Friday, April 27, 2007
New Robot Looks Strikingly Human
The ultra-lifelike robot Repliee Q1 made quite an impression at the 2005 World Expo in Japan. Shown below (at left!) with co-creator Hiroshi Ishiguru, the robot is so lifelike that roboticists may want to start working on a Bladerunner-style Voight-Kampff test now.
(From Ultra-Lifelike Robot Debuts in Japan)
Repliee Q1 has silicone for skin, rather than hard plastic. It has a number of sensors to allow it to react in a manner that appears natural; it appears to flutter its eyelids, chest movements correspond to breathing, and other tiny shifts in position that mimic unconscious human movement. The android can mimic actions made by a human; this helps the robot's movements appear more lifelike. By facing a person with reflective dots placed at key points (like wrist, elbow, palm), the robot can try to match those points on its own body with those of the person who is "modeling" human movement.
The greatest limit to the lifelike movement of the robot is that it has only 31 actuators in its upper body; a nearby air compressor provides the energy needed for articulation.
In his excellent novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, Philip K. Dick explores what happens in a society when android replica humans cannot be physically distinguished from human beings. Only the Voight-Kampff empathy test can make the distinction, when used by a trained officer like Rick Deckard:
"I'm not a peace officer," Rick said. "I'm a bounty hunter." From his opened briefcase he fished out the Voight-Kampff apparatus, seated himself at a nearby rosewood coffee table, and began to assemble the rather simple polygraphic instruments...
(Read more about the Voight-Kampff test)
San Francisco's Wave magazine recently wondered whether or not candidates for their mayoral elections were humans or androids; they applied an empathy test to make sure. See Is Your Candidate Human?. Read more about Repliee Q1 in Ultra-Lifelike Robot; more materials available at Android Science. Thanks to Andy Gowland for contributing the tip on this story.
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Panasonic tweaks SD camcorders to ‘Full HD’ at 1920 x 1080i
Barely five months after announcing the world’s first video camera to record HD TV images to an SD memory card, Panasonic has replaced it with a cheaper, more-capable model that it claims breaks new ground.
Last November’s HDC-SD1 has been ruthlessly elbowed aside by today’s release of the HDC-SD3, which offers video recording at 1920 x 1080i pixels, compared with the earlier model’s 1440 x 1080i resolution.
If you’re thinking the difference is minimal, you’re probably right not to be bothered unless you’ve just bought the SD1. The newcomer not only lays down a few thousand more pixels per frame, but it’s also likely to be ¥30,000 cheaper at ¥150,000. That includes a bundled 4GB SDHC card.
Both cameras use the relatively new AVCHD compression technique to fit high-definition video onto current-generation media, such as the SD cards used in this case. A similarly revamped DVD camcorder has also been announced in the shape of the HDC-DX3.
Although Panasonic claims the SD3 and DX3 are the world’s first ‘Full HD’ camcorders, which the 1920 x 1080 specs justify if one overlooks the interlaced/progressive debate, the website for the SD1 and DX1 still prominently touts them as ‘Full HD.’
On the cameras themselves, only the latest versions have a corresponding badge, as you’ll see in the second photo above. There are no details of the new cameras on the Panasonic website yet.
Aside from the ballyhoo over line counts, upgrades to the included editing software and some minor tweaks to the casing, such as to the grip of the SD3, the new camcorders seem unlikely to make much of a splash when launched in Japan on April 25.
Samsung SyncMaster 225MS-R: Ready to Make Waves in Japan
Samsung SyncMaster 225MS-R will soon hit the market and that too in the ‘the land of the rising sun’- Japan. This wonder shows off its widescreen LCD display bestowing you with 22″ wide angle viewing and a substantially clearer presentation integrity as well as maintaining the maximum resolution of 1,680 x 1,050.
It further features a contrast ratio of 700:1, brightness level of 300cd/m2, too good, a DVI-D HDCP port and an HDMI 1.1 port which provides you with that added zeal and high definition thirst! This magnificent piece of marvel has a price tag of 380 Euros and will soon be made available in the Japanese market.
Unmatchable HD LCD TVs by NEC: Strictly for Professionals
NEC has made public its two latest and the hottest LCD TV screens strictly for professionals. I guess they must be having enough mettle to prove what they have boasted!
