Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Portable Copy and Paste: Scanner and Printer in One

Conceptual ‘Copy & Paste’ Tool is a Portable Scanner and Printer In One

Do you copy and paste stuff a lot when you’re on the computer? It simplifies a lot of tasks and doesn’t take more than few seconds to do if you’re familiar with the usual shortcuts. Wouldn’t it be awesome if you could somehow do the same in real life?
That’s what the folks behind the Copy & Paste tool are envisioning with their concept design. It looks like one of those scanning guns that cashiers use to scan the code on the stuff that you’re buying. Only this time, you’re supposed to move the device over whatever it is you want to copy and paste.
Pushing the button on the underside activates the scanner, while the button on top activates the printer. The handy device is, effectively, a scanner and printer that can print on any surface.
It’s impressive in concept, but it remains to be seen whether this can actually be made from a manufacturer’s standpoint. 
Source:[1][2]



Monday, September 8, 2014

Wireless EarBuds

Wireless EarBuds


The Earin are the smallest pair of wireless earbuds created by Olle Lindén. Not only are they amazing in style, design, and technology but most importantly deliver high quality audio sound.The two tiny earbuds function together as one Bluetooth headphone and fit perfectly in your ears. These types of headphones come with no lights, sensors, wires or other attachments so no tangles. They’re almost invisible yet provide a fantastic music experience and are a true companion for a music lover.


Each earbud has several silicone foam tips to choose from so that they can be the right color and best fit for your ear. The company also designed an accessory called, Concha lock which allows for a better grip so the earbud can stay in place during every situation.

The earbuds are stored in a special cover which also works as a charger. With dimensions of 62mm in length and 18mm in diameter, the capsule case is compact and can be carried anywhere even in your pockets.
Reference :[1][2]

SanDisk Ultra Fit Series USB 3.0 Flash Drive

SanDisk 64GB Ultra Fit Series USB 3.0 Flash Drive


USB flash drives are great devices for transferring huge amounts of data from one computing device to another. Sometimes we ecen use our USB flash drives as a semi-permanent extra storage for our devices. However normal USB drives just sticks out too much and are not practival to be left of the USB port when you are transporting your laptop for example. The SanDisk 64GB Ultra Fit Series USB 3.0 Flash Drive on the other hand is about the size of a Bluetooth or RF USB receiver that often comes with a wireless mouse.
Like the USB receiver, the SanDisk 64GB Ultra Fit Series drive has a very low profile and just sticks out slightly from the USB port. It sits securely and is unlikely to get damaged when transporting your laptop around with the drive still plugged in the USB port. USB 3.0 has read speeds of up to 130 MB/s and write speeds that are up to 10 times faster than the older USB 2.0 devices. USB 3.0 devices are also backwards compatible with the older standard which means you can transfer files between newer and older machines. It just means that it will take longer on the older device.
The SanDisk 64GB Ultra Fit Series drive also comes with a one-year free subscription to RescuePRO Deluxe recovery software.source This software helps to recover deleted files, photos and videos and save them to your computer’s drive.
The flash drive is also available in 16 GB and 32 GB sizes.


Sunday, September 7, 2014

Moto 360

MOTO 360: Wearable Gadget

It's been a long time coming. Despite its end of summer launch window, the Moto's curved stylings were enough to overshadow the first pair of Android Wear watches, the squared off, uninspired, cheap-looking LG G Watch andSamsung Gear Live. In the meantime, though, a second wave of Android Wear watches has already begun jockeying for attention (and disposable income).

When a device is as sleek, futuristic and eye-catching as the Moto 360 you can do one of two things. Wear one under a shirt and suit so that you can easily peep at the circular smartwatch as and when you need to. This is the way all the Motorola execs do it - we didn't even notice many of them had the 360 on at first glance. 
The second thing you can do is slyly turn your wrist around or pretend there's an itch on your arm so that you can bring the Moto into people's eyeline to get more attention.
That's what we've been doing. 
Because it looks awesome and we want to show it off. Even in a room full of other people who are wearing a Moto 360.
It takes up about the same amount of space on your wrist as a regular analogue watch, or for that matter the square LG G Watch (which looks even more uninspired in design now we've sat it next to the Moto atop our wrist). It is chunky though at 11.3mm high so it does sort of declare its presence even if you don't want it too. At least, then, it's light. The 360 with a black leather strap, the unit we've been given to review, weighs just 49g. That's heavy enough so you know it's there but light enough to avoid feeling like you have a tiny computer strapped to your arm. 
The steel body feels sturdy with a perfectly smooth circular edge and a single power button on the right hand side. We tried winding it - nothing happened but still, it's a nice borrowing from watch design school. If you select the watchface with a ticking hand and two timezone dials then squint, it could be an IWC.  

