MSI’s mid-range S30 laptop is coming to Europe for 699 euros, we go hands-on (video)

MSI's mid-range S30 laptop is coming to Europe for 699 euros, we go hands-on (video)

When we first heard MSI was showing off a device at CeBIT called the S30, we assumed it was the successor to the S20, the company’s first Windows 8 Ultrabook. Alas, though, it’s not quite an Ultrabook, and it’s certainly not as well-specced a system as the S20. What we have instead is a 13-inch thin-and-light, one that’s headed to Europe for €699 and up. To start with a quick rundown of the specs, it comes either a Core i3 or i5 processor, along with 4GB of RAM and a variety of storage options, with the best one being a 500GB / 64GB SSD combo.

Oddly, that 1,366 x 768 display doesn’t support touch — a surprise given the price, and given that other machines in its class do include that feature. At least the touchpad seems to do a capable job of handling all the various Windows 8 gestures. Finishing up our tour, that 23mm-thick chassis (a bit too thick by Ultrabook standards) is wide enough to accommodate an Ethernet jack, along with HDMI-out and a VGA socket. Only one USB 3.0 port (plus one 2.0 connection) seems a bit stingy, though. In any case, enjoy our hands-on video, and maybe even stay tuned for a closer look at that S20 Slider.

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Hands-on with Fujitsu’s waterproof, dustproof Stylistic M702 tablet (video)

Somehow we missed this at Mobile World Congress last week. We were so busy playing with Fujitsu’s GPS cane and 5-inch F-02E phone that we didn’t even notice the company introduce a waterproof, dustproof Android tablet. As you can see in that shot above, the Stylistic M702 is more than just water-resistant: it meets the standards for IPX5, 7 and 8, which is to say it can withstand immersion in one meter of water for up to 30 minutes. (That, and the occasional jet stream.) A close inspection of the tablet will show that all the ports are sealed with rubber-coated doors, which should keep out liquid as well as dust particles.

Other than that, this more or less has all the specs you’d expect on a high-end Android tablet, including a 1.7GHz quad-core Tegra 3 processor, a 10.1-inch, 1,920 x 1,200, IPS display, 2GB of RAM, NFC, Bluetooth 4.0, MHL, dual 8MP / 1.2MP cameras and LTE connectivity. The built-in storage tops out at 32 gigs, but fortunately there’s a microSD slot to give you more leeway. Out of the box it will run Android 4.0, but an upgrade to Jelly Bean is coming. Interestingly, there’s also a small door housing an antenna, but that’ll only be offered on the Japanese model; the European config we handled here at CeBIT had just a blank slot. Most impressive of all, potentially, is the claimed battery life: the 10,000mAh cell is rated for 15 hours of runtime, which would be a coup indeed. And at 590g (1.3 pounds) the tablet isn’t even that heavy, considering the gigantic battery squeezed inside. It’s available now in Europe, Africa, India and the Middle East for €999, which is expensive, sure, but perhaps it’s a price corporate customers can swallow anyway.

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Coby goes nuts with the Google-certified tablets, we go hands-on

Coby goes nuts with the Google-certified tablets, we go hands-on

You might take the Play Store and other Google apps for granted when shopping around for Android tablets, but for Coby it’s a Big Deal (with a capital “B”). So much so that after releasing its first Google-certified slate back in January, it’s coming out with three more, in 8-, 9- and 10-inch flavors. (A Coby rep told us the idea is to catch as many customers as possible.) Despite the different screen sizes, they all boast the same specs as the 7-inch model we showed you at CES, including a dual-core Amlogic 8226-MX CPU, 1GB of RAM, 8GB of built-in storage, a microSD reader supporting 32GB cards and a 0.3-megapixel webcam up front. They also have modest 2MP cameras ’round back, which the 7-incher doesn’t have.

Design-wise, the 8-inch MID 8065 and 9-inch 9760 have the same plastic construction as the 7-inch one, albeit with higher-res screens. The 10-inch MID 1065, though, has a more premium-feeling metal casing, along with an IPS panel (the pixel count tops out at 1,280 x 800, so don’t get too excited). Indeed, the viewing angles are better than what we saw on the 7-incher, but you’re still going to suffer delays even when you flip the tablet to change screen orientations. So far, we know the 8- and 10-inch models are coming to the US for $180 and $230. As for the 9-inch version, there’s no room for it in the states, apparently, but a Coby rep from Germany told us it’ll go on sale there later this month for around €219. As your lead reviews editor, I can tell you the Magic 8 Ball is turning up an “outlook not good” on a possible review, but we’ve added some hands-on photos below if you’ve just got to get a closer look.

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Thermaltake and BMW’s Level 10 M gaming headset hands-on

Thermaltake and BMWs Level 10 M gaming headset handson

If we had a direct line to BMW’s Designworks studio, we’d probably harass it to the point of requiring a court order. Thermaltake, on the other hand, have shown a lot more restraint, only harnessing the teutonic skunkworks’ expertise on two previous occasions. The pair announced its Level 10 gaming headset today at CeBIT, so we decided to get our mitts all over the first examples of the hardware to be seen in public and find out what they’re all about.

