Sure, there are nifty apps that allow you to simulate a keyboard on your iPhone, but Ion Audio has gone ahead and created a physical one to match the newly announced
iType. The iDiscover keyboard, along with the companion iDiscover Keyboard app, has 25 keys and effectively turns your iPhone into a music studio complete with synth-action keys, and pitch and modulation wheels. Better yet, it doubles as a controller for MIDI software on either Mac or PC.
The iDiscover keyboard turns your iPhone into a piano and more originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 16:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Wondering what kind of apps are enabled by the “world’s first HDTV-based application store“? Check out this CES show floor demo of a cross platform game tying together a Samsung flat-screen TV and cellphone to experience the magic of virtual fishing. We’ll probably keep our dedicated systems for gaming, but for a slight hint of what a crossplatform app store has to offer, by all means take a look.
Continue reading Samsung Apps demo ties phone & TV together in Wiimote-like bliss
Samsung Apps demo ties phone & TV together in Wiimote-like bliss originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 16:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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LAS VEGAS — Sixty percent of the camcorders that Samsung sells are bought by women. And not because they are painted a patronizing pink, either. According to Samsung VP of digital media, Seung Soo Park, moms buy most of the cameras because they’re not gear-heads and instead want something simple that just works.
Samsung’s latest lineup [...]

DLNA is one of the most widely adopted digital content sharing protocols around, and at CES this year you’d have a hard time finding a new HDTV on the floor that doesn’t use it to stream videos, pictures and music around the home — not to mention all the other multimedia devices. The new guidelines released earlier this year are finally making their way into new devices and these new guidelines are apparently what cable TV providers have been waiting for. Unlike most current DLNA implementations, the new clients can now display the DLNA server’s user interface, and although you might not be in love with it, your cable company is. So what this could mean to us is that if we buy one of these new HDTVs with DLNA baked in, we would be able to use the cable company’s DVR via the network even if the DVR is in another room — not to mention PlayOn and a number of other DLNA servers. Now of course no one wants to mount a set-top under your newly wall mounted HDTV, so this could really end up being what many have been waiting for — not to mention the fact that all your content should be available to any room of the house. Of course a press release is one thing and implementing is another, but this is one that we’ll be following closely.
Comcast, Time Warner and Cox are excited about the latest in DLNA originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 15:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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LAS VEGAS — Getting on the treadmill also means its time to plug in those headphones for some Lady Gaga and Rihanna.
Now a digital music player from Philip called Activa promises to sort through your music library and sync it to your heart rate. It’s a pedometer combined with a music player.
The watch-like Activa can [...]
We’ve been waiting and waiting to see
Pixel Qi’s 3Qi e-paper screen in a device, and we were hoping to see some sort of solid announcement at
CES, but looks like we will still be waiting. Though the company has ramped up production on its E ink killer which allows you to turn the backlight off on an LCD screen, they’re still working with its half a dozen partners. We
were told that within the year we will see a manufacturer that “everyone is familiar with” announcing a device that uses the technology. No word though if it will be a netbook, e-reader or tablet.
Though we’ve seen prototype devices before, we got another look at it today. The high resolution display was hacked into a Lenovo IdeaPad S10. With the backlight on the screen color looked crisp though horizontal viewing angles while watching a video clip on the screen were poor in some lighting. Similarly, when we turned the backlight off, which switches the display to just a black and white mode, the viewing angles on a movie weren’t great. Regardless, we continue to be impressed with the refresh rates of the display. Hit the break for a quick video.
Continue reading Pixel Qi screens to be used by a major manufacturer in 2010
Pixel Qi screens to be used by a major manufacturer in 2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 15:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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We’re so hard at work here at CES that we almost forgot that we just got brand new t-shirts! To celebrate our time in Las Vegas, we thought we’d share a little love and give away five of these precious bits of thread. You probably know the drill already, but the full rules (and another shot of our kind friend Roger modeling the shirt) are after the break so read on and get commenting!
Continue reading Engadget’s CES giveaway: win an Engadget t-shirt!
Engadget’s CES giveaway: win an Engadget t-shirt! originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 15:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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