Motorola, Toshiba, HTC and other tech giants are using this year’s Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas to debut their latest and greatest products. In what should prove a surprise to exactly nobody, many of those products are smartphones and tablets. While every company is offering something different with regard to software and hardware, some trends are definitely emerging: Many of the upcoming tablets, including the Motorola Xoom and Toshiba’s tablet, embrace Android 3.0. With regard to smartphones, manufacturers definitely have their eye on 4G networks.
If last year’s CES was all about e-readers for many companies, this one is all about tablets. Companies such as Research In Motion (with its PlayBook) hope to make a dent in the increasingly crowded space. Other tech stalwarts, though, seem more concerned with offering the latest devices in entirely different product lines, including connected TVs and in-car IT systems. In any case, the sheer number of new devices poised to enter the market suggests that 2011 will be a very big year for tech. – …
Posts Tagged ‘shown’
Motorola Droid Bionic, Toshiba Tablet, HTC Inspire, Others Shown at CES
Dell Android Tablet Shown Off at Oracle OpenWorld
Dell showed off a prototype of a 7-inch tablet PC running Google Android at Oracle OpenWorld. It will be the company’s second tablet PC after the 5-inch Streak. – Dell plans on releasing a 7-inch tablet PC, powered by
Google Android, as a follow-up to the recently released Streak. CEO Michael Dell
offered a sneak peek of the new device during a Sept. 22 presentation at Oracle
OpenWorld, but remained tight-lipped about specs or a possible release
date.
…
Versatility in Accounting as Shown By Peachtree Solutions Posted By : Gina Williams
Business owners nowadays have taken an innovative leap and started utilizing modern technology in many aspects of their business processes.
Survival strategy movies to be shown to Haiti quake victims
More than 70,000 people in quake-hit Haiti capital Port-au-Prince and nearby cities will be shown free movies on survival strategies, a media report said Saturday.
Under a programme launched in 2005 which aims at sharing cinematic experience with communities devastated by poverty or natural disasters, the Mexican government will show 11 films free of charge in [...]
Aamir khan’s European premiere at the 60th Berlin International Film Festival was a huge success and now his production Peepli Live will be released simultaneously in Germany and India. After Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan’s film Om Shanti Om, Peepli Live is the second bollywood film to get honor of being shown in this program two years ago.
Mumbai witnessed its first ever Cyclothon yesterday where Salman Khan was the star attraction of the event. Cyclothon is the event where Cycling professionals from different parts of the world participate in. It was held around the Bandra suburb that continued till noon.
The city’s foremost Cyclothon had two cycling events: the BSA Hercules India [...]
CIA bomber shown on TV with Pakistan Taliban leader
A Pakistan television station showed on Saturday what it said was the suicide bomber double agent who killed CIA agents in Afghanistan sitting with the Pakistani Taliban leader, and reported he shared US and Jordanian state secrets with militants. Private television station AAJ showed
Burley set to be shown the red card
Wireless power system shown off
By Jonathan Fildes
Technology reporter, BBC News, Oxford
A system that can deliver power to devices without the need for wires has been shown off at a hi-tech conference.
The technique exploits simple physics and can be used to charge a range of electronic devices.
Eric Giler, chief executive of US firm Witricity, showed mobile phones and televisions charging wirelessly at the TED Global conference in Oxford.
He said the system could replace the miles of expensive power cables and billions of disposable batteries.
"There is something like 40 billion disposable batteries built every year for power that, generally speaking, is used within a few inches or feet of where there is very inexpensive power," he said.
Trillions of dollars, he said, had also been invested building an infrastructure of wires "to get power form where it is created to where it is used."