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‘Talking Places’ is the Google Glass of tour guides, we go hands-on (video)

SensoMotoric Instruments is a company that builds eye-tracking goggles for research and teaching projects, and the DFKI is the German center for artificial intelligence. Together, the pair has cooked up ‘Talking Places,’ a Google Glass-esque concept that is designed to help people navigate unfamiliar locations. Thanks to a combination of cutting-edge hardware and software, we were taken on a tour of a model village and were surprised to see that the unit offered up plenty of information about our surroundings. Interested in how it’s done? Head on past the break.

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WADI Affordable Water Filtering Technology Powered By Solar Energy

[CeBIT 2013] For people who live in industrial and developed countries, access to clean water is never really an issue and we tend to forget that a huge number of people on this planet do not enjoy that type of access. Consequently, according to water.org, over 3.4 million humans die each year from a water related disease.

Today at CeBIT, I met with Martin Wesian, founder and CEO, Helioz, the company behind WADI, an innovative and affordable water filtering device powered by solar energy.



WADI Affordable Water Filtering Technology Powered By Solar Energy


WADI Affordable Water Filtering Technology Powered By Solar Energy


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By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Kingfisher Portable Washing Machine, Clip apartment generates own energy and uses recycled waste water,

Forget creepy Intel: SHORE unlocks your face at a glance, and it’s already in use

If you thought Intel’s plans for a viewer-watching Web TV box were intrusive, you might want to bury your face in your hands (and leave it there permanently) after seeing Fraunhofer‘s clever and creepy SHORE facial ID system. On show at CeBIT, SHORE can not only identify a face in a still image or real-time video stream, but figure out gender, age, and even what mood the person is in: happy, surprised, angry, or sad. Meanwhile, while Intel’s home entertainment tracking system is already mired in controversy, Fraunhofer tells us commercial implementations of SHORE are already out in the wild.

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In Fraunhofer’s demo, a computer running SHORE was able to identify and classify multiple people walking in and out of frame, with the results of the analysis floated over each person on a wall display. The measurements happen almost instantaneously – the research institute says SHORE can identify a face at 107.5fps if it’s directly facing the camera, while full analysis including facial expression detection is at 45.5fps – and the system can handle head tilts of +/- 60-degrees and head rotation of +/- 90-degrees.

So far so good, but it’s the measurements not the identification which is what makes SHORE so impressive. Fraunhofer claims a 91.5-percent accuracy rate on face detection and a 94.3-percent accuracy rate on gender detection: by identifying the face, the eyes, nose, and mouth, and the rest of the facial shape, it can decide how happy or sad, angry or surprised they are. The extent of those criteria are displayed on red bars: when we smiled, it accurately picked up on that, while widening our eyes boosted our “surprised” rating.

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More patchy was the age detection, which gives an estimate with a degree of confidence (so, for instance, SHORE could decide you’re 38, with a range of +/- 8-years). That proved susceptible to being confused by the ambient lighting: with strong ceiling lights, for instance, those wearing glasses were often confused for someone much older, because the shadows of the glasses frames on their cheeks were mistaken for evidence of old age.

Nonetheless, it’s a mighty impressive system in all, not least because of the incredibly low minimum specifications. Fraunhofer says SHORE will run on a single core of an Intel Core 2 Duo 6420 processor, under Windows XP, and with facial detection from anything down to an 8 x 8 pixel image (though you won’t get the more complex analysis). It’ll also run on mobile devices, such as smartphones, and can either be a standalone system or integrated into another, more complex monitoring package.

That flexibility – and the fact that Fraunhofer is licensing out the technology together with the offer of customizing it depending on client need – means the possibilities for implementation are far greater than, say, Intel’s proposed advertising tailoring on the Web TV box. Market research is an obvious one, for instance a camera above a store window display to track reactions of those glancing in, as well as customizing advertising playlists depending on the demographics of those watching. Car dashboards could monitor drivers and ensure they were alert and calm, as well as better track which person was giving which spoken command.

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In hospitals, the degree of pain to which patients are suffering could be monitored autonomously, helping the more efficient use of painkillers (and avoiding unnecessary suffering). Augmented reality games are another possibility, but Fraunhofer is also keen on the idea of using the SHORE technology to enhance “virtual actors” and “intelligent agents” for customer services and entertainment, reacting to those they are talking to, behaving appropriately for their mood, and even mimicking that mood themselves. In fact, Fraunhofer had a robotic head which, using a camera in the forehead, could replicate the viewer’s expressions with animated eyes, mouth, and other elements.

