Samsung Galaxy Gear Smartwatch Won’t Reportedly Be Able To Make Calls

Samsung Galaxy Gear Smartwatch Wont Reportedly Be Able To Make Calls

A number of recent rumors suggest that Samsung will unveil the Galaxy Gear smartwatch alongside Galaxy Note 3 at its event on September 4th in Berlin. The company has long been rumored to be working on a smartwatch, as per rumors the Galaxy Gear will actually act as a companion for the company’s Galaxy lineup of Android powered devices. A recent report from Bloomberg suggested that the smartwatch will have ability to make phone calls. The Verge contradicts this report with one of their own, claiming that their sources say the watch won’t be able to make calls, “the watch is not a phone,” to be precise.

Not much is known about Samsung’s much rumored smartwatch at this point in time. Patents suggest that the Korean manufacturer’s watch might have a flexible display, but we haven’t heard anything about this being the case with Galaxy Gear. A new rumor claimed that while Galaxy Note 3 will be released next month, Samsung will probably release the smartwatch in October. The company itself has not said anything about a smartwatch right now. Its invite for the September 4th event was quite evidently about the Galaxy Note 3, it didn’t contain any hints about a smartwatch. Fortunately, September 4th isn’t far off, so its only a matter of time before we get to see what Samsung has up its sleeve.

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    Galaxy Gear Smartwatch Announcement Rumored For September 4th Event

    Galaxy Gear Smartwatch Announcement Rumored For September 4th Event

    Samsung has long been rumored to be working on a smartwatch. In fact, it is just one of the major companies that has been rumored in recent months to be involved in making a watch that does much more than just telling the time. The company has scheduled an event on September 4th, there it will be unveiling the much rumored Galaxy Note 3 phablet. A few weeks ago it was speculated that Samsung’s smartwatch would be called Galaxy Gear and now Sammobile “confirms” that Galaxy Gear will be unveiled alongside the new phablet on September 4th.

    To be absolutely clear, let me remind you that no confirmation has been received from Samsung. So it can’t be said for sure if the smartwatch is indeed going to be unveiled on the aforementioned date. It has been called a companion for Galaxy smartphones, though nothing has been revealed or leaked as yet regarding its design or capabilities for that matter. No information regarding pricing and availability has been offered as of now. Samsung’s invite for the September 4th event was pretty evident about the Galaxy Note 3 launch, it didn’t contain any hint regarding the Galaxy Gear. Probably we’ll see more leaks regarding this smartwatch as the event approaches.

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  • Galaxy Gear Smartwatch Announcement Rumored For September 4th Event original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Hand-Tech Camera Glove Concept Puts A Camera In Your Palm

    Hand Tech Camera Glove Concept Puts A Camera In Your Palm

    At some point in our lives we’ve all formed a frame with our fingers and have taken an imaginary picture or acted as a hot-shot movie director. Imagine if it became possible to actually record a video or take a picture using just those gestures. There’s a new design project that does just that, by putting a camera and microphone in your palm. Though its just a concept, not something that you’ll be able to pick up in the next few months. Made by Francesca Barchiesi as a graduation thesis, the Hand-Tech camera glove concept has the ability to not only record video or take pictures, but also the ability to project images, measure and exchange different types of data as well as translate sign language.

    (more…)

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  • Hand-Tech Camera Glove Concept Puts A Camera In Your Palm original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Sony announces head mounted image processing unit

    We know that the next big thing in the world of consumer electronics will most probably be wearable technology – the likes of Google Glass will definitely make quite a splash in the industry, if you ask me. Well, there is a place for the likes of Google Glass, but do remember that wearable tech could have so much more potential. Case in point, Sony has just announced the launch of a head-mount image processing unit which is capable of receiving and outputting endoscope image signals, as well as controlling video images, and these can subsequently be displayed in 3D or 2D via an accompanying head-mounted monitor. This head-mounted monitor can also be picked up as a separate purchase.

    The medical fraternity is one that will appreciate this head mounted image processing unit, especially those who are involved in the world of laparoscopic surgery. In this procedure, an endoscope is inserted via multiple keyhole incisions in a patient’s abdomen, letting the surgeon confirm video images that are shown off on a monitor in real time, and it has become a common procedure since it minimizes the strain on patients when compared to open surgery. Sony’s head-mount image processor will come in handy for sure, where it is equipped with a 3D head-mounted monitor and will play nice with a 3D surgical laparoscope. This is made possible thanks to the incorporation of Sony’s advanced 3D and display-related technologies, where it can realize a standard of 3D images which will be able to meet the demands of medical professionals.

