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'Cowardice':Â
Ajit Pai Accused of Hiding From Net Neutrality Backers After Bailing on Tech Conference --Â
--Â One critic suggests that Pai cancelled because "he realized that the tech industry kinda despises him."Â
(commondreams.org)
https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/948741836994240512
The Netflix @AltCarb booth is the best branding at CES so far #CES2018
Possible DJI Spark killer by Walkera?
First look at the upcoming Walkera PERI drone. Features include:
4k video
3-axis gimbal
15 min flight time
1km range
22mph max speed
No definite release date but it should be available sometime within the next month or two for a retail price of $499.Â
ValamiĂ©rt betegesen szeretem az ilyen kĂŒtyĂŒket (mĂșltkor majdnem megvettem egy mƱködĆkĂ©pes Psion Series 5-öt Ă©s most kicsit bĂĄnom is, hogy nem tettem meg) Ă©s Ășgy tƱnik, nem Ă©n vagyok vele egyedĂŒl, sĆt! NĂ©hĂĄny lelkes fejlesztĆ ugyanis elkĂ©szĂtette a fenti PDA-t, vagy ha Ășgy tetszik, klasszikusan "menedzser kalkulĂĄtort", amit egyĂ©bkĂ©nt az idei CES-en promĂłztak is mindenfelĂ©. A Gemini PDA tervezĆi igyekeztek mindenes eszközt, de nem egy zsebre rakhatĂł laptopot alkotni, nagyon sokat merĂtettek  a PsiontĂłl dizĂĄjn szempontjĂĄbĂłl, de ezt nem is tagadjĂĄk. A 17.14 cm x 7.93 cm x 1.51 cm-es kĂ©szĂŒlĂ©k 5,99 colos kijelzĆt kapott, ami termĂ©szetesen Ă©rintĂ©sĂ©rzĂ©keny, az azon megjelenĆ Android rendszert Ă©s dual-bootban indĂthatĂł Linuxot egyarĂĄnt kezelhetjĂŒk Ăgy. BelsĆre egyĂ©bkĂ©nt egy MediaTek Helio X27-es processzorral, 4 GB RAM-mal Ă©s egy 64 gigĂĄs hĂĄttĂ©rtĂĄrral lĂĄttĂĄk el a gĂ©pet, melybĆl kaphatĂł lesz majd csak WiFi kĂ©pes Ă©s WiFi + 4G verziĂł is, elĆbb 300 utĂłbbi pedig 400 dollĂĄros ĂĄron rendelhetĆ elĆ, a piaci ĂĄrat elvileg 200 dollĂĄrral magasabb nyitĂĄsra tervezte a cĂ©g. Az LTE Ă©s CDMA tĂĄmogatĂĄssal is rendelkezĆ modell egyĂ©bkĂ©nt telefonĂĄlĂĄsra is alkalmas - sĆt, az Alcatel egyik korĂĄbbi közĂ©pkategĂłriĂĄs modelljĂ©nĂ©l lĂĄtott mĂłdon a fedlapi beszĂ©lgetĂ©si hagszĂłrĂłk egyben mikrofonok is, szĂłval bĂĄrhogy a fĂŒlönkhöz emelhetjĂŒk a Gemini PDA-jĂĄt. KihangosĂtĂĄsra, videĂłbeszĂ©lgetĂ©sre, meg Ășgy egyĂĄltalĂĄn mĂ©diatartalmak lejĂĄtszĂĄsĂĄra egyarĂĄnt az oldalsĂł hangszĂłrĂłkat lehet hasznĂĄlni, a videĂłcsevejhez meg beĂ©pĂtve leledzik a kijelzĆ mellett egy 5 megapixeles kamera is. KĂŒlsĆ kamera gyĂĄrilag nincs, egy plusz modul formĂĄjĂĄban lehet venni egy szintĂ©n 5 megapixeles pĂ©ldĂĄnyt - ebbĆl is lĂĄtszik, hogy a Gemini nem mai szintet megĂŒtĆ okostelefonnak szĂĄnja az eszközt. KommunikĂĄciĂł szempontjĂĄbĂłl kĂ©t Type-C USB kerĂŒlt a kĂ©szĂŒlĂ©khĂĄzba, NFC sajnos kimaradt, de GPS mindkĂ©t variĂĄnsban van. TovĂĄbbi Ă©rdekessĂ©gek közĂ© tartozik a a fedlapon elhelyezett, több LED-es ĂĄllapotjelzĆ sor, mely programozhatĂł, formatervileg pedig a zsanĂ©r speckĂł kialakĂtĂĄsa gyönyörködteti a szemet. ElsĆ blikkre kifejezetten Ă©rdekes tehĂĄt a kĂŒtyĂŒ, de mindenkĂ©pp borzasztĂłan rĂ©tegcucc. Akit egyĂ©bkĂ©nt Ă©rdekel mĂ©g az ilyesmi, a kĂnai GPD is forgalmaz ilyen kĂ©szĂŒlĂ©keket ( itt meg a gyĂĄrtĂł honlapja), teljes Ă©rtĂ©kƱ Windows 10-zel, csak az kicsit drĂĄgĂĄbb mĂłka.

