Archive for the ‘Technology Related Articles’ Category

XBox 360 – New Video Game has a steep price, but system capabilities & games worth it

Sunday, November 20th, 2005

Paul Chapman
Province

Wireless controllers are just one of many, many extras Xbox has included with the new 360.

On Tuesday the video game world will be making a huge leap into the future.

The Xbox 360 is upon us, and this new machine takes it to another level — bigger than the leap of the first

Xbox, or even from the original PlayStation to PlayStation 2.

The computing power is much bigger, the games faster and the graphics sharper. But the Xbox 360 is not just a little diversion for the nights when Desperate Housewives is in reruns. This is a full-on, grown-up media machine.

Online use is huge, both in gaming through Xbox Live and the 360’s media-centre capabilities. DVDs, music, streaming video from your PC, gaming in single player mode or online with foes from around the world — this is a true multi-media machine.

There are two packages, one for $399, one for $499, with the more expensive one being a way better deal as you get a whole host of extras such as a hard drive, headset and wireless controllers that would cost you much more buying them separately. Don’t be scared off by the price. This is a machine that will be front and centre in your entertainment life for at least five years, if not longer.

The geek speak sounds impressive even if you don’t know what on Earth it means: 3.2 gigahertz, multicore, IBM CPU, a custom ATI graphics chip and multichannel surround sound, a 12x DVD-ROM drive that can read Xbox 360 DVDs and the usual optical media formats, such as DVD-Video, DVD-ROM, CD-ROM, CD-R, CD-RW, MP3 CD, and JPEG Photo CD. You can move files onto the 360 through the USB ports, or through the Media Centre extender capabilities by streaming media over to the box from any Windows PC on your home network.

There’s 512 megabytes of system memory, and an advanced 500MHz ATI graphics chip. The chip has 48-way parallel floating-point dynamically-scheduled shader pipelines. They tell me today’s PC desktop video cards max out at 16 pipelines, so I know the Xbox 360 is better. How? I don’t know, but those numbers are impressive.

This is good ol’ American technology. Big numbers, big capability. One of the peripherals comes with a 20-gigabyte removable hard drive that stores 300 times the data as the 64-megabyte memory card that is also available. There are wireless controllers, high definition AV cables, it’s all high-end stuff.

But all this means nothing if you don’t have the games. Here’s a look at some of the launch games:

CALL OF DUTY 2

Some are saying this is the game that shows off the most evidence of what the 360 can do. It has limited appeal — it’s a war game — but for the ones who want to be first in, will be a huge seller.

KAMEO: ELEMENTS OF POWER

A magical heroine takes on the persona of other creatures to fight evil. Getting a big marketing push and probably the most generally appealing game at launch.

MADDEN NFL 06

The sports giant looks incredible. A system-seller for hard-core football fans and sports gamers.

NEED FOR SPEED MOST WANTED

Locally developed racing game will show off the speed of the system perfectly.

PERFECT DARK ZERO

A franchise that was stolen from Nintendo, this spy shooter may be the most anticipated launch game.

PROJECT GOTHAM RACING 3

This one looked near-perfect on the Xbox; on the 360 will be amazing.

TIGER WOODS PGA TOUR 06

One of the best sports games out there will look stunning on the 360.

TONY HAWK’S AMERICAN WASTELAND

Big franchise makes the leap, taking action and adventure on a skateboard to the next level.

FIFA 06

Another Vancouver-made game, this brings the ultra-realistic soccer franchise to more computing power. With the World Cup next year, this will be a must-own title on the 360 for soccer fans.

NBA LIVE 06

The third launch game done here in Vancouver, this may be one of the best yet — the detail here is stunning.

PETER JACKSON’S KING KONG

The famed Lord of the Rings director was involved in the game, so you know it’s going to look stunning and play just like the blockbuster. Giant apes and dinosaurs in a video game, how can it miss?

The second generation of games, though, may be the reason to buy the 360. The coming months are going to see some amazing titles:

SAINT’S ROW

Being tabbed as a Grand Theft Auto-style game that is turning heads behind closed doors.

QUAKE 4

This one will be huge. People were raving about how Doom 3 looked on the Xbox, but Quake 4 rocked the hardest cynics back at E3.

ELDER SCROLLS IV: OBLIVION

Fantasy, role-playing, action and amazing immersiveness make this one a hotly anticipated title.

FULL AUTO

Road combat, a la Twisted Metal with a Crazy Taxi and Project Gotham twist. I loved the preview for this at E3.

GEARS OF WAR

A sci-fi-themed tactical shooter from an over-the-shoulder third-person perspective, this will rival Halo. One of the best-looking games I’ve ever seen with a great story. This will probably end up as a movie.

© The Vancouver Province 2005

Finally LCDs that can get in the game

Saturday, November 19th, 2005

Sun

1) BenQ FP93G 19-inch LCD monitor, $500, available in January, 2006.

One of the reasons that gamers have tended to stick with the old dependable CRT monitors is that LCDs have lacked the speed to render game graphics quickly. Now BenQ is about to release what it says is the world’s fastest 19-inch LCD monitor, with performance “similar to that of the CRT.” It features an ultra-fast two millisecond grey-to-grey (GTG) response time, designed to offer clearer, sharper images with no lagging and image burning. This is produced through advanced motion accelerator technology, which increases the twisting speed of liquid crystal and shortens the GTG response time.

2) Memorex Mega Travel-Drive in four-, six- or eight-megabyte models, $120 to $200 US.

Tiny portable hard drives are simultaneously getting smaller and increasing in storage capacity, as evidenced by these new models from Memorex. Designed for the business traveller with a ton of data to back up, these drives are 4.5 x 5 x 1.4 centimetres, about 20-per-cent smaller than previous drives. The TravelDrive’s pivoting USB connector allows you to plug the drive into your laptop in tight spaces. At the same time, the drive does not need a separate power supply. Memorex estimates that the eight-gigabyte drive could store more than 100,000 text files.

3) Toshiba Qosmio G20-XG6 17-inch mobile AVPC and F20-XG1 15-inch model, $3,500 and $2,600 respectively.

Both these models are designed for those who want a combination of home entertainment possibilities along with solid computing power. They come with a TV tuner, DVD Super Multi double-layer drive functions, remote control, and Harmon Kardon speakers. Both also come with an Intel Pentium M 760 processor at 2.0 Ghz, one gigabyte of DDR2 and are loaded with Windows XP Media Centre Edition 2005. The more expensive model has two 100-gigabyte hard drives, while the 15-inch model has a single 100-gig drive.

4) Xantrex XPower Pocket Powerpack 100, $120.

