Posts Tagged ‘interface’

Windows Phones set to launch on October 6

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009


Microsoft has taken the wraps off its Windows Phone schedule today with the confirmation of Windows Mobile 6.5 devices for October 6, 2009. Microsoft re branded Windows Mobile to Windows Phone earlier this year at the Mobile World Congress. The idea is to re-focus marketing on the products so that consumers are not confused at what they are purchasing and that they are aware they have a Windows powered phone. The Windows Mobile 6.5 operating system promises a more easy-to-use user interface,

Read more at Source: Neowin.net / Main

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Windows 7 RTM Multilingual User Interface MUI Packs Download and Installation

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Microsoft has released all 35 language packs as optional updates via Windows Update for Windows 7 RTM. The following language packs are available for download:

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Opera 10 Released

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

After a long gestation period, Opera has released version 10 of their browser, which comes packed with a whole lot of improvements and new features. It’s got a completely new interface, a turbo mode for those days of bandwith drought, automatic updates (finally!), and lots more.

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Movable Prosthetics: The Biomechanical Interface

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009


The woman who can feel roughness or smoothness in her artificial hands for the first time in years; the child whose artificial leg lengthens as he grows; the previously armless man who can reach into a cabinet above his head to prepare dinner; machines that will some day register sensations in much the same way that people can — thanks to research that will culminate this year in a major set of new designs, procedures and prototypes for artificial limbs, some of these miracles might eventually become commonplace, perhaps in another generation.

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i-gotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Tracker Giveaway

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

igotu_gt200_gps_travel_loggerThe i-gotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Data Tracker is a handy little gadget for digital camera users and travelers.

With the i-gotU software, the i-gotU GT200 keeps memory of your own journey by arranging pictures geographically.

It’s a bonus to have with digital cameras and camera phones because the i-gotU software can create a HTML / web file for your friends and families to see the route of your trip on a map and the scenes you have seen will pop up along the route with text introduction.

You can also upload your favorite photos to online Album sites such as Flickr and Picasa in a fast and easy way.

How the i-GotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Tracker Works:

  • Make sure your digital camera time is correct
  • Power on the GPS Travel Logger outdoors
  • Wait auto-positioning and locate your current position
  • Take the GPS Travel Logger with you when taking photo

Key features of the igotU GT200:

  • Small design with advanced power-saving function
  • Auto-map your photos with GPS location information
  • Compatible with all digital cameras and camera phones, coolest GPS tracking gadget for your journey
  • Organize and present your journey in three-dimensional Google Maps and Google Earth
  • Create and share your live travel blog on-line with all your friends quick and easy
  • 3D Virtual Reality Travel Blogs on @trip are viewable on Windows and Mac computers
  • Share your own @trip journal or your favorite trips with your social networks on Facebook, MySpace, Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, Google Bookmarks and Yahoo Bookmarks….etc.
  • Export into multiple file formats (GPX, MHT or KMZ)
  • Automatically upload photos to popular web album like Picasa and Flickr
  • Water-resist hardware design, suitable for rainy days, skiing, water sports
  • Compatible to third party GPS navigation software, can be used as Bluetooth GPS Receiver for your PDA or mobile phone

Hardware specifications:

  • Dimension: 46 x 41.5 x 14 mm
  • Weight: 37g
  • Built-in SiRF StarIII low power chipset
  • Built in GPS Patch Antenna
  • Built-in flash memory. 32000 waypoints
  • Built-in 750mAh Lithium-ion battery
  • 2 LED for tracking and battery / charger status Indication
  • Average acquisition time for cold start: < 60 seconds, warm start: < 38 seconds
  • USB 1.1 interface for PC connection
  • Bluetooth V2.0 EDR Class 2 technology for PDA, mobile phone connectivity
  • Operation temperature: -10 to + 50 degrees centigrade

System requirements:

  • PC with Windows 2000, XP, Vista
  • PC with USB 1.1 or 2.0

i-GotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Tracker Giveaway Details

We’re giving away 2 units to two of our valuable readers in the next couple of days. If you would like to win one, simply leave a comment below on how you would use the i-GotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Tracker if you had one. Please post your entry in by Friday the 28th August and two winning comments will be selected by the 29th August, 2009. Go for it!

i-gotU GT200 Bluetooth GPS Travel Logger

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Tags: GPS logger, GPS logging, gps tracker, GPS Tracking, i-gotU, igotU, iGotU GT-200, iGotU GT200



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Kiss Tunes makes your PC a finely tuned musical instrument

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

KissTunes. It's website and a musical instrument.

