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High tech surfboard gets smartphone parts

One collaboration between Pukas Surfboards and Tecnalia Technology is putting data capturing components like a gyroscope, accelerometers and GPS, (commonly found in smartphones) into surfboards to help push the design further. The idea is to quantify the forces on the board during use and translate that into a better understanding of what the boards encounter. more »

Bifocals just became extinct – thanks electronically charged LCD crystals!

If you think a pair of glasses taped together at the nose bridge was geeky, then PixelOptics has just upped the ante with their EmPower glasses. These glasses feature a bit more than glass and plastic to make your vision better. On board, the glasses sport an accelerometer, battery, and focusing lenses. Forget today’s bifocal more »

Sony VAIO P notebook gets an update, now has an accelerometer and more

Sony has just rolled out an updated version of the VAIO P notebook for the European market. The new model is similar to the past, but has a few new additional features and some bright new exterior colors. One of the most interesting was the addition of the accelerometer. With that you can use the more »

Augmented reality android app: Wikitude

In what has to be the worst name ever for any app, not just Android, Wikitude by Mobilizy offers something extremely unique: augmented reality. In addition to being a POI (point of interest) search companion, the tool makes use of all the on-board hardware on the G1: GPS, accelerometer, data connection, camera among others. In my opinion, this is the coolest thing on the G1 phone.

The remarkable augmented reality is basically like looking through a pair of binoculars that identifies landmarks and provides snippets of information from Wikipedia about them (video below). Imagine you are traveling through Europe, as you are prone to do, and whip out your G1 and activate Wikitude which tells you the bar you are drinking in was visited by Napoleon. Instantly, you’ve got your own tour guide.

See what else this cool piece of software does.

Update: Google *not* playing favorites with Android

Last month, I asked whether Google would start to pay favorites with respect to designing and upgrading their products now that the Android phone was out. Today, I learn that Google Earth for iPhone became available yesterday as a free application from the App Store. There is no Android version, yet.

The Google team seems very excited about putting the world in your pocket via the iPhone. A quick tour of the application shows it augments the native Google Maps application that comes with every iPhone and iPod touch. An accelerometer based trick allows you to tilt the phone to get a 3D view, panning up or down as you tilt. It’s quite a neat trick. A bare bones search function is also available, though in my test the very same results were brought up in Maps.

Keep reading to see a video of the app in action and more.

Olympus wants you to get your tap on with their new Stylus 1050 SW

Compact, rugged, and with a price tag that won’t break the bank, the newest model of outdoor ready compact cameras by Olympus has a clever little feature that they invite users to tap into. Yeah, ok…so I’m sure by now you’ve figured out it has something to do with tapping, right? Well, correct you are.

Usually, one does NOT want to bump, bang, or ever tap their camera any more than necessary. In the case of the Stylus 1050 SW however, Olympus invites their users to “tap into worry-free fun”. It means just what is sounds like. The camera uses an innovative tap interface where it registers taps on not only the screen area like some other touch screen cameras do; but also anywhere on the camera body. It uses an accelerometer so that it can read taps on different surfaces to control different functions just by tapping the appropriate area. Certain taps on the right side of the camera do one thing…taps on the left another. You can even calibrate the tap sensitivity to your liking. According to Olympus, it offers benefits in adverse conditions as well.

Sony Ericsson’s F305 motion-based gaming phone

Another handset that we can expect to see officially announced at the big Sony Ericsson event on June 17, the F305, which is being touted as their “first Motion Gaming-enabled phone.” While the gaming features are taking the front seat, the F305 does also offer quad-band GSM with EDGE support, a 2-inch TFT display, 2-megapixel more »

Nokia N95 8GB firmware update enables automatic screen rotation

The wonders of the built-in accelerometer are put to good, legitimate use by Nokia as it enables an automagic screen rotation feature on any European Nokia N95 8GB handset. This move makes Nokia look like it has accepted that the feature is really in-demand with users. It might seem a novel idea, but who would’ve more »

The FlipSilent for Symbian phones: When talking isn’t on your mind

Have you ever dropped something or committed some other social faux pas while searching for your cell phone in order to turn the damn ringer off? Well, drop no more when incoming calls arrive, as so has help in the form of FlipSilent, a small software that helps you “use your phone naturally.”

FlipSilent utilizes accelerometer technology, which is the very same that is used to re-orient phone and camera displays horizontally or vertically. FlipSilent transforms the process of quieting an incoming call to an action as simple as flipping the phone from its back to its face (assuming of course, that you know where your phone is to flip, a malady that sometimes befalls a small segment of our population).