Archive for the ‘Gadget News’ Category

Gadget News New TV trends: Internet movies, 3-D, power saving

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LAS VEGAS (AP) - TV makers are adding sexy new features like streaming Internet movies and 3-D capabilities this year, betting that they can keep consumers away from basic, no-frills sets, even in a weak economy.The manufacturers are fighting an unhappy trend. DisplaySearch, a research firm, forecasts that global sales of LCD TVs, the most popular kind, will fall 16 percent in 2009 to $64 billion. That would be the first sales decline since the technology debuted in TVs in 2000.

To entice consumers to come back, manufacturers are touting relatively inexpensive advances. One is that many top-line and even some value-priced TVs will connect to the Internet.

Such TVs started appearing a year ago with limited functions, like being able to display news stories and weather reports. Now, back-end systems and partnerships to provide streaming movies are coming together.

For instance, LG Electronics Inc. and Vizio Corp. announced this week at the International Consumer Electronics Show that some of their TVs will be able to show video from Netflix Inc.’s streaming service. LG said the service would add $200 to $300 to the price of a TV. Panasonic Corp. and Sony Corp. TVs will show videos from Amazon.com Inc.’s Unbox service.

Yahoo Inc. is emerging as the leading provider of other Internet data services to TVs, through something it calls the Widget Engine. Sony, LG, Toshiba Corp. and Samsung Electronics Co. all plan to introduce TVs that can grab Flickr photos, YouTube videos and news stories through a broadband connection.

Two other new features cut across the top-tier TV models: improved handling of fast-moving scenes and a reduction of power use.

Last year, manufacturers touted sets that display 120 frames per second, for sharper and smoother action and panning scenes. TV signals and discs have only 24 to 30 frames per second, so the sets compute more frames to stick between the existing ones.

This year, most manufacturers are raising the bar to 240 frames per second, but not by computing more new frames. Instead, the backlight will switch on and off very quickly, fooling the eye into perceiving even smoother movement.

Manufacturers have also jumped on the opportunity to get their sets certified under the new, much tougher Energy Star requirements set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. In November, the agency introduced limits for the power use of switched-on TVs. The old Energy Star rules only specified the power that TVs could use in standby mode, with the screen off.

The goal for the Energy Star program is to recognize the most energy-efficient 25 percent of a product category. But most new TVs announced at the show will meet the requirements, so the EPA will likely have to raise the bar.

Sony introduced what it called its “first green line” of LCD TVs. The “Eco Bravia” models will use 40 percent less power than last year’s models, exceeding the latest Energy Star requirements. Samsung and Panasonic announced TVs with similar cuts in power consumption, without branding them as “green.”

Samsung, the world’s largest maker of TVs, is making a big push in LCD TVs that are backlit by light-emitting diodes, or LEDs, rather than the standard fluorescent tubes. This is less radical than dispensing with LCDs altogether to use a different technology known as organic LEDs, yet it promises power savings and eye-popping colors and contrast. LED sets have been on the market in very small quantities, held back by their higher cost.

“We are going to create the market” for LED TVs, said Jong Woo Park, president of the Korean company’s digital media division. He didn’t say what the new sets would cost.

These energy-saving touches give the new TVs a more subdued tenor than the industry offered last year at CES. Then, there was an emphasis on bigger screens and expensive emerging technologies like organic LEDs, which promise ultra-thin, ultra-bright TVs in the future.

“You can’t be too thin. But will people pay extra for it in this economy?” asked Scott Ramirez, vice president of marketing for TVs at Toshiba America Consumer Products. “I have yet to find a person who will say that their flat panel is too fat.”

Ramirez also said that while the industry likes to brag about screens with diagonal measurements as large as 150 inches, very few people buy sets costing more than $2,500. That means that practically all sets sold are 55 inches or less. The only major manufacturer that pushed the size envelope at CES this year was Sharp, which introduced an 82-inch screen to fill a gap between its models at 65 inches and 108 inches.

Perhaps the strangest development in TVs is this year’s focus on sets capable of showing three dimensions. This idea has been touted since the 1950s. But interest has faded every time, and 3-D viewing has never quite moved beyond the gimmick stage, though the latest generation of digital cinema projectors has enabled widespread 3-D releases of some films.

This time there’s a concerted effort from TV makers to make 3-D viewing in the home happen.

“I believe 3-D is the next big wave coming to the consumer electronics industry,” said Woo Paik, chief technology officer at LG.

Panasonic Corp. is pushing the hardest, and wants the industry to unite on ways to get 3-D content to TVs. Many TV sets are already capable of showing 3-D images that can be viewed with special glasses. But there are no discs or disc players for 3-D content, nor are there 3-D broadcasts.

Panasonic wants to solve that problem by working with the Blu-ray Disc Association and other bodies to set standards for 3-D delivery systems, resulting in commercial products by next year, according to Yoshi Yamada, chairman and chief executive of Panasonic North America.