These 2 LCD TVs definitely have a good backup in regards to their functionalities. They come up in diagonal sizes ranging from 40-inches to 46-inches with 1366×768 max resolution, 500 cd/m2 of excellent brightness and 1200: 1 of contrast ratio, too good for the professional front I am sure.
Both models also feature HDMI and DVI-D HDCP.
Professionals will be having the time of their lifetime with this awesome LCD TV!
Toshiba Matsushita Announces the World’s Largest 20.8-inch Polymer-type OLED Display
FED TVs Likely to Hit the Shelves in 2009
The 19.2-inch FED panel comes with a 1,280 x 960 pixel resolution, contrast ratio of 20,000:1, and a brightness of 400cd/m2. The FED displays are said to be having better brightness at low power consumption.
Anyhow, we won’t be able to see the FEDs until 2009.
World’s First 42-inch Plasma TVs with Full HD Panels Debuting April 27th
April 27 is the scheduled date for the launch of Panasonic maker Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd’s world’s first 42-inch plasma TVs with full high definition panels in Japan.
With its new superior line up of full HD models boasting an image resolution of 1,920 by 1,080 pixels, Panasonic aims to challenge rival LCD TV makers. The new 42-inch TVs are anticipated to cost from $3,449 to $3,617.
Matsushita also revealed its plans shell out $2.4 billion to build the world’s largest plasma display factory.
Samsung’s 24-inch LED Backlit LCD Panel: The Finest Picture Viewing Ever
One may view this marvel even through an angle of 180-degree, this thing is seriously catching attention of the critics too, so does this mean that this kind of viewing is possible practically from any place within the room?
It bestows the max resolution of 1920 x 1200 and a contrast ratio of 1000:1.Its practically the best buy for the Artists and the designers, I suppose.
JVC Flaunting Its Gigantic 110-inch Rear Projection TV
The grotesque TV consumes a low power of 220W, which is much less that the power consumed by an average PC. It boasts a constrast ratio of 5,000 to 1, and a female-to-TV ratio of 7:1.
If you happen to be in Japan this December, you make get one for youself by paying a stocky price of $50,500. Just think of playing your favorite game on the big screen!
Toshiba to Drop a 30-inch OLED TV in 2009
‘SyncMaster 275T’series by Samsung : Quite a Competition!
The SyncMaster 275T has functionalities - four USB 2.0 ports and a variety of inputs like S-Video, component and DVI sustaining HDCP(High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection). A separable speaker (option) is also offered. recommended price is 1,340,000(KRW).
Panasonic TH-65PX600U Plasma HDTV Review
model: TH-65PX600U 65-Inch Plasma HDTV
category: TVs
review date: April 2007
reviewed by: Adrienne Maxwell
Introduction
I’m not sure what I was thinking when I requested a review sample of Panasonic’s TH-65PX600U. No, that’s not true. I know exactly what I was thinking: “Hmmmmm, 65-inch 1080p plasma…ooooooooo.” The allure of it managed to push a few relatively important details aside, such as where in my house I would put it and how I planned to get it there. The panel weighs 174.2 pounds – that’s without the speakers or pedestal stand, both of which are optional accessories that cost extra ($600 and $1,200, respectively). Needless to say, this isn’t the type of product you casually throw up on the wall for a short-term viewing period, so I went with the optional stand, which is itself a serious piece of hardware: it weighs about 55 pounds, and its base (48.9 by 16.5 inches) is too large to sit atop my normal gear rack or any other short cabinet in my home, for that matter. Ultimately, I decided that, for my purposes, it would be fine to simply set the plasma on the floor.
28-percent of Americans now own an HDTV
Would dual must carry be good or bad for HDTV?
While there is little doubt in how analog broadcast television is going to meet its demise, the jury is still out on analog cable. While some of use think that cable companies will use the DTV transition to move customers to digital cable, others aren't so sure. FCC Chairman Kevin Martin is now proposing what is being referred to as dual must carry, which would require cable companies to carry both the digital and analog version of each local affiliate's feed, unless the cable companies switch to an all digital network. Sure all digital network seems great to us, but for all those without QAM tuners in their TVs, this means a converter box on every TV just like the OTA folks. The FUD is getting really deep in here, but somehow we think Kevin might be on to something. If cable companies are encouraged to go to digital and since digital SD channels use far less bandwidth than analog ones, that means more room for HD and other digital services we love.
