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Showing posts from September, 2009

Smart Google search Devices - Mindblowing concept device

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Smart Google search Devices - Mindblowing concept device Smart Internet search will be able to do with a mobile device in the NEAR future A mobile device with Touch screen, built in camera, scanner, WiFi, google map (hopefully google earth), google search, image search… Like this way, when you can see a building through it, it gives you the image search result right on the spot. Choose a building and touch a floor and it tells you more details of the building. You can use it when you want to know a car model, an insect name, what kind of food is served at a restaurant and how much, who built a bridge, etc. etc. It's got a scanner built in. so you can use it this way when you want to check the meaning of a word in the newspaper, book, magazine, etc. It would be much easier to read a real book. You can use the dictionary, wikipedia, thesaurus and anything else available on the web. What do you think? Indoor guide:Works in a building, airport, station, hospital, etc. Automatic simult

Intel's Mobile Internet Device Revealed

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- Intel's Mobile Internet Device Revealed Intel's latest gadget is a MID (Mobile Internet Device) that's designed for both work and play Its 45nm dual-core "Silverthorne" processor keeps the device running cooler and longer. The Intel Ultra Mobile Platform 2007 represents an innovative collection of energy-efficient silicon building blocks and technologies designed to enable manufacturers to deliver a new category of small, truly mobile devices This second-generation ultra-mobile platform powers exciting, new Mobile Internet Devices (MIDs) for consumers or Ultra Mobile PCs (UMPCs) for business and education segments. Ultra-mobile Intel architecture components can enable compelling features and functionality of a PC with the convenience of a more pocketable solution for lifestyles on-the-go. Mobile Internet Devices (MIDs) -- MIDs personalize a new category of small, truly mobile consumer devices enabling a PC-like Internet experience, coupled with the capabil

Black Berry

BlackBerry Storm - What happens when the efficient menu-driven user experience of the BlackBerry meets the discoverable new user experience of finger-driven touch? The answer for the BlackBerry Storm has been that the BlackBerry experience wins, and who loses depends on what you were expecting from RIM's first departure from a physical keyboard. While adorned with a few on-screen buttons and simple gesture support, the Storm is much less of an iPhone-like experience than, say, the T-Mobile G1. The Storm's main advantage over other BlackBerry devices is that it has a larger screen, not necessarily one that is controlled by touch. However, to accommodate the removal of its trademark keyboard, RIM has taken touch-screens into a literal new dimension by requiring users to depress the screen to activate a button on the screen, which lowers and springs back like a giant keyboard key. The screen's ability to respond to presses as a physical button (like the trackpad in App

Barry Young (OLED-Association) video interview

Barry Young (OLED-Association) video interview with many OLED prototypes shown - Barry Young is Senior Advisor, Consultant to Display Search. Being one of the industry's leading authorities on OLEDs and flexible displays, Young has originated all of Display Search's OLED and Flexible Display intelligence and has visited and consulted with most of the OLED manufacturers worldwide.