KissTunes. It’s website and a musical instrument.

… well, sort of. But for budding musicians who are geeks with a rock god fantasy, it’s a fairly cool concept. The Kiss Tunes website turns your laptop into an electronic keyboard, assigning white and black keys to the first two rows of the QWERTY Keyboard. With it, you can record songs, edit and share with others using the KissTunes website (registration is required).

With the simple click of your mouse on the keyboard, you can activate the interface. Then, as you play the QWERTY, the keys light in the KissTunes interface. This means that one can use KissTunes also as a learning tool. And with the recording option, students can hear their lessons on playback. Players also have the option to change instruments from Acoustic Grand Piano, Electric Piano, Steel Guitar and Kalimba instruments.

Check out this cool video of KissTunes in action.

Now, of course the utility doesn’t cover the entire range of a piano or keyboard, and doesn’t allow for writing down the songs you play, so more advanced musicians should try JamStudio, which mimmicks everything from guitar to piano to drums and everything in between.

Hat Tip – Lifehacker


Introducing Foolish Gadgets because not all gadgets are cool :)
[ Kiss Tunes makes your PC a finely tuned musical instrument copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]




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First Look: Windows 7 Shapes Up as Microsoft’s Best OS Yet

Monday, August 17th, 2009

desktop3

Good news, everyone! If you’ve been stuck in a time loop using Windows XP, which is nearing eight years old, or Windows Vista, which is just annoying, you can finally break free: Windows 7 is almost here. Microsoft delivers a slickly designed, vastly improved OS that will warp you to the world of today. This upgrade is big, and it’s hugely recommended for Microsoft users.

When we say big, we mean really BIG — so we’re not going to bombard you with an epic overview covering every single aspect. Rather, today we’ll guide you through an early look at some major new features and enhancements we tested in the almost-final version released last week. And in the weeks leading up to the Oct. 22 launch of Windows 7, we’ll continue posting our impressions, testing more features of the OS on various types of hardware.

We’ll start with interface, move on to performance and usability, and then we’ll conclude with the “funner” stuff. Let’s begin exploring, shall we?

Revamped Interface With Improved Presentation
Upgrading from Windows XP to Windows 7 will be like ditching your old Toyota Camry for a sexy, new Nissan GT-R. Everything from the typography to the icons, and from the toolbar to the windows, has been refined with some extra detail, polish and shadows. Finally, Microsoft creates a clean, modern look that competes with Apple’s finely designed Mac OS X Leopard.

picture-21

To accompany the new look, there are three new features that make the Windows 7 interface pretty groovy: Aero Peek, Aero Snap and Aero Shake. They’re window-management tools, similar to Apple’s Exposé in Mac OS X. Aero Peek is the most significant: When triggered, the feature displays outlines of all your open windows behind your active window; each outlined box contains a thumbnail previewing its corresponding window to help you choose.

Aero Snap (see screenshot above) is pretty cool, too: Drag a window to the right side of the screen, for example, and Aero Snap will automatically adjust the window into a rectangle that takes up the entire right side (same happens if you drag to the left). And Aero Shake is a cute feature: You click and hold onto a window and give it a shake, and any visible windows behind it will disappear (minimize, not close).

A major change appears in the main toolbar glued to the bottom of the screen. Rather than clutter the bottom of your screen with annoying rectangular tabs, your open applications are instead contained in a small square displaying only the icon of each active app. With AeroPeek activated, you can also preview thumbnails of the activity of apps by hovering over their corresponding taskbar icons. That’s certainly a welcome change now that many of us multitaskers enjoy running a multitude of apps at once

If Internet Explorer 8 is your browser of choice, there’s a bonus: Hovering your mouse over the Explorer icon, you’ll be able to preview all the tabs you have open in a stacked view, letting you go directly to the tab you wish to browse.

Then there’s the Start button at the bottom left corner — a feature Windows fans have grown to love. It’s very similar to the old one, functioning almost exactly the same. The main difference is the addition of a gradient to give it a fresher aesthetic. As for functions, a very useful addition to the Start menu is a search bar that instantly appears at the very bottom. This will make finding and launching files a snap.

