Baby trends: hand, footprint stamps and hair fude pen

You don’t hear a lot about exciting baby trends in Japan (other than crying baby videos and iPhone apps), no doubt due to its declining birth rate.

It’s full marks to Rezon, then, for this new innovation: a very stylish stamp that you can customize with your child’s hand or footprint. Called the Otete & Anyo (おててとあんよ) (cute Japanese words for a baby’s hands and feet), it is designed to be a special gift that your infant will cherish until they are much older. It even comes in a collectible wooden box, with the name and birth date of the subject engraved on the stamp.

otete-anyo-baby-hand-foot-print-stamp

Of course, getting this stamp made is not like popping into your local convenience store. You first need to make a print of your child’s hand or foot with ink. Then you scan this and send it in, and Rezon get to work making a unique stamp. It’s a bit of a process but we think the results are impressive.

otete-anyo-baby-hand-foot-print-stamp-2

In Japan it has also become customarily for some young parents to make commemorative calligraphy brushes (筆, fude) using the locks of their infant’s hair. Writing with your own hair might seem a bit strange but we presume the final brush is meant to be mostly decorative. Some of these gift sets also include hand prints. For examples, see AkachanFude.co.jp.

akachan-fude-baby-hair-brush

You can get the Otete & Anyo stamp from the JapanTrendShop.

DIYer combines iPhone 3GS with Show WX for pico projected gaming bliss (video)

The Moject project proved that smartphones and pico projectors do indeed have a thing for one another, but Ethan Janson has taken things one step further with an unnamed contraption that holds his iPhone 3GS, a Microvision Show WX and an “ancient” point-and-shoot camera. Put simply, the handmade thingamajig allows him to play his iPhone games on a far larger screen, and since the Show WX is continually in focus regardless of distance from walls, there’s never a blurring issue when flailing about in order to control the gameplay. The full skinny is down there in the source, but shortcut takers can head straight past the break for a video.

[Thanks, Ethan]

Continue reading DIYer combines iPhone 3GS with Show WX for pico projected gaming bliss (video)

DIYer combines iPhone 3GS with Show WX for pico projected gaming bliss (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 May 2010 13:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePicoProject  | Email this | Comments

LinnStrument multitouch music maker gets demoed on video, grasps for investors

Roger Linn. Ever heard of him? He’s only the man behind the modern day drum machine and the original MPC-60, and he’s also the man behind the concept you’re inevitably peering at above. For now, Roger’s calling this beaut the LinnStrument, and there’s quite a back story to go along with it. The design began way back in 2006, with the goal being to create a full-on multitouch instrument with the ability to let one’s finger dictate volume, timbre, pitch and pressure. No doubt, many have tried to concoct something similar, but Roger’s discovery of TouchCo enabled him to create one sans the limitations of imitators. Unfortunately, Amazon quietly scooped up the startup in January of this year (to have this sort of technology available for the Kindle product line), and in turn, shut down TouchCo’s involvement with the outside world. Now, Roger’s being forced to reveal his unfinished work in hopes of attracting investors or unearthing another company that could mimic this sort of awesomeness en masse. Jump on past the break and mash play to get a better idea of what the world’s missing out on, and be sure to tell Jeff Bezos “thanks” the next time you bump into him.

[Thanks, Peter]

Continue reading LinnStrument multitouch music maker gets demoed on video, grasps for investors

LinnStrument multitouch music maker gets demoed on video, grasps for investors originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 16 May 2010 11:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Create Digital Music  |  sourceRoger Linn Design  | Email this | Comments

For Cellphones, It’s Hip to Be Square

kin_one

For cellphones, square is the new black.

This season, big handset makers including Nokia, Microsoft and Motorola are betting you’ll want to flaunt cute, palm-shaped devices that look more like compact powder cases than brick-shaped mini-tablets.

Motorola is likely to introduce a new phone next month called Flipout that will have a 2.8-inch display, a 3.1-megapixel camera and a twist-out keyboard. We haven’t tested it yet, but on looks alone, it’s fabulous, darling.