Monday, April 16, 2007
28-percent of Americans now own an HDTV
Panasonic TH-65PX600U Plasma HDTV Review
I’m not sure what I was thinking when I requested a review sample of Panasonic’s TH-65PX600U. No, that’s not true. I know exactly what I was thinking: “Hmmmmm, 65-inch 1080p plasma…ooooooooo.” The allure of it managed to push a few relatively important details aside, such as where in my house I would put it and how I planned to get it there. The panel weighs 174.2 pounds – that’s without the speakers or pedestal stand, both of which are optional accessories that cost extra ($600 and $1,200, respectively). Needless to say, this isn’t the type of product you casually throw up on the wall for a short-term viewing period, so I went with the optional stand, which is itself a serious piece of hardware: it weighs about 55 pounds, and its base (48.9 by 16.5 inches) is too large to sit atop my normal gear rack or any other short cabinet in my home, for that matter. Ultimately, I decided that, for my purposes, it would be fine to simply set the plasma on the floor.
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
CEATEC: Hitachi TVs reprocess HD video on the fly
The W50P-XR10000 and W60P-XR10000 plasma TVs have screens that measure 50in and 60in across the diagonal, respectively. They are both equipped with a 250GB internal hard drive that can store 23 hours of HD content in standard recording mode. Both models were on display this week at Hitachi's booth at Ceatec.
For users who want to store more than 23 hours of content, the W50 and W60 offer two additional recording modes that rely on a ViXS Systems Inc. chip to reprocess the video stream at a lower bit rate, effectively doubling the hard drive's capacity to 50 hours or 65 hours, depending on the recording mode selected.
The W50P and W60P are priced at ¥550,000 (US$4,658) and ¥950,000, respectively. Both TVs will go on sale in Japan during the fourth quarter of this year.
The W50 and W60 join other televisions in Hitachi's product line that offer internal hard drives for recording video content. On sale in Japan since May, these models include the W37L-HR9000 and W32L-HR9000, which sport 32in and 37in LCD screens, respectively. The W37L is priced at around ¥300,000, while the W32L costs about ¥250,000.
Analysts predict no dominant next-gen console
The games industry has long been acknowledged as a lucrative business to be involved with, which is why reports from market analysts on the prospects for new consoles command such attention.
The latest, from respected analysts IDC, comes to the conclusion that none of the next-generation games machines currently on sale is likely to lord it over the others. The report excerpt (the full hit will cost you $4,500 – see what we mean about the cash in all this?) does, however, conclude that Nintendo will be top of the pile in the short run.
Analyst Billy Pidgeon says, “…none of the three new consoles will dominate the market in the next five years like the PS2 dominated last cycle; however, Nintendo's Wii will outship and outsell the 360 and PS3 in 2007 and 2008.”
Considering that we’re already seeing the Wii forging ahead, that much doesn’t bring a great deal to the table, although we can't help but wonder if the soon-to-be rumbling PS3 might spring a few surprises.
Students recreate building-sized Donkey Kong in Post-it notes
Lightly whisk 6,400 colored Post-it notes into a team of ten geeky engineering students, top with a fetish for retro arcade games and bake on a four-storey building overnight and whaddya get?
Yep — a Technicolor paper-based recreation of Donkey Kong circa 1981 at the University of California. Boink.
Is e-cash killing real money in Japan?
Next month in Japan sees the beginning of the endgame in an ambitious scheme to entirely do away with paper tickets across Tokyo’s complex public transport network. The new the Pasmo IC-card ticketing system will work seamlessly with several existing smartcards to make life incredibly easy for the busy Tokyoite.
Pasmo is the latest RFID/IC card on the scene – it joins Suica, Edy and their variants embedded in a host of mobile phones to complete a comprehensive cashless network for both travel and shopping. A typical day for a hypothetical Tokyo resident might see him use such e-cash technology a dozen or more times, as follows:
• 7:00am: Bus to station from home using Pasmo.
• 7:15am: Wave Suica card over ticket gate to begin commute.
• 8:30am: Arrive at Shinjuku station, exiting using Suica again.
• 8:15am: Pick up morning snack at convenience store, paying with either Suica or the Edy or Osaifu-Keitai (mobile wallet) in phone.
• 11:00am: Canned coffee from Edy-enabled vending machine.
• 1:00pm: Lunchbox from local shop with new Osaifu-Keitai reader.
• 6-7:30pm: Suica into station, to buy evening sports paper and a dried squid snack from kiosk on platform and out again at home station.