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VICTOR sums up the trends that dominated CES 2018
For normal people, the end of the year is a time for celebration, vacation, and family.
For people in the tech industry, though, itâs a time of frantic preparation for the biggest trade show in the Western Hemisphere: CES.
The Consumer Electronics Show takes place in Las Vegas every January, perfectly timed to drain the joy out of the holidays for 170,000 people. Itâs not open to the public â only to members of the industry and the media that covers it.
The Consumer Electronics Show comes once a year, whether we like it or not.
The purpose of the show is for nearly 4,000 companies to show off what theyâre working on. When will these products reach stores shelves? Some of it soon, some of it next year, and lots of it, never.
Every year, everyone wants to know: What was new at CES? The world is hungry for an exciting answer, like, âOh, thereâs this thing called an iPad!â or âThey showed this car called a Tesla!â
But every year, there are fewer new breakout inventions; at CES 2018 last week, Iâd say there were zero. (In fact, the most talked-about display at CES last week was when the power went out for two hours. At an electronics show. #irony.)
Instead, CES these days is more about the same buzzword, technologies seep into existing products from across the industry, cross fertilizing. This year, six of these seeping technologies were on display â which, for your convenience, Iâve boiled down to a handy acronym: VICTOR.
It stands for voice, Internet of Things, cars, TVs, oddballs, and robots.
Voice
At this point, you probably know that the Amazon Echo is that cylinder that sits in your house and responds to voice commands, kind of like Siri for the home. Google has its own copycat version, called Google Home. These things are incredibly popular â already, theyâre in 16% of American homes.
Both Amazon and Google have been aggressively encouraging other companies to build their voice technologies into their own appliances: refrigerators, light switches, lamps, speakers, robo-vacuums, TVs, headphones, security cameras, door locks, washers, dryers, cars, and so on. âWorks with Amazon Alexa!â and âWorks with OK Google!â signs were everywhere at CES last week.
You couldnât swing a cat without hitting an Alexa-enabled product.
Whatâs great is that this isnât an either/or thing. Itâs not another Betamax/VHS war, or a Blu-ray/HD-DVD war. Since Alexa and âOK Googleâ are just software, thereâs nothing to stop them from coexisting in the same product. The Sonos One speaker, Vivitar smart speaker, and new TiVo models, for example, can all understand commands barked in either command language.
Internet of Things
The Internet of Things, of course, is the nonsensical name for home devices that are networkable, so that we can control them by pulling out our phones and opening an app. For something thatâs supposed to make our lives simpler and easier, thatâs too much hassle. Consumers have been staying away in droves.
What may save the âIâ in VICTOR is the âVâ in VICTOR â voice control. âAlexa, is the dryer done yet?â âHey Google, make it two degrees warmer in here.â âAlexa, lock the doors.â âOK Google, I want to watch âRambo.ââ
That arrangement actually works â and was everywhere at CES 2018. Samsung and LG, among others, demonstrated entire model living rooms and kitchens filled with appliances waiting for your verbal command.
An LG employee shows how its new fridge has six cameras inside that let you see its contents.
Cars
The self-driving car courses at CES were a third bigger than last year. Every car company youâve ever heard of, and a few you havenât, were demonstrating their self-driving prototypes. Lyft was even giving a few lucky showgoers rides around town in self-driving cars.
Sleek-looking concept cars filled the CES exhibit halls.
For 10 years, people have been saying that these cars would hit the roads in 2020 â and guess what? Unlike most heavily hyped new technologies, this horizon isnât receding. People are still saying 2020. That means itâs probably real.
Lots of people were also talking about Toyotaâs e-Palette, a prototype self-driving store.
Toyota envisions its E-Palette as a self-driving store, delivery van, or even hotel room.
TVs
CES show floors have always been dominated by massive walls of brilliant TV screens, and this year was no exception. The industry is still hard at work pushing us to buy 4K TV screens, which have four times the number of pixels as hi-def screens. Only one problem: You canât see the difference from a normal seating distance.
As it does every year, LG created a dazzling wall of TV screensâthis time, in an undulating canyon.
Even if you could see it, thereâs very little to watch. Not a single TV network or cable channel broadcasts in 4K. If you own a 4K television, and you want to watch 4K shows and movies, you have two choices: Buy a 4K Blu-ray player and buy new movies on disc â or stream your shows online, from services like Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, iTunes, Google Play, Vudu, and YouTube.
In short, 4K is kind of a hoax.
(What you can see â what is worth upgrading to â is a much less catchy format. Itâs called HDR, for high dynamic range. Much brighter brights, much darker darks; more detail in those bright and dark places; and more shades in between. More shades of color, too. Really fantastic.)
So the forehead-slapping breakthrough of CES 2018 was â get this â 8K screens. Thatâs right: four times as many pixels as 4K. If 4K was a stupid hoax, then 8K is four times as stupid. Really? They think weâre going to re-buy all our movies on disc again, to play on another new special disc player?
