services including weather reports, cell phone communications, television broadcasts, government communications, and air traffic management. NASA believes that the technology could also result in significant savings by preventing the need for satellite replacement and eliminating launch costs. The successful demonstration used the Canadian Dextre robot four.

That robot had to cut a pair of twisted wires approximately the thickness of four sheets of paper used to secure spacecraft components during launch. Once the wires were cut, the robotic system had to unscrew and store a pair of protective caps to expose the fuel tank. The fuel tank could then be refueled using a washing-machine size RRM module in orbit.

[via NASA]


NASA announces successful robotic satellite refueling demonstration is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Freesat adds YouTube to “free time” on-demand service

YouTube is set to arrive on UK free-to-air TV service Freesat, though you’ll still need an internet connection in order to actually watch streaming videos. The new access, which will be added as part of Freesat’s <free time> on-demand/satellite hybrid system, will offer a new UI designed for use on TVs, along with the promise of a more responsive experience.

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Announced last fall, <free time> blends live and on-demand content with a “backwards” EPG that allows users to look at what shows they missed as well as what’s upcoming. Those titles – assuming Freesat has a deal with the provider – are then pulled in streaming form from iPlayer and other web services, within <free time>’s HTML5 interface.

Freesat says [pdf link] that it’s that HTML5 platform which makes enabling YouTube so straightforward, since the official Google app is also made in HTML5. Of course, it also means you need a web connection to your Freesat set-top box in order to access the streaming services.

According to Freesat, which launched back in 2008 as a subscription-free way to access satellite content, the company has seen its 3 millionth sale recently. It also claims growth is considerably outpacing rival UK services, such as Sky and BT Vision, with 55,000 new households supposedly signing up in Q3 2013.


Freesat adds YouTube to “free time” on-demand service is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Audio Pro Air One wireless speaker breaks cover

A Swedish audio company called Audio Pro has unveiled the new wireless speaker that supports Apple AirPlay. The speaker is called the Allroom Air One and supports DNLA devices. The wireless capability of the device allows users to stream music from their iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and other devices.

allroom

Users can also stream music to the speaker directly from a Mac or PC running iTunes. Windows Phone and Android users are able to stream music to the speaker using DNLA technology. The wireless speaker also has a Direct Link feature to allow streaming of music when wireless network isn’t available.

The speaker has a pair of one-inch soft dome tweeters and a pair of 4.5-inch bass units. The device is driven by a 100 W amplifier achieved using a quartet of 25 Wt class D amplifiers linked to a Digital Sound Processor. The speaker is covered in leather and is available in black, white, or red.

Other connectivity options include a USB port, 3.5 mm port, and an optical digital TOSLINK input. The speaker also ships with a wireless remote control allowing you to control the volume, track, and pause or play content from across the room. The device also has an app giving greater control functionality designed for the iPhone. The speaker is available in Europe right now for €700.

[via Audiopro]


Audio Pro Air One wireless speaker breaks cover is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.