Clear Speakers, Segway Clone Top CES Coverage 165
jlouderb writes "Phew. We just finished five days of wall to wall coverage of this year's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Highlights include "invisible" speakers, a Segway clone for around $1,000, details on Intel's LCoS plans, a humanoid robot from Sony and more HDTV recorders, new home networking schemes and flat panel TVs than you can shake a stick at. If you weren't one of the 100,000 or so who made it to Vegas, check out what you missed at PCMag.com."
Invisible Speakers (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Invisible Speakers (Score:5, Funny)
Re:That website doesn't work in Safari (Score:1)
Pictures? check
Links? check
Formatting? check
Ok, I give, what doesn't work. Is it that the site is /.?
What did you expect? They're invisible! (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Invisible Speakers (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Invisible Speakers (Score:1)
Re:Invisible Speakers (Score:3, Funny)
I'm really happy about The Emperors new speakers. Almost as cool as The Emperors new clothes.
The other highlight (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The other highlight (Score:1)
I might just turn up to the next CES
nude macgirls webcam [151.197.31.93]
Re:The other highlight (Score:2)
I suspect this has more to do with a Las Vegas law that requires all convention floor presenters to hire and present at least one booth-babe. Granted - it might make the MSN commercials a bit better if they continued with this theme. But not likely.
Although... it would make the MSN "can little Jimmy look at porn?" commercial a bit more entertaining.
Re:The other highlight (Score:2)
AND
nude macgirls webcam [151.197.31.93]
in the same post. Welcome to Slashdot.
Yet another highlight (Score:5, Funny)
Invisible speakers (Score:5, Funny)
"Nice game of Solitaire you've got going there."
Not a Segway (Score:5, Insightful)
Not a big shock since the Segway's balancing system is patented.
Re:Not a Segway (Score:1)
I'm no patent lawyer, but I think that you might be able to use a unicycle as prior art. Although with a unicycle, you have a human doing the work of the gyroscope, computer, and motors.
Re:Not a Segway (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Not a Segway (Score:2)
So some company is finally trying to cash in on the lucrative market that Segway is tapping.
Seems like a winner to me...
Re:Not a Segway (Score:1)
Re:Not a Segway (Score:1)
Definitely Not a Segway (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not a Segway (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Not a Segway (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not a Segway (Score:1)
Re:Not a Segway (Score:2)
- are unable to turn in place
- have a footprint smaller than people's shoulders
which I think are critical to success. So: close, but no cigar.
Re:Not a Segway (Score:3, Insightful)
Another thing that this does is increase the footprint for the device. I believe one of the advantages touted for the Segway was that it could be used wherever someone would walk due to a footprint roughly the same size as a pedestrian. It looks like if one wanted to pivot around with this device, you're much more likely to catch someone's toes as the back wheels swing around.
Re:Not a Segway (Score:2)
Another nice thing about the Segway is that you move it (at least forward/backward) merely by adjusting your balance naturally. And you stop by doing a "whoa doggy" maneuver that is pretty instinctive.
I assume (article didn't say) this is more like a standard go-kart with a stop/go (or motorcycle flick of the wrist) and handlebars. I bet it won't be nearly as agile.
--
Re:Not a Segway (Score:2)
A 4 wheeled variation could use the additional wheels to detect the angle the platform is at, and use the motors to balance it. It could (probably) be just as stable as the segway.
Ok... the robots... (Score:3, Interesting)
It seems every few months we have a new video of the latest, greatest robot dancing. Maybe I should be happy about all of this because it's R&D and any of that is needed in today's marketplace because so many companies have ditched it. In any case, I rather have them research rockets or other space machinary to get to Mars a little quicker. (I realize robotics has an impact on space exploration but sheesh, what's the use if we can't get anywhere first.)
I'm really ranting now but the hot dance moves on the Super Humanoid Robot 5000 really makes me want to cap myself.
Here Are Three Reasons (Score:5, Insightful)
Spin off technologies used in industry the general public is unaware of.
Long range goals (something American companies often neglect). Someday everyone will have robotic aids and servants. It won't happen overnight, nor necessarily in our life time, but its an easy prediction to make for something almost certain to happen within the next hundred years.
Re:Here Are Three Reasons (Score:2)
Re:Here Are Three Reasons (Score:3, Insightful)
a) It's more difficult to come from QRIO to a general-purpose intelligent robot than from radio to Internet, from Wright's Flyer to 1000+ passenger jets, solar-powered planes and UAVs, from Model T to GM's Autonomy.
or
b) The rate of progress is decreasing.
is true. But I think both a and b are false. And we will have intelligent robots in a few decades, not centuries.
Check this [transhumanism.org] out.
