More details emerge of supposed PSP2 with backside touch controls, HD screen, hot personality

More details emerge of supposed PSP2 with backside touch controls, HD screen, hot personality

About a month before this year’s Tokyo Game Show we started hearing new reports of the PSP2, a device that’s been rumored since roughly the dawn of time (which could explain the prehistoric creatures on the concept render above). These rumors, however, were different, specifically the mention of a touchpad on the back of the device. Alas that device didn’t make an appearance to the press at TGS, but supposedly Sony was showing it off to some developers. Kotaku has learned a few more things, most notable being a display an inch larger than the current PSP’s and having a high-def resolution — a detail that should surprise none. According to the report Sony is still tweaking the internal hardware, trying to mitigate overheating issues ahead of a release sometime in the fall of 2011. That would likely mean an unveiling at the 2011 E3, the same place the original unit was first shown in the flesh eight whole years earlier.

More details emerge of supposed PSP2 with backside touch controls, HD screen, hot personality originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Oct 2010 07:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Viewsonic VX2258wm 22-inch multitouch display hits stores in Europe

It looks like the folks at Viewsonic never got the memo that people don’t want touchscreen displays on devices that don’t lay flat. (Maybe Steve forgot to CC ’em?) That, or maybe they just have a rebellious streak — which we can certainly respect. Either way, the company has just announced the VX2258wm, a 22-inch monitor that uses Infrared Optical Imaging to bring Windows-certified multitouch to the table (er, desk). And that, alongside 1080p HD resolution, ClearMotiv II Technology, a 5ms response time, a dynamic contrast ratio of 100,000:1, and support for HBDP (High Bandwidth Digital Protection) Blu-ray devices, sounds pretty good to us! Available now in Europe for £189 (roughly $300). PR after the break.

Continue reading Viewsonic VX2258wm 22-inch multitouch display hits stores in Europe

Viewsonic VX2258wm 22-inch multitouch display hits stores in Europe originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 Oct 2010 06:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Report: Nook Color Will Be Android-Based Reader/Tablet

Rumors are swirling that Barnes & Noble’s next device after the first-generation Nook will be an Android-based, full-color, touchscreen e-reader. The company will reportedly announce the e-reader/tablet hybrid, called the Nook Color, at its October 26 media event in New York.

“It’s a big step ahead, instead of chasing Amazon,” a source told CNET editor David Carnoy. Carnoy identifies the source as an anonymous tipster “who has proven reliable in the past.”

Reportedly, the Nook Color will have be Android-based like the current Nook, have a 7-inch screen and retail for $249. It won’t have quite as much functionality as the iPad or a full Android tablet, but it will also cost much less.

Currently, the Nook has a custom Android-based OS, a 6″ black-and-white E Ink screen, a 3.5″ color touchscreen LCD for navigation, and costs $149 ($199 for a model with 3G). Barnes & Noble will reportedly continue to sell the current Nook along with the Nook Color.

Barnes & Noble has definitely long been interested in combining e-books with color. Earlier this year, Pandigital offered a 7″ color reader with access to Barnes & Noble’s e-bookstore. The Pandigital Novel was available at many retail outlets, but was panned for poor hardware and interface design and went back to E Ink in its second iteration.

It’s possible that a color-capable Nook could use a Mirasol screen. Developed by Qualcomm, the Mirasol is low-power, is readable in direct sunlight, switches back and forth between color and black-and-white, and can play video. In August, we reported that Qualcomm was shipping 5.7″ screens at the end of 2010 for devices — including one from “a major client” — slated to appear in early 2011.

That doesn’t match the specs suggested by CNET’s source, which instead point to a 7″ LCD touchscreen. It would also mean that the new Nook wouldn’t appear until sometime next year at the earliest.

Barnes & Noble could also stick with the Nook’s two-screen approach, using a 5.7″ Mirasol screen for display and a 3.5″ LCD touchscreen for navigation. It may not run a full range of applications like a hybrid, but would be a solid media player, offering color books, photos, the web and some video on a single screen. Barnes & Noble could announce the device now, do preorders later this year, and begin shipping it in late winter or spring 2011.

