I can’t tell you how often I’m all dressed up and have nowhere to keep my phone. This has happened to me, I don’t know… at least one time. Thanks to soft circuit technology and the folks at CuteCircuit, I can now have my fancy soiree and my phone, too. Behold, the M-Dress, a silk jersey sheath that is also a mobile phone:
That sharp-dressed woman is presumably talking on her phone (and levitating, but that’s a different post). According to the CuteCircuit site, you simply insert your SIM card into the tag and voila! Phoneless mobile service on the go. If you do receive a call while looking fabulous (and of course you will), simply lift your palm to your ear as illustrated, and to hang up, return your arm to your side. Silk jersey and gesture recognition? I’ll have two, please.
The M-Dress is not yet available but CuteCircuit has it posted as a Coming Soon item in their store. Available now: the beautiful-but-somewhat-less-impressive Star Scarf, shown above, and the goth-glam-meets-sci-fi configuration in the video below, known as the CuteCircuit Kinetic Dress.
The company, based in London, specializes in all manner of Wearable Technology, including Bluetooth enabled shirts and pattern-shifting skirts.
These t-shirts are made of so much “Winning!” and “Awesome!” that I absolutely had to share them with you guys.
Science! is dedicated to bringing you the finest in off kilter science t-shirts with a faux sarcastic nerd loving absurdist bent. Funny geek friendly graphic t-shirt designs by Jeremy Kalgreen and are available in a variety of colors and styles, or feel free to create your own with our custom designer
A little less than a year ago, My family and I took a 1 week vacation to Disney World in Orlando, FL., where we pretty much had the best time of our lives. I never went to Disneyland Paris though, but judging from what I’ve seen, it looks pretty much the same, on a smaller scale. Anyways, check out the following video showing the theme park from a tilt-shift perspective.
Some people over at The Technology Studio in the U.K. had the marvelous idea of hooking a Kinect to a Pufferfish globe-projection system to create what could possibly be one of the most awesome anti-theft systems of all time. Just project an image of the Eye of Sauron on the globe’s surface and use the kinect to have that eye follow people walking in its vicinity. Now all you have to do it set up the device in the middle of your house and let it do its job.
Yesterday evening, Entertainment Tonight aired a one minute preview for Joe Johnston’s upcoming Captain America: The First Avenger. The movie opens July 22nd, 2011. Can’t wait for it! :)
Google’s attempts to settle its legal dispute with authors and publishers — and in the process, claim the rights to millions of out-of-print titles — have been dismissed by a federal judge.
The case involves a lawsuit by the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers dating back to 2005, which accused Google of copyright infringement by scanning books to make them searchable online.
In 2008 the two sides agreed a settlement to the case that would include Google setting up and maintaining a register of book copyright and a royalty payment system. The settlement also gave Google the right to scan all books unless and until the copyright holder asked it to stop. And most controversially, the deal meant Google would have exclusive rights to digitize orphan titles: those which were in copyright, but where the rights holder either wasn’t known or couldn’t be traced.
Critics of the deal complained it would effectively give Google a monopoly in the book digitization market. There were also claims that neither party in the agreement had any authority to “give away” the rights to orphan books, along with serious questions about how the deal could affect books published outside the US.
According to Chin’s ruling, around 500 people filed formal responses to the proposed settlement, the vast majority opposing it. Specific objections included other author and publisher groups noting that they should be involved in any granting of rights to Google, and concerns that approving the deal would violate the right of Congress to decide copyright law.
Chin backed most of these concerns, as well as noting that given the original lawsuit only involved Google displaying “snippets” of book content on its Book Search site, a settlement wasn’t the place for the two sides to decide copyright issues involving the full text of books.
Concluding that the proposed settlement was “not fair, adequate and reasonable”, Chin rejected it. While technically that leaves the two sides back in opposition to one another with a copyright infringement claim to dispute, Chin did strongly hint that a revised deal would stand a better chance of getting approval with one major revision: that the opt-out system be replaced with opt-in, meaning Google could only digitize a book with the express permission of the rightsholder.
I’m an old school TransFan, so these Michael Bay, can’t-tell-the-ass-from-the-elbow Transformers are not my cup of tea.
However, Chinese artist Yang Junlin’s sculptures, made of thousands of pieces of welded metal and miscellaneous parts just might make me a believer. I mean, his work almost makes it ok that Megatron is now a tank. Almost.
Yang has created 1,000 of these insanely cool Transformers since 2007, and they’ve become so popular he started his own business with an equally cool-sounding name, “Legend of Iron”. (Take that, wimpy Google!)
Now here’s one Xbox that will never have a Red Ring of Death.
Crafted by Ben Winfield of Cape Town, South Africa, this pine replica of the original Xbox is pretty much the coolest thing you’ll see today. It comes complete with a wooden controller that actually plugs into the front of the console and has real, working thumbsticks! See? Coolest thing today; just like I said.
Check out more photos of the Xbox and his other wooden works – including a replica Sand People rifle – over on his Facebook page or his blog.