• 8:00pm: Pay for new sofa on credit using phone’s iD credit-card chip at furniture store.
• 8:15pm: Fork out for few rounds of sake at local bar – oops, cash only.
• 9pm: Family dinner at chain restaurant – Edy does the trick.
• 10:30pm: Pasmo home again on the bus.
At first, this futuristic lifestyle is undeniably fun, and there’s no doubt that IC-card technology is convenient. However, on the downside, many of these services are available only to people able to secure credit, as the final charges appear on the monthly phone bill.
As more deals are thrashed out to allow interoperability and a single IC standard draws closer, could we be facing a future where anyone without credit or the desire to embrace technology faces becoming a second-class citizen? ‘Ugh – real money? No thanks, it’s filthy.’
WiMax wireless pushed to handle HD TV
Mobile WiMax continues to make rapid strides in the race to establish a long-range alternative to Wi-Fi, with the latest breakthrough being a demonstration of wireless high-def TV broadcasts.
Using a tweaked IEEE802.16e setup, Japan Radio Company (JRC) and Runcom Technologies recently showed HD TV video being transmitted at 30Mbps, which was more than enough throughput for the HD vids.
The two companies combined their wireless expertise to create a base station and user terminals using WiMax IEEE802.16e-2005 on the 2.5GHz portion of the spectrum.
Emphasising the significance being placed on WiMax to challenge other technologies, JRC general manager Fumio Murakami said: “Japan … is expecting superior performance from the WiMAX networks to compete with the existing broadband wireless networks in the country; The collaboration with a pioneer … such as Runcom supported JRC in its plan to demonstrate such performance to the leading operators in Japan.”
While any large-scale commercial deployment of WiMax specifically for video broadcasts remains uncertain, it’s clear that, whatever it is used to transmit, the standard has a bright future.
Thursday, April 5, 2007
PSP gets trial at Arsenal and firmware upgrade in Japan
Just as the PlayStation Portable has had its firmware updated to make it that little bit more useful, so we receive news of an unusual trial involving the Sony handheld system in the UK.
So far, only Japanese PSPs have been able to download the update to firmware version 3.30, which adds a range of new screen resolutions for showing H.264 MPEG-4 videos. The usual release pattern should see the update released first in the US within days, then in Europe in a few weeks.
Aside from adding high(ish)-resolution 720 x 480-pixel playback (among other sizes), the new firmware also adds menu thumbnails for videos and RSS items and better performance from downloaded PSone games.
Elsewhere, Arsenal FC’s Emirates Stadium is about to host an unusual field test using PSPs in the hands of football fans. The new S.PORT system will be tested by wirelessly beaming replays and statistics to PSP screens during Arsenal games at the stadium.
Reports suggest that the new technology could be used in other venues for different sports, so don’t be surprised to see legions of nerds fumbling with their toys blissfully unaware of another goal bursting the net or a streaker at Wimbledon.
Panasonic tweaks SD camcorders to ‘Full HD’ at 1920 x 1080i
On the cameras themselves, only the latest versions have a corresponding badge, as you’ll see in the second photo above. There are no details of the new cameras on the Panasonic website yet.
Aside from the ballyhoo over line counts, upgrades to the included editing software and some minor tweaks to the casing, such as to the grip of the SD3, the new camcorders seem unlikely to make much of a splash when launched in Japan on April 25.
Barely five months after announcing the world’s first video camera to record HD TV images to an SD memory card, Panasonic has replaced it with a cheaper, more-capable model that it claims breaks new ground.
Last November’s HDC-SD1 has been ruthlessly elbowed aside by today’s release of the HDC-SD3, which offers video recording at 1920 x 1080i pixels, compared with the earlier model’s 1440 x 1080i resolution.
If you’re thinking the difference is minimal, you’re probably right not to be bothered unless you’ve just bought the SD1. The newcomer not only lays down a few thousand more pixels per frame, but it’s also likely to be ¥30,000 cheaper at ¥150,000. That includes a bundled 4GB SDHC card.
Both cameras use the relatively new AVCHD compression technique to fit high-definition video onto current-generation media, such as the SD cards used in this case. A similarly revamped DVD camcorder has also been announced in the shape of the HDC-DX3.
Logitec transforms iPod into alarm clock with bells on
The Dialive will be available in the middle of this month in either black or white for around ¥8,000, adding bells and a snooze button to any full-size iPod from 4G on or either model of nano. There’s a refreshingly low-tech plastic dial on the back that adjusts the size of the dock connector.