An annoyance for most road warriors is having to carry a number of different power adapters, and the cumbersome “bricks” that often come with them. Vancouver-based Xantrex eliminates all this by offering a device that can power up such essential equipment as laptops, cell phones and PDAs, as well as MP3 players and game consoles, doing that through a USB power outlet. It weighs less than 2.4 pounds and is capable of recharging a Blackberry 30 times, an iPod 20 times and provide as much as 2.5 hours of laptop run time, without having to be plugged in.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

 

Canadian scientists invent the ‘Google of terror fighting’

Thursday, November 17th, 2005

TerroGate engine can alert security analysts of potential targets, pinpoint future hot spots

Sarah Staples
Sun

Canadian defence scientists will unveil today the Google of terror fighting tools: the world’s first search engine able to track down sophisticated references to terrorism hidden in vast quantities of written documents and Web pages.

TerroGate, developed by computational linguists at Defence R&D Canada — Valcartier, in Val-Belair, Que., is software that uses algorithms to search for the vocabulary of terrorism.

From a theoretically limitless and ever-changing store of written information, TerroGate calls up word matches centred around five main themes: terrorist tactics, groups and individuals, weapons, locations and targets.

The words could be contained in common document formats, including Microsoft Word, Adobe Acrobat and HTML (the coded language of the Internet). Eventually, the software will be able to comb through newswire feeds in real time as well.

The software could, for example, pull all references to water or nuclear power plants thought of as targets in Western Europe; instantly alert national security analysts to places where suicide bombings have occurred; or point out future potential hot spots anywhere in the world where wanted individuals are likely to strike.

TerroGate melds two emerging search trends. An “entity extraction” component sifts through documents tagging relevant words for easy retrieval. And the system is one of a handful in the world capable of performing “conceptual” searches, which don’t merely hunt for keywords the way Google or Yahoo do, but also notions more vaguely associated with the keyword.

“With traditional search engines you always need to know what [word] you’re looking for,” said Alain Auger, group leader of the knowledge management systems group at Valcartier, and the computational linguist in charge of the research. “Here, as long as you have an idea of the concept you want to search, you don’t have to know all the keywords. You can finally find information you didn’t know you wanted. To my knowledge, there’s nothing similar to it right now in the world.”

Security forces around the world already rely on rudimentary “entity extraction” technology. At least two commercial systems exist — AeroText, by a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin, and ThingFinder, by Inxight Software, Inc., which is used by the U.S. Defense Department and the U.S. army — but they only annotate generic proper or place names in a document. It’s still up to defence analysts to decide if the tagged references point to terrorist activity, Auger said.

In contrast, TerroGate automatically homes in on terror-related concepts and terminology without need for further analyst intervention, and with an accuracy rate of 93 per cent — a feat the software can accomplish in under three seconds, the scientists said.

The software is scheduled to be introduced in Quebec City, at Defence & Security Innovation 2005, a biennial conference attended by various government agencies.

Researchers started with a shortlist of one million words culled from non-classified international reports on terrorism, which they winnowed into a list of 3,000 exclusively terror-related terms. Those form the backbone of TerroGate’s sensitive, multi-layered searches, Auger said.

Auger said he’ll also consider building separate versions of TerroGate to retrieve words in languages other than English.

“Once it has been demonstrated that the technology is valid, from there now the potential is vast.”

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

 

Cellphones quickly morphing into do-everything devices

Wednesday, November 16th, 2005

Marc Saltzman
Sun

Bigger than television and the PC, the almighty cellphone has now topped 800 million users worldwide, and is estimated to reach one billion users within three years.

This isn’t too surprising, is it? After all, many have experienced that sinking feeling in the pit of their stomachs after accidentally leaving their cellphone at home. Heaven forbid.

Not only is the phone a lifeline to the outside world — friends, family, clients and co-workers — but it’ll soon be a music player, camcorder, portable television, PDA, satellite navigation device, web companion and hand-held gaming system.

Never short on innovation, a half-dozen new cellphones debuted this fall in Canada, each offering a tempting reason to upgrade.

Here are a few noteworthy examples:

THIN IS IN

Rogers Wireless and Motorola have teamed up to create a limited-edition pink version of its award-winning Razr cellphone to help spread awareness for Rethink Breast Cancer ($25 will be donated per handset sold). The ridiculously slender quad-band flip phone (1.39 centimetres by 5.3 cm by 9.8 cm) offers a handful of bells and whistles such as a 4X zoom camera, Bluetooth for supported wireless headsets and printers, and high-resolution colour screens to display 3-D games, screensavers, wallpaper, multimedia messaging or web content. The stunning silver keypad is created out of a single sheet of nickel-plated copper alloy. Price is still to be announced; rogers.com/pink.

TUNES TO GO

You may have heard of the Motorola Rokr music phone with Rogers Wireless, but Bell Mobility subscribers can also get into the groove. Carry a hundred of your favourite MP3 tunes wherever you go with the Motorola e815, a new flip phone with a slot in the side for a TransFlash memory card, which is smaller than a postage stamp to store all your songs or audio books. Or you can store photos and videos on the card thanks to the phone’s 1.3-megapixel camera. The e815 also offers Bluetooth support for wireless headsets, messaging features and built-in speaker. Oh, and, um, it can make phone calls, too. $149 with 36-month plan; Motorola.ca.

MIXMASTER

Cellphone users in search of fun features rather than business applications may opt for the Sony Ericsson Z520. Available from Fido, this fashionable quad-band world phone hides glowing lights around its body that flash in a certain pattern when a call comes in (perfect for in a dark club); you can program a different pattern for different incoming numbers. The VGA-quality camera shoots photos and video, which can then be mixed together in creative ways with Sony Ericsson’s Video DJ software. You can also change the front and back covers of this flip phone to customize its appearance. $75 with two-year plan; Sonyericsson.com.

FASHION FORWARD

Nokia’s latest “premium” handset fuses style and substance. Encased in a slim, stainless steel body, and a stunning screen protected by reinforced glass usually found in luxury timepieces, the Nokia 8801 is one of the increasingly popular “slide” phones that, when opened, reveals its laser-cut keypad and camera lens on the back that can shoot both still images and up to an hour of video footage. This GSM device with Bluetooth support also features voice recording, voice dialing, speaker phone, high-quality ringtones and 3-D graphics. $550 with a two-year Fido plan; Nokia.ca.

ROGER THAT

Available exclusively through Telus Mobility’s Mike network, the Motorola i878 is the company’s latest “push-to-talk” handset (think walkie-talkies), but with many extras such as Bluetooth support, a 1.3-megapixel camera, MP3 player, removable memory cards and multimedia messaging. Plus, along with its Direct Connect push-to-talk service that lets you speak instantly with millions of other users in Canada, the U.S., Mexico and South America, the Motorola i878 also offers “push-to-view” picture messaging and the ability to push contact information — such as names, phone numbers and e-mail addresses — for yourself as a virtual business card or anyone in your stored contacts list.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Digital cameras boast more pixels, more zoom, more video

Wednesday, November 16th, 2005

Marc Saltzman
Sun

If you’re in the market for a new digital camera, the good news is the swank new “digicams” are dropping in price even as new features are added, such as higher megapixels, better optical zoom and higher-quality video capture.

While simple point-and-shoot digital cameras make up the bulk of the consumer market, digital SLR (single lens reflex) cameras are increasing in popularity thanks to its through-the-lens view and wealth of manual options.

