E Ink and Sonostar pair up for Mobius flexible-display smartwatch, we go hands-on at Computex

E Ink and Sonostar pair up for Mobius flexibledisplay smartwatch, we go handson at Computex

Earlier this week, E Ink announced its Mobius flexible display, a 1.73-inch touch-enabled panel for smartwatches. Now, the new screen has made its way onto the Computex exhibition floor in Taipei. Sonostar, a local manufacturer, has integrated the 320 x 240 grayscale panel within its new wearable, which the company is demonstrating for show attendees. Simply called “Smartwatch,” the product is little more than a mockup at this point, but it is expected to hit production sometime in Q3 of this year.

The two samples on hand were non-functional, unfortunately, but they did each contain a working Mobius panel — one displayed a sample Facebook notification, while the second had the time and date with a small low-res picture of a dog, along with battery and Bluetooth indicators up top. The watch itself was very lightweight, and while glare was clearly an issue today, there’s plenty of time for engineers to tweak things before this ships later in the year. The Smartwatch, which can stay powered for up to a week with each charge, will come in both black and white, and should be compatible with both Android and iOS devices. Pricing is not yet set, but representatives did confirm that it’ll be coming to the US.

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Gigabyte Smart Lamp doubles as an Ultrabook hub, is missing a few ports (hands-on)

Gigabyte Smart Lamp doubles as an Ultrabook hub, is missing a few ports handson

Things we expected to see at the world’s premier computer show: mainstream notebooks, gaming notebooks, thin notebooks (“pineapple shrimp, lemon shrimp“), maybe even a tablet or two. But a desk lamp? Not so much. And yet, that might be the most memorable thing Gigaybte is showing here at Computex. The Smart Lamp is, as you’d expect, a proper light, one you can use on four different brightness settings. But it also doubles as a laptop hub, with a DVD player built into the base, along with a handful of other ports. These include two USB sockets, dual headphone / earphone jacks and an SD reader.

It’s a neat idea, to be sure — who doesn’t love two-in-one devices – but considering it’s supposed to supplement the ports normally found on Ultrabooks, it seems to be missing quite a few big ones. Why not throw in an HDMI port, or some other kind of display output? Ooh, or how about an Ethernet jack? Or a DVD drive that can burn discs in addition to play them? Anyway, you can color us slightly disappointed after having gotten an up-close look, even if the concept itself deserves an ‘A’ for creativity. No word yet on how much this will cost, when it will go on sale or in which countries it will be available. Until then, check out the walk-through video below — not that this thing needs much further explanation.

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Adobe XD’s Project Mighty and Napoleon: the future of cloud-connected design tools for tablets (hands-on)

Adobe XD's Project Mighty and Napoleon The future of cloudconnecte tablet design tools handson

Adobe’s best known for its creative software, but lately it’s been toying with the hardware side of design. Over the past few weeks, the company’s XD division’s been teasing Projects Mighty and Napoleon for tablets: the former is a pressure-sensitive stylus, while the latter is a ruler for drafting. Both hardware experiments feature Bluetooth but, more importantly, they tap in Adobe’s Creative Cloud. The units are essentially a serious side project for Adobe, but we have a feeling designers will be seriously excited once they get to see these prototypes in action. Geoff Dowd, XD’s Design Lead, was kind enough to delve a bit deeper into the projects for us in a video walkthrough you can catch after the break.

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ASUS’ ET2702 all-in-one is its first with a 2,560 x 1,440 screen

Even if you just skim our Computex coverage, you’ll quickly see there’s a theme tying it all together: displays. Super-high-resolution displays. It’s true of every company we’ve seen, really, but moving beyond 1080p seems especially important to ASUS. So far, the firm has shown off a pair of 4K displays, along with its first 2,560 x 1,600 tablet. Now, it’s unveiling its first all-in-one desktop with QHD resolution. That would be the ET2702, which comes standard with a 27-inch, 2,560 x 1,440 IPS screen. Though we admittedly only spent a few moments with it, we noticed the colors held up even under the glare of the harsh lighting in Taipei’s Nangang Exhibition Center. We were also taken with the design, which includes an edge-to-edge glass display layered over a long speaker grille. There are some other modern touches, too, like white LED lights, a matte aluminum pedestal and a metal mouse to match. Speaking of that mouse, it’s one of the nicer ones we’ve seen tossed in with an all-in-one: aside from the quality build materials, it has a touch strip providing haptic feedback. The included keyboard is well-spaced and easy to type on as well.

In the US, at least, there will be just one configuration to start, with key specs including: a Core i7-4770 processor, a 2GB AMD Radeon HD 8890A GPU, 16GB of RAM, a 2TB hard drive, 802.11ac and a Blu-ray drive. It’ll arrive in either late July or early August, we’re told, with a price around $2,000, if not slightly less. For a closer look, we’ve got hands-on photos below and a short walkthrough video after the break.