As for the specs, the snooze button adds nine minutes to your kip, the speakers output 6W total, there’s a dinky little volume control on the back and the Dialive even charges the player via a mains connection.
Monday, April 2, 2007
Suvil Bluetooth handsfree — does what it says on the box
Suvil is one of those firms that produces plenty of the little bits and pieces you never knew you wanted. One case in point is the Hong Kong company's ClipFree iAudio BT (top) Bluetooth add-on for pretty much any piece of kit with an audio output. We took a quick look at the gear this morning and were pleasantly suprised.
The ClipFree does the whole BT thing just the way it should — the package includes a dongle for a stereo, cellphone or whatever, a clip-on receiver, both in- and over-ear headphones and a couple of different audio jacks, so connectivity is simple.
Performance is fine over 5m or so, but you might not want to push it to the claimed 10m range, and audio is generally clear. The auto-switching ability — between an audio source and an incoming call, for example — is smartly done and battery life is reasonable at four hours of use or 120 on standby.
Suvil also has a range of Wi-Fi necessities, such as the Wi-Fi Hunter (below), a bare-bones key-chain 802.11 b/g detector. Currently, we only have pricing in Euros (€89 for the ClipFree and €15 for the key chain) but US and Japan readers can expect to see Suvil gear in the stores any day now.
Mobile phone sales grow — except in Japan
Worldwide mobile phone sales grew 21.5 percent year on year to 251 million units in the third quarter, with India and China driving growth, according to research from Gartner.
Gartner predicts that sales for the year will fall just shy of one billion phones. Sales should reach 986 million units by the end of the year, the research group said.
Europe, one of the most mature mobile phone markets in the world, showed just 1.9 percent growth over the same quarter last year.
Asia Pacific experienced the most dramatic gains, with sales of 80.8 million units during the third quarter, an increase of 54.7 percent over the same period last year. That significant growth happened despite a decline in sales of 4.7 percent in Japan compared to the third quarter in 2005. An increase in retail outlets and better distribution channels in emerging markets such as Indonesia, Philippines and India significantly offset that loss though, driving growth in the region.
Other regions of the world also reported solid growth. In Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa, sales grew 19 percent compared to last year, to 48 million phones. North American sales reached 40.8 million units, up 12 percent. Sales in Latin America grew 13.7 percent over the same time last year, to 29.8 million phones.
Gartner reported that the smaller phone makers will increasingly struggle to compete against the giants. In the third quarter, Nokia, Motorola and Samsung together accounted for 68 percent of phone sales.
Among those three, competition is fierce. While Motorola increased its market share during the quarter, it lost its number one position in Latin America, to Nokia, and also lost its number two spot in Western Europe, to Samsung. Nokia has the largest market share worldwide, but failed to grow its market share in North America during the quarter.
Nokia's worldwide market share was 35.1 percent, up from 32.5 percent in the same quarter last year. Motorola had 20.6 percent, compared to 18.7 percent during the third quarter in 2005. Number three vendor Samsung had 12.2 percent market share, just slightly down from 12.5 percent last year.
Man thrown in the slammer for selling bad ringtones
Next time you fancy getting the theme from The Godfather or Close Encounters as a cellphone ringtone, just be careful where you buy it — you could be helping put the seller behind bars.
It's pretty hard to believe, but the Malaysian press is reporting that some half-assed market trader who has been selling unlicensed ringtones has been arrested by their equivalent of the RIAA.
He faces up to five years in jail and a massive fine just for peddling annoying crap — personally, I'd pay him not to sell that junk ever again to anyone.
Legs everywhere rejoice as dog humps USB port silly
Wireless USB finally arrives on the desktop in Japan
After several months, Y-E Data’s YD-300 WUSB hub is finally on sale in Japan — for ¥39,800, or almost $350.
If that seems like a lot for a four-port USB hub, that’s because it is. Also, it’s not technically complaint with ‘official’ WUSB, so Y-E Data has to call it an Ultra-Wideband Wireless Hub (UWB), but that won’t stop Japan’s computer nerds lapping it up.
The technology promises wireless USB transfers between anything connected to the hub and a dongle that plugs into a PC over up to 10m. Speeds are similar to those from regular, wired USB 2.0 connections (480Mbps), so the attraction is in clearing up a little cable clutter.
That and being first on the block to use yet another new wireless technology of course.