Problem is, with so many cameras on the market, it can be overwhelming to choose one that best suits a shutterbug’s needs and budget.

Here’s a brief look at a few new and impressive models.

FASHION FIRST

Canon has been a trend setter in the point-and-shoot digital camera space for a while now, and the company’s latest offering — the PowerShot SD30 Digital ELPH ($499; www.canon.ca), shown below — is sure to continue its dominance for its fusion of fashion and functionality. Under the hood of its metallic body (available in Tuxedo Black, Rockstar Red, Glamour Gold and Vivacious Violet, each with matching cases) is a 5-megapixel CCD with Canon’s proprietary DIGIC II image processor, 2.4x optical zoom and 16 automatic and manual shooting modes such as Kids and Pets, Night, Video and Snow, to name a few. This camera also ships with a camera station with wireless remote, the CS-DC1, which lets you charge the camera’s battery and easily transfer images to a PC.

For the same price, also consider the Kodak EasyShare V550 Zoom Digital Camera ($499; www.kodak.ca), another sleek 5.0-megapixel camera with a few interesting bells and whistles (including the ability to shoot up to 80 minutes of video).

GREAT ZOOM, GREAT PRICE

Many “soccer moms” (and dads, too) know all too well it can be tough to take a good photo of the kids playing the game from the stands or sidelines. Perhaps you need a camera with better zoom so you can capture their fancy footwork or emotion on their face. The Olympus SP-500 UZ ($479; www.olympusamerica.com), shown below, offers an incredible 10x optical zoom so you can take great shots from afar. The 6.0-megapixel camera, which supports interchangeable lenses (yes, in a point-and-shoot), also has a large 2.5-inch screen at the back to view photos or videos immediately after taking them.

If you’re after a bargain, the aggressively-priced HP Photosmart R817 ($349; www.hp.ca) is a stylish 5.1-megapixel camera with powerful Pentax 5x optical zoom. This small and brushed stainless steel digicam also features built-in red-eye removal as well as in-camera stitch modes that lets you create a panoramic photo (with the aid of the two-inch LCD), without the need for PC editing software. Shoot high-quality VGA video (30 frames per second) on a SecureDigital (SD) card or with the 32 MB of internal memory.

MORE FOR LESS

Photo enthusiasts in the market for an affordable digital SLR camera should consider the Nikon D50 ($1,069 with 18-55-mm lens or $860 without; www.nikon.ca), a lighter and a more automated version of its award-winning big brother, the D70. Take beautiful shots with the 6.1-megapixel Nikon DX Format CCD image sensor, interchangeable Nikkor lenses and multiple shooting modes, including Landscape, Sports, Children and Night. Best of all, you won’t lose that once-in-a-lifetime moment thanks to its super-quick startup time of 0.2 seconds, fast shutter speeds (from 30 to 1/4,000 second), high-speed flash (up to 1/500 second) and continuous shooting bursts at 2.5 frames per second. Between charges, the lithium-ion battery lets you shoot up to 2,000 images.

Sony also has a new “prosumer” digital SLR in the marketplace worth looking into — the DSC Cyber-shot R1 ($1,299; www.sonystyle.ca), shown above — with its whopping 10.3-megapixel image sensor, ultra-wide Carl Zeiss Vaio-Sonnar T zoom lens (24-120 mm) and shutter release time of only 7.5 milliseconds.

MEGAPIXEL MADNESS

At an amazing 9.0 megapixels, Fujifilm’s new E900 ($599; www.fujifilm.ca) offers the highest resolution in a point-and-shoot camera available today. Therefore, not only can you zoom in and crop a digital photo without losing much clarity but you can also blow up your favourite shot into a poster-sized print to hang on a wall. The sleek black camera with silver trim also takes fast snapshots with its quick shutter speeds (and turns on in just over a second), while the built-in image stabilizer will help prevent blurred images often caused by shaky hands. The E900 features multiple shooting modes, while video is captured at 30 frames per second. Be sure to pick up a 256-megabyte xD Picture Card or higher as the bundled 16-MB one just isn’t big enough.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Wireless-revolution gadgets can replace much of the ‘spaghetti’ behind your desk

Wednesday, November 16th, 2005

Marc Saltzman
Sun

Logitech’s wireless headphones sell for about $179 and are Bluetooth-integrated

Break free from the cords and cables that bind you. After all, with all the time you spend in front of your PC, who wants to deal with that mess of “spaghetti” wires on or behind your desk?

Fortunately, many of today’s top computer accessories can help you un-tether — without sacrificing power, performance or style.

While it’s been a buzzword for at least a decade, the “wireless revolution” is finally upon us; the following are just a few shining examples of what’s new and newsworthy for your home or office.

Microsoft Wireless Desktop

Microsoft’s latest two-in-one combo is a sleek multimedia keyboard and optical mouse with laser precision — without wires to clutter the desktop. The Microsoft Laser Desktop 6000 ($139; www.microsoft.ca) includes a “comfort curve” ergonomic keyboard angled at six degrees to better match your wrists’ natural resting position, and features a number of hot keys that provide one-touch access to e-mail, instant messaging programs, the Internet, documents and digital music. The “high-definition” wireless mouse reads 1,000 dots per inch for incredible accuracy and offers a four-way middle scroll wheel and magnifier button to zoom in on digital photos.

HP PhotoSmart 3310

“All-in-one” machines that copy, scan, print and sometimes fax are a dime a dozen these days but HP’s latest has a few key bells and whistles. For one, the HP PhotoSmart 3310 ($499; www.hpshopping.ca) has built-in Wi-Fi support to join an existing wireless network, therefore, more than one PC can access the unit’s many functions, wirelessly. Secondly, it’s the fastest photo printer on the market capable of spitting out a four-by-six glossy print in under 14 seconds (or 32 pages per minute for text, 31 pages per minute for colour). The PhotoSmart 3310 also has a large, colour LCD screen, two paper trays, an adapter for slides and negatives, multiple memory card slots and a USB port for memory sticks or PictBridge cameras.

Logitech Mobile Freedom Headset

It’s no wonder that more and more Canadians are talking with friends, family or clients via the Internet; it’s free, sounds great and it doesn’t matter where you (or they) are in the world. So the next time you’re gabbing on Skype or MSN Messenger, throw on a wireless Bluetooth headset, such as Logitech’s Mobile Freedom ($79; www.logitech.com), so you can keep chatting while continuing to type away on the keyboard. It’s also perfect for trash-talking during heated multiplayer games and of course, works with your Bluetooth cellphone. The crystal clear and comfortable headset can be paired with a PC that has integrated Bluetooth or with a snap-in, USB-based Bluetooth hub.

D-Link GamerLounge

Lag is no longer an excuse — crush the competition in your favorite online games with the fastest wireless router on the market; D-Link’s GamerLounge DGL-4300 ($230; www.dlink.ca) offers up to 180 Mbps of wireless speeds thanks to its proprietary GameFuel technology that provides blazingly fast, latency-free connectivity. The 802.11g router also offers four Gigabit Ethernet ports, customizable settings for individual games and applications, and support for Xbox machines so you can have the console hop onboard your wireless network for intense Halo 2 Capture-the-Flag matches.

