CRISTAL combines ‘The Sims’ and Surface for full room control

Have you ever yearned for more immediate control over your surroundings? No, we don’t mean Magneto car-flipping abilities. We mean more like wrangling all of the gear in a room into some kind of understandable and connected system. If you said yes — and you’re a Sims aficionado — you’ll want to check into CRISTAL. We’re not talking expensive champagne here, we’re talking about the “Control of Remotely Interfaced Systems using Touch-based Actions in Living spaces” system (c’mon, it sort of makes sense). The premise is simple: instead of having to juggle multiple remotes and input systems to deal with a room full of technology, CRISTAL merges a Surface-like touch area (your coffee table in this scenario), an overhead camera, and connected devices to form a frighteningly intuitive control scheme. The idea allows for all sorts of handy arrangements, like being able to virtually drag media from a server on one side of the room to your TV on the other, dim lights in a particular area by swiping on that location, or draw a path for a Roomba to clean using the overhead view. Right now this is just a research project, of course, but the team working on the concept believes costs could move down from the astronomic $10,000-$15,000 the setup would cost now to a more affordable range. Until that happens, you’ll have the video of CRISTAL in action after the break.

Continue reading CRISTAL combines ‘The Sims’ and Surface for full room control

Filed under: , ,

CRISTAL combines ‘The Sims’ and Surface for full room control originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 15 Aug 2009 11:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Logitech’s Harmony 900 Universal Remote Has Touchscreen

Only a certain type of person is willing to drop $400 on a remote control, but those people are going to be excited about the new Logitech Harmony 900.

The Harmony 900 isn’t quite as huge and crazy as the Harmony 1000, as it retains the form factor of, you know, a remote control, like the Harmony One. But it packs in a color touchscreen to let you control pretty much anything you want. It’s the best of both worlds.

It’s also got a new RF to IR blaster to control your home theater components. Instead of sticking small IR receivers to the IR inputs of every device in your cabinet, you put the blaster in front of all of them and it fires off its signal in every direction, hitting everything at once. It makes the install process easier, at least. This way you can control closed cabinets (or cabinets behind you) with RF, so the repeater will send the IR to the desired components.

Look for the Harmony 900 later this month for $399.99. [Logitech]

Bang & Olufsen’s BeoTime alarm clock / remote favors a flute

Bang & Olufsen — the Danish boutique retailer famous for engineering gorgeous AV products that only a sliver of humanity can afford — has just introduced its newest product, and it’s a far cry from the gargantuan HDTVs and superfluous sound systems that it’s used to shipping. Designed by Steffen Schmelling and inspired by Mozart’s The Magic Flute, this elongated wireless alarm clock actually serves another purpose. Once it has awoken you from your slumber just in time to catch The Price Is Right in high-def, you can take it with you in order to control some of your other B&O components. The cubes you see are actually displays, and the built-in motion sensor enables display backlights to activate with a simple touch. We’re told that the device should hit showrooms this August for $375, though you should probably budget for an anger management course to keep from smashing this thing to bits the first time it buzzes at 5:30AM.

[Via PRNewswire]

Filed under:

Bang & Olufsen’s BeoTime alarm clock / remote favors a flute originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Jul 2009 12:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Sonos CR200 remote control’s product page reveals capacitive screen, $349 price tag

Looks like Sonos has put up a staging page for its CR200 remote control along with all the specs you could ask for, and a handful of low resolution pics to boot. That 3.5-inch VGA LCD display indeed is a touchscreen, and better yet, it’s capacitive. It’s also a good bit smaller and lighter than its CR100 ancestor, only 2.9 x 4.5 x 0.7 inches in size and six ounces in weight — you can probably give thanks to the aluminum case for at least some of that weight loss. Price is just a hair below $350 and that drops to $290 when you get it as part of the Bundle 250. The “add to cart” function doesn’t quite seem to be working, but it can’t be long now, right? Just in case the page gets pulled, we’ve taken the liberty of screencapping all the good parts and throwing them in the gallery below.

[Thanks, Schmoop and Lowwie]

Filed under:

Sonos CR200 remote control’s product page reveals capacitive screen, $349 price tag originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 19:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

NC State gurus build remote control bats, freak out Dukies and Tar Holes

Micro-aerial vehicles, or MAVs as they’re called in the elusive underground, are far from new, but a team from NC State University is hoping to advance the field with an all new critter. The Robo-Bat is a remote controlled creature that relies on a super elastic shape-memory metal alloy for the joints, which is said to provide a full range of motion while enabling it to “always return to its original position — a function performed by many tiny bones, cartilage and tendons in real bats.” The crew is also utilizing other “smart materials” in the muscular system, giving it the ability to react in real time to environmental changes such as sudden wind gusts. Ideally, this bionic chiropteran would be used to chivvy those who dare step foot on Franklin Street or inside Cameron Indoor Stadium, but in less malicious situations, it could help well-meaning scientists get the bottom of that whole “aerodynamics” thing.

