Fujitsu touch interface detects fingers on real objects, adds digital details to print

Fujitsu touch interface can detect fingers on real objects

Bringing touch interfaces to real-world objects often involves putting hardware either inside the item or in front of it, neither of which is especially natural. Fujitsu has developed a control system that could eliminate those obstructions and bring digital interaction to many surfaces, even to old-fashioned paper. Its multi-camera approach can distinguish between objects on a table and the exact positions of a user’s fingers, right down to fingertip outlines; it’s accurate enough to scan text from a book as you drag your finger along the page. The system really comes alive, however, when its projector is involved. Besides providing visual feedback, the image overlay allows for both control of purely digital objects and interfaces tailored to real-world items. The company imagines brochures or maps that pop up extra details, among numerous other examples. While we wonder how long the technology will remain useful when there’s an ongoing push to go paperless, Fujitsu sees enough practicality that it’s anticipating a product in its fiscal 2014. That doesn’t leave long until we can get a very literal hands-on.

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Via: The Verge

Source: Fujitsu

LG Jukeblox hits the FCC, makes us wonder what a Jukeblox is

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Once in a while, a product meanders through the FCC that we’ve actually never heard of. Today we found a test report concerning LG’s Jukeblox, a “networked media module” that doesn’t seem to exist anywhere else on the internet. The report details that the unit has an 802.11 b/g WiFi module, but no hints as to its intended purpose or destination. At a guess, we’d posit that the device is destined to rival the AllShare Cast, but given that “Jukeblox” is also the name of SMSC’s digital audio technology, LG might have to deal with some trademark wrangling before this product sees the light of day.

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Source: FCC

Big Jambox 2.0 update brings extended battery life, new AAC support for iOS 6.1

If you thought $300 was a lot of money to drop on the Big Jambox, Jawbone has just released an update that might make that amount a little easier to swallow. The 2.0 software for the large Bluetooth speaker brings new AAC support for iOS 6.1 that promises better audio streams with fewer interruptions, two more hours of battery life when streaming from a iOS 6.1 device, synced volume control, a mode that silences all voice prompts and tones, improved LED response time and last but not least, support for the PS Vita. Simply head over to Jawbone’s MyTalk website, plug in your Big Jambox via USB and follow the instructions on how to make your big booming speaker even better.

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Source: Jawbone MyTalk

Buffalo – Bus-powered 8-port USB hub “BSH8U01″ series – Supply 1000mA current by connecting to 2 USB ports

Buffalo - Bus-powered USB hub "BSH8U01" series - Supply 1000mA current by connecting to 2 USB ports

Buffalo’s new bus-powered USB hub “BSH8U01″ series connects to 2 USB laptop ports and supplies 1000mA current without using an AC adapter, so you can steadily use devices that require a measurable amount of power. Previous models of bus-powered USB hubs can only supply up to 500mA.

“BSH8U01″ has 8 ports so it’s useful when you need to connect multiple devices like a keyboard, mouse, card reader, USB drive, etc. to your laptop at the same time.

Price: ¥3,213 (including tax)
Color: black, white
Interface: USB2.0
Data transfer speed: USB2.0: Max 480Mbps
Power-supply method: Bus power
Length of cable: 0.9m
Size: 46×132×15mm
Weight: 145g

Orders can be made here.

Insert Coin: LineCam is a high-flying cable car system for your camera

In Insert Coin, we look at an exciting new tech project that requires funding before it can hit production. If you’d like to pitch a project, please send us a tip with “Insert Coin” as the subject line.

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Father and son team Nick and Larry Braun want to build a portable zip line system for cameras. Problem is, predictably, design and manufacturing cost a lot of money. So, the two have turned to Kickstarter and are asking for a little help in getting their LineCam project off the ground. The duo are actually building two different models: the simple, gravity-powered Glide and the motorized Flow. Both are wheeled carts that attach to a cable and have mounts for various cameras, including standard tripod mounts for shuttling DSLRs through the air. The Glide is capable of using smaller gauge line and has a simpler rigging assembly, which helps keep cost and weight down. The remote controlled Flow, on the other hand, requires a much more robust setup.

