Showing posts with label Smartphones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Smartphones. Show all posts

2012-04-21

Cellphones That Can See Through Walls

Your Next Phone May Be Able to See Through Walls | PCWorld

Researchers at the University of Texas at Dallas disclosed this week that they've developed an imager chip that could turn mobile phones into devices that can see through walls, wood, plastics, paper, and other objects.
[...]
Portions of the electromagnetic spectrum are already used for consumer devices. For example, microwaves are used to cook food, broadcast radio uses AM and FM waves, and infrared waves are used for seeing in the dark. For their purposes, the researchers used waves in the terahertz range.

Team Finds Possibilities in Untapped Terahertz Range - UT Dallas News

Tapping the Terahertz Gap

Shown is the electromagnet spectrum, from radio waves used for FM and AM signals, to infrared waves used for remote controls, to gamma rays that kill cancer cells.  A team at UT Dallas is focusing on the "terahertz band," which has not been accessible for most consumer devices.



Dr. Kenneth O, director of the Texas Analog Center of Excellence and a professor of electrical engineering, left, worked with a team including Dae Yeon Kim, who was among the authors of the research report.

Will Cellphones Be Able to See Through Walls? New Research Says Yes



When signals on the terahertz band travel from your phone, they’ll bounce back — and that’s when the microchip comes in. The chips are manufactured using CMOS (Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor) technology, which is the basis of most of the electronic devices around you. A censor in the chip will pick up terahertz signals and then images can be created.

If terahertz-band signals can create images with fewer lenses — which would be the case with this technology — that means less money for lenses and a smaller camera. By using a CMOS sensor, the cost becomes even cheaper.

“CMOS is affordable and can be used to make lots of chips,” said Dr. O. “The combination of CMOS and terahertz means you could put this chip and receiver on the back of a cellphone, turning it into a device carried in your pocket that can see through objects.”



2012-03-11

Samsung Flexible OLED Display

Samsung flexible OLED gadgets incoming this year - SlashGear

Samsung is mass producing flexible OLED displays for products still on track for release in 2012, the company has confirmed, though the exact extent to which they actually bend will depend on more than just the panels themselves. Samsung Mobile Display’s assistant president confirmed the sales plans this week, Asia Economy Park News reports, insisting that “flexible displays will be commercialized within a year.” The initial implementations are expected to include smartphones and tablets.




DailyTech - New Samsung Flexible Display Patent Detailed

Foldable displays use plastic rather than glass as a substrate for the displays. The plastic allows a flexible display to be bent, folded, or rolled opening up the possibility of smartphones that are curved like bracelets or can be rolled up into a very thin profile. The patent in question showed images of just such a device with a screen that rolls up into a cylindrical holder.  
The displays can into electronic newspapers, while keeping the same features that are used to in rigid screens. One of the benefits of these flexible screens compared to rigid screens will be very apparent to any smartphone user who has dropped their device and crushed the screen.  
The flexible displays will be able to absorb the shock and bend rather than cracking and breaking, making a more robust screen that is lighter at the same time. According to the patent, the flexible display will be based on a substrate of flexible plastic, metal foil, thin glass, or other thin and flexible material. The patent also notes some the target products for the screens.



A Samsung Flexible Display Patent Emerges, Products due in 2013 - Patent Bolt

The display of patent FIG. 3A may be bent, folded or crooked with respect to a predetermined bending central line seen above as patent point #51. The sensor unit 20 may detect a degree of bending of the flexible display unit as the predetermined bending angle. If the unit is abused or not in use for a given amount of time, the power supply will shut off automatically.



Samsung's patent FIG. 3B simply illustrates the condition where the flexible display apparatus is substantially folded. In that particular bended state, it sure looks like it's mimicking a folded book, don't you think? Considering that Samsung earlier listed the possibility of using an electrophoretic display in an electronic book as one of their possible end user products, it's not much of a stretch at all to envision this being used as such in the future. A few other interesting concept designs have been leaked over time,  such as  this one.

Samsung Flexible AMOLED coming to a Phone near you in 2012 | OMG!Droid


The flexible display, we are looking to introduce sometime in 2012, hopefully the earlier part, said Samsung spokesman Robert Yi

2009-04-08

The Nokia E75 (reviews)

Clipped from: Nokia E75 smartphone announced - Mobiletor.com

Nokia E75 smartphone announced




Nokia has announced the availability of the much awaited Nokia E75 phone. The company claims that this new device is the first phone to come integrated with the Nokia Messaging and email services as well as to use a new email user interface.

Clipped from: Nokia - ShowPressRelease

Nokia


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Email the way you want it - Nokia E75 begins shipping
April 06, 2009


Espoo, Finland - The Nokia E75 has arrived in stores, bringing the company's best efficiency and productivity solution to the market. The new arrival is the first device to ship with the new email user interface, offering full desktop email functionality, and complete integration of Nokia's email and messaging services.

Clipped from: YouTube - Nokia E75

Nokia E75



Clipped from: Review: First look at the Nokia E75 messaging device | Smartphones and Cell Phones | ZDNet.com

Review: First look at the Nokia E75 messaging device



Clipped from: Ye Giant Nokia E75 Review | ZOMG its Cj

Ye Giant Nokia E75 Review





The E75 is positioned as the next Eseries Flagship device, with it’s formfactor stated to replace the E90 Communicator Series. The device however, comes fully loaded with features such as the 3.2 MegaPixels Camera, Slide-Out Qwerty Keyboard in addition to the AlphaNumeric Keypad. There’s GPS and Wifi built-in, and the mostly stainless steel finishing gives it a nice classy expensive feel and weight to the device.