Logitech Wireless Headphones for PC

Simply plug the teeny Bluetooth adapter into the headphone port of your desktop or laptop computer (included), throw on these wireless headphones and then crank up the tunes. And if your PC already has integrated Bluetooth, you won’t need the adapter at all. This digital wireless technology offers about nine metres of range, plus you can adjust the volume or mute tracks without needing to touch the PC (or MP3 player if you’re using this gadget on the go). The Logitech Wireless Headphones ($179; www.logitech.com) also include rechargeable batteries that can play up to eight hours between charges.

Saitek P3000 Wireless Gamepad

Get your game on with a completely wireless and rechargeable gamepad for your PC. The Saitek P3000 ($49; www.saitek.com) looks and feels very much like a PlayStation 2 controller with its dual analog sticks, eight-way D-pad, two triggers and numerous face buttons (actually you get six on the right-hand side of the pad instead of the typical four). Gamers can also customize their titles by programming keys and commands to specific buttons. A small LCD screen provides information, such as battery life; the unit ships with two rechargeable power packs so you’ll never have to wait to get in front of the action.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Christmas lists bristle with gotta-have gadgetry

Wednesday, November 16th, 2005

Hot items range from cutting-edge satellite radios to retro-tech turntables

Peter Wilson
Sun

VANCOUVER SUN Digital cameras, such as the Nikon D-50 being shown off above by Andy Kahrman of London Drugs, are among the consumer electronics items starting to fly off the shelves for Christmas.

The Sirius StarMate: Satellite radio is the very latest thing

Sales of the new XBox 360 are expected to be brisk this holiday season

Paradigm’s New Blockbuster Cinema Speakers put home theatre enthusiasts front-row centre.

The new iMac is designed for music, DVDs, photos and video editing.

Samsung display (above) explains the differences between plasma, LCD and DLPprojection HDTV. LG Electronics’ flagship 60-inch plasma highdefinition TV (left) features a built-in personal video recorder for $16,000.

The Hummer laptop ($4,548 US) is rugged, comes with GPS.

Sure, it’s just November, but it’s already time for you Silicon Santas to start thinking about what you’re going to slip into that jam-packed cyber-sleigh of home electronic goodies this holiday season.

Among the items with sizzle in stores this year will be satellite radios, Microsoft’s new Xbox 360, portable DVD players, LCD and plasma TVs, iPods and other MP3 players, DVD camcorders, digital SLR cameras, and portable 4×6 snapshot printers.

Oh, and turntables.

Turntables? Yes, says London Drugs merchandise manager Cedric Tetzel, who reports that at about $100 a pop these vinyl LP-playing devices from way-back-when are big sellers these days.

“The fascination with turntables seems to be a very strong trend this year,” said Tetzel. “The Sony automatic turntable sells for $99 now, and the kids are picking it up.”

Tetzel himself has revived his old turntable, on which he plays his collection of Led Zeppelin albums. Now, he says, he knows he’s not alone.

And, he points out, a top seller on the Web these days is Allsop’s Orbitrack II vinyl cleaning kit.

Aside from the vinyl revival, Tetzel, Lori DeCou of Future Shop and Best Buy, and David Newman of A&B Sound foresee satellite radio units flying off the shelves — or they will as soon as you can get them.

Priced in the $100 to $400 range — and dedicated to either XM Canada or Sirius Canada — the radios are like a cellphone, in that you first pick your satellite radio provider, and then choose the unit you want.

“You buy the hardware component, sure, that’s one thing, but that in itself gets you nothing. You need to buy a subscription to the service you want,” said DeCou, who heads corporate communications at both Future Shop and Best Buy Canada.

Subscriptions are, at least at present pricing, $12.99 for XM, which is offering 80 channels, and $14.99 for Sirius, which offers 100 channels.

Stores that carry the radios will be providing a chance to listen to the offerings, so you’ll know what you’re getting.

“At the end of the day, it’s like digital TV,” said Tetzel. “You”ll probably find that customers, instead of saying I want 80 or I want 100 channels, will want a channel that caters to them.”

Satellite radios are expected to be in stores within the next couple of weeks.

Newman, A&B’s vice-president of consumer entertainment software, sees the excitement continuing well into 2006, especially the in-car market, which will include video as well as satellite radio.

For DeCou, another big item will be the XBox 360, set to debut on Nov. 22, and she warns that customers who want to put one under the tree better hustle their way to stores as soon as they can.

“We did pre-orders online, and now we’re finished with that,” said DeCou, who would not disclose how many were purchased in advance. “Expectations are that there are going to be some significant constraints on the product, so the message is if you’re hoping to get an Xbox, don’t procrastinate.”

DeCou added that the arrival of the XBox 360 has created a whole buzz around the category, just as the new excitement over digital SLR cameras can’t help but increase interest in the whole category of cameras, even though the SLRs are aimed at more serious users.

The excitement is in cameras like the Nikon D50, the Canon Rebel XT, and the newly launched Olympus Evolt 500, which are highly popular with two lens kits and sell in the $1,200 price point.

Newman said that at A&B, while the race for the higher megapixel cameras continues to grow, five-megapixel cameras are fast becoming the norm.

“We’re seeing a split in the design consumers want,” said Newman. “Sixty per cent like the compact, take-anywhere lifestyle camera, while the other 40 per cent opt for the traditional high-zoom professional look and feel.”

As for printing digital photos, Tetzel said seasonal buyers will have a large choice among stand-alone snapshot printers that are meant for producing 4×6 prints without the need for a computer.

“Last year, we had three models on the shelf for Christmas, but this year I’m expecting between six and eight,” said Tetzel, who added that families love to take them to parties where they can produce prints for family and friends instantly.

Not unexpectedly, the iPod and its rivals continue to be major items this year. Where one might have expected the sales of the iPod to slow — even with the arrival of the new video model — Tetzel doesn’t see this happening.

“Back in the Sony Discman days, my son had one and my daughter had one and that was it,” said Tetzel. “Now in the iPod generation, I have one and my wife has one, because it’s more personal than the old devices. You can have your own music and your own playlist.”

Newman and Tetzel both see the flat-panel trend continuing in the LCD and Plasma areas. While Newman sees the entire segment from 32- to 50-inch screens, Tetzel says the excitement is right in the middle of that — at around the 42-inch size, with the emphasis turning toward LCD.

The surge toward the flat panel is also pushing the audio end of things this Christmas, said Newman.

“Go into any specialty A/V retailer today and you’ll see numerous on-wall speaker systems and audio component solutions specifically designed to mate with flat-panel TVs,” said Newman. “Many vendors are now offering simple front-speaker-only solutions that, through advanced processing, give you the re-creation of full multi-channel surround sound.”