The Flow is definitely the more interesting of the two products. Rather than simply riding the cable under the the influence of physics, it features an RF remote with speed control and the ability to run in reverse. And the 10,900mAh battery is charged in part by a regenerative breaking system packed into the shuttle. Having all this machined aluminum made here in the US isn’t cheap however. The Glide platform alone (that includes none of the rigging or cabling) will require a pledge of $510. The Flow? A jaw dropping $4,535. And if you want all the necessary equipment to film your exploits from the air you’ll have to offer support totally $5,600. Still, if you’re serious about your photography and video, it might not seem like that absurd a price. Heck, the GoPro guys seem to like it. Check out the video pitch for the LineCam after the break.

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Via: GizMag

Source: Kickstarter

Hands-on with the smaller, less expensive 7-inch Wikipad (video)

Handson with the smaller, less expensive 7inch Wikipad

When the Wikipad went from 10.1-inches to just 7-inches earlier this year, subsequently cutting its price in half alongside the size reduction, the gaming-centric Android tablet went from riskily priced potential failure to affordable item of interest in one swift move. $500 for a 10.1-inch tablet with a proprietary gaming controller peripheral? With a Tegra 3, no less? That already sounds outdated, and at $500, it sounds outright crazy. Though Wikipad promises a 10.-1-inch version is still in the works, the 7-incher is headed for retail in the coming weeks, with the aforementioned Tegra 3 quad-core SoC, a 1,280 x 800 IPS screen, Jellybean 4.1, and that enormous detachable game controller (12 buttons in all!). At last week’s Game Developers Conference, we had a chance to check out the latest version of the Wikipad just ahead of its retail launch — for more on that meeting, join us beyond the break.

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Wacom unveils crayon-esque Bamboo Stylus mini for tablets and smartphones

Wacom unveils crayonesque Bamboo Stylus mini for tablets and smartphones

Wacom wants to make sure there’s no buyer’s remorse for those who didn’t pop for a pen-equipped device, so it added the Bamboo Stylus mini to its portable touch-pen lineup. It joins the Stylus Feel, Solo, Pocket and Duo, but brings a stubbier 4.7 centimeter (1.85 inch) form factor and strap with a dummy mini-jack plug for terminal pen mis-placers. Despite the whimsical look, Wacom says the body is brass plated, has six colors of soft-touch rubber and nibs that are replaceable with firm or soft touch options. You can color in your order now for $19 at the source.

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Source: Wacom (store)

Elecom – Windows 8 touchpanel control capable wireless/wired mouse “BlueLED Mouse” and “ULTIMATE Laser Mouse”

Elecom is releasing 2 models of its new mouse “BlueLED Mouse” and “ULTIMATE Laser Mouse”. Both models have wired type and wireless type.
And both can navigate on touchpanels.
1) BlueLED Mouse
• Wired type “M-BL18UBA” series – ¥4,410 (including tax)
Colors: Silver, Black, Red
• Wireless type “M-BL19DBA” series – ¥6,730 (including tax)
Colors: Silver, Black, Blue, Pink, Red, Orange
Common features:
– You can control (flick, swipe, zoom, …

XYZbot’s Fritz offers a cheaper robot head, free trips to the uncanny valley (video)

XYZbot's Fritz robot face provides a buildityourself trip to the uncanny valley video

It’s been relatively easy to get your hands on an expressive robot face… if you’re rich or a scientist, that is. XYZbot would like to give the rest of us a shot by crowdfunding Fritz, an Arduino-powered robot head. The build-it-yourself (and eerily human-proportioned) construction can react to pre-programmed actions, text-to-speech conversion or live control, ranging from basics like the eyes and jaw to the eyelids, eyebrows, lips and neck of an Advanced Fritz. Windows users should have relatively simple control through an app if they just want to play, but where Fritz may shine is its open source nature: the code and hardware schematics will be available for extending support, changing the look or building a larger robot where Fritz is just one part. The $125 minimum pledge required to set aside a Fritz ($199 for an Advanced Fritz) isn’t trivial, but it could be a relative bargain if XYZbot makes its $25,000 goal — and one of the quickest routes to not-quite-lifelike robotics outside of a research grant.

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Source: Kickstarter

Unboxing the OUYA (video)

With Kickstarter backer shipments kicking off last Thursday, it’s no surprise that some folks are already receiving their OUYA consoles. Two of our US-based, East Coast staffers just got their consoles this morning, and here we are with an unboxing video and screens so that you can share in the excitement with us. Of course, we’ll have a full review of the Android-powered $99 game console coming later this week — long before the console becomes available at retail on June 4th — so keep your eyes loose and your brains ready. For now, enjoy the melange of media we’ve prepared for you; should you prefer a deeper dive, our hands-on is right here.

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