Panasonic is going to release the 14mm thin classic looking compact digital camera “DMC-XS3″ from their lumix series on August 22.
“DMC-XS3″ has a 5X optical zoom 24mm wide-angle lens with high sensitivity MOS sensor. Because of the MOS sensor and Venus Engine, it is able to take high-quality night view photos in a dark situation.
There are several features that helps you to take a photo the way you want – “Creative Control” and “Creative touch” that you can apply special filter effect after taking a photo, or “Creative Panorama” that you can apply special effect for panoramic photos, or “Beauty Touch” that girls might like.
Price: About ¥20,000 Size: 92.2 x 54.4 x 18.5mm Weight: 89g (only the body part) Image sensor: 1/2.33inch MOS sensor (15.3 million total pixels) Effective pixel: 14.1 million pixels Monitor: 2.7inch 230000 dot TFT monitor, frame coverage about 100%
Panasonic is releasing new Lumix camera “DMC-FZ70″ with the world’s first 60X optical zoom on August 22.
“DMC-FZ70″ has 16.1M MOS Sensor and Venus Engine built-in, which minimize the noise generation and create high-definition images. It offers 20mm wide-angle to 1,200mm (60X) long zoom. With the image stabilizer “POWER O.I.S.”, you don’t need to worry too much about camera shake when shooting with 1200mm long zoom.
Price: About ¥48,000 Size: 130.2 x 97.0 x 118.2mm Weight: 562g (only the body part) Monitor: 3.0 inch 460000 dot TFT monitor, frame coverage about 100% Effective pixel: 16.1 million pixels Image sensor: 1/2.3 inch MOS sensor (16.8 million total pixel)
Japan: Not Always as Tech as it Seems Often discussed, but difficult to appreciate if one’s never been here, is the notion of Japanese technological duality, or contradictionism, if you will. Among the favorite targets are the fax machine and its death grip on relevance, banking stuck in 1997, and very late-to-the-game smartphone adoption. These exist side-by-side with some of the world’s most advanced robotics research, a plurality of global industrial automation, the world-standard high-speed shinkansen trains, nationwide 4G wireless coverage, etc.
A lot of Japan has remained unchanged for, ohhhhh… a few thousand years, and one of the technological hangers-on is the humble broom. While one can find a standard plastic broom with plastic bristles anywhere, there are just as many, if not more, shiny new cleaning tools with bamboo handles and some kind of dried grass or an entire plant just stuck on the end.
One might argue that if it’s not broke, blah blah blah, but try effectively sweeping anything other than a lawn with a tumbleweed wired onto the end of a stick. Granted, they’re used primarily for outdoor cleaning – but still, that they exist alone is a curiosity.
(Editor’s Note: Though we’re making light of the issue here, it’s also quite nice to be spared the noise and air pollution of leaf blowers and lawn mowers here in Japan. Mid-sized weed eaters, small engine rotary grass cutters, are pretty much the only motorized outdoor landscaping tools in use.)
So, arguably, in a country where all public school students spend at least 10-15 minutes a day cleaning their own classrooms and buildings by hand, where the verb「掃除」(“sō-ji;” cleaning) is often pronounced with an honorific prefix, and a generalized reverence for things being clean & tidy pervades much of everyday life, the leap to robot cleaners is an interesting one, but one that’s gradually being taken. Japanese buyers’ most common leap is this:
Yep, according to a new survey report from Tokyo-based Seed Planning Market Research and Consulting (市場調査とコンサルティングのシード・プランニング), Boston, Massachusetts-based iRobot’s Roomba, available here since 2004 (and first to market), holds a 75%+ share of Japan’s robo-cleaning market.
Seemingly unrelated, the luxury of home cleaning robots and the practical utility of disaster response robots have one thing in common here in Japan: iRobot. The American company makes both Japan’s #1 selling cleaning robot and the first robots able to enter and inspect the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster zone. This again, is a matter of timing; iRobot’s PackBot and Warrior models have been tested and deployed in active war zones for more than a decade, and Roomba’s 2004 introduction in Japan was far ahead of any viable domestic models.
In second and third place, respectively, are domestic models from Tsukamoto Aim (below left) and Sharp’s Kokorobo series (below right):
(Another Editor’s Note: It’s not being, and would be unfair to imply here that all models sold by Tsukamoto Aim license and take design cues from Hello Kitty, but the existence of this product is, well, it’s just… Japan!)