Performance and Usability
You’ll immediately notice Windows 7 feels a lot faster than its predecessors, and that’s because memory management has been smartly re-engineered. In older versions of Windows, every application you have open is sucking up video memory, even if the windows are minimized. This isn’t the case in Windows 7: The only windows and apps using video memory are those visible on your screen. Windows users are accustomed to closing applications to boost performance, but that’s going to be unnecessary with Windows 7.

Smoother performance would be a waste if usability weren’t improved, too. Windows 7 won’t disappoint. Remember in Windows XP when you hooked up an external hard drive and it was unrecognized, requiring you to search the web to find that stupid effing software driver? Windows 7 includes up-to-date files, which should automatically recognize your device, and in most cases it’ll “just work.” If, for some reason, Windows 7 isn’t compatible with your attached device by default, it’ll search a database for you in an attempt to find a file to install.

Similarly, Windows 7 tries to streamline networking of peripherals, such as printers and scanners, with a feature called HomeGroup. Let’s say you’re running Windows 7 on computer B in your household, and computer A is the one hooked up to a printer in another room. If computer B is on the same network as computer A, Windows 7 will search for the printer driver on computer A and share it with computer B. The same networking feature will also allow you to share folders and files between networked computers. There’s a catch to this seamless networking: HomeGroup is an exclusive Windows 7 feature. So if your other machine is running the Mac OS, or Linux, then forget about it.

setupfilesThere are also some annoyances that will remind you, “This is still Windows.” When plugging in a thumb drive, for example, Windows will ask you what you want to do with it: Play audio, play a movie, or open the folder to view its files. It’s a thumb drive, for God’s sake: Recognize it and just open the damn folder! After receiving such notifications you can tell Windows 7 to automatically perform one of the aforementioned functions when a specific type of device is attached (see screenshot at right), but we wish the OS would just know what to do.

We also found the software-compatibility checker to be kind of lame. For example, when we downloaded TweetDeck, a .air file which requires Adobe Air, Windows 7 didn’t recognize the file extension and offered to do a search for compatible software. That search did not discover Adobe Air — a pretty popular format — so we were disappointed.

“Funner” Stuff

desktop
We were vastly entertained by the desktop backgrounds included with Windows 7. They’re freaky, bizarre, fascinating, disturbing and, in some odd way, beautiful at the same time. We’re speaking specifically of the wallpapers in the “Characters” section, illustrations that Microsoft collected from artists around the world.  Take a gander at the screenshots above and below to see for yourself.
desktop2

Microsoft improves on the entertainment experience, too. Windows Media Center gets a utilitarian makeover that looks a tad like Apple’s Front Row (and we’re not complaining). The revamped program makes it easy to browse your movies, photos, music and so on by tapping a few keys. Nice big thumbnails display previews of your media to make your collection look nice and perdy.

A feature we have yet to test (once we get the proper hardware) with Windows Media Center is the new media-streaming capability. If you have a Wi-Fi enabled TV, you’ll be able to seamlessly stream your Windows Media Center content onto the television set. This should make piracy a blast.

More to Come
We’ll continue exploring the intricacies of Windows 7 in the next few weeks. Coming up next: Windows 7 touchscreen support; an in-depth look at the Windows 7 Media Center, including NetFlix streaming; and tips on multitasking with Aero. Stay tuned.

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Experimental Tech Turns Your Coffee Table Into a Universal Remote

Monday, August 17th, 2009

cristal1

Stock up on coasters. A new technology combines the coffee table with a universal remote so that people sitting around the table can tap on a screen to change the channel, turn up the volume or dim the lights.

CRISTAL (Control of Remotely Interfaced Systems using Touch-based Actions in Living spaces) is a research project in user interface that attempts to create a natural way of connecting with devices. The system offers a streaming video view of the living room on a tabletop, so users can can walk up to it, see the layout of the room and interact with the TV or the photo frame.

“We wanted a social aspect to activities such as choosing what to watch on TV and we wanted to make the process easy and intuitive,” says Stacey Scott, assistant professor at the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada, and a member of the project. A demo of CRISTAL was shown at the Siggraph graphics conference earlier this month.

The idea isn’t completely novel. Microsoft showed off Surface, a multitouch display in 2008 that allows users to interact with it by using gestures.

Universal remotes have become popular in the last few years, but they are still difficult to use. Their greatest flaw, though, may be that they do not help quash those battles over who gets the remote.  CRISTAL solves those problems, says Christian Müller-Tomfelde, an Australian researcher who is currently writing a book on research in tabletop displays.