Re:Here Are Three Reasons (Score:2)
Re:Ok... the robots... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Ok... the robots... (Score:4, Interesting)
Sure they will make their money back. Not from the full robot of course. But from taking parts of the whole to make a cheaper robot. I've considered robotic vacuums, but until they do the stairs I'm still left with doing part of the job by hand. (and at that the worst, doing each step individually with the smaler attachment) Take just a fraction of the technology and make a cheap vacuum and they can make part back.
A robot to cook my meals doesn't need to walk. (in fact given long enough arms can be built into the unused space between my cabinets and the ceiling. I'd like to have this type of robot in my home. I'd love to have a (healthy and tasty given my preferences and doctors orders) meal waiting for me when I get home from work using whatever is in my kitchen.
Re:Ok... the robots... (Score:1)
Re:Ok... the robots... (Score:2)
I havea perfectly fine vacuum sitting in my living room. ITs hasn't moved in nearly a month, and it was several months at the previous position. I don't think a remote control would help. Now if the remote would store the path taken, I'd use it once to vacuume everything, and then just tell the vacuum to run that path once a day. However it still needs to get stairs, or I'm not sure I will care enough to buy it.
Cooking Robot (Score:2)
Think about your target market for a cooking robot. It is going to be a bunch of single men who don't want to cook and don't have any idea of what to buy. Suppose they forget to buy enough hot dogs one day. I think that is what the result would be...
"Bob, I made you a nice refreshing tobasco, relish and ketchup sandwich... I even through a little soy sauce on there to make it something special!"
It ain't gonna work like you think it would!
Re:Cooking Robot (Score:2)
Re:Cooking Robot (Score:2)
I find that not having ingreadents isn't the biggest problem. I got lots of steak in my freezer. I just forget to thaw it before I leave, and I'm too hungry after work to bother anyway. Likewise I have vegtables and potatos, but by the time I get home from work I'm too tired and hungry to spend an hour cooking, so I toss a froozen pizza in the oven despite wanting something better. If nothing else, the robot can order delivery for missing ingreadents. (I know the big names in web grocerys are out of
Re:Ok... the robots... (Score:2)
segway clone (Score:4, Insightful)
Wasn't it the biggest let down when you heard that this new type of mobile that would "revolutionize" transportation forever... turned out to be a bulky, overpriced scooter?
Hey- the wheels are next to each other. Neat. Now why would I want to buy one?
It was a great idea, but not any more than meal-in-a-pill was a good idea, or the anthropomorphic robot of the 1950's. Neat, but who really wants one (not counting rich people with money to burn)? So does it really deserve to be copied? Imitation is the most sincere form of flattery... but... it's a scooter!
Re:segway clone (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:segway clone (Score:2)
All the more reason to embrace LESSER technologies, like pogo sticks.
Re:segway clone (Score:3, Funny)
good times roll (Score:2)
Re:good times roll (Score:2)
Re:segway clone (Score:1)
Re:segway clone (Score:4, Interesting)
I do think Segways have a use in positions such as, say, warehouse manager and other jobs where people are walking around all day.
Still, I'd rather walk and get the exercise. Oh well.
Attitude for success (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Attitude for success (Score:2)
Rad2Go [rad2go.com] : Segway [segway.com] = I-Cybie [virtualpet.com] : Abio [sony.net]
I guess there's a market for knock-off gucci watches, so why not knock-off Segways? But still, I think it's in very bad taste. I hope they get laughed off the stage.
High Definition TiVo (Score:5, Interesting)
-S
Me too.... (Score:3, Insightful)
I did use it a little last month when I tried out HDNet, but sadily I'm addicted to TiVo (dual tuner no less) and promptly cancelled HDNet and turned the Proscan off.
-mb
The transparent speakers are my pick (Score:5, Interesting)
Sliding the suckers out probably isn't necessary on a laptop anyway, because you'll be sitting so close to it. However what with the rash of large-display laptops coming out these days, it might be nice to have this feature, so that you can have portable cinema that a couple of people can sit down in front of.
Alternatively, and perhaps more realistically outside of Japanese test markets, you could have a stereo flat panel speaker built into the display for your front channel, and then plug speakers into the headphone jack and configure the sound to use them for the rear channel audio. This is probably a much better idea, but this is one of those stream-of-conciousness posts.
Re:The transparent speakers are my pick (Score:2)
And what about frequancy range? If it's ultrasonic capable, maybe we could use bowls made of plastic to keep soup warm. Or for cleaning things... Also good for fire alarms... all the windows go off. Put the cabling on the outside, and you can have internal/external alarms on the same channel. Noise cancelation in cars? Put a microphone in
DRM? That's bad news... (Score:2, Interesting)
Microsoft wants to do more than make sure there are Windows-powered devices in every office, home, cell phone, and car.
