Smart glasses Sony SmartEyeglass was introduced by Sony last September, and in March 2015 these multimedia smart glasses with the label Developer Edition will only be available for the first buyers. After the withdrawal of Google's Glass glasses, they will have no real competition, and they will hit you in the pocket for 670 euros. For this, you will get augmented reality, which will work in connection with your smartphone.
Smartphone
Microsoft continues to push the boundaries with its Lumia smartphones, but not so much in terms of user experience and technology itself, but rather the price, which continues to slide down. Which is clearly encouraging news, as the Lumia, with the working name of RM-1099, should be available for less than 60 euros. Obviously, you won't get a Fittipaldi for this, but it will satisfy all those users who still use smartphones "on a whim" or who are not too demanding.
Reach79 is a smart cover that answers the prayers of those asking for a good mobile signal. Because while it's pretty amazing how many things we can do with an iPhone; book a hotel, check your heart rate,... most smartphones, despite all the goodies they've gotten in recent years, are really only as "powerful" as their signal strength. So no more drag-and-drop downloads and dropped calls due to technical glitches.
The Aquaris E4.5, a smartphone from BQ, is the first smartphone with the Ubuntu operating system, which was looking for its "host" for more than two years, and Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu, finally found it in the said model of the Spanish telecommunications the colossus. The phone brings to the market, what we call in political jargon, an alternative, because it is neither "left" (Android) nor "right" (iOS), but a breath of fresh air with many advantages, such as flexibility and functionality.
The Olympus Air A01 is a camera without a screen that "misses" when you attach a smartphone to it. It is very similar to a lens intended for a camera with interchangeable lenses, except that it also has a sensor and other necessary electronics in the cylinder. In this case, the function of the "body" is taken over by the smartphone, which thus gains the power of a high-end camera with countless options that are accessible through applications.
Wireless chargers are becoming an increasingly common sight, and the days when cables will be unnecessary are no longer light years away. Light-colored is Microsoft's Qi wireless charger Nokia DT-903, which "accepts" all smartphones with the Qi standard, the standard that has the most credit for wireless charging. It is a plastic tile that, when a smartphone is placed on it, lights up like neon. Either orange, white and green.
You've probably stocked up on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod and then frantically searched for it around your apartment, while the worst scenario of losing it was running through your head. So that you don't have to turn over every pillow, go through all the pockets and all the bags, there is now a Marco Polo app that locates your iPhone. How? With your voice. You call it like you would call a dog, except that the iPhone will not run to you, but will answer you as you have taught it.
Although we will more or less guess about the final appearance of the Samsung Galaxy S6 smartphone until March 2, 2015, its details are already known and judging by the leaked information, we are in for a real supermobile that will sweep away the competition. How could it not, when a 64-bit and 8-core Exynos processor made with 14-nanometer technology will be hidden under the metal glass case.
Google and Lapka have shown where the limits of a modular phone are, or where they are not. Namely, after Google revealed the prototype of the Ara modular smartphone, we are now getting additional dimensions of what this type of technology can offer us. This is how Lapka created a series of special modules with sensors that open the door to functionalities that far exceed those that smartphones have today.
Since the advent of smartphones, boredom seems to have disappeared from our lives. And since the advent of smartphones, there is rarely a moment when it is not within reach. They have become a conditioned reflex to boredom, as shown by a recent study by the Flurry research group, which found that the average owner of a blue phone uses the latter for almost three hours a day.
Anyone who has ever wanted to record a "vlog" (a video blog that wasn't pure improvisation) or a promotional video has already faced the fact that they forgot or mixed up the text and only managed to do it on the 14th try. If you deal with this on a daily basis, it can be quite time-consuming. At the TV stations, they solved this with "trotl" drums, which until now were too expensive for home use. But now here's The Parrot, for which you only need a DSLR camera with recording capability and a smartphone.
Are you troubled by the question of how to save battery? Do you own an Android smartphone? Although most people point the finger at the smartphone for a (too) quickly drained battery, in large cases it is only a scapegoat. The key is the use of a mobile phone, where operating systems play a big role. Android proved to be particularly greedy, sometimes straining the battery unnecessarily. But there are solutions for Android that keep the smartphone at high speeds and at the same time do not keep the battery in the anaerobic zone all the time.