Newman believes the flat-panel surge will continue, built on the arrival of the new high-definition formats for DVDs such as HD-DVD and Blue-Ray, which will eventually have both players and discs on offer.

Speaking of DVDs, prices have now come down so far on portable DVD players that you can get them in the $100 to $150 range, which puts them in Christmas gift category.

“I might not buy it for myself, but I’d think, geez, if I had one that would be really cook . . .” said DeCou. “So those things become great gift ideas.”

Also strong, is the DVD recorder, which, said Newman, are offered in configurations that will attract all segments of buyers and have reached a price point, many dropping below $200, that make them highly attractive.

“Recorder configurations can include a full-function VCR, hard disc drives, or both,” said Newman.

Associated with DVD recorders, naturally, are the new camcorders that allow users to record straight on to DVD or even use built-in hard drives.

While DVD camcorders are not for those who want to edit their images using such programs as iMovie on the Mac, they are still popular, said Tetzel.

“In the old days of tape people actually transferred a full tape over to VHS,” said Tetzel. “So they never edited anyway and the DVD camcorder is now a nice small format.”

Newman sees the trend in wireless phones turning towards devices that incorporate more than just one or two functions. Now the interest is high, he said, in those that have MP3 players, voice recorders, full-fledged PDA functions, video recording and video conferencing.

“The trend is to converge personal electronics into one compact, mobile and functional device,” said Newman. “The industry is doing this in a big way with Motorola’s Rokr E1, which incorporates Apple’s iTune software or the Nokia N70, which has the ability for video conferencing.”

While there has been a push on for media centre PCs for a few years now, Tetzel believes that they won’t truly move into the living room until they have the sleek looks of components in a stereo system.

By sheer coincidence, London Drugs just happens to offer a media centre PC from its own Certified Data brand that, you guessed it, looks like a stereo component.

Finally, DeCou said that the gift card has come into its own the past couple of years and, unlike the paper gift certificates of the past, no longer carries the sign of the last-minute desperation purchase by someone who doesn’t want to bother coming up with the appropriate gift.

“The stigma of giving a gift card as being the lazy answer to buying a gift is really gone,” said DeCou. “People don’t look at a gift card and go ‘oh, man, you couldn’t even think what to get me.’ It’s more an appreciative thing, it’s like ‘wow, thank you, because now I can go get what I really want or need or would like.'”

DeCou uses the example of a woman who wants to buy a video game for someone.

“She’s confronted by a mammoth display of games and she’s scratching her head going ‘I have no clue.’ The answer for her is a gift card.”

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Quality can be an issue for home theatre in box

Dedicated equipment will give better audio quality, specialist advises

CanWest News Service

By Danny Bradbury

When putting together a home theatre system, most people think about the display, but unless they put the effort into choosing an audio setup, they aren’t really getting the big picture.

Home theatre audio systems run the gamut from low-end box-store bundles to individual components costing thousands of dollars.

At the very least, you need a pre-amplifier and an amplifier. The pre-amp takes the sound from your source input (such as your CD or DVD player) and passes it on to the power amplifier, which boosts the signal before sending it out to the speakers. Pre-amplifiers usually contain controls such as source switching, so that you can choose between different audio inputs such as DVD, CD and radio. They normally contain tone controls that let you adjust the timbre of the sound.

Other components are speakers and the sound sources themselves, as there are many different types of radio, DVD and CD player from which to choose.

The cheapest option is to buy everything in one package, commonly known as a home theatre in a box. But beware of quality issues — audio specialists have described these as little more than a ghetto blaster with a couple of speakers attached.

“Many of these home-theatre-in-a-box systems don’t give you good audio quality,” warns Kerry Fuchs, store manager at Saskatoon-based Audio Warehouse. “When you build a system you want components from specialist manufacturers.”

Instead, consumers can opt for an AV receiver, which comes with a radio tuner, pre-amplifier and power amplifier all in one. This leaves more choices for the other components such as speakers, CD and DVD systems.

The more dedicated equipment you use for each function, the better your audio quality will be says Mark Leger, a consultant at Halifax-based home-theatre specialist Fidelis Design. An integrated amplifier contains just the amp and the switching in a single box, leaving the customer to buy a dedicated radio tuner.

Real afficionados buy separate pre-amplifier and power amplifiers, following what audio retailers call the “separates” route. But if you want to do that, bring your wallet.

“It’s not worth doing separates in home theatre unless you’re going to go well over $6,000,” says Jon Connelly, owner of Natural Sound of Kitchener, Ont.

When buying a power amplifier, whether it is integrated or not, the quality-focused buyer will steer clear of units offering lots of power but using integrated circuit outputs, warns Connolly. Instead of focusing just on the power output from the amplifier, focus on units with discrete, transistorized outputs, which you can buy from $400 upwards. This will give you a better dynamic range.

To get the sound from the source to the receiver, the best option is a digital connection, explains Fuchs. Look for an optical audio or digital coaxial output. The alternative is to use an analog output using standard left and right audio jacks, but the quality will be poorer. The home theatre world is moving to the High-Definition Multi-media Interface (HDMI), which delivers both video and sound through one cable. DVD equipment and receivers are already available with these connections.

Many of DVD players also play CDs, and the forward thinking consumer might want to look for one that also supports one of two newer CD formats, Super Audio CD or DVD-Audio.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

The PC moves out of office, into the TV room

Danny Bradbury

For CanWest News Service

When is a PC not a PC? When it’s sitting next to the TV. Personal computers may have spent the last 25 years on or under a desk, but the battle is on to create an entertainment hub for the family room that brings together the television, computer games and even radio.

Apple recently entered this battle with its latest iMac computer. Shipping with a remote control, it uses Front Row, a user interface designed to offer music, DVD playback, photo viewing and video. But the device, starting at $1,600 and offering up to a 20-inch screen, lacks one major component: where is the TV tuner? Surely, an entertainment PC should offer the capability to hook up to your cable or satellite service?

Microsoft is one step ahead with the XP Media Centre Edition 2005, specifically tailored for entertainment PCs. In addition to DVD playback, photo viewing, Internet radio and games, the software also enables users to use the PC as a personal video recorder by hooking into the cable service. Users can set it to record programs based on a key word, actor or director name, movie or program title.

Microsoft relies on partners to sell PCs running its software. Media Centre PCs have smaller, more streamlined cases. Russell Sampson, salesman at Vancouver-based PC retailer Frontier PC. says a 20-decibel fan will run at whisper-like volumes ideal for the family room.

Look for high-capacity storage in a PC, especially if they wish to record lots of TV. There are two types of storage — hard drive storage for fast access and DVD storage for archiving data. Internal DVDs will support either the DVD-R, DVD+R or DVD-RAM standards — and sometimes more than one of these.

Forget DVD-RAM which few people use these days, says Greg Stapells, owner of Toronto-based specialist PC retailer Signa Computer Solutions.

DVD-R and DVD+R enables consumers to record data to a DVD, to burn recorded TV shows to disc. Hard drives store data inside the PC for fast access.

