BBC: 2005 Looking Good for Gadgets 149
wiggles writes "The BBC says, 'The relentless pace of development in the hi-tech world and rampant competition in many of its sectors, particularly among mobile phone firms, all suggests that 2005 is going to be a very good year.' They talk about that (overused?) buzzword 'convergence' and the implications for gadgets in 2005 as we further approach the 'convergence' asymptote. So what 2005 gadgets are Slashdotters looking forward to?" I'm forecasting that 2006 and 2007 are ALSO looking good for gadgets. You heard it here first...
iPhone (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:iPhone (Score:1)
Anyone remeber the GLOBALS from Earth Final Conflict? About a 5 inch video monitor that rolls up into the body of the device, Video/Digital camera, GPS, [video]Phone, and a low end computer all in a package that fits not so badly in one hand (when the screen is not engaged/unrolled.)
I want one of those audio-our ports.
Re:iPhone (Score:2)
http://www.jjambproductions.com/heroprops3.html [jjambproductions.com]
Home automation (Score:5, Interesting)
Control4 [control4.com] looks especially interesting.
-ccm
Re:Home automation (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Home automation (Score:3, Informative)
Zigbee (Score:1)
Re:Home automation (Score:3, Interesting)
I hope we don't (Score:1)
*ducks*
time warp (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:time warp (Score:2)
Treo 650 for a non-Sprint network (Score:2)
Alex.
DAB (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:DAB (Score:2)
A USB slot to record live radio onto a memory key would be useful too, although I'd settle for internal caching if it had a big enough hard drive.
Watches that communicate with one another (Score:3, Informative)
A simple request... (Score:5, Interesting)
If there actually is a PDA out there for lazy farts like me, then I'd be grateful for the tip. If there is no such animal, then I hope some company stops focussing on cramming multimedia stuff into a smaller and smaller box and listens to lazy farts like me who just want a good basic PDA and are Linux users.
Re:A simple request... (Score:1)
I'll tell you what i'm bloody-well looking for... (Score:1)
a small pda-phone, good battery life, bluetooth and IR, and an SD or xD card reader. that's all i really care about.
my phone has an endless list of "Features" like 100 memory addresses and voice dial. but there are only 20 voice dial locations. which means that if i want to use voice dial, i've got to portion them out. well, since the voice dial optio
Re:A simple request... (Score:2)
Newer devices do more than older devices - this isn't new. But don't complain that newer devices do too much for what you want when a thousand older devices must be on eBay looking for a home like yours.
-N
Convergence (Score:3, Funny)
convergence (kn-vûrjns) n.
Re:Convergence (Score:1)
Re:Convergence (Score:1)
That's the oddest pronunciation that I've ever seen. Where are all the vowels?
Re:Convergence (Score:2)
s/clock/camera/
Pretty good news but (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Pretty good news but (Score:2)
WiFi phone (Score:5, Informative)
Re:WiFi phone (Score:2, Informative)
But vendors are clever: since the overhead is huge for small packets, they might as well use a high-quality 32 kbps codecs in there; so when you're trying out their solution with just one or two phones, you think "wow, the quality is better than any phon
Re:WiFi phone (Score:2)
Wireless VoIP Phone [relianceinfo.com].
USofA really needs to pick up pace as far as mobile tech. is concerned. But will the baby bells controlling so much of the telephony market, I don't see that happening.
Camera/Binoculars that know what I'm looking at (Score:4, Interesting)
For the camera, it would be nice if it told me in a little overlay, and if it stored the info in the EXIF header to make it easier to categorize pictures.
---
Other wierd ideas like this on my blog [blogspot.com] :-)
Re:Camera/Binoculars that know what I'm looking at (Score:2)
Re:Camera/Binoculars that know what I'm looking at (Score:2)
GPS is not the end-all solution unfortunately, since:
1) It works really crappy indoors
2) You need some way of knowing exactly which direction the user is facing. Compases are easily confused so you need gyros. Good gyros are expensive and big.
Re:Camera/Binoculars that know what I'm looking at (Score:2)
One of the things I really like when I trvel on CSA [www.csa.cz] is a display on the plane that maps our route, gives a list of nearby cities and landmarks, the outside temperature, air speed, ground speed, time in the air and estimated time to arrival. Of course it is a 12 hour flight to the Czech Republic, so I am sure this releaves the flig
Re:Camera/Binoculars that know what I'm looking at (Score:2)
I use my GPSR on planes all the time. You should ask permission before the flight takes off, but I've never had anyone say no, and have never had a problem using it(except from the other cattle/passengers who seem to get freaked out if you don't sit there and shut up). Get a window seat and make sure you get the antenna up close. An external antenna helps as well as a method to stick it to the window.
