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By N2H

Archive for September, 2008

The coolest cell phones you may never see

CHIBA, Japan–If the concepts on display at Ceatec are any indication, completely deconstructing the traditional form factor of the mobile phone is one of the next major phases of design and development research.

Fujitsu concept phone

Fujitsu concept phone

(Credit: Erica Ogg/CNET News)

Japan has one of the most robust mobile phone cultures anywhere, and it shows here on the second day of the show. Sharp, Fujitsu, NTT DoCoMo, and KDDI each had intriguing takes on the next form factor for devices used not just for mobile communication, but watching videos, playing games, and performing mobile navigation.

Take the necklace on the right. It alerts the wearer when there’s a call or a message incoming. It’s made by Fujitsu and, while it isn’t an actual product, is indicative of how cell phones are thought of here: not just communication devices, but accessories made to fit neatly and inconspicuously into the daily routine.

Then there were a host of phones whose screens and keyboards pull apart to be used separately. The Fujitsu version shown below uses magnets to connect the two pieces in the desired configuration. NTT DoCoMo was demonstrating a similar concept.

But as far as futuristic, elegant design goes, KDDI was far and away the winner. The wireless company showed off beautiful designs, which are nowhere close to being reality, but show the aspirations it has for the cell phone. The Ply was part of its yearly Design Project. (Here’s a picture of last year’s version.)

Designed by Hideo Kambara, the Ply imagines the phone as a device with a series of layers. One layer is a pop-up projector, another is a slide-out keyboard, and another is a printer, a game controller, and so on. The ones on display here and shown further down the page are just papercraft renderings.

Fujitsu concept phone

The Fujitsu phone can be configured in any way and stuck together magnetically.

(Credit: Erica Ogg/CNET News)

Photos: Gadgets at Ceatec, day 1

We don't watch much video on our cell phones in the U.S., but the Japanese do. This Sharp phone features Dolby Mobile, 5.1-channel surround sound for the phone. Click on the above image for more pictures from the first day of Ceatec.

(Credit: Erica Ogg/CNET

MP3 Insider 116: Web radio lives on

Photo of Sony B Series Walkman MP3 player.

The Sony B-Series Walkman. What's that B stand for, anyway?

(Credit: CNET Networks/Corinne Schulze)

House of Representatives passes a bill that will protect Webcasters from royalty-related death for at least a bit longer. Also, Donald and Jasmine review the Iriver Spinn, Archos 5, and Sony B-Series Walkman.

Listen now:

Download today’s podcast

Originally posted at MP3 Insider

Toshiba makes a Netbook, but not for North America

Toshiba NB110 Netbook

Toshiba's Atom-powered mini-notebook at Ceatec.

(Credit: Erica Ogg/CNET News)

CHIBA, Japan–Toshiba hopped onto the Netbook bandwagon here at Ceatec, announcing the NB110.

Design-wise, there’s nothing too remarkable about it. It resembles an Eee PC, with specs a mix between that and the HP Mini-Note: Intel Atom …

Western Digital unveils new ShareSpace NAS server

The new WD ShareSpace NAS server.

(Credit: Western Digital)

Western Digital (WD), introduced on Tuesday its all-new NAS server called ShareSpace. The server somewhat resembles the design of the company’s My Book external hard drives with easily accessible drive bays, eco-friendly hard drives, and quiet performance.

The new NAS

Garmin Colorado $50 Rebate

According to a poster in our forums, Garmin will be rolling out a $50 rebate on Colorado model handheld GPS devices starting tomorrow through the end of the year.

Dell Vostro 1710

The Vostro 1710 manufactured by Dell is a unique model within the Vostro Series. This laptop is intended to be a desktop replacement, but to also carry with it the convenience of a mobile business tool. What separates the 1710 from other Vostro models is the 17” Widescreen WXGA, giving it multimedia characteristic more than a mobile business tool. Upgrade the video card from the standard to a Discrete Graphic Card NVIDIA GeForce 8600M GS and this unit has gaming and theatre experience potential, also supported by the 24X DVD/CD-RW combo drive and the two channel high definition audio codec. Dell still equipped the 1710,…

Dell Vostro 1510

The Dell Vostro 1510 is an out-of-the-box ready to use business tool that has been manufactured to be reliable, convenient and affordable. The 15.4” Widescreen WXGA holds this laptop at a manageable size and weight, 5.72lbs, for mobile users. There are processor options, Intel Celeron M550 being the basic with a CPU speed of 2.0GHz and memory maxing out at 2GB. The video cards and audio performance are of a standard quality, not intended for demanding multimedia users. Dell has, however, given the Vostro 1510 its maximum Wireless connectivity potential, supported by Next-Generation Wireless-N wi-Fi. A durable construction and system/data protection are other features Dell has…

Super Talent to release budget solid-state drives

Two weeks after announcing two new high-speed solid-state drives, Super Talent Technology on Tuesday announced it will release the MasterDrive LX as a budget SSD later this week.

(Credit: Super Talent Technology)

Bandwidth Caps

GigaOM White Paper: The Facts & Fiction of Bandwidth Caps