"We love this stuff [electricity] so much," he said.
Mr Giler showed off a Google G1 phone and an Apple iPhone that could be charged using the system.
Witricity, he said, had managed to pack all the necessary components into the body of the G1 phone, but Apple had made that process slightly harder.
"They don’t make it easy at Apple to get inside their phones so we put a little sleeve on the back," he said.
He also showed off a commercially available television using the system.
"Imagine you get one of these things and you want to hang it on the wall," he said. "Think about it, you don’t want those ugly cords hanging down."
Good vibrations
The system is based on work by physicist Marin Soljacic at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
It exploits "resonance", whereby energy transfer is markedly more efficient when a certain frequency is applied.
When two objects have the same resonant frequency, they exchange energy strongly without having an effect on other, surrounding objects.
For example, it is resonance that can cause a wine glass to explode when a singer hits exactly the right tone.
But instead of using acoustic resonance, Witricity’s approach exploits the resonance of low frequency electromagnetic waves.

- 1. First magnetic coil (Antenna A) housed in a box and can be set in wall or ceiling
- 2. Antenna A, powered by mains, resonates at a specific frequency
- 3. Electromagnetic waves transmitted through the air
- 4. Second magnetic coil (Antenna B) fitted in laptop/TV etc resonates at same frequency as first coil and absorbs energy
- 5. Energy charges the device
The system uses two coils – one plugged into the mains and the other embedded or attached to the gadget.
Each coil is carefully engineered with the same resonant frequency. When the main coil is connected to an electricity supply, the magnetic field it produces is resonant with that of with the second coil, allowing "tails" of energy to flow between them.
As each "cycle" of energy arrives at the second coil, a voltage begins to build up that can be used to charge the gadget.
Mr Giler said the main coil could be embedded in the "ceiling, in the floor, or underneath your desktop".
Devices using the system would automatically begin to charge as soon as they were within range, he said.
"You’d never have to worry about plugging these things in again."
Safety concerns
Mr Giler was keen to stress the safety of the equipment during the demonstration.
"There’s nothing going on – I’m OK," he said walking around a television running on wireless power.
The system is able to operate safely because the energy is largely transferred through magnetic fields.

"Humans and the vast majority of objects around us are non-magnetic in nature," Professor Soljacic, one of the inventors of the system, told BBC News during a visit to Witricity earlier this year.
It is able to do this by exploiting an effect that occurs in a region known as the "far field", the region seen at a distance of more than one wavelength from the device.
In this field, a transmitter would emit mixture of magnetic and potentially dangerous electric fields.
But, crucially, at a distance of less than one wavelength – the "near field" – it is almost entirely magnetic.
Hence, Witricity uses low frequency electromagnetic waves, whose waves are about 30m (100ft) long. Shorter wavelengths would not work.
‘Ridiculous technology’
Witricity is not the first jump on the concept of wireless electricity.
For example, the nineteenth century American inventor Thomas Edison and physicist and engineer Nikola Tesla explored the concept.
"In the very early days of electricity before the electric grid was deployed [they] were very interested in developing a scheme to transmit electricity wirelessly over long distances," explained Professor Soljacic.

"They couldn’t imagine dragging this vast infrastructure of metallic wires across every continent."
Tesla even went so far as to build a 29m-high aerial known as Wardenclyffe Tower in New York.
"It ran into some financial troubles and that work was never completed," said Professor Soljacic.
Today, chip-giant Intel has seized on a similar idea to Witricity’s, whilst other companies work on highly directional mechanisms of energy transfer, such as lasers.
However, unlike Witricity’s work, lasers require an uninterrupted line of sight, and are therefore not good for powering objects around the home.
In contrast, Mr Giler said Witricity’s approach could be used for a range of applications from laptops and phones to implanted medical devices and electric cars.
"Imagine driving in the garage and the car charges itself," he said.
He even said he had had interest from a company who proposed to use the system for an "electrically-heated dog bowl".
"You go from the sublime to the ridiculous," he said.
Ted Global is a conference dedicated to "ideas worth spreading". It runs from the 21 to 24 July in Oxford, UK. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
U.S. soldier shown in Taliban video
The Taliban have released a 28-minute video showing a US soldier captured in Afghanistan last month. In the video, the soldier, in grey clothes and with shaved head, says being a prisoner is “unnerving” and that he misses his family.