Great fun seeing where y
The Perfect Phone (Score:5, Insightful)
I dropped it once and it stopped working. When I went looking for a new phone, I discovered that Nokia had discontinued the 8600 and the only options for new phones were these large monstrosities with cameras, video games, color screens and picture messaging. Absolutely horrible.
Now, don't get me wrong, I'm looking forward to the days of wearable computers, but when it comes to a cellphone, all I want is a phone that is small and has good voice quality. The 8200 was the perfect phone. I have no idea why it was discontinued, but all the cell phone makers are playing the same game -- gadgets, gadgets, gadgets. I don't want crazy features, I want something that does its job well, not 15 jobs poorly.
Here's to hoping that in 2005 cell phone makers will go back to producing good cell phones, and not try to include a camera and an atari emulator on every model!
Re:The Perfect Phone (Score:2)
Re:The Perfect Phone (Score:2)
Oh, and it's cheap.
Re:The Perfect Phone (Score:2)
There is a real need for non-camera phones (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's to hoping that in 2005 cell phone makers will go back to producing good cell phones, and not try to include a camera and an atari emulator on every model!
I travel quite a bit to customer sites, and many of them - particularly organizations with very valuable intellectual property (e.g. trade secrets) - explicitly prohibit cameras of any kind. It is my hope that the major mobile phone vendors recognize the need for nicely-featured phones without cameras for use by consultants and other people working in these facilities.
Re:There is a real need for non-camera phones (Score:2)
Re:There is a real need for non-camera phones (Score:2)
Re:There is a real need for non-camera phones (Score:1)
Re:The Perfect Phone - Suggested Replacement (Score:2)
It also doesn't have all those features that you don't like, which is one of the reasons that I got it. I love that I can fit it in the leg pocket of my jeans or the breast pocket of my coat, and it's very sturdy - I've dropped it a bunch of times and it hasn't yet skipped a beat.
Re:The Perfect Phone (Score:4, Informative)
1. Small
2. Lots of space for contacts
3. Synch with Outlook
4. Some flash memory with a USB socket, like a USB memory stick
5. Well designed UI
6. Good audio quality
7. Shold look recognisably like a phone
8. Predictive text
Things I don't want on a phone:
1. Camera
2. Video camera
3. Games
4. Audio recorder
5. mini qwerty keyboard
6. flashlight
7. GPS
8. Compass
9. Microsoft Office
10. A meda player
Things that are acceptable as long as they don't get in the way:
1. GPRS
2. Some kind of WAP/internet thing
3. Bluetooth
4. a Java runtime
Incidentally, I had the same phone as you until it broke. subsequent models have been larger and less easy to use.
Also, with reference to "must look like a phone", when Nokia released the 6230 last year, almost everyone I know bought one within 2 months. This was because it didn't look like it was designed by a 12 year old like the previous two years output.
Re:The Perfect Phone (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The Perfect Gadget (Score:3, Interesting)
Software:
Hear hear - fewer crappy phones (Score:1)
(BTW I live in SF Bay Area CA where the 800 mhz network is alive and well.)
Re:The Perfect Phone (Score:2)
Completely agreed. I'm intending to go to these guys [retrofone.com] if I ever need to replace my 8890. Which I hope I don't.
Peter
It's not really a "gadget", but... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:It's not really a "gadget", but... (Score:2)
Look around the site a bit for other models.
I saw some up for sale at http://auction.yahoo.co.jp/ for reasonable prices.
$500 "iMac mini" (Score:5, Insightful)
Relentless pace of development (Score:3, Insightful)
E-paper (Score:4, Informative)
More Retro Stuff (Score:1)
Re:More Retro Stuff (Score:2)
The first rangefinder digital camera using the Leica M lens-mount: The Epson R-D1
The LEICA DIGILUX 2 which is expensive but cool
Or my least favorite: the Rolleiflex MiniDigi, a tiny digital copy of Rollei 6x6cm Twin Lens Reflex Camera
Killer smartphone (Score:3, Informative)
MP3 playback, superb sound quality and standard 3.5mm socket.
GPS receiver and the ability to use standard GPS software for smartphones.
A very good keyboard (not spongey), either a standard phone type or qwerty as long as the device doesn't look stupid.
SDIO compatible SD slot
Wifi
Good battery life
Good speakerphone
Expandable memory
Non-volatile storage
Re:Killer smartphone (Score:2)
Re:Killer smartphone (Score:2)
Palm that doesn't crash (Score:2)
Oh, and I want a SDIO Wireless Card for it.
Oh, wait, this is a REAL WORLD list of ideas, not science fiction. My bad.
Re:Palm that doesn't crash (Score:2)
The SDIO wireless would be good: I think the official one will burn out a tungsten E.