Then came the Big Three: speeches by Dell's Michael Dell, HP's Carly Fiorina, and Intel's Paul Otellini. All three PC companies now are fully ensconced in the world of consumer electronics, none more so than HP, which has wholeheartedly endorsed DRM as the wave of the future. And when someone endorses DRM these days, Hollywood pays tribute. Ben Affleck, Doctor Dre, Alicia Keys, and The Ed
Re:DRM? That's bad news... (Score:2)
On the whole, it does not worry me that much. If Carly had announced that HP was in partnership with MS to support and develop Palladium that would have bothered me a lot more. That may be coming (as you say), but it seems more likely to me that HP are really
Re:DRM? That's bad news... (Score:1)
Your assuming they will be able to. Seeing how soon motherboards with be DRMed possibly from the bios to the cpu, I doubt they will be able to install any version of linux unless its complies and is "trusted." And seeing how all the major OEM have decided to "officially" embrace DRM we could have a serious problem. First you are going to likely see non-DRM products
Why clone the Segway? (Score:5, Insightful)
For $1000 youre still talking about a nice shiny new "bike shop" bike that would run the clone into the dirt. Heck, even a $150 Wal Mart special would have no trouble in that regard.
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:2)
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:3, Insightful)
So healthy persons are not the Segway's target market.
We're talking about a guy who makes fancy balancing wheelchairs, the segway is more like a fancy motorized "walker" (what do you call them 4-legged cane-like things elderly people walk around with?).
its a neat idea if the Segway werent eclipsed by the venerable bicycle in nearly every respect.
From your young, healthy point of view. But for someone who's proud to be able to sta
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:2)
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:2)
Close, but the Segway is a yuppie toy, not a next-gen wheelchair. The next generation Segway will be the device that made Baron Harkonen float around.
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:2)
Could you ride that bike on a crowded sidewalk (local ordinances aside)? How about through an office hallway.
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:2)
Not when you're dealing with long distances. Sure - walking is good exercise. Most people could use it (me included). But the Segway provides a way of covering those distances in a manner when walking isn't practical (and neither is a vehicle such as a car or bike).
Who said anything about 20ft? Some office complexes are rather large. Zipping around a large office campus, going in and out of the ass
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:2)
For the price of a Segway
You just answered your own question.
It doesn't NEED to be that expensive. By a LONG shot.
you can buy a nearly weightless (15 lbs) carbon fiber bike that Lance Armstrong would be proud to ride, and with a few weeks of practice, any reasonably healthy person could out pace and out distance any Segway.
Try riding a carbon-fiber bicycle around indoors, at a crowded convention, in a buisness suit. B-)
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:2)
Lazy b*stard - what is wrong with walking around a crowded convention, that's what most of us would do.
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:2)
OK
For the price of a segway, you can buy a nearly weightless (5 lbs) razor scooter that Lance Armstrong probably wouldn't be caught dead on, and with a few weeks of practice, any reasonably healthy person could out pace and out distance any Segway, indoors, at a crowded convention, in a business suit.
In fact, for the price of a segway you can buy razor scooters for all the fat bastards on your corporate board and upper management. Now, wouldn't that be worth it to see your entire company "leadership" rid
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:2)
Shoot, is that in the "Official Geek Manual"? Do I lose geek points when I say "I don't care" about most of these new products?
A tech geek is someone who finds technology insteresting. However it doesn't mean that think that all new technology is 'foward-looking'.
On the contrary, after being exposed to technology for a while, I'm pretty cynical and disinterested in most products put out by these tech shows. They are usually full of the same shit
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, I agree. The Segway is a solution in search of a problem that's already been solved in better ways--for most people. Still, unlike "new" speakers, a "new" camera, or most other daily "new" shite from companies, the Segway is at least fairly original.
Re:Why clone the Segway? (Score:2)
What I find kind of amusing about this line of thinking was the reactions to the first bicycles. They were rather inefficent, difficult to use, somewhat dangerous, and got a lot of negative attention from critics claiming that t
Not a clone in the slightest... (Score:4, Informative)
The entire point of the Segway is the gyroscopic balancing.
I'm reminded of that "RoboSweep [slashdot.org]" that billed itself a "Roomba Clone".
Who submits? (Score:5, Interesting)
Or the one the other day about the color alterations on the mars photos. Now, I'm almost willing to forgive this one, since it is pretty interesting, but on the other hand, the guy could have gotten the answer to his dilemma just by going to NASA's site.