Samsung displayed a new display technology called MicroLED, which it claims to be as great-looking as OLED but at a lower price and less chance of burn-in. Cooler yet, the company proposes selling these TVs as one-foot, borderless tiles, which you can assemble to make as big a TV as you like. The one on the show floor, at 146 inches diagonal, dubbed âThe Wall,â was a huge hit with showgoers.
LG also displayed (in an off-floor, invitation-only hotel area) a huge flat screen TV that rolls up. Itâs built like an upside-down window shade; when you need the screen to get smaller, it wraps up around a roller at the bottom, hidden inside a wooden box.
LGâs prototype TV rolls upward or downward into the box below, to fit the video material.
Why? Because, the company says, you may want to watch different movies or shows that have different screen proportions. The real reason, of course, is, âBecause we could.â
Oddball things
The âOâ in VICTOR is the catch-all for all kinds of other crazy stuff on display. Walk the 50 football fieldsâ worth of exhibit space, and youâd find:
Two laundry-folding machines. One, the Foldimate, will cost $980 but will require you to attach each piece of clothing to clips; the other, the Laundroid, will go for $16,000 but does everything for you.
A full-body suit for playing virtual-reality games, so that bullets can âhitâ you anywhere, or you can walk into a hot or cold virtual place, and youâll feel it.
An electronic breast pump that you wear secretly inside your bra as you go about your day.
A tiny, battery-free sensor that you wear on your fingernail to detect excessive exposure to UV light.
Another stab at the Google Glass concept. This time, the virtual screen is superimposed on your field of view by a full pair of sunglasses.
Not one, not two, but three self-driving suitcases that follow you through the airport.
The Puppy 1 self-driving suitcase balances on two wheels, using technology adapted from Segway.
Remember my exhaustive (and exhausting) report about the struggles of the through-the-air charging industry? The products that can charge your gadgets at a distance? Well, the FCC just approved some of these products, including the Energous three-foot charging system. The very first product to include it is called the Myant Skiin, a line of clothing that tracks your vital statistics as you wear it.
Robots
No surprise here: Robotics and automation were the stars of the show. Heck, theyâre the stars of every show right about now. Everywhere you looked, there were shiny white plastic robo-things with big eyes and smiley mouths to look less threatening. Most of them seemed to be âbecause we couldâ designs, rather than âyou need one of these.â
Here and there, though, you could spot far more purpose-built robots:
Honda displayed a series of robots designed for specific tasks: an all-terrain model for outdoor work; a self-balancing wheelchair; and a weird, globule-shaped, huggable âempathy robotâ with facial expressions projected onto its face from within.
LG offered three new robots for commercial use: one for restaurants, to deliver food or drinks; one for hotels, to carry luggage up to your room; and one for grocery stores, which guides you to the food shelf youâre looking for, and scans the package as you drop it into its hopper.
LGâs new service robots are designed for restaurants, hotels, and grocery stores.
Sony is re-introducing its Aibo robotic dog, this time in a more advanced, more puppy-like incarnation (probably $1,700 when it hits the U.S.). Sensors make the dog respond appropriately when you pet it or swat it; it learns your voice over time and seeks you out; and, like the original Aibo, it plays fetch with a pink ball.
Omron built a ping-pong-playing robot â not ever intended to be for sale, but to show off its robot-making skills.
Just to make sure all of Vegasâs bases were covered, the Sapphire Gentlemenâs Club featured two pole-dancing stripper robots as a CES gimmick.
Hail to the VICTORs
So, you get it: Same as last year, just more of it.
If all of that seems like a lot to read, well hey â hereâs a rhyme to make it go down easier:
V is for the voice control in every gadget here â âAlexa, do my bidding!â⊠âOK Google, bring my beer!â In TVs, cars, and speakers, itâs a miracle of choice. The worldâs at your command â at least if you donât lose your voice!
I is for the second realm, called Internet of Things, Itâs networked household stuff, complete with all the fun that it brings Itâs thermostats, refrigerators, all your kitchen gear⊠So far, nobodyâs buying it â but hey, perhaps next year.
C is for self-driving cars! So many at this show! Weâre told theyâre really coming soon â about two years to go. T is for the TV screens on all the expo floors. They look amazing when theyâre here â but less so once theyâre yours.Â
O is for the oddball stuff! The offbeat and bizarre: This laundry-folding robot, or this crazy concept car. R is for the robots â Sonyâs puppy stole my show. This grocery bot asks what you want, then shows you where to go.
So thereâs your whole mnemonic â VICTOR! Hope you liked the show And donât forget the greatest part â you didnât have to go!
David Pogue, tech columnist for Yahoo Finance, welcomes non-toxic comments in the Comments below. On the Web, heâs davidpogue.com. On Twitter, heâs @pogue. On email, heâs [email protected]. You can sign up to get his stuff by email, here. Â
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Revealed at #CES, Namco Bandai and My Arcade are teaming up for collectible mini arcade machines of classics like Pac-Man, Galaga and Dig Dug