That’s not quite as good as being able to sell it right away, but might slow the Kindle 3’s momentum. And with a firmware upgrade for existing Nooks on the way, they can continue to sell the discounted older device and plenty of e-books until the Nook Color arrives.

Image: Mirasol prototype e-reader.

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The Altaz 3.5-inch Internet Clock Radio tells you the weather, ‘provides endless entertainment’

The Altaz 3.5-inch Internet Clock Radio tells you the weather, 'provides endless entertainment'

“Endless entertainment from a clock radio?” you say, cynically sipping on your tea. “Yes, that’s what I said!” desperately cries the Altaz press release embedded below, pledging that its new 3.5-inch touchscreen’d Internet Clock Radio will keep you smiling until the end of time. The device will naturally tell you when exactly that is and wake you up before you get there, also showing the weather, streaming internet radio, and sucking down photos from Picasa. You know, pretty much all the stuff a Chumby One can do. But, can it walk? Unlikely, though the built-in battery, SD card reader, and 802.11g wireless do conspire to make it reasonably independent. All yours for a $99 MSRP, though a little Googling will save you 15 bucks or so.

Continue reading The Altaz 3.5-inch Internet Clock Radio tells you the weather, ‘provides endless entertainment’

The Altaz 3.5-inch Internet Clock Radio tells you the weather, ‘provides endless entertainment’ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Oct 2010 11:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Shocker! Cellphone touchscreens are dirty

If you have even the slightest inclination towards Mysophobia then please, do yourself a favor and stop reading now. A Stanford University study found that if you put a virus on a touchscreen surface then about 30 percent of it will make the jump to the fingertips of anyone who touches it. From there it goes into the eyes, mouth, or nose — whichever face-hole is in most urgent need of a rub. And just to drive the point home, the Sacramento Bee adds this little nugget from an unspecified British study: “Mobile phones harbor 18 times more bacteria than a flush handle in a typical men’s restroom.” Eww. You know, sometimes it’s best not to know how the sausage is made.

Shocker! Cellphone touchscreens are dirty originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Oct 2010 05:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Giant touchscreen vending machine at CEATEC stares us down, offers us a frosty beverage

So we tracked down one of those crazy new touchscreen- and camera-enabled vending machines being deployed across Japan’s mass transit stations at CEATEC today; one of their claims to fame is that they’re WiMAX-enabled in order to receive ads and other high-bandwidth content, so local WiMAX provider UQ installed one of the units in its booth as a showcase of the kinds of wild and crazy things you can do with ludicrous speed. As much as we hate to admit it, we’re pretty sure we’d be consuming more overpriced juice, soda, tea, coffee, and water if we had one of these near our homes — seriously, how can you resist those cute rectangular eyes staring at you, slowly stealing your soul while asking you to “come by?”

Of course, the scary part about that is that the machine really can see you — it’s got a camera right above the display that detects your presence, makes some snap judgments about you based on largely accurate stereotypes, and recommends certain beverages (though you’re still free to choose whatever you like). The machine supports Suica payments — a popular NFC system in these parts — using either a Suica card or your appropriately-enabled phone, which makes blowing hundreds of yen on cans of Georgia Vintage coffee frighteningly simple. Follow the break for some video of the machine in action… or if you’re planning a trip to Japan in the next couple years, expect to see these around town in some of the high-traffic train stations.

Continue reading Giant touchscreen vending machine at CEATEC stares us down, offers us a frosty beverage

Giant touchscreen vending machine at CEATEC stares us down, offers us a frosty beverage originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 07 Oct 2010 20:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Displax Overlay Multitouch turns your LCD or plasma into a touchscreen, demands a pretty penny

Remember when Displax teased us earlier in the year with a polymer film that could take any conventional LCD, plasma or RPTV and turn it into a touchscreen? Yeah, well now that very technology is shipping to Average Joes and Janes like yourself your good pal Jim. Starting nowish, the outfit’s customizable Overlay Multitouch will be heading out to screens ranging from 32- to 103-inches in size in order to add multitouch capabilities to a screen that previously hated even the thought of being groped. Of course, with a starting tag of €1,300 ($1,805), we get the impression that most of the orders (at least initially) will be coming from corporations looking to jazz up their boardrooms. In related news, the company is also debuting a 42-inch Windows 7-based multitouch table that can detect up to four independent touches at once. The Oqtopus uses a specific kind of optical technology that allows bare fingers, styluses and even gloved hands to operate it, but with a starting price of €4,500 ($6,250), we’re guessing your own personal Santa is already signaling “no.”