Some people will moan about the strip that cuts off the bottom of the circular screen. But Moto showed us the alternative in its Model Shop. A fully round screen, with no room for the display drivers, would have meant much bigger bezels. In fact, the prototype Motorola threw out looks a little like LG's G Watch R. We think Moto made the right choice. Source 
Why Round Face?

The Moto, as expected, has the best Android Wear watchfaces so far. From an animated ticking clock face with timezone dials to a stylish rotating set of circles, they really show off the form factor. There's only seven, yes seven, to get started with but we're hoping to be able to download many more in a matter of days. With Moto holding competitions for watchface designs, we don't think it will stick at seven for long. Like the Gear Live and G Watch, you can set the watchface to always on, or 'ambient' here - the 360 warns that this decreases battery life but hey, a watch is for telling the time. 
Battery Last Long Day
Moto says the 360 should last a day of mixed use and after our initial play, we'd be inclined to agree. After eight hours (on auto brightness) of setting it up, testing voice, changing watchfaces every five minutes and taking our heart rate, the 360 still had 47% battery which isn't too shabby. 
It's a 320mAh unit, which sounds like it shouldn't take long to charge. But the Moto 360 charges wirelessly, via the bundled dock, so expect it to take longer than a microUSB cradle. When docked, the 360 displays the time in a night mode so chances are you'll stick the charger by your bed and charge once a night, during the week at least.
It's an elegant solution, the charger is big enough that it probably won't get lost (unlike the Gear Live's cradle, for instance) and it means the designers didn't have to ruin the build with a microUSB port. We'll update this hands on review after a couple of charges with the timings of how long it takes to get from 0-100%. 


















Friday, September 5, 2014

Power Cup Charger

Power Cup Charger: Unique Coffee Cup Design

This is one powerful cup of coffee! Actually, it’s a clever design for a power inverter. The shape fits conveniently into your car’s cup holder. A must-have for the commuter or road tripper, our inverter can power three devices at once. This triple espresso has 2AC outlets for laptops, DVD players, phone chargers, camera chargers, etc. and one USB power port for iPods, MP3 players and cell phones. Simply plug it into your DC car outlet (18” cord) and get your power fix.


  • Unique Coffee Cup Design
  • 200 Watt Continuous, 400 Watt Peak
  • Safety provides 120V AC power from any auto 12V power socket
  • AC Outlet, 1 USB Power Port






Pen Printer : Use Old Pens as Ink to Print


Innovative Pen Printer Lets You Use Old 

Pens as Ink to Print Documents



Far too often we're left with pens that still have ink, but are unable to write. Introducing Pen Printer. This innovative gadget aims to make use of these types of pen that you may have laying around collecting dust at home. Source
More Info


Thursday, September 4, 2014

Zero Ink Printer

ZINK Zero Ink Printer


ZINK is a portable zero ink printer capable of printing photos directly from your smartphone.
The secret of this ink and toner lacking printer is in the paper. ZINK Zero Ink Paper is a patented paper created by the company which, when heated by the device, activates the yellow, magenta and cyan colour-forming crystals embedded within the paper itself.
The printer is operated by the ZINK Design & Print Studio app which allows you to center your images, add captions, and apply unique filters to enhance your photos. Once you are done editing, your images will print at a 2 inch by 3 inch size, at a 640 x 1224 dpi resolution, in less than one minute. Notably, the printer can output up to 20 prints before it needs to get recharged — which takes 1.5 hours and can be done using a micro USB adapter.

Despite its small size, the ZINK produces photographs which are rich and vibrant in colour. The prints are also watermarked and resistant to fingerprints, dust, and scratching. Worth mentioning is the fact that the ZINK device is capable of printing using many existing Apple AirPrint enabled apps. Source







