Gadget Lab Hardware News and Reviews

Nyoombl Uses the TV for Video Conferencing

nyoombl

A tiny device promises to make video conferencing a better experience by using the TV that’s already in your living room.

Nyoombl, an interestingly named start-up, is showing a gadget called Greypfroot that will sit on top of your TV and allow you to make calls from one TV to another or to a phone mobile or a PC.

“Why can’t persons with laptops today enjoy video calls with loved ones who are currently familiar with TV sets?” Oladayo Olagunju, CEO of Nyoombl said during his presentation at the DEMO Spring conference Tuesday. “Teleconferencing really doesn’t have to require any corporate dedicated set up that has to cost thousands of dollars.”

The caller and receiver don’t have to always have the Nyoombl device, except in case of TV-to-TV teleconferencing, says the company. The only requirement is that one of the users have an account with an online e-mail service that also offers video chat such as Google Talk or Yahoo.

“We are working on open clients similar to Google Talk, and hope that the proprietary ones will open up to interoperability as we continue to engage them in talks,” says Nyoombl in its website.

Increasingly, TV makers are looking to add video conferencing as one of the applications built into TV sets. Samsung and LG for instance offer Skype on newer TVs. Skype on TVs will be similar in its interface to the application that PC users are familiar with, but it is not available on all TVs.

Nyoombl says its advantage is that it works with existing TV sets. The Nyoombl Greypfroot is a “palm-sized device” that sits on top of the TV screen. The device includes a webcam and comes with its basic conferencing own software that can send and receive calls from TVs. Nyoombl’s Greypfroot “connects via the TV’s coaxial connection and adds an interface to accept or reject incoming video chat requests,  says CNET.

To initiate a call from a TV, you can use the TV’s remote, while the other person is on a laptop running, say Google Talk. When the call’s connected, the TV screen is split into two halves, even as the show the TV is running continues in the background.

Nyoombl hasn’t disclosed pricing for the device yet but Olagunju says it will be more affordable than a “current smartphone on the market.”

Check out the video to see Nyoombl’s demo

MiFi Update Adds Movie and Music Streaming

img_0283

Today Novatel, the people behind the miraculous little MiFi personal hotspot, announced Novadrive, a cloud storage service for MiFi owners. Boring. What it didn’t announce is way better: an update to the MiFi which adds media streaming to the iPod Touch or any other connected device.

The update, demoed at the CTIA show and which will be available for many current MiFi models, lets users stream music and movies over Wi-Fi via the DLNA (Digital Living Network Alliance) protocol to any DLNA-equipped device, including TV-sets. This combines with a not often mentioned feature of the MiFi, its microSD card slot. Load up a 32GB card with movies and media and you have just doubled the capacity of your iPhone, and as the MiFi acts as a USB mass storage device when plugged into a computer, even iTunes-haters can load it up.

The MiFi gets better and better, not just for connectivity but for extra tweaks like this. And with the launch of the Wi-Fi-only iPad in little over a week, having your own internet connection is starting to look quite attractive.

Next-Gen MiFis Stream Videos and Music to iPhone and iPod Touch [Laptop Mag]

See Also:

Neat Hack: Binder-Clip Cable-Keepers

binderclips-kabels

This one is more for the life-hacking crowd than the gadget-loving crowd, but the simplicity, ingenuity and plain good-looks of this little cable management hack make it worth showing off. It also plays right into my cable-tidying obsession, meaning I couldn’t not post it.

This binder-clip cable-saver comes from David Rudolf Bakker in the Netherlands, and is something you could replicate right now just by rummaging in the junk drawer. The clips clamp onto the edge of your desk and you thread power, ethernet and USB cables through the fold-back loops by disconnecting them temporarily from the clip body. That’s it: your cable will never escape down the back of the desk again, and will instead be held patiently at the ready to be plugged into you notebook. Those wire loops are even big enough that the cable itself won’t snag as it is pulled through.

I don’t have any clips, having given up on paper some years ago, but I do have cables. Lots and lots of snaky, tangled cables. I shall visit the stationery store today.

No more USB cables behind your desk for losses [Lifehacking via Lifehacker]

See Also:

8-Bit Hanger Brings Mouse Pointer Into Your Home

finger

My mother told me that it’s rude to point. Then again, we’re English, so pretty much everything is considered to be rude or inconsiderate to somebody. As a nation, we are uptight except when drunk. The 8-Bit Hanger, then, should never be sold in Blighty, as these pixelated pointy fingers would be the equivalent of shouting filthy abuse at your own parents.