To Buy or Not to Buy and Why: Reasons & Numbers As elsewhere, cleaning robots got a slow start here in Japan. Shiny new gee-whiz product purchasing patterns from early adopters gave the market an initial bump, but average consumers were hesitant – rightfully so – early Roomba and domestic models just didn’t, you know, work very well, and reviews and word of mouth weren’t kind to the inspired, yet uninspiring machines.
The tech has caught up, however, and sales in Japan are booming. According to Seed Planning, since 2008 the home cleaning robot market has seen a 6-fold increase in yearly sales (approx. 380,000 units sold in 2012), and they project sales of 9o0,000 units in 2018. In a nation of about 128 million people, if realized that’s some serious market penetration. Given that homes in Japan generally aren’t all that big and don’t have a lot of carpeting, it’s all the more impressive. Among Japan’s massive, dominant middle-class, such expenditures are a luxury but not quite as economically extravagant as one might think – but still, 900,000!
In addition to evaluating brand preference and sales figures, Seed Planning’s survey among 400 cleaning robot owners and 300 non-owners also gauged reasons for consumers’ purchasing and not purchasing. Current owners included simple convenience and easing the cleaning burden as the most common reasons for buying, and, true to form in the Japanese consumer tech market, a lot of people just wanted to try a “cute” new product (in that vein, see video below for some of the best viral marketing cleaning robot makers didn’t but could have ever asked for). Non-owners cited cost and concerns over the robots’ ability to properly clean as the most common barriers to purchasing (best seller iRobot’s prices range from $650 – $800, Sharp’s Kokorobo models are comparable, and Tsukumoto Aim’s, at $100-$150 for the disc-shaped models, up to $400 for the unfortunately named “Hobot” glass cleaning model, are vastly more affordable).
Why Care? Because Live-In Social Robots Begin, Labor Shortages Pend, and $¥$¥$¥$¥$¥$! Okay, to be fair, it’s understandable if you’re yawning at the ferociously unsexy topic of cleaning robots. But here’s the kicker: one has to fully grasp and appreciate that these unassuming little pucks of technology are the vanguard of personal service robot deployment and use. The quest toward a friendly, conversational, perhaps dressed-like-a-French-maid home and/or industrial service robot has to start somewhere – and clearly, it’s on. For now these simple machines operate within a very narrow spectrum of ability, but they are, nonetheless, primarily autonomous robots existing side-by-side with human beings, doing a job, becoming part of our conceptual landscape; these are the babysteps of human/robot integrative socialization, and while still novel to us, for future generations they might be simply obligatory and obvious.
Japanese society, as per usual, presents a unique market observation opportunity. Women do most of the cleaning and housework here, and if, as predicted and arguably very necessary, more women begin entering more of the workforce, in addition to the impending and unavoidable large-scale human labor crisis facing the country, then the seemingly over optimistic sales projection of 900,000 units in 2018 makes a lot more sense.
It’s often claimed, but seldom detailed how, the robotics industry is going to have any practical impact on the Japanese economy. (which it’s going to desperately need in 50 years when – and this is inevitable – 30% of what might be the world’s most advanced capitalist economy’s consumers have passed away, and due to extremely low birth rates, go unreplaced). Well, let’s see: how about 900,000 units times even the low-end cost of a cleaning robot plus maintenance, accessories, upgrades, etc.? Not a bad economic push, that.
For now, iRobot’s running away with the Japanese sales cake, but there’s no shortage of competitors on their way up. One review site, LesNumeriques, found 24 (!) viable models from around the world worthy of consideration:
So, there you have it. But, if even now the subject of cleaning robots does absolutely nothing for you, if you remain unmoved by the practical genesis of in-home, someday social robotics, if the intriguing demographic factors are just meh, and if you care little about potentially lots and lots of big-time money changing hands here in Asia, then we’ll simply leave you with these words:
Cat Riding a Roomba In a Shark Costume Chasing a Duckling (and if that doesn’t strike a nerve, someone should take your pulse)
• • •
Reno J. Tibke is the founder and operator of Anthrobotic.com and a contributor at the non-profit Robohub.org.
Sony is going to release the DSLR camera with interchangeable lenses “α58″ on August 9. The camera won’t be sold alone – It will be only available as a lens kit:
“α58″ adapted Exmor APS HD CMOS image sensor, image processor BIONZ, and OLED Tru-Finder with 100% frame coverage. Also, to make you easy to bring a moving object into focus, it has “Lock-On AF” functionality that recognizes the size of the object, “Translucent Mirror Technology” and “15-Point AF with 3 Cross-Type Sensors”.
