Archive for the ‘hands-on’ Category
Friday, August 29th, 2008
Filed under: Displays, HDTV, Home Entertainment
We’re still pondering the difference between Toshiba’s Cell-based Resolution+ technology and its “good enough for everybody else” XDE tech, but we got a look at Resolution+ today — featured in Toshiba’s new ZF575 Regza TVs — and it seems to work well enough. Unlike XDE, which is designed with DVDs in mind to mess with contrast and colors, in addition to sharpness, Resolution+ just focuses on sharpness, for a multitude of SD inputs, and seems to do a decent job of it. Comparison shots up ahead, don’t poke your eye on any jaggies!
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Original post by Paul Miller
Posted in resolution, eyes-on, zf, regza, zf575, hands-on, features, ifa 2008, Ifa2008, lcd, Toshiba, ifa | No Comments »
Friday, August 29th, 2008
Filed under: Digital Cameras, Displays
Toshiba is pulling an EyeToy, minus a diabolical plan to actually sell the thing and make a killing off of collectable elemental decks. The company’s Cambridge-based Research Lab has some new video camera-based feature they’re prototyping for possible eventual TV implementation. The real highlight is a fist-based cursor control — just stick out your hand, make a fist, and control a cursor on-screen for navigating the TV’s functions. You can also put up your palm to stop the madness, and even rotate 3D images on-screen, but it’s all a little shaky for now. Another thing we saw was picture recognition: hold up a cue card to the TV with an image on it and the TV recognizes it and performs a pre-assigned function. Tosh is also working on speech recognition and some other things; not really changing the world, but some fun stuff all the same.
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Original post by Paul Miller
Posted in eyetoy, prototype, gesture, gesture control, GestureControl, hands-on, features, ifa, ifa 2008, Ifa2008, Toshiba, research | No Comments »
Friday, August 29th, 2008
Filed under: Portable Audio, Portable Video

