It’s not often that you find a webcam that’s multifaceted, but Earth Trek’s webcam is just that. Dubbed the “hottest webcam” this world has ever seen (um, no), this unit packs a 1.3-megapixel camera, VGA capture abilities, auto focus / auto brightness and the real kicker, a 2-port USB hub. Probably still a ripoff at $45, but if you need those extra peripheral ports bad enough, who knows what you’d be willing to do.
[Via Pocket-lint]
Filed under: Digital Cameras, Peripherals
Earth Trek offers up VGA webcam with 2-port USB hub originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 29 Nov 2008 01:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Tags: bad-enough, digital-cameras, earth, earth-trek, earthtrek, entry, friend-via, real-kicker, usb, usb hub, usbhub, webcam, world
We already caught a brief glimpse of Tomy’s
Zink printer-equipped Xiao digital camera
earlier this month, but with the Friday release date now upon us, we finally have a few more details about the would-be Polaroid successor. That includes word of a price for both the camera (¥34,800, or just under $370), and the paper you’ll need to actually print photos which, at ¥880 (or about $9) for 20 sheets, likely won’t have you plastering your walls with the 2×3-inch shots, even though they do actually have adhesive backs. Interestingly, you can also use the camera to print photos from any IrDA-equipped cellphone, but unfortunately not via WiFi or Bluetooth, which would be a tad more welcome. If that’s got you intrigued, you should have a slightly easier time picking one up when it launches internationally next spring, although by then it’ll likely also be competing with
Polaroid’s own Zink-equipped camera.
Filed under: Digital Cameras
Tomy’s printer-equipped Xiao digital camera hits Japan originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Nov 2008 18:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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We’ve seen these Amazon “leaks” time and again. So while the December 7th date for the Vado HD might be an educated guess, the details including that $200 price tag certainly look real enough. The display still measures 2-inches, but the beefier 3.3 x 7.9 x 6.3-inch solid state camcorder now brings 8GB of storage for up to 2 hours of 720p MPEG-4 recordings — 8 hours at VGA quality. It also ships with an HDMI cable for instant playback to your like-equipped television. Otherwise, slot the cam into your PC’s (XP and Vista, only) USB port to instantly share your works to YouTube and others with the help of the cam’s built-in Vado Central Software. With this, the Kodak Zi6, and Flip Mino HD, there certainly won’t be any shortage of pocket HD cameras of suspect-tweener quality to choose from this holiday season.
[Via epiZENter]
Filed under: Digital Cameras
Creative’s $200 Vado HD pocket camcorder ready for pre-order originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Nov 2008 02:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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It’s near, the day that Canon’s EOS 5D Mark II hits retail shelves (outside of China) is almost upon us. According to Rob Galbraith, the 21 megapixel, full-frame, Full HD-capable EOS 5D Mark II will leave Canon’s US distribution centers starting today. That should translate to a body-only $2,699 retail appearance sometime this week if you’re lucky. YouTube’s new widescreen, high-definition, holiday videos will never be the same.
Filed under: Digital Cameras
Canon’s EOS 5D Mark II reportedly hitting US stores (shelves?) today originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Nov 2008 06:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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ASTRO Gaming, the same outfit responsible for the A40 gaming headset, is dishing out a new pair of gig bags that’ll go perfectly with your Rock Band drum bag. Up first is the Roadie, which is designed to hold a pair of Rock Band / Guitar Hero axes with enough room for a slim PlayStation 2 or a few of your musical video game titles. The Mission complete system gear bag is built to carry any current-generation game console (though we don’t see any reason why an Atari Jaguar wouldn’t fit in as well) along with most every accessory you can think of — spare Wiimote straps and Salt & Vinegar chips included. Both pieces are available for pre-order right now, though we can’t imagine too many of you buying in with the absolutely ludicrous $99.95 / $129.95 prices. Seriously, can you not buy a real Fender hardshell for less than that? Full release is after the break.