Image sensor: APS-C size (23.2 x 15.4mm), Exmor APS HD CMOS Sensor Pixels: 20.1 million effective pixels, 20.4 million total pixels Monitor: 6.7cm (2.7inch) TFT, 460,000 dot Size: 128.6 x 95.5 x 77.7mm Weight: 492g (only a body part)
We wrote about Thanko’s “Gokuusu Battery 4.5mm” with 1000mAh capacity last month, and today they released the new model with high-capacity 2200mAh called “Gokuusu Battery 7.5mm”.
Just like the previous model, it can used as a 4GB USB flash, and also it’s compatible with 4 different connect adapters: lightning connecter, dock connecter, microUSB, and miniUSB.
JVC Kenwood is going to release a new rugged action camera “GC-XA2″ from their ADIXXION series in early August. The models are dustproof, shockproof, 5m waterproof and -10℃ low-temperature resistant.
It has a full HD 1080/60p mode, 8M backside illumination CMOS image sensor, F2.4 lens, and Wi-fi function built-in, and newly features “Hi-Speed REC” mode that allows you to record 120 frames per second in full HD quality.
Price: Open price Size: W74 x H53 x D35mm Weight: 110g Image sensor: 1/3.2inch backside illumination CMOS image sensor, 7.99 million pixels Effective pixels: Moving image 7.5million〜5.9million pixels, Still image 7.5 million pixels Monitor: 1.5 inch Zoom: 5X digital zoom
NTT docomo is going to release the Disney’s official smartphone “Disney Mobile on docomo F-07E” manufactured by Fujitsu on July 31.
There are a lot of Disney related designs on the smartphone, for example, the castle and Tinkerbell on the back side lights up and Micky Mouse appears. Also, you can enjoy Disney contents for free.
It has 4.7 inch screen, 1.7GHz Quad Core CPU, Xi, 64GB ROM, and 2GB RAM built-in, and it is compatible with waterproof/dustproof, mobile wallet, One-seg, infrared data communication, and finger print sensor.
Sanwa Supply just released a magnet built-in tablet holder “MR-TABST8W” that holds 9-11 inch sized tablet.
By attaching your tablet or iPad on a fridge or a whiteboard with this tablet holder, you can make use of it in many situations, such as cooking dinner from a recipe shown on the tablet attached on the fridge, or attaching it on the whiteboard and showing materials in the meeting.
It is also attachable on a wall with the accompanying screws.
NTT has developed wearable textile electrodes which can be worn on the inside of a shirt, and can continuously monitor the electrical activity of the heart over an extended period of time.
The wearable electrodes are fabricated from a conductive fiber, consisting of a silk or a synthetic fibre core coated with a conductive polymer called PEDOT-PSS.
This conductive polymer has excellent biocompatibility, and can deliver ECG measurements with a stability equivalent to that of conventional medical electrodes, without the need for attaching the electrodes to the skin with an electrolyte paste or gel.
As the textile electrodes are soft to the touch, flexible and breathable, long term monitoring which places no burden on the wearer is now possible. Studies conducted by NTT showed no signs of skin irritation or contact dermatitis after long-term use.
NTT now plans to conduct further experimentation, this time with 100 wearers, to further investigate their safety and effectiveness.
In the future, these wearable electrodes could be used to aid home or remote medical care, reducing the risk of heart attack through early detection and treatment of heart irregularities, or in fields such as sports, general fitness and scientific research.
This content is provided by DigInfo.tv, AkihabaraNews Official Partner.
A pen-shaped video camera that is able to shoot 1080p full HD video is now out from Thanko.
Videos or photos you take are saved on a micro SD card inside of the pen-shaped video camera, and by connecting a big-screen LCD TV and miniHDMI terminal located in the upper part of the video camera with a HDMI cable (sold separately), you can watch the videos and photos easily.
The pen-shaped video camera also has a USB terminal built-in so that you can connect it to your PC directly and then you can charge its battery or use it as a card reader.
The pen clip part is used for the lens’s protection cover.
For your information, you can actually use it as a pen.
This is site is run by Sascha Endlicher, M.A., during ungodly late night hours. Wanna know more about him? Connect via Social Media by jumping to about.me/sascha.endlicher.