Remember when slashdot was about the wierd and wacky stuff on the internet? Like the lego porn page, or the telephone sex page (the one where telephones are having sex), the unix admin porn page, the site that you can telnet into and it does star wars (the movie) in ascii, and other things like this.
I think I miss this the most about slashdot.
Re:Who submits? (Score:1)
Re:Who submits? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Who submits? (Score:1)
Re:Who submits? (Score:2)
I just don't get it.
Re: (Score:2)
Ok, here's what I found... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Who submits? (Score:2)
I can't help but notice that you provide 4 examples of "vintage slashdot"... three of which are porn related, and the fourth is star wars in ascii, which to a geek is so close to porn that they're indistinguis
That is not a segway clone. (Score:1)
Stax (Score:5, Interesting)
You could indeed see through these; there was only a layer of something like a coarse cheesecloth in front of them, and a metal grill of sorts behind, protecting what I understood was a pair of sandwiched plastic layers that looked like celophane. Our cats would eye the whole arrangement from time to time and flex their claws. They learned to stay away from them eventually.
This particular pair was a factory-rejected "showroom model", coming at a significant discount: the engineers had the bright idea of putting two LEDs on the bottom of the speakers to indicate whether you were overdriving the speakers. Green was loud but acceptable, and Red meant that you'd probably already committed one or more of the precious panels to the garbage. Unfortunately, their reviewers, who like to listen in dark rooms at high volume, found the presense of a bright green LED "distracting". The company purportedly removed it from subsequent models.
The panels were apparently very low-yield -- something like only 11 pairs a year were manufactured, and it's seems pretty obvious from Stax's headphone-centric website that they're no longer making them. We did manage to get a replacement panel from them once, about 2 years after we purchased the speakers, but I'm pretty sure that won't happen again. The speakers had another problem recently with capacitors in their power supply leaking -- just recently we found a second batch when the second speaker's started going bad, but I don't believe they've been installed yet. A bit of a shame, really.
As a side note, these speakers completely spoiled me -- nothing which I've had since sounds nearly as clear. With a good recording, you could close your eyes and completely lose yourself. These taught me to appreciate vinyl far more than I would have otherwise; with some listening and comparison, I could even understand why my father had gone with a tube amp rather than a solid state one...
Re:Stax (Score:1)
Re:Stax (Score:2)
And yes, you're right -- once you've listened extensively to electro-static speakers, nothing else seems to measure up.
A REAL Segway Clone... (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.tlb.org/scooter.html
coolest thing in the nextgen home (Score:2)
Invisible speakers (Score:1)
Detroit auto show has toys too (Score:1)
Now that
qrio.zip without registration (Score:1, Offtopic)
Yeah I'm lazy
Anyway, looks like a pretty spiffy robot, would love to see it run.
Best PR quote ever... (Score:5, Interesting)
"Although local governments have placed restrictions on riding Segways in crowded city streets, Wang said the same restrictions shouldn't apply to the Electric Chariot. "It's not a Segway," he said. "But we're going to say to the consumer, 'You bought it, you figure it out.'""
This Segway imitiation is a joke; it's playing on the segway image with absolutly none of the same technology. This thing is more related to an senior-citizen mobility soloution, except you stand up. And it even has a name to match!
How do those invisible speakers sound (Score:1)
I have a Panasonic Panasonic SJ-MJ57 [panasonic.jp] Minidisc player that comes with clear speakers, even cool blue LEDs that light them up. The downside is that the sound is pretty bad.
How to render the Segway obsolete (Score:1)
Re:Contemplating SUICIDE (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Contemplating SUICIDE (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Contemplating SUICIDE (Score:2, Informative)
If you're trolling, fuck off immediately and stop causing people consternation. If you aren't, please click the above link and find a suicide hotline near you. Operators are standing by.
Incidentally, I wonder what's up with that page's colors. Black and purple? Gah, how depressing.
Do not do it (Score:1)
You do not want to do it, trust me on this. You have a lot of life left in you, do not throw it away.
While things appear hopeless, you can do something about it.
Get a book on parenting, learn to budget things. You don't have to buy your children toys all the time, try getting creative and give them a cardboard box to play with and crayons to draw on that box. Won't cost you much and keeps them h
Re:Contemplating SUICIDE (Score:2)
Re:Segway... (Score:1, Funny)
Turns out it needn't be very fancy after all. (Score:2)
I was at a convention last Nov where a fellow had hacked up his own Segway-like device. Very stable. Very zippy. Very controllable.
Segway talks a lot about how hard the balance problem is, going on about the number of processors they threw at the problem. This guy said it was actually pretty simple. Yes you do need a rate gyro and an accellerometer. But t
Re:Segway... (Score:1)