In a stunning attempt at making us afraid to pick up another Samsung DAP ever again, Samsung’s set-up for its new YP-Q1 and YP-U4 players was in the ass end of the huge Samsung hall at IFA, with lights enough to cook a chicken and some technical errors to boot. For starters, the Q1 (pictured) is just a pain to use, with capacitive touch controls that only work through tapping in the four directions (or center for select), instead a more natural scrolling motion. The screen is nothing special, and the interface seems a step back from Samsung’s other full-featured DAPs. If we were to say anything positive, the Q1 does feel nice and solid in the hand, but it’s nowhere near as thin or sexy as it could / should be. The U4 we tested wasn’t charged, and had rather infuriating surface and side controls that made us a little happy it wasn’t. It’s nowhere near as sexy in person as it was in those press shots, and could do to lose a few millimeters here and there.
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Original post by Paul Miller
Posted in hands-on, yp-q1, yp-u4, features, Ifa2008, ifa, ifa 2008, samsung | No Comments »
Friday, August 29th, 2008
Filed under: Portable Audio, Wireless
TrekStor has this interesting piece of kit on display at IFA, the Wireless SoundBox. It all starts with a USB stick attached to the computer. From there, your music is streamed wirelessly at a distance up to 25-meters to up to 20 of the boxy, 2.4GHz speakers. The 4x battery (AA, presumably) speakers feature a nice to touch, “softtouch” coating, individual volume controls, and line-in for connecting audio sources directly. The sound quality was about on par with what we’d expect from such a tiny speaker but the range was quite good considing the level of public 2.4GHz noise on the IFA show floor. €50 (about $74) takes home the stereo starter set (USB stick and 2x speakers) with each additional speaker costing €30 (about $44) starting in October. See our attempt to run away with ‘em after the break.
Continue reading Video: TrekStor’s Wireless SoundBox is wireless sound in a box
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Original post by Thomas Ricker
Posted in soundbox, wireless soundbox, WirelessSoundbox, 2.4ghz, trekstor, ifa 2008, Ifa2008, hands-on, ifa | No Comments »
Friday, August 29th, 2008
Filed under: Laptops
There’s no nice way to say this, Fujitsu-Siemens: your Amilo Mini’s keyboard flexes like a trampoline. Sure, there’s an Atom processor inside here, a great 9-inch screen and some other fine tech specs, but in general this netbook just feels like a shoddy piece of work, and we expect more from a top-tier manufacturer (you do desire to be a top-tier manufacturer, right?) Take those trackpad-flanking mouse buttons, for example: how are we supposed to work ‘em? Have you ever attempted to use this laptop? Let’s hope Dell’s Inspiron 910 can lift this form factor up from the mire and give it a shot at actually outlasting this faddish stage — netbooks like this just aren’t going to cut it.
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Original post by Paul Miller
Posted in hands-on, amilo mini, AmiloMini, features, fujitsu-siemens, ifa, ifa 2008, Ifa2008, netbook | No Comments »
Friday, August 29th, 2008
Filed under: Displays, HDTV
While Panny’s 150-inch plasma from CES gets its very own room at the Panasonic booth, the new “budget-friendly” TH-103PZ800 103-inch plasma was relegated to a bit part in the back row of an artsy, rock garden-planted collection of displays. We don’t have much to say about the actual display, and we’re sure that anyone planning to drop $50k on one will be doing a bit more than taking our word for it anyways, but trust us when we tell you that the 150-incher makes the 103 look like a tiny pretend television for tiny pretend people.
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Original post by Paul Miller
Posted in eyes-on, 103-inch, TH-103PZ800, hands-on, features, ifa, ifa 2008, Ifa2008, panasonic | No Comments »
Friday, August 29th, 2008
Filed under: Digital Cameras, HDTV
We got a look at Sony’s new HD-shootin’, 10.1 megapixel Cyber-shot T500 today, and it seems to do what it says on the box. There was no Memory Stick in the display version, so we couldn’t test out any HD recording, but the touchscreen interface did seem responsive, and mode switching from stills to video is a snap. Perhaps it was the lighting we were under, but the large LCD did seem to flicker a bit, and wasn’t stunningly bright either, but otherwise we’re big fans of the build quality of the device. Fashioncam this is not — there’s some heft, bulk and sharp edges here that will keep it away from your skinny jeans — but the T500 is a fine entry from Sony, and at $399 it’s pretty well priced for what it can do.
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Original post by Paul Miller
Posted in hands-on, Cybershot, T500, features, Cyber-shot, ifa, ifa 2008, Ifa2008, sony | No Comments »
Friday, August 29th, 2008
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
A spec sheet is well and good (and trust us, these spec sheets are that), but when we’re talking Blu-ray players it’s really becoming a question of price: when will they drop? Well, if these Europe prices for the DMB-BD35 and DMB-BD55 from Panasonic are any indication, Panasonic’s answer is “not yet.” The BD35 is being priced at 399 Euro, while the BD55 will go for 499 Euro. Our guess is the conversion rates ($588 and $735, respectively) won’t apply here when these get shipped over to the States, but even at $399 and $499 these well-specced players aren’t doing themselves any favors in a Blu-ray market dominated by the PS3. There’s really nothing to say about actual “hands-on” impressions of these two, though we would like to say that we scoured Panny’s booth for the DMR-BR360V Blu-ray / VHS combo and were sad to come away empty handed, our tattered copy of “Titanic” unwatched.
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Original post by Paul Miller
Posted in eyes-on, dmp-bd35, dmp-bd55, hands-on, Ifa2008, panasonic, ifa, ifa 2008, blu-ray | No Comments »
Friday, August 29th, 2008
Filed under: Portable Audio, Portable Video
As good as the
SPINN is, we can’t rave about iriver’s newest PMP, the P20 launching today at IFA. Looks like our early excitement about the product back at CES was misplaced. First off, it’s big — a true brick by today’s PMP standards. Also, we’re not sold on the implementation of the SPINN interface here. The P20 uses a combination of vertical and horizontally placed thumb wheels, an “ok” button (why not just press in the thumbwheel like on the SPINN?), and touchscreen AMOLED — a heap of overly-complex overkill based on our admittadly, limited time with the device. The touchscreen was also rendered unusable by menus only accessible by the thumbwheels as well as an incredibly high bezel framing the display thus inhibiting screen touches along the edges. As to the specs, it’s everything we heard: 4.1-inch 480 x 272 pixel display, FM tuner, TV-out, voice recording, and integrated DMB TV option, 80GB or 120GB hard disk, and Li-Polymer battery for 12-hours of audio, 9-hours of video, or 8-hours of DMB in a 130 x 97 x 20.5-mm slab.
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Original post by Thomas Ricker
Posted in hands-on, amoled, p20, features, oled, ifa, ifa 2008, Ifa2008, iriver | No Comments »
Friday, August 29th, 2008
Filed under: Portable Audio, Portable Video

We’ve seen iriver’s SPINN (above between the HTC Touch Dual and iPhone 3G) floating around Korea in pics and video for a few weeks now. But damn if this little 3.3-inch DAP doesn’t make a distinct impression in person. Of course, you’ve heard the term “iPod killer” tossed around for years with obvious effect. But this, this little SPINN with brilliant OLED display and up to 16GB of storage looks to be device-for-device superior to the bigger iPod touch. The SPINN navigation is very well implemented and allows for natural and precise one-handed operation with heavy tactile control — touchscreen too if that’s your preference. Of course, making an iPod killer is about more than just the device — it’s the ecosystem of PC software, third party accessories, and daunting global distribution and retail model which faces any upstart vendor. On sale now in Korea, iriver hopes to address the latter piece of the puzzle as they prepare for a global (US, UK, and Europe) launch in September and October — assuming they can sort out the necessary distribution / retail channels this week at IFA.
Continue reading Video: Hands-on iriver’s SPINN, the first true iPod killer
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Original post by Thomas Ricker
Posted in oled, hands-on, spinn, dap, Ifa2008, iriver, ifa, ifa 2008, video | No Comments »
Thursday, August 28th, 2008
Filed under: GPS, Transportation