More on why Palm is junk (Score:2)
Never mind the fact that in my original support request, I spelled out in writing that the problems persisted even after a hardware reset.
In the end I uninstalled Documents to Go. Lovely that an application that came with the device turns out to be a bug ridden slice of pain. In all fairness doing so did eliminate an entire category of errors, so now I can sync the piece of junk with just
Re:More on why Palm is junk (Score:2)
Personally, I'd just return the thing under warranty to wherever I bought it - that isn't normal Palm behaviour.
Re:Palm that doesn't crash (Score:1)
Re:Palm that doesn't crash (Score:2)
Nokia 7710 (Score:2)
Maybe in this year the example is taken by more vendors, and that kind of device grow in features and get lower prices.
Let's see... (Score:1)
the CELL processor (Score:1)
Nah, I'm looking forward to the Cell processor and the technological advances it would bring.
Cell Phones (Score:1)
Is this too much to ask for? (Score:2)
Re:Is this too much to ask for? (Score:2)
But the other AC reply to you is right... you'll get sticker shock.
A phone for business not games (Score:3, Insightful)
I would like better more commonsense PDA functions in the phone such as Palm conduits to Lotus notes and the ability to sync to a web based public calendar. I'd also like a better phone book, one that allows better integration of email addresses.
And as a long time T9 user - back when it was used on Palmpilots as well, I have to say, that dog won't hunt anymore. It's too tedious to use effectively for text messaging and email. I think that Samsung and company are just going to have to bite the bullet on this one and provide a fold up keyboard tht connects to the obscure and seemingly useless data port on on VI660 phone in order for me to effectively use PCS vision services.
And I probably won't get a camera phone unless and until it's a better cheaper and more efficient replacement for a REAL digital camera. And at that, it has to plug directly into a photo printer and unload and print just like the cameras of today.
In five years I want to get rid of my laptop, PDA, phone, MP3 and CD player and use a single device that doesn't cost as much as a car, runs 2 full days on battery power and is 100% backup-able to some storage device on my homeLAN like a network NAS box.
Re:A phone for business not games (Score:2)
Why in the heck would you want to print a digital picture? I thought the point of digital photography was that you could share it without killing trees. Get Gallery [menalto.com].
And I'd much rather have everything be Bluetooth enabled and network than carry one huge thing aro
Re:A phone for business not games (Score:2)
Novelties or improvements? (Score:1)
Motorola MPX (Score:2)
Bluetooth > Convergence (Score:4, Interesting)
Call me foolish, but I for one am not lusting after convergence. I'd rather have good Bluetooth support. That way, my cell phone, which is good at GSM communications and picture taking, for example, can talk with my iPod which is good at data storage (where all those pictures go). Or my PDA, with it's nice big screen, can download web pages via my cell phone. Or my cell phone can get the next 24 hours worth of appointment information from my PDA, in case I want to travel light for a little while. The scenarios go on and on...
It just seems a little more elegant than carrying one monolithic brick around with you.
Re:Bluetooth Convergence (Score:1)
Re:Bluetooth Convergence (Score:2)
Also, maybe separate gadgets do their own task better, but somewhat i would
An All In One (Score:1)
Make it with an extra long battery life, or on-board power source, and give it removable flash memory or a micro hard drive (oh wait, the iPod already has a hard drive, thank you.)
That will be convergence enough for me. I don't care what it costs.
But what would be uber-cool is if it were an Apple product.
Regards,
Roger Born
writing.borngraphics.com
"Vini Vedi Velcro"
all function in a device: form factor matters (Score:2)
"pocket size" for voice communication, text messaging, web search, music, small photos, music;
"head phone" size;
"clip board" size;
"desk top" size;
"wall size" for high quality entertainment.
MIT's Project Oxygen is experimenting with ubiqitous computing with three of these form factors- handheld, desk and wall. Everything communicates through wifi.
You Need A CarryAll (Score:1)
Ref: http://www.gizmodo.com/gadgets/robots/toyoto-ifoo
=)
Regards,
Roger Born
writing.borngraphics.com
"Sorry. No Refunds"
Consumer Divergence (Score:1)
it used to be I buy a gadget knowing that at I will be "cool" for at least 6 months, but now I find myself holding out because what's the use of buying that new Uber phone when next month there will be a better cheaper one.
what this means is that companies will find their products won't sell and that could only mea
Re:Consumer Divergence (Score:1)
I don't buy in that case, if anything I might buy online from another country, cheaper and a more recent model.
If only Apple would make a Tablet it could be.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Think of it as an extension to the iPod line --- the iPod lets one carry all of one's music (as a backup too) and modify the order it plays in --- the iPod Photo adds all of one's images to that --- how about a further upscale unit to allow one to carry all of one's documents?
