Archive for the ‘OpticalIllusion’ Category

Samsung Soul promo video shows 10 optical illusions in 136 seconds

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

Filed under:

We’ll be frank — we really have no idea what Samsung’s getting at with its freshest Soul promotional video, but it’s certainly a fine piece of eye candy if nothing else. Put simply, the video shows a maniac darting about demonstrating ten optical illusions in just over two minutes, and in case you couldn’t guess, the Soul is saved for last. Should we have prefaced that bit with a spoiler warning? Too bad — vid’s still waiting after the jump if you’re interested, though.

[Thanks, Joel]

Continue reading Samsung Soul promo video shows 10 optical illusions in 136 seconds

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph

85% of Chinese Likes Censorship

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

cynagh0st writes “A Pew Internet & American Life Project report indicates that of an overwhelming majority of Chinese people that believed the internet should be “managed or controlled,” 85% want the government to do this managing. This is resulting from surveys on internet use over the last 7 years in China. ‘The survey findings discussed here, drawn from a broad-based sample of urban Chinese internet users and non-users alike, indicate a degree of comfort and even approval of the notion that the government authorities should control and manage the content available on the internet.’ The report goes further into describing the divide in perspective between China and Western Nations on the matter and discusses the PRC’s justifications for internet control.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by CmdrTaco

85% of Chinese Citizens Like Internet Censorship

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

cynagh0st writes “A Pew Internet & American Life Project report indicates that of an overwhelming majority of Chinese people that believed the Internet should be ‘managed or controlled,’ 85% want the government to do this managing. This is resulting from surveys on Internet use over the last seven years in China. ‘The survey findings discussed here, drawn from a broad-based sample of urban Chinese Internet users and non-users alike, indicate a degree of comfort and even approval of the notion that the government authorities should control and manage the content available on the Internet.’ The report goes further into describing the divide in perspective between China and Western Nations on the matter and discusses the PRC’s justifications for Internet control.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by CmdrTaco

Mormon Church Goes After WikiLeaks

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

An anonymous reader writes “The Mormon Church has instructed its lawyers to gag the Internet over WikiLeaks’ release of the 1968 and 1999 versions of its confidential handbook for Church leaders. Apart from attacking WikiLeaks, legal demands were sent to Jimmy Wales of the WikiMedia foundation for a WikiNews article merely linking to the material, and scribd.com has also been censored. WikiLeaks has (of course) refused to remove the documents.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by CmdrTaco

China to Regulate Internet Map Publishing

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

hackingbear writes “After text, pictures, and videos, China starts regulating Internet map publishing (here is the google translation.) The government believes that Internet maps can represent the state’s sovereignty and its political and diplomatic positions in the international community — and consequently, inaccurate maps could harm national interests and dignity, produce bad political influences, reveal national secrete and harm national security, in addition to harming consumer interests. So from now on, publishing maps would require approval and (yet another) license from the state survey bureau. That means Google, Yahoo, etc., need to remove China from the map; or maybe they just pay up some officials and their agents to acquire yet another license. And our newest 80Gbps DPI monsters need to be upgraded to identify maps together with porn.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by timothy

Author Faces Canadian Tribunal For Hate Speech

Saturday, May 10th, 2008

An anonymous reader writes “A Seattle Times editorial notes that the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal will put author Mark Steyn on trial for his book ‘America Alone,’ which has angered Muslims in Canada. Steyn is a columnist for the Canadian magazine Maclean’s. According to the editorial, British Columbia bans all words and images ‘likely to expose a person… to hatred or contempt because of race, religion, age, disability, sex, marital status or sexual orientation.’ Steyn is unapologetic, and is advertising his book as a ‘Canadian Hate Crime’ and daring the tribunal to ‘pronounce him bad.’” The Canadian tabloid the National Post has coverage of what it calls “a media storm.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by kdawson

China Wants US-Owned Hotels to Censor Internet

Monday, May 5th, 2008

jp_papin writes “The Chinese government is demanding that US-owned hotels there filter Internet service during the upcoming Olympic Games in Beijing, US Senator Sam Brownback has alleged. The Chinese government is requiring US-owned hotels to install Internet filters to ‘monitor and restrict information coming in and out of China,’ Brownback said Thursday. ‘This is an insult to the spirit of the games and an affront to American businesses,’ he said. ‘I call on China to immediately rescind this demand.’ US State Department spokesman Tom Casey said he wasn’t aware of those specific requests from the Chinese government, but Brownback said he got the information on Internet filtering from ‘two different reliable but confidential sources.’ The State Department is apparently continuing dialog with China about freedom of expression.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by timothy

Jack Thompson’s Letter To Take-Two Exec’s Mother

Sunday, May 4th, 2008

debatem1 writes “Apparently, anti-violent-video-games crusader Jack Thompson is at it again, this time writing a letter to the mother of Strauss Zelnick, Chairman of Take-Two, the company that produces the GTA series of video games. In it he compares Zelnick to a member of the Hitler Youth, advocates beating the young Zelnick, and contemplates the existence of a Ted Bundy merit badge for boy scouts.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by timothy

Room for one more? Panasonic wiggles into OLED TV game

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Filed under: , ,

Alright, we get it. SED actually is not the wave of the future for televisions, but OLED most probably is. At present, we’ve got Sony, Toshiba, Samsung and LG Display (among others) all vying for your future dollars, and since competition in the HDTV space is so grand for consumers, we won’t be kvetching too much about yet another entrant. DigiTimes has it that Matsushita (parent company of Panasonic) is looking to begin production of OLED displays “in the future.” That’s it. No juicy clues as to when, no inside information about panel sizes — nothing. Just enough to tease you and leave you in a state of panic for the foreseeable future.