In more balanced parts of the world, though, these cute little hooks are the perfect retro-styled hanger for pretty much any part of the house, from bags of onions in the kitchen to towels in the bathroom. The MDF and acrylic hangers come equipped with a permanently attached screw and measure 3 x 2.8 x 0.6-inches.

Actually, maybe these should be brought to England, and lined up in hallways across the nation as the perfect security device: Any well brought-up burglar would drop his swag-bag immediately upon seeing them and cower in shame at the mean accusatory tone of these jagged digits. $20 each.

8-Bit Hanger [Meninos via Noquedanblogs]

Guitarbud Hooks Axe to iPhone

643031

The Guitarbud from PRS is little more than a cable that takes the output from the jack of an electric guitar and splits it to headphones and an iPhone. But this simple accessory, if done right, could offer almost endless possibilities for guitarists.

It all depends on which app you pump the sound into. The built-in voice-memo recorder will do if all you want is to record your music and mail it off to friends, but there turns out to be a slew of purpose-made guitar apps in the iTunes Store, from multi-track recorders to PRS’ own JamAmp software which lets you play along, via an amp-simulator, with backing tracks. In short, if you are a guitarist and you have an iPhone, you should probably have something like a Guitarbud.

Something like the Guitarbud, but not the actual Guitarbud itself. The problem start with the price: $30 for a splitter cable is clearly too much. Then there is the quality. Buyer reviews over at the Musician’s Friend store are almost unanimously bad, citing poor build quality (”it feels like it’s the $2 cord that you get when you buy a cheap guitar package”), crackling, non-shielded audio and problems getting anything other than a weak signal into the phone.

It’s a shame, as the possibilities are exciting, especially with the added power and size of the upcoming iPad. Based on the reviews, we’d hold off right now, and maybe even concoct our own solution from better hardware. But the idea of this little widget is enough to make me think about taking up the guitar again.

Guitarbud [PRS via Mac OSx86]

See Also:

Preview: Instapaper Pro for iPad

instapaper-ipad

Instapaper Pro, our favorite read-later iPhone application here at Gadget Lab, will be available for the iPad on day one. Over at the Instapaper blog, developer Marco Arment has posted screenshots and a great explanation of the problems facing developers without access to an actual, physical iPad.

Instapaper Pro for iPad will be a universal app, a bundle containing code for both the iPad and iPhone. This means that, if the app makes it through Apple’s approval channels, current Instapaper users will never have to see a pixel-doubled version, which “sucked, and it was completely unusable by my standards,” according to Arment.

Being a simple reading application, there aren’t many differences in the interface, which is mostly just text and pictures after all. Arment was wary of making changes without being able to see them in action: “I didn’t want to commit to any huge risks because I don’t have an iPad to test them on,” he says.

The one big change is the horizontal folder view, above. All it does is expose the folders into which your articles are organized (you knew Instapaper has folders, right?), but it looks to be a lot easier and more obvious to use.

Arment plans on making more tweaks when he has an iPad in his hands, but we’re very pleased he decided to go ahead with making an untested Instapaper available at launch. We feel exactly the same way as him about the app: “an iPad without native Instapaper Pro is not a device I want to own.”

Preview: Instapaper on iPad [Instapaper Blog]

See Also:

EcoCHARGE Wall-Wart: Slim On Power, Slim On Looks

ecocharge

I’ll admit it: I’m obsessed with power cables and wall-warts of all kinds. Maybe its because nobody made a good one yet, so nowhere can I buy a power-brick that will fit neatly into a strip without crowding out others, that will charge USB devices and switch off when it isn’t needed. I shall keep looking until I find it.

The EcoCHARGE gets pretty close. Its narrow body slots in between bigger, greedier bricks and its tail trails away to either a mini or micro USB plug. A hatch on the block itself swings aside to allow a full-sized USB cable to be plugged in. The “Eco” part of the name comes from the device’s low power draw, and the fact that it switches off completely once charging has done, eliminating vampire draw like AT&T’s Zero Charger. Well, almost. Weirdly, the indicator LED appears to activate when the unit is *not* charging: “When the LED is off, the EcoCHARGE is active”. Still, it wins by pulling one tenth the power of an Energy Star compliant charger.