Continue reading ASTRO’s Roadie / Mission fake instrument gig bags are way too serious
Filed under: Gaming, Peripherals
ASTRO’s Roadie / Mission fake instrument gig bags are way too serious originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Nov 2008 06:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Photographer and occasional Wired.com contributor Dave Bullock has organized a photography club on Skid Row, a massive encampment of 7,000 to 8,000 homeless people in downtown Los Angeles.
Using cheap digital cameras obtained through a city arts grant, the Skid Row Photography Club made more than 20,000 photos over the past six months, and they’ve now put on an art show during LA’s Downtown Art Walk.
Dave wants to keep the project going, and to do that he needs more cameras. He welcomes donations of old (but still working) digital cameras with any number of megapixels. Got a camera you want to donate to the club? Email Dave at eecue@eecue.com and tell him the Gadget Lab sent ya.
Skid Row Photo Club’s First Show [thanks, Dave!]







It’s still not quite point-and-shoot, but it looks like some researchers at Japan’s National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (or NICT) have gone some ways towards making
holography a tiny bit more practical. As Tech-On reports, their method is based around a fly-eye lens that consists of a number of micro lenses, which allows for moving images to be captured in normal lighting conditions, and is also used to display the image after a computer works its magic on the raw images. There are still a few fairly significant drawbacks to the setup, however, as the image displayed is currently limited to one centimeter in size with a two degree viewing angle, although the researchers say they should be able to increase that to a four centimeters within the next three years. Check out an equally tiny image of an actual hologram captured with the system after the break.
Continue reading NICT researchers develop new method to make holography more practical
Filed under: Digital Cameras, Misc. Gadgets
NICT researchers develop new method to make holography more practical originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Nov 2008 17:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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We already knew how much the world’s first digital picture frame tied to a wireless carrier network would cost, but no one bothered to mention a specific release date. Regardless, the T-Mobile Cameo is finally available in T-Mob retail stores, and it’ll cost you $99.99 up front plus $9.99 per month for the connected services. It’s the gift that keeps on giving taking.
Filed under: Digital Cameras, Displays, Wireless
T-Mobile Cameo frame now available for $99.99 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Nov 2008 10:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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The key to any good pseudo-educational show featuring demonstrations that typically result in explosions (i.e. Mythbusters) is super-duper slow-mo sequences that expand those fleeting instants of incredibly expensive pyrotechnical glory into multiple minutes of time wasted between commercial breaks. If you’re looking to record your own similar antics, amateur-style, Casio’s time-stretching shooter the EX-FH20 is for you, delivering decent image quality and a bevy of burst and slow-mo modes that will capture 7 megapixel stills at 40 fps and 1000 fps video at 224 x 56. However, if that sounds rather gimmicky to you, according to PhotographyBLOG’s full review there’s really nothing noteworthy about the machine which, at $600, is out-paced and under-cut by other, similar SLR-lite options like Canon’s PowerShot SX10. ‘Nuff said.
Filed under: Digital Cameras, Portable Video
Casio’s EX-FH20 reviewed: perfect for YouTube slow-mo junkies, nobody else originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Nov 2008 10:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Filed under: Digital Cameras, Misc. Gadgets
Matrox’s new Iris GT “smart camera” doesn’t mark the first time that the Atom processor and Windows CE have run into each other, but it’s certainly one of the most interesting encounters, even if it’s one that most folks likely won’t see first hand. Apparently, the camera is intended to be used in various “machine vision” applications, like locating and reading barcodes or measuring the geometry of 2D objects, but we think you’ll agree that it has one other, not quite official use written all over it: robot eye. The camera’s specs certainly seem to make that a possiblity, and include that ever-present 1.6GHz Atom processor, 256MB of RAM, 1GB of flash storage, a gigabit Ethernet port, and USB 2.0 and RS232 ports, not to mention accomodations for a number of interchangeable lenses — it’s even dust-proof and “washable.” No word on a price just yet, but Matrox says it’ll be available sometime in the first quarter of next year.
[Via jkOnTheRun]
Matrox Iris GT smart camera brings Windows CE to Atom-land originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Nov 2008 13:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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