Cell Phone Party Cup – Never Miss Another Tweet

Some people insist staring at the screen of their smartphone every waking hour of the day. While I personally abhor this anti-social behavior, it’s a fact of modern life. Now you can keep an eye on the screen of your phone even while you’re having a drink of your favorite beverage.

cell phone party cup

The Cell Phone Holder Party Cup is exactly what it sounds like. It’s a  16oz. plastic drink cup with a built-in stand that fits most smartphones. Just strap your phone into the straw-mounted stand, and you can keep an eye on your gadget whenever you go in for a sip.

At first glance, I thought this was an April Fools joke, and then I realized that it’s the end of May. Oh well. If you really must keep constant watch on your screen, you can buy one of these over at Perpetual Kid for $8(USD).

[via That’s Nerdalicious via FoodBeast]

Microsoft Gives Surface RT Buyers A Free Cover For A Limited Time

Microsoft is giving away a free cover for customers who buy a Surface RT for a limited time.

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What’s inside Motorola’s digital tattoo?

Motorola dropped some jaws this week, when Advanced Technology and Projects Group chief Regina Dugan revealed the company’s tinkering on digital tattoos, week-long implanted electronics that could free you from the tyranny of remembering passwords. Dugan – a former DARPA head – described the tattoo as perfect for a wearables market targeting users that don’t actually bother wearing watches any more, instead turning the body into a walking authentication token. She also namechecked mc10, a company not unfamiliar to SlashGear, as the brains behind the flexible tattoo-tech, but just what’s inside?

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Cambridge, MA, based mc10 calls the tattoo “epidermal electronics”, and has in fact been working on the concept for some years now. The idea is relatively straightforward: rather than rely on the user carrying a device, or remembering to strap one on each morning, the technology is temporarily bonded to their skin.

That bond has another advantage, since the responses of the wearer’s skin can also be used to collect health data. The tattoo is made up of various sensors and gages, such as for tracking strain in multiple directions (how the user is flexing), EEG and EMG (electrical impulses in the skeletal structure or nerves), ECG (heart activity), and temperature, as well as light and other factors. In total, it’s a mini-lab for your arm, the side of your head, or anywhere else on the body.

epidermal_electronics_annotated

Like NFC chips, the mc10 epidermal electronics get powered up from an external electricity source, using the embedded wireless power coil. It’s a similar system to the wireless phone charging Nokia and others have implemented in recent handsets, and it powers the tattoo’s transmitter. That’s all layered onto a sheet of water-soluble plastic that gets laminated to the skin; in fact, it can even be disguised with a regular temporary tattoo pattern, opening the door to potential branding and such.

Once they’re in place, they’re incredibly resilient. The tightly coiled structure of the electronics means that, even if the tattoo is stretched or twisted, the connections won’t break. It’s also waterproof, which means that even if you’re swimming or in the shower, the tattoo won’t be affected.

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However, epidermal electronics don’t just have to stop at being biometric keys for your laptop and your Netflix account. Studies using the technology have found that they can also track muscle movements around speech, when applied to the throat, potentially turning the tattoos into half of a wireless hands-free kit. Since you don’t actually have to speak out loud, it could pick up sub-vocal commands, too. Alternatively, they can even track brain signals with enough accuracy to control a computer, which might mean simply thinking about making a call and having your nearby smartphone place it. Similar sensors have been used to fly remote-control planes and drones, something mc10 is working on replicating with its more compact tattoos.

They were some of the possibilities mc10 co-founder Ben Schlatka spoke to us about last year, when we talked to him about the advantages of persistent sensing. The company is also working with the US army on embedded electronics in battlefield clothing, which could collect energy and convert it into electricity to power the gadgets soldiers carry.

“Imagine a kids’ fake tattoo that can sense how our bodies work: data from the heart, the brain, muscles, body temperature – even hydration levels,” Schlatka told us. “When a sensing technology conforms to the consumer and not the other way around, it can capture more insights for longer periods of time without discomfort or distraction.”

Motorola isn’t the only company intrigued. Back in April, mc10 announced it had closed a new $8m financing round, taking the company’s total Series C funding to $18m. Exactly which investors have come on-board is yet to be confirmed, though mc10 did say that it now has backers across its consumer, digital health, and medical devices divisions.

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Whether Motorola will actually release a wearable using mc10 technology remains to be seen; the Google-owned company still needs to prove it has a solid foot in the smartphone market, though the new Moto X could address that. Still, it’s clear that the digital tattoo is capable of further breaking down the boundary between users and their devices. If Motorola can leverage that, alongside Google’s own ongoing research into wearables like Glass, it could be the differentiator the company needs from the increasingly crowded Android market, not to mention finally silencing the critics who doubted the wisdom of the smartphone company’s acquisition in the first place.