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Halo: Spartan Assault revealed for Windows Phone and Windows 8, we go hands-on

Halo Spartan Assault announced for Windows Phone and Windows 8, we go handson

Between the Xbox One, Steven Spielberg’s latest TV project and the approach of E3, fans have been eagerly awaiting the announcement of a new Halo game. 343 Industries has heard their pleas, but its answer is somewhat unexpected — the next game in the legendary franchise isn’t for Microsoft’s next-generation game console, but for the company’s mobile and tablet platforms. Built specifically for Windows Phone and touch-enabled Windows 8 devices, Halo: Spartan Assault hopes to offer the essence of Halo in a portable format. Engadget stopped in at the game’s launch event to take a look.

“In a nutshell, it’s a top-down twin stick arcade-style action shooter,” explained Dan Ayoub, executive producer at 343 Industries. “Really, a brand new way to play Halo.” Ayoub told us that the game was designed to push the limits of phone and tablet graphics, stressing the Halo franchise’s history as a trailblazer on Microsoft platforms. “We wanted this to be no exception,” he said, inviting journalists at the event to try the game for themselves. We picked up a nearby Surface Pro slate and tucked in.

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MSI’s MouseBook is a laptop whose trackpad doubles as a standalone mouse

MSI's MouseBook is a laptop whose trackpad doubles as a standalone mouse

The problem with laptop trackpads: they’re usually not very good. But would turning the touchpad into a mouse solve the problem? Perhaps. That’s what MSI seems to be attempting with its MouseBook concept. In essence, it’s a laptop with a trackpad that can pop out and then be used as a standalone mouse. As you can see in the photo above, there’s a release switch for removing the pad. Once it’s out, you can move it across your desk as you would a mouse, as opposed to just using it as an external trackpad. It connects over Bluetooth and, as you’d expect, it recharges when it’s inside the laptop. What we find most intriguing, perhaps, is the fact that when you remove the trackpad, a flat surface rises up to fill the space so that you’re not left with a gaping hole in your palm rest. Since this is just an experiment at this point, MSI can’t say if it will ever make its way into a real product. If you’re curious, though, we’ve got a walkthrough video after the break, showing everything except, uh, how it works — MSI still doesn’t have a fully functioning unit to show off.

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SoftKinetic teases embedded 3D depth camera, coming to Intel devices next year (hands-on)

SoftKinetic previews its embedded 3D depth camera at Computex 2013 video

At Intel’s Computex keynote earlier today, the chip maker teased that it expects embedded 3D depth cameras to arrive on devices in the second half of 2014. Luckily, we got an exclusive early taste of the technology shortly after the event, courtesy of SoftKinetic. This Belgian company not only licenses its close-range gesture tracking middleware to Intel, but it also manufactures time-of-flight 3D depth cameras — including Creative’s upcoming Senz3D — in partnership with South Korea-based Namuga. Read on to see how we coped with this futuristic piece of kit, plus we have a video ready for your amusement.

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Toshiba Excite Write, Pro and Pure tablets hands-on

Toshiba has three new tablets for Computex 2013, and while none can match the miserly $129 price tag of the ASUS MeMo Pad HD 7, the 10.1-inch range still promises something for most tableteers. We caught up with Toshiba today to check out the Excite Write, the Excite Pro, and the entry-level Excite Pure, and to see whether the company’s liberal splashing of high-res screens and digital pen functionality made the Excite series the tabs to pick from. Read on for some first-impressions.

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Outwardly, all three share the same aesthetic, similar at first glance to previous Toshiba tablets (and, to the casual look at least, to the first-gen iPad). The casing is plastic, not metal however, and given a rough, nutmeg-grater-like texture which makes it grippy but, if we’re honest, not feel particularly premium to the fingertips. They’re also not the thinnest tablets around – 10.5mm thick for the Pro and Write, 10.2mm for the Pure – with weight hovering at the 600g mark for the Pure and 632g for the Pro/Write.

The Pure is the cheapest of the trio – $299.99/£249.99 – though it’s hardly ground-breaking. Tegra 3, 1GB of RAM, and 16GB of onboard storage are par for the course in low-cost tablets, as is WiFi a/b/g/n and Bluetooth 4.0. There’ll be a 3G option, but Toshiba hasn’t price it up yet; otherwise, you get micro HDMI, microUSB and a microSD card slot, a 3-megapixel camera on the back, a 1.2-megapixel camera up front, and stereo 0.7W speakers.

The 10.1-inch, 1280 x 800 display is decidedly average, with good colors when viewed face-on but which sour somewhat as you look at the screen askance. Performance of Android 4.2 Jelly Bean is solid though nothing outstanding. Toshiba can’t help but push a keyboard, however, with the detachable folding Keyboard Cover adding a reasonably-sized layout with acceptable travel.

