by Jay Garrett on November 23, 2009
Another new Dell but this one will fit into your pocket.
The puter purveyor has shown off its first entry into the smartphone market today.
The Dell Mini 3i will be launched this week in China.
The phone sports a 3.5 inch, 640×360 HD touchscreen display, built-in GPS, a 3-megapixel camera with auto-focus, Bluetooth and a microSD card slot for up to 32GB of expandable memory.
Thank goodness they decided against the monster 5 inch screen!
You get a choice of “Red Passion” and “Oiled Bronze” – these are the colours and not names of age restricted Blu-ray movies
The distinct lack of 3G means that it wont be coming to Europe any time soon as, let’s face it, we kinda need that and rightly expect our smartphones to be rockin the 3G.
Am I wrong?
by Jay Garrett on November 26, 2008
Wakamaru is soon to become household name rather than a household servant.
The domestic droid designed and built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industry stands 3 feet tall, and weighs about 30kg. It was released in 2005 and costs around £9,000. It can greet guests and provide information like weather forecasts but soon will be tredding rolling the boards.
Tuesday marked the theatrical debut for the bot, which appeared onstage alongside really-real actors in a play that’s being billed as the first robot-human artistic collaboration.
Hataraku Watashi (“I, Worker”), by playwright Oriza Hirata, focuses on a couple who own two housekeeping robots, one of which loses its motivation to work.
The 20 minute production took place at Japan’s Osaka University (c’mon – where else?) where Hirata is also a visiting professor at the Centre of the Study of Communication-Design.
The performance was played in front of the media ahead of a possible full-scale public run in the next year or so.
Hirata and the rest of the project team wrote special software that lets the robots move and deliver the right lines.
The robot is primarily meant as a companion for seniors and the disabled. Using a combo of a laser and cameras it’s able to track and identify people, and recognises approximately 10,000 words necessary for daily life and now possibly an acting career.