IMAGES: Dr Todd Coleman; mc10


What’s inside Motorola’s digital tattoo? is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Intel to launch Celeron and Pentium chips based on Atom architecture

Bay Trail Atom processor

In recent years, Intel’s Celeron and Pentium processors have been cut-down versions of more advanced counterparts. For the chips’ next updates, Intel is taking an opposite tack — it’s bringing low-end Atom architecture into the big leagues. The company is confident enough in the speed and flexibility of the Bay Trail-based Atom platform that it’s launching desktop and laptop versions (Bay Trail-D and Bay Trail-M) under the Celeron and Pentium badges. There isn’t much more to share regarding the CPUs beyond their expected releases late in the year, although there’s a good chance that we’ll learn more at Computex next week.

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Source: PCWorld

Xbox One Design Choices Defended By Microsoft

Microsoft defends the choices its made in designing the Xbox One.

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Shapeways Introduces New Squishy 3D Printing Material, Elasto Plastic

Elasto_3d_print_Shapeways

While the name “Elasto Plastic” sounds like an 80s punk band, it is, in fact, a new material from 3D printing company Shapeways. The plastic is elastic to a certain degree yet maintains its shape after stretching or squeezing. It will break when pulled too hard and is still in the experimental stage on the Shapeways website.

The material is off-white and has a “grainy finish.” It’s laser sintered and a bit jagged because of the layer-by-layer requirement to build the model. Shapeways writes that it is “not ready for broader use” but can be used for personal models and experimental projects.

We recently featured Shapeways in our TC Makers series and they’ve begin printing this material on their nylon sintering machines in their US factory. It takes about eight days to print and ship and could be an interesting hinge material for 3D-printed projects. Considering it already looks like cartilage, I’d be curious to see how makers take the material to the next level.

via 3DPrintingIndustry

ASRock M8 gaming PC appears with BMW design cred

The last time we saw BMW get into the gaming PC market was way back in 2009 with the Thermaltake Level 10 case. It was certainly a beauty, and something that we’ve quite never seen before. However, BMW is back again with something new, and it’s a complete gaming PC for ASRock. It’s called the M8, and it’s different from the Level 10 in the sense that it actually looks like a traditional gaming PC this time around, but it comes with some unique features.

bmw-asrock

The M8 is ASRock’s first Small Form Factor PC, and both companies are planning to officially unveil the new rig during Computex next week. What’s perhaps one of the coolest features of the case itself is that the side panels are stuck on with magnets rather than traditional screws, so access to the internal components is a lot easier.

The front of the case has a giant knob that has an integrated OLED screen for displaying things like fan speeds, temperatures, and usage stats. The knob can also adjust the speed of the case fans to make it a bit more quieter during those times when you’re not in the heat of virtual battle.

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BMW says that the case was designed to be either laying vertically or horizontally, and they say it’ll “look good from any perspective,” which we can’t argue with them too much according to the images we’re seeing laid out before us. Apparently, BMW put a lot of thought into the design of the case, saying that it “is very much an exaggerated mode of expression. It speaks to the gamers’ souls and offers iconic differentiation in a small gaming PC.

bmw-asrock2

ASRock says that “one does not play games on a boring gaming rig. Gamers should be able to feel the adrenaline rush the moment they power on their PCs, just as drivers get fired up the moment they start their engines.” Specs for the new gaming PC weren’t released, however, but we do know that it’ll have 802.11ac WiFi and Bluetooth 4.0, as well as a Creative SoundCore 3D quad-core processor for audio.

VIA: Jalopnik

SOURCE: BMW


ASRock M8 gaming PC appears with BMW design cred is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Sony CEO Calls PS4 ‘First And Foremost’ A Video Game Console

Sony’s CEO wants to make sure people are aware his company is selling the PS4 as a game console first.

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Tetris creator launches Marbly, his first mobile-focused game

Tetris creator builds Marbly, his first mobilefirst game

Alexey Pajitnov certainly has a presence on phones and tablets when there’s a seemingly infinite number of Tetris ports. His newly released Marbly is his first game built with mobile in mind, however. The iOS puzzler isn’t as action-packed as Tetris or even Hexic, but it’s as deceptively simple as Pajitnov’s earlier work: players have to think several steps ahead as they match like-colored marbles. The game is easy enough to try when it’s free, with in-app purchases available when gamers need a helping hand. It’s also just the beginning of Pajitnov’s mobile efforts — publisher WildSnake Software claims that he’s working on more releases, which suggests that there’s plenty of all-too-addictive gameplay in our future.

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Via: Pocket-lint

Source: App Store

Star Wars Large Darth Vader Glitter Light

Assuming the Dark Lord of the Sith is one mean character who is just less forgiving than the Emperor himself, it would still be out of character to see Darth Vader’s room sport the £19.95 Star Wars Large Darth Vader Glitter Light. After all, this is a pretty self descriptive device, where it was specially designed to imitate the dreaded lightsaber, a weapon of choice for Jedis as well as Sith alike during times when folks were more civilized.

Of course, you will not find some sort of mystic crystals powering the Star Wars Large Darth Vader Glitter Light, but rather, good old electricity that has coursed through the wire to power it up. It will definitely have a far lower energy cost compared to the Death Star, and your little one (or even you) can wistfully dream up of those classic Jedi-Sith battles on the numerous planet systems that are all part of Star Wars folklore.

[ Star Wars Large Darth Vader Glitter Light copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]