Sound2 Speakers Look Like Giant Desktop Earbuds

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Lacie’s new Sound2 Speakers are neat in two ways. First, they can hook up to a computer via USB as well as the usual line-in jack, and second, they look like a giant pair of earbuds.

The pedigree is also good, with the internals designed by high-end French speaker company Cabasse, and we like the loud-enough 30 Watt output and the fact that these are real, big speakers rather than the ubiquitous subwoofer and satellite setup normally targeted at computer users.

But what will sell these speakers is of course the looks, and those earbud-like cases will sit great on your desk next to a notebook. There’s even a hide-away external power supply to keep the desktop clear. We’ll have to hear them in person to make a choice, of course, but right now these are looking like a good candidate for the new speakers in Gadget Lab’s Spanish office (aka my bedroom). $100.

Product page [Lacie. Thanks, Kim!]


Go Back To School With Wired This Labor Day Weekend

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While you’re kicking back this weekend, sipping some cold suds and soaking up the last rays of summer, remember that school is starting up again soon. It doesn’t matter if you’ve been out of academia for decades are about to start college or have a wee one about to commence second grade, we here at Wired have got all your gear needs covered.

First off we take four different (legal) study aids to task. Many have claimed that these herbal supplements can improve cognitive function. Our intrepid writer, Alexis Fitts, tried four different herbal remedies in our very, ahem, scientific tests.

You can read I Dream of Genius: Herbal Drugs Promise Big Neural Gains in its entirety at our reviews site.

We also take up another important academic activity, drinking beer! Science editor and noted brewski connoisseur, Betsy Mason pitted two kegerators head to head in a winner-take-all brouhaha.

She also built our very own DIY kegerator, Beer Robot. You know the legend. You follow him on twitter.  Now find out how he came to be.

Can’t get your fill of beer? Scope our gallery of crazy, custom pimped out kegerators too.

Then we also assembled gadgets perfect for kids entering grade school, teens in high school, and those about to embark on college:

Top Gear For Primary School Tykes

High School Gear For The Gossip Girl Set

The Best Gadgets For College Kids


Experimental Tech Turns Your Coffee Table Into a Universal Remote

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Stock up on coasters. A new technology combines the coffee table with a universal remote so that people sitting around the table can tap on a screen to change the channel, turn up the volume or dim the lights.

CRISTAL (Control of Remotely Interfaced Systems using Touch-based Actions in Living spaces) is a research project in user interface that attempts to create a natural way of connecting with devices. The system offers a streaming video view of the living room on a tabletop, so users can can walk up to it, see the layout of the room and interact with the TV or the photo frame.

“We wanted a social aspect to activities such as choosing what to watch on TV and we wanted to make the process easy and intuitive,” says Stacey Scott, assistant professor at the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada, and a member of the project. A demo of CRISTAL was shown at the Siggraph graphics conference earlier this month.

The idea isn’t completely novel. Microsoft showed off Surface, a multitouch display in 2008 that allows users to interact with it by using gestures.

Universal remotes have become popular in the last few years, but they are still difficult to use. Their greatest flaw, though, may be that they do not help quash those battles over who gets the remote.  CRISTAL solves those problems, says Christian Müller-Tomfelde, an Australian researcher who is currently writing a book on research in tabletop displays.

“It is a clever use of the tabletop as a ‘world-in-miniature’ interface to control room elements,” he says.

Scott and researchers from the Upper Austria University of Applied Sciences have been working on the idea for less than a year. It started when Michael Haller, the head of the Media Interaction Lab at the university, found himself frustrated with different remotes for each device: TV, radio and DVD player.

“Every time you get a new device into the living room, you get a new remote with it,” says Scott. “And instead of difficult programmable universal remotes, this offers intuitive mapping of the different devices and home.”

CRISTAL uses a camera to capture the living room and all the devices in it, including lamps and digital picture frames. The captured video is displayed on the multi-touch coffee table. The video image of the device itself is the interface, so a sliding gesture on the image can turn up the volume of the TV, for instance. To watch a movie, drag an image of the movie cover and drop it on to the TV on the multitouch screen.