    This new Sony unit maximizes the technological advantages of OLED (organic light-emitting diode) panels, allowing one to enjoy extremely detailed image representation of the target area. Some of these characteristics will include high resolution, superb reproduction of blacks, excellent video image response times, as well as precise color reproduction. A couple of panels have been fitted inside the monitor, where each one is meant for the respective eyes. Independent HD images will then be displayed on the left and right panels, where there will be no visual crosstalk, so that you can check out the target area in high definition glory complete with faithful color reproduction and highly-precise information relating to depth. We do look forward to see what else technology can throw up in the world of modern medicine.

    Press Release
    [ Sony announces head mounted image processing unit copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

    Job Listing Suggests Motorola Mobility Is Starting To Focus On Wearable Tech In Earnest

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    Heads up, wearable tech aficionados: Motorola Mobility is looking to produce some new wearable gadgets and it wants some help. The Google-owned company quietly posted a job listing yesterday looking for someone to fill the role of senior director of industrial design for wearables — according to the post, that person will “provide strategic leadership, champion innovation and institute best practices to create a new world-class wearable’s [sic] design group within Motorola.”

    At first glance, it seems like the sort of person the more business-centric Motorola Solutions would be looking for — after all, they’ve got plenty of experience in wearable computing as it is — but references in the listing to the company’s “future with Google” make it clear this isn’t just an instance of a post going up on the wrong career site. Then again, Motorola Mobility was responsible for devices like the ill-fated MOTOACTV (seen above), so they’re not exactly strangers to wearable tech either.

    Of course, there’s very big question we need to address here: what exactly does Motorola mean when they use the word “wearables”? At this point it’s tough to say, but Regina Dugan, head of MM’s Advanced Technology and Research Group, gave us a bit of a hint when she took at the stage at AllThingsD’s D11 conference. At the time noted that she was “profoundly interested in wearables, and showed off an electronic authentication “tattoo” developed by MC10 — essentially an ultra-thin patch loaded up with very small antennas and sensors — that Motorola would be helping to advance in conjunction with the company.

    That sounds pretty niche to be honest, but it may just be the tip of the iceberg if the language in the job listing is any indication. There are repeated references to the importance of consumer appeal: the person who lands the gig must “define design strategies that synthesize technology innovation and consumer desires” and “ensure creative direction for design is consumer focused”, which make it look like Motorola eventually wants to release a wearable device that’s meant for the masses. That jibes rather nicely with remarks made by Motorola consumer experience design SVP Jim Wicks last month at TechWeek in Chicago — he suggested in his keynote address that people won’t be hunched over their gadgets in the future, and that wearable tech will continue pick up steam.

    Motorola definitely isn’t the only one tackling the wearable tech trend, as parent company Google has reportedly been working on a smartwatch for a while now, and Apple has reportedly been fleshing out its staff with health and sensor experts who may be working on fitness-friendly wrist-worn gadget.

    This isn’t the first time that Motorola let an upcoming initiative slip thanks to a publicly available job posting — earlier this year the Google-owned company was caught trying to hire a senior director of product management for the “X-Phone”, a device we know now to be the Moto X. To absolutely no one’s surprise, that job listing disappeared shortly after it started getting media attention, but the proverbial damage was already done.

    As it happens, Motorola is still looking for quite a few people — there are some 450 job openings listed on the Motorola Mobility careers page. Google revealed yesterday in its quarterly earnings release that between March and June of this year, Motorola Mobility lost more than half of its nearly 10,000 person workforce  — some certainly moved on of their own volition, but the rest likely were given the boot to help streamline the company staunch the operational losses it’s reported regularly ever since Google acquired it last year.

    UPDATE: Motorola has responded to say that the “vast majority” of those people worked in manufacturing in China and Brazil, and have been transferred to Flextronics.

    Pebble Sold 275K Units Through Kickstarter And Pre-Orders, Tops 1M Watch Apps Downloaded

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    Smartwatch startup Pebble revealed today for the first time that it has received 190,000 pre-orders for its wearable computing accessory through its own web store following the tremendously successful Kickstarter campaign it ran last year. That means it amassed around 275,000 pre-orders total for the smartwatch, which is impressive early traction for a device that didn’t have a proven market in place to sell into.

    Pebble co-founder Eric Migicovsky told me the company wanted to reveal the total order volume now as a follow-up to its Best Buy availability announcement, in order to provide some context around the challenges the startup has faced in terms of shipping product to backers. Response at Best buy has also been very good, Migicovsky says, though the team isn’t yet ready to talk about specific numbers. The Pebble is sold out at many of Best Buy’s retail locations already.

