Feb 29 2012

Sony Tablet P US release date announced

Category: Mobile PhonesGadgets & Tech @

Sony Tablet P US release date announced

The Sony Tablet P is finally coming to the states, and it’s not far off. The Sony Tablet P’s US release date is March 4th. It will cost $ 399 with a two-year contract with AT&T.

It’s been available for months in the UK, and we already have a review.

That contract will require a $ 35 a month 3GB data plan, or you can bump the plan to 5GB a month for $ 50.

Game and watch

The Sony Tablet P is a unique dual-screened tablet that folds in the middle, ala Nintendo DS. Both screens measure 5.5-inches, and gaming is clearly a priority.

The Tablet P is Playstation-certified and sports a 1GHz processor, a 5MP camera, and 4GB internal storage.

So what do you think? Is the price right for a gaming-centric tablet or would you rather save some money and buy the multi-featured PS Vita?




Techradar – All the latest technology news

Tags: , , , ,


Feb 29 2012

Mini quadrotors play Bond, James Bond (video)

Category: ReviewsGadgets & Tech @

This week’s TED2012 conference isn’t all talk — sometimes the videos features speak for themselves. Check out this phenomenal one from the University of Pennsylvania starring a number of nano quadrotors playing the James Bond theme by banging percussion, hitting the piano and strumming a guitar. The room in the video has infrared lights and cameras and the ‘copters are outfitted with reflectors, making it possible to plot their position. The result is technical wizardary worthy of Q himself. Check it out after the break.

Continue reading Mini quadrotors play Bond, James Bond (video)

Mini quadrotors play Bond, James Bond (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Feb 2012 18:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Adafruit  |  sourceU Penn  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Tags: , , , , ,


Feb 29 2012

Exclusive: Microsoft: ‘It’s the complete vision for Windows 8′

Category: Mobile PhonesGadgets & Tech @

Exclusive: Microsoft: 'It's the complete vision for Windows 8'

Windows 8 Consumer Preview: Gabriel Aul

The Windows 8 Developer Preview (as the name suggests) was for introducing developers to Windows 8 and it didn’t have many of the pieces of the OS, especially not the final user interface.

The Consumer Preview obviously isn’t completely finished but it is what Director of Windows Program Management Gabriel Aul calls "the complete vision for the product". He calls the look of the Metro start screen "more finished and more polished than it was at Build."

In fact there have been over 100,000 code changes since the Developer Preview, which makes the Consumer Preview a wholly different beast.

And while there are new ways of switching between applications and new touch controls "we also went back and added a ton of mouse and keyboard support to complete that experience," Aul promises.

The touch controls are a more developed version of what we saw at CES this year and Aul explains the logic behind the way they work. "The new things are all about the edges. The left and right edges are about Windows controls; the left side is about switching, the right side is about controls.

Windows 8 switching panes

The top and the bottom edge are about app controls, and they both do the same so you can choose which you prefer."

That makes sense for touch; "when you’re holding [a tablet] the touch is all about the edges. Ergonomically, they’re the easiest thing to hit with my thumbs."

The Windows 8 Start Screen

The charms are carefully arranged, he says. "The Start screen [charm] is always right there under my thumb." But it’s also optimised for mouse users, who can just roll into the corner area without having to be too precise.

"With a mouse, if I have to pick a particular pixel it needs fine control, but for the Metro controls you can just jam the pointer up into the corners – you don’t have to be precise. When I pull down a charm, I’m putting my mouse in the right place for the controls. I make a big movement to open the charms, I pull down and my mouse is there, I hit Settings and my mouse is right where the controls are so it’s a very small movement."

Moving between Windows 8 Metro apps

Putting the mouse in the top left corner shows a thumbnail of the next Metro app, but you can pull down to see thumbnails for up to five current apps. Outlines of the thumbnail edges help make that more obvious.

"It has hints that there are tiles hidden away when I put the mouse in the corner; it’s very subtle, it’s just something to say there’s something here." With a touch screen, swiping an app in from the left and back off screen shows the same thumbnail strip, or you can use Windows-Tab on the keyboard.

Need to see more than five apps (or to be able to jump straight to individual apps on the desktop)? Alt Tab gives you thumbnails for all running apps the way you’re used to.

The Start Menu still exists in Windows 8

And while the Start button is no longer an orb at the end of the taskbar, clicking in the corner still works (and hovering your mouse there shows a thumbnail of the Start menu you can click).

"We didn’t take the Start menu away," he points out; "it’s just zero pixels. In the lower left corner you have Start where you expect it to be, you click it to jump back to Start. Or if I go to the lower corner and push up, I get that same switching list."

Windows 8 start thumbnail

Touch is also more responsive in the Consumer Preview, Aul claims. "We’ve got the physics of swipe dialled in now; as you swipe it really sticks to your finger. Switching performance is as fast as I can flick through, it switches.

The Windows key takes me to Start or whatever I’m doing as fast as I can do it." Scrolling through the start screen with a mouse now works directly; instead of grabbing a scroll bar you just move your mouse to the side of the screen. That gives you a more responsive scrolling behaviour, especially if you have a scroll wheel on your mouse.

"It has a physicality to it, there’s a different response when I push a little or a lot." And while the picture password option is certainly easier than tapping out a password on a tablet screen, Aul claims it can be more secure. "It’s cryptographically stronger than a numeric PIN and it’s actually as good as a strong password if you have a complex photo."

Windows 8 on different devices

Aul is a big fan of Windows tablets like the Samsung Series 7 Microsoft has frequently used to demo Windows 8 (check out our Hands on: Windows 8 tablet review) but he also dropped strong hints about how Windows on ARM (WOA) tablets will fit in as companion devices that rely on syncing documents and settings.