[Via OLED Display]

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph

Pioneer, Panasonic reach basic agreement on Kuro production, first new displays due fall ‘09

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Filed under: ,

Pioneer and Matsushita (Panasonic) have finally hammered out the basics of a deal that will allow the latter to supply panels for future Kuro plasma displays, and plasma HDTV fans to breathe easy again. Pending a final agreement in May, dollars and cents remain undisclosed, but we can expect a fusion of Panasonic’s current “Neo PDP” technology from its Viera line when they begin production May 2009 in Amagasaki before hitting shelves in the fall. Kuro will still be maintained as a premium brand (with a premium price) with different image processing, while both companies plan to keep working together on reducing power consumption and the infinite black level plasma. Pioneer still plans future Kuro LCD HDTVs based on panels from Sharp,but it’ll also apparently have access to IPS technology from Panasonic’s tie-up with Canon and Hitachi. See? We told you it’d be okay.

[Via AV Watch]

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Richard Lawler

Panasonic’s flash-based HDC-SD9 HD camcorder gets reviewed

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Filed under: ,

Although Panasonic’s HDC-SD9 is mighty, mighty small, reviewers over at CNET felt that it fell short in a number of key areas. For starters, Panny included a few quirky design choices; for instance, removing the battery requires the LCD cover to be open, but doing so can also turn the camera on unless you place it in a different mode. Granted, the minuscule size didn’t leave the outfit too much to work with, but if you’re easily flustered by these type niggles, you can run far, far away right now. As for image quality, critics noted that still shots were marginally better than awful, but capturing full motion HD clips was something it did manage to do relatively well. Still, no one handling this critter was enthusiastically shouting for joy when all was said and done, so do yourself a favor and eye the review down there before clicking that order button.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph

Panasonic’s Lumix DMC-TZ50 gets official in US: Picasa / T-Mobile HotSpot-friendly

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

Filed under:

Panny’s Lumix DMC-TZ50 isn’t brand new or anything — after all, we first caught wind of this WiFi-equipped point-and-shoot late last month in Japan. Nevertheless, Panasonic is now announcing that said camera will be heading Stateside with 802.11b/g capabilities, access to T-Mobile HotSpot service and the ability to upload photos directly to Google’s Picasa Web Albums — exactly like we saw at CES. Specs wise, you’ll find a 9.1-megapixel sensor, 10x optical zoom, 28mm wide-angle lens, 720p movie mode, SD expansion slot, video output, red-eye correction, optical image stabilization, the Venus Engine IV and a 3.0-inch LCD monitor to boot. Unfortunately, there’s still no word on when (or if) this technology will filter out to more Panasonic models, but folks interested in this here camera can pick one up next month for $449.95.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph

Panasonic launches 64GB P2 card, AJ-PCD35 ExpressCard adapter

Monday, April 14th, 2008

Filed under: ,

Now that you’re already penning a purchase requisition for one of those fancy new P2 HD camcorders, you might as well toss a couple of Panny’s new 64GB P2 cards (model AJ-P2C064) and its AJ-PCD35 ExpressCard adapter on there, too. Yep, Panasonic has chosen NAB Show 2008 to double up on its current 32GB P2 card and to introduce a five-slot P2 memory drive with an ExpressCard interface. Put simply, the latter can hold all five cards from a fully-loaded VariCam 2700 / 3700 camcorder (or any other P2 rig) and give users the ability to upload content on the go with their ExpressCard-equipped laptop. Regrettably, the company didn’t bother doling out dollar figures just yet, but we’d go ahead and file ‘em both under “expensive.”

[Via I4U News]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph

Panasonic reveals trio of P2 HD camcorders at NAB

Monday, April 14th, 2008

Filed under: ,

Panasonic’s AG-HMC150 HD camcorder is fine and dandy if you’re cool with hauling around a couple SDHC cards, but for those with bigger budgets and loftier dreams, the trio of P2 rigs debuting at NAB Show are likely to be entirely more suitable. Starting things up is the VariCam 2700 (model AJ-HPX2700) and VariCam 3700 (model AJ-HPX3700; pictured), which both feature native HD resolutions, five P2 card slots, master-quality 10-bit 4:2:2 AVC-Intra 100 recording, variable frame rates in one-frame increments, HD-SDI outputs and a multi-gamma function including Film-Rec. As for the latter, it steps things up to full 1,920 x 1,080 support while boasting a trio of HD-SDI outs (versus two on the VariCam 2700). Lastly, we’ve got the 4.2-pound AG-HPX170, which reflects the HMC150 in a variety of ways but utilizes a pair of P2 slots in order to log those high-def captures. Mum’s the word on pricing for the Fall-bound family, but do yourself a favor and hit the read link for lots more details on each.

[Via Broadcast Newsroom]

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph

Panasonic unveils SDHC-lovin’ AG-HMC150 HD camcorder

Monday, April 14th, 2008

Filed under: ,

If you thought the HD camcorder announcements at NAB Show 2008 started and ended with Canon’s new duo, you’d be sorely mistaken. Panasonic is launching a new one of its own under the limelight: the Fall-bound AG-HMC150. This handheld rig is the newest member of the AVCCAM family and can capture clips at 1,280 x 720 or 1,440 x 1,080 while utilizing the industry standard MPEG-4 AVC / H.264 compression profile. You’ll also find native 16:9 1 / 3-inch 3CCD imagers, a digital signal processor with 14-bit A / D conversion and 19-bit processing, 13x Leica Dicomar zoom lens, optical image stabilization and the ability to store footage on SD / SDHC flash cards. Sure, $4,500 is still a lot of coin, but it’s certainly within the realm of reason for many prosumers out there.

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Original post by Darren Murph


Developages - Development and Technology Blog

Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS and Subscribe to Developages by Email.