Sunday, January 30, 2011

Concept Gadgets Part 2


Every cool gadget started out as a concept. The smart phone that you use was once just a twinkle in a designer’s eye. Since technology is moving at such a fast pace, talented designers from all around the globe spend much of their time dreaming up fantastic new devices. Take a look at two such amazing concept designs which may, in future end up in your households.


LINC
Here is something to cheer about in the wake of global warming. LINC is a typical touch screen smart phone with all the connectivity and features you come to expect. It has got everything from a media player to a Wi-Fi. But here’s the catch. LINC is leased to the user as a service, not as a product. The handset is made up of valuable materials like aluminum, glass, and electronic components that the producer can harvest for re-use. After using the device for about a year, when the next generation of hardware comes along, the user is expected to ship back the device to its manufacturing facility were it is reassembled for upgradation. The best part is that LINC is designed for automated disassembly. A directed radiant heat beam targets its internal memory metal latch, releasing the assembly. In one step, LINC automatically disassembles into its few simple components, glass, aluminum and its circuit flex (transformers huh?). LINC changes the entire concept of production and consumption method today. If ever something like this is put into practice, then it could greatly reduce hazardous waste and improve environmental health by reducing e-waste.   





Synaptic’s Fuse
At first man made QWERTY handsets, then came the touchscreens and what’s next? Synaptics’ Fuse is an experimental phone that can interact with by squeezing, gripping, flexing and tilting the phone. The device melds multiple technologies such as multi-touch capacitive sensing, haptic feedback, 3-D graphics and proximity sensing. Fuse tackles the difficulty of single-handed usage and the need to constantly look at the screen, two big challenges that users face today with current generation touchscreen devices. With Fuse, touch sensors at the back of the phone means users can poke it to receive or initiate calls. Force and capacitive touch sensors on the sides of the phone also allow you to squeeze the phone to select icons from the phone’s menu. Incorporating the accelerometers into the user interface also means you can tilt the phone to scroll and grip the phone tight to stop. Synaptics plans to license parts of the handsets design to makers that are looking to take user interface on mobile phones to the next level. So it’ll take sometime before we can actually get a taste of this technology.



 



Thursday, January 13, 2011

Amazing List: Coolest Cellphones


Nokia 888: The bendable phone

You can roll it, bend it, put on your clothes like a clip. It has a simple programmable body mechanism which enables it to change its form in different situations. When you want to talk on the phone, the body form turns into the form of the good old telephone. You can personalize these forms and record them, so that it fits you in the best way that you have chosen. It is powered by liquid battery, and uses a flexible touchscreen display and has a touch sensitive body cover which helps the device understand and adjust itself to the environment.


Hyundai MP-280: the Perfume Phone


For anyone who is worried about their body odour, Hyundai presents the MP 280 cell phone, a clamshell phone with a built-in perfume container! Open the device to make a call or receive a call and the handset will squirt out the fragrance. Once you have exhausted the supply you can refill the perfume chamber with your favorite perfume using a syringe which comes with the handset. The butterfly object at the centre of the phone is where you "inject" the perfume. About 2 drops of the concentrate are enough to last about 8 hours. Apart from the perfume thing, the phone has a changeable cover panels which make it more attractive to customers.


Samsung Serene: the elegant phone


This cellphone is unique not just because Samsung built it, but because the device has been specially designed by Bang & Olufsen. To start with, the handset sports an unusual design where the screen is placed at the bottom of the phone and the keyboard representing the top half. The makers believe that by flipping the screen, the user no longer have to place his or her ear onto the screen causing it to become greasy. Bang and Olufsen's minimalism is present throughout the design. There is no screen on the outside part of the cellphone, the circular formed button, and ring tones that are used and installed are designed not to rude ears, so the elegant impression would appear very clear.The Serene's unique design comes in a small package which is priced at Rs 65,430/- only. So, any takers?


Chrome OS...its all about the speed

Move over OSX and Windows 7, there is a new OS on the block that may just give you a run for your money. Google had surprised everyone by announcing its own Operating System. The Chrome OS is the new desktop platform that we have been hearing about for sometime now. So what is this Chrome OS and what exactly does it offer? Here we go-
read the full article at http://www.carnstyle.com/EmagazineCurrent/Magazine.aspx

Most Affordable Entry level Android phone

The Android segment has grown at an astonishing rate over the years since its first introduction. The Android phones have quickly become the “wave of the future”. Not only can one talk & text on an Android phone, it also enables us to perform tasks that were once associated to only laptops and desktops. The Indian market is getting flooded with Android phones these days and the consumers certainly have a lot of choice while picking one. But most of these phones are not mass market phones, these are high end phones that are often limited to a certain segment of consumers only. We have made a list of five Android phones which are currently retailing under the price of Rs 12,000/-. These are; the Acer beTouch E110, Spice Mi 300, Samsung I5503 Galaxy 5, LG Optimus P500 and the LG Optimus GT540. In our bid to find out what really will be the best entry level smartphone of 2010, we pitched the phones together in a head to head comparative study. Here is what we found-




for more details, check out the latest e-mag at http://www.carnstyle.com/EmagazineCurrent/Magazine.aspx