Sony’s - Hugging Camera Lets You Swap Out Lenses

Sony’s Latest Smartphone-Hugging Camera Lets You Swap Out Lenses

Sony has never been afraid to get a little crazy. Over the years, the company has made OLED displays you wear on your face, Luke Skywalker binoculars that record 3-D video, tablets that fold up into burritos, and car stereos that transform into Walkmen. At its most interesting, Sony makes products born out of a Willy Wonka/Dr. Seuss/The Jetsons brainstorm, except these products have names like WDX-RLXT1B instead of The Electrick Fizzlefozz.
And now, like a gift from a parallel universe, there’s a new Sony product with pure sass coursing through its veins. The Sony ILCE-QX1 is a follow-up to last year’sQX10 and QX100 smartphone-mountable cameras, and this one has—get this—an interchangeable lens mount, a 20-megapixel APS-C sensor, and a pop-up flash.
Like its fixed-lens predecessors, the QX1 comes with spring-loaded arms that latch onto the sides of your smartphone, connects to a mobile device via Wi-Fi, and has an NFC-pairing option. From there, you control it with the PlayMemories Mobile app for iOS and Android, and the phone acts as your live-view viewfinder as well. Once you shoot, the QX1 automatically saves lower-resolution copies of each picture to your phone. From there, you can opt to save a full-resolution copy to your phone or just store photos to the QX1’s MicroSD card slot.
The mount accepts Sony’s E-Mount lenses, which means you can use the QX1 with any lens built for the company’s mirrorless cameras. The QX1 has a focal-length multiplier of 1.5X. Aperture-priority, shutter-priority, and RAW shooting modes are accessible for the QX1 through the mobile app.
As with previous models in the QX series, controlling the camera through the app will be mission-critical. The QX1 doesn’t appear to have any physical controls beyond its shutter button, which limits your options when using it as a standalone camera. The pop-up flash on the top of it is a new feature, as is the beefier removable battery tucked under the door on the back of the QX1.
In Sony’s product photos, the QX1 looks lens-heavy when it’s attached to a phone; you’ll probably need to shoot with one hand under the lens and the other tapping controls on a touchscreen. That said, one of the QX lineup’s strengths—perhaps even its best use case entirely—involved detaching the gadgets from the phone and using them as disembodied camera lenses. Their small sizes, flat bases, and tripod mounts are great for creative shot compositions. The QX1’s larger sensor and lens mount should offer a boost in image quality.
If you’re thinking of a really good reason to buy a QX1 instead of a Wi-Fi-equipped interchangeable-lens camera, the price might be one of them. Slated to ship by the end of September, the QX1 will cost around $400 for the body only. [source]



Friday, January 10, 2014

iPhone 6: iPhone Air, Thinnest Smart Phone ever by Apple

iPhone “Air” concept is thin as two credit cards, light as a feather


This iPhone 6 concept from France is an absolutely beautiful representation of what many are probably hoping the real iPhone 6 from Apple actually looks like.

This concept, from Frenchsoft, showcases an extremely thin and realistic “iPhone 6″ that comes with a design that we think is fit for the real iPhone 6 that is rumored for 2014. Like many other iPhone 6 concepts, the designers have been inspired by Apple’s new iPad Air design and have dubbed this device an iPhone 6 “Air.”

The device checks in with a 6mm design, thinner than the iPhone 5s, a larger 4.5-inch display that is edge-to-edge with ultra thin bezels, again like the iPad Air, a camera in the upper corner, and their version of iOS 8. Their version of iOS 8 features tweaked icons that look a bit different than the ones found in the current version of iOS, iOS 7.

Simply put, it’s one of the better looking iPhone 6 concepts that we’ve seen. And while it may not look exactly like the iPhone 6, it’s possible that we’ll see Apple lend out some of its “Air” design characteristics to the next iPhone.

It also features Apple’s TouchID fingerprint reader that the company embedded into the home button with the iPhone 5s. TouchID offers users added security but more importantly, convenience.
iPhone 6 rumors themselves are extremely scarce though the rumors that have leaked have virtually all pointed to a larger display in the vicinity of 4.5-inches and 5-inches. iPhone 6 rumors also point to launch dates spanning across 2014. Both summer and fall, which have both been utilized by Apple in the past, are reportedly possible launch windows for Apple’s new smartphone. May has also been rumored as a possible launch month though not for an iPhone 6 but for an iPhone phablet, larger than 5-inches.
The rest of the device’s specifications remain uncertain and likely will remain that way up until the device’s launch later on this year. [Source]


Monday, December 2, 2013

Water Powered Calculator

Water Powered Calculator : Filled water to Run Calculator


Water has many uses in our everyday lives. It is a thirst-quenching drink, it can help clean a wide range of things and is a universal solvent. Recently though, many of you may have heard of water being used as a source of energy. The Water Powered Calculator is a successful attempt to use water as a source of energy.

The calculator has three water batteries which look like the image shown below.

The batteries consist two electrodes made of a special alloy which facilitates a chemical reaction in the presence of water, producing electricity to run the calculator. The battery timing is very impressive considering the fuel is water. The batteries last 2-3 months, during which time the water evaporates and can simply be replaced by simple, everyday tap-water.


The concept of free energy is beautifully exemplified by the Water Powered Calculator. The transparent body allows you to see what goes on inside the device giving you a first-hand glimpse of the process as it is happening. It is a must-have for every mathematician, scientist and engineer.