LightPad G1 – Turn Your Phone Into A Notebook
The LightPad G1 will rely on pico projector technology, transferring image onto a screen that measures 11' by including the projector’s innards behind. This will be an energy efficient configuration, where displaying 500 nits of brightness translates to just 2.5 watts of juice required. It comes in a thin and svelte form factor that would up the portability ante, and you will also be able to use a wall or other equivalent surfaces as a projector’s display to show im ... »
Samsung Smart Window – A Giant Transparent Screen
Samsung has something very interesting over at CES this year called Smart Window -- a transparent screen which wraps the whole “minority report” experience right up. This transparent screen will fit any window up to 46 inches at a resolution of 1366 x 768 and it’s fully controlled by your touch. Folks who are outside will not be able to know just what you are viewing, other than wondering how come you are daydreaming all the time from your room or store window. ... »
Casio New Hybrid LED-Laser Slim Projectors
Casio announced six new models in its SLIM line of hybrid LED-laser projectors at the Consumer Electronics Show this week: the XJ-A141, XJ-A146, XJ-A241, XJ-A246, XJ-A251 and XJ-A256. Featuring slim bodies and weighing in at only 5 pounds, these 1.7' high projectors are compact yet powerful at the same time -- makes them the thinnest high-brightness projectors in the industry The SLIM projectors are available in a range of resolutions, brightness and connectivity option ... »
10-Core Ivy Bridge-EP CPU Has 95W TDP at 2.4GHz
Intel dubbed Ivy Bridge-EP (successor of Sandy Bridge-E architecture), which will feature up to 10 processing cores. Scheduled to be released no sooner than 2013, an engineering sample of such a CPU has recently been detailed by a leaked CPU-Z screenshot published by Hardcore Hardware. The 1.59 version of CPU-Z correctly recognized this chip as an Ivy Bridge-EP/EX processor and reveals that it packs 10-cores with Hyper-Threading support working at a base frequency of 2. ... »
Haier 22 & 46-inch Transparent HDTV
At CES 2012, Haier is showing off a device which you can see right through it, as part of its "Future Technologies" portfolio of products. They give an option to choose from a 22' or 46' model, depending on your budget and size of your room. This Brilliant TV was made using the OLED Technology featuring a resolution of 1680 x 1050. company claims that this TV is 15% more efficient in power consumption than LED TV’s. Apart from that, do expect decent viewing angles ... »
iPad 3 – Retina Display, Quad-Core A6 CPU and LTE
Bloomberg reports via Twitter that production of the next generation tablet is supposed to have started this month. Rumors indicate that the next device will sport a super-fast quad-core processor whilst being Apple’s first delve into the 4G/LTE wireless network for nifty download speeds. The iPad is in production over in China, with Pegatron taking the lion’s share of responsibilities whilst long-serving iDevice machine Foxconn churns out around one sixth of the q ... »
HZO Says – Future Gadgets Could Be Be Water-Resistant
Have you ever dropped your iPhone or any other electronic gadget for that matter into the toilet? Chances are that when it dried out it probably didn’t work or likely not function the way it should. At CES 2012, HzO announced a new method of waterproofing electronic devices called WaterBlock. According to HzO’s Waterblock technology, a thin film nano-coating can provide a clear and near invisible layer of protection over the vital electronic circuitry within. Tha ... »
Sony is showing a concept design for an upcoming ultrabook at CES, that looks a lot like its current VAIO Z but it’s behind glass, Sony Vaio laptop follows Intel’s guidelines for ultrabooks it will likely measures less than 0.8 inches thick, weigh less than 4 pounds, and have a Sandy Bridge or Ivy Bridge processor. The 13 inch laptop has 2 USB ports including 1 USB 3.0 port. There’s also an HDMI port, VGA port, headphone jack, Ethernet jack, and a card reader whic ... »