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Things start to get more interesting when you step up to the Excite Pro and Excite Write. For the most part they’re identically-spec’d: you get a 10.1-inch 2560 x 1600 display that looks fantastic face-on, but which has the same narrowish viewing angles of the cheaper tablet, and NVIDIA’s Tegra 4 chipset with 2GB of RAM and either 16GB or 32GB of storage.

Wired connectivity options are the same as before, but the wireless array steps up to WiFi a/b/g/n/ac along with the Bluetooth 4.0, together with LTE as an option. The main camera is now an 8-megapixel shooter, and there’s an HDR mode. Harmon Kardon has been tapped for its speakers, with 1W stereo on the back edges.

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In the hand, the same somewhat cheap feeling lingers – Toshiba’s plastics are sturdy, but they hardly fill you with premium confidence – and it’s not instantly obvious where the Tegra 4′s extra turn of speed comes in. Still, that’s more to do with the third-party apps you load, and we spent more time with Toshiba’s suite of TruNote apps for the Write variant.

The chunky stylus – which has no dock to slot into the tablet itself, unfortunately, though you do at least get a pocket-clip – can be used with its nib and flipped to strum the eraser head against the screen; there’s also a side-barrel button for secondary functions. Unfortunately, Toshiba TruNote doesn’t quite hit the spot for perfect digital inking: there’s noticeable lag between you writing out words on the screen and the ink flowing, though when it does emerge it’s smooth and looks good on the high-res panel.

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One of TruNote’s party tricks is being able to flip handwritten notes and hand-sketched graphics into text and art, though it probably comes as little surprise that we had mixed results. Our first attempt at cursive was simply too confusing for the Excite Write; when we forced ourselves to be a little more careful, the system managed to get roughly 50-percent of the text right. However, at other times it flipped the sentence order around – we exported a handwritten note to a text email, and got the words juggled nonsensically, for instance.

There’s also the possibility of grabbing a screenshot and annotating that. Unfortunately, that’s similarly sluggish, and Toshiba’s TruNote clipping interface is puzzling. What should be a simple process – snap a shot, grab a particular color and thickness of pen, annotate, and save – ends up being an exercise in frustration as you tap, tap-and-hold, try to find suitably contrasting colors, and generally grow frustrated by the system.

It’s reminiscent of Microsoft’s OneNote app, back in the days of Windows XP Tablet Edition, complete with both the laggy ink and the patchy conversion technology. Unfortunately for Toshiba, we’re ten years further on from XP Tablets, and Microsoft’s digital inking experience has come on leaps and bounds in the meantime. Factor in the relatively high price of the Excite Write (from $599.99; the penless Excite Pro is from $499.99) and we’re not sure the value shows through.

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Toshiba Excite Write, Pro and Pure tablets hands-on is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
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ASUS shows off new touchscreen, USB and gaming monitors at Computex (eyes-on)

ASUS shows off new touchscreen, USB and gaming monitors at Computex (eyes-on)

We came to ASUS’ Computex booth to see the new 4K monitors, but it turns out the company had a lot of other (albeit slightly less exciting) models on display too. First up (starting with the stuff you can actually buy), the company is showing off a 15-inch USB-powered monitor — a first for ASUS. In fact, the company has teased this guy before, but with a lower-res 1,366 x 768 display. Now, we’re told a 1080p version is also on the way, with the 1,366 x 768 one coming in July for $159, and the full HD model shipping in August for around $209. Either way, you get a matte, anti-glare panel, and the whole thing weighs in at less than 800g (1.8 pounds). And, as is customary for monitors like this, it comes with a carrying case that doubles as a stand.

Moving on, we saw two touchscreen monitors (one 19.5 inches, the other 23.6), both of which have 1080p screens — and some fairly thick bezels. The big differences, so far as we can tell, are that the bigger version has an HDMI panel and IPS, whereas the smaller guy makes do with a lowlier TN panel. No word on price, or even whether this will go on sale in the US, though an ASUS rep did confirm it’ll reach select markets sometime in Q4. Wrapping up, ASUS also outed a tri-panel gaming setup, with three 27-inch, 1080p IPS displays. In particular, the company is touting the skinny bezels. Are they skinny enough not to distract gamers, though? Check out our hands-on photos and judge for yourself.

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ASUS teases upcoming mechanical ROG ‘Armor Keyboard’ for gamers

ASUS ROG announces the Armor Keyboard with mechanical keys for gamers

ASUS’ ROG presentation here at Computex wasn’t all meaty graphic powerhouses — it also displayed a new mechanical keyboard for discerning typists gamers, albeit underneath a piece of black cloth. We were told that the temporarily named “Armor Keyboard” wasn’t quite ready to show off its design just yet, but when it comes out towards the end of Q3 this year it will, surprisingly, boast the title of ASUS’ first in-house-designed mechanical gaming keyboard. As you’d expect, this backlit device will feature “ultra-responsive” mechanical key switches, as well as dedicated media and programmable hot keys located along the periphery. We’ll be keeping an eye out for more information about it later this year, naturally.

Richard Lai contributed to this report.

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