August 19th, 2010 — Gadgets

Sony announced the DR-GA500 and DR-GA200 Ultimate Weapon Gaming headsets, both with the “unique ‘triple enfolding’ design for unrivalled comfort over long periods of wear”. The DR-GA500 and DR-GA200 both have 40mm drive units and integrated boom microphone. They are ideal for strategy and online multiplayer gamers.
Sony DR-GA500 signal processing hardware
The more advanced DR-GA500 features a Dolby Pro Logic IIx decoder with unique Sony Virtual Phones Technology (VPT) to create convincing 7.1ch 3D surround effects. It also offers the FPS mode. In order to provide better sound, the DR-GA500 will come with a compact signal processing hardware.
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August 19th, 2010 — Information

Olympus has unveiled a new point-and-shoot camera for the Japanese market. Known as the Mju 7050, this stylish camera has a 14-megapixel CCD image sensor, a 28mm wide-angle lens, a 7x optical zoom lens, a 3.0-inch LCD display, a 2GB of internal memory, an SD/SDHC memory card slot, an HDMI output and 720p HD movie recording capabilities. The Olympus Mju 7050 will go on sale in Japan from late August for unannounced price yet. [Olympus]

August 19th, 2010 — Information

Kubota Image Tools has announced details of the 20th iteration of its Digital Photography Bootcamp and launched an entirely new event to precede Bootcamp, called, SummitUp 2010.
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August 19th, 2010 — Gadgets
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Below are the specifications of Samsung’s Galaxy U for LG U+ which is expected to be unveiled this week. The phone will be available in black or white and the only thing we’re waiting now is for the availability and price.
Specifications:
Size: … — full article at samsunghub.com
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August 19th, 2010 — Gadgets
Silk: it’s stronger than Kevlar, thinner than a human hair, it’s biocompatible (it doesn’t trigger human immune system response), and it’s produced by insects (although some new-fangled metabolically engineered bacteria seem to be up to the task). Researchers at Tufts University have created a silk and gold biosensor that can be implanted in the body to keep tabs on proteins and chemicals. One possible use would be to keep track of diabetic’s glucose levels, notifying the patient when things go wonky. At the present time, they’ve only tested the antenna itself — it was found to resonate at specific frequencies, even when implanted in several layers of muscle tissue (from a pig, mind you). For their next trick, the team will outfit the device with proteins or other molecules to monitor in-vivo chemical reactions.
Implantable antenna designed using silk and gold originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Aug 2010 03:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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