    For the first six to ten months following the close of the Kickstarter campaign, the focus for Pebble was exclusively on shipping; it wasn’t a priority, per Migicovsky, but “the” priority. Now, the startup is getting to a point where it can change its focus to start working towards accomplishing its longer term goals as a company. Part of that includes meeting demand and making sure everyone who pre-ordered receives their device, which should happen over the next year, Migicovsky says. But developers are the other big priority to whom Pebble is now turning its attention.

    “Our focus as a company is now shifting to supporting third-party developers,” Migicovsky says. The company has seen over 1 million watch apps downloaded to Pebble devices, as measured by installs made through its iOS and Android apps. There’s already an active community around the Pebble SDK, and Migicovsky says that fostering that will be where the startup shifts spending and development efforts.

    “This means our developer tools will get better, we’ll be focusing on how developers can get their tools out to users,” he said. “It’s in our best interest,  as well as in the interest of developers to share this these stories.”

    So now that Pebble has made good on getting to market, it will focus on these two goals to help build the smartwatch into a lasting, robust platform. Of course, those 275,000 pre-orders, while impressive on their own, might not look so amazing should Apple release an iWatch as it appears to be preparing to do. But that’s still an unknown quantity, and Pebble doing their best to solidify their current market positioning is the best thing the startup can do right now.

    Migicovsky will also be doing an AMA on Reddit starting at 12 PM PDT, so that should be an opportunity for him to expound further on what the future holds for his startup.

    Not sure if you’re exactly a smartwatch kind of person?

    Not sure if you’re exactly a smartwatch kind of person? Check out Lifehacker’s nifty little guide to help you figure out if you should make the jump.

    Read more…

        

    The Mysterious Case Of The Missing Jawbone Up

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    It seems a week doesn’t go by without finding out about a malfunctioning Jawbone Up band. The wearable step tracking bracelet measures how much you move each day and how well you sleep.

    It was relaunched late last year in the US, and came to Asia in March.

    I have five people on my Up friends list (all with new bands less than two months old), and already four of them are facing issues. Some are saying their LED lights have stopped working, and one of their bands is not being able to track sleep anymore.

    My own band coughed and died just two weeks after I purchased it from an Apple store in Hong Kong. It stopped being able to retain a charge, and its purported ten-day battery would go flat within half a day.

    A Japanese user I met this week saw I was wearing one, and informed me that his stopped working as well after about a month.

    This is not good.

    The Up is currently in its second generation. The first was a fiasco. Shortly after a triumphant launch in 2011, users complained that the band wasn’t holding a charge, and the company was forced to issue a global refund.

    It came back a year later, full of promise, but these anecdotal stories of woe keep popping up.

    When I went to return my band, one of the sales staff at the International Finance Centre (IFC) Apple store in Hong Kong informed me that the store was running dry on supplies because it had sent back a large batch of devices back to Jawbone. This was prompted by numerous customer returns, she said.

    A user in Singapore, Kimberly Mah, had a band that had battery issues as well. She wrote to Jawbone, but was informed that the company would not ship a replacement “due to international shipping regulations”. Jawbone said she should check with the retailer she bought the band from.

    But when she went to the Challenger outlet at Funan Centre, the retailer was completely out of stock, saying new bands wouldn’t come in for at least another month. Could this be signs of technical issues with production at Jawbone?

    A survey of the numerous PC stores at Funan Centre also showed that each had just one or two bands on the shelf, potentially indicating a supply issue. The Apple Singapore online store lists an 8- to 10-week wait for new bands, as well. Jawbone has a lot resting on this new product — it’s raised about $210 million so far from venture firms, and Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer joined its board a little over a month ago.

    At the top of the supply chain, the company who brings in the bands to Singapore, Digital Hub, couldn’t help with a replacement either, because they too were out of stock.

    Jawbone’s response to all of this is that it’s a supply problem due to the bands selling like hotcakes. “It’s one of our fastest-selling products in Jawbone history… we are working to keep up with the incredible demand,” said a spokesperson.

    On any new technical issues, she simply said that the band is “entirely new, inside and out” with regard to its redesign after the first generation, and pointed me to the testing processes they put the bands through before they’re sent out of the warehouse.

    One can only hope these claims hold true.

    Meet the Lucky People Who Suddenly Owe Google $1500

    We already know the first, lucky six who have the honor of paying Google $1,500 in exchange for Glass and the adventures and general ridicule that will follow. But now, @projectglass is in the process of announcing the rest of the lucky winners by replying individually to each of their past #ifihadglass tweets. Here’s a sampling of the trailblazers in all their glory. There will be 8,000 in total. More »

    Electronic Sensor Tattoos Can Now Be Printed Directly Onto Human Skin

    Thanks to the same people that brought us the stick-on electric tattoo and stretchable battery, we’re now looking at a future of electronic sensors that can be printed directly onto human skin. More »