Sofa-Dress Makes Uncomfortable Chairs Slightly Less Uncomfortable

Sofa-Dress (Images behavior Studio MAEZM)
By fear Liszewski

Created by methodicalness flat MAEZM (whose website appears to be over its allocated reciprocation limit) the Sofa-Dress is essentially a reflect counterbalance fashioned to set atop a horribly apprehensive wooden or metal chair, making the movement participate gaming slightly inferior uncomfortable. It’s a adroit idea, and with some more material reflect or artefact it could actually alter comfort to thousands of edifice kids or advise articulate attendees every over the world.

[ yatzer - Studio MAEZM ] VIA [ Freshome ]

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Microsoft prepares WinMoDevCamp events for WM developers

While cosmos busy employed with Nokia to alter Office Mobile to Symbian, Microsoft is also effort protector to move Windows Mobile 6.5.

To attractiveness as some developers as possible, the Redmond interact has ordered up the Windows Mobile Developer Camp, which is a program of forthcoming “not-for-profit gatherings to amend applications for the upcoming promulgation of the Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.5 OS.”

The prototypal WinMoDevCamp circumstance module avow locate in Seattle, on August 19. After that, there module be kindred events in New York, San Francisco, Austin, author and Singapore.

Microsoft expects attendees to allow ambulatory developers, UI designers, .Net Developers, scheme developers, and testers.

Apart from creating infant Windows Mobile apps and gathering Microsoft Mobile Developer Experience aggroup members, attendees module also be flourishing to “migrate existing ambulatory applications from the iPhone, Blackberry and Palm Pre to the Windows Mobile Platform.”

WinMoDevCamp

You crapper encounter more info, as substantially as removed for the circumstance at the WinMoDevCamp authorised website.

(thanks to Brian Blank for the tip).

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RED blows away small room of videophiles with 4k RED RAY footage at half the bitrate of MiniDV

While RED has been pretty tight-lipped about its planned RED RAY product, some footage shown off at RED’s NAB party gave a sizable hint that RED RAY could be much more than meets the eye — specifically a $1,000 device that can play cinema-quality 4k video off of standard DVDs. At the party they played an uncompressed showreel of 4k footage on a Sony 4k projector, which clocked in at 1.3GB per second, and then showed that exact same footage under the “RED RAY” codec at a mere 10Mb/s (megabits, not bytes; about half the bitrate of SD DV), at a compression rate of 700:1. Attendees claimed they could see zero visible compression, though a projector in a ballroom isn’t exactly the best case scenario to test that sort of thing. Unfortunately, there’s little other info about how they’re achieving this (we hear “wavelets” come into the equation at some point), or to what nefarious aims, but with compression like this the implications for content distribution are pretty stunning: 1080p streaming for all. Naturally, the down side of all of this is probably some pretty hefty processing power on the consumer end, but we’ll cross that I/O bridge when we come to it.

[Thanks, Ben H]

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ASUS shows off Eee Stick at CeBIT

Just in case you missed the ASUS barrage from earlier this morning, we’ll bring you back up to speed while also showing off another fun gizmo the company drug to Hannover. The motion sensing Eee Sticks were on hand at CeBIT, and in varying colors to boot. We were too bashful to get a video of ourselves playing in the demo rig the company had set up, but we’re making it our mission to coerce other attendees to have a go and let us film them tomorrow. ‘Til then, have a look at the stationary Sticks below.
Gallery: ASUS shows off Eee Stick at CeBIT

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Panasonic’s 103-inch plasma repurposed as multitouch air hockey table

With VIZIO and Pioneer jumping out of the plasma game, we can totally foresee sales of Panasonic’s 103-inch PDP skyrocketing. All kidding aside, a startup arcade would be ludicrous to not shove one of these into the center of the action. What you’re looking at above is a mutltitouch air hockey table, made possible by Panny’s ginormous plasma and a U-Touch overlay from uicentric. The table was on display over in Amsterdam at ISE 2009, and quite frankly, we’re intensely envious of the attendees who were able to blow off some steam by grabbing a game on this. Obligatory video is just past the break.

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Giant e-paper display spotted, ogled at Taiwanese book show

Now showing at a Taiwanese book expo: two gorgeous e-paper displays, one in black-and-white and one in color. The approximately 24-inch readers were created by Delta Electronics (no relation to the airliner) and are being used by a local newspaper publisher to survey attendees and gauge interest in their future use. Our friends at Engadget Chinese tell us the color one is less contrasty than its monochrome partner, but beyond that, details are scarce and no one at the booth could provide any specs. One thing’s for certain: they’re a helluva lot crisper than those 28-inch e-paper billboards popping up around Tokyo. Hit up the read link for more pics.
Source

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Wrist-worn flexible OLED prototype is for the military, but kids like it too

Wrist-worn flexible OLED prototype is for the military, but kids like it too
Flexible OLED displays are becoming more and more commonplace (and festive), despite not actually being available in any devices you can buy just yet. When that day finally comes, Universal Display Corporation thinks one of those gadgets will be something like the above: a wearable, flexible, 4-inch prototype screen that CES attendees will be able to check out and maybe even try on — albeit uncomfortably. It’s been developed with military applications in mind (they always get the cool stuff first), but bendy consumer devices are naturally envisioned as well. There’s no word on when we’ll start seeing them in passports or flexi-phones, but we’re thinking we have a while to wait yet.

[Warning: PDF link; via OLED-DISPLAY.net]
Source

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