Displax Overlay Multitouch turns your LCD or plasma into a touchscreen, demands a pretty penny originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 07 Oct 2010 09:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Savant stuffs iPod touch into multifunctional Touch Remote, includes VoIP and FaceTime promises

That’s no render we’re looking at, Savant assures us, it’s the most recent photograph of the company’s Touch Remote prototype. This crazy do-it-all peripheral comes with an embedded fourth-gen iPod touch — no word on whether you’ll be able to remove it, though it looks unlikely — and mirrors the abilities of Savant’s iPad home control and automation app. That means that once you get your lights, climate control, network cameras, and home cinema hooked up to Savant’s control hub, you’ll have yourself a neatly streamlined remote to save you doing anything yourself again. Or so goes the theory, anyhow. Savant augments the offering with promises of VoIP and FaceTime integration by the time the Touch Remote ships to retailers in the first quarter of next year. MSRP is set at $399, which may or may not be feasible given that the iPod touch by itself costs at least $229. We shall see. For now, you can see the prototype device on video after the break.

Continue reading Savant stuffs iPod touch into multifunctional Touch Remote, includes VoIP and FaceTime promises

Savant stuffs iPod touch into multifunctional Touch Remote, includes VoIP and FaceTime promises originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 07 Oct 2010 04:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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oStylus capacitive pen review

Like it or not, the capacitive touchscreen just isn’t cut out for use with a stylus. We’ve seen foam-tipped pens and meat-injected tubes have a go at it, but we’ve yet to really find an option that we were truly satisfied with. It’s not hard to imagine why having a legitimate capacitive stylus would be beneficial for creative types; doodling on a tablet, a Magic Trackpad or a mobile device (just to name a few) would be killer if we had a reliable tool to doodle with. Enter the oStylus, a limited run (for now) product that aims to shift the paradigm and make drawing on capacitive touchpanels just as easy as drawing on resistive ones. Creator Andrew Goss was kind enough to send us what appears to be the sixth finalized unit from the production line, and we were able to test it on the iPad, Apple’s Magic Trackpad and an iPhone. Read on if you’re interested in our two pennies.

Continue reading oStylus capacitive pen review

oStylus capacitive pen review originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 01 Oct 2010 19:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Touchscreen iMac Rumors Still Kicking

iMac_Touchscreen_Mode_Patent.jpg

A touchscreen iMac? Sure, why not. The rumors have been bubbling around for some time now, and let’s face it, they do seem to make some sense. Ever since the release of the first iPhone, Steve Jobs has clearly stood on one side in the great battle between buttons and touchscreens.

So why not bring such functionality to the company’s perennially successful all-in-one desktop? After all, the product exists in a space not likely to cannibalize potential iPad or iPhone sales, even with the addition of such functionality. Those devices are all about portability, and while the iMac has a decidedly smaller footprint than the majority of desktop combos, it’s not really designed to leave your office space.

Various patents filed by the company seem to confirm the rumors, including the spiffy one above that appears to turn the iMac into a giant iPad.

DigiTimes, that Taiwan-based source of seemingly endless Apple rumors, is fueling the fire once again. According to the paper, “Sintek Photronics has reportedly sent samples of projected capacitive touch panels to Apple to be incorporated in the latest iMac.”

Sintek Photronics apparently has that rare ability to create viewable touchpanels for devices with screens over 20 inches. The iMac starts at 21.5 inches.

So, if the rumor is true (which, naturally, is a big “if”), what sort of timeframe are we looking at for a touchscreen iMac? Well, Apple Insider points out that, since the device is are still in the testing phase, it most likely won’t see a release this year.

Makes sense to us, especially since the iMac just got an upgrade in July. Apple bumped the device up to Core i5 and Core i7 processors. An early 2011 release isn’t out of the question, however, particularly given the fact that the iMac doesn’t strict to the annual release schedule of an iPhone or iPod.