From Engadget: LightBeam pico projector turns any surface into a display, any object into a remote

Do you ever stop to think about all those plain, unloved surfaces in the world, which go through life without ever once being used to reflect a Flickr feed or Facebook wall? It amounts to hectares of wasted potential, but there is a solution. It’s called LightBeam and it’s a ‘nomadic’ pico projector that uses a webcam to track and reorient its display to suit any ad hoc surface — the piece of paper in your hand, the cover of a book, or the picture frame on your desk. And just when you think you’ve seen it all before, the guy in the video after the break rotates a coffee mug to flip the channel. Handy, no?

Continue reading LightBeam pico projector turns any surface into a display, any object into a remote (video)

 

from Engadget

From Engadget: Qualcomm Krait S4 SoC fully benchmarked, diagnosed as ‘insane’

Qualcomm Krait S4 benchmarks

We’ve seen it, touched it and we fully expect it’ll be turning heads in Barcelona next week, but until now Qualcomm’s Krait chip has largely escaped the rigors of independent benchmarking. Fortunately, AnandTech has to come to our rescue once again with a characteristically thorough analysis at the source link. Those blue and green charts can speak for themselves, but if you’re in a rush then here’s the rub of it: the Krait truly is a next-gen SoC, with the dual-core 1.5GHz MSM8960-powered reference handset delivering an “insane performance advantage” of between 20 percent and 240 percent on CPU benchmarks. As we glimpsedrecently, graphics performance is somewhat less ground-breaking but still very healthy, with the 28nm process allowing the Adreno 225 GPU to run at up to 400MHz, versus 266MHz on its Adreno 220 predecessor. Oh yes, this is going to be one mother of an MWC.

 

from Engadget

From Gizmodo: How a Man Survived Without Food For Two Months in a Snow-Buried Car

When a Swedish man drove down a deserted forest road near Umeaa, Sweden last December 19th, he was probably looking forward to Christmas. But that day, his car somehow became buried under a mountain of snow. He was trapped there for two months, suffering insanely low temperatures, with no access to food. Last Sunday, he was discovered. Alive. But how? More »
from Gizmodo