Ford invited us to its swanky Premier Auto Group headquarters in Irvine, California to talk about the future of Sync and demo the latest iteration of their infotainment platform coupled with Sirius Travel Link. According to the company, Sync v2.0 debuts in November, bringing tighter integration with Ford’s syncmyride.com portal, providing owners with in-depth online vehicle health reports. Also in the cards is E911 support, which automatically places an emergency call as soon as the vehicle detects airbag deployment. Sync 3, scheduled to debut “sometime in 2009,” will bring traffic, news, sports and weather to Ford vehicles without requiring navigation or a monthly subscription. On the infotainment front, however, 2009 Ford vehicles with the navigation option can subscribe to Sirius Travel Link for $7 a month, enabling real-time traffic info, coast to coast weather, local gas station listings sorted by price, movie show-times and sports scores. Peep the gallery below for a smorgasbord of screens.
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Original post by Dante Cesa
Posted in ford sync, FordSync, SIRIUS Travel Link, SiriusTravelLink, sirius, hands-on, nav, navi, navigation, ford, Microsoft | No Comments »
Thursday, August 28th, 2008
Filed under: Laptops

We’re not just staring down a boring press release of Samsung’s new X360, we actually got to fiddle around with it for a few minutes and came away fairly impressed. It has a build somewhere in-between the plastic-ish Voodoo Envy 133 and the rock-solid ThinkPad X300, though probably closer to the latter, and the sheen of Silver Nano Technology on the technology saves us from bacteria but adds a slightly cheap flavor to the keyboard. The isolated keys aren’t as deep as those found on Sony’s latest models, nor not quite as crisp as an Apple keyboard, but should make for a comfortable typing experience. The port layout seems reasonable, the LED-backlit screen bright and not-too-terribly-glossy, and the brushed metal finish on the back is surely a nice touch. We didn’t play much with the Korean OS, but Samsung claims the next-gen 128GB SSD offers a 25-50 percent boot time bump. Up against the MacBook Air the X360 is significantly thicker, but actually a tiny bit (3 ounces) lighter. We’ll leave it to you to decide the victor while we swap USB devices willy nilly in an attempt to finish this post.
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Original post by Paul Miller
Posted in hands-on, ultraportable, x360, features, Ifa2008, ifa, ifa 2008, samsung | No Comments »
Thursday, August 28th, 2008
Filed under: Digital Cameras
We’ve seen pictures of Sony’s
ODO Twirl N’ Take, wind-up camera before. Here in Berlin, we actually had a chance to take this eco-friendly digicam for a spin. Ha, get it? We said
spin to refer to this kinetic concept camera! Amazing.
Anyway, enough with our overly-tired, undernourished gibberish, the full-on hands-on is posted after the break.
Continue reading Video: Sony’s ODO wind-up camera really works
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Original post by Thomas Ricker
Posted in twirl and take, odo, twirl n take, TwirlAndTake, TwirlNTake, hands-on, features, ifa, ifa 2008, Ifa2008, concept, sony | No Comments »
Thursday, August 28th, 2008
Filed under: Displays, HDTV

The
wraps are off and we’ve had a chance to get eyes on with Sony’s new Bravia Z4500 1080p LCD. While Japan unveiled the world’s first
MotionFlow 240Hz set, this is similar, just 40 frames per second slower. That didn’t stop Sony from making the claim that the Z4500, “provides the smoothest and crispest motion reproduction to be achieved by an LCD TV.” Of course, both are multiples of the industry standard 50/60Hz. Sony’s being coy with the measurements and the price of this set, but with the show model listed as KDL-52Z4500, we’re guessing 52, kid-captivating inches of silky smooth video that looks so good, you may never have to parent again. “Look into the spiral Jimmy, good critter.”
We’ve got a comparison video after the break: 200Hz Motionflow on the left, your father’s 50Hz on the right. We could defintely see the difference in the uh, highly controlled demo. Question is: can you when this thing shows up at the local big box before Xmas.
Continue reading Video: Sony’s 200Hz MotionFlow Bravia Z4500 tricks kids into sitting even closer to the TV
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Original post by Thomas Ricker
Posted in bravia, z4500, hands-on, Ifa2008, ifa 2008, ifa | No Comments »
Thursday, August 28th, 2008
Filed under: Laptops
A USB shuffle here, a logo swap there and here’s what you get, the MSI, uh hem, LG X110. Sporting a fairly obvious MSI Wind base, LG’s X110 is making its first appearance in Berlin. Prices will range from €399 to €499 (about $590 to $738) which takes home an 8.9-inch display, 120GB disk (6GB SSD option), 1GB of RAM, and choice of built-in 3G HSDPA and GPS modules. Yes, XP running atop a 1.6GHz Atom processor, too. On sale in Europe at the end of September.
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Original post by Thomas Ricker
Posted in hands-on, X110, Wind, MSI, LG | No Comments »