Behind the scenes, the magic is in the huge amount of education Fraunhofer has given the system, teaching it to recognize common schema of mood and reaction from thousands of images of expressions. Called the Facial Action Coding System (FACS) it allows the computer to quickly calculate what each viewer is showing in a matter of milliseconds. That’s even if there are dozens of people in the frame, too; Fraunhofer showed the camera a print out covered in face thumbnails – over a hundred of them, packed tightly together – and SHORE spotted them all and ran its mood analysis. The system has short-term memory, too; Fraunhofer tells us that faces aren’t stored long-term, but there is a shorter-term caching system which can spot if a face was in-frame very recently, and collate all the data from each sighting. Each gets a temporary ID code, and a timer to show how long they were attentive for.

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Perhaps most alarming is the fact that this isn’t a simple piece of prescient, Minority Report-style research: SHORE is already out in the wild. Fraunhofer couldn’t tell us all of its clients, but did confirm that market research firm GFK is using SHORE for its consumer surveys. There, participants simply allow the standard webcam on their computer to feed their expressions back to the server, as they watch a series of commercials or other content. Meanwhile, there are SHORE installations already watching passers-by from within store display windows, though Fraunhofer wouldn’t be pressed on which retailers exactly are using it.

Meanwhile, you can try it for yourself. Fraunhofer offers a free trial version of SHORE to download, as a proof of concept, which you can find here. Those particularly paranoid might prefer to spend their time knitting balaclavas, however, as the possibility that you’re being watched, analyzed, and generally figured out by a machine running something like SHORE is growing every day.

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Forget creepy Intel: SHORE unlocks your face at a glance, and it’s already in use is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Yunasko: Ultracapacitors with High Power Efficiency

[CeBIT 2013] I met with Yunasko‘s co-founders Natalia Stryzhakova (Ph.D.) and Andrii Buvailo at CeBIT in Hannover. Yunasko develops ultracapacitors, which are energy storage devices with extremely high power capacities and fast charge / discharge profiles. For example, high power is required when you start an electrical vehicle (not when you drive it) or when the power in your computer suddenly shuts down and you need an immediate burst of power to take over.

According to Andrii Buvailo, regular capacitors have less efficiency than Yunasko products when it comes to Kilowatts stored per Kilogram. The patent-pending component provides almost 3 times more power per kilogram than the competition. Basically, it means that Yunasko is able to provide more power in a smaller form factor, a feature that is highly in demand for small consumer electronic devices or even for electrical vehicles that need to save some space and weight. For instance the ELF shown at CeBIT could benefit from this ultracapacitor.



Yunasko: Ultracapacitors with High Power Efficiency


Yunasko: Ultracapacitors with High Power Efficiency


Yunasko: Ultracapacitors with High Power Efficiency


Yunasko: Ultracapacitors with High Power Efficiency


Yunasko: Ultracapacitors with High Power Efficiency

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By Ubergizmo. Related articles: ELF: Hybrid Solar / Pedal Vehicle by Organic Transit, Toyota i-Road Personal Mobility Concept ,

Surface Pro Clone Caught At CeBIT

Surface Pro Clone Caught At CeBIT

[CeBIT 2013] The Microsoft Surface Pro has been available for nearly a month in the U.S. and has steadily been making itself available again through Microsoft’s brick & mortar and online stores. Microsoft announced today the Surface Pro is heading to Germany during this year’s CeBIT, but it looks like clones of the company’s popular tablet has made its way to the show.

The Surface Pro clone looks an awful lot like the official tablet as it sports a 13.3-inch screen although it’s internals are quite different as the clone runs on either a Core i3 or i5 processor, 4GB of RAM and options for a 32 or 64GB SSD. The Surface Pro clone also has a 5MP rear-facing camera, a 2MP front-facing camera, a SIM card slot, SD card reader, two USB 2.0 ports and a mini HDMI port.

The manufacturers of the Surface Pro clone are HKC from Shenzhen who are an OEM, although it seems this “original” equipment might not be so original after all.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Android 4.x Finally Overtakes Android 2.3 Gingerbread, Future Ferrari Models Could See iPads Integrated Into Them,

MSI AG2712 All-In-One Gaming PC at CeBIT 2013 – Hands-On

[CeBIT 2013] We published yesterday when MSI announced its first All-In-One AG2712 here at CeBIT and today I had the opportunity to see the 27-inch computer “in person”. The design is quite nice with a transparent stand and a wide speaker grill that runs across the device, just below the bezel.  Featuring THX audio, the speaker delivered a quite powerful sound when I watched the NVidia demo (check the video above) and the touch display was super responsive. The chassis is a little thick compared to other AIO that we have seen in the past 6 months, such as the super thin HP Spectre.



MSI AG2712 All In One Gaming PC at CeBIT 2013   Hands On


MSI AG2712 All In One Gaming PC at CeBIT 2013   Hands On


MSI AG2712 All In One Gaming PC at CeBIT 2013   Hands On


MSI AG2712 All In One Gaming PC at CeBIT 2013   Hands On


MSI AG2712 All In One Gaming PC at CeBIT 2013   Hands On


MSI AG2712 All In One Gaming PC at CeBIT 2013   Hands On

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By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Baldur’s Gate: Enhanced Edition Arriving On Mac 22nd February, CM Storm RX Gaming Surfaces Hopes To Give You An Edge,