Here are a couple of the features that the E75 boasts :

  • 240 x 320 pixels 16M colors TFT Screen at 2.4 inches
  • Symbian OS 3.2 (S60 V3 Feature Pack 2)
  • ARM 11 369 MHz processor
  • 3.2 MegaPixel Camera with autofocus and LED flash, VGA Video Recording at 30fps
  • Quad-band GSM with Dual-band 3G with HSDPA support
  • Wifi and GPS built in
  • microSD card expandable, includes 4GB in package
  • FM and Bluetooth
  • Micro USB v2.0, suppports USB-Charging
  • Standard 3.5mm Audio Jack
  • Slide-out Full Qwerty Keyboard
  • Accelerometer sensor for automatic UI rotation and motion-based features

Clipped from: YouTube - Nokia E75 Full Review

Nokia E75 Full Review

Full review of Nokia's slider QWERTY for the business set - thanks to the folks at WOMWorld for the loaner. What'd Noah think after a week or two with the E75? Watch and find out!



Sources:

  1. Nokia E75 smartphone announced - Mobiletor.com
  2. Nokia - ShowPressRelease
  3. YouTube - Nokia E75
  4. Review: First look at the Nokia E75 messaging device | Smartphones and Cell Phones | ZDNet.com
  5. YouTube - First look at the Nokia E75
  6. Ye Giant Nokia E75 Review | ZOMG its Cj
  7. YouTube - Nokia E75 Full Review

Related:
  1. Nokia Europe - Nokia E75 - Products
  2. Nokia E75 video round up | Nokia Conversations
  3. Nokia E75 Now Shipping : Email the Way You Want It | ZOMG its Cj


2008-08-15

First Google Android Phones Coming Soon


Recently there were some rumors


Clipped from: Google Android just five weeks away? | The Register the first Android phone

The Register ®

Google Android just five weeks away?

This week, another unnamed source told TmoNews - a T-Mobile obsessed blog - that the American wireless carrier will offer up the first Android phone for pre-sale on 17 September.

Back in June, sources told The Wall Street Journal that Google's currently closed open mobile platform could be delayed until 2009.


Clipped from: TmoNews » Blog Archive » Android may be here sooner then we think

Android may be here sooner then we think




We’re hearing rumor after rumor that Android has been delayed, and pushed back to 2009. Well TmoNews is jumping into the pool or rumors, calling BS on those other rumors, and putting in our vote of confidence on a presale of the Android phone on September 16th, 2008. This information, coming from a trusted source, prices the Android phone, also known as the G1 (Codename or real name, we’re not sure) at $399.


Even a video:


Clipped from: YouTube - HTC Dream



Now The New York Times confirms:

Clipped from: Smartphone Is Expected via Google - NYTimes.com



Smartphone Is Expected via Google

T-Mobile will be the first carrier to offer a mobile phone powered by Google’s Android software, according to people briefed on the company’s plans. The phone will be made by HTC, one of the largest makers of mobile phones in the world, and is expected to go on sale in the United States before Christmas, perhaps as early as October.
[...]
The phone’s release date depends on how soon the Federal Communications Commission certifies that the Google software and the HTC phone meet network standards. Executives at all three companies are hoping to announce the phone in September because they would benefit from holiday season sales. The people briefed on the discussions declined to be named because they were not authorized to discuss the project.

Related:
TmoNews » Blog Archive » Android may be here sooner then we think
Smartphone Is Expected via Google - NYTimes.com
Google Android just five weeks away? | The Register
Unofficial Blog Says First Google Phone Has a Release Date and a Name: The G1 | Gadget Lab from Wired.com
Sources: HTC’s Google Android phone is “weeks away” from launching » VentureBeat
New info and pricing emerges for T-Mobile’s Android phone, September launch? - TECH.BLORGE.com

2008-07-15

Inside the iPhone 3G -- A Complete Disassembly by iFixit


iFixit has live blogged the first disassembly of an iPhone. A video and some highlights of this event:
clipped from www.tuaw.com

iFixit breaks down an iPhone 3G

The wacky folks at iFixit are up to their destructive ways once more. They've gotten their hands on an iPhone 3G and they did what any normal geek would do: tore it apart and posted pics on the internet.
clipped from www.youtube.com
iPhone 3G Disassembly / Disassembling by iFixit
clipped from www.ifixit.com
iFixit

You fix it. We make it
easy.


We enable you to repair your Apple PowerBook, iBook, MacBook
or iPod yourself.


Thousands of Mac + iPod parts,


free Fixit Guides, and
exceptional support.


iPhone 3G Disassembly
clipped from live.ifixit.com

Safe in our possession

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No surprises inside the box:

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Removing the SIM card. Fortunately for the world's paper clips, the iPhone 3G comes with a SIM eject tool.

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Rotating the display up.

first image

Do not remove

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Just kidding. Look, the battery isn't soldered on!

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Logic Board

first image

At last!

From top left to bottom right: Display glass, LCD, Main board and EMI shield, Antenna and battery, Back panel.

first image

blog it
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Related:
iFixit: iPod, iBook, & PowerBook Parts and Accessories
iPhone 3G - iFixit: iPod, iBook, & PowerBook Parts and Accessories
iPhone Disassembly: iPhone Parts
iFixit breaks down an iPhone 3G - The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)
Applelinks.com iFixit Disassembles iPhone!