Some Media Centre PCs will ship with a hard drive storing tens of gigabytes, and it’s best not to economize here, says Stapells. Toshiba’s Qosmio PC offers 120 gigabytes of storage, says product manager Jason Laxamana — and it will ship a 200-GB version next year. It is a laptop rather than a desktop unit. Shipping with a screen as wide as 17 inches, the PC uses Windows XP Media Centre by default and is designed for home users who want to watch recorded TV around the house. At almost 4.5 kilograms for the heaviest unit, it’s not something most people would want to travel with extensively.

Notebooks are not as upgradable as desktop PCs. For example, the graphics chip within the Qosmio cannot be replaced by the user, and with graphics so important for entertainment users, this should be considered.

“It’s basically a choice between ATI and Nvidia,” says Sampson, on the two most popular graphics card vendors on the market.

Look for a video card built for 3-D graphics if you want to play sophisticated computer games on your entertainment PC. Stapells recommends using separate high-end gaming and TV tuner cards for the best performance. He also advises customers to buy a PC with a dual-tuner card, meaning it can take two separate TV signals at once. That will let users record one TV show while watching another. Either way, look for a Digital Video Interface (DVI) connector that connects the PC to a display using a digital rather than an analogue interface, maintaining a perfect picture.

The current weak spot is high-definition TV (HDTV). Now starting to appear on Canadian cable services, HDTV content will grow, but Stapells says no PCs support this yet. ATI offers a HDTV tuner card which will be available in Canada soon.

Underpinning all this is the central processing unit (CPU). Until recently, clock speed (the speed at which electricity pumps through the CPU) was the primary measurement of performance. A 3.2-gigahertz Pentium 4 chip will give better performance than a 2.4-GHz one, for example. Now the two main CPU vendors — AMD and Intel — are touting dual-core processors, which effectively give two separate brains on a single CPU to help divide the work.

Dual-core processors can be useful for multi-tasking — running multiple applications.

High-definition TV filled with choices

Consumers can be bewildered with the variety of big-screen TVs

Steve Makris

Edmonton Journal

challenge, not least for consumers planning to buy a big-screen TV.

With the number of brands growing to include computer companies like HP and Dell, consumers sometimes find themselves bewildered by the gauntlet of big-screen TVs in stores.

Where do you start and who do you trust when investing in your next TV?

First, decide what kind of TV you want. According to the Electro Federation Consumer Electronics Marketers of Canada, flat panel plasma, LCD and projection high definition TVs (HDTV) will account for about 25 per cent of TV units sold this year.

“It’s a unique time to buy an HDTV now,” said Eric Stockner, senior TV merchandise manager for Future Shop Canada. “The 40-inch HDTV is the battleground where plasma, LCD and projection TVs are competitively priced against each other.”

You may not need a high definition TV; simply replacing a worn-out CRT (cathode ray tube) set may be enough. But if you are ready to jump into the world of HDTV, do your homework.

Read magazines or check online sites from manufacturers, and read reviews. Spend time with a salesperson who is knowledgeable about the products.

And be prepared for the salesperson’s first question: Where do you want to watch TV in your house?

Unlike old tube TVs that work anywhere, today’s high-tech TVs use three different technologies that produce sharper and clearer pictures but show differently.

– Plasma TVs: A mere 10 centimetres thick, these are best in average-lighted rooms, and like tube TVs looks great from any angle. They also show older analogue channels best. Prices and models start at $2,000 for lesser known 40-inch brands to $5,000 for name brands and upwards of $16,000 for an LG 60-inch model with built-in PVR (personal video recorder.) New 40-inch HDTV ED (enhanced definition) models for about $2,500 are gaining popularity among people who simply want better TV, and DVD-quality picture.

– LCD (liquid crystal display) panel TVs: These are just as thin as plasma screens, are crisper, and feature punchy colours for brighter rooms. They use technology similar to laptop screens and show digital sources like video games and connected computers with heightened clarity. Despite the hype, their advertised “view from any angle” feature is not as good as plasma. LCD TVs start at laptop size for less than $800 and go up to 45-inch models for $5,000.

– DLP (digital light processing) projection models: These are characterized by a deeper base tapering to the thickness of plasma TVs at the top, are suitable for darker rooms and have narrower viewing angles. They are not as sharp as flat panels and best viewed from a distance — ideally, from a sofa across the room. Like plasma, they start at 40 inches; 60-inch models cost about the same as 40-inch plasma and LCD flat panels.

Two older technologies with HDTV features provide added choice to budget-minded shoppers.

New tube-based CRT HDTVs, like Samsung’s 30-inch widescreen TX-R3079, go for about $1,200; Sony’s 27-inch FD Trinitron WEGA HD Ready TV sells for around $900. TV purists maintain analogue CRT technology is still the best TV available, but screens are limited in size.

And despite industry death threats, HDTV-ready projection TVs using older analogue technology, also under $2,000, attract “big picture” fans with smaller wallets but the lower HDTV quality.

Which of these is the best TV?

“Trust your eyes,” says William Zadnik, a custom systems designer with Edmonton-based Audio Ark. “After all the hype, it’s about what looks best to you.”

True, but most stores don’t play the best HD signal on every TV on display and are unlikely to re-arrange 60 kilogram models for customers to compare side by side.

Samsung’s Techspot (http://www.samsung.ca/techspot) features a nifty live comparison of all three TV technologies in all Brick Warehouse stores.

London Drugs’ recently revamped A/V section, calibrates each TV display and shows models in a progressive order.

“Our eyes and what we like are different,” said Andy Kahrmann, London Drugs national manager of photo-electronics and audio visual systems. “You need to be able to buy to your taste but also understand what you are buying into.”

Judging HDTVs is subjective so watching shows on store TVs you are familiar with helps. Do it in evening hours when most widescreen HDTV shows are on, or on weekends for similar quality sporting events. Compare how clearly grass blades show on sports fields.

Don’t be fooled by daytime shows, many of which appear to be digital but are actually regular analogue quality “bumped up” to look like HD. Or looped demo videos from manufacturers.

Gamers and computer users should try their devices on new TVs before they buy, as some big screens limit computer options. HP’s new Plasmas and LCDs for example, feature additional PC input controls, not surprisingly coming from a computer company.

“We are a serious player in the Canadian market with tier-one high-definition TVs that bring our colour expertise from our printing and digital entertainment and photography products,” said John Kelly, HP Canada marketing manager, personal systems group.

Samsung offers a 24-inch 242MP HDTV LCD that doubles as a computer monitor, but at an unmatched 1900 computer pixel resolution compared with the top 1280 pixels other TVs go to.

DVD players, if properly used, can demonstrate just how good an HDTV is. Especially in dark shadow scenes.

For that you need to have a progressive-capable DVD player connected via component (red, blue and green) cables or DVI (digital video interface, now being replaced by newer, smaller HDMI connectors, the absence of which indicates an older HDTV or DVD player).