Even if it did nothing but display a
If it's set up to be a Macintosh computer as well, being able to run Mac applications is a huge benison is just icing on the cake, but just basic use (calendaring / scheduling, note-taking, document annotation) in situations where a laptop is inappropriate / inconvenient (meetings, interviews, while walking about), and having the (portable!) equivalent to a Wacom Cintiq whet it's attached to one's Macintosh (look at the program Maxivista for an example of how this could work) is certainly worthwhile.
And of course, it'd be nice to replace my Newton which I still use for contact management (synch w/ iCal and AddressBook.app), note-taking (port the Newton user interface and Notepad) and of course, reading some ebooks (incl.
William
(whose Stylistic has music, hundreds of ebooks, a complete graphic design portfolio _and_ all the tools necessary to update and work on said portfolio --- see http://members.aol.com/willadams/portfolio.html --- including a copy of TeX, LyX &c.)
Re:If only Apple would make a Tablet it could be.. (Score:1)
Re:If only Apple would make a Tablet it could be.. (Score:1)
http://members.aol.com/willadams/portfolio.html
or
http://www.tug.org/texshowcase
William
2006 and 2007? (Score:1)
*wink*
Asymptote is right (Score:1)
Only Cell Phones (Score:2)
I want... (Score:1)
Now, once I have a phone like this, I'll want something extra for it too: a pair of small, backwards/forwards facing cameras with built-in micropho
Re:I want... (Score:1)
Open platforms (Score:3, Insightful)
If it isn't an open platform you can count me out. By open I don't mean it has to run Linux, but if I can't get a devel kit at little (use the pricing and availibility for the official Palm devkit as an example) or no cost it isn't open. If I can't download apps from sourceforge and install them without the vendor's blessing it isn't open. Notice that even WinCE is open by this definition.
Yes I understand that some parts of a cellphone's firmware must be unchangable for reasons that are obvious to anyone with an understanding of how things work, but the rest should be as open as possible, and standardized across multiple product lines and vendors is a big plus.
Flying Car (Score:1)
Ultimate hands-free phone (Score:2)
Re:useless gagets. (Score:2, Insightful)
I know the quality of the camera/video isn't comparable to what I would get out of a "real" digicam, but hell, it will get better over time. They may be "useless gadgets" for some of us who don't use a camera or voice recorder on a dai
Re:useless gagets. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:useless gagets. (Score:1)
I think it is generally the same population exchanging one generation of gadget for the next. I know some that have been through 5 or 6 generations of PDA's. The combination of small and useful is an extremely difficult dicotomy to overcome with a friendly interface. Some products like the ipod have been "killer apps" because they penetrated a new market and have
Re:useless gagets. (Score:2)
Here are some mpegs. One of them being a 1cm thick electronic pad (I liked it). (named SONY 2) This was in the SONY building in Tokyo last September. I wish I had no Karma because everybody is going to see this thing! Remember to remove the space made by the slashdot comment system.
http://homepage.mac.com/crackedbutter/FileShari
Re:useless gagets. (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't need a cellphone that takes pictures and plays MP3s, but I'm looking for one; and I don't need an iPod that can store 40Gb of music, but it sure is nice not to have to worry about what to transfer over to the iPod and just put _everything_ there so I can access it.
It's natural, when what we actually _need_ is taken care of, to start looking at the next step -- the things we'd really, really like.
The truth is (well, the truth filtered through my liberal biases) that people need to feel secure in their person, that they need to have a way to make sure they'll have food on their table tomorrow, and a way to exercise a certain sense of autonomy. A roof over their head would be nice too.
While in much of the world the above can't be taken for granted, most of us who read Slashdot already have this. We're probably not going to get shot in the street; we probably don't have to worry about being able to afford a loaf of bread tomorrow. So we start looking at the next, more optional stuff. That's OK -- there's nothing wrong with wanting more out of life than the bare necessities -- as long as we don't confuse "Man, I'd really like to be able to play 'Baby One More Time' as my ringtone" with a need
Re:useless gagets. (Score:2)
True, but wedgies, swirlies, and getting stuffed into lockers are dangers we face everyday.
Re:useless gagets. (Score:2)
To add, I've noticed that of late, most issues or point of views have become polarized. Today, you're either a techno-freak or a luddite. You're either expected to own or at least want a plasma television, a TiVo, a VOIP/cell/PDA phone or you don't even believe in electricity. Heck, it even extends to other things. You're either a Bush lover or a Bush hater. However, i digress.
Like you said, a lot of us are confusing a "good to have" technical gadget with a need. While there's nothing wrong with