Sharp’s remote controlled LED light-bulbs generate seven-shades of smart

While you’re replacing your household incandescent light-bulbs with LEDs in a bid to save energy and possibly cash (over the 40,000-hour lifespan) you might want to consider these remote-controlled lamps from Sharp. The DL-L60AV gives you on/off and dimming functions as well as the ability to adjust the light in seven shades of white to warm up or cool down the glow. Best of all, they screw into a standard E26 socket for a one-to-one exchange with your existing ocean warmers. The features of the remote control are still unclear (lighting zone support, range of operation, etc.) but it appears to work with multiple-lamps in parallel which is a nice touch. However, we’d like to see Sharp integrate a Z-Wave or ZigBee chipset so we could link these directly (without special wall-switches) into a tricked-out home automation and power managment system. The DL-series start at ¥3880 (about $40) for simple LED lights before hitting ¥7980 (about $82) for the fully-equipped DL-L60AV and begin shipping July 15th in Japan.

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Sharp’s remote controlled LED light-bulbs generate seven-shades of smart originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Jun 2009 03:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sharp adds cyan and yellow to its RGB displays, laughs scornfully at magenta

Sharp adds cyan and yellow to its RGB displays, laughs scornfully at magenta

Sharp is taking some cues from the nearly dearly departed print publishing world for its next line of LCDs, adding two colors to the typical RGB gamut. Cyan and yellow, half of the CMYK spread that makes your Sunday Garfield sketch pop, are going to be added to the company’s displays to make up what it’s dubbing “Multi-Primary-Color Technology.” The tech is said to be able to reproduce 99 percent of all colors able to be perceived by the human eye — because apparently 1.7 billion colors from a traditional LCD wasn’t enough. The displays will be on display at the Society for Information Display Symposium in San Antonio starting next week. So, lucky Texans, prepare to get your cone cells massaged.

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Sharp adds cyan and yellow to its RGB displays, laughs scornfully at magenta originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 May 2009 09:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sharp slings out industry’s thinnest solar modules for cellphones

Timely, no? Just a month after Sharp aided in producing the planet’s first waterproof solar cellphone, the aforementioned outfit has just announced the industry’s thinnest solar module for handsets. Checking in at just 0.8 millimeters thick, the LR0GC02 shouldn’t take up too much space on your daughter’s great-granddaughter’s smartphone, and while Sharp isn’t handing over too many details just yet, we figure it’ll pretty much do what it says. You know — charge the handset it’s integrated into whenever sunlight is available. As for when we’ll see these in cellphones everywhere? Take a wild guess, tree-hugger.

[Via Akihabara News]

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Sharp slings out industry’s thinnest solar modules for cellphones originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 May 2009 10:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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KDDI au unveils summer ’09 lineup: e-books, solar power, and 720p recording

Japanese carrier KDDI au has now followed Softbank and NTT DoCoMo in pulling the red velvet cover off its summer 2009 devices, and as always, there are some neat tricks in here. From Toshiba, the Biblio is billed as an e-book reader; granted, it’s using an LCD instead of an E-Ink display, but it’s a doozy at 3.5 inches at 960 x 480. It features 7GB of user-accessible storage on board for books, and also has a slide-out dynamic keyboard that can display a numeric pad in the portrait orientation or full QWERTY in landscape. Moving on, the Sharp Sportio Water Beat — as its name suggests — is a waterproof sports-oriented set with advanced calorie and distance tracking (a la Nike+), but you’re still never too far from your true destiny as a couch potato thanks to the phone’s one-seg reception. Next, the Hitachi Mobile Hi-Vision Cam Wooo is the latest in the multimedia-centric Wooo series, becoming KDDI’s first phone capable of 720p video recording at 30fps — and there’s HDMI-out on board for when the time comes to enjoy your footage. Finally, the SH002 is the realization of Sharp’s solar phone concept from earlier this year, delivering one minute of talk time for every 10 minutes of charge time. There are other announcements in the mix here — eight new phones in total — but those were the killers of the bunch, and as always, this post is about as close as most North Americans will ever get to them.

[Via Engadget Japanese]

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KDDI au unveils summer ’09 lineup: e-books, solar power, and 720p recording originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 May 2009 23:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sharp’s 20-inch AQUOS DX LCD HDTV has a built-in Blu-ray player, no 1080p panel

Cute Sharp, real cute. Brag about releasing the world’s first 20-inch LCD HDTV with a built-in Blu-ray player, but don’t even mention to consumers that they won’t have the luxury of seeing their flicks in full resolution. For reasons unknown, the latest set in the AQUOS DX range does indeed pack a remarkably convenient integrated BD player, but the 1,366 x 768 resolution makes the whole thing sort of pointless. As Liz Lemon would say: “That’s a deal-breaker, ladies.” At any rate, folks who snap one up in Japan will also find a digital TV tuner, DVD support, a 1,500:1 contrast ratio and 450 nits of brightness. It’ll be available in black (LC-20DX1-B) and white (LC-20DX1-W) for ¥150,000 ($1,593) at the tail end of next month in the Land of the Rising Sun.

