Tag: tech Digest
Homestar planetarium cell phone strap
To heck with seeing eternity in a grain of sand — with the Strap-Ya HomeStar planetarium cell phone strap you can hold the entire cosmos in the palm of your hand. Just add battery, flick the switch, and peep at the teeny-tiny stars. Based on the Sega HomeStar from last year, while this isn’t made by Sega, it was designed by the same guy, so the galaxies should be compatible. $7. [GT]
Strap-Ya HomeStar planetarium cell phone strap [via TOKYOMANGO]
Related posts
Homestar Planetarium – see the universe on your wall
New supernova from star 150 times the size of the sun
Astronaut Glove Competition rewards low-cost cleverness
20 exclusive beta invitations to RealPlayer to give away right now!
Hopefully most of you would be familiar with RealPlayer, the cross-platform media player which plays numerous multimedia formats such as MP3, MPEG4, QuickTime and Windows Media. Infact, some of you may even remember when it was launched in 1995 as RealAudio Player, one of the very first media players capable of streaming media over the internet.
With thanks to RealNetworks, we have 20 exclusive invitations for Tech Digest readers to join the private beta testing of the new RealPlayer, which lets you bookmark and download video clips you find on the web, which can be later viewed offline and even ripped to CD or DVD. Imagine being able to download all of The Smith’s music videos and rip them to a DVD! In the future, further updates to the player will also support devices, so you can download directly to your iPod or PMPs. I’m sold…
If only I had this 'Worst. Keynote. Ever!' t-shirt yesterday at the NMK Forum
If you were actually working yesterday instead of skiving off and reading Tech Digest like you normally do, you would’ve missed my live-blog from yesterday’s New Media Knowledge Forum conference.
Mamiya's 645AFD II digicam: 22 megapixels
While you can get, say, a thousand, crappy digital cameras for $10,000, you can also get a single Mamiya’s 645AFD II medium format camera, designed to function seamlessly in either the film or digital universes. It has a 80mm f/2.8 AF lens, equivalent to a 50mm conventional lens, can shoot 1.5 frames per second, and has a 14-bit sensor which generates 12-bit images. Dedicated “Quick Action” buttons let you pre-set functions you use all the time, and it’s pre-loaded with 36 custom functions. If you’re already set up with half a Mamiya and only need a digital back, you can pick up the Mamiya ZD digital back for only $7,000. [GT]
Mamiya’s 645AFD II | Mamiya ZD digital back [via CNet]
Related posts
Panasonic to launch DMC-FX100 12.2 Megapixel wide-angle compact digital
Casio boosts the megapixel count to 12 on the Exilim Zoom EX-Z120
Sony’s 12.1 megapixel Cyber-Shot W200
Mark Miller building better robots
“Why is there a serious lack of humanoid research… in the US?” Mark Miller asks. Not content simply to complain, Miller’s doing something about it. His workshop is full of androids in varying stages of function, but his active baby is “Amy”, a four-foot tall bot that he develops on a mostly daily basis. He logs his development experiences whether positive or negative, and is self-taught. “I am not attempting to replace people in the workforce, or take away jobs,” Miller says, “but to add quality to their lives by allowing some of the everyday tasks to be done by a machine. We have very short life spans, and should have as much time as possible doing what we want to do.” [GT]
The android man (via Gadget Lab)
Related posts
Tech Digest’s Robot World Cup: Round 1
Kansei: robot with facial expressions
Tamanoi robot talks vinegar, yo
Emotional Social Intelligence Prosthetic camera tells you if you're boring
We’ve all wandered off on tangents about our incredibly hilarious cat or intolerably handsome mate or unbelievably brilliant infant and usually manage to find our way back, but those with autism or Asperger’s Syndrome can easily stay socially lost. MIT grad student Rana El Kaliouby has developed a solution, an Emotional Social Intelligence Prosthetic which monitors the body language of those around you and relays you helpful hints like “stop talking about your collection of fat Elvis stamps”. The device correctly identified emotions 90% of the time when exposed to actors, and 64% of the time with everyday people, which is still probably more accurate than even healthy human beings. Damn, we’re self-absorbed. At least, I am. [GT]
Emotional Social Intelligence Prosthetic [via Popgadget]
Related posts
Electrosensitivity to electromagnetic radiation?
Biotex programme “intelligent textiles”
‘Caveman’ provides 4d rendering of the human body
Xuuk eyebox2 knows where you're looking
Red-eye reduction works by detecting the retina and canceling out its effects. The eyebox2 takes that one step shorter — all it wants to know is whether you’re looking at it. While currently a dream-come-true gadget for marketers wondering if a given poster or billboard is even getting any attention, expect similar technology to turn up in everything from subpoenas to invitations to your nauseous cousin’s New Year’s Eve party — because unlike previous eye-tracking tech, this is cheap. Normally the rig goes for around £12,000, but this starts at about £500 — nearly affordable enough to start embedding in those stop signs your lawyer said you didn’t see. [GT]
eyebox2 (via Gizmowatch)
Related posts
GPS pay-as-you-go for cheaper car insurance or big brother passenger?
Creative’s Big Brother webcam
Snooper Strabo – sat nav and enhanced speed camera warning system
Chinese S116 solar-powered mobile charges by… candlelight?
Sporting a microSD memory card slot, MP3 player and a 1.3 megapixel camera, the S116 mobile phone from Hi-Tech Wealth, Inc. has a solar panel on the back which supposedly provides 40 minutes of talk time per one hour of light exposure. Apparently it’s even sensitive enough to derive significant charge from light as weak as that provided by a church taper, and the battery lasts 2.5 times as long as the battery in a typical mobile. (I believe the latter, but the former sounds pretty unlikely.) Hi-Tech Wealth, Inc, plans to release six more phones on similar lines over the next year. [GT]
World’s 1st solar-powered mobile developed in China [via Inhabitat]
Related posts
Meraki solar powered outdoor Wi-Fi access kit
3 megawatt solar roof will be largest in Europe
Solar-powered mobile phones will keep you talking
Snap on some ultra-pixelated Stolen Jewels by Mike and Maaike
The “Stolen Jewels” collection from Mike and Maaike is literally a high-tech remix of stolen jewelry into an almost unrecognizably low-res form. First taking poor quality images of the jewelry from the web, the photos are pixelated and then printed on scored leather, so that it’s actually possible to pop out each individual “jewel”. Pieces are based on greats like the Hope Diamond Broach, the Golden Jubilee Diamond Broach, and the Great Chrysanthemum Necklace. [GT]
“Stolen Jewels” by Mike and Maaike [via Moco Loco]
Related posts
Vertu Signature Cobra and Python – jewel-encrusted mobiles for millionaires
Mousepad Couch made literally from mousepads
Global Link’s Ring Mouse – wear your peripherals with pride
boynq Blox speakers let you slide the bass
Not only are the boynq Blox speakers sculptural and cool looking, the placement of the speakers actually has a practical function: you adjust the bass and treble by moving the speaker along the slide track. They’re powered by dual 5-watt amplifiers and have the usual 3.5mm minijack out. Also, instead of having some big ugly wall wart, they’re USB powered. £17.99. [GT]
boynq Blox speakers (via Stylehive)
Related posts
Nimzy Vibro Max portable speaker hits the UK
SoundArt – speakers become works of art
XtremeMac Luna iPod alarm clock and speaker system