Monday, January 07, 2013

Swype Now Crowd-Sources Your Autocorrections

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5973700/swype-now-crowd+sources-your-autocorrections

Swype Now Crowd-Sources Your AutocorrectionsSwype, the sliding keyboard that dramatically speeds up typing on Android, just got a little more clever. As well as offering a more fluid typing experience, it now crowd-sources your autocorrections—which should (hopefully) make for fewer embarrassing mistakes.

The new feature, called Living Language, essentially crowd-sources its dictionaries. Opt-in, and you join a population which is having its typing habits analyzed. That should mean, for instance, that your phone automatically recognizes words which are trending globally but wouldn't otherwise appear in your local dictionary—think YOLO, or one of the hundreds of other new terms that spring up every week.

There's also an extra auotcorrect trick up Swype's sleeve. The latest edition will also flag up words that it thinks you may've typed by accident: not spelling mistakes, but words that it thinks you might want to change. (Go on, use your imagination.) The feature is supposed to learn as you type—but it remains to be seen whether it spells the end for Damn You Autocorrect. [Swype via Verge]

Read More...

This 3D Printer Churns Out 3-Color Objects as Big as a Basketball

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5973708/this-3d-printer-churns-out-3+color-objects-as-big-as-a-basketball

This 3D Printer Churns Out 3-Color Objects as Big as a BasketballWe all know size matters. As, seemingly, does 3D Systems, because its latest desktop 3D printer is a whopper, with a build platform that can handle designs of up to 1,030 cubic inches. Yes, that is big enough to recreate a basketball.

The CubeX—which 3D Systems modestly refers to as "the ultimate desktop 3D printer"—offers up a resolution of 125 microns, and yet can print objects as large as 10.8 x 10.45 x 9.5 inches. And unlike a lot of desktop 3D printers, it does it in three colors, too, using either PLA or ABS plastics.

Designs can be printed direct from a computer, or even by simply plugging a USB stick with the design into the device. Child's play. The downside? It'll set you back a cool $2,500. [3D Systems via Engadget]

Read More...

New DLP Pico Chip Brings Brightened, Doubled Resolution to Tiny Projectors

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5973718/new-dlp-pico-chip-brings-brightened-doubled-resolution-to-tiny-projectors

New DLP Pico Chip Brings Brightened, Doubled Resolution to Tiny Projectors Over the past few years, pico projectors stuffed into smartphones and tablets have seemed like novel concepts with little real world application—yet. But the little projectors may finally evolve from novel to practical, especially with DLP's latest pico chip architecture breakthrough.

The new pixel architecture packs a 30% brightness increase and doubled resolution into a platform no bigger than the current generation. And all this comes with a 50% energy efficiency increase, to boot.

The platform is still sampling to manufacturers, so don't expect to see any products before "the end of the year." With all the potential these chips hold, though, it's worth the wait. [Press Release]

Read More...

LG Adds NFC to Its TVs and Appliances So It Can All Work Together

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5973732/lg-adds-nfc-to-its-appliances-and-tvs-so-they-can-all-work-together-updating

LG Adds NFC to Its TVs and Appliances So It Can All Work TogetherIf you're an LG fan, your house is about to get a whole lot smarter with a host of intelligent appliances.

The company is focusing on developing not just smart devices but cultivating an entire smart home ecosystem. LG calls the plan "One Touch Connectivity," and the idea is that it lets your phone and LG's various NFC-enabled appliances—including televisions, laundry, ovens, refrigerators, even a smart robotic floor sweeper—work together. Much of this lineup can be controlled via voice or touch commands from a smartphone. So you'll be able to see if you do, in fact, need milk while at the grocery store, start the roast in your oven before you get home from work, or check the progress of your robotic vacuum from anywhere there's an internet connection.

Read More...

Sharp Has a 4K TV Ready for This Summer

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5973793/sharp-has-a-4k-tv-ready-for-this-summer

Sharp Has a 4K TV Ready for This SummerNot to be left out of the spec party, Sharp just announced that it's joining the 4K pleasure cruise this summer, with a 60-inch set.

It has a 240Hz panel, active 3D, and built-in Wi-Fi. 4K packs four time the pixels of a standard 1080p TV into the same amount of space for a picture that'll make you crap yourself. That is if you can afford it. No details are available on price yet, but if other comparable sets are any indication, Sharp's 4K TV will probably cost enough for you to take out a second mortgage on your house.
Sharp Has a 4K TV Ready for This Summer

Read More...