The EcoCHARGE costs $30 for both mini or micro USB flavors, with an iPhone/iPod version coming in April. Given that you can just plug your iPhone into the USB port, this future iPhone-specific version seems less useful.

EcoCHARGE [Ventev. Thanks, Anna!]

Sprint, HTC Unveil First 4G Android Phone

evomain

Android superfactory HTC’s latest smartphone is a 4G device designed just for Sprint. The phone called HTV Evo is a feature-packed gadget that will have the distinction of being the first phone offered for a 4G network in the United States.

The Evo has a 4.3-inch touchscreen, two cameras, GPS navigation, HDMI output and mobile hotspot capability. It will run Google’s Android 2.1 operating system and HTC’s custom user interface called the Sense.

And despite its large touchscreen (the iPhone’s display is 3.5 inches, while the Nexus One and Motorola Droid have a 3.7-inch screen), the Evo feels comfortable, says Into Mobile, which got some hands-on time with the phone.

Sprint claims its 4G network can offer download speeds up to 10 times faster than current 3G networks, allowing the Evo to be blazing fast when it comes to data access.

Over the last few years, Sprint has been building out its 4G network and the company’s 4G wireless services is available in 27 cities in the United States, though that doesn’t include most major hubs like San Francisco and New York. Sprint has said it will expand its 4G network in a big way this year.

Sprint has also launched a 4G wireless product called Overdrive that uses an available wireless data connection to establish a local Wi-Fi hotspot. The hotspot supports up to five devices at a time.

Sprint and HTC haven’t announced pricing for the Evo, but the device is expected to launch this summer.

Like the Nexus One, another HTC-designed phone for Google, the Evo will use a 1-GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor. It will have an 8-megapixel auto-focus camera with HD-capable video camcorder and a forward-facing 1.3-megapixel camera. (See a list of detailed specifications on Sprint’s site.)

Evo’s mobile hotspot functionality will allow up to eight Wi-Fi-enabled devices to share the network. The phone will also support Adobe Flash and will have a “custom” web browser, says Sprint.

More photos of the Evo 4G from the Sprint HTC event

Continue Reading “Sprint, HTC Unveil First 4G Android Phone” »

Portable LED Display Offers Laptop Users a Secondary Monitor

medlFor laptop users, having dual screens on the road is almost impossible unless they are willing to lug one of Lenovo’s hefty notebooks around.

Now, a Hong Kong-based company MEDL technology is showing a 13-inch lightweight, portable LED display that can be used as a secondary monitor to add digital real estate.

The LED display, simply named “The Panel,” weighs about 2.2 lbs and connects to a PC or a Mac through a USB cable. The screen has a resolution of 1280 x 800 pixels and claims up to five hours of battery life.

The Panel is not limited for use just with laptops, says MEDL. It can connect to phones and gaming consoles such as the Xbox 360 or Sony PlayStation 3–anything that has a USB port.

MEDL is showing The Panel at the ongoing DEMO Spring conference.

As laptops become more popular among users than desktops, the idea of having dual displays for mobile devices is catching on. Last year, Lenovo introduced a $5000 dual-screen laptop that weighed about 11 lbs and combined a 17-inch display and a 11-inch screen in a single box.

MEDL’s LED screen could be an alternative to the Lenovo monster, though MEDL is yet to announce pricing or availability for the product.

Roundup: Steve Jobs’ Terse Replies to Fan Mail

Normally as quiet and retiring as a geek at the Homecoming dance, Apple CEO Steve Jobs has been on an unusual e-mail spree in the weeks leading up to the iPad launch, according to multiple reports.

By our count, Jobs has sent at least four e-mails to eager Apple nerds asking about issues such as iPad tethering, future MacBook upgrades, open e-books and Picasa photo syncing.

On Tuesday morning, Cult of Mac posted an e-mail exchange between Jobs and an Apple customer inquiring about whether the iPad would support open (i.e., non-DRM) e-books. Like his past e-mails, Jobs’ reply was terse:

Yep.

Sent from my iPad

Jobs has been known to occasionally respond to e-mails from customers similar to the way a celebrity musician or movie star might write back to fan mail. Though extremely concise, his e-mails offer a tiny window into the workings of the famously secretive corporation.

This is also the first published e-mail from Jobs with the “Sent from my iPad” signature.

Continue Reading “Roundup: Steve Jobs’ Terse Replies to Fan Mail” »