Filed under:

NC State gurus build remote control bats, freak out Dukies and Tar Holes originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 09:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Sonos CR200 remote control has a touchscreen, at last

And here it is. After we unearthed the Sonos CR200 in a FCC filing, out comes the first pic. As we expected, it’s a portrait controller and is said to include a touch-screen which makes an on-screen QWERTY keyboard a lock for searching by artist, album, or song titles. Goodbye scroll-wheel! If you own a Sonos, then you know this is the best thing to happen since, well, buying your Sonos… just so long as it’s not priced for $399 like the CR100 it replaces.

Filed under:

Sonos CR200 remote control has a touchscreen, at last originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Jul 2009 04:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Sony’s newest remote control ships with a Z200iR compact music system (updated)

It’s not often that a remote control becomes the centerpiece of a product launch, but man, would you look at that. That’s the remote for Sony’s NAS-Z200iR, a WiFi-enabled shelf audio system with slot-loading CD and iPod dock. The Z200iR is DLNA-certified so it works with any DLNA device in your home including NAS boxes and of course, your PC or Mac. The re-chargeable remote features a 3.5-inch LCD display that gives you full control over sourced media including Internet radio, integrated AM/FM tuner, or devices connected via the Z200iR’s USB or audio-in ports. The sound comes courtesy of a pair of independent, 20-watt speaker enclosures with double neodymium magnets used to drive the bass. A simpler, WiFi-less CMT-Z100iR system will launch first in July with the Z200iR headed to Europe in mid September. Sorry, no prices announced so no joy.

Update: Ready for the pricing? The German press release has the Z200iR at €699. That’s nearly $1,000 for a compact sound system that sits on a shelf. Way to go Sony, way to go.

[Thanks, Daniel O.]

Filed under:

Sony’s newest remote control ships with a Z200iR compact music system (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Jul 2009 04:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Sonos CR200 controller outed by the FCC

Without a doubt, Sonos makes an excellent wireless distributed audio system. If we had to nit pick (and we do), then its massive controller, the CR100 is easily the first thing to complain about. For starters it’s a $400 remote control that does one thing, it controls your Sonos audio system. Granted, the CR100 is rugged, splashproof, and turns on in an instant thanks to a built-in accelerometer; features that can’t justify the price, however, in light of the solid Sonos did its user base when it released a free Sonos controller app for the iPhone and iPod touch. The app even one-ups the CR100 with its on-screen QWERTY since the CR100’s scrollwheel isn’t exactly the best interface for typing out the name of an artist search. So imagine our intrigue when we saw a new CR200 Sonos Controller pass through the FCC. The new controller appears to prefer a portrait orientation (instead of landscape like the CR100) and was tested across 802.11g WiFi frequencies with a 24Mbps fixed data rate. While that doesn’t give us much to go on, at least it passed the tests meaning we could be close to an official announcement. Considering the controller’s physical design hasn’t changed since its launch in January of 2005, a few more days or weeks of waiting shouldn’t be a problem.

Filed under: ,

Sonos CR200 controller outed by the FCC originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 20 Jun 2009 02:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Corkscrew nanopropellers may one day deliver drugs internally

Clearly, vaccinations are so three years ago. As the race continues to find the best, most mobile internal transportation device for delivering drugs to remote places within the body, Peer Fischer of The Rowland Institute at Harvard University has teamed with colleague Ambarish Ghosh to concoct the wild creation you see to the right. The glass-derived nanopropeller was designed to move in a corkscrew motion in order to plow through syrupy, viscous liquids within the human frame. The device itself is fantastically small, measuring just 200 to 300 nanometers across at the head and 1 to 2 micrometers long. Fischer points out that each of these can be controlled with a striking amount of precision via an external magnetic field, though we don’t get the impression that they’ll be on to FDA testing in the near future. Ah well, at least our gra, er, great-grandchildren will be all taken care of.

Filed under:

Corkscrew nanopropellers may one day deliver drugs internally originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Jun 2009 00:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Logitech’s Harmony Adapter for PS3 reviewed

Eager to know if Logitech’s prayer-answering Harmony Adapter for PlayStation 3 really is as magnificent as you hope it is? Fret not, as our main men over at Engadget HD have the answer. They paired this up with their Harmony blaster and PS3 in order to see just how fantastic / terrible the IR-to-Bluetooth converter is, so head on over to read their two pennies. Go on, get!

Filed under: ,

Logitech’s Harmony Adapter for PS3 reviewed originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 May 2009 15:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments