Tuesday, January 12, 2010

iPhone TV and Wireless Charging: Hottest Gadget in the Gadget Shows Exhibition 2010


iPhone was coming to gadgets show at Las Vegas with the new invention. This Microsoft gadget was showing the change of the thought that cost is the most stopping way in technology. They prove that it was wrong. iPhone came with micro chip that can be used as TV tunnel like in manual television. Therefore, it does not need cost at all to watch movie from the gadget. We can bring our TV only in pocket and it also can be used as phone. What an amazing invention. However, other gadget that also cools is the wireless charging. So, now we can use our gadget freely while it is charged, without having worried to move forward and break the wire anymore.
At the International Consumer Electronics Show last week, 3-D television, electronic readers and little laptops captured much of the attention. There were plenty of other interesting ideas on display, too, from 3-D printing to a wireless cell phone tether. TV on the iPhone — Qualcomm Inc.'s FLO TV service has been limited by the fact that only a few AT&T Inc. and Verizon Wireless cell phones can receive the signals, which carry about 15 news, sports and entertainment channels. Now, Qualcomm has teamed up with phone accessories maker Mophie to create an external battery pack for the iPhone that doubles as a FLO TV receiver. No price for the pack was announced; FLO TV service costs $15 per month. Separately, TV stations are also rolling out their own broadcasts for mobile devices. Game-controller glove — Iron Will Innovations demonstrated a futuristic-looking black-and-silver glove that replaces a keyboard and lets users control games by touching their fingers together instead. Called the Peregrine, the glove includes five sensors on each finger that replace different keystrokes when touched to the glove's thumb. Wireless charging — Last year, Powermat USA showed off a mat that charged gadgets that were placed on top of it — as long as the gadgets were equipped with special covers. Polaroid Instant Cameras — Polaroid stopped making instant film two years ago, but a brave group of enthusiasts and former employees bought one of Polaroid's factories in Netherlands and reinvented the film. It didn't announce a price. In the past few years, the Polaroid brand has been used for a new type of battery-powered portable digital printer, which produces photos reminiscent of the old film.

Cell-phone tether — Losing your cell phone is a drag, and a company called Zomm believes it can make it a thing of the past. It has a small device, also called Zomm, that connects wirelessly with your phone through Bluetooth and sets off an alarm if you walk away from it. Zomm is expected to be available this summer for $80.
3-D camera — The big push from TV makers this year is for sets that show 3-D in the home. The 3-D camera is available now for $599, and a 3-D photo frame sells separately for $499.
At the show, the Dutch company announced that they're now offering sculptures in full color. The cost: $16.22 per cubic inch.
Mopping robot — It's the battle of the cleaning robots! The vacuuming Roomba robots will get competition this September from the Mint, a square robot that has a pad for a dry or wet Swiffer-type cleaning cloth. Guided by a beacon that projects an infrared light on the ceiling (think Batman signal), the Mint will methodically sweep one room at time.

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