February 6th, 2010 by admin
From a pure specification standpoint, it’s hard to knock HTC’s HD2 . Scratch that — it’s impossible to knock the HD2. A 1GHz Snapdragon CPU is just the tip of the iceberg, with the icing on the cake being the 800 x 480 resolution display, 5 megapixel camera, GPS and a downright stunning overall design.

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How would you change HTC’s HD2?
February 6th, 2010 by admin
Japanese customers’ augmented reality mirror to see what makeup looks like without trying it on Electronic Key Impressioner makes key copies from the lock itself Gesture cube is a many-sided monitor Affordable Scosche Solbat2 Solar Charger Music In Love Audio Splitter Desktop Teeth Whitening Lamp Nekura Scramble watch Flashlight Flying Discs Back to the Future Lights and Sound Mark I Delorean Steel Clean Soap Stainless Steel Hand Odor Remover Bar Nikon unveils Coolpix P100 digital camera Verizon Wireless offers Motorola Devour AMD is proud to unveil affordable ATI Radeon HD 5450 graphics card Sanyo releases Dual Cameras Introducing Foolish Gadgets because not all gadgets are cool [ Gadget Thumbnails for 05-Feb-2010 copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

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Gadget Thumbnails for 05-Feb-2010
February 6th, 2010 by admin
Chances are we’re missing something incredibly awesome being said in this foreign-language video, but we can probably guess what Mobile-review Sergey Kuzmin is saying: “I’ve got the Sony Ericsson Aspen and you don’t.

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Sony Ericsson Aspen caught on video, loving life with WinMo 6.5.3
February 6th, 2010 by admin
The Week in Green is a new item from our friends at Inhabitat , recapping the week’s most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us. This week at Inhabitat we saw several hot advances in solar technology that stand to shape how our buildings are built and how we power the electronics in our lives. CASE in point: this beautiful glass photovoltaic system can be affixed to windows and actually magnifies the available sunlight inside into tiny solar chips to create electricity

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Inhabitat’s Week in Green: photovoltaics, footballs, and Greener Gadgets
February 6th, 2010 by admin
And now for another interesting application of augmented reality, and it’s pretty practical, too. Not only that, but it is already in use. At the Takashimaya department store, there is a Digital Cosmetic Mirror that allows customers to see what make-up will look like on their face, without putting it on.

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Japanese customers’ augmented reality mirror to see what makeup looks like without trying it on
February 6th, 2010 by admin
One of the problems with having a car is when you lose the key and you can’t find the spare. If only you could find a friend who has the Electronic Key Impressioner.

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Electronic Key Impressioner makes key copies from the lock itself
February 6th, 2010 by admin
It would appear that the future is in gesture technology. This device, known as the Gesture Cube, is designed to meet the future head-on

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Gesture cube is a many-sided monitor
February 6th, 2010 by admin
Though Sony’s overall bottom line is back in black , what held it back from an even bigger celebration cake was its core electronics brand, and no stranger to that sector is the PlayStation group.

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PlayStation 3 still a loss leader, ’six cents for every dollar’ of hardware sold
February 5th, 2010 by admin
Remember those rumors back in the day that Dell’s Android-powered Streak MID — the device that would later be revealed as the Mini 5 — would be manufactured by Qisda ? Well, we’ve got some pretty solid proof of that now that it’s hit the FCC under Qisda’s name. What you see on the left is the label submitted in today’s filing for a device called the Qisda M01M; on the right, you have a shot from that pictorial of a device in Shenzhen of the same name

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Dell Mini 5 earns FCC approval, AT&T 3G coverage assured
February 5th, 2010 by admin
For a platform billing itself as the business user’s best friend, BlackBerry’s list of unsupported protocols that have achieved ubiquity is actually astonishing: you can’t do two-way read status sync with an IMAP email account, for example, and amazingly, you can’t natively connect to an Exchange ActiveSync service without being routed through RIM’s back-end software. In a shocking move that’s straight out of 2002, it seems at least one of those niggles is going to get patched up soon thanks to a leaked list of email features in BlackBerry Internet Service 3.0, the software carriers deploy to marshal all data connectivity on the handsets they’ve deployed to customers

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RIM’s BIS 3.0 email features apparently leaked, finally does Gmail justice