New high definition TVs are either “HDTV-ready” — requiring an external tuner box supplied by cable and satellite providers — or “HDTV” with built-in tuners that can receive free HD from off-the-air stations in Toronto, Windsor, Ont., and Vancouver by simply hooking up an antenna.

– – –

DO YOU NEED A HIGH DEFINITION TV?

Before you go shopping for a high definition TV, ask yourself whether it suites your needs and budget.

Sure, HDTV is stunningly clear and sharp, even better than a real movie theatre or home DVD.

But be prepared to pay for more than just the TV.

You will need an additional HD receiver and service from a cable provider or a satellite service.

And don’t be fooled by the new direct cable card feature on the newest TVs — that’s years away from service in Canada and doesn’t work with a satellite feed.

Most new HDTVs have decent sound, but you might want to check out a sound-surround system or bundled package, starting at about $500.

Then, there are the little things, like new HDMI cabling between receiver and TV — for optimum quality — at $100 a metre. And the possibility of redecorating the TV room for that optimum viewing experience.

There is also the issue of HD widescreen content, which is limited to half a dozen U.S. prime-time feeds and weekend sports or playoffs. The rest of the programming is a mix of regular square TV and similar-sized digital-quality broadcasts.

If you still want something better than your present set, splurge several hundred bucks on a new tube and DVD player and rent movies for less than subscription pay-per-view … you will be pleasantly surprised.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Hummer laptop among latest high-tech goodies

Then there’s the LG laundry monitor

Charles Mandel

CanWest News Service

Shopping for that hard-to-please person on your list? Here’s an off-beat list of high-tech goodies that will thrill just about every gear-head in your household.

Gassing up your Hummer might not be an option any more with the rising price of fuel, so how about a Hummer laptop ($4,548 US) instead? The yellow-and-white portable is rugged and designed to withstand vibrations that might knock it out of calibration. It even comes with GPS (global positioning system), so if you don’t know where you parked your Hummer, your Hummer laptop can find it for you.

If it’s a more basic model you’re after, without the GPS and Cingular wireless broadband-ready set-up, they can be had for as little as $2,988.

Laundry is a chore, so why not make it easier with LG’s remote laundry monitor ($1,999 Cdn, sold with washing machine.) Plug the remote monitoring device called Clothes Eye into a wall socket and it will tell you the status of your wash from anywhere in the house. From wash, to rinse, to spin, the monitor keeps track of LG’s front-load washer so you don’t have to. A separate dryer/monitor combo is also available.

The only thing better than coffee in the morning might be fetching your toast from a DeLonghi radio toaster ($98 US.) These retro-looking machines, available in a variety of cool colours, not only offers six settings and defrost and bagel options, but they also tune into FM radio stations. No word yet as to which station makes the toast taste best.

If FM radio doesn’t cut it, then you need the Baxter MP3 Ripper ($895 Cdn.) The ripper will burn 25 audio CDs at a time, at the rate of five minutes apiece. Besides duplicating CDs and DVDs, the ripper will also convert entire CD collections to MP3.

After ripping the audio collection, you might as well get on with transferring your data. EasyPC Transfer ($39.99) is a software package that helps transport everything from an old computer to a new one in one easy application. PC Transfer will shift contacts and address book to data files, wireless settings and more.

To some extent, Mimobots ($69.95) do the same function as EasyPC Transfer, but are way cuter. The finger-length flash drives are made to look like small monsters and have much the same appetite. They can absorb as much as one gigabyte of files in their USB ports. Mimobots are currently one of the most stylish computer accessories on the market.

Another tiny tech device is the new HP Deskjet 460 mobile printer ($299) designed for printing from notebooks and handhelds. HP’s offering is the first WiFi-enabled printer for wireless printing and will spit out colour photos and documents just as easily as black and white text. It’s lithium ion battery will deliver up to 450 pages per charge, and it can do up to 17 black-and-white pages per minute

Of course, the mini-tech item of them all is an iPod, and dozens upon dozens of accessories are manufactured for the ubiquitous music player, including speaker systems galore. One of the many options available is the Kensington SX 2000 speakers ($199.99). The flat-panel speaker system with a docking mechanism to charge the iPod delivers fat sound from both the front and back of the system, supplying a surprising and satisfying bass punch. One caveat is to check to ensure the system is compatible with the new iPod nano and video iPod.

The iPod isn’t the only electronic device screaming for accessorizing. Give your PDA that Men’s Vogue treatment with a new leather case from Roots ($34.99). The case fits a number of popular models, including BlackBerry and Palm, and comes with a swivel belt clip.

If you can’t avoid splashing drinks, then you probably need a Kensington Keyboard for Life ($29.99). The spill-safe keyboard has a sealed membrane design to protect against accidental spills. The keyboard not only comes with PS/2 and USB connections and works with PCs running Windows 98 or later, it also offers a lifetime warranty.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Software keeps prying eyes off BlackBerrys

Monday, November 14th, 2005

Companies can now protect e-mails sent from employees’ PDAs

Sarah Staples
Sun

CREDIT: Richard Arless Jr., Montreal Gazette Dr. Joseph Yermus is the inventor of a database for hand-held computers that lists typical dosages and possible drug interactions of over 30,000 medications.

Two new software products that safeguard e-mails sent via BlackBerry are being called the first in a slew of upcoming releases aimed at curbing the growing threat of theft and misuse of company information by employees wielding PDAs (personal digital assistants).

BlackBerry Gateway, launched in Canada and the U.S. this week by Waltham, Mass.,-based Liquid Machines, Inc., and Secure Mobile Mail, a competitor by Authentica, Inc. due to make its North American debut later this month, both tout the ability to lock down messages after they’re sent over Research in Motion’s popular hand-held devices.

Users draw up rules for their BlackBerry, not just encrypting sensitive missives, but setting them to expire by a specific date and time and preventing e-mails and attachments from being opened, copied, printed, edited or forwarded by individuals lacking proper authorization.

The software — the first of its kind for mobile devices — is part of the emerging “Enterprise Rights Management” industry projected to be worth $634 million US in global revenues next year.

ERM adapts technology originally created to restrain illegal movie and music downloading, to the task of giving businesses tighter rein over their electronic communications.

The technology acts as a kind of digital watermark — imprinting documents and data with invisible layers of access privileges so that the data is safe from prying eyes, no matter which desktop or portable device is used to relay it.

The software for BlackBerrys is being launched at a time when studies show fraud perpetrated by employees is on the rise, and there is concern over the potential for hand-held gadgets — including PDAs, camera-loaded cellphones, iPODs and mini-computer hard drives embedded in watches or pens — to be used to conveniently squirrel away company secrets.

“Twenty, 30 years ago, if you wanted to take sensitive documents you had to back up a truck and load up physical paper,” said Ed Gaudet, VP of product management for Liquid Machines.

“Now, it’s as easy as walking in with an iPOD [that] can basically download 60 gigs.”

Both software products let managers remotely control e-mails of their employees, and delete messages by remote if the BlackBerry is ever lost or stolen.