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Gadget News SkyFire- the new way to browse from your mobile.

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Skyfire browser for Windows Mobile is game changing, does Flash


The Skyfire browser is set to finally bring PC-like browsing to your Windows Mobile device with crazy speeds and support for all manner of embedded content. Sure, there are ways to get Youtube and other mobile video content through proxy sites that convert on the go or with other 3rd-party applications, but this puppy does it all in one sweet and free package. Facebook and Myspace pages load up in no time, video plays in the browser, and all of this is accomplished with some server side magic on the part of the Skyfire server but is completely transparent to the user. All flavors of Windows Mobile — 5 and 6 for both touchscreen and not — are supported with the roadmap hinting at Symbian support in the near future. Sounds too good to be true? It is, and you don’t have to just take our word for it, follow the read link to get signed up for the beta, this is something that just cannot be missed.

Check the video of it in action

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Gadget News Whats states have the fastest internet speeds?

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Who’s the fastest ISP?
If you live in Nevada, Virginia or Pennsylvania you reside in states with the fastest surf speeds in the country, according to a new study from PCMag.com.

The bottom ranking states were Wyoming (379 Kbps), Hawaii (378 Kbps) and New Mexico (322Kbps), twice as slow as top ranked Nevada.

To find the nation’s best ISPs, PCMag used its custom-designed SurfSpeed application, which pulls pages from several popular Web sites to measure actual Internet surfing speed. The study looked at over 17,000 unique IP addresses.

Verizon’s FiOS fiber-optic connections are the fastest overall service, and Cablevision’s Optimum Online is the fastest cable ISP in the United States.

Cable connections are 47 percent faster than DSLs. Cablevision’s Optimum Online tops the list, with an average nationwide SurfSpeed of 839 Kbps. Sixty-one percent of users said they were satisfied with the service.

Even the slowest cable service provider (Earthlink, averaging 565 Kbps) was faster than some DSL providers, from CenturyTel at 520 Kbps down to Alltell’s puny 357. FrontierNet is the fastest DSL provider in the nation, averaging surf speeds of 724 Kbps. Only 27 percent of DSL users said they were satisfied with the service.

What States Have The Fastest Internet Speeds?


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Gadget News Vusix iWear Glasses

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The Vuzix iWear Video Glasses with iPod & iPhone compatibility, this is a sunning product.

Now these Vuzix iWear AV230 Video Glasses will work great with your iPhone and iPods, these are awesome and will give you that cinema experience, it is the big display on your head, and we really mean that. This gadget will enhance you viewing because it has been specifically designed for portable media players like the iPhone for example.

The Vuzix iWear AV230 can connect to most NTSC or PAL audio/video device with video out capabilities, they are comfortable to wear and you would wear them like normal glasses, they have removable high quality stereo headphones and include separate focus adjustments. They can be worn even if you wear prescription glasses, buy yours now for only $99.99 on Woot.


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Gadget News Your iPhone may be helping big brother track YOU!

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During WWDC 2008 there was a great presentation given about a new social application, Loopt, that utilize GPS technology to show you friends/contacts around you.

Using location-based technologies, Loopt lets you know where your friends are by automatically updating maps on your mobile handset. Loopt even lets you send messages to nearby friends or receive automatic alerts when they’re nearby so that you never miss an opportunity to meet.

Loopt give you control as to when people can track you… but what if someone was using a similar application to track your every move? Would you be able to notice it? Not if it is integrated well enough in some friendly looking application.

I don’t know what Apple is looking at when they accept application for the future app store but they better make sure no one is hiding some sort of tracking code that can tell your very move.

Apple’s current iPhone SDK agreement does not appear to cover this. It only specify that: “Applications may not be designed or marketed for real time route guidance; automatic or autonomous control of vehicles, aircraft, or other mechanical devices; dispatch or fleet management; or emergency or life-saving purposes.” Nothing about tracking users.

The iPhone is not what one would call your typical GPS Tracking hardware. I mean, it is just a phone. But given the right software it could be turned into something similar.

I certainly do not want to be tracked… and if I am then I want to control when it happen. I might want to be tracked in certain circumstances by some of my family members… like an outing at a park. But I want it off when I want it off. I have to be able to go out with the boys without being tracked if you know what I mean.

Sure it might be interesting to track others… like your kids, to know where they are and to make sure they really go to their friends house… but is it necessary? Is it because the technology allow it that you should use it without their consent? I don’t think so.

OK, if the kids are young enough it is not that bad. It is not really spying on them but rather guarding them. But when they turn 12 and they are more reasonable… should they be asked if they would mind being tracked? Guess what their response will be…

Any way, I don’t know where this GPS Tracking will lead us but for one I will make sure my phone won’t be leaving bread crumbs behind me when I don’t want to.


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