"I love the tablet. Other people may want smaller more power efficient tablets and another computer. If I’m on the couch browsing and reading email and I want to go to work I dock it and work [on the same machine]. In the tablet scenario, I put it down, I walk over to my desktop and log in and it’ll feel just like the machine I’ve been using. The IE history is even there. I don’t have to connect it and sync stuff; it just all happens automatically."

The Windows 8 Consumer Preview is available for download from Microsoft now. To get it, head over to http://preview.windows.com.




Techradar – All the latest technology news

Tags: , , , , ,


Feb 29 2012

TED 2012: UPenn Flying Robots Play a Mean Keyboard

Category: CamerasGadgets & Tech @

Photo courtesy of Vijay Kumar.

LONG BEACH, Calif. — Some of the biggest leaps in aerial mechanics at the University of Pennsylvania have come straight out of professor Vijay Kumar’s mechanical engineering lab. The small, unmanned aircraft developed by Kumar and his team are just eight inches in diameter and weigh in at a little over a tenth of a pound. Four rotors surround a central processor that guides the pitch, yaw and direction of the small quadricopters, which can be manned remotely.

Kumar foresees multiple applications for his tiny craft, including building structures through coordinated efforts: An algorithm can explicitly tell the robots which parts of a structure to pick up, where to place them down, and when to do so. And just like the collective intelligence of an ant colony carrying food to the hive, Kumar’s robots can autonomously coordinate their positions across a group of machines without the aid of any central coordinator — all by sensing the positions of nearby craft, adjusting, and moving accordingly.

As you can imagine, the implications of the project’s application are widespread. In architectural applications alone — from simple construction to navigating buildings remotely — the possibilites are limitless.

But these are humdrum next to the robots’ fantastic performance of the James Bond theme across multiple instruments — as seen below — programmed and coordinated by two of Kumar’s top PhD candidates.

Gadget Lab

Tags: , , , , , ,


Feb 29 2012

Lytro pre-orders start shipping, infinite focusing now within reach

Category: CamerasGadgets & Tech @

Lytro pre-orders start shipping, infinite focusing now within reach

Those of you that scurried and got an early spot in the pre-order line for Lytro’s upcoming camera, ought to peep your inboxes for an email similar to the one we’ve embedded after the break, confirming shipment of the infinitely focusing light boxes. Per a ton of tips from you, in addition to a blog post from the company’s official blog, early orders of the unconventionally shaped camera that allows you to refocus after the fact are now en route to abodes stateside. When we played with it at its launch event, we came away impressed, yet ultimately longed for the underlying technology to be licensed to others — something the company maintains it’s actively exploring. No matter, with a unit in hand, look for our full review in the coming days.

Continue reading Lytro pre-orders start shipping, infinite focusing now within reach

Lytro pre-orders start shipping, infinite focusing now within reach originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Feb 2012 18:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceLytro  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Tags: , , , , , , ,


Feb 29 2012

Forget the iPad 3 — I’d Still Buy an iPad 2

Category: AppleGadgets & Tech @





Mashable OP-ED: This post reflects the opinions of the author and not necessarily those of Mashable as a publication.

Even if the next iteration of Apple’s iPad shot laser beams and can turn into a flying car, I would still settle for an iPad 2.

Why? One word: price.

I’m not an early adopter of new gizmos and gadgets. I love technology, but I don’t need — nor can I afford — the latest and greatest of everything. I use a two-year old Droid Incredible and managed to get my 2007-era MacBook to last for five years with battery and RAM upgrades.

Getting that kind of life out of my stuff makes me happy on a strangely deep level.

As a politics writer at Mashable, surrounded by technophiles, that attitude makes me something of a minority. While plenty of my colleagues bring tablets to our editorial meetings, I haven’t jumped on that bandwagon just yet.

Don’t get me wrong, I’ve wanted an iPad since the second, vastly improved version was released. I just haven’t been able to justify dropping $ 500 or more on a device that I didn’t need but only wanted.

It’s what economists call consumer surplus: the difference between what I’m willing to pay and what the marketplace says I ought to pay.

And the iPad’s competition, such as the $ 199 Kindle Fire, never did anything for me.

But with the iPad 3 now on the horizon, the iPad 2 — at a reduced price, say $ 299 — may suddenly become a much more affordable and attractive option.

At that point, I am no longer choosing between a tablet and a plane ticket to Europe.

If all I want is a very portable, typing-friendly device for taking notes and writing, I don’t need a retina display. If I just want to surf the web with the flick of my finger over a Wi-Fi connection at home or a local coffee joint, I don’t need 4G.

SEE ALSO: iPad Event Confirmed: Apple Invites Press to ‘Touch’ Something | iPad 3: Apple’s Biggest Test

Today, a little less than a week until the rumored iPad update, I can score a new, basic iPad 2 for $ 450 at Best Buy or on eBay, while Apple is still charging $ 500. The aftermarket price for an iPad 2 should continue to plummet if a new iPad is released.

And what if Apple repeats its iPhone strategy by continuing to sell the iPad 2 at a reduced price at official Apple Stores? That will all but guarantee that I — and other price-conscious technology shoppers — will jump at the chance to finally own a great tablet at a reasonable price. And I won’t have to risk a purchase on an aftermarket auction site, either.

I can’t drop five hundred bucks on an iPad 3, even if I justify it as something I’ll use for productivity’s sake. But $ 299? Sign me up for that, friends.

Would you prefer to buy an iPad 2 for a reduced price? Sound off in the comments below.

More About: apple, ipad, ipad 3, op-ed, Opinion, tablets




Mashable!

Tags: , , ,


Next Page »