And they keep a backup copy of all messages on company servers so that compliance officers or forensic auditors can follow the digital equivalent of a “paper trail” for the BlackBerry in case of an investigation.

Liquid Machines’ software can also sift through BlackBerry messages looking for keywords, patterns — like customer account numbers — or IP addresses, and block or reroute those messages before they reach unintended recipients.

“So if I want to set up a ‘Chinese Wall’ [separating salespeople from investment bankers in a brokerage firm], my BlackBerry can do it,” said Gaudet.

There is “definitely a need to tighten the security” around new generations of digital devices that are becoming ubiquitous in offices, and aren’t always carefully monitored, according to Robert Castonguay, VP and national director of Forensic Technology Services for KPMG Canada.

Castonguay, whose team has investigated several cases in Canada where removable thumbnail drives were used to download confidential work information, said before ERM there wasn’t the means to apply an audit trail to data that flows over portable gadgets if things went awry.

“More companies will come out with [ERM software), they’ll improve in their functionality, and obviously it’s positive for corporate security,” he said.

Mark Overington, VP of marketing for Lexington, Mass.,-based Authentica, said the Canadian-made gizmo’s ubiquity in financial, government, manufacturing and defence circles made it a logical choice as the first portable device to load with ERM.

One client, a California investment bank, has used ERM for regular desktop and laptop computers to prevent valuable sales leads from being taken and used by employees who leave the firm.

Individual leads are e-mailed to salespeople for client meetings, but the information can’t be copied or pasted anywhere else.

Clients including computer chip manufacturers and the U.S. Department of Defense have begun using ERM on top of other secure arrangements — such as confidentiality agreements with customers and outside suppliers — they already have in place.

“Of course you could photocopy your laptop screen — there are always physical ways to break [ERM] if you have the patience, but it’s less likely,” Overington said.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

 

Local fuel cell battery to power cell phones

Wednesday, November 9th, 2005

JIM JAMIESON
Province

Tekion’s Neil Huff shows off company’s mini fuel-cell prototype

A looming crunch in conventional battery technology has spurred electronics giant Motorola to invest in a Burnaby micro-fuel-cell developer.
   Neil Huff, president and chief executive of Tekion, wouldn’t disclose the size of the Motorola investment, but said it will have a major impact on the company — which has grown from four to 65 employees in 2 1 /2 years.
   “It gives us credibility,” he said. “It helps us focus on some of the areas we need to that will allow us to get a product [to market] by 2007.”
   Tekion, which was founded in March of 2003, is developing a miniature power pack that can fit inside and power mobile-electronic devices such as cellphones, twoway radios, entertainment devices, satellite phones and notebook computers.
   Called the Formira power pack, the tiny device uses a pure form of formic acid as a fuel and is combined with a lithium-ion battery.
   The technology’s power range is milliwatts to 50 watts and energy range of 10 to 100 watt-hours.
   The technology is licensed from the
University of Illinois, where it was developed by the company’s chief technology officer, U.S. operations, Dr. Richard Masel.
   Rocky Daehler, director of Motorola Ventures, said conventional battery capacity has become a significant challenge in the mobile-electronics field as devices offer more features and consumers want smaller packages.
   “If you look at all the applications being packed into mobile devices, some of them are quite power hungry,” he said. “Other trends are a desire to make them smaller, so you’ve got to come up with a way to power them.”
   Daehler said the power density of the Tekion system and the fact formic acid is non-flammable made the product attractive to Motorola.
   He wouldn’t say in which product Formira would debut, although it’s unlikely to be a cellphone.
   Huff said the technology allows for a fuel cell that can powered by a replaceable or refillable cartridge.
   When the first product launches in 2007, he said it will be slightly more expensive than conventional batteries. 
   

Watch whatever you want, whenever you want

Sunday, October 30th, 2005

Jim Jamieson
Province

LEFT: Hauppauge WinTV-PVR USB2 ABOVE RIGHT: The Slingbox

It used to be that how and what you watched on your TV was about screen size and which cable package you subscribed to. That has all changed, of course, as the digital world insinuates its way into every nook and cranny of our lives. Nowadays, there’s a gadget available at your local electronics retailer to alter — and hopefully improve — just about every experience you can have with your TV. Here are a few:

THE SLINGBOX

Ever been on a trip and wished you could still catch your favourite soap opera or that crucial ballgame?

The Slingbox solves that problem by allowing you to watch the same content you would on your home TV on any computer with a broadband Internet connection.

Get it? This device — at 25 centimetres wide and 10 cm deep and 1/2 kilogram — is small and light enough to pack in a suitcase and means you could watch a TV stream from your home cable box, satellite receiver or PVR in any hotel room in the world. It also allows the less ambitous to stream TV anywhere in their house via wireless router.

Be aware, though, that the technology is far from perfect. Reviewers say that when The Slingbox is used wirelessly or over the Internet, the video signal degrades .

Suggested retail: $310

OPPO HIGH DEFINITION DVD PLAYER

One of the biggest disappointments of owning a high definition TV in Canada is the dearth of high-def content available. This extends to video rentals, where DVD movies look good but not like they did when you saw them at the theatre because they aren’t recorded in true high definition. OPPO’s OPDV971H is one of a new wave of players that addresses that issue with something called video upscaling. Currently, DVD movies aren’t recorded in high definition, but the result is noticeably improved detail and colour. OPPO [www.oppodigital.com] has received rave reviews for this player, which offers a multitude of features including playback of just about any format you can name.

Suggested retail: $199 US (available from their website)

SANDISK PHOTO ALBUM

Digital photographers have been viewing their pictures on TV for a while, but SanDisk has come up with a device that does it simply while offering added functionality.

About half the size of a VHS tape –187 millimetres x 66mm x 20 mm — Photo Album is nothing if not versatile. It has eight memory card slots — supporting CompactFlash Type I and II, Memory Stick, Memory Stick PRO, SmartMedia, xD, xD Type M, SD and MultiMediaCard — as well as a slot for USB flash drives. The device allows you to show digital stills and digital video on your TV in addition to playing MP3 files on your stereo. Photo Album also comes with a remote that can zoom in and out and make video larger to fill your screen. It can also be used as a memory card reader for your computer. Suggested retail: $56

HAUPPAUGE WINTV-PVR USB2

If you’re not particularly techno-friendly and you want to watch and record TV on your computer, check this out.

The WinTV-PVR USB2 turns your PC into a digital TV recorder, which allows you to burn the content on to CDs or DVDs. The device plugs into your PC or laptop’s USB port and gives you a 125-channel cable-ready TV tuner for TV in a window (or full screen). It can also turn home video tapes into MPEG movies.

Installation is simple: Plug into your PC or laptop’s USB 1.1 or 2.0 port, connect to any kind of TV reception (cable, antenna, etc.) or a VCR or camcorder and load the software from the installation CD.

The package also includes WinTV-Scheduler so you can schedule TV recordings on a daily, weekly or once-only basis, and a remote control. Suggested retail: $170

© The Vancouver Province 2005