“It is a clever use of the tabletop as a ‘world-in-miniature’ interface to control room elements,” he says.

Scott and researchers from the Upper Austria University of Applied Sciences have been working on the idea for less than a year. It started when Michael Haller, the head of the Media Interaction Lab at the university, found himself frustrated with different remotes for each device: TV, radio and DVD player.

“Every time you get a new device into the living room, you get a new remote with it,” says Scott. “And instead of difficult programmable universal remotes, this offers intuitive mapping of the different devices and home.”

CRISTAL uses a camera to capture the living room and all the devices in it, including lamps and digital picture frames. The captured video is displayed on the multi-touch coffee table. The video image of the device itself is the interface, so a sliding gesture on the image can turn up the volume of the TV, for instance. To watch a movie, drag an image of the movie cover and drop it on to the TV on the multitouch screen.

But it will be a few years before this remote is available at Best Buy. It could take five to 10 years before affordable multitouch tabletops can be created for consumers, says Müller-Tomfelde. “The investment to get such a coffee-table display into the living room is not to be underestimated, as we can see with Microsoft’s Surface technology,” he says.

Scott estimates that a tabletop remote such as CRISTAL could cost $10,000 to $15,000. But she is confident that the idea can become viable enough for consumer production in a few years, especially if it can be combined with Microsoft’s Surface product.

Check out a video demo of CRISTAL below.

Photo and video: Media Interaction Lab

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New Archos 2 Vision PMP

Monday, August 17th, 2009

archos-2-vision-mp3-rm-engArchos has just released its latest PMP in Europe and they’ve called it the Archos 2 Vision PMP.

While its diminutive size, slick looks and features may appeal to many, the battery life may not be as welcome – 10 hours audio and 4 hours video.

Other than that the interface looks simple enough to use and will be a decent competitor in the PMP market.

Some Features on the Archos 2 Vision PMP:

  • Screen size 2-inches
  • 220 x 176 resolution display
  • Tactile slider for menu navigation and volume control
  • Credit card size
  • FM Tuner and recorder
  • Micro SD memory card slot
  • Internal memory
  • Support for MP3  / WMA audio and AVI video
  • Battery life Audio : 10 hours, Video : 4 hours

Currently available only in Europe. Rest of the world to follow soon.

Via Engadget

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Tags: Archos, Archos 2 Vision, Archos 2 Vision PMP, PMP, Portable Media Player



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Casio announces Privia PX-330

Monday, August 17th, 2009

casio-px-330

With everything going digital these days, it comes across as no surprise to see Casio release yet another digital grand piano onto the market half a dozen years after they made the initial foray with the Privia line, offering a lightweight portable instrument with the sound and feel of a grand piano minus the grand price tag. The latest in the digital revolution effort is spearheaded by the Privia PX-330, where it will bring together unprecedented audio quality and performance while looking sleek. Musicians will find that the new grand piano sound offered in the PX-330 is made up of a quartet of dynamic layers of stereo piano samples. More realistic sound with seamless transitions and a superior dynamic range is on the tables when integrated with Casio’s Linear Morphing System .In addition, a new Tri-Sensor 88-note scaled hammer action keyboard is capable of offering users the weight, feel and resistance of a grand piano without having to turn it into something bulky that only the Incredible Hulk could lug around.

Unless you’re some weird and crazy musical genius, the Casio PX-330 is equipped with 128-note polyphony that ought to be able to cater to even the most demanding musical passages without missing a beat, and you can go on layering sounds while using the damper pedal without worrying about dropping notes. The inclusion of an acoustic Resonance Effect will further simulate the sound of the dampers released off the strings by the sustain pedal, bringing realism to an entirely new level.

The Casio PX-330 will also come with 250 instrument sounds and a 16-track recorder, allowing budding and seasoned musicians alike the ability to churn out recordings of up to 16 separate instruments. There is a graphic LCD display available that provides vital information to users at a glance, where one can check out the names of all sounds, songs, rhythms in a jiffy while helping assist in editing and recording functions. Instead of the old floppy disk of yore, the Casio PX-330 relies on the SD memory card format to load and store your compositions while transferring them over to another computer. Connectivity options include a built-in USB MIDI interface, ¼” outputs for connectivity to mixers and PA systems and a built-in registration memory. Expect to pick up the Casio PX-330 for $799.99 this September.

Press Release


Tech Cult – We cover the latest tech news, but always with a funny twist.
[ Casio announces Privia PX-330 copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]




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