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Cellphones

Intel Envisions Shape-Shifting Smartphones 79

An anonymous reader writes "It's not sci-fi, but rather advanced robotics research which is leading Intel to envision shape-shifting smartphones. 'Imagine what you would do with this material,' says Jason Campbell, a senior researcher at Intel's Pittsburgh Lab who's working in collaboration with Carnegie Mellon University. 'If you want to carry the device, you'd make it as small as possible by making it pack itself as densely as possible. When you go to surf the Web, you're going to make it big.' The material being studied is transparent silicon-dioxide hemispheres, which can roll around each other under electrical control to create different shapes. The lab has built 6-inch long actuators, which it's working to reduce to 1-mm tube-sized prototypes. When will we see a shape-shifting phone? 'In terms of me being able to buy it, that's a difficult forecasting problem, because I have to guess about manufacturing costs,' Campbell said. 'I won't do that. But we hope the science will be proved out in three to five years.'"
Television

18% of Consumers Can't Tell HD From SD 603

An anonymous reader writes "Thinking about upgrading to an HDTV this holiday season? The prices might be great, but some people won't be appreciating the technology as much as everyone else. A report by Leichtman Research Group is claiming that 18% of consumers who are watching standard definition channels on a HDTV think that the feed is in hi-def." (Here's the original story at PC World.)

Comment Re:Cingular only? For shame, Apple! (Score 1) 1619

Ok there are two parts to your question. Network independence is a good thing.... but it would be a little hard on them to expect them to provide both a CDMA (Verizon,Sprint) and a GSM (Cingular,T-Mobile (other freq. of GSM being the rest of the WORLD)). So that they picked GSM I think is the only choice they had since they were going to go global with the product. That being said... why not let you pick T-Mobile or Cingular?

There are two glaring reasons why they did what they did:
1. Price: As you can tell by the people already complaining about the price, there price point was important, and I think they realized they could chop off a 100 or so (I don't know exactly, but think of other phone discounts) by making it with a service plan and giving the carrier an exclusive contract. This reduces price, which from reading comments from many sites, seems to be the biggest gripe so far
2. Features: Visual Voicemail requires cooperation with the carrier. This is obvious. If I had a chance to play with the thing, I think I will find others (I thought I heard something about it "knowing" where it was for weather and maps.... for example). These features means that you can't just design the phone and forget about the carrier, since they are an integral part. Apple went for as many killer featurs as possible. This came at the expense of universal GSM interoperability.

I can see why people will love this, and I can see why some will complain. All I ask is that you stop and think about why things ended up being this way

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