Motorola’s square-shaped phone follows the release of Microsoft’s fresh-looking Kin One earlier this month. The Kin One has a 2.6-inch display, a slide-out keyboard, and looks like a rounded square when closed. In September, Nokia introduced the Twist on Verizon, a squarish phone with a 2.5-inch display.  Even LG has a square-shaped phone called the Lotus, which has been available on Sprint for more than a year, and though it’s not exactly been a big seller, its looks are hot, hot, hot.

“The small square design is very pocketable and feels particularly right for the younger audience and especially for women,” says Paul Bradley, executive creative director of Frog Design, a San Francisco-based innovation and design company. “It’s small, thin and you can just throw it into your pocket.”

Not surprisingly, ads and promotional spots for Microsoft’s Kin One phone are filled with teens and young people texting and uploading photos to Facebook.

Square-shaped phones also offer a way to stand out from the clutter of smartphones in the market and attract younger consumers who are looking for a splash of individuality.

“Industrial designers are looking at the square shape as the next opportunity in the handset marketplace,” says Bradley.”Unlike the candy bar design that has become synonymous with Apple’s iPhone, the square shape still doesn’t evoke the image of any one iconic device and it doesn’t feel like it’s imitating Apple.”


Smartphones are one of the fastest-growing devices in the consumer electronics business. Nearly 55 million smartphones were shipped in the first quarter of 2010, up nearly 56 percent from the same quarter a year ago, according to a recent IDC report. Attracting consumer attention in this market, though, has become a major challenge for mobile phone makers.

Motorola Flipout

Motorola Flipout

Most smartphones today have at least a 3.5-inch touchscreen display, camera, video-recording capability, Wi-Fi connectivity, quick access to social networking apps and easy ways to share photos and videos. So what’s a phone got to do to stand out?

Exploring new designs may be the answer, says Max Burton, also an executive creative director at Frog Design.

The rectangular shape of the cellphone stems from the phone’s history, he says. The earliest cellphones naturally fell into a rectangular shape because of the way the display, keypad, microphone, antenna and speaker had to be positioned.

“The first handheld phones were rectangular-shaped and that made sense,” says Burton. “But now as the components and circuitry have gotten more sophisticated, the need for the traditional form has all but disappeared.”

There are trade-offs. A smaller form factor leaves much less room for the screen, and the new square phones have screens that are at least an inch smaller in diagonal dimensions than their rectangular cousins. Forget about a wide, cinematic screen aspect: Any movies you watch on these things will basically be animated postage stamps. Keyboards are small, too, and are usually hidden underneath the screen in a slide-out bottom shell.

But square phones offer the perception of being more fun and flirty, which could make up for some of the shortcomings, say Bradley and Burton.

“It’s all about communication,” says Bradley. “The candy bar form factor supports web browsing very well but once that is not your primary goal then its time to look at other shapes.”

Younger users who are also more likely to give square phones a chance, say the duo. “The youth market is not caught up in history,” says Bradley. “They will adapt to new forms quickly.”

Top Photo: Keith Axline/Wired.com

See Also:


Nokia Head of Design Marko Ahtisaari talks about priorities, competition, and future direction

Marko Ahtisaari will be a familiar name to Dopplr users, being both the CEO and one of the major investors in the startup’s social networking software. Having been acquired by Nokia in late September 2009, his team now works to help Symbian regain its world-conquering ways while Marko himself has returned to Nokia to helm its Design group — an outfit that, judging by the world’s disappointment with the N97 and other devices, is frankly in need of some fresh ideas. So, when we were invited to meet him this morning for a journalist get-together where Marko hoped to “begin the conversation” about Nokia’s future direction, we grabbed our pen, paper and DSLR and rushed off to go have a listen. The camera came in use when we got to handle a Nokia N8 prototype for the first time, but do join us after the break to see what else we learned.