[Via Engadget German]

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Sharp’s 20-inch AQUOS DX LCD HDTV has a built-in Blu-ray player, no 1080p panel originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 May 2009 07:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sharp’s MIDtastic RD-PM10 electronic dictionary

Sure, it’s no Zaurus, but Sharp’s new RD-PM10 certainly is a looker. It packs a 4.3-inch WQVGA screen, QWERTY keyboard and 8GB of storage into a pretty delightful form factor, and while it’s only designed for light e-dictionary and media playback duties, with Windows CE 5.0 as the backbone, we could imagine it doing a whole lot more with a bit of extra oomph under the hood. There’s a microSD slot for expansion, pretty great codec support, and a 360,000 KRW (about $288 US) list price.

[Via SlashGear]

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Sharp’s MIDtastic RD-PM10 electronic dictionary originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 May 2009 10:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sharp Aquos Shot 933SH and Miruno 934SH handsets get handled

Sharp Aquos Shot 933SH and Miruno 934SH handsets get handled

It’s debatable whether anyone really needs a 10 megapixel cameraphone with a maximum ISO setting of 12800, but plenty of people (ourselves included) really want one, so we’re coveting these new pics of Sharp’s Aquos 933SH, which also sports a 3.3-inch VGA LCD, 16GB of internal storage, and a “cheese focus” setting that guarantees that your friends’ faces and not their fondues will be in focus at your next party. Also handled by Akihabara News is the Miruno 934SH, another high-end model with a more feminine marketing angle that somehow gets by with just eight megapixels on tap, but adds in all sorts of fun (and vaguely demeaning) applications, like a palm reader and a kitchen timer, and is even waterproof so that bath time doesn’t have to interrupt gab time. Unsurprisingly there’s still no mention of an American release, so don’t give up that bathroom speakerphone just yet.

Read – Aquos Shot 933SH Hands-on
Read – Miruno 934SH Hands-on

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Sharp Aquos Shot 933SH and Miruno 934SH handsets get handled originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 May 2009 09:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NTT DoCoMo counters SoftBank with 18 new handsets of its own

8 megapixel cameras and 3-plus-inch wide VGA displays are the order of the day in NTT DoCoMo’s 18-strong summer 2009 range of phones from Panasonic, LG, Fujitsu, NEC, Sharp, HTC, and Toshiba, but a few are definitely standing out for us. First would be the unforgettable N-09A from NEC, integrating patent leather right into the phone’s case; it’s not often that you need to condition your handset with saddle soap, so that one definitely caught our eye. Next up, we have a couple smartphones (not to say that anything in this lineup can be labeled “dumb” by any stretch) from HTC and Toshiba — the expected HT-03A and T-01A, respectively, which are localized rebrands of the Magic and TG01. Only a Japanese carrier lineup oozes enough machismo to make a TG01 look like a 16-ounce can of weak juice, so our hats go off to you, NTT DoCoMo — thanks for ruining one of 2009’s most promising devices for us. Hey, at least they’re offering the Magic in both white and black.

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NTT DoCoMo counters SoftBank with 18 new handsets of its own originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 May 2009 05:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sharp AQUOS SHOT 933SH offers 10 megapixels on a silver cellular platter

Is it a phone? Is it a camera? Does it really matter anymore? If neither the mirumo 934SH nor the Solar Hybrid 936SH are quite to your liking, feast your eyes on this other wonder from Sharp that’s hitting SoftBank Mobile in Japan this summer, the AQUOS SHOT 933SH. The headlining feature on this sucker would be the massive optics combined with a 10 megapixel low-noise CCD sensor, which is made infinitely easier to use as an actual camera thanks to a rotating touchscreen display — just flip it around, snap it facing outwards, and voilà, your old point-and-shoot is on notice. Otherwise, you’ve got a 3.3-inch WVGA display (perfect for viewing one-seg television) and global roaming capability, so don’t be surprised if we try to smuggle one of these stateside when it launches in late May, alright?

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Sharp AQUOS SHOT 933SH offers 10 megapixels on a silver cellular platter originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 May 2009 04:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sharp’s solar 936SH and 934SH with “memory LCD” headline latest SoftBank lineup

As you might expect, Japanese carrier SoftBank’s summer 2009 lineup contains the usual science-fiction array of ridiculously well-equipped handsets — plus 3G photo frames and a Lenovo IdeaPad S10 with embedded WWAN — but the real news here might be a pair of lovelies from Sharp. The mirumo 934SH (pictured left) features a 3-inch external display that can display time, date, weather, news, and other information without consuming any power between changes; sounds like E-Ink, though Sharp describes it simply as a “memory LCD.” You’ve also got an 8 megapixel camera, a waterproof shell, and a UV sensor that can help you determine just how quickly you need to slather on the SPF 30. Next up is the Solar Hybrid 936SH, a phone suspiciously similar in concept to the device Sharp is working on for SoftBank competitor KDDI au. Clearly the big draw here is the big solar array up front that’ll give you one minute of call time or two hours of standby per 10 minutes of charging, but you’ve still got IPX7 water resistance, an 8 megapixel camera, and a full wide VGA display at your disposal. Look for the 934SH in June and the 936SH in August — if you happen to be in Japan, anyhow.

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Sharp’s solar 936SH and 934SH with “memory LCD” headline latest SoftBank lineup originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 May 2009 02:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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