But it will be a few years before this remote is available at Best Buy. It could take five to 10 years before affordable multitouch tabletops can be created for consumers, says Müller-Tomfelde. “The investment to get such a coffee-table display into the living room is not to be underestimated, as we can see with Microsoft’s Surface technology,” he says.

Scott estimates that a tabletop remote such as CRISTAL could cost $10,000 to $15,000. But she is confident that the idea can become viable enough for consumer production in a few years, especially if it can be combined with Microsoft’s Surface product.

Check out a video demo of CRISTAL below.

Photo and video: Media Interaction Lab

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LG to Embed Vudu’s On-Demand Movie Service Into TVs

lh50_frontStreaming media provider Vudu has partnered with LG to include its software into upcoming LG high-definition TVs. The move will get rid of the intermediary set-top box and allows consumers to directly watch on-demand content from the internet on their TVs.

“Smart TV’s are part of an exciting new industry trend,” says Alain Rossmann, CEO of Vudu. “Vudu is partnering with leading consumer electronics vendors to embed the new Vudu service directly into the TV, eliminating the expense and hassle of purchasing, installing or connecting another device to the TV.”

The new Vudu service delivered through LG TVs allows consumers to discover and watch high definition movies on-demand. The service will be available on upcoming models of LG’s broadband TVs later this fall.

Licensing Vudu’s software to consumer electronics makers such as LG though is a strategy that allows Vudu to go out of the box and focus on delivering the service.  It’s a strategy similar to what GPS-navigation devices maker Dash had adopted. Dash started out by producing standalone GPS boxes with its software that offered services such as local search. But the company soon abandoned the hardware-based GPS systems and instead focused on licensing its applications and services to run on other products.  BlackBerry maker Research In Motion acquired Dash earlier this year.

In the last two years, streaming media boxes that bring online movies, TV shows and content to the TV have become popular with consumers, though they are still a small fraction of audience that rents movies. Apple launched its Apple TV in 2007.  Meanwhile, Roku, a company that started by offering $100 boxes in partnership with Netflix included access to content from Amazon.com earlier this year. Netflix rival BlockBuster also has a streaming video box available.

Vudu says its service differs from rivals in that it can offer movies in 1080p definition and high resolution Dolby Digital surround sound. Vudu also offers features such as instant fast forwards, rewind and instant start for all its movies. Customers can instantly buy or rent from the company’s library of movies with no monthly fees.

See Also:


Podio Bike Speakers Turn Cycling into “Enjoyable Melodious Tour’

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Poor cyclists. Not only do they sustain indignity every time a car parks in a bike lane, or a moronic taxi passenger flings open a door in their path, the poppets have to brave their journeys to a soundtrack of car horns and abuse shouted by other, less civilized road-goers.

Podio, a neat, handlebar-mounted MP3 player from Japan, aims to ease their pain. Here’s what it does, scooped directly from the product page, itself rendered in beautifully sonorous Japlish:

Moreover, mounted by a special bracket over a bike handlebar,Podio Audio is transformed into a bike audio, and from then on, bike hiking is not mere exercising, but also an enjoyable melodious tour.

Irresistibly  adorable, I think you’ll agree, although delving into the specs we see a different, less appealing story. The speakers, once charged and loaded with up to 2GB of MP3 or WMA tracks via USB, pump out a thunderous 1.5 watts, enough to be heard above the squeak of an un-oiled wheel but little more. The battery life is fine, stretching to nine hours for speakers (although shrinking if you actually turn them up loud enough) and a magnificent 60 hours for headphones, although if you’re using headphones you may as well stick with your current MP3 player.
Do visit the site, especially the “applications” page which lists (with photos) the activities you can enjoy whilst using the Podio. These include “Working”, “Others”, “Beauty” and the all encompassing “Living Life”. Currently, the price is undisclosed, as is the release date.

Product page [Mini-Speaker]


Thin-Film Speakers Add Big Sound to Big TVs

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As high-definition TVs get cheaper and bigger, many people are discovering that the joys of HDTV aren’t always matched by similarly high-quality sound.

In fact, the sound from TV sets’ embedded speakers has arguably gotten worse. The cathode-ray tube sets of old had plenty of room in them for high-quality speakers, whereas today’s flat sets have much less space. Less space means less room for the air displacement needed to make big, beefy, well-rounded sound waves, and that means if you want good sound, you’ll need to add a couple hundred bucks to your TV purchase for a nice pair of external speakers.

Now some companies say they have a better way: Transform the front of the TV screen itself into a vibrating membrane, making it in effect a giant, high-fidelity speaker, giving your HDTV an acoustic range that would make Pavarotti proud.

Emo Labs, a Waltham, Massachusetts startup, has created flat, transparent “speakers” that go in front of the display. And it is not alone in its plans to put good sound right on the face of your TV.  Warwick Audio and NXT Technologies, two British companies, and a Korean firm, Plasma & Ion Beam Corp., have similar plans.

“People are spending a lot of money on these TVs expecting to get great video and audio,” says Allan Evelyn, vice president of business development for Emo Labs. “And when they get their HDTV they are disappointed to discover their old CRT TV had much better sound.”

“It’s a question of physics,” says Aldo Cugnini, a digital technology consultant with AGC Systems, “and physics usually dictates that the bigger speakers have higher fidelity.”

Not anymore, says Emo Labs. Wheeling in at least six boxes that contained cables, a prototype 32-inch TV and a notebook computer, Jason Carlson, CEO of Emo Labs joined Evelyn in showing Wired.com an impressive demo. Every note of Diana Krall’s Live in Paris coming straight from the HDTV sounded like it had been piped through a Bose speaker system. “With our flat embedded speakers the sounds come from the screen, almost like what you get in motion picture theaters,” says  Carlson.

Traditional speakers have three fundamental components: a cone that pushes the air, a voice coil that is an electromagnet and a permanent magnet that can attract or repel the voice coil. When the coil moves, it pushes and pulls on the cone. This, in turn, vibrates the air in front, creating sound waves.

But with thinner or smaller displays there is not enough room to create that displacement resulting in a ‘tinny’ and weak sound.

“Manufacturers are challenged for real estate on a display and they want it to be as thin as possible,” says Cugnini.  “That means they can put the speakers behind the display or at the bottom, both which are not ideal.” The best sound field, say experts, comes from the spaces in front of the speaker and the screen.

For HDTV buyers, this can be a significant annoyance.  HDTVs larger than 50 inches are usually connected to external speakers to create a home theater system. But smaller screens tend to be standalone, forcing users to accept poor audio as part of the package, says Evelyn.

The problem is also a result of how most consumers buy their HDTVs.  Retail stores currently hook up rows of HDTVs in a bid to compare the picture quality.  There’s no place there to determine the sound quality on each. “Quite often the video is running on as many of these screens simultaneously and the sound isn’t,” says Cugnini. “And even if it is, it’s not a good determination of how that audio will translate in your bedroom or living room.”

Emo Labs's Edge Motion Speaker Promises Better Sound for Thin Displays

Emo Labs's Edge Motion Speakers Promise Better Sound for Thin Displays

Emo Labs uses a thin membrane made of polyethylene terephthalate (or PET, a plastic used in bottles) and two piezoelectric actuators. The actuators vibrate the membrane along the side, creating a force that is perpendicular to the motion. Emo Labs says it is negotiating with display manufacturers to embed its technology that users can see in TVs in the next nine months to a year.

Meanwhile, researchers at the University of Warwick hope to commercialize their flexible speaker technology by the end of the year.

Warwick Audio has created ultra-thin (0.2 mm thick) laminate panels that can be used to replace traditional magnet-and-cone speakers. Unlike Emo’s, Warwick’s speaker panels are not transparent. The company hopes to use them largely in public address system and displays.

The better sound quality will, however, come at price. Having a membrane in front of the display will result in about 4 percent loss in brightness, says Carlson. And then there’s the additional cost that stems from making the switch to the new tech. Eventually customers will have to pay more for their enhanced audio TV sets.  “Newer technologies cost more to implement so the street price of the TV will go up,” says Cugnini. Emo Labs estimates its speakers would add a 10-15 percent premium to cost.

But wouldn’t that be a small price to pay if Matt Giraud can sound better on American Idol, or Jack Bauer’s car chases on 24 boom just that much louder?

Top Photo:  University of Warwick creates flat, flexible speaker/ University of Warwick