Continue reading Nokia Head of Design Marko Ahtisaari talks about priorities, competition, and future direction

Nokia Head of Design Marko Ahtisaari talks about priorities, competition, and future direction originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 May 2010 12:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Finite Elemente’s Hohrizontal 51 iPod / iPhone dock is its own shelf

The world needs another iPod / iPhone dock like it needs another billion gallons of oil floating around in the Atlantic, but there’s something eerily seductive about Finite Elemente’s latest piece. The Hohrizontal 51 is no average dock, and in our estimation, it’s a design element first and Apple accessory second. Designed to be wall mounted and hold up to 55 pounds, this stunning shelf integrates an iPod / iPhone dock into itself, and the inbuilt speakers / video outputs make it even more functional. There’s plenty of space for a bedroom-sized HDTV, and if you’re careful, maybe even an iMac. Too bad the $660 MSRP all but eliminates the hope of you ever springing for one, but hey, if you ever needed encouragement to sharpen your carpentry skills, you needn’t look further than the source link below.

Finite Elemente’s Hohrizontal 51 iPod / iPhone dock is its own shelf originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 May 2010 11:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink DVICE  |  sourceFinite Elemente  | Email this | Comments

iRetrofone Base: perfect for homes with cutting-edge GPRS reception

Still looking for that perfect iPhone dock? Struggling to convince ma and pa that ditching the landline really is the best thing to do? Freeland Studios is up for helping with both quandaries, as the handmade iRetrofone Base provides both a perfect resting place for your iPhone (or any phone, really) and a pinch of vintage to boot. Cast from resin with the utmost care, this here adornment can be ordered in both black and clear, though you’ll have to wait around a fortnight for one of the $195 devices to actually ship. Up next? A resin-based bag phone holster for those who constantly lose their smartphone between the seat and center console. Thanks for repeating yourself, history.

iRetrofone Base: perfect for homes with cutting-edge GPRS reception originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 07:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Retro To Go, Engadget German  |  sourceEtsy (Freeland Studios)  | Email this | Comments

Tok Took Power Plug has a silly name, smart concept

Tok Took Power Plug has a silly name, simple concept

The last concept we saw from designer Soon Mo Kang was a simple but innovative power strip that, with a light press, could automatically send your bulky AC adapters flying. Kang is back with another idea for plugging in and, while it’s in much the same vein, it takes easy unplugging down to the individual level. The Tok Took Power Plug takes inspiration form a retractable pen: push in the back to extend the prongs, then push the back in again to retract them. This makes unplugging very easy (as demonstrated after the break), and also means you can toss it in a bag without gouging everything else in there. It’s another simple but smart idea that, sadly, we’re not expecting to see in the wild any time soon.

Continue reading Tok Took Power Plug has a silly name, smart concept

Tok Took Power Plug has a silly name, smart concept originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Apr 2010 14:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceUnplggd  | Email this | Comments

With ‘Ping’ clothing, status updates literally tap you on the shoulder

Arduino-powered clothing is nothing new; we’ve seen CO2-detecting dresses, compass belts and inbox-checking T-shirts all within the last six months. But this Ping social networking garment concept is not quite the same thing. Where those were DIY projects with a single-function, Ping is the brainchild of a professional UI designer… and the fabric itself is a social network UI that registers your movements as attempts to communicate. Woven with flexible sensors and conductive threads connected to an Arduino Lilypad and Xbee, clothing made from the fabric can detect when you lift a hood or tie a ribbon and wirelessly send Facebook status updates accordingly — or tap you on the shoulder in a number of different rhythms so you know not only when, but who might be trying to get in touch. Designer Jennifer Darmour imagines a future in which clothing offers full-body 3D gesture recognition and senses our environment. When we can reliably use it to control our computers, we hope she’ll get in touch.

With ‘Ping’ clothing, status updates literally tap you on the shoulder originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Apr 2010 07:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink DVICE, Gizmodo  |  sourceElectricfoxy  | Email this | Comments

Designer lantern sculptures shaped like faces

Mic Itaya’s exhibition “Chochin” (提灯, lantern) at Daikanyama’s Gallery Speak Now is displaying multiple new works by the designer. The extraordinary lanterns are available for purchase too, from just a few thousand yen up to fifty and sixty thousand ($550-600+).

chouchin-mic-itaya-lantern[Images via Mic Itaya’s website and ClubKing.com]

Itaya has apparently blended contemporary sensibility with the desire to harness the “communication power” of traditional lantern shapes. He came up with slender human faces and curving tubes that are part sculpture, part lighting fixture. The exhibition runs until 28